Site Links
ByzCath.org Home
Latest News
Liturgical Calendar
Lectionary
Newest Members
Rybak, Brendan Cooke, prieststeve, Mike E, JW55, AlyoshaGorshok, UnityNow, ALLEN, Dionysius25, Douglas W, 2105, Subdeacon Ben, Juvenaly, WAbersdorf, Pulane, Monk Michael, Chris Johnson, MikeP, Francois, dkullman
3255 Registered Users
Who's Online
19 Registered (Anthony, Chtec, Collin Nunis, Deacon Robert Behrens, Epiphanius, Job, John K, John Murray, JSMelkiteOrthodoxy, Mikey Stilts, Mykhayl, Nicole_248, Pani Rose, Penthaetria, theophan, 4 invisible), 60 Guests and 21 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Private Forums
The Byzantine Forum also hosts these private forums: The Deacon's Door (for deacons and deacon candidates and their wives), the Orthodox Christian Studies Forum (for currently enrolled students only of the distance education programs offered by the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America) and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church Clergy Forum (for clergy, religious, and clergy wives of that Church). Contact an administrator for access.
Latest Photo
Camp Nazareth Pilgrimage 2008
Forum Stats
3255 Members
20 Forums
22569 Topics
293180 Posts

Max Online: 1087 @ 07/16/07 01:09 PM
Page 1 of 15 1 2 3 ... 14 15 >
Topic Options
#289405 - 05/21/08 08:28 PM Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish?
Orthodox Pyrohy Offline
Forum Keilbasa Sleuth
Member

Registered: 01/17/05
Posts: 1345
Loc: Near BOB
We were having a enlightened discussion about the origins of kielbasa. Some were saying it was Rusyn because it had to have came from Sub-Carpathia. But the Ukrainians said that Sub-Carpathia is in Ukraine therefore Kielbasa had to be noted as being originally from Ukraine. The Polish guy said, "no, no, no! Kielbasa was invented in Warsaw and taken to the Carpathian mountains by Jesuits in the 1600's therefore kielbasa is Polish in origin.
I'm confused, what do you all think?
Is kielbasa Polish, Ukrainian, or Rusyn?

Top
#289407 - 05/21/08 08:33 PM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Orthodox Pyrohy]
Halia12 Offline
Member

Registered: 11/02/07
Posts: 188
Loc: Canada
How about all three? I cannot believe that sausage did not exist before 1600.
I am sure there is a lot of cross-cultural borrowing in Eastern Europe.
Who invented cabbage rolls? Borscht? How can any of this be proved?

Who cares anyway?

Jusy enjoy the food.

Top
#289408 - 05/21/08 08:33 PM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Orthodox Pyrohy]
Slavipodvizhnik Offline
Member

Registered: 07/23/05
Posts: 1836
Loc: The Third Rome
Actually, since Carpatho Russia, Ukraine and Poland all belong to Russia, kielbasa is actually Russian!


Alexandr, ducking for cover!!!

Top
#289409 - 05/21/08 08:35 PM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Orthodox Pyrohy]
Ung-Certez Offline
Member

Registered: 02/17/02
Posts: 2170
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
 Originally Posted By: Orthodox Pyrohy
We were having a enlightened discussion about the origins of kielbasa. Some were saying it was Rusyn because it had to have came from Sub-Carpathia. But the Ukrainians said that Sub-Carpathia is in Ukraine therefore Kielbasa had to be noted as being originally from Ukraine. The Polish guy said, "no, no, no! Kielbasa was invented in Warsaw and taken to the Carpathian mountains by Jesuits in the 1600's therefore kielbasa is Polish in origin.
I'm confused, what do you all think?
Is kielbasa Polish, Ukrainian, or Rusyn?


Matvey,

You crack me up, man!

X.B. B.B.!

Ung

Top
#289410 - 05/21/08 08:35 PM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Slavipodvizhnik]
Alice Moderator Offline
Moderator
Member

Registered: 01/12/03
Posts: 6564
Loc: New York
This is as futile as debating if baklava and stuffed Grape leaves are Greek, Lebanese or Turkish? Who cares? Just choose the particular recipe you like best and eat...

Alice \:\)

Top
#289411 - 05/21/08 09:20 PM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Orthodox Pyrohy]
Ung-Certez Offline
Member

Registered: 02/17/02
Posts: 2170
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
 Originally Posted By: Orthodox Pyrohy
We were having a enlightened discussion about the origins of kielbasa. Some were saying it was Rusyn because it had to have came from Sub-Carpathia. But the Ukrainians said that Sub-Carpathia is in Ukraine therefore Kielbasa had to be noted as being originally from Ukraine. The Polish guy said, "no, no, no! Kielbasa was invented in Warsaw and taken to the Carpathian mountains by Jesuits in the 1600's therefore kielbasa is Polish in origin.
I'm confused, what do you all think?
Is kielbasa Polish, Ukrainian, or Rusyn?



I thought Sts. Cyrill and Methodius and their disciples introduced kolbassy (kovbassi, kielbassy, I forget the Hungarian name, etc.) to Greater Moravia, So. Poland, and Pannoia in c.863 A.D., and later brought it to Kyiv in c. 988 A.D. Soon after, the Germanic Holy Roman Emperor denounced this act, and forced these Slavs to eat "Bratwurst" instead. This was only cleared up after the Pope recalled Cyrill and Methodius to Rome to straighten out this culinary heresy! \:D

X.B.! B.B.! Smachnoho!

Ung

Top
#289416 - 05/21/08 10:49 PM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Ung-Certez]
AMM Offline
Member

Registered: 04/04/05
Posts: 2550
Loc: PA
It's Welsh in origin and was known as Cyllbasedd. It was carried to Eastern Europe by two brothers, Cyryl and Mawrthyd.

Top
#289418 - 05/21/08 11:04 PM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: AMM]
Pavloosh Offline
Member

Registered: 03/19/05
Posts: 465
Loc: Northeastern Pennsylvania
A much more important question: Who stole the kishka?

Top
#289424 - 05/22/08 01:12 AM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Pavloosh]
Etnick Offline
Member

Registered: 11/12/02
Posts: 919
Loc: Where we say men and mankind
I can't tell the difference between Kolbasi or Italian sausage. I get heartburn from both! But boy are they delicious! \:D

Top
#289429 - 05/22/08 03:16 AM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Etnick]
Orthodox Pyrohy Offline
Forum Keilbasa Sleuth
Member

Registered: 01/17/05
Posts: 1345
Loc: Near BOB
 Originally Posted By: Etnick
I can't tell the difference between Kolbasi or Italian sausage. I get heartburn from both! But boy are they delicious! \:D


You have to experience homemade or at least made at a specialty shop kielbasa to really experience it. The stuff you buy at the supermarket doesn't compare to home made nor the two or three varieties they have at the Eastern European Store near here...
But to be fair the Russian... err.. Eastern European shop sells Carpathian Kielbasa, let me think how they write it, Karpatskya I think... not karpatska though ;\)
homemade beats all though.
That supermarket stuff is greasy.

Top
#289436 - 05/22/08 07:43 AM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Orthodox Pyrohy]
Secret Squirrel Offline
Byzantine Secret Service
Member

Registered: 06/03/07
Posts: 143
Loc: The Oak Tree
 Originally Posted By: Orthodox Pyrohy
We were having a enlightened discussion about the origins of kielbasa. Some were saying it was Rusyn because it had to have came from Sub-Carpathia. But the Ukrainians said that Sub-Carpathia is in Ukraine therefore Kielbasa had to be noted as being originally from Ukraine. The Polish guy said, "no, no, no! Kielbasa was invented in Warsaw and taken to the Carpathian mountains by Jesuits in the 1600's therefore kielbasa is Polish in origin.
I'm confused, what do you all think?
Is kielbasa Polish, Ukrainian, or Rusyn?

None of the above. I was always taught that kielbasa was a bad Italian sausage recipe that was sold cheaply to the Slavs in Krakow. You know those Florentine merchants could not pass up an opportunity to make a quick bit of change on an otherwise useless recipe. I understand the British came in second place on the bidding for the recipe. \:D

Top
#289439 - 05/22/08 08:07 AM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Secret Squirrel]
Our Lady's slave Offline
Member

Registered: 11/03/01
Posts: 4944
Loc: Glasgow , Scotland
I have to say I wonder how well it would do in certain areas of Scotland - bearing in mind that the Italians opened the Fish and Chip shops that sell deep fried Mars Bars.

We have plenty of Poles here - I wonder how they would look on deep fried Kielbasa \:\)

Top
#289440 - 05/22/08 08:09 AM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Secret Squirrel]
Garajotsi Offline
Member

Registered: 04/17/06
Posts: 286
Loc: Canada
Xpucmoc Bockpec

Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish?

Who cares but it is simply \:\) DELICIOUS! \:\)

Kolya
_________________________


Top
#289444 - 05/22/08 09:00 AM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Garajotsi]
Orthodox Catholic Offline
Member

Registered: 11/05/01
Posts: 22065
Loc: Canada
Dear Rusyns,

Kielbassa was actually a pagan food that was offered to honour the wild boar-god of the forests in pre-Christian times among the East Slavs.

Historically and culturally, the Slavs were deathly afraid of the forests. It was in the forest that all sorts of evil existed and the pagan Slavs felt the need to placate embodiments of such evil, such as the dangerous wild boar, with rites and sacrifices. Enter - kielbassa which when offered to the wild boar god was then consumed as a formm of "communion."

The form of kielbassa used in such rites persisted and the Orthodox Patriarchs were all too painfully aware of its pagan roots. They wrote several times to the Kozaks (now what were they - Ukrainian, Rusyn or Polish?)to ask them to refrain from bringing kielbassa for the Church blessing of Easter foods etc.

Of course, the Kozaks never obeyed such commands . . . Some pagan traditions were definitely worth keeping (and which true Slav could disagree with them?). If anything, this made the Kozaks even more "pro-kielbassa."

So the kielbassa tradition is basically that of Rus' and the Rusyny descended from the Eastern Slavs. The material culture is largely shared with Poland and south eastern Poland in particular (we do know that Poland received Christianity from the East and only later became RC). And the Poles took much from the Rusyn-Ukrainian tradition. Just ask any Pole to say the word "two" in Polish . . .

But the Poles have improved on the Rusyn kielbassa (as we always feared they would . . .).

They have mastered the tradition of frying kielbassa on an open pan by slicing a piece lengthwise and putting the two pieces down and over - rather than the primitive Rusyn way of slicing kielbassa in many pieces that only dries them out by the time they are ready to be served.

In Williamsville, NY there is a pancake house, run by a wonderful Polish family, that prepares kielbassa with pancakes that tastes like nobody's business!

One more reason to salute our Kozak heritage!

Alex

Top
#289446 - 05/22/08 09:06 AM Re: Is kielbasa Rusyn, Ukrainian or Polish? [Re: Orthodox Catholic]
Serge Keleher Offline
Member

Registered: 06/22/06
Posts: 3489
Loc: Dublin
Actually I would think that the national affiliation of the stuff depends on how one spells its name!

Fr. Serge

Top
Page 1 of 15 1 2 3 ... 14 15 >



The Byzantine Forum provides message boards for discussions focusing on Eastern Christianity (though discussions of other topics are welcome). The views expressed herein are those of the participants and may or may not reflect the teachings of the Byzantine Catholic or any other Church. The Byzantine Forum and the www.byzcath.org site exist to help build up the Church but are unofficial, have no connection with any Church entity, and should not be looked to as a source for official information for any Church. Contents copyright ©1996-2008. All rights reserved.