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In Silesia, a type of sour rye soup known as żur śląski is served in a bowl, poured over mashed potatoes. In the Podlasie region and also elsewhere in Poland, it is common to eat żurek with halved hard-boiled eggs. In Polish Subcarpathia, there is a traditional variety made of fermented oatmeal (Polish: żur owsiany or kisełycia).
In Polish cuisine, white borscht (barszcz biały, also known as żur or żurek, 'sour soup' [g]) is made from a fermented mixture of rye flour or oatmeal and water. It is typically flavored with garlic and marjoram, and served over eggs and boiled fresh sausage; the water in which the sausage was boiled is often used instead of meat stock.
Żurek, a sour rye soup with biała kiełbasa and egg Dried apples, pears and plums – a traditional product of Poland, used, for example, to prepare Christmas compote. Zupa pomidorowa – Thin tomato soup made with tomato purée, root vegetables, and stock, usually served with pasta or rice; sour cream is often added.
Barszcz biały – sour rye and pork broth with cubed boiled pork, kielbasa, ham, hard boiled egg, and dried breads (rye, pumpernickel) Chłodnik – cold soup made of soured milk, young beet leaves, beets, cucumbers and chopped fresh dill; Czernina – duck blood soup
Main ingredients of the soup is bread sourdough, water, sausages and onion slices. Also added are wheat flour, sour cream and potatoes. [3] The potatoes are peeled, cut into small cubes, then put into water and boiled. Sliced sausages and chopped onion are fried on the pan. When the potatoes are almost boiled, sausage and bread sourdough are added.
Sour cherry soup: Hungary: Cold (chilled) Hungarian: meggyleves. Sour cherries, sour cream: Sour rye soup, white borscht, żur: Poland, Belarus: Made of soured rye flour (akin to sourdough) and meat (usually boiled pork sausage or pieces of smoked sausage, bacon or ham) Sour soup (fish soup) Vietnam: Fish Rice, fish, various vegetables, and in ...
Sorrel soup; Solyanka, thick, spicy and sour soup in the Russian and Ukrainian cuisine; Okroshka, cold Russian soup traditionally made with kvass; Sour rye soup, known as żur in Belarus and Poland, or kyselo in Slovakia and the Czech Republic. Jota (Slovenian cuisine) Styrian sour soup (Slovenian cuisine) Vipava sour soup (Slovenian cuisine)
It is used in soups such as żurek (sour rye soup), kapuśniak (cabbage soup), or grochówka (pea soup), baked or cooked with sauerkraut, or added to bean dishes and stews (notably bigos, a Polish national dish). Kiełbasa is also very popular served as a cold cut on a platter, usually for an appetizer at traditional Polish parties.