What is your country's national or traditional dish?
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Traditional Romanian Meatball Soup
60 Minutes to Prepare and Cook
Ingredients
1 onion, large
3-4 carrots
1 celery root (substitute 1-2 celery stalks)
2-3 parsley roots
1 lb. pork
2 T. vegeta (or vegetable bouillon)
2 1/4 lb ground meat (pork, beef, or both)
2-3 eggs
6 L. water
2 egg yolks
1 T. vinegar OR ½ t. lemon juice
1 c. sour cream
2 T. flour
salt
pepper
parsley
oil for fryingDirections
Chop onions and fry in oil. Grate carrots, celery root, and parsley roots. Add to onions in oil and fry. Cut pork into 2-3 centimeter cubes and add to roots. Season with vegeta (or vegetable bouillon). Pour water over the roots and boil until meat is tender.
Meanwhile, mix ground meat with 2-3 eggs. Add flour, as well as salt and pepper to taste. Roll meat mixture into tablespoon sized balls.
Once the pork is tender, add meatballs to the soup. Simmer until the meatballs rise (this means they are done). To turn the soup sour, add vinegar OR lemon juice (adjusting to taste). In a separate bowl, mix 2 egg yolks with the sour cream. Remove the soup from the flame and add the egg/sour cream mixture. Do not boil the soup after this or it will curdle. Season with fresh chopped parsley.
Number of Servings: 12Sarmale
(Stuffed Cabbage Leaves)Origin: Romania Period: Traditional
Recipe
Ingredients2 large cabbage
1 small cabbage, finely shredded
5 slices of bacon, finely diced
115g salt pork (smoked is best), but into 5cm slices
2 large onions, finely chopped
2 tbsp paprika
1 garlic clove, crushed
salt and freshly-ground black pepper, to taste
120ml water
900g sauerkraut, drained of juice (but reserve this)
2 tbsp caraway seeds, lightly crushedFor the Filling:
450g minced pork
450g minced beef
2 eggs
75g uncooked rice
120ml iced water
1 garlic clove, crushed
3 tbsp onions mix (reserved from cooking the sauerkraut)
120ml of the reserved sauerkraut liquid
salt and freshly-ground black pepper, to taste
360ml sour creamSarmale
(Stuffed Cabbage Leaves) Preparation:Method:
Remove and discard any wilted outer leaves from the large cabbages. Carefully core them both then place in a deep bowl and pour plenty of boiling water over the top. Set aside to soak as you prepare the filling.
Combine the bacon and salt pork in a pan. Heat gently then stir-in the onions and fry for about 10 minutes, or until the onions turn golden brown. Remove 3 tbsp of the mixture and add to the filling (instructions below) now stir in the paprika to the remaining onions mix and stir thoroughly to combine. Add the garlic then season with salt and black pepper before stirring-in the water. Cover with a tight-fitting lid and simmer for 15 minutes before adding the sauerkraut and caraway seeds. Cover the pot again and allow the mixture to simmer as you prepare the main filling.
For the Filling:
Combine the ground pork and beef in a bowl, add the 3 tbsp onion mix from above then stir in all the remaining ingredients except the sour cream. Mix thoroughly with your hands, until the mixture is completely blended and smooth.
Now remove the cabbages from the hot water and carefully remove all the leaves one by one (be careful not to tear them). Cut off the thick base of each leaf and level out (you need about 15 of the larger, outer, leaves. Place about 2 tbsp of the filling mix on each leaf. Tuck in the end then fold the sides over before carefully and tightly rolling the leaf up. Sit the rolled leaf on top of the sauerkraut mix, pushing them gently into the mixture. Continue the process until all the leaves have been filled. Cover with the shredded cabbage and add just enough water to cover. Adjust the seasonings to taste then cover and simmer gently for 2 hours.
Transfer to a serving plate, garnish with the sour cream and serve
Mititei (grilled cooked flavored beef sausages)
Ingredients
* 5 Cloves garlic, peeled * 1/4 c Water * 1 lb Ground chuck * 2/3 lb Coarsely ground pork * 1 ts Baking soda * 1 1/2 ts Salt * 1 ts Black pepper * 1/2 ts Dried thyme, whole * 1/2 ts Dried basil * 1/2 c Beef stock
Instructions
Crush the garlic well in the water, using a fork. Stir the meat, baking soda, seasonings, and garlic puree together. Add Beef Stock and mix well. For each sausage, take 1/3 cup of the meat mixture, and roll between the palms of your hands into a sausage shape about 4 inches long. Place sausages side by side in a container and cover. Refrigerate overnight so that the flavors can blend. These are excellent on the grill. They may also be broiled or baked in the oven. Broil the sausages about 3 minutes per side until cooked through and browned.. HINT: When hand rolling sausages or meatballs of any kind, keep a small bowl of water near you so that you can keep your hands a bit wet. This way the meat will not stick to your hands.
Among the wines, Romania offers excellent wines, both white and red, particularly those regions of Murfatlar, Jidvei, Dealul Mare and Tirnave.
Cheers!
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Guys,
I'm not too sure what the national dish is here in Ireland but the Net tells me its Irish Stew!
Mike
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@mike lucey said:
Guys,
I'm not too sure what the national dish is here in Ireland but the Net tells me its Irish Stew!
Mike
Do you ever eat it, or only we tourists?
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@al hart said:
Do you ever eat it, or only we tourists?
Hah... That's classical though.
For a "traditional Hungarian dish" one would say "goulash" which is (for tourists) made totally differently than what we understand as a goulash.
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I love Goulash! The proper kind
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The soup?
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Being Scots, I think most folks here already know what our national dish is.... and a recipe would only suffice to put others off. Made badly it tastes like dog food, but made well I'd trade the finest fillet steak for a spoonful of this "warm, reeking rich" delicacy any day!
Nevertheless, here's a photo- exactly as it we serve it at a traditional Scots Burns Supper, cut open with a "sgian dubh"- a small knife traditionally (and hygenically) kept in the top of your right sock!
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Some would say in the UK it's Chicken Tikka Masala .....
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@petercharles said:
Some would say in the UK it's Chicken Tikka Masala .....
Someone else mentioned this.
Any of you from the UK - Did your grandmother serve you Chicken Tikka Masala?
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@jackson said:
Being Scots, I think most folks here already know what our national dish is.... and a recipe would only suffice to put others off. Made badly it tastes like dog food, but made well I'd trade the finest fillet steak for a spoonful of this "warm, reeking rich" delicacy any day!
Nevertheless, here's a photo- exactly as it we serve it at a traditional Scots Burns Supper, cut open with a "sgian dubh"- a small knife traditionally (and hygenically) kept in the top of your right sock!
[attachment=0:223s3zdn]<!-- ia0 -->haggis.JPG<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:223s3zdn]I had some of this in Edinburgh a few years ao and it was pretty good. But I don't think I have the nerver to 1: Try to make it. 2;) Try to serve it here in Colorado. (Although as a small part of an appetizer plate with other Scottish dishes it might work.)
While in Edinburgh I ate twice at the Peacock for the Fish and Chips. It was great!
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LOL, that's amazing- Edinburgh is my hometown and the Peacock Inn is one of my family's favourite eateries entirely on the basis of their fish and chips! You chose well!
Re: haggis, even in Scotland almost nobody makes it themselves- Macsween's Butchers are pretty much unanimously acknowledged as having perfected the somewhat gruesome recipe many decades ago and the vast majority of haggis fans are now happy to leave the actual preparation to them. http://www.macsween.co.uk/
Unfortunately for many Scots-descended Americans it's currently illegal to import haggis to the States, but then maybe many American diners are glad of this! LOL
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@jackson said:
LOL, that's amazing- Edinburgh is my hometown and the Peacock Inn is one of my family's favourite eateries entirely on the basis of their fish and chips! You chose well!
Yes - I had lunch there while my wife was off on the tour bus to Glasgow. It was so great that I took her to dinner there the same night.
I loved Scotland, and although you probably won't appreciate it, I loved the accent as well. (What accent? )
I took the city tour bus three times because the people giving the narration were so friendly, and so fun. And the third time around we got to see Queen Elizabeth and Price Phillip entering a house - (with much less security then we Americans would have thought possible - even prior to 9/11) - from the top of the bus.
Can't wait to get back.
(I see from the Photo that this visit was in 2000) -
@al hart said:
Do you ever eat it, or only we tourists?
Yep, and love it especially on cold wet winter evenings
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@mike lucey said:
Guys,
I'm not too sure what the national dish is here in Ireland but the Net tells me its Irish Stew!
Mike
I wish I was Irish, Mike; I love Irish Stew!!!!!
Australia - T-bone steak and veg [not the 'shrimp on the bbq you thought....]
Or maybe bucket of banana prawns, slice of lemon and a cold beer.
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Another South African dish, and my favorite.
Peri-Peri Chicken
500 grams chicken tenderloins
seasoned flour
1/4 cup olive oil
3 cloves crushed garlic
3 tablespoons fresh chopped coriander leaves or parsley
2 teaspoons chicken stock powder
1/2 red chile -- sliced
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1 kilogram baby potatoes -- parboil and quarter
Peri-Peri basting sauceSprinkle the chicken with the seasoned flour. Mix together the oil, garlic, coriander or parsley, dry chicken-stock powder, chili and lemon juice to make a paste. Toss the chicken into the mixture to coat. Stir fry in a hot frying pan in the olive oil for 5-8 minutes until the chicken is just cooked. Add the potatoes and peri-peri sauce and warm through. Serve with extra peri-peri sauce, Portuguese rolls and fresh sambal salads, e.g. chopped onion, cubed avocado, diced cucumber, cubed tomato, cubed pineapple etc.
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I local friend advised a Harry Potter theme. I suggested that most of the foods mentioned in Harry Potter might only appeal to a younger crowd.
@unknownuser said:
I think you might underestimate the number of Harry Potter fans among people (in particular women) who might also be in the range of people who might regularly dine at Sansone's. You may even know a couple of them fairly well.
I didn't mean that there weren't any older fans, just that the older fans might not like the same foods as the characters in the book:
The ones which best qualify as traditional foods are: shepherd's pie, Cornish Pastries, steak and kidney pudding, Yorkshire pudding, and spotted dick (which we remember so well from the Aubrey / Maturin series). Still these could work well as a combination English / Harry Potter theme.
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@utiler said:
Or maybe bucket of banana prawns, slice of lemon and a cold beer.
Isn't that the same as "Shrimp on the Barbie?"
I was surprised when Outback Steak House first opened that their idea of Australian dishes was:
Kookaburra Wings
Aussie Cheese Fries
Walkabout Soup of the Day
Alice Springs Chicken, etc.I was surprised that they couldn't adopt anything which sounded like an authentic Australian food.
For instance, our Rodizio Grill (Brazilian) offered things like Quail Eggs which we don't usually see at other restaurants.
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@solo said:
Another South African dish, and my favorite.
Peri-Peri Chicken
Thanks Solo - we made Peri-Peri Shrimp last year - so I still have a tin of Peri-Peri powder left over. (I was doing a similar apprenticeship for appetizers).
What do you serve it with?
[edit: I guess I could have read the end of the recipe ]Is Peri-Peri a South African term, or an island nearby?
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