The BEST Guide to POLAND
Unanswered  |  Archives 
 
 
User: Guest

Home / Food  % width posts: 159

PIZZA & KETCHUP served only in Poland?


mocilla - | 3
5 Jan 2012 #121
yes nothing wrong with good ketchup, people eat what's they like.
Wedle 16 | 496
5 Jan 2012 #122
Polish pizza is garbage just like most Polish food

You talk sh1te

These are my favorite Pizza places in Warsaw, try them one day when you finally get round to visiting Poland:

nonsolo.pl/pl
ilcaminetto.pl
nanowolipkach.pl
sascha 1 | 824
5 Jan 2012 #123
Polish pizza is garbage just like most Polish food.

what you call 'american food' is that what the immigrants brought with them on the bounty.

the original american food by the indians was extinct by the genocide the whites did to them before deporting them to 'reservates'. lol

polish pizza is cool.
tygrys 3 | 290
6 Jan 2012 #124
polish pizza has hard crust and not enough toppings.
pip 10 | 1,659
6 Jan 2012 #125
You talk sh1te

These are my favorite Pizza places in Warsaw, try them one day when you finally get round to visiting Poland:

You are right- nonsolo is good- looks like they have renovated since I was last there- the other two....I will have to try them.

If you are ever in the Jozefoslaw area of Warsaw, tucked away is an amazing place called Numero uno. The chef lived in Australia for a number of years working at a pizza place- the Australian owner gave him the secret to the crust when he moved back to Poland.

trattorianumerouno.pl

the anitpasti and foccacia are amazing.
Wedle 16 | 496
6 Jan 2012 #126
If you are ever in the Jozefoslaw area of Warsaw, tucked away is an amazing place called Numero uno. The chef lived in Australia for a number of years working at a pizza place- the Australian owner gave him the secret to the crust when he moved back to Poland

Pip, the best places in Warsaw are always the ones that are tucked away, they try harder than the ones on main street. All of the three places I mentioned are out of the main stream especially il caminetto, it is on the upper floor of a 1960's shopping block in Saska Kempa, they have the most amazing thin crust pizza.They were the first Italian family owned restaurant in Warsaw, it became something of an establishment amongst the Italian community here, it is certainly worth a visit with the family, although if you go on Sundays be sure to book a table in advance,
SOPH
4 Jul 2012 #127
Pizza & ketchup IS THE BEST!!!!! HAS TO BE A HAM & PINEAPPLE PIZZA WITH LOADS OF KETCHUP
Wroclaw 44 | 5,379
4 Jul 2012 #128
HAS TO BE A HAM & PINEAPPLE PIZZA

Hawiian
PennBoy 76 | 2,432
4 Jul 2012 #129
PIZZA & KETCHUP?

That's how you can tell someone is Polish. I think it tastes better, especially if it's a Pudliszki . But we're not the only ones it is entirely normal in Brazil or Trinidad.
PlasticPole 7 | 2,648
4 Jul 2012 #130
The best tasting thing of all is Chili Sauce.
beckski 12 | 1,617
4 Jul 2012 #131
That sounds really good. Is Polish pizza ever baked with toppings under the cheese, inside the pizza?
ddligigio
20 Oct 2013 #132
We do this in serbia and montenegro
so that is two more countries
billpawl - | 32
20 Oct 2013 #133
cant be wprse than vinegar on french fries in uk...ughhh :((

I don't know why vinegar on french fries would be "ughhh" in uk, they are fantastic in America. It used to be a favorite thing to get them every Friday night at the local racetrack.
carlfraine - | 3
28 Oct 2013 #134
Want to taste it as soon as possible.
mochadot18 17 | 245
28 Oct 2013 #135
pizza places in Michigan

Ummmm that's cause JETS pizza is just amazing without adding crap like Ketchup to the pizza.
Buggsy 8 | 98
28 Oct 2013 #136
It has puzzled me ever since I have been here.
That together with the big burgers that are filled with grated cabbage.
Considering that most of the popular ketchup brands in the country contain little to no real tomato puree in them-
this says a lot about the quality of food in Poland. With pizzeria's and most restaurants it is right to say that if you don't know much about them, cosidering the

rampant use of substandard ingredients, just walk away.
jon357 74 | 22,020
28 Oct 2013 #137
It has puzzled me ever since I have been here.

It's considered a little unsophisticated by many (in the capital anyway), but still persists. Some waiters/waitresses (more accurately students waiting table) are surprised when people don't want the sauce.

That together with the big burgers that are filled with grated cabbage.

An ingrained habit, sadly.

Considering that most of the popular ketchup brands in the country contain little to no real tomato puree in them-
this says a lot about the quality of food in Poland. With pizzeria's and most restaurants it is right to say that if you don't know much about them, cosidering the
rampant use of substandard ingredients, just walk away.

Spot on.

A particular bugbear of mine is frozen chips. They're so rife that a lot of the post-89 generation don't know that real ones can exist.
sobieski 106 | 2,118
28 Oct 2013 #138
A particular bugbear of mine is frozen chips. They're so rife that a lot of the post-89 generation don't know that real ones can exist.

Although there are quite a few "Frytkie Belgijskie" who a very decent job. There are two ones near ul. Szpitalna here in Warsaw who are really good, and there is Renesans on ul Francuzka in Saska Kępa.
peterweg 37 | 2,311
28 Oct 2013 #139
It's considered a little unsophisticated by many (in the capital anyway), but still persists.

Its almost the same as the tomato sauce base mixture. But I guess these 'sophisticates' have never made proper pizza have they?

There is nothing particularly wrong with adding ketchup to Pizza, people add worse. In Southern France, Chilli oil is a standard addition to Pizza.

I always add an bit of ketchup to any pizza or pasta tomato sauce base I make. Its also an ingredient to Salsa, chilli and Pad Thai noodles.

A BIT being the key, not spread it all over.
Steveramsfan 2 | 306
28 Oct 2013 #140
It is not Ketchup that they put on Pizza. It is homemade pizza base sauce but also there is a home made Garlic sauce used too.
jon357 74 | 22,020
28 Oct 2013 #141
Its almost the same as the tomato sauce base mixture.

It's nothing like. Check out what goes into ketchup. The image below is one of the better ones - the cheapest of the stuff in PL (and you didn't think your local pizza shop get it from Waitrose, did you?) is far worse.



jon357 74 | 22,020
28 Oct 2013 #142
Here's a popular mid-price Polish brand:

Ketchup KOTLIN łagodny (w plastiku) - skład: pomidory (136g na 100g produktu), woda, cukier, acetylowany adypinian diskrobiowy - substancja zagęszczająca, sól, kwas octowy - regulator kwasowości, naturalny aromat (zawiera seler), benzoesan sodu - substancja konserwująca.

wieszcozjesz.blogspot.it/2013/07/co-z-tym-ketchupem-kotlin-ciag-dalszy.html

Enjoy the benzoesan sodu.
Harry
28 Oct 2013 #143
you didn't think your local pizza shop get it from Waitrose, did you?

My local pizza shop make their tomato sauce fresh every day.
peterweg 37 | 2,311
28 Oct 2013 #144
It's nothing like

Tomatoes, fried onions, sugar and herbs are the ingredient of Pizza tomato base.

The only major difference is the vinegar - which is an enhancement to tomatoes natural acidity. The 'spices' are among others, All Spice (English Spice).

I use Garlic, bay leaves, mixed herbs (oregano, Marjoram, Basil etc). pepper, even a little smoked paprika. But there is nothing in Heinz Tomato ketchup that is incompatible with Pizza.

I bet if you made a pizza with a thin layer of Heinz ketchup as the base you would not find it 'wrong', especially if you added garlic and the herbs.

We are talking about Cheese and Tomato on Toast, not caviar. I suppose its an essential food source to people who can't cook, but fundamentally its simple food for the poor.

My local pizza shop make their tomato sauce fresh every day.

Good for them, I assume them serve it to be added to the Pizza after serving?

Enjoy the benzoesan sodu

Can you differential E211 in tomato products?

And how do you know thats it not used in the tomato puree they made the pizza base with?

You are picking and choosing what you don't like while buying industrially produced food without any ingredient label of any sort.

If Poles like to put tomato sauce on their Pizza (home made or industrial ketchup) then let them, its nothing wronger than eating Pizza in the first instance.
jon357 74 | 22,020
28 Oct 2013 #145
Can you differential E211 in tomato products?

Who needs to? Your body 'differentials' for you whether you want it to or not.

My local pizza shop make their tomato sauce fresh every day.

As long as it stays under the cheese, that's fine.

Cheese and Tomato on Toast,

That ain't pizza. Or rarebit. Or croque monsieur.

You are picking and choosing what you don't like

Outside a famine zone, that's what people do. And I choose to think - as a fair few other posters in this thread do and doubtless many more in real life, that ketchup on pizza is trashy and on a par with instant coffee (people buy that?), readymade mayonnaise (buy an egg and some oil), artificial 'non-dairy cream substitute', pasta salad and 'mild cheddar'.
peterweg 37 | 2,311
28 Oct 2013 #146
Outside a famine zone, that's what people do. And I choose to think - as a fair few other posters in this thread do and doubtless many more in real life, that ketchup on pizza is trashy and on a par with instant coffee (people buy that?), readymade mayonnaise (buy an egg and some oil), artificial 'non-dairy cream substitute', pasta salad and 'mild cheddar'.

Or buying a Pizza instead of making it yourself? Firstly you are mixing up your taste and what is 'trashy'. Some people like mild cheddar, others prefer non-saturated fat for their white coffee.

Some people like ketchup, most people in fact and it is very healthy - mores than fresh tomatoes. The E211 is an unusual and exceptional ingredient for Tomato Ketchup.

Who needs to? Your body 'differentials' for you whether you want it to or not.

.The issue is adding ketchup to Pizza, not whether your body can magically detect something that is probably not in the ketchup or sauces that Poles put on their Pizza.

As long as it stays under the cheese, that's fine.

Oh dear, all sauce MUST be under the Cheese. Are you a Pizza Nazi as well as a Pizza Snob :)

That ain't pizza. Or rarebit. Or croque monsieur.

With proper tomato base, Mozzarella cheese, olive oil and toast you can make better pizza that most pizza joints.
jon357 74 | 22,020
28 Oct 2013 #147
Or buying a Pizza instead of making it yourself?

Not exactly rocket science. A bit of dough, a smear of passata and some good cheese.

.The issue is adding ketchup to Pizza, not whether your body can magically detect something that is probably not in the ketchup or sauces that Poles put on their Pizza.

Maybe you deliberately misunderstand or maybe you genuinely don't get it. If you put too many chemicals in your body you get sick. Maybe now or maybe the abnormal cell growth comes in a few years. maybe the crap someone feeds their kids when young doesn't cause the carcinoma until decades later.

If Poles like to put tomato sauce on their Pizza (home made or industrial ketchup) then let them,

If people like to wear socks with sandals or a black bra under a white blouse, have mooning garden gnomes, a blue plastic roof, drink alcopops or smoke in the bus stop, let them. That doesn't mean one can't say on a discussion forum that they think it's tacky. Or perhaps you think poor taste is beyond criticism...
peterweg 37 | 2,311
28 Oct 2013 #148
That doesn't mean one can't say on a discussion forum that they think it's tacky.

Eating pizza is tacky. Criticizing what other people put on tacky food is hypocritical.

I'm making Pizza tonight, I may add ketchup.
jon357 74 | 22,020
28 Oct 2013 #149
Eating pizza is tacky.

Tell that to a Neapolitan! It isn't just ham and pineapple, you know.

I'm making Pizza tonight, I may add ketchup.

Likewise, but no sugary sauce slathered near it.
mochadot18 17 | 245
28 Oct 2013 #150
Do they serve Pizza with gravy in Poland??? We have that a lot around here its AMAZING sooo good


Home / Food / PIZZA & KETCHUP served only in Poland?
BoldItalic [quote]
 
To post as Guest, enter a temporary username or login and post as a member.