Gołąbki

Gołąbki (Polish pronunciation: [ɡɔˈwɔmpki] ) is the Polish name of a dish popular in cuisines of Central Europe, made from boiled cabbage leaves wrapped around a filling of minced pork or beef, chopped onions, and rice and/or kasza.

Gołąbki
Gołąbki served with tomato sauce and vegetables
Alternative namesGołąb, holubky, holishkes
CourseAppetizer or main
Place of originPoland
Serving temperatureHot
Main ingredientsCabbage, pork or beef
Ingredients generally usedonions, rice, kasza
Variationsgolubtsy, "lazy golubtsy" (made with minced meat)

Gołąbki are often served during on festive occasions such as weddings, holidays, and other family events.[1][2]

Etymology

Gołąbki is the plural form of gołąbek, the diminutive form of gołąb ("pigeon, dove"). Max Vasmer accepts this as the origin of the word, stating that the dish was so named due to similarity in shape. The Polish linguist Marek Stachowski finds this theory semantically dubious. He instead proposes an Oriental borrowing, pointing out that a similar dish, aside from Eastern Europe, is known in the Levant and Central Asia. He mentions Persian کلم kalam "cabbage" or کلم پیچ‎ kalam pič "cabbage roll" and Old Armenian կաղամբ kałamb "cabbage" as possible sources. The word would have later been altered by folk etymology to resemble the word for the bird.[3]

Other names

Gołąbki are also referred to in English as golombki, golumpki, golabki, golumpkies, golumpkis, gluntkes, or gwumpki.[1][2][4] Similar variations are called holubky (Czech, Slovak), töltött káposzta (Hungarian), holubtsi (Ukrainian), golubtsy (Russian), balandėliai (Lithuanian), Kohlrouladen (German) or kåldolmar (Sweden, from the Turkish dolma). In Yiddish, holipshes, goleptzi golumpki and holishkes or holep are very similar dishes.[5]

In the United States, the terms are commonly Anglicized by second- or third-generation Americans to "stuffed cabbage", "stuffed cabbage leaves", or "cabbage casserole".[1][2][4][6]They are also referred to as "pigs in a blanket",[7][8] not to be confused with pigs in blankets in British and Irish cuisine.

See also

References

External links