- Cuisine of Belarus
Belarusian cuisine derives from the same sources as those of its neighbours - Lithuanians, Ukrainians, Poles, and in later times Russians.
History
The history of
gastronomy inBelarus reveals a highly exotic rather than a poor cuisine. In the early 15th century whole fried aurochs from the primevalBelaviezha forest , now a national preserve, were sent as a gift to the German emperor.Fact|date=February 2007 The records of exports of the candied roots ofSweet Flag ("Acorus calamus") toWestern Europe date back to the 16th century. First mentioned in an early 17th century political pamphlet, bakedgoose with green peppers was still a popular dish for November feasts –All Saints and St Martin’s – in the mid-19th century was served by an emigrant, count Abukhovich-Bandinelli, to his friends inParis . Fact|date=February 2007Aside from its predominantly Ruthenian roots, Belarusian cuisine is very close to Lithuanian: the first Belarusian state entity, the
Polatsk principality , conqueredLithuania back in 11th century, and remained the core and center of the state for some 200 years. In the 13-14 centuries, however,Lithuanians gained the upper hand, and gradually took over today’s Belarus, as well as much of today’sRussia andUkraine , creating a hugeGrand Duchy of Lithuania which at one time in the 15th century extended from the Baltic to theBlack Sea to formEurope ’s largest state. The majority of its citizens were Belarusian-speaking, andOld Belarusian language was the main official language. After the union with Poland in 1569, Polish influence became strong in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Though both the Polish elite and the Belarusian nobility borrowed much from Italian, German and French cuisines, this influence hardly made itself felt in the diet of the serf peasant majority until the abolition of serfdom in 1861.Fact|date=February 2007 Some of the borrowed dishes, however, spread throughout the society, such aslazanki (a mixture offlour dumpling s and stewedmeat , related to Italianlasagna ) and, above all, various dishes made of gratedpotato , typical for German cuisine.The political upheavals of the 20th century completely wiped out the former privileged classes, gentry and bourgeoisie, the bearers of more sophisticated and western-oriented spiritual and material culture. Many traditional upper and middle class dishes went down the path of oblivion. The very idea of a separate Belarusian cuisine was treated with suspicion. Only after World War II did it occur to the communist authorities that the proclaimed ‘flourishing of national culture’ (Stalin even thrust Belarusian puppet ‘state’ upon the founders of theUN in 1945) should also be evident in the cuisine. The only source which was permitted for such a culinary reconstruction, however, was the heritage of the poorest peasants as of the 1880s, a time when primitive rural lifestyle was already on the wane. Chefs were instructed by the Party, however, to create the new Belarusian cuisine from scratch. And so it was. Dish names, recipes, kitchenware – all were reinvented anew, as though ten centuries of history had never existed. Only the sudden and (for many) unexpected advent of independence in 1991 brought an opportunity to restore these lost traditions, and a great deal still remains to be done here.Modern Belarusian cuisine is still heavily influenced by its recent Soviet past, and many local restaurants feature Russian, or Soviet dishes rather than true specialties of local cuisine. Belarusians are far more concerned with getting to know Italian, Chinese,
Japanese cuisine than with the careful restoration of their own culinary heritage. However, draniki (both plain and stuffed), boršč, haladnik, mačanka, zrazy, cold meat rolls, eggs stuffed with mushrooms,halubtsy , fried ‘shoved-with-a-finger’ pork sausage and bliny are likely to be found everywhere, as well as sour rye bread.Cereals
Since
wheat does not grow well in a cold and wet climateBelarusians were always fond of a kind of somewhat sourrye bread , and the most traditional hard drink,harelka , closely related to Russianvodka , was distilled primarily from a rye malt.Like other
Slavonic peoples , Belarusians could boast of a huge variety ofbliny (pancakes) of various thickness, plain and filled, made mostly of wheat orbuckwheat flour, but also usingoatmeal (tsadaviki).Various kinds of
cereal especiallybarley , oatmeal and buckwheat were common. Belarus was the likely centre of Europe’s buckwheat culture, and dishes made with this healthy grain used to be very popular: various kinds ofbun s,cake s and dumplings which, except for the well-known "kasha ", no longer exist today.Vegetables
The main
vegetable s werecabbage (often made intosauerkraut ) andbeet s, whileturnip s, swedes,parsnip andcarrot s both stewed and boiled (with the addition of a small amount ofmilk ) were somewhat less popular. As elsewhere in Europe,legume s were the main source ofprotein , mainly in the form ofkamy (puree ofpea s orbean s with melted lard).oups
The word
soup was not known inBelarus until the 18th century when the nobility borrowed it from German, but soup as a type of dish clearly existed centuries earlier. The common name for most traditional Belarusian soups waspoliuka , except for those based on and named after that vegetable which was the main ingredient: kapusta (cabbage soup), buraki (beet soup), gryzhanka (swede soup). For a typical poliuka the major ingredients (fish ormushroom s during fasts) are first boiled withspices ; cereals such as barley ormillet are boiled in the stock, and then flour blended with water, breadkvass , beet juice orbuttermilk are added to the stock. Black poliuka, made withgoose orpork blood are closely related to Swedishsvartsoppa . Offering a matchmaker black poliuka was the polite way for the bride’s parents to decline a young man’s proposal. (A ruder gesture was to hand him a rawpumpkin ). Like the Ukrainians, Russians andPoles , Belarusians are fond ofborscht , a thick and rich beet and cabbage soup made with grains, potato and meat. Soups are much more authentic, both hot (shchi , boršč,sorrel soup) and especially cold sour soups which provide cooling relief during the hot summerHaladnik , a cold sour soup of beet, beet tops or dock (a sour plant of the buckwheat family, growing everywhere in the wild) served withsour cream , boiled eggs and potatoes) for a long time was the subject of jeers from Belarus' Polish neighbours – until they borrowed this dish in the late 18th century, when it became a fixture in Polish cuisine.Meals
A traditional peasant or merchant's dinner consisted of just two dishes: soup and a main course. A special kind of pot, the
sparysh , with two compartments, was used by farmers' children to bring lunch to their father working in the fields. Prior toWorld War II salad s or other zakuski were not very common, and recipes based on Russian models tended to appear in modern Belarusian postwar cookbooks.Farmer cheese and various kinds of cold meat (usually smoked) were usually available, however, at least on holidays.Meat
Meat was in rather scarce supply for most people, and was primarily eaten only on the main Christian holidays. Avid consumers of pork, Belarusians are less partial to
mutton andbeef . Most common was raw porksausage (so called ‘shoved-with-a-finger’);kishki , orkryvyanka , was a local black pudding made ofpig ’s blood and buckwheat grain;škalondza , orkindziuk , a particular kind of round sausage made of pig stomach filled with pork minced with spices – a relative of the Lithuanianskilandis – were known throughout the country. Borrowed from Italian cuisine by nobility in 16th century, cold meat rolls,salceson s andbaleron s were common to all of society by the 19th century, and are still very popular. The local dishpauguski , cold rolls made of halved goose breasts, however, which were once the pride of middle-class cuisine, no longer exist today.Veraščaka , an 18th century thick meat gravy with pieces of meat and sausage used as a dip for thick pancakes, is still one of the most popular specialties of Belarusian restaurants today, although it is more frequently calledmačanka (a dip). Also popular arezrazy , chopped pieces of beef twisted into a sausage shape and filled with vegetable, mushroom, eggs, potato etc. Pork dishes are usually fried or stewed, with cheese or mushrooms seasoning. Beef steaks are also quite frequent, but mutton, once very popular, is almost entirely limited to Caucasian or Central Asian restaurants.Dumplings
Kalduny , small boiled dumplings related to Russianpelmeni and Italianravioli , were produced in endless combinations of dough, filling and sauce. Especially popular were Count Tyshkevich’s kalduny (filled with a mixture of fried local mushrooms and smokedham ). In the late 19th century kalduny began to be made with grated potato rather than with a flour-based dough and, unfortunately, the former huge variety of fillings shrank considerably. Today, kalduny have to struggle vigorously to regain their former popularity, now overtaken by Russian pelmeni. Sadly, this is true of many traditional Belarusian dishes which lost their places both on tables and in minds to the standardized and faceless cuisine of the Soviet period.Dairy products
The main
dairy products include a kind ofcottage cheese , once a common offering to pagan deities, and sour cream which is widely (if not ruthlessly!) used in cooking. Only in the mid-19th century was fermentedcheese borrowed from theNetherlands andSwitzerland , and the local version of Edam was very popular for decades in theRussian Empire . Sourbutter from the formerDzisna county was proudly exported toEngland , where it continued to be the most expensive variety up toWorld War I . Today, however, these traditions have become a thing of the past.Beverage
Traditional drinks include
biarozavik , a fermentedbirch sap ; thicksaladukha , made ofrye floor andhoney ;kisiel , the traditional jelly drink of all Slavonic peoples, previously made of oatmeal floor, now is made with potato flour flavoured with pulp of variousforest berries . Kvass is still the main local soft drink, although it is increasingly made ofsugar s and flavorings which imitate natural flavorings rather than with genuine rye malt. Every small town boasts a local variety ofmineral water , which is probably the country’s main mineral resource. Belarusians prefer carbonated water. Local harelkas (vodkas) are very good, notably those with birch sap or various forestherb s, and are popular with lovers of strong drink. Mead and many other similar drinks made of honey and spices, which were very common up to the 19th century, and then were more or less rarely found until the present, are mainly represented bykrambambula , perhaps better known for its odd name than for its specific taste. Which also contains fried salmon.Minority cuisine
Belarusian cuisine owes much to Jewish cooking, since for centuries
Jews had a virtual monopoly on inn-keeping. In the 19th century Jewish influence was especially noticeable in bringing in potato dishes of German origin, such asbabka (thekugel of the Jewish cuisine). This was a two-way gastronomic street, for the famous bulba latkes, the potato pancakes of the East European Jews, bear a Belarusian name, since Belarusians prefer to call themdraniki ; both draniki and bulbalatkes are Belarusian words, but "latkes" is now primarily used to describe the dish in Jewish cuisine.Another important minority ethnic group which influenced Belarusian cuisine were theTartars , whose cuisine was especially strong in various cakes with fillings, mutton and vegetable dishes.Potato
The potato became so common in 19th century – there are some 300+ dishes recorded in Belarus – that it came to be considered the core of the national cuisine. In the
Soviet Union , Belarusians were scornfully calledbulbashi , potato-eaters; today this humiliating cliché of the Soviet times is beginning to fade.alad
Typical salads are made of a fairly short list of ingredients: endless combinations of boiled beef or
chicken , potato, beet, carrot,apple ,herring , diced cheese, cannedpea s and corn, canned fish, ‘crab fingers’,onion s and mushrooms, and are generously seasoned withmayonnaise orsunflower oil .Fish
Historically, Belarusians had little contact with fish from the sea, and this is still evident in the cuisine. The most common sea fish (after herring, which has been the most common appetizer all along the Baltic coast and its vicinity ever since the 14th century) are
hake andcod and there are relatively few dishes with such fish. Much more traditional and common are lake fish, notablyzander , cooked in endless ways, andcarp (especially the famous stuffed carp, the gefilte fisch of Jewish cuisine).Eel s, smoked or stuffed, are the specialty of the lake country in the northwestern part of Belarus, adjacent toLatvia and Lithuania.Garnish
Garnishes are usually boiled, fried or mashed potatoes,
rice orpasta . Meat dishes are frequently served with bliny or draniki in rounded clay pots. While Belarusians consider kasha (cereals) as rather ordinary dishes and cook them frequently at home, they are more rarely found in restaurants.
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