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Romanian Cuisine Information

The Romanian cuisine is a diverse blend of different dishes from several traditions with which it has come into contact, but it also maintains its own character. It has been greatly influenced by Ottoman cuisine while it also includes influences from the cuisines of other neighbours, such as Germans, Serbians, and Hungarians.

Quite different types of dishes are sometimes included under a generic term; for example, the category ciorbă includes a wide range of soups with a characteristic sour taste. These may be meat and vegetable soups, tripe and calf foot soups (shkembe chorba or iskembe), or fish soups, all of which are soured by lemon juice, sauerkraut juice, vinegar, or traditionally borş (fermented wheat bran). The category ţuică (plum brandy) is a generic name for a strong alcoholic spirit in Romania, while in other countries, every flavour has a different name.

Contents

Description

"I had for breakfast more paprika, and a sort of porridge of maize flour which they said was "mamaliga", and egg-plant stuffed with forcemeat, a very excellent dish, which they call "impletata"." - Bram Stoker, Dracula, Chapter 1
A plate of sărmăluţe cu mămăligă, a popular Romanian dish of stuffed cabbage rolls (sarmale) accompanied by sauerkraut and mamaliga. The cabbage rolls are usually garnished with sour cream, not lemon and olive.

Romanian recipes bear the same influences as the rest of Romanian culture. The Turks have brought meatballs (perişoare in a meatball soup), from the Greeks there is musaca, from the Bulgarians there are a wide variety of vegetable dishes like ghiveci and zacuscă, from the Austrians there is the şniţel and the list could continue.

One of the most common dishes is mămăliga, a cornmeal mush served on its own or as an accompaniment. Pork is the preferred meat, but beef, lamb, and fish are also popular.

Before Christmas, on December 20 (Ignat's Day or Ignatul in Romanian),[1] a pig is traditionally slaughtered by every rural family.[2] A variety of foods for Christmas prepared from the slaughtered pig consist of the following:

The Christmas meal is sweetened with the traditional cozonac (sweet bread with nuts) or rahat (Turkish delight) for dessert.

At Easter, lamb is served: the main dishes are roast lamb and drob de miel – a Romanian lamb haggis made of minced organs (heart, liver, lungs) wrapped and roasted in a caul.[3][4] The traditional Easter cake is pască, a pie made of yeast dough with a sweet cottage cheese filling at the center.[5][6]

Romanian pancakes, called clătită, are thin (like French crêpes) and can be prepared with savory or sweet fillings: ground meat, white cheese, or jam. Different recipes are prepared depending on the season or the occasion.[7]

Wine is the preferred drink, and Romanian wines have a tradition of over three millennia.[7] Romania is currently the world's 9th largest wine producer, and recently the export market has started to grow.[7] Romania produces a wide selection of domestic varieties (Fetească, Grasă, Tamâioasă , Busuioacă), as well as varieties from across the world (Italian Riesling, Merlot, Sauvignon blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Muscat Ottonel). Beer is also highly regarded, generally blonde pilsener beer, made with German influences. There are also Romanian breweries with a long tradition.

Romania is the world's second largest plum producer (after the United States)[8] and as much as 75% of Romania's plum production is processed into the famous ţuică, a plum brandy obtained through one or more distillation steps.[9]

List of dishes

Soups

Meat

Mititei, mustard and bread Frigărui

Fish

Romanian roe salad decorated with black olives

Vegetables

Pies

List of salads

List of cheese types

The generic name for cheese in Romania is brânză and it is considered to be of Dacian origin. Most of the cheeses are made of cow's or sheep's milk, goat's milk is rarely used. Sheep cheese is considered "the real cheese", although in modern times some people refrain from consuming it due to its higher fat content and specific smell.

List of desserts

Baklava is prepared on large trays and cut into a variety of shapes. Amandine.

List of drinks

Bottle of ţuică purchased in Timişoara, Romania.

Aphorisms

An existential Romanian question is: Do we eat to live, or live to eat? A great number of proverbs and sayings have developed around the activity of eating. They range from the innocent child's saying of thanks:

Thank you for the meal
it was good and tasty
and the cook lady was beautiful[16]

to the more philosophical:

Thank you Lord
for I have eaten and I am hungry again[17]

and

Love passes through the stomach[18]

or the simple:

Appetite comes while eating[19]

or the sarcastic:

The pig eats anything, but it gets fat for others[20]

or a total fulfillment saying:

Ate well, drank well, in the morning woke up dead[21]

Mămăligă has long been considered the poor man's dish:

He doesn't even have a mămăliga on the table[22]

Pork is the preferred meat in Romanian cuisine:

The best fish will always be the pork[23], or
The best vegetable is chicken meat and the best chicken meat is pork[24]

Personalities

Notes and references

  1. ^ Ignatul or Ignat's Day (December 20)
  2. ^ Christmas customs in Romania: "pig's ritual sacrifice"
  3. ^ Making lamb drob
  4. ^ Traditional recipe for drob de miel, with step-by-step photos
  5. ^ A photo of pasca
  6. ^ Pasca recipe
  7. ^ a b c Educations.com/Study in Romania
  8. ^ Romania second to USA in world plum production, 2007 plum production data on FAOSTAT
  9. ^ Ţuica production consumed 75% of Romanian plums in 2003
  10. ^ Ghiveci: Romanian vegetable stew
  11. ^ Recipe for ghiveci
  12. ^ Covrigi on display
  13. ^ Varieties of gogoşi: photos and recipes (Romanian)
  14. ^ Recipe for savarina
  15. ^ Mucenici: background and recipe
  16. ^ Romanian: Sărut mâna pentru masă, / c-a fost bună şi gustoasă, / şi bucătăreasa frumoasă
  17. ^ Romanian: Mulţumescu-ţi ţie Doamne / c-am mâncat şi iar mi-e foame
  18. ^ Romanian: Dragostea trece prin stomac
  19. ^ Romanian: Pofta vine mâncănd
  20. ^ Romanian: Porcul mănâncă orice, dar se-ngraşă pentru alţii
  21. ^ Romanian: Mâncat bine, băut bine, dimineaţa sculat mort
  22. ^ Romanian: N-are nici o mămăligă pe masă
  23. ^ Romanian: Peştele cel mai bun, tot porcul rămâne
  24. ^ Romanian: Cea mai bună legumă e carnea de pui şi cea mai buna carne de pui e carnea de porc

Piftie de curcan www.cookery-online.com - Balcanic and Romanian recipes.

Other sources

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Thu Jul 7 18:55:29 2011