Borscht
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Categories: Articles to be merged since September 2007 | Slavic cuisine | Soups | Polish soups | Peasant foods | Ukrainian cuisine | Jewish cuisine | Lithuanian cuisine | Ukrainian loanwords
Image:Borscht with cream.jpg
Borscht with sour cream.
Borscht (Russian and Ukrainian: борщ, Polish: barszcz) is a vegetable soup from Eastern Europe, which is traditionally cooked including beetroot as a main ingredient[1][2] which gives it a strong red color. Other, non-beet varieties also exist, such as the tomato paste-based orange borshch and the green (zelioni) borshch (sorrel soup).
Ingredients of making borsch
EtymologyThe soup is part of the local culinary heritage of many Eastern and Central European nations. The Ukrainian and Russian name is borshch (борщ, pronounced /borʃtʃ/). It is also a staple dish in Eastern Europe, and made its way into United States cuisine and English vernacular by way of Jewish immigrants (as well as other Eastern Europeans) with the spelling borsht, the Yiddish word for the soup is "בורשט" (borsht). Alternative spellings are borsch[3][4] borscht and borshch. Hot and cold BorshchThere are two main variants of borshch, generically referred to as hot and cold. Both generally are based on beets, but are otherwise prepared and served differently. Hot BorshchHot borshch (mostly Ukrainian and Russian), the kind most popular in the majority of cultures is a hearty soup with many common optional ingredients, depending on the cuisine, including various vegetables (beans, cabbage, carrots, cucumber, potatoes, onions, or tomatoes), mushrooms, and meats (chicken, pork, or beef). It is more akin to a stew than most soups, and may be eaten as a meal in itself, usually with thick dark bread. Image:Lurid borscht.jpg
The lurid pink colour of traditional Lithuanian cold borscht. Often eaten with a hot boiled potato, sour cream and dill.
Cold BorschtCold borscht (mostly Lithuanian) exists in a number of cultures. It is the kind most commonly eaten by Ashkenazi Jews (European-heritage), and is the only kind readily available commercially in markets in the U.S. Cold borscht is most often a simple sweet soup, consisting of sliced or diced beets cooked in their broth, optionally with lemon juice, minced onion, and sugar to produce the desired sweetness. It is served as a thin chilled broth with the beet pieces, sometimes with a single boiled potato, and usually with sour cream, which creates a contrast to the soup's sweetness. The sour cream is not mixed into the soup, but placed by the diner in the middle of the soup, to be scooped into the spoon with the liquid and beets. There are several other varieties of cold borscht. One is made with the mild Russian yeast drink called kvass. Another combines chilled milk or yogurt with sliced tomatoes. While the base for borshch is often meat stock, this version is only suitable for non-Lenten seasons among some Christian communities that observe Lent. A simpler vegan version made with vegetable stock is eaten during Lenten and fasting periods, which is called Fasting Borshch. Jewish borshch containing dairy ingredients contains no meat. Polish variationsThe basic Polish borscht (barszcz) recipe includes red beetroot, onions, garlic, and other vegetables such as carrots and celery or parsley roots. The ingredients are cooked for some time together to produce kind of clear broth (when strained) served as boullion in cups or in other ways. Some recipes include bacon as well, which gives the soup its distinctive, "smoky" taste. Other versions are richer as they include meat and cut vegetables of various kinds where beetroots aren't the main one (though this soup isn't always called barszcz, but rather beetroot soup). This variation of barszcz isn't strained and vegetable contents are left in it. Such soup can make the main course of obiad (main meal eaten in the early afternoon). Barszcz in its strictly vegetarian version is the first course during the Christmas Eve feast. It's served with ravioli-type dumplings called "uszka" (lit. "little ears") with mushroom filling (sauerkraut can be used as well, again depending on the family tradition). Typically, this version does not include any meat ingredients, although some variants do. As other Christmas traditions, barszcz served at that time has its own symbolic meaning. Most of food served at that time isn't quite the food of the living ones, but of those that passed away. Dried fruit, mushrooms — all symbolise death of the old year as opposed to birth of the new one a day later. Change of food on December 25 (Christmas) is a visible sign that old traditions are still preserved in those little, sometimes unclear ways. A key component to the taste of barscz is acidity. Whilst barszcz can be made easily within a few hours by simply cooking the ingredients and adding vinegar, lemon juice or citric acid; the traditional way is to prepare barszcz several days before and allow it to naturally sour. Depending on the technique; the level of acidity required and the ingredients available, barszcz takes 3-7 days to prepare in this way. Other regional recipesThere are local variations in the basic borscht recipe:
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References
cs:Baršč de:Borschtsch el:Μπορς es:Borscht eo:Barĉo fr:Bortsch id:Borscht ko:보르시 he:חמיצה ka:ბორში lt:Barščiai nl:Borsjt ja:ボルシチ oc:Bòrshch pl:Barszcz (potrawa) ru:Борщ sl:Boršč fi:Borssi sv:Borsjtj uk:Борщ |


