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  2. Czech cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czech_cuisine

    The recipe comes from Czech roots, however, the bordering countries—mainly Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary—consider buchtičky se šodó as food that came from their country. Pudding is a flavoured custard combined in layers. Pudding is served in a glass topped with fruit or shaped in a mould. Christmas cookies (vánoční cukroví)

  3. Category:Czech cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Czech_cuisine

    Coffeehouses and cafés in the Czech Republic (2 P) Czech snack foods (3 P) Czech-American cuisine (1 C, 6 P) P. Czech pastries (8 P) R. ... Czech food writers (1 P)

  4. Kolach (cake) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kolach_(cake)

    Koláč preparation in bakery Making kolaches. A kolach, [1] from the Czech and Slovak koláč (plural koláče, diminutive koláčky, meaning "cake/pie"), is a type of sweet pastry that holds a portion of fruit surrounded by puffy yeast dough.

  5. Trdelník - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trdelník

    Baking of trdelník. Although trdelník is usually presented as a "traditional Czech cake" or "old Bohemian pastry", and mentions of český trdelník ("Czech trdelník") can be found in 20th-century literature, [7] the cake is mostly mentioned in literature as a Slovak or Moravian, not Bohemian dish, and the spread of this dessert in Prague is recognized to have started more recently.

  6. Vánočka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vánočka

    Vánočka (Czech: [ˈvaːnot͡ʃka]) is a plaited bread, baked in Czech Republic [2] and Slovakia (in Slovak called vianočka) traditionally at Christmas time. Such special festive Christmas bread made from white flour, either in the form of a wedge or of plait, was first mentioned around 1400 by Benedictine monk Jan of Holešov in his work Treatise on Christmas Eve.

  7. Prague ham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prague_Ham

    Prague Ham (Czech: Pražská šunka, German: Prager Schinken) is a type of brine-cured, stewed, and mildly beechwood-smoked boneless ham [1] [2] originally from Prague in Bohemia (Czech Republic). When cooked on the bone, it is called šunka od kosti ("ham from the bone"), considered a delicacy. [2]

  8. Goulash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goulash

    In the Czech Republic and Slovakia, goulash (Czech and Slovak: guláš) is usually made with beef, although pork varieties exist, and served with boiled or steamed bread dumplings (goulash with beef in Czech hovězí guláš s knedlíkem, in Slovak hovädzí guláš s knedľou), in Slovakia more typically with bread. In pubs it is often ...

  9. Klobásník - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klobásník

    A klobasnek (Czech klobásník / ˌ k l oʊ ˈ b æ s n ɪ k /, plural klobásníky, meaning "a roll made of sweet, spun dough known as koláč made and often filled with klobása or other fillings") is a chiefly American Czech savory finger food. [1]