Menu

  • Home
  • About
  • My favourites
Skip to content

thefidgetyfoodie

not your average food & travel blog

Travel like a foodie

From a Russian cooking class with love

Posted on January 19, 2017 by thefidgetyfoodie

the-fidgety-foodie_russian-cooking-class-in-moscow-9

Carefully hand making each and every pelmeni – a Russian staple

I did lots of cool things when I went to Russia last year – like staring in awe from the front row of the Bolshoi ballet and being battered (in a good way) with birch leaves during a traditional banya.

But my favourite experience was the Taste of Russia cooking class I took in Moscow. Not just because I got to cook (which I love) and eat (which I love even more), but because I spent the day with real Muscovites who let me drill them about their lives, their diets, their family and their future.

The day didn’t start well. Ever tried to take the Moscow subway? It’s ridiculously intense. I’m no stranger to large rail systems – I can navigate the tube with my eyes closed and have never had any issues in cities like New York and Paris (except when my sister and I went through two at a time and were almost arrested by French police but that’s another story).

Moscow is a different beast. The subway is HUGE and there isn’t a single direction in English, nor did anyone I ask for help speak English. I can read a decent amount of Cyrillic thanks to its likeness to the Greek alphabet but on my first full day in Russia, pre-coffee, I struggled. I’m not usually one to give up but I did and left the metro thinking a cab had to be an easier option.

the-fidgety-foodie_russian-cooking-class-in-moscow-6

Flipping syrniki – Russian cottage cheese pancakes

Wrong. The traffic in Moscow is a disaster. It’s all one way so the layout forces cars to go in unnecessary directions. Plus I couldn’t see a cab rank or a single cab for that matter and I had no wifi to book an uber. So it was a deep breath and back down to the metro for me, where I finally worked out where to go and made it to the cooking class meeting point with just a minute to spare. Phew!

I arrived to find I was the only person there. Was everyone else late too?

No, it transpired that I was the only person in the class. That was music to my ears. A private market tour and cooking class to myself, what a score!

the-fidgety-foodie_russian-cooking-class-in-moscow-7

My foodie dream team of Nadia, Milena and Zhukova

Firstly I was escorted to the Dorogomilovo market, one of Moscow’s largest, with ‘the chief’ Zhukova, her daughter Milena and daughter-in-law Nadia. A family affair!

The market was so fabulous it deserves a post of its own but essentially we picked up all the ingredients for lunch and I got to try tastings of whatever I pointed to. Which was a lot. Quite often I’d point to something and request identification; if Milena, whose English was excellent, didn’t know the word in English she’d whip out her iphone and google translate it for me.

the-fidgety-foodie_russian-cooking-class-in-moscow-5

Zhukova ‘the chief’ runs the kitchen

From the market we drove 20 minutes away to the kitchen, a modest size room filled with a big table and cooking accoutrements. Our menu for the day included Siberian pelmeni (dumplings with a beef filling), borsch and syrniki (cottage cheese pancakes) with apricot ‘jam’. Zhukova put me straight to work – chopping onions, working dough and stewing apricots while I quizzed her on the provenance of the dishes and life in Russia.

the-fidgety-foodie_russian-cooking-class-in-moscow-8

Zhukova shows me how the dough for pelmeni is rolled out

I learnt that pelmeni are the backbone of Russian home cooking and women are scrutinised on their pelmeni style and output. There’s the proper way to make them and the shortcut route but I got the impression that serious Russian cooks knew exactly which path they should follow. Read More

55.755826 37.617300

What’s inside a foodie’s pantry?

Posted on November 11, 2015 by thefidgetyfoodie

 

thefidgetyfoodie pantry ingredients (1)

A snapshot of my pantry

So what does a foodie keep in their pantry anyway?

A great book has just been published called Inside Chefs’ Fridges, which reveals what top international chefs keep in their fridge. A fridge is the window to the soul you know. I’ve always believed this, in fact my retro black Smeg fridge is the most beloved (and expensive) item in my home. Inside is a mix of fresh ingredients and panoply of condiments and sauces, but no pickled marigold flowers or frozen flies which is what turned up in some of the chef’s fridges.

But to me the real action is in the pantry. A quick stocktake of my pantry reveals a strange mix of ingredients from near and far, with bits and bobs from Greece, Croatia, France, Sweden, Finland, Mexico, Canada and Japan.

thefidgetyfoodie pantry ingredients (6)

My prized Skandi ingredients – cloudberries and frukt soup

My love affair with cloudberries is no secret. I would probably devour a jar a week if this prized ingredient wasn’t so rare and expensive. My stocks are low at the moment and this beauty came from my colleague Sally who was in Sweden recently. I’m holding onto it for dear life until I can stock up again. The stuff in the packet is fruit soup from Sweden. My Swedish friend Johan introduced me to the whole concept of sweet soups through his love of blackberry soup and I had to have the supermarket version, in apple and cinnamon flavour.

thefidgetyfoodie pantry ingredients (2)

Just a few of the sweet goodies lurking in my pantry

I have an entire cupboard of sweet-related bits and bobs but these are some of my favourites. The chocolate coated popping candy is from the UK and is yet to pop up in Heston’s range in Australia. The lavender sugar balls were gifted by my beautiful French friend Agathe who instinctively buys anything purple and edible she sees, just for me. I’ve waxed lyrical about the marzipan carrots before, they are one of my ultimate supermarket finds and look awesome atop any carrot cake number.

thefidgetyfoodie pantry ingredients (3)

Mexicans love to flavour their food with lashings of chilli and sugar

I came back with a backpack of food when I went to Mexico – there were just too many tempting treats! My favourite discovery was Miguelito – this stuff is sensational. Part sugar, part salt and a whole lot of chilli, I love it on the rim of cocktails or to dip fruit in. The Mexicans eat it straight from the packet. The chile y limon mix is great for dusting on vegies or anything needing a kick. Read More

-33.867487 151.206990

My 10 tips for surviving La Tomatina

Posted on August 17, 2015 by thefidgetyfoodie

The blood red action of La Tomatina

It’s coming up to that time of year again.

Backpackers and the Spanish know exactly what I’m talking about.

It’s tomato bloodbath time. Otherwise known as La Tomatina.

La Tomatina is one of those mandatory European travel experiences, up there with the running of the bulls, camping out for Wimbledon tickets and partying on the Greek islands.

This unassuming town goes mental on one day of the year

For the uninitiated, La Tomatina is a festival held in the tiny Spanish town of Buñol, about an hour from Valencia. It started in 1945 as an innocent food fight and grew to the point where the town of 9,000 inhabitants was being overrun by 50,000 crazies on the last Wednesday of August each year to get caught in the cross fire of a bloody food fight.

It got so ridiculously big that the town had to introduce a ticketing system to scale it right back down to a more reasonable 20,000 people.

photo (7)

Locals get prepared for action

So you can’t just rock up like I did with my friend Anna many years ago; have the privilege of being crushed against the side of the road as the tomato-laden truck passes by; practically become blinded by the acid in the tomatoes; and lose almost every piece of clothing in the process. Well you can but you have to be selected first.

For anyone that makes the cut, well done you! Here are my ten tips for surviving La Tomatina.

Moments before the tomato avalanche begins

Bunol are you ready??!!

Bunol are you ready??!!

1. Don’t take a camera. At least don’t take a camera you want to be sure you’ll take home in working condition. I’m still glad I did take a camera (yes this was back in the day when people had actual cameras rather than just using smart phones) because it captured these shots that are priceless to me. However the second people saw me with a camera I became an instant target and everyone wanted to take the camera (and me) down.

This is how is starts

In retrospect I should have kept it in a plastic bag for protection. By some miracle, the camera survived although I did find random pieces of dried tomato wedged in its crevices for months to come.

The food fight has well and truly begun!

Goggles are definitely an advantage at this stage

Read More

39.420344 -0.790133

My 9 most random supermarket finds

Posted on June 22, 2015 by thefidgetyfoodie

Stocking up on frappé sachets in Greece

One of my favourite things to do in a new city or town is explore the local supermarket.

For me it’s the heart and soul of a country, culture and cuisine. What could be more insightful than a look at what people eat every day? That’s why it was a no brainer for my list of 6 steps to scoping out a city like a true foodie.

Bear in mind that this is written by someone who gets a thrill from visiting even her own local supermarket. From a young age, mum would always take me on her weekly Thursday night shopping trips and I LOVED to pour over the shelves, suggest new products (sometimes even helpfully throwing items straight in the trolley) and help her unpack.

The best part about foreign supermarkets is the potential for quirky and unusual items that I may never have seen or been able to get my hands on before.

ruebli003

I pick up a packet of marzipan carrots whenever I’m in Switzerland

This is how I discovered some of my favourite supermarket finds, like mini marzipan carrots from Switzerland (perfect for decorating carrot cakes) and frappé sachets from Greece (because real Greek frappés must have Greek Nescafé in them).

Then there are the items that stop me in my tracks and have me asking how, or ever why?

DSC04669

blk. That’s black water to you and I.

1. Like the black water I came across in Mexico City. Otherwise known as ‘Alkaline Fulvic Trace Mineral Infused Water’ and supposedly containing superior minerals to assist better hydration than normal water. I’m not sure how water can become more hydrating but ten points to the manufacturers for being attention grabbing.

IMG_6393

What a load of crap

2. I’ve already told you about my discovery of crap in Romania but it surely deserves another mention. I don’t think anything else has ever stopped me in my tracks quite as quickly as this towering collection – holy crap I thought! Even though I now know that crap means carp in Romanian, it still makes me smile.

IMG_6395

Clever Romanians eat Big Ben it seems

3. Another thing I noticed in Romanian supermarkets is how they love to use English names to brand everyday products. This is how I came across chocolate called ‘Big Ben’, ‘Laura’ and ‘Clever’. It was a marketing ploy that worked on me – I bought one of each.

IMG_4348

Swiss eggs for Swiss National Day

4. When it comes to clever branding, the Swiss are ahead of the game. What other country would brand eggs with their national flag? I discovered these around Swiss National Day on the 1st August which celebrates the foundation of the Swiss Confederacy. Around this date practically everything is coated in red and the distinctive white equilateral cross – eggs included.

spam_macnuts_giftbox_can

Spam flavoured macadamias, what are the Hawaiians thinking?

5. Branded red eggs I have no problem eating. Spam flavoured macadamia nuts? Not a chance. Spam is massive in Hawaii, with a yearly festival devoted to the stuff (called the Spam Jam, of course). Obama even orders it when he goes home. I guess it’s the Aussie equivalent to chicken salt. Read More

How to scope out a city like a true foodie in 6 steps

Posted on February 3, 2015 by thefidgetyfoodie

Stunning aubergine at the Kowloon City Market in Hong Kong

Stunning aubergine at the Kowloon City Market in Hong Kong

Museums, art galleries and walking tours all have their place on any of my travel itineraries, but not before I’ve made a dent in a city’s key foodie hubs. And if I’m fortunate to have time up my sleeve then these are the places I will revisit again and again. They are also the best way to fast track your way into the culinary heartland of a new culture.

Slippery eels at the Kowloon City Market in Hong Kong

Slippery eels at the Kowloon City Market in Hong Kong

1. Food Markets

There are not many cities and towns without a food market of some sort. After all, this was how people shopped before supermarkets came along (not that I’m dissing supermarkets as you’ll see in the next point). Countries like France, Finland and Hong Kong are experts at food markets and even have themed markets for your every gastronomic desire.

Starfish at the Tai Po Hui market in Hong Kong

Starfish at the Tai Po Hui market in Hong Kong

This is where you will see first-hand what produce and ingredients are in season and sourced locally. You’ll find gems that you won’t find anywhere else. And those gems will likely be cheaper than anywhere else too.

Dried seahorse at Wanchai market in Hong Kong

Dried seahorse at a market in Hong Kong

Fave pick: the plethora of wet and dry markets in Hong Kong are an exotic adventure in the making. Wander through produce in a myriad of vivid colours and relish random finds like dried seahorse and starfish.

An eponymous herb range I discovered in a Romanian supermarket

An eponymous herb range I discovered in a Romanian supermarket

2. Supermarkets

Don’t be fooled into thinking that supermarkets are purely the domain of locals and backpackers looking for cans of tuna. I can (and do) spend HOURS in foreign supermarkets; just ask any of my patient travelling buddies.

Fancy some crap? (relax, it's the Romanian word for carp)

Fancy some crap? (the Romanian term for carp)

I love to see what’s stocked on the shelves, the more random the items the better. If I come across something I’ve never seen, that’s grounds enough for me to buy it. I also get a kick out of quirky packaging, unusual names (crap anyone?) and in-store advertising (must be my inner marketing nerd). Read More

Tasty bites from Transylvania

Posted on November 27, 2014 by thefidgetyfoodie

Dracula's castle (maybe) in Bran

Dracula’s castle (maybe) in Bran

I’ve just returned from a week in Transylvania, the largest region in Romania.

Dracula you say? Well yes, he’s their biggest drawcard. A fictional character based ever so loosely on a 15th century prince who probably never actually lived in Transylvania (at least not in his so called castle), created by a writer who never stepped foot in the country. But who cares? Everyone loves the story and at one point it was the best selling book after the Bible.

What does Dracula drink? Draquila of course

What does Dracula drink? Draquila of course

I was much more interested in the food. Of course. You don’t hear much about Romanian food and even the culture is a bit of a mystery. Due to its location, it’s always been a buffer zone of sorts, sandwiched between big powers like Russia, the Austro-Hungarians and the Ottomans.

image

Ciorbă – Romanian sour soup

Transylvania was part of Hungary until WW1, after which it was absorbed by Romania. This is why you see a strong Hungarian and German influence throughout the region, along with references to Turkish and Russian culture.

While everyone else chased vampires, I chased down all the traditional dishes I could find and was not disappointed. So here’s a litle overview of my favourite dishes:

image

Ciorbă soup with tripe

Ciorbă soup: The average temperature while I was there was 2 degrees so I was freezing most of the time. Lucky for me then that no Romanian meal is complete without a soup and their signature is the distinctive sour soup called ciorbă that is soured with vinegar, sauerkraut juice or lemon. I tried a few variations including vegetable, tripe and pork and they were all generously portioned and delicious. Many people baulk at the idea of eating stomach lining (I have no idea why) but even the doubtful would enjoy it prepared this way as it’s thinly sliced and very tender. Trust me!

image

Mămăligă, a meal unto itself

Mămăligă: this is the Romanian answer to polenta; boiled cornmeal that is the very cornerstone of Romanian meals. It is served plain or with butter, cheese or sour cream. I made the mistake of ordering it along with a main, thinking it would be like a side dish. What came out could have fed me for days: a veritable steaming mound that had layers of cheese melted within in. I’d gladly be a peasant to eat this every day.

Sarmale served with mămăligă, sour cream and a chilli pepper

Sarmale served with mămăligă, sour cream and a chilli pepper

Sarmale: I am no stranger to cabbage rolls. In Greek cooking we have lahanodolmathes which are delicous cabbage wrapped parcels of rice and meat, cooked and doused in an avgolemono (egg and lemon) sauce. So the bar for me is set very high (especially if it’s yiayia’s lahanodolmathes we’re taking about), but I’m always eager to try a variation.

Even supermarket sarmale was tasty

Even supermarket sarmale were tasty

Sarmale are different in that they use sour cabbage rather than fresh cabbage, smoked meat, and are covered in a tomato sauce. So the end result has a completely different flavour to what I’m used to but I really enjoyed the sourness and the smoky flavours. Apart from eating this in a restaurant I also tried the supermarket version which was so good (and so cheap) it became my train snack of choice.

So many delicious baked treats at every turn

So many delicious baked treats at every turn

Baked treats: I am incapable of walking past a bakery or street food stand without stopping to stare, salivate and more often than not, buy something on display. If I spy something I’ve never tried before then that’s grounds for immediate purchase. Even if I’ve just eaten.

Apple filled pastry

My freezing hands hold an apple filled pastry

There are hole-in-the-wall bakeries dotted all over the towns of Transylvania and each one had a slightly different offering so I tried my fair share of pastries, cakes and other doughy creations. Some were disappointing, either bland or not as fresh as I’d hoped given I could see the oven working overtime in the background.

A giant pocket of fried dough stuffed with salty cheese

A giant pocket of fried dough stuffed with cheese

My favourite was from the town of Sibiu – a giant piece of crescent shaped dough, filled with salty cheese and deep fried. At 2 lei a pop (that’s less than €0.50) it was practically a meal, albeit not a particularly healthy one.

Baklava made with chocolate and soaked in chocolate syrup

Baklava made with chocolate and soaked in chocolate syrup

Baklava. If ever a food had an identity crisis this would have to be it. The Greeks claim to have invented it. The Turks swear it’s theirs. The Armenians perfected it. No it was the Lebanese.

Whatever. As long as I can eat it I’m happy. There’s plenty of it around in Romania and what excited me most was the not-very-traditional-but-genius chocolate version.

Chocolate baklava. Traditional? No. Delicious? Oh yes

Chocolate baklava. Traditional? No. Delicious? Oh yes

I also spotted this years ago in Istanbul but have never seen it elsewhere. A bastardisation for sure but the combination of filo pastry, nuts and chocolate syrup was fantastic.

image

Papanași – Romanian doughnuts with sour cream and tart berry jam

Papanași: Every cuisine seems to have a variation on fried sweet dough (loukoumades, beignets, kleina, churros…) and I’m yet to find a variation I haven’t loved. Papanași are Romanian doughnuts made from a mixture of sweet cheese, eggs and semolina, fried and served with sour cream and fruit syrup or jam. Very heavy but very delicious. They are a popular dessert in restaurants but I would not recommend eating this in conjunction with mămăligă unless you have been fasting for three days.

image

Kürtőskalács from its true home in Transylvania

Kürtőskalács get an honourary mention even though they featured in their own post recently. They originate from Transylvania which was of course part of Hungary until 1918, so both the Hungarians and the Romanians lay claim to this unique pastry. After eating my weight of them in Hungary I thought it only fair to try one in its original home. It was more or less the same in looks, size and preparation. I chose walnut as I hadn’t seen this option elsewhere.

Is it just me who ends up with an uncooked inner layer in their kürtőskalács?

Why do I always end up with an uncooked inner layer in my kürtőskalács?

It was beautifully caramelised on the outside but once again had an uncooked layer on the inside. I’m beginning to wonder if this style of cooking over coals ever allows the kürtőskalács to cook through? This is keeping me up at night!

Has anyone else experienced Romanian food, either in Romania or elsewhere?

45.943161 24.966760

The Breakfast Club

Posted on November 6, 2014 by thefidgetyfoodie

IMG_4244

Breakfast is arguably the most important meal of the day. Especially if you´re arguing with a nutritionist.

When I am travelling and especially when I am staying with friends abroad, I find that breakfast says a lot about the place I am in and the people I am with.

Here are my favourite breakfast moments from the past few months:

A Full Irish Breakfast

A Full Irish breakfast

The Full Irish – closely related to the Full English, this is the type of heart stopping affair that will safely keep you full ´till dinner. Handy if you´re labouring in the fields all day or as in my case, exploring the Irish countyside. The key elements include bacon, sausages, black pudding, white pudding, sautéed mushrooms, beans, fried potatoes and tomato. All cooked in lots of lovely Irish butter and served with soda bread and a cup of tea. My favourite parts were (vegetarians look away) the respective puddings; black pudding is a made from pork blood, oatmeal, pork fat, onions and spices and white pudding is similar minus the pork blood. It´s the key defining feature of the full Irish breakfast so don’t let your squeamish side deter you!

A fresh ensaïmada from Mallorca

A fresh ensaïmada from Mallorca

Not just any old breakfast pastry, Mallorca´s ensaïmada is a protected product (up there with Champagne and feta) with a guarantee of origin since 1996, even though it originates from the 17th century. Flour, water, sugar and pork lard create sheer layers of pastry which are shaped in a coil, baked, sprinkled with powdered sugar and sometimes filled with cream or custard. They are the Balearic answer to croissants, dipped in coffee and enjoyed as the morning meal.

Breakfast spread in Leipzig. Where to start?!

Breakfast spread in Leipzig. Where to start?!

My friends Marc and Kathleen in Leipzig really know how to put on an impressive German breakfast spread. It all starts with bread; lots of it and different varieties. Select a piece and build your breakfast from there. There were several cheeses including camembert and cheddar, various cured meats (even a vegetarian sliced ´meat´), crudités, jams, mustards, hard boiled eggs, homemade pickles, cream cheese, slices of apple cake, fruit and fresh coffee. I tried to be as restrained as my hosts, focusing on one piece of bread and one or two toppings at a time but with that spread it was tough!

Delicios skyr and homemade jam on toast in Iceland

Delicios skyr and homemade jam on toast in Iceland

A homemade Icelandic breakfast is not to be missed. I´ve already waxed lyrical about my obsession with skyr and the fact that it appears at every meal. Breakfast is no exception. Add milk or cream or just enjoy this smooth dairy product unadorned. Almost everything at this breakfast table was homemade, including the sweet kleina pastries and the delicious blackberry jam.

The classic French breakfast

The classic French breakfast

Breakfast at a sidewalk café in Paris is as de rigueur as visiting the Louvre. A French breakfast is usually small and perfectly formed – typically a croissant and/or tartine (sliced French bread) with butter and jam, juice and café crème. You can jazz it up with a fried egg or swap your croissant for a pain au raisin. Très chic, just like the French.

What´s your favourite breakfast meal?

Cloudberries are my crack

Posted on November 2, 2014 by thefidgetyfoodie

IMG_4085

That is to say this rare Arctic berry has become somewhat of an obsession for me and I´ve spent a disproportionate amount of time and money trying to track it down. 

cloudberry-season-15

Photo by My Little Norway

These delicate berries, in season for barely three weeks, can only be hand-picked from the swamps of the Northern Skandinavian countries. Such remote and enigmatic locations are often a closely guarded family secret, passed down through generations.

shop-nordicbakery

I remember exactly when my obsession with cloudberries began. It was mid-2007 and I began working in London´s Soho, next door to a café called Nordic Bakery. It was a treasure trove of Skandi goods, from piping hot cinnamon buns to gravlax on rye.

cloudberry jam

This is where I first picked up a jar of cloudberry jam (hjortronsylt) and from the first spoonful I was hooked. At £5 a jar it was an expensive habit (but surely cheaper than crack?), especially when you consider my penchant for eating it straight from the jar.

IMG_4085

I dreamt about eating the berries fresh but was never in the right place at the right time. Read More

60.173324 24.941025

6 sugar highs I’ll never forget

Posted on October 30, 2014 by thefidgetyfoodie

IMG_5382

Get to the heart of a country’s sweet spot and I think you’re well on your way to understanding the very soul of those people. The Greek sweets I’ve grown up with often come drenched in honey syrup and sprinkled liberally with cinnamon. Well we are sweet and intense people are we not?!

I have an extraordinarily strong sweet tooth. And a very robust dessert stomach. Both come in handy when travelling and eating a disproportionate amount of sweet treats.

Here is a taster of some unforgettable sweet moments; memorable as much for their provenance as their deliciousness.

Hungarian Dobos Torte

Hungarian Dobos Torte

Dobos Torte: this Hungarian beauty was invented 130 years ago; that’s impressive staying power in the fickle world of dessert fads (take note cronuts). Five layers of sponge cake and chocolate buttercream are topped with a firm caramel glaze and crushed nuts. Patissier József Dobos pioneered the use of buttercream to extend the cake’s shelf life, a clever idea in the pre-refrigeration age. Pick up a slice from any patisserie or cafe throughout the country.

Europe's first liquid nitrogen ice cream parlour

Europe’s first liquid nitrogen ice cream parlour

Liquid nitrogen ice cream: cooking with liquid nitrogen is not exactly an age old technique but it has revolutionised ice cream production. Leading the charge is Chin Chin Labs, tucked away in London’s Camden markets. Pick your flavour and watch as the ice cream custard mixture is whipped into a frenzy with liquid nitrogen, delivering ridiculously smooth, dense and crystal-free ice cream to order. 

Saffron and seasame seed ice-cream with salty caramel sauce and pistachio crumbs

Saffron and seasame seed ice cream with salty caramel sauce and pistachio crumbs

A myriad of curious flavours rotates regularly; try tonka pineapple one week and pumpkin cheesecake the next. They also get creative with their toppings (white chocolate coated potato chips anyone?). 

Calissons in every colour

Calissons, almost too beautiful to eat (but not quite)

Calisson: you can’t take two steps in Provence without tripping over a display of these stunning beauties. Each one perfectly almond shaped, they are made from candied fruit paste and marzipan with a thin layer of royal icing. The flavours represent the beautiful produce and colours of southern France. My favourite place to buy them is La Cure Gourmande. Why L’Occitane hasn’t developed a calisson flavoured range is beyond me. Read More

How to navigate a Polish milk bar

Posted on October 25, 2014 by thefidgetyfoodie

Walk around the cosmopolitan streets of a modern Polish city and the communist era is not immediately evident.

Until you step into a Polish milk bar (bar mleczny). Offering hearty meals to the masses, these cheap cafeterias thrived during the communist era and are still popular with students, pensioners and curious travellers. And apparantely the staff liked to yell at customers (soup nazi style).

Familijny milk bar in Warsaw

Familijny milk bar in Warsaw

My equally curious friend Maz and I walked into Warsaw’s best known milk bar, Familijny, with empty bellies and a sense of excitement. It was a no frills affair, from the formica tables to the absence of any colour. Minimalist in the way only ex soviet bloc countries can be.

The extensive menu of Polish classics

The extensive menu of Polish classics

We looked at the menu on the wall. 100% Polish. I can generally navigate a foreign menu, taking cues from the layout and the few words I know. We took a stab that zupa was soup and gulasz was goulash. After that we were stumped.

Diners eat quickly and quietly

Diners eat quickly and quietly

So we decided to order something from each section and hope for the best. The most expensive dish was 7.5 zlotys (AUD$2.50/£1.50) so we weren’t exactly risking our life savings. This is what we ordered

1. bulka
2. zupa gzbowa
3. kurczak pieczony
4. gulasz miesny
5. nalesniki
6. kalafior

Our experimental meal at Familijny milk bar

Our experimental meal at Familijny milk bar

Which turned out to be (clockwise from the top left) Read More

51.919438 19.145136

Posts navigation

Older Posts
Newer Posts

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new posts by email.

Categories

  • Asian foodie adventures
  • Best of Australia
  • Boozy travel tales
  • Cheesy tales
  • Cuba
  • Delicious London
  • Estonia
  • European foodie adventures
  • Family foodie tales
  • Food in the Americas
  • Food-themed parties
  • Foodie collections
  • Greek foodie traditions
  • Marvellous markets
  • Sweet stories
  • Sydney (and surrounds) food adventures
  • Travel like a foodie
  • Uncategorized

Recent Posts

  • Bienvenidos a Miami
  • The 4 food groups of Christmas
  • Tassie’s Top 5
  • Pondering Palermo
  • 14 food rules of Colombia

Recent Posts

  • Bienvenidos a Miami
  • The 4 food groups of Christmas
  • Tassie’s Top 5
  • Pondering Palermo
  • 14 food rules of Colombia

Recent Comments

Bienvenidos a Miami… on My foodie adventures in C…
Gary Avila on Pondering Palermo
thefidgetyfoodie on The 4 food groups of Chri…
Katia Sanfilippo on The 4 food groups of Chri…
thefidgetyfoodie on Tassie’s Top 5

Archives

  • November 2022
  • December 2021
  • June 2021
  • October 2020
  • March 2020
  • November 2019
  • August 2019
  • March 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • August 2018
  • June 2018
  • April 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • October 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • March 2017
  • January 2017
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • May 2016
  • March 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014

Categories

  • Asian foodie adventures
  • Best of Australia
  • Boozy travel tales
  • Cheesy tales
  • Cuba
  • Delicious London
  • Estonia
  • European foodie adventures
  • Family foodie tales
  • Food in the Americas
  • Food-themed parties
  • Foodie collections
  • Greek foodie traditions
  • Marvellous markets
  • Sweet stories
  • Sydney (and surrounds) food adventures
  • Travel like a foodie
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Follow Following
    • thefidgetyfoodie
    • Join 151 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • thefidgetyfoodie
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...