| The
region has given to the Hungarian cuisine a lot of characteristic
dishes.
As its inhabitants would say, Somogy
County's head
is washed by the waters of the Balaton, its feet by the Dráva.
Life here has traditionally been closely enriched by the
varied landscape of hills, forests, marshes and waters. They
have also greatly determined the diet. The very names of some
dishes, listed as though they figured on a menu, are telling:
Somogy duck stew with dumplings; sterc made from flour
crumble and eaten with curdled milk, mutton stew with cottage
cheese pasta, also described as the dinner of 1848;
apple stuffed with nuts, pike with vegetale ragout à la
Mrs Révész, bacon rinds with mushroom and letcho,
popularly known as "Kapos clothes stew".
Baranya County, inhabited alongside the Hungarians also
by Germans, Croats, and Székelys, can also boast of
quite a few delicious specialities. As regards the ingredients
and the modes of preparation, the list is practically unending.
Fish, game, fruit and wine are of cardinal
importance in all local cuisines. From Ormánság come the "bounded
dumpling soup" (made with strudel pasta and stew base)
and the "flax spinner's potatoes" (with smoked
bacon, green pepper in paneake); from Pécs, the Tubes
stuffed rumpsteak (wìth poultry liver, celery, mushroom,
with red-wine and plum jarn sauce) and the "tipsy gnocchi" (with
potatoes, onions and ewe-cheese); from the region of Zselicség
we know the "Szenna pocketed meat" (pork slices
stuffed with mushrooms, bacon and cheese fried in breadcrumbs).
These dishes should be tasted to accompany the wines
of the region.
The best known region in Tolna County with a similarly
varied ethnic make-up is Sárköz, famous
for its folk costumes. The villages of Őcsény,
Decs, Sárpilis, Alsónyék and Báta
have formed a specific closed community practically from
the time of the Magyar Conquest. Only a hundred years ago
the saying "half water, half fish" well described
the riches of the waters in the region abounding in marshland,
bogs and forests. No wonder that fish
and game occupied an important piace in the diet. On feast days the menu included
mutton, lamb, strudel, béles (soft sweet sponge cake
layered with various flavours) and a variety of raised cakes.
Well worth tasting are the pickled fish, the lamb
soup with tarragon, the steak
with forest mushrooms and the back
of venison with tarhonya, a special Hungarian egg barley, flavoured with
bacon or the various handmade strudels.

|

Fried carp

Oven roasted duck

Noce di vitello al vapore

Krémes - Hungarian typical pastry
|