Ping: Parb Pierogi question 1651


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In message Mr Libido Incognito

I suppose that it sounds strange but I'd never even heard of P*******s until I came across them in this group. See I can't even write the word, for I see here different spellings and don't know which to use. I'm still not much the wiser except that I came across them once up in just one of my hundreds of cookery books.

It's not unusual that location and tradition moulds our tastes. However, unless we visit a foreign country and try its foods; or are lucky enough to find an ethnic restaurant which serves a selection of its country of origins foods, we never have the chance to try them. I have never seen, let alone entered a Russian, Polish, Swedish, Danish, etc, etc east european restaurant so have no idea what they serve.

The odd thing is that I have entered and eaten in Italian, French, Dutch (but recently). Many visits to Indian, Pakistani, Chinese and Thai but so few from my own European continent!! I can't bear the thought of eating raw fish from a Japanese one, so I've missed out on one Asian influence ;-)

Ping: Parb Pierogi question 1652
Not pirohies. Pirohy IS plural. Please get it right. Not many similarities between English and Slovak food that I've seen. The Slovak food is flavorful. "-) Many cultures have similar foods -- most, I...

Don

 


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Ping: Parb Pierogi question 1652 | 9" parchment circles... 1650