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Hungarian or Magyar cuisine (Hungarian: Magyar konyha) is the cuisine characteristic of the nation of Hungary, and its primary ethnic group, the Magyars. Hungarian cuisine has been described as being the spiciest cuisine in Europe. [1] [2] This can largely be attributed to the use of their piquant native spice, Hungarian paprika, in many of ...
A traditional Austro-Hungarian coffee party cake, traditionally baked in a distinctive circular Bundt mold. Kürtőskalács: A spit cake specific to Hungary and Hungarian-speaking regions in Transylvania, more predominantly the Székely Land. Lekvár: A very thick, sometimes coarse jam of pure ripe fruit originating in central and eastern Europe.
In Hungarian cuisine, traditional gulyás, [11] pörkölt, and paprikás are dishes which evolved from the food of the cattle herders of the Hungarian plains. In present-day Hungary, gulyás is known as a soup. It is also called gulyásleves, which translates to gulyás soup, although gulyás is understood commonly as a soup without specifying.
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.
Garlic can also be a traditional ingredient. It is also considered to be traditional food in Czech, [3] Slovak [4] and former Yugoslavian cuisine and is also very common in Poland and Austria. Most Hungarian recipes recommend the mildest variant of Hungarian wax pepper, which are in season August–October which is also when field tomatoes are ...
Túrós csusza (Hungarian: [ˈtuːroːʃt͡ʃusɒ] ⓘ) is a traditional Hungarian savoury curd cheese noodle dish made with small home-made noodles or pasta. [1]Traditionally, noodles used for this dish are home-made with flour and eggs, mixed into a dough, and torn by hand into uneven fingernail-sized pieces that are then boiled in water.
Kürtőskalács (Hungarian: [ˈkyrtøːʃkɒlaːt͡ʃ] ⓘ; sometimes improperly rendered as kurtosh kolach; Romanian: colac/cozonac secuiesc; German: Baumstriezel) is a spit cake specific to Hungarians from Transylvania (now Romania), more specifically the Székelys. [1]
Pörkölt is a Hungarian stew with boneless meat, paprika, and some vegetables. [1] It should not be confused with gulyás, a stew with more gravy or a soup (using meat with bones, paprika, caraway, vegetables and potato or different tiny dumplings or pasta simmered along with the meat), or paprikás, which uses only meat, paprika and thick heavy sour cream).