Tag: Food

Everything Else,

Coffee, Kawa, Café

On the heels of recent news regarding the health benefits of coffee Erin Kennedy writes an Ode to Coffee:

As I was sipping my piping hot, freshly ground Starbucks House Blend, I thought, —ahhhh—. I’m not sure what it is about coffee, but I love it. Caffeinated or not, I love coffee. The smell, the taste, the culture. I need it, have to have it, would hate to live without it.

I am from a family of huge coffee drinkers. My parents always had a pot of it going. I loved the smell, but hated the taste of it (they drank it black). When I was 19, my boyfriend at the time drank it and, wanting to impress him of course, I started as well. My love affair with coffee continued long after college and long after the boyfriend. What a wonderful courtship it has been…

Thanks to Sharad Verma for the link to the article.

Whether you call it coffee, kawa, café, caffè, kaffee, coffi, кофе, káva, koffie, kahvi, kávé, kahve, or кава enjoy.

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Videos from CNN’s Autumn of Change: Poland

Lights, camera … Poland
CNN’s Fred Pleitgen visits a Polish film school that has produced some of the world’s greatest filmmakers.

Polish economy going strong
CNN’s Frederik Pleitgen on the state of the Polish economy, which is faring much better than its neighbors.

Polish cuisine comeback
After the collapse of communism, Polish people also opted for fast food restaurants, but they are going back to their roots.

Birthplace of Solidarity
CNN’s Fred Pleitgen visits the town where Poland’s uprising against communism began.

Poland’s free media
Poland’s media has flourished since the fall of communism. CNN’s Fionnuala Sweeney reports.

Catholic Poland
Fred Pleitgen reports on the power and influence of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland.

PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia,

Lenten fish fries and other culinary delights

In the Albany, New York area check out the Polish Community Center, 225 Washington Ave Ext, Albany NY 12205 (call 518-456-3995) every Friday between February 27th and April 10th, 4-8pm for a tremendous fish fry. My family and I went last week. I literally felt like the Apostles had just dumped their nets full of fish on the table. The fish was tasty, with great fixins’ and a side of homemade sauerkraut salad. The service was personal and exceptional. They have Polish beers too — you can’t go wrong…

fishfry

From the Cleveland Plain Dealer: Lent is here and that means it’s fish-fry season: Your local guide

St. Mary’s Polish National Catholic Church — 5375 Broadview Road, Parma, Ohio. 216-741-8154. 4-7 p.m. Fridays, March 13 through March 27. $8. Includes pierogi, slaw or applesauce, fries, bread and butter, coffee and dessert.

As BigSister28 noted in the comments section to the article: “St. Mary’s Polish National Catholic Church on Broadview Road has, without a doubt, the best pierogies. And the best homemade cupcakes for dessert.

…and from the Standard-Speaker: Hometown happenings

A potato cake and soup sale will be held at Ss. Peter and Paul PNCC, Adams Street, McAdoo, Pennsylvania on every Friday during lent and the soups available include pasta fagoli, tomato, potato mushroom, vegetarian vegetable, macaroni and cheese and haluski. Advanced orders are appreciated, but walk-ins are welcome. For more information call 570-929-1250 or 570-929-1558.

Smacznego! Bon Appétit!

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“This Polish restaurant is a keeper”

From Albany’s alternative newspaper, Metroland, a review of Muza’s Polish restaurant and deli in Troy, New York: Satisfaction in Polish

Jan Siemiginowski has big plans for his restaurant. Muza has been open for a year and a half at the corner of 15th and Congress streets in Troy, building up a devoted following for its low-priced and very tasty Polish food.

It’s family run—”Siemiginowski’s mother, Genowefa, runs the floor, while his wife, Alicja, is in the kitchen—”and a sense of family informs the place, welcoming first-time visitors as if they’ve been showing up all their lives. So why shouldn’t they come more often and hang out longer?

There’s a vacant storefront on the corner, sharing a wall with the restaurant. Siemiginowski would like to see that become a market, reviving one of the building’s past lives. There’s a hillside behind the buildings, and it’s already in the process of being walled and terraced for outdoor dining, with plans for entertainment.

Don’t doubt his ability to make this happen. Unless you examine old photos, you won’t realize that the three small buildings comprising the restaurant were once only two. He built the one in the middle. For now, pay a visit to content yourself with a cuisine that should have long since gained a Capital Region foothold. If you’re lucky, you’ll sample the borscht.

I’ve sampled many varieties of this very varied soup, and tried my hand at it in my own kitchen. Nothing has come close to the Muza version. The regulation beets populate a broth that’s thin but flavorful, lightly vinegared, and also sports kidney beans, carrots, onions and allspice berries.

This I enjoyed with a $7 lunch special that included a trio of pierogi, potato-filled dumplings topped with caramelized onion bits. It goes beyond being merely traditional; it’s also homemade, as the dumplings are pinched by hand. Should you have mental charts of carbs and calories in mind, you may well ask, —Why would I want to stuff potatoes in what’s essentially thick ravioli?— You would thus be revealing yourself as shamefully innocent of the satisfaction these hearty morsels deliver.

But let me tell you of an earlier meal, a dinner I enjoyed with my family. We too often end up in two cars, which proved even more problematic when I got the last parking spot in front of the restaurant and my wife had to search around a corner. With this act I may have killed chivalry once and for all.

Tension vanished, though, as we studied the menu, which offers a page headed —Polish Style— along with an even broader range of continental items. For the fan of Polish food, golombki are offered for $8, potato pancakes for $7. Kielbasa with sautéed cabbage is $10.50; add potato pancakes for another 50 cents.

How about pierogi and golombki? It’s $8.50. Add potato pancakes and it’s $10.50. But why not go all the way? The Polish Feast is only $12.50 and gets you all of the above with an order of mashed potatoes. The golombki are thin cabbage leaves wrapped around a savory blend of pork and beef with rice; the potato pancakes are crisp as a knish. And, while I’m not fussy about kielbasa, being a great fan of any flavorful sausage, I was especially impressed with this variety.

Muza is an easygoing place, and the service is appropriately casual. We always had the comfortable sense of being looked after, and everyone involved in the place was very eager to please us. I look forward to keeping up with the changes and improvements that are in the works; I think this Polish restaurant is a keeper.

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Good Shepherd pierogi sale

From the Times Leader Good eats! column:

Pierogi Sale, sponsored by Church of the Good Shepherd, Polish National Catholic Church, 278 East Main St., Plymouth, Pennsylvania. One dozen with potato and cheese filling cost $7 and will be sold this Sunday and Sunday, March 8th. Farmer’s cheese filling will be sold only on Sunday, March 22nd for $8.50 per dozen. Place orders by calling (570) 779-4781. Pickup orders from 3-5 p.m. in the church auditorium in the rear of the church.

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Events at the Albany Polish Community Center

Friday, Jan. 9 – Polish-American buffet, 4-8 pm
Sunday, Jan. 11 – Polka Dance with the Eddie Forman Orchestra, 3-7 pm
Sunday, Jan. 18 – Ballroom dance
Sunday, Jan. 25 – Ballroom Dance
Sunday, Feb. 1st – Super bowl Sunday Party! Doors open at 4 pm
Saturday, Feb. 14th – Valentine’s Day Dinner & Dance, 6-12 midnight

For more information please visit the Center’s website or call 518-456-3995. The Center is located at 225 Washington Ave Ext, Albany NY 12205.

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Annual blessing of wine

From the Toledo Blade: Resurrection PNCC plans ‘Blessing of the Wine’

Resurrection Polish National Catholic Church will hold a traditional ‘Blessing of the Wine’ service on Dec. 28.

The ceremony is an old tradition in the Catholic Church and one that the PNCC has followed for many years, according to Chris Cremean, a member of Resurrection PNCC.

People can bring their personal wine from home to be blessed, he added.

The Rev. Jaroslaw Nowak, pastor, will perform the blessing at the 12:15 p.m. service at the church, 1835 West Temperance Rd., Temperance. More Information is available by calling the church, 734-874-5052.

Irony – the blessing of wine on Temperance Road in Temperance, Michigan… 🙂

I previously wrote on this event, which takes place every December 28th on the Feast of St. John the Evangelist. My post includes the Rite used in the PNCC. For more information, contact your local PNCC Parish.

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Wait, aren’t those latkes?

From the Pittston Sunday Dispatch: Potato pancakes and soup on menu at Holy Mother of Sorrows Church

Dinner Chairman Paul Kaspriskie, left, at the grill with Al Micka
Dinner Chairman Paul Kaspriskie, left, at the grill with Al Micka

It was just what the doctor ordered, as the saying goes. The perfect foods to fill one’s belly on a cold, wintry day: hot soup and potato pancakes.

That’s what was on the menu at Holy Mother of Sorrows Polish National Catholic Church, Dupont, on Friday, Dec. 5, all topped off with an assortment of homemade desserts.

The annual fundraiser —“ a bargain at $6.00 per person —“ also featured a Chinese auction.

Lottie Hoban and Stella Kotula served as co-chairs for the event with Arnold Borc serving as ticket chairman.

You will notice the interesting crossover between Polish and Jewish foods – i.e., the potato pancakes or latkes. The event featured clam chowder – very New England, and a Chinese auction. Hmmm – who said the PNCC was “Polish only?” 😉 flag-poland