Kabanos

Kabanos
Type Sausage
Course Appetizer, main
Place of origin Poland
Serving temperature Hot, Cold
Main ingredients Pork
Cookbook: Kabanos  Media: Kabanos

Kabanos /ˌkæbæˈnɒs/ (plural: kabanosy) is a Polish long thin dry sausage made of pork. They are smoky in flavor, and can be soft or very dry in texture depending on freshness. Typically, they are quite long, 60 cm (24 in) but very thin, with a diameter of around 1 cm (0.39 in), and folded in two, giving them a characteristic appearance. Their staging process, and the resulting exceptional taste and aroma are the features which set kabanosy apart from other sausages. Kabanos is the most popular sausage in Poland.

Etymology and history

The name comes from word kaban, an old term used in Eastern Poland for a young male pig fattened with potatoes specially for making this kind of sausage (hence kabanos - "made of kaban"). The word kaban with a similar meaning is also present in other Slavic languages, e.g. it denotes a boar in Russian and Ukrainian. It was loaned into Slavic from Turkic languages.[1]

Kabanosy were known to be produced already in medieval times at least, and because of their long-lasting capabilities they were considered perfect food for soldiers and travellers, which is reflected by kabanos' design traits: thinness, usually very extended length, and shape in which they are always kept. According to some historians, they were hanged around neck (like a necklace), allowing any horse-mounted riders to eat on the go without stopping for food break. For the same reasons they were also used as hiking food and very common among Polish Highlanders. Tighter, smaller wraps of long kabanosy - as sold nowadays - were also common among foot soldiers (and travellers). Smaller kabanos wrapping allowed it to be "worn" on a wrist and eaten while marching.

Although nowadays only pepper is used for spicing and kabanos-making recipe is the same throughout modern Poland, it is so only since the beginnings of the Second Polish Republic (circa 1920). Before 20th Century many various spices were being used in the production of kabanosy, giving them local, distinct taste, which differed between various regions of Poland.

Modern Times

Production of kabanosy requires minimum of 150 grams of best grade pork meat to make 100 grams of sausage, which is known today as "minimum of 3:2 ratio", meaning that it takes 3 kilograms of meat to make only 2 kilograms of kabanosy. It happens because of the loss of most of the water contained within meat used to prepare the raw sausage, which evaporates during the long process of meat smoking.[2] Nowadays almost every Polish manufacturer of kabanosy describes on the packaging at which ratio their sausage was made, for example manufacturer Kania states that "157 grams of meat was used to make 100 grams of kabanosy".[3]

There are 2 main types of kabanosy: slightly "softer" and more common nowadays type (smoked much less, just for the taste), and a "harder" ones (much drier than the softer ones), which are smoked for very long time, basically until it is impossible to bend the sausage anymore (to the point that it "cracks" when someone attempts to bend it). Because of the long and thorough smoking process, the "harder kabanos" type is extremely long-lasting and doesn't spoil as quick as any other meat without preservatives. Furthermore, kabanosy are also categorized into another 2 main types, depending on the amount of spices: "hot" (very spicy) and "mild" (less spicy). Both "harder" and "softer" types of kabanosy come as "hot" or "mild", since the "hardness" of sausage come only from the length of smoking times, but otherwise they are made of exactly the same ingredients.

According to modern recipe, kabanosy are currently seasoned only with pepper, with rare exception when hint of cumin is sometimes also added. Unlike other meats, these sausages are typically eaten alone as an appetiser and often served with cheese. Although kabanosy can be cooked with other food, they are always served cold only. Only if there were no other meats available to Polish travelers or soldiers, only then they would have sliced kabanos into small pieces and cook them with vegies and buckwheat, millet, potatoes or whatever else they had available at the moment.

In recent years some manufacturers created sausages made according to exactly the same process as kabanosy, but substituted pork with other meats (mainly poultry). Due to their distinct shape and look they are often called kabanosy too, with the addition of name of the meat they were made from, i.e. kabanosy z kurczaka, "chicken kabanosy".

Polish-German dispute

After Polish accession to European Union, Poland and Germany fought a trade war for 10 years over the name kabanos (due to German claim to the traditional Polish recipe).[4] In 2011, when Polish manufacturers submitted scientific proofs of kabanos' Polish origins from their historians, the EU have finally granted the Guaranteed Traditional Speciality kabanos name to Poland.[5] This status does not forbid manufacturers from other countries to produce and sell kabanos under that name, but demands that it is made according to specified "time-honoured recipes".[6]

See also

References

  1. Max Vasmer (1953–1958). "Кабан". Russisches etymologisches Wörterbuch (in German). Heidelberg: Winter. Russian translation by Oleg Trubachyov: "Кабан". Этимологический словарь русского языка. Moscow: Progress. 1964–1973.
  2. "Kabanosy - tradycyjny specjał z Polski". Prawdziwe Mistrzostwo. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  3. "ZM Kania - Kabanosy". Zakład Mięsny Kania. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  4. "Polish-German War Over Kabanosy". TVN24. 30 August 2010. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  5. "Poland has won the war over Kabanosy". TVP Info. 22 September 2011. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  6. Stratis G. Camatsos (27 Sep 2011). "Kabanos sausages obtain EU certification. Germany withdraws its objection". NewEurope.

External links

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