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  2. List of Polish desserts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Polish_desserts

    A Polish cream pie made of two layers of puff pastry, filled with whipped cream, creamy buttercream, vanilla pastry cream (custard cream) or sometimes egg white cream, and is usually sprinkled with powdered sugar. [5] Pączki: Pastries traditional in Polish cuisine; the Polish word pączki is often translated to English as "doughnuts". Pańska ...

  3. Pączki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pączki

    The Polish word pączek [ˈpɔ̃t͡ʂɛk] (plural: pączki [ˈpɔ̃t͡ʂkʲi]) is a diminutive of the Polish word pąk "bud". [6] The latter derives from Proto-Slavic *pǫkъ, which may have referred to anything that is round, bulging and about to burst (compare Proto-Slavic *pǫknǫti "to swell, burst"), possibly of ultimately onomatopoeic origin.

  4. List of Polish dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Polish_dishes

    Faworki – light fried pastry covered with icing sugar; Kisiel – juicy pudding made with pure fruit juice thickened with starch; Krówki – Polish fudge, soft milk toffee candies; Kutia – small square pasta or wheat with poppy seeds, nuts, raisins and honey; typically served during Christmas in the eastern regions

  5. Rugelach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rugelach

    Traditional rugelach are made in the form of a crescent by rolling a triangle of dough around a filling. [6] [7] Some sources state that the rugelach and the French croissant share a common Viennese ancestor, crescent-shaped pastries commemorating the lifting of the Turkish siege, [8] possibly a reference to the Battle of Vienna in 1683.

  6. List of pastries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pastries

    A traditional Polish pastry, originally a wedding cake that has made its way into American homes around the Christmas and Easter holidays. The pastry is a light and flaky dough filled with a variety of sweet and savory fillings such as apricot, raspberry, prune, sweet cheese, poppy seed , or even a nut mixture.

  7. Polish cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_cuisine

    A traditional Polish dinner is composed of three courses, beginning with a soup like the popular rosół broth or tomato soup. In restaurants, soups are followed by an appetizer such as herring (prepared with either cream, oil, or in aspic), or other cured meats and chopped raw vegetable salads.

  8. Poppy seed roll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poppy_seed_roll

    It is traditional in several cuisines, including Polish (strucla z makiem, strucla makowa; poppy seed cake = makowiec), Kashubian (makówc), Hungarian (mákos bejgli [1]), Slovak (makovník), Czech (makový závin), Austrian (Mohnbeugel, Mohnstrudel or Mohnstriezel), Ukrainian (pyrih z makom пирiг з маком or makivnyk маківник ...

  9. Karpatka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karpatka

    Karpatka is a traditional Polish cream pie with some sort of vanilla buttercream filling – areated butter mixed with eggs beaten and steamed with sugar (krem russel) [1] [2], areated butter mixed with crème pâtissière (according to Polish gastronomy textbooks made from whole eggs) [2] or just thick milk kissel enriched with melted butter [3].