Rentals
Rental Search





Search by Keyword or Phrase
Flights

Personal flight
booking service

 

 


Online flight
booking service

 


 
Skip Navigation Links Home » Forum
* Please, register and login to use the message board.
Welcome Guest Search | Active Topics | Members | Log In | Register

Recipies for traditional bulgarian meals Options · View
Poli
Posted: Wednesday, September 19, 2007 12:55:22 PM
Rank: Newbie
Groups: Member

Joined: 8/7/2007
Posts: 5
I would like to share with everybody what do we cook on holidays.
I will try to include as many holidays I can think of and put them in chronological way.

PETKOVDEN
(SAINT PARASKEVA’S DAY)
14 OCTOBER

Calf’s tripe soup | Mutton hotch-potch
On 14 October, in conformity with the Christian church calendar, the Reverend Saint Paraskeva’s (Petka’s) Day is celebrated. By a century-old tradition the village bull was slaughtered as sacrifice on this day. In certain Bulgarian regions a black sheep was stuck on this occasion. Everbody gathered in the village square, bringing along bread and a wooden vessel of red wine. Each family took home a portion of the boiled sacrificial meat, and the festive meal started after the table had been censed by the priest.

In addition to the sacrificial broth, the women cooked veal or mutton as a main course. This particular broth is a meat soup with vegetables and spices prepared by each housewife according to her own taste and recipe.

Perhaps of greater interest will be the calf’s tripe soup prepared in the Sofia region.






CALF’S TRIPE SOUP Ingredients 1 calf’s tripe
1 spoonful of fresh milk or yoghourt for thickening
salt
red pepper
ground pepper
a clove of garlic


Directions:
Clean the tripe well by scrubbing it with a sharp knife and wash it thoroughly under running water.
To preserve the nutritious properties of the tripe, you should put the whole piece in boiling water. Let it be stewed very well. Take out the tripe and seive the bouillon.

Put the tripe, cut in small pieces, back in the soup.

Thicken with the milk and add salt and red pepper to your liking. Serve the soup hot, offering a mixture of vinegar, salt and crushed garlic for seasoning. Another spice to this dish is ground pepper.

Do not serve the tripe soup to individuals with sensitive stomachs, even if they are real belly-worshippers. The spices in this dish are too strong and difficult to assimilate.

Mutton hotch-potch may be served as a main course on Petkovden. Hotch-potch is a Bulgarian specialty prepared with a great number of various vegetables and baked on oven, a dish suitable for any taste and season.






MUTTON HOTCH-POTCH Ingredients 1 kg of mutton
2 onions
1 teacupful of grease
400 g potatoes
300 g vegetable marrows
400 g French beans
200 g eggplants
250 g peppers
200 g okra
1 bunch of parsley
2 teaspoonfuls of red pepper
salt to one’s taste
pepper


Directions:

Cut the mutton into portions.
Add salt and pepper. Put it in water to boil together with the onions in a small quantity of water.

When the water evaporates, add the grease. Stew the meat well and then transfer it into an earthen dish.

Add the potatoes, peeled and sliced, the sliced marrows, the French beans, cut and stewed beforehand, the cubed eggplants, the chopped peppers and the okra. Sprinkle all these ingredients with the minced parsley, the red pepper, add salt and mix well. Roast it on a moderate oven.

If you wish, before taking it out of the oven, you can make a paste cover of 4 well-beaten eggs. In this case, bake the dish till the cover reddens.

The hotch-potch is served in the earthen dish in which it has been cooked.
Poli
Posted: Monday, October 08, 2007 5:03:16 PM
Rank: Newbie
Groups: Member

Joined: 8/7/2007
Posts: 5
SAINT DIMITRI’S DAY
26 OCTOBER


In the Bulgarian folk calendar, the Day of Saint Dimitri is connected with a turn of seasons - it marks the beginning of winter. According to the popular beliefs, the sky opens up at midnight before Saint Dimitri’s Day. From this day on the first snow is expected too. Saint Dimitri is considered to be the patron of winter, frost and snow. October 26 is the last day of a traditional period (beginning from St. George’s Day and concluding with St. Dimitri’s Day) for seasonal workers - shepherds, farm hands, etc. Therefore, this day has also been known as Razpous (Dismissal).

Various poultry and vegetable dishes are usually prepared as festive food on St. Dimitri’s Day. We have chosen to present here an original dish from the village of Gorni Dabnik.







HEN STUFFED WITH CABBAGE AND GROATS

Ingredients
1 hen with the giblets
1 kg cabbage
200 g groats
100 ml vegetable oil
10 g red pepper
mint
salt


Directions:
Clean up, wash and salt the hen. Stew the chopped cabbage, the giblets and the groats in half of the overall amount of vegetable oil.
Add the red pepper and the minced mint. Pour hot water into the mixture and leave it to boil for 10 minutes or so until the cabbage gets mellow.

Fill the hen with this stuff and sew it up. Put the rest of the vegetable oil and the hen in a baking dish.

Roast on a moderate oven. Add water now and then in order to prevent the meat from getting dry.

Any kind of fresh or pickled vegetable salads may be served with the stuffed hen.
But your family or guests will be delighted to taste a salad of peppers and eggplants traditionally prepared in the town of Vidin and its neighbourhood.






SALAD OF PEPPERS AND EGGPLANTS

Ingredients
2 eggplants
8 green peppers
4 tomatoes
50 g walnut kernels
50 ml vegetable oil
4 garlic cloves
half a bunch of parsley
salt
vinegar


Directions:
Roast the eggplants and the peppers on a quick oven. Their taste will be finer, if you roast them on fire. Then peel them and cut them into small pieces.
Add the ground walnut kernels and crushed garlic, and season with some of the vegetable oil, the vinegar and the salt. Mix well and put the mixture in the serving dish.

Arrange the thinly sliced tomatoes on top.

Sprinkle the cut up parsley and pour the remaining vegetable oil on them.

This is an excellent autumn salad which can be offered as an appetizer preceding the main course. Do not serve it, however, to people with diseased kidneys, for eggplants are harmful food in such case.

Users browsing this topic
Guest


Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.

Main Forum RSS : RSS

Powered by Yet Another Forum.net version 1.9.0 (NET v2.0) - 10/10/2006
Copyright © 2003-2006 Yet Another Forum.net. All rights reserved.

For Sale
Property search Property Search
Search by Keyword or Phrase



 

Bookmark and Share

gooflifebulgaria
Advertising with us | Link exchange | Sitemap | Links | Privacy policy | Disclaimer | Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2007 Skandinav Invest OOD. All rights reserved.