T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2980.1 | try 913 | MCIS1::MICHAELSON | | Thu Apr 04 1991 15:46 | 2 |
| Try note 913 I did a directory search and found that one.
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2980.2 | 913 does not have what I want | GRINS::MCFARLAND | Like Sands Through The Hour Glass | Fri Apr 05 1991 10:34 | 15 |
| I already looked at 913, it does not contain what I
am looking for. Most of the recipes in it are for
cabbage soup.
I am looking for something that is rather special
like something served on a special occasion or
holiday and would be good for a dinner party for
8 people.
I do plan to go to the library if the great chefs
of DEC don't come up with something interesting.
Judie
|
2980.3 | | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Tue Apr 09 1991 11:44 | 9 |
| How about a good, homemade goulash?
That sounds pretty polish to me and it is hearty.
I had that served to us once, followed by a heavenly chocolate cream
torte that was out of this world... it was cooked by a Polish lady who
unfortunately moved out of the area, but I still dream of her
mastery... I wish I had those recipes!
Best luck. Ana
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2980.4 | Beef rollatini Polonaise? | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Fri Apr 12 1991 16:51 | 3 |
| My friend who grew up in Poland once served us rolled-up thin beef
fillets with lots of slivered onions rolled inside and in the sauce
they baked in.
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2980.5 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Howling at the Moon.... | Mon Apr 15 1991 10:19 | 5 |
| When I was a kid, my mom used to serve us a German dish similar to that. It was
beef fillets and they had mustard spread on them, the pickle spear, onions and
spices inside, rolled up and tied with cord or a tooth pick and then baked in an
au jus sauce. We called them Roulade, but I know there is a more formal name
for the recipe.
|
2980.6 | Perhaps I can help! | MEMIT::GORSKI | | Tue Apr 16 1991 13:40 | 42 |
| Perhaps I can help. Although I was raised in England, I speak Polish and
ate/eat cook Polish/European/English fare. If you are interested give
me a call - I have a Polish cookbook in English and one in Polish.
I don't read NOTES often.
BTW, Polish cuisine was influenced by the French, Austrians
(Austro-Hungarian empire), Germans and Russians. An indication to
their history.
From my experience - family and friends:
Poles make wonderful soups - a cold one whose base is beets, with loads
of goodies - more like a meal in itself - chlodnik.
They have a dill (as in pickle) soup. Of course they have beet soup
barscz (borsch), and dried mushroom soup.
They love herrings - pickled, salted . . . and fresh water fish.,
They make delicious pierogi (dare I say it Poland's equivalent to
Italian ravioli) and stuffed cabbage leaves, This is everyday fare.
They have a dish called Bigos, (Hunters Stew) - cabbage, sauerkraut
and various meats, game and sausage simmered for a long time - good on
a cold winter's night.
They cook poultry and game. They make roast duck stuffed with apple.
They roast lamb and make a sour cream sauce and serve it with hot
grated beets. They have great sausage, (kielbasa - plural Kielbasi)
They are serious about their mushrooms (edible fungi) and make many an
expedition/family outing to gather them. They then dry, pickle and
cook them depending on the variety.
They have delicious deserts in the cake/torte line. They make good
donuts (not like Dunkin Donuts), with a prune filling. They make
small cream filled babki and yeast babki. They make excellent fruit
boiled dumplings, apple cakes . . . The list is endless, I
just can't recall them all at this moment.
Alcoholic Beverages: Vodka SERVED CHILLED, and beer served chilled.
Non-Alcoholic: Tea with lemon and coffee.
|
2980.7 | Polish, my favorite food | ABACUS::STECYK | | Fri Apr 19 1991 11:01 | 36 |
| Although my background is Lithuanian and Ukrainian, many of the dishes
are somewhat "polish". One main dish I can remember as a child and
many of my Polish friends enjoy is Kapusta (spelling?).
Although many of these recipes were not measured per se, I have made
the following who have remarked, "gee, this is just like my mother's".
Here goes....
1 bag of sauerkraut (Clauson's)
1 medium head of cabbage coarsly chopped
Approximately 1 cup of Chicken Stock
1 Tbs. caraway seeds
1 tbs dry mustard
2 med onions sliced
1 pkg of kielbasa (I like Essem) - or - approx 2 lbs pork chops
Divide all of the above in half, except meat. In a large baking
dish, layer cabbage, sauerkraut, onion, sprinkled seeds and mustard.
Place meat on this layer. Place another layer of cabbage, sauerkraut
onion, etc. on top of the meat. Add Chicken stock.
In a 250 oven, bake for approximately 2-3 hours or until meat is tender
when fork is inserted and cabbage is also soft. Pork meat should
literally fall off the bone but is not dry.
I will often serve this with a dark rye bread and boiled potatoes.
For condiments, be sure to have brown mustard and malt vinegar.
Kapusta (spelling?) seems to have several variations in Polish
cooking, i.e. Kapusta soup. It is basically a combination of
Sauerkraut and fresh cabbage.
Also, an authentic main course is Cabbage Rolls (Golumpke - spelling?)
If you would like that recipe, let me know.
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2980.8 | Polish Kapusta | ABACUS::STECYK | | Fri Apr 19 1991 11:04 | 5 |
| RE: Kapusta....
Be sure to cover the baking pan with aluminum foil while
cooking.
|
2980.9 | | SALEM::DODA | Weather'sHere,WishUWereBeautiful | Fri Apr 19 1991 11:39 | 14 |
| I grew up on most of the stuff mentioned in this note. My parents
brought and I came over when I was almost a year old, back in
'63.
I'd just like to add that if anyone would like to sample REAL
kielbasa, there is a deli just off RT 290 in Worcester. Can't
recall the exit, but the building is visible from both side of
290. It's on the right if you're travelling from 495. They carry
4-5 different varieties. One taste of the real stuff and you won't
touch the Essems of the world again.
daryll
(Yes, Doda is polish and hasn't been shortened.)
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2980.10 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Forever is as far as I go | Fri Apr 19 1991 12:54 | 6 |
| re .7
When I was a child, my mother made this all the time, but she put in a rack
of pork ribs to cook, or sometimes one of those small Daisy hams (think they
are called picnic hams). This all simmered to the point of falling apart,
served with mashed potatoes or boiled potatoes.
|
2980.11 | FRUGAL GOURMET SHOW | DECLNE::TOWLE | | Fri Apr 19 1991 15:00 | 6 |
| rep 2980.7
My wife and I watched the Frugal Gourmet last nite on PBS and he
made the sour kraut and noodles disk and kilbasa recipe, etc. I have
ordered his latest book on our Immigrant Ancestors for her as well, so
in about 4-6 weeks she should be suprised.
|
2980.12 | More on Polish Food in Worcester | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue Apr 23 1991 10:33 | 44 |
| RE: I'd just like to add that if anyone would like to sample REAL
kielbasa, there is a deli just off RT 290 in Worcester. Can't recall
the exit, but the building is visible from both side of 290. It's on
the right if you're travelling from 495.
The market is Golemo's on Millbury Street. Their kielbasa is imported
and outstanding. There are several different varieties. I bought one
that was extremely lean and was disappointed! There was no grease, and
it was too "unlike" the commercial kielbasa I bought occasionally.
Golemo's has lots of different types of Polish foods.
Now if you're not talking about Golemo's... then you must be talking
about Tom's Delicatessen on Water Street - right across from Widoff's.
Tom's - in my estimation - is cleaner than Golemo's. They have pre-
cooked homemake Polish goodies, too. Didn't care for their golumbki,
though - the sauce was definitely too sweet and it couldn't compare
with my grandma's.
Tom's also has a great selection of all kinds of different foods and
coffees, etc. I bought my tahini and chickpeas there the last time I
made homous. I go there to buy their prune butter (yum), and they have
that yummy Polish prune babka.
To get there, exit off 290 at the Kelley Square exit. Turn right at
the end of the exit/stop sign. When you get into Kelley Square - cover
your eyes, take a deep breath, and drive! Just kidding... seriously,
bear to the right to get onto Water Street. Tom's will be on the left
hand side across from Widoff's bakery [great bulkie rolls-- hot and
fresh all the time].
If you want to go to Golemo's, then you need to go into Kelley Square
and turn left by the first gas station on the left - is that Lafayette
Street? Unfortunately, Millbury Street is one way coming into Kelley
Square. So you have to go down the street that parallels Millbury St.,
about to Maurice's and then turn up. If I'm wrong, would appreciate
someone correcting me.
Can't wait for the Polish picnics to start, to go and get that polish
food! If only I could learn to cook like grandma...
Rgds,
Marcia
[whose mom was a TRCZYNSKI]
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2980.13 | | SALEM::DODA | Weather'sHere,WishUWereBeautiful | Wed Apr 24 1991 09:21 | 9 |
| Marcia,
I can't remember the name since my father goes down and picks up
the stuff. All I can picture is a brick building with a sign
visible from RT 290.
I could've sworn this stuff was made locally.
daryll
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2980.14 | | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Mon Apr 29 1991 12:58 | 9 |
| If you can see it from 290, (got a smiling guy with a kielbasa wrapped
around his neck), and the huge Polish red & white flag flying, that's
Golemo's. Some of their kielbasa might be domestic. What I bought was
imported.
I now prefer Tom's on Water Street.
Rgds,
marcia
|
2980.15 | Near and dear to my heart. | CUSPID::MCCABE | | Tue Jul 30 1991 12:58 | 55 |
| Look what I found ...
Maybe not too late. A festive disk is usually linked to a holiday
and depending on the day (such as christmas eve) may be meatless.
Bigos is a very traditional dish that to truely enjoy takes about
a week to make (you keep adding things and it keeps getting better).
It a mixture of kapusta (pickled cabbage), fresh cabbage, assorted
fresh and smoked meats, wild mushrooms .. excuse me I have to go
eat something.
Its a great way to use fresh game and a loaf of hearty rye and some
potatoes can keep people at the table for hours.
Christmas eve would be a fish, borsht and piergogi (potato and farmers
cheese, or pototoe onion, or my favorite kapusta (cooked picked
cabbage) with butter and bread.
Easter would be a meat and egg borcht, a ham and some kielbasa (or any
other perserved meat from the larder), bread, and desserts.
In fact most any Polish dish with meat is festive. In Poland today
having meat is cause for celebration.
A full festive meal (general)
Start with a fish dish herring w/ herbs, a soup (sour dill mushroom
cream borsht is a favorite), a roast, sausages and/or a baked ham,
serve with stemed potatoes with onion and sour cream, rye bread (or
babka - braided raison bread), and vegtables. And a very rich dessert
with tea or coffee.
Very very very cold vodka should be freely poured.
On the subject of Kielbasa - Falls Provision in Chicopee Falls in
western Massachusetts is makes my favorite (Milwalkee and Chicopee
vie each year for the largest Kielbasa in the world title. It
alternates). They also make Kishki (don't ask whats in it till
you've had some).
Warning this is NOT for the faint hearted. It will wilt almost
anything in your 'fridge and the effect will linger for days. This is
serious stuff and maybe the only thing more than 3 members of my
mothers side of the family will agree on (my aunt actually stopped
dating a Polish meat packer when his Kielbasa quality dropped)
If anyone needs specifics of a Polish receipe feel free to write, I'm
one of the first members of the family who's first langauge is english.
Measurements will of course need to be estimated, I don't have anything
written down.
-Kevin
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2980.16 | What's GROATS though? | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue Jul 30 1991 16:33 | 3 |
| I love KISHKA! And never even thought to look what is in it. My hus-
band one day decided to read the label to me when I brought it home...
Wish he never had. I really like that stuff!
|
2980.17 | Groats - buckwheat | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Wed Jul 31 1991 12:17 | 5 |
| Groats are buckwheat, a grain. I believe it is in the grass family.
They are very common in Russian cooking, as well as Eastern Europe.
Laura
|