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Polish culinary dislikes


Czyryca 1 | 48
28 Jan 2010 #61
No reservations is hands down the best food related tv out there

I like Good Eats with Alton Brown and Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmerman. I like No Reservations but Bourdain is too much of a cynic for me. Dont like his "tude"
Myszolow 3 | 157
28 Jan 2010 #62
Your wastefulness was fixed. Two words with the same meaning, pfft!

Not really. We use the word grill to mean what I believe in the US is known as a broiler.
It's like a kind of oven that radiates heat from one side only. Most domestic ovens in the uk have one built in.

American barbecue sounds very nice too.
Cardno85 31 | 976
28 Jan 2010 #63
Dont like his "tude"

That's what it's all about. I love the fact that he's an offal chap like myself!

I have watched every episode of No Reservations and A Cooks Tour...love it to bits! Kitchen Confidential is a great read too!
Czyryca 1 | 48
28 Jan 2010 #64
I know i know, he just rubs me the wrong way sometimes. Like he is constantly unhappy with where he just was, and is only happy with where he is a present.

I love cooking, trying to make duck confit with an orange marmalade glaze this weekend...Mmm duck is sooo tasty. Oyster stuffing to go with that, saw it on Good Eats.
Emerson 1 | 7
28 Jan 2010 #65
The best bbq is over a camp fire.

BBQ in Canada can be on a gas grill, charcoal, or wood.

Is there plenty of sushi in Poland?
convex 20 | 3,930
28 Jan 2010 #66
he's an offal chap like myself

amen, gotta love the tasty bits...he's a bit dickish every once in a while, but usually delivers.
Czyryca 1 | 48
28 Jan 2010 #67
Is there plenty of sushi in Poland?

I love sushi, never had it in the Great White North though...I'm banned from Quebec haha.
polkamaniac 1 | 482
3 Feb 2010 #68
Try some bull testicles. Also called Prairie Oysters in Canada (Alberta). It is called "criadillas" in Spain but has different names in other Latin countries. The criadillas are the testicles of the pig. They are sliced first and then cooked with garlic and parsley, better if they are barbecued. If you don't know what you are eating, the taste is intense but in a nice and pleasant way.
f stop 25 | 2,507
3 Feb 2010 #69
Then there is one Polish dish that I cannot get my American friends to buy into - sledziki - herring with onion in oil. You sweat the onions with bit a of vinegar first. Mmmm. Polish sushi, I tell them!

And I'm crazy about the stuff. Around here, the only herring I can get is the one in wine sauce or sour cream. Both disgustingly sweet.
z_darius 14 | 3,965
3 Feb 2010 #70
[quote=Polonius3]- Marmite
- whiskey
Depends on the brand.
If there is no Crown Royal in the house I'll have tea,

- peanut butter
Popular among Poles here

- marshmallows <--- wrong, this has been actually popular in Poland for decades in the form of Ptasie Mleczko

- instant mashed potatoes
wasn't that supposed to be about culinary dislikes, as in food? Real food, that is.

- Mexican food in general <--- very good, I know few Poles who dislike it
- apple pie & cheddar chese
together or separate?

- Anything spicy
hence black pepper and horse radish are.. wait! Poles us those a lot.
Isn't paprykarz popular in Poland anymore?
What about tatar? How can you eat it without hot spices?

- Lamb poles hate Lamb.
It's called baranina. Mostly consumed in the mountain regions of Poland.
f stop 25 | 2,507
3 Feb 2010 #71
Oh no! You cannot compare the delicate, with a touch of lemon, taste of ptasie mleczko to the marshmallow sugar bomb! I protest!
z_darius 14 | 3,965
3 Feb 2010 #72
Ptasie Mleczko is still marshmallows. Only better.
beckski 12 | 1,617
3 Feb 2010 #73
Lamb poles hate Lamb.

I tasted lamb once & nearly gagged. The smell & taste were disgusting enough, to keep me away from the nasty meat for life.
jonni 16 | 2,482
3 Feb 2010 #74
- Lamb poles hate Lamb.
It's called baranina.

It's called jągnięcina actually. Baranina is mutton, rarely eaten in Western Europe these days.

Whenever I cook lamb for Poles, they eat the lot with gusto and ask when I'm going to cook it again.
Cardno85 31 | 976
3 Feb 2010 #75
Baranina is mutton, rarely eaten in Western Europe these days.

Which is a shame, I think mutton is marvellous. Sure it takes a bit more effort cooking it to ensure it's not too tough, but the flavour you get from it is incredible!
z_darius 14 | 3,965
3 Feb 2010 #76
It's called jągnięcina actually. Baranina is mutton, rarely eaten in Western Europe these days.

No, it's called baranina after all.
pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jagni%C4%99cina
Jagnięcina is still baranina.
jonni 16 | 2,482
3 Feb 2010 #77
z_darius

Dariusz, lamb is jagnięcina, mutton is baranina. Go check on the menu in a good restaurant.

By the applying the same arguentative 'logic', cielęcina would be wołowina.
Czyryca 1 | 48
3 Feb 2010 #78
Also called Prairie Oysters in Canada (Alberta)

Rocky Mountain Oysters in Colorado
polkamaniac 1 | 482
3 Feb 2010 #79
Calf's headis is a delicacy in France. A British relative living in France raved about it so I ordered it in a restaurant. I was green until the waiter took it away. Basically, the fleshy bits of a calf's head, cooked for a long time and cut into squares, each consisting of a few strings of slimy meat and a 1cm thick layer of fat/gelatinous glop. The brain is served in the corner of the plate.yum-yum!!!!
pawian 223 | 24,389
17 Aug 2019 #80
These are some of the things I have found most Poles do not fancy when they first try them.

Of course, it is a very individual matter.

I agree with the following in your list that I have tried:

- licorice
- whiskey
- marshmallows
- mint sauce (to accompany mutton)

No to the following which I always found pleasant or even fascinating to my taste buds.
- maple syrup
- peanut butter
- snails
- frog legs
- squid
- mutton
- Mexican food in general
Chemikiem
21 Aug 2019 #81
I am surprised! In my experience so far, Poles are not particularly fond of spicy or strong tasting food. None of my friends share my passion for Indian or Mexican meals.

Strong tasting cheese is another no-no. I've never forgotten the look on one friend's face when I got her to try extra-mature cheddar. She had to spit it out. Forget cheeses such as Stilton. Maybe it's because Polish cheese is very bland by comparison.
jon357 74 | 22,054
21 Aug 2019 #82
Forget cheeses such as Stilton

I have a few friends here who always ask me to bring some back to PL.

The shops here in Warsaw seem to have more and more strong cheeses and also things with chilli in.
pawian 223 | 24,389
21 Aug 2019 #83
Poles are not particularly fond of spicy or strong tasting food

I need spicy food to arouse my stomach to produce more gastric acids. Without them, I can go on without eating for a day and I am not hungry. :):)

E.g, I have eaten raw garlic to suppers since I was a teenager - always a few cloves. I even eat it with cakes.

Forget cheeses such as Stilton. Maybe it's because Polish cheese is very bland by comparison

I never tried Stilton but as I love blue cheeses which have strong smell and taste, especially old ones, I think Stilton would be quite mild to me. :)


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