Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Covrigi is the plural form of the Romanian word covrig. [1] The word kovrig is a loanword from the Old Bulgarian kovrigъ. [1] [2] [3] Cognate words are found in other Slavic languages, e.g. Russian kovriga (коврига) meaning "round bread" or korovai. [2] The Old East Slavic kovriga is mentioned in the Primary Chronicle under year 1074.
The traditional Romanian and Moldovan colac is a braided bread, typically made for special occasions or holidays, such as Christmas, Easter, weddings, and funerals. [29] It is a traditional custom of Romanian rural society, on Christmas Eve, to gather in groups, to go in different houses and to sing colinde, traditional Christmas carols. In ...
Ghiveci - Romania's national dish; a vegetable stew similar to the Bulgarian gjuvec and the Hungarian lecsó [20] [21] Ghiveci călugăresc - vegetable stew prepared by the nuns in the monasteries; Fasole batută - bean paste made from Romanian refried beans, uses white or cannellini beans, with the addition of olive or sunflower oil and minced ...
Noodle latkes, also known as Romanian noodle latkes, pasta latke, or pasta latkes, are a type of latke made with pasta of Romanian Jewish origin, that is traditionally prepared during Hanukkah, although they may be eaten as a side dish during other times of the year.
The recipe consists of eggs, raisins, walnuts, pineapple, sugar, butter, egg noodles and cottage cheese. [23] Szaloncukor is a Romani dessert that is fastidiously mixed flour and sugar and made the dough into shapes like sugar cookies, then they are baked, wrapped, and hunged on a tree by the Roma until January 6 for the feast of the Epiphany.
Kalduny – Type of dumplings in Balto-Slavic cuisines; Kenkey – Ground maize dumpling from West Africa; Khinkali – Georgian dumpling; Khuushuur – Mongolian fried meat pastry or dumpling; Knödel – Large round poached or boiled potato or bread dumplings, made without yeast; Kluski – Polish name for dumplings, noodles and pasta
Pasta is so much more than a noodle. It's been vilified as a dangerous carb and a cause of weight gain, praised for diversity and its origins have been argued over time and time again. It is a ...
Mămăligă (Romanian pronunciation: [məməˈliɡə] ⓘ;) is a polenta-like dish made out of yellow maize flour, traditional in Romania, Moldova, south-west regions of Ukraine and among Poles in Ukraine, Hungary (puliszka), the Black Sea regions of Georgia and Turkey, and Thessaly and Phthiotis, as well as in Bulgaria and in Greece. [3]