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The Carniolan sausage (Slovene: kranjska klobasa, Serbo-Croatian: kranjska kobasica, Australian English: Kransky, German: Krainer Wurst, Italian dialect of Trieste: luganighe de Cragno) is a Slovenian parboiled sausage similar to what is known as kielbasa or Polish sausage in North America.
Slovenian honey (slovenski med), honey gathered exclusively on the territory of Slovenia. Prekmurje ham (prekmurje ham), ham from Prekmurje. Salt from Piran (piranska sol), salt gathered manually form salt fields on Slovenian coast near Piran. Carniolian sausage (kranjska klobasa), usually cooked sausage from pork and bacon.
Chorizo sausage Saucisson Skilandis Sausages being smoked. This is a list of notable sausages. Sausage is a food and usually made from ground meat with a skin around it. Typically, a sausage is formed in a casing traditionally made from intestine, but sometimes synthetic. Some sausages are cooked during processing and the casing may be removed ...
Volunteers serve sausage, mashed potatoes, bread and other traditional Slovenian dishes to guests Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024, during the 26th Annual St. AlÕs Sausage Festival at the Slovenian ...
A blood sausage, also known as a blutwurst sausage, is a sausage filled with blood that is cooked or dried and mixed with a filler until it is thick enough to solidify when cooled. Most commonly, the blood of pigs, sheep, lamb, cow, chicken, or goose is used.
kabanos, a thin, air-dried sausage flavoured with caraway seed, originally made of pork, sometimes a horse meat variation may be found. kiełbasa odesska, made with beef. kiełbasa wędzona, Polish smoked sausage, used often in soups. krakowska, a thick, straight sausage hot-smoked with pepper and garlic; its name comes from Kraków
Kaszanka is a traditional blood sausage in Central and Eastern European cuisine. It is made of a mixture of pig's blood, pork offal (commonly liver), and buckwheat or barley stuffed in a pig intestine. It is usually flavored with onion, black pepper, and marjoram.
In April 2012 Slovenia announced it would seek to have the product name "Krainer" (after Krain, the German name for the Slovenian area of Carniola) to be protected by the EU. This would have caused this Austrian sausage to be renamed. On 15 June 2012 Austria and Slovenia reached a compromise.