- sweet-and-sour, for example.
Lahanodolmades (Λαχανοντολμάδες) –
Greece Töltött
káposzta –
Hungary Balandėliai –
Lithuania Halubcy –
Belarus Golubtsy (Голубцы)...
- seasonal,
hearty dishes such as töltött
káposzta, húsos
káposzta and
korhelyleves are
based on savanyú
káposzta.
classic Hungarian restaurants often offer...
-
variations are
called holubky (Czech, Slovak),
sarmale (Romanian), töltött
káposzta (Hungarian),
holubtsi (Ukrainian),
golubtsy (Russian), balandėliai (Lithuanian)...
-
Zoltan Kaposztas is a male
former international table tennis player from Hungary. He won a
bronze medal at the 1983
World Table Tennis Championships in...
- of the day. The most
commonly consumed pickles are sauer**** (savanyú
káposzta),
pickled cu****bers and peppers, and csalamádé, but tomatoes, carrots,...
- Benő
Káposzta (Budapest, 7 June 1942) is a
former Hungarian footballer. He pla**** for Újpesti Dózsa as a defender. He pla**** 19
games for the
Hungary national...
- The
Káposztás utcai Stadion is a multi-use
stadium in Sopron, Hungary. It is
currently used
mostly for
football matches and is the home
stadium of MFC...
- red cabbage, cauliflower, carrot,
green tomatoes, sauer**** (savanyú
káposzta), beetroot, TV
pepper (abbreviation of "töltésre való"
meaning "meant for...
-
salads and appetizers,
stuffed peppers and
stuffed cabbage called töltött
káposzta.
Hungarian cuisine was
influenced by
Austrian cuisine under the Austro-Hungarian...
-
Szeklerland it is an
essential part of székelygulyás and the erdélyi
rakott káposzta (a type of c****erole). In Romania, the
local type of sauer**** ("varza...