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Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Why the Knish Became New York's Miss Congeniality | Serious Eats
src: www.seriouseats.com

A knish is an Eastern European snack food consisting of a filling covered with dough that is either baked, grilled, or deep fried.

Knishes can be purchased from street vendors in urban areas with a large Jewish population, sometimes at a hot dog stand or from a butcher shop. It was made popular in North America by Eastern European immigrants from the Pale of Settlement (mainly from present-day Belarus, Poland, Lithuania and Ukraine).

In most Eastern European traditional versions, the filling is made entirely of mashed potato, ground meat, sauerkraut, onions, kasha (buckwheat groats), or cheese. Other varieties of fillings include sweet potatoes, black beans, fruit, broccoli, tofu, or spinach.

Knishes may be round, rectangular, or square. They may be entirely covered in dough or some of the filling may peek out of the top. Sizes range from those that can be eaten in a single bite hors d'oeuvre to sandwich-sized.


Video Knish


History

Eastern European immigrants who arrived sometime around 1900 brought knishes to North America. Knish (????) is a Yiddish word that was derived from the Ukrainian knysh (????) and Polish knysz. The first knish bakery in America was founded in New York in 1910." Generally recognized as a food made popular in New York by immigrants in the early 1900s, the United States underwent a knish renaissance in the 2000s driven by knish specialty establishments such as the Knish Shop in Baltimore, Maryland, Buffalo and Bergen in Washington, DC, or My Mother's Knish, in Westlake Village, California.


Maps Knish



Similar dishes

Many culinary traditions feature similar baked, grilled, or fried dough-covered snacks (see list of dumplings), including the Cornish pasty, the Scottish Bridie, the Jamaican patty, the Spanish and Latin American empanada, the Middle Eastern fatayer, the Portuguese rissol, the Italian calzone, the Central and South Asian samosa, the Texan klobasnek, the Czech kolache, the Romanian placinta, the Russian and Ukrainian pirog, pirozhki and vatrushka, the Tatar peremech, the Russian-German bierock, and the Southeast Asian curry puff.


Garlic Mashed Potato Knishes - What Jew Wanna Eat
src: whatjewwannaeat.com


See also

  • Jewish cuisine
  • Turnover
  • Yonah Shimmel's Knish Bakery

Don't Panic Over the Knish Shortage - NBC Connecticut
src: media.nbcconnecticut.com


References


Why the Knish Became New York's Miss Congeniality | Serious Eats
src: www.seriouseats.com


External links

  • The dictionary definition of knish at Wiktionary
  • The dictionary definition of ???? at Wiktionary

Source of article : Wikipedia