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Kapusta z grochem – peas, sauerkraut and spices; Kartofle gotowane – simple boiled potatoes with parsley or dill; Kasza gryczana – buckwheat groats; Kopytka – hoof-shaped potato dumplings; Mizeria – traditional Polish salad made from thinly sliced cucumbers and sour cream, seasoned with salt, pepper and occasionally sugar; Ogórek ...
Kapusta with mushrooms Pronunciation of the word "kapusta" in Polish. Zasmażana kapusta, [1] known to many Polish people simply as kapusta [kah-POOS-tah] (which is the Polish word for "cabbage"), [2] is a Polish dish of braised [3] or stewed sauerkraut [1] or cabbage, with bacon, mushroom and onion or garlic.
Polish cuisine is rich in meat, especially pork, chicken and game, in addition to a wide range of vegetables, spices, fungi and mushrooms, and herbs. [1] It is also characterised by its use of various kinds of pasta, cereals, kasha and pulses. [2] In general, Polish cuisine makes extensive use of butter, cream, eggs, and seasoning.
In Russia, sauerkraut is known as кислая капуста (kyslaya kapusta) 'sour cabbage' or квашеная капуста (kvashenaya kapusta) 'fermented cabbage'. [citation needed] In Germany and Austria, cooked sauerkraut is often flavored with juniper berries [22] or caraway seeds; apples and white wine are added in popular variations.
Kapusta, literally meaning "cabbage" in several Slavic languages, may refer to: Kapusta kiszona duszona , a Polish dish NATO reporting name for Soviet communications ship SSV-33
Kapuska with veal. Kapuska is a traditional Turkish cuisine and Balkan cuisine stew [1] [2] whose name is derived from the Slavic languages word for cabbage.Although the name is imported, the dish is a Turkish version of a cabbage stew common in Russia, Ukraine, Poland and other countries of Eastern Europe.
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The earthen oven has historically been used to bake flatbreads such as taftoon (Persian: تافتون), taboon bread and laffa, and has been in widespread use in the greater Middle East for centuries. Aside from baking, some were used for cooking: pots were laid within the cavity of the oven and set upon hot coals, covered in ashes.