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  2. Hungarian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_cuisine

    Lángos is the most famous Hungarian street food. A deep fried flatbread typically served with garlic, sour cream and cheese. Hétvezér tokány A famous stew dish, which needs to be prepared from at least three kinds of meat: chicken, pork, beef or wild game meat. Vegetables and mushroom is usually also added in the stew and it is served with ...

  3. List of restaurants in Hungary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_restaurants_in_Hungary

    Babel, in Budapest, offers modern cuisine, [2] and is one of Hungary's seven Michelin-1-star-rated (in 2023) restaurants [3] Its walls show evidence of the 1838 Great Flood of Pest. [2] Borkonyha Winekitchen, one of Hungary's seven Michelin-1-star-rated (in 2023) restaurants [3] Café Gerbeaud

  4. List of Hungarian dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hungarian_dishes

    A luxury food pâté made of the liver of a duck or goose that has been specially fattened. Gránátos kocka A home-cooked, simple egg noodle dish, made with potatoes and paprika powder. Often served with pickled gherkins or other pickled vegetables on the side. Májgaluska leves: Small liver dumplings used in different soups, as in a liver ...

  5. Somebody Feed Phil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somebody_Feed_Phil

    Somebody Feed Phil is an American travel documentary television series presented by Philip Rosenthal that premiered on Netflix in January 2018. [1] Each episode follows Rosenthal touring the cuisine of its featured city, and spotlights charities and non-profit organizations that operate in the region.

  6. Lángos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lángos

    Lángos (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈlaːŋɡoʃ] [1]) is a typical Hungarian food.Nowadays it is a deep fried flatbread, but in the past it was made of the last bits of the bread-dough and baked at the front of a brick or clay oven, to be served hot as the breakfast of the bread-baking day.

  7. Hold Street Marketplace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hold_Street_Marketplace

    The Hold Street Marketplace or Market Hall V, now officially known as Downtown Market, is one of the six great Budapest market halls built under the monarchy in Hungary. The building between Moon Street and Vadász Street in the 5th District was built between 1892 and 1896 as the No. 5 marketplace by Győző Czigler .

  8. Kürtőskalács - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kürtőskalács

    The name refers to a stovepipe (kürtő), since the fresh, steaming cake in the shape of a truncated cone resembles a hot chimney.. This opinion is shared by Attila T. Szabó [], scholar and philologist from Cluj-Napoca: "...when taken off from the spit in one piece, the cake assumes the shape of a 25–30-centimetre [10–12 in] long vent or tube.

  9. Great Market Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Market_Hall

    The Great Market Hall or Central Market Hall, Market Hall I (Hungarian: Nagyvásárcsarnok [ˈnɒɟvaːʃaːt͡ʃɒrnok]) is the largest and oldest indoor market in Budapest, Hungary. The idea of building such a large market hall arose from the first mayor of Budapest, Károly Kamermayer, and it was his largest investment. He retired in 1896 ...