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Polish American Cuisine & Other Eastern European Countries

Polish American Cuisine & Other Eastern European Countries. Presented by Nicci Brown, Leah Cerwinske , Molly Deprenger , Kelly Kester, & Bryana Piazza. Eastern Europe. Iron Curtain. “East Central” Europe. Slavic Nations. Slav: Most ethnically and linguistically diverse group of Europeans

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Polish American Cuisine & Other Eastern European Countries

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  1. Polish American Cuisine& Other Eastern European Countries Presented by Nicci Brown, Leah Cerwinske, Molly Deprenger, Kelly Kester, & Bryana Piazza

  2. Eastern Europe

  3. Iron Curtain

  4. “East Central” Europe

  5. Slavic Nations • Slav: Most ethnically and linguistically diverse group of Europeans • Eastern and southeastern Europe • East Slavs: Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians • West Slavs: Poles, Czechs, Sorbs • Roman Catholic Church • South Slavs: Serbians, Croatians, Bosnians, Slovenes, Macedonians, Montenegrins, Hungarians, Bulgarians

  6. Polish in America • According to the 2012 American Community Survey from the United States Census Bureau, approximately 9,500,696 Polish individuals are currently living in the United States • According to Homeland Security’s “Yearbook of Immigration Statistics,” from 2003-2012, 105,507 native-born Poles obtained legal permanent residence in the United States • Outside of Poland, Chicago is home to the largest community of Polish individuals in the world • Chicago’s Polish community often referred to as Polonia

  7. Polish in Chicago: Immigration • Three distinct waves of immigration from Poland to Chicago: • 1) 1850s-1920s: Due to economic changes in Poland, this was primarily a “peasant” migration, also known as the “Great Migration” • Also known as “ZaChlemeb” (For Bread) • 2 million Poles left Eastern Europe • Moved to the Northeast and Midwest to work as industrial laborers • By 1930, the Polish community replaced Germans as the largest ethnic group in Chicago • 2) World War II: Due to Nazi takeover in Poland • 3) 1980s: Known as the “Solidarity” immigration as a result of martial law and the struggle to bring democracy to Poland

  8. Polish in Chicago: Immigration

  9. World War II • During WWII, Germany invaded Poland and killed nearly three million Jewish citizens • About two million Polish Catholic civilians were killed • 250,000 emigrated to the U.S. during WWII • 250,000 Poles emigrated to the U.S. following WWII

  10. Communist Poland • Following WWII, Joseph Stalin and the Soviet Union controlled Poland and other Eastern European nations • Communist control • Stalin and the government tightly controlled all aspects of life • Between 1950 and the late 1980s, over 185,000 Poles emigrated to the U.S.

  11. Polish in Chicago • When the Polish immigrated to Chicago, many moved close to where work was. The largest initial area of settlement was near factories on the northwest side and was known as the “Polish Triangle” or “Polish Downtown” • Between Ashland Avenue, Division Street, and Milwaukee Avenue • Expanded into what is now known as Wicker Park, Bucktown, and Logan Square • Currently, not many Poles still live in this area, but the Polish Museum of America is still there on Milwaukee Ave.

  12. Old Polish Triangle

  13. Polish in Chicago • Polish community moved further northwest to the Avondale neighborhood, which is now also mixed with the Hispanic Community • Continued moving even further northwest: Irving Park, Portage Park, Jefferson Park, and Norwood Park are where a large number of Polish Americans reside today • In 1990, 65% of all Polish Americans lived in the suburbs • Niles • Park Ridge • Palatine • Northbrook • Lansing

  14. Where to go? • Laramie Bakery and Deli • 3012 N. Laramie Avenue • Eastern European foods • Paczki, borscht, sausages, cheeses • Harczak’s Authentic Ethnic Sausages • 7035 W. Higgins Avenue • 11 different varieties • Kasia’s Deli • 2101 W. Chicago Avenue • Entrees, soups, salads, cold cuts, cheeses, kolachzis, sides • Red Apple Buffet • 3121 and 6474 N. Milwaukee Avenue (2 locations) • “Polish Home Cooking” - Potato pancakes, stuffed cabbage, Polish sausage

  15. Polish in Chicago

  16. American Polonia • Established immigrant communities in the United States • Largest Polonia community is in Chicago • Polish American Organizations in Chicago • Polish Museum of America • Polish American Association • Polish National Alliance • Polish Highlander’s Alliance of North America

  17. Polish in Chicago • Since 1979, the Chicago Polish community has celebrated Polish food and traditions every Labor Day weekend at the Taste of Polonia in Jefferson Park in Chicago. • While this annual event features Polish speakers, bands, and dancing, the main event involves the food.

  18. Polish in Chicago: Demographics

  19. Polish in Chicago: Demographics

  20. European Food Information Council (EUFIC) Romania Slovenia • Bulgaria Poland Czech Republic Croatia • Estonia • Albania

  21. Traditional Diet and Eating Patterns • Polish food is rich, substantial and relatively high in fat, including saturated fat, and salt. • Typical meals contain a lot of meat or sausages. • The vegetables typically used are cabbage, beetroot, cucumber, carrots, celery, parsley, dill, mushrooms, and potatoes. • Cream and sour cream are common ingredients in soups and sauces, or are added as a topping.

  22. Traditional Diet and Eating Patterns • Red meat, poultry, and sausages are most commonly fried in a generous amount of oil before consumption • Vegetables are often fried after being boiled. • According to a 2009 study from the London Social Marketing Unit (LSMU), traditional Polish foods are “relatively healthy and balanced on the surface.” • Meals seem healthy based on the different foods and fresh vegetables consumed • The unhealthy food practices identified include: • High levels of fat consumption (fatty hams, smoked meats and sausages, cream, deep frying) • Regular consumption of high-salt condiments

  23. Vegetables • In 1518, an Italian princess married a Polish King, bringing her cooks and gardeners to Poland • Polish food already had many vegetables but she introduced so many new ones that the Polish word for vegetable “wloszczyzna” means “things from Italy”

  24. Traditional Polish Foods • Pierogi • Kapusta • Braised sauerkraut or cabbage, bacon, mushrooms, onion, garlic, and butter • Seasoned with salt, pepper and sometimes bay leaf, sugar, paprika and apples • Golabki • lightly soft boiled cabbage leaves wrapped around minced pork or beef, chopped onions, rice or barley • Baked in a dish in a tomato sauce

  25. Traditional Polish Foods • Bigos • Part of Polish, Lithuanian, Belarusian, and Ukrainian cuisine • “Hunter’s stew” • Typical ingredients include white cabbage, sauerkraut, various cuts of meat and sausages, pureed tomatoes, honey, mushrooms • Meats may include: • Pork,ham, sausage, veal, beef, venison, rabbit, or other game • Seasoned with pepper, caraway, juniper berries, bay leaf, marjoram, pimenta, dried or smoked plums, etc…

  26. Traditional Polish Foods • Sausages • Kielbasa • “Polish sausage” • Smoked • Staple of Polish cuisine • Kiszka • “Blood sausage” • Common in Eastern Europe • Meat, pig’s blood, buckwheat/barley, pig intestines used as casing • Kabanosi • Long and thin • Dry sausage made of pork

  27. Traditional Polish Foods • Soups • Flackzki • Tripe soup: thin strips of beef tripe • Bay leaf, parsley, carrot, beef broth, salt, pepper, nutmeg, paprika, marjoram • Czernina • Duck’s blood soup: duck, hen, rabbit, or pig blood; poultry broth • Polish, Lithuanian • Sweet & sour taste due to vinegar and sugar • BurakowaZupa • Polish beet soup

  28. Traditional Polish Foods • Pączki: typical Polish dessert • Deep fried dough filled with a sweet filling • Pączki Day, also referred to as Fat Thursday (the last Thursday before Ash Wednesday) was traditionally celebrated to use up all of one’s lard, sugar, eggs and fruit before Lent • Today it is more commonly celebrated on Fat Tuesday • Polish individuals in Chicago celebrate on both days, due to the large Polish community

  29. “Typical Day” in Poland Breakfast (8-10am) Toast with marmalade/jam with coffee/tea Lunch (3-4pm) Pierogis, Kielbasa sausage, Soup (i.e. Flackzi) Dinner (7-8pm) Golabki Snacking is not common!

  30. Catholicism • Great majority of Polish Americans are Catholic • 1/5 of all Catholics in the U.S. are Polish American • Polish Americans have married outside of the church more than American Catholics of other descents

  31. Holidays • Observe Catholic holidays of Christmas and Easter • Christmas Eve celebrate wigilia • Wigilia is a meal with meatless dishes and oplatek

  32. Swienconka • Food baskets brought to church for a blessing on the day before Easter Sunday • Foods have symbolic meanings • Eggs stand for strength of family and new life • Decorated eggs (Pisanki) for Easter

  33. Pulaski Day • National day of remembrance of Polish culture • Parades in large cities in March

  34. Health Beliefs • Faith healers common in Poland • Many Polish Americans very religious and believe wearing religious medals will help prevent illness • Other beliefs to maintain health include avoiding sick people, eating a healthy diet, keeping warm, exercising, and avoiding gossip

  35. Therapeutic Food Use • Some Polish Americans may believe sauerkraut, tea, and soda water are good for colic • Chamomile tea used for cramps • Raspberry tea and wine help with colds • Cooked garlic for high blood pressure • Warm milk, tea, or lemonade for coughs • Tea with honey and spirits to sweat out illness

  36. Food Safety Concerns • Sausage is a staple in Polish Americans’ diets • Important to make sure sausage has “safe food handling” label on packages • Use fresh sausage within two days of purchase • Ensure sausage has been cooked to 160° F using cooking thermometer • Keep cooked sausage out of the danger zone • More species testing on imported beef from Poland occurring

  37. Counseling Concerns • Language barrier • RUMC currently does not have Polish interpreters • Use InterpreTalk • Cultural differences • Very formal • Extend a handshake, refer to client as Mr. or Ms. • If unfamiliar with the foods that the client mentions, ask them to describe the ingredients and style of preparation

  38. Polish-Speaking Chicagoans: 2000

  39. Counseling Concerns

  40. Prevalence of Chronic Disease • Polish Americans considered white/Caucasian in most U.S. epidemiological studies • Generally lower incidences of chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes compared to Hispanics, African Americans, and Native Americans • However, some Polish-American dietary habits may put them at risk for chronic health complications • HAPIEE Study (Health, Alcohol, and Psychosocial Factors in Eastern Europe): 2009 study by Boylan et al. examined the dietary intake of three random samples of men and women aged 45-69 years old from Poland, Russia, and the Czech Republic • Used a Healthy Diet Indicator (HDI) with scores ranging from 0-7 (7 is highest) with a score of 1.0 +/- 0.7 among Polish men and women

  41. HAPIEE Study

  42. HAPIEE Study

  43. HAPIEEStudy

  44. Diet Restrictions: Diabetic • Sugary Sweets • Not always a part of daily life, but important to educate • Pierogis • Common in a traditional Polish diet • Traditionally contain potatoes wrapped in wheat dough • Educate on starches and impact on blood sugar • Inconsistent intake • Long periods of time in between meals • Encourage a small mid-day snack for carbohydrate consistency, prevent blood sugar spikes and lows

  45. Diabetes Friendly Eating Plan • Breakfast (8-10am): Toast with marmalade/jam with coffee/tea (caution with excess sugar) • Mid-day snack: • Lunch (3-4pm): Pierogis, Kielbasa sausage, Soup (i.e. Flackzi) • Monitor amount of pierogis consumed for appropriate carbohydrate exchanges • Dinner (7-8pm): Golabki

  46. Diet Restrictions: Heart Healthy • Sodium • Typical recommendation: <2300mg/day • Fat • 25-35% kcal Many traditional Polish foods are full of sodium and saturated fat: Sausages/meats, soups, pierogis, etc.

  47. Heart Healthy Eating Plan • Breakfast (8-10am): Toast with marmalade/jam with coffee/tea • Lunch (3-4pm): Pierogis, Low fat/low sodium Kielbasa sausage (or a smaller portion paired with a lower fat meat), low sodium Soup (i.e. Flackzi) • Dinner (7-8pm): Golabki • Dessert *Avoid salting foods and adding extra fats (i.e. butter)

  48. Diet Restrictions: Renal • Sodium • Sausages/meats, soups, pierogis, etc • Phosphorus • Traditional Polish foods may be lower in sodium and phosphorus • Americanized Polish sausages and other foods may be more processed here in the US which means that the phosphorus content will increase

  49. Kidney Friendly Eating Plan • Breakfast (8-10am): Toast with marmalade/jam with coffee/tea • Lunch (3-4pm): Pierogis, low sodium Kielbasa sausage, low sodium Soup (i.e. Flackzi) • Dinner (7-8pm): low sodium Golabki • Dessert *Opt for more natural, less processed meats for less sodium and phosphorus

  50. Pierogi • Pierogi are a type of dumpling that originated from Central or Eastern Europe • Poles, Russians, Ukranians, Slovaks, and Czechs claim to have invented pierogi • Fillings include meat, sauerkraut, potato, cheese, and a variety of fruit • Can be served with soup, as a starter sprinkled with fried onion, as a main course with sour cream and applesauce, or even as a dessert www.polishharvest.com

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