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Bokoli or pogaca - Wheat bread made with baking soda but no yeast, sometimes with crumbled fried bacon stirred into the dough before baking [31] Boranija - a meat and green bean stew. [31] Cignidaki zumi - a soup made with the leaves of the stinging nettle plant [31] Djeveli - omelette made from the chicken eggs or eggs of game birds [31]
Grătar (usually made together with "mici") - grilled pork/beef, thinly sliced with condiments; Musaca - an eggplant, potato, and meat pie; Ostropel - method of cooking chicken or duck or any meat. It is a slow-cooked fried meat in tomato sauce. Papricaș - Chicken paprikash made with bell pepper and paprika, originating from Hungary
The traditional Romanian and Moldovan colac is a braided bread, typically made for special occasions or holidays, such as Christmas, Easter, weddings, and funerals. [29] It is a traditional custom of Romanian rural society, on Christmas Eve, to gather in groups, to go in different houses and to sing colinde, traditional Christmas carols. In ...
Mămăligă (Romanian pronunciation: [məməˈliɡə] ⓘ;) is a polenta-like dish made out of yellow maize flour, traditional in Romania, Moldova, south-west regions of Ukraine and among Poles in Ukraine, Hungary (puliszka), the Black Sea regions of Georgia and Turkey, and Thessaly and Phthiotis, as well as in Bulgaria and in Greece. [3]
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The Slavic word "salo" or "slanina" as applied to this type of food is often translated to English as "bacon", "lard" or "fatback" in general, depending on context. Unlike bacon, salo contains more fat than lean meat and unlike lard, salo is not rendered. It is similar to Italian lardo, the main difference is that lardo is sliced for curing.
Covrigi is the plural form of the Romanian word covrig. [1] The word kovrig is a loanword from the Old Bulgarian kovrigъ. [1] [2] [3] Cognate words are found in other Slavic languages, e.g. Russian kovriga (коврига) meaning "round bread" or korovai. [2] The Old East Slavic kovriga is mentioned in the Primary Chronicle under year 1074.
Without a doubt, one of the most popular dishes in Romania, and perhaps can be called the national dish, is Sarmale, or Sarma in other cultures of the Balkans, and the Caucasus; a mixture of pork, beef, and lamb, or just plain pork, with onions and rice, wrapped in semi-sour cabbage or grape leaves, and then placed usually in a porcelain pot ...