Tag: Food

Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

Fall Dinner & Dance/Ostatki at the Albany PCC

Polish Community Center of Albany cordially invites everyone for our annual Fall Dinner & Dance!

Saturday November 29th, 2008 beginning at 7pm
$30 per person
Buffet dinner & after midnight snack
Entertainment by EKSTAZA Band
For reservation & information please call:
Dariusz Figiel 518-235-6001
Marian Wiercioch 518-235-5549
Margaret Leoniuk 518-221-6406

Polski klub w Albany NY zaprasza całąÂ Polonię na zabawę!

—Ostatki—
Sobota 29 listopada 2008 — 7 wieczorem
cena biletu $30 od osoby w tym wliczony obiad i po pÏŒłnocy (czerwony barszcz z przekąskami)
Bawimy się z orkiestrą EKSTAZA!

po bilety proszę dzwonic do:
Dariusz Figiel 518-235-6001
Marian Wiercioch 518-235-5549
Małgorzta Leoniuk 518-221-6406 

Polish Community Center
225 Washington Ave Ext
Albany NY 12205
Telephone: 518-456-3995

PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia, ,

Polish Dinner and Raffle in Wilkes-Barre

Annual Polish Dinner and Raffle from 4-7 p.m. on Saturday in the parish hall of Holy Cross Polish National Catholic Church, 17 Sheridan St., Heights, Wilkes-Barre. Traditional Polish cuisine including kielbasa and pierogi will be available. A raffle for a variety of baskets and gift items will be held after the dinner. Tickets are $8 for adults and $4 for youth ages 12 years and younger. Tickets will be sold at the door.

Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

The best vodka in town

I love Vodka, and especially Polish vodka, more properly Polskie wódki. While Polish Vodka gets its shelf space in U.S. liquor stores, most shoppers still miss out on the vast variety of types and styles available. This article from the Sydney Morning Herald explores the history and variety found in the world of Polish vodka: The best vodka in town.

Here are some of the types and styles I have tried:

  • Belvedere
  • Chopin
  • Luksusowa
  • Wyborowa
  • Żubrówka (3 ways – the original, homemade using bison grass from Białowieża, and the U.S. import)
  • Extra Żytnia
  • Lanique Vodka (kosher from فańcut Distillery)
  • Królewska

I encourage you to drop a note to your local proprietor and ask that they carry a selection of Polish vodkas. Of course enjoy responsibly.

Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , , ,

Poland’s organic farms prove to be fruitful ventures

From Yahoo! Canada News: Poland’s organic farms prove to be fruitful ventures.

Eighteen years ago, Boguslaw Klimczak had a barn with 20 cows and a line of patient customers every morning: The farmer in this small town in central Poland sold his locally produced cheeses out of the trunk of his car at the local farmer’s market.

Now Mr. Klimczak drives a Nissan SUV, and his company, with 3 million zlotys ($1.2 million) in sales per year, has its own distribution network sending fresh butter, cream, yogurt, and cheeses —“ made according to traditional Polish recipes —“ to stores across Poland, and without European Union subsidies to boot.

Klimczak says he’s not planning to apply for European Union subsidies and doesn’t spend any money on marketing.

“I’d rather not complicate things by growing too big. Plus, I don’t want to take money just for the sake of taking it,” he says. “We’ve filled a niche, that’s what business is about.”

I loved shopping at these little street side markets when I was in Poland. Folks would come early in the morning, often by bus (small carbon footprint there – better that 50 cars showing up all at once) bringing farm fresh items. We would venture, still sleepy eyed, out of our hotel to buy fresh fruit, yogurt, veggies, and cheeses.

Of course I had a connection to doing that sort of thing. My Busia grew fresh veggies at home and we had the Clinton-Bailey Farmers Market nearby.

To find out more about green Poland visit the International Coalition to Protect the Polish Countryside (ICPPC) and ECOCENTRE ICPPC. Several years ago I had the opportunity to work with Sir Julian and Ms. Lopata. They are great people and their efforts deserve support. Here’s a few of their photos.

(This area is free from genetically modified organisms)
(This area is free from genetically modified organisms)
PNCC, ,

Upcoming craft sales and events

From the Reading Eagle: Craft sales kick off the holiday season:

In Berks County, PA (the Reading, PA area) including Friday, Nov. 7th, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., at St. Stephen’s Polish National Catholic Church, 20 St. Stephen’s Church Lane, Cumru Township, PA

For more information call (610) 775-4559. Stop by and say hello to Fr. Senior Edward Ratajack.

A Rummage Sale at my parish, Holy Name of Jesus National Catholic Church, PNCC, 1040 Pearl Street, Schenectady, NY on Saturday, October 18 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

We are also having a Pennsylvania Dutch Dinner on Saturday, November 8 from 4 till 7 p.m. Stop by and join us.

PNCC, ,

Parish event in Wallington, NJ

An announcement from Transfiguration Parish. I met some lovely people from Transfiguration this past Sunday while at the Holy Mass and Banquet honoring the centennial of the Polish National Union of America. If you are in the area I encourage you to attend and support the parish.

The Polish National Catholic Church of the Transfiguration, 135 Hathaway St., Wallington, NJ will hold a Chicken BBQ Dinner Saturday, Oct. 11, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Eat-in and take-out orders will be available. Tickets are $8 each; call 973-773-4090 for information. Reservation deadline is Oct. 8.

PNCC,

If this is the secret to Church success…

the PNCC will be huge!

Freebies Poll Results

Like it or not, we’ve all been to church at least once before for the free stuff. For me, it was free Chick-fil-a that started my journey of faith. So what freebie would be most likely to get you going to a church?

Holding the number one spot, ever since free fish and bread (and later, blood and body) in the first century, it’s free food. Everyone loves free food, so your church ought to be dishing it out…

Perspective, Political

Freedom to eat

From the AP: Chicago overturns ban on foie gras in restaurants

CHICAGO (AP) —” Dining on foie gras —” a delicacy made of duck and goose liver —” will soon be legal again in Chicago.

The City Council on Wednesday repealed its two-year-old ban on the gourmet dish, drawing dissent from animal rights activists who consider foie gras cruel because the birds are force-fed to make their livers bigger.

But there were no worries in chef Didier Durand’s restaurant, Cyrano’s Bistrot.

“All of us are so excited,” Durand told reporters as he held his pet duck, Nicolai, named after French President Nicolas Sarkozy. “People miss it. They used to go to the suburbs to get foie gras and stopped going to specifically French restaurants.”

Durand was one of a coalition of restaurateurs who started Chicago Chefs for Choice, a movement to overturn the ban, which went into effect in August 2006. He said Wednesday that he would begin serving foie gras again as soon as the repeal goes into effect later this month.

“You might disagree with serving foie gras, but you don’t do a ban and forbid everybody to have foie gras,” Durand said. His restaurant was one of many across the city that held foie gras dinners in the days before the ban took effect…

Amen chef, Amen! The government looses control over one more aspect of our lives. If you don’t like it, don’t eat it. Protest against it. Use your mind and your wits to convince others of your argument, but don’t put me in prison because I disagree with your perspective.

Poland - Polish - Polonia

The Polish diet works

From the Daily Princetonian: The Poland Diet: The dish on American cuisine from overseas by Isia Jasiewicz

This summer, I ate full-buffet breakfasts, three-course lunches and three-course dinners every day for a month: huge slabs of pork, piles of potatoes, creamy vegetable soups, meat-filled dumplings, cheese-filled crepes, bread loaded with butter, heavy cakes, sweet tarts. Nothing was off-limits, and I didn’t make a single trip to the gym. But somehow, I lost weight. How did I do it? The simple answer: I was in Poland.

I can see why you might not believe me. But it’s true. I go to Poland every summer. Every summer, my grandfather force-feeds me homemade cakes. And every summer I come home slimmer. True, I do more walking in Poland than I do here, and living in a Warsaw apartment with no air conditioning makes it easy to break a sweat. There’s also the fact that in Poland the bigger meal traditionally takes place in the middle of the day rather than in the evening, giving you more time to burn it off before you go to bed. But the most important reason I can come up with for the success of the “Poland diet” is surprisingly straightforward: The food is just more natural there than it is here.

We’ve all seen the exposes on the American mass-production of meat, so you probably know that American cows and pigs raised for slaughter are fed growth hormones and antibiotics. Fruits and vegetables, meanwhile, are sprayed with all sorts of chemicals to make them look perfect. And then there’s genetic modification. Did you know that fish DNA is sometimes added to tomatoes to make them last longer?

Now, I’m about as far away from being a biochemist as a fish is from being a cucumber, but common sense tells me that human beings are designed to eat what’s available to them naturally. Digesting artificial hormones, insecticide residue and bizarre genetic creations simply cannot be right.

In Poland, you’d be seriously hard-pressed to find an organic vendor or a health-food store anywhere. There’s no need for them. Lining the streets of Warsaw are hundreds of tiny produce stands, bathed in fruity scents, with handwritten cardboard price signs out front. Sometimes my parents and I buy a box of raspberries, and we have to be careful as we grab each berry to make sure there aren’t any bugs in it before we eat it. The extra step is worth it, though. The lack of insecticides can’t keep the fruit flies away, but it does preserve that juicy, tangy taste.

The grocery stores in Poland sell huge slabs of fresh meat, and, of course, an endless variety of kielbasa, and you can rest assured that those sausages are coming from delicious Polish pigs that have been raised on small farms eating scraps of grain and potatoes. Even at the cafeteria of the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, where I ate every bit of the multi-course meals included in my meal plan this summer, the sweet cream that topped the potato pancakes came from real Polish milk from real Polish cows. My parents say that the food used to be even better; Westernization and globalization have made some farms in Poland turn to America’s mass-production methods. Fortunately, though, a lot of the food in Poland is still made the traditional way, and it’s a good thing, because the same factors that make it delicious also make it healthy.

I can attest first hand that it works. In my first two trips to Poland I lost about 45lbs. I attribute it to different eating habits, most especially the eating schedule, walking and using public transportation, and that the food was natural and fresh each day.

No one I knew had huge refrigerators, just small ones to hold a few things. Everything else was purchased fresh daily.

Poland - Polish - Polonia

In case you’re hungry

From Adam Marianski The author has co-authored two books on meat smoking and making sausages. He runs the web site Wedliny Domowe where you can find more information about making quality meats at home. via PG-GB (Bulgaria): The Mystery of Polish Sausage – What is Kielbasa?

Without a doubt the word Kielbasa has worldwide recognition, yet it is also often misunderstood. Kielbasa is the general Polish name for sausage. You cannot walk into a Polish store and say: please give me a pound of kielbasa. The sales lady, surrounded by 50 different kinds of kielbasa, will inevitably reply: yes, but which one? There are well over 100 types of kielbasa, and the word itself is meaningless unless followed up with the proper name: Kielbasa Rzeszowska, Kielbasa Krakowska, Kielbasa Tuchowska, Kielbasa Mysliwska, etc. It is like going into a deli and asking for some cheese. Sure, but which one: American, Provolone, Swiss, Gorgonzola, Gouda, Muenster – you have to provide some details. There is no specific sausage called kielbasa but there are many sausages that carry the word kielbasa as part of the name.

We know of only one sausage that carries the word “Polish” in its name and that is the Polish Smoked Sausage (Polska Kielbasa Wedzona). This is probably what the first immigrants brought with them to America. The problem we face here is that you can find Polish Smoked Sausage in almost every supermarket in the US, and no two are made the same way. Yet Polish Smoked Sausage as been well defined for centuries and everybody in Poland knows what goes inside. We do not intend to become judges in this matter, but instead rely on Polish Government Standards for Polish Smoked Sausage. These rules have remained unchanged for the last 60 years.

Before we anger many people who have been making Polish Smoked Sausage in their own way for years, let’s clarify something further. It’s perfectly fine to add an ingredient that you or your children like into your sausage. You still have the full right to say that you made a better sausage than the famous Polish Smoked Sausage. You may say that your grandfather who came from Poland made the best Polish sausage in the world and we honor that. Maybe he used chicken stock instead of water or maybe he added something else. What we are trying to say is that he was making his own version of the known classic or some other Polish sausage and it could have tasted better for you and your family. We do not dispute that fact. You can of course add anything you like to your sausage, but it will no longer be the original Polish Smoked Sausage (Polska Kielbasa Wedzona) or any other brand named sausage. Once you start changing ingredients, you create your own recipe and you may as well come up with your own name.

  1. For centuries Polish Smoked Sausage was made of pork, salt, pepper, garlic and marjoram (optional). Then in 1964 the Polish Government introduced a second version of the sausage that was made of 80% pork and 20% beef. All other ingredients: salt, pepper, sugar, garlic, and marjoram remain the same in both recipes. The marjoram is optional but the garlic is a must.
  2. The meat is cured before it is mixed with spices. In the US Cure #1 (sodium nitrite plus salt) is used, in Europe Peklosol (sodium nitrite plus salt) is common.
  3. The sausage is stuffed into a large hog casing: 36 – 38 mm and formed into 12″ (35 cm) links.
  4. The traditional way was to cold smoke it for 1 to 1.5 days (it had to last for long time).
  5. In most cases it is hot smoked today

A little test was performed to see how large American manufacturers make Polish Sausage. Four sausages called Polish Kielbasa or Polish Sausage were bought at the local supermarket in Florida and each of them was produced by a large and well known meat plant. The number of ingredients and chemicals used varied from 10 to 20 and different combinations of meats were used: pork-beef-turkey, beef only, pork-beef. Except the name, none of the sausages had anything to do with the original.

It seems that for the manufacturers any sausage that is smoked (or have liquid smoke added) and stuffed into a 36 mm one foot long casing can be called Polish Smoked Sausage or Polish Kielbasa. It becomes quite clear that manufacturers put any ingredients they like inside of the casing and the name Polish Kielbasa is used just for credibility and to gain the trust of the consumer.

The problem is further magnified by various sites on the Internet that provide countless recipes for making Polish sausages. Yet the mysterious Polish Smoked Sausage is embarrassingly simple to make and all it needs is pork, salt, pepper and garlic.