Solyanka

Solyanka

Solyanka with olives
Alternative names Selyanka
Type Soup
Place of origin Russia
Serving temperature Hot
Main ingredients Meat, fish, or mushrooms, pickled cucumbers with brine; often cabbage, smetana, dill
Cookbook: Solyanka  Media: Solyanka

Solyanka (Russian: соля́нка; [sɐˈlʲankə] is a thick, spicy and sour Russian[1][2] soup that is common in Russia and other states of the former Soviet Union and certain parts of the former Eastern Bloc.

Overview

There are three basic types of solyanka, with the main ingredient being either meat, fish, or mushrooms. All of them contain pickled cucumbers with brine, and often cabbage, salted mushrooms, potatoes, smetana (sour cream), and dill. The soup is prepared by cooking the cucumbers with brine before adding the other ingredients to the broth.

Solyanka is also popular in the former East Germany (the current German states of Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, and Thuringia, along with the eastern half of Berlin), where it is commonly found in restaurants and available in canned form in grocery stores. (The German transliteration is Soljanka.) This practice stems from the era when Soviet troops were stationed in the GDR, and Soljanka was found on the menu at many East German restaurants. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who was raised in East Germany, is fond of Solyanka.[3]

See also

References

  1. Похлёбкин, Вильям (1983). Национальные кухни наших народов. p. 9.
  2. Георгієвський, Микола (1967). Українська кухня. p. 6.
  3. Connolly, Kate (28 September 2010), "Angela Merkel reveals her East German food stockpiling habit", The Guardian, Berlin, retrieved 2014-07-17, I'm particularly fond of solyanka (a meat and pickled vegetable soup), letcho (a Hungarian vegetable stew) and shashlik (a spicy kebab)
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