Romania Food And Unique Drinks
Romanian food is very diverse
and rich flavored, colored and fragranced, highly influenced by
history and foreign traditions, as well as specific plates. Romanian
cuisine identifies with the notion of exquisite dishes, with such
luring smells that their aroma makes its way out of Romanian dishes
photographs.
What makes Romanian food so individual and special
is the fact that the dishes are easy to be prepared, without special
endowment and the ingredients are handy. The biggest influence over
Romanian cuisine was the Balkan cuisine, but also of other nations,
such as the German, Hungarian and Serbian cuisine.
The recipes carry the same influences as the whole
Romanian culture: from Romanians the pie, word that initially preserved
the meaning of the Latin term of placenta, the Turks
brought the quenelles soup and the Turkish cake in the shape of
lozenge, the Greeks brought the dish called musaca (a dish of vegetables
and mince meat), the Bulgarians have a variety of mixed vegetable
food such as zacusca, and the schnitzel comes from the Austrians.
The most common Romanian specific dish is the
hominy; a broth of corn flower, which was considered for a long
time poors food but now has become more appreciated. The main
meat used by Romanians is pork, but they also eat beef, chicken,
mutton or lamb, depending on the geographic area.
Some of the recipes are strictly related with
the season or the holidays. Usually, on Christmas each family used
to sacrifice a pig and they used to fix a variety of dishes made
from the meat and organs:
- Sausages, blood pudding, black pudding, wrapped
in pork intestines.
- Meat jelly, a jelly made of difficult to use pork parts such as
ears, legs, and head, arranged in aspic jelly.
- Meat balls in cabbage, a delicious mixture of meat wrapped in
cabbage leafs, garden sorrel.
- Tochitura, some sort of stew served along with hominy and wine;
- And as something sweet they have the traditional pound cake, sweet
bread with nuts, cocoa or Turkish delight.
On Easter they eat lamb and the specific dishes
are:
- Grilled lamb ( Roast lamb with savory recipe)
- Shiver, a backed mixture of organs, meat and fresh vegetables,
especially green onion; (Lamb shiver recipe)
- And as a dessert matzos, a specific pie, with cheese and sultanas.
(Cheese matzos recipe)
The main drink is wine, remarkable by its force
and bouquet with a local tradition of over 2 millenniums. Romania
is the ninth major producer of wine in the world and recently the
export market has registered a growth. A large scale of local sorts
is produced:
- Feteasca
- Grasa
- Tamaioasa
But universal wines are also produced:
- Riesling
- Merlot
- Sauvignon Blanc
- Cabernet Sauvignon
- Chardonnay
- Muscat Ottonel
The beer is also consumed at a large scale; under
German influences.
Romania is the second large producer in the world of plums and almost
the entire production of plums is used in order to produce tuicã,
a brandy of plums obtained through distillation.
Romanian food and Romanian drinks can be a real
challenge for any foreign visitors.
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