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Full text of "Hungarian specialities cookery book"

1UNGARIAN 

SPECIALITIES 
COOKERYBOOK 





BY 



NEI1YDE SACELLARY 

AND 

HELEN FODOR 




R.GERGEI* BUDAPEST HUNGARY 
DOROTTVAUTCA2 




LIBRARY 

THE UNIVERSITY 
OF CALIFORNIA 

SANTA BARBARA 

FROM THE LIBRARY 
OP F. VON BOSCHAN 



OCS LIBRARY 



. 




We dedicate this book to the first Lady of our country, 
Madame Nicholas Horthy de Nagybdnya. 

The Authors. 



HUNGARIAN 

SPECIALITIES 

COOKERY BOOK 



BY 

NELL Y DE SA CELLAR Y 




R. GERGELY, DOROTTYA UTCA 2, BUDAPEST 



Illustrated by KELENYI (KOZALIK) ILONA 
Printed by D. LOBL & SON, BUDAPEST 



FOREWORD. 



This book would not have come into existence had it 
not been inspired by the interest of our foreign visitors, 
which caused us to realize the need of dealing more widely 
with this subject matter. 

The Hungarian kitchen, the Hungarian folklore 
plays a very important role in the conquest that foreign 
tourist traffic has achieved in Hungary, especially during 
the past jew years, 

That natural reserve with which all our foreign visitors 
regard our ,,strange" flavours, soon thaws into a definite 
liking for our dishes, and now they- even desire the savour 
which is lacking in the western-style kitchen. These fla- 
vours and savours we serve in rich varieties. 

With this little book we wish to serve one purpose: to 
bring Hungay nearer to your hearts in giving you a glimpse 
into Hungarian life and in making you acquainted with our 
country. If this can be accomplished we are certain that 
you will become our friends. And we Hungarians have a 
great need of your friendship so in order to achieve our 
goal we resort to the old Hungarian proverb: the way to the 
heart is through the stomach! We too have chosen this way, 
and in this manner our book intends to reach your hearts. 



Now we turn to our readers with one reqeust hawe 
confidence in us, rather our recipes. We realize that foreig- 
ners are a little afraid of, the\ highly seasoned Hungarian 
dishes which they are not accustomed to, but this very fact 
has led us to compile the cookery book with utmost care in 
the selection of the recipes, so .that we can recommend 
them to you with a clear conscience, not only from the stand- 
point of deliciousness but also from that of ditetics. 

Please accept this little book with as much love as we 
welcome you to our poor, mutilated land Hungary. 

We wish you a good appetite and most pleasant enter- 
tainment. 

The authors. 



HUNGARIAN DISHES 



THICKENING 



(Rantas. ) 

First we would like to say a few words about our 
soups and vegetables. To foreigners it is strange that we eat 
much thicker soups and vegetables than the people of other 
countries. The reason is that we prepare a thickening for all 
our soups and vegetable dishes. ,,Rantas" is the special Hun- 
garian thickening and whereas in other countries foods are 
prepared with either butter or a little flour, in our country 
this thickening is used always. Especially in the country it is 
inconceivable to prepare a soup or a vegetable without 
thickening. Its purpose is to thicken and flavour the food. 
Not all, but most vegetables and soups are prepared in this 
way. In our recipes it is indicated whether a dish is prepared 
with or without ,,rantas". It is prepared in the following 
way: Put some flour in hot lard, add finely chopped onions 
and fry until ingredients turn a rosy color; add paprika and 
dilute with soup or cold water. Now add to the soup or 
vegetable being prepared. 

We wish to explain also the difference between the 
,,paprikas" and stew (porkolt). By stew we mean those 
dishes which consist of lard, onions, paprika and meat in a 
thick gravy. ,,Paprikas" is prepared in the same way but 
sour cream is always added. Porkolt and Gulyas are pre- 
pared like our stew but it is more succulent and potatoes and 
noodles are cooked also in it, but always without sour cream. 



SOUPS 



CHICKEN SOUP WITH COOKED BEEF. 

(Tyuk leves bennejott marhahussal.) 

Our recipe will serve six people, but one can imagine 
that at a Hungarian village wedding, where 100 or 200 peo- 
ple are invited, what great quantities of ingredients are 
used to prepare this soup, which is just the first course of the 
holiday banquet. Chicken soup is an infallible dish at wed- 
ding festivals or at the Easter Sunday dinner. 

2 Ibs beef ! /2 lb. beef bone 

1 small chicken 2 carrots 

1 cellery 2 parsley roots 

1 large potato 1 kohlrabi 

1 small head kale 1 onion 

1 green pepper 1 tomato 

paprika, salt. 5 pepper seeds 

Place beef and meat in a pot with beef bones and 
add enough cold water to cover meat. Cook for an hour and 
then add all the vegetables and seasoning. Continue cooking 
slowly, under boiling point for three hours more. Now strain 
sou free from vegetables and meat into another pot and 
cook dumplings or noodles in it. Serve the meat separately 
with potatoes, or as many country people do, - - serve 
the meat and cooked vegetables on a separate dish at 
the same time as the soup is served. The beef however, must 
never be served, as it is only used to give the soup a good 
flavour. 

8 



,,GULYAS" SOUP. 

(Gulyas leves.) 

The Gulyas is a near relative of the stews and differs 
only in that the Gulyas consists of more liquid, the meat is 
chopped into smaller pieces, and is served not on a meat plat- 
ter, but in a soup bowl with potatoes and gnocchi cooked 
in it. 

Preparation is as follows: 

2 Ibs. beef 2 tablespoonsful lard 

2 onions 1 green pepper 

1 2 teaspoonsful paprika 1 Ib. potatoes 
gnocchi 

Cut beef into small pieces. Fry onions in lard and add 
meat, green pepper, paprika. Stew until meat begins to soften. 
Dilute with as much water as is necessary for the soup, salt 
and cook small potato squares and gnocchi in it. 

POTATO SOUP WITH SOUR CREAM. 

(Krumplileves tejjellel.) 

I Ib. potatoes 1 tablespoonful flour 

1 tablespoonful lard 1 onion 

1 tablespoonful paprika 2 tablespoonsful sour cream 

Clean and cut potatoes into squares and cook in salt 
water till half done. Prepare a thickening from lard, flour, 
onions chopped fine and when it becomes red, add 
paprika and dilute with a little water. Stir in with the pota- 
toes and cook till potatoes become soft. Just before serving 
add sour cream. In season cook a green pepper and half a 
tomato in the soup to give it a delicious taste. 



CABBAGE (CAROUSER) SOUP. 

(Kaposztas korhelyleves.) 

1 Ib. sourkraut 3 tablespoonsful lard 

2 pints caggabe juice 3 tablespoonsful flour 
sliced smoked sausage 2 teaspoonsful paprika 

2 onions. 3 tablespoonsful sour cream 

l /2 pint water 

Mix sourkraut, cabbage juice, sausage, water, salt and 
cook for an hour and a half. When sausage is tender, mix 
with it a sauce consisting of onions chopped fine, lard, flour, 
paprika. Add sour cream and allow soup to boil. Serve hot. 



CREAMED BEAN SOUP. 

(Tejfeles bableves.) 

1 Ib. beans 2 tablespoonsful lard 

2 carrots 2 tablespoonsful flour 

1 parsley root some paprika 

3 tablespoonsful sour cream noodles 

2 small onions 

Cook beans in a quart of water together with carrots 
and parsley root. When beans are soft, add a thickening pre- 
pared the following way: heat lard, add flour and chopped 
onions; when turning red add cold water and mix in with 
the beans. Add paprika, noodles and before serving the sour 
cream; heat a little longer and serve. It is even more tasteful 
and delicious, if smoked sausage cut into rings is cooked 
with the beans. 

10 



LENT SPAWN SOUP. 

(Bojti halikra leves.) 

Spawn thickening 

sliced carrots 1 2 egg yolks 

Bay leaf sour cream 

vinegar or lemon juice roasted bread crumbs. 

onion 

Cook fish together with sliced carrots and bay leaf, 
in as much salt water as will cover the fish. 

From a little lard prepare a thin white sauce; dilute 
with the soup. In the soup bowl mix sour cream well with 
one or two yolks of eggs adding a little vinegar or lemon 
juice to it. Pour soup on this mixture. Serve with rolls cut 
into small squares, roasted red. 

SOUR PIG SOUP. 

(Savanyu malacleves.) 

Wash and cut up the nails, feet, liver and lungs of six- 
eight week pigs. Prepare thickening from one tablespoonful 
lard, 2 spoonsful flour and a large onion chopped fine, little 
paprika and water. 

Place meat in thickening together with a little bay leaf 
and cook till soft. Before serving, add salt and Vinegar or 
lemon juice according to taste, 3 tablespoonsful sour cream 
and serve hot. 

COUNTRY HAM SOUP. 

(Falust sonkaleleves.) 

thickening water in which ham has been 

2 3 tablespoonsful sour cream cooked 

11 



Usually the water in which ham has cooked is set aside 
and used either for vegetables or soup. Take as much liquid 
as is needed for the soup and add a little thickening in 
which there is no onion. Add sour cream and boil. It is 
not necessary to salt the soup as the ham liquid is usually 
sufficiently salty. Serve with roasted roll squares. 



SOUR EGG SOUP. 

(Savanyu tojadeves.) 

Prepare abundant, light thickening adding as much water 
or sour cream to it as is necessary for the soup. Season with 
little vinegar, bay leaf, salt and grated lemon rind. Before 
serving, carefully break two eggs per person into the soup 
in such a way that the yolk and whites stay together; cook 
hard. Add sour cream according to taste. 



COUNTRY ,,LEBBENCS" SOUP. 

(Falusi lebbencsleves.) 

l /4 lb. fresh smoked bacon 2 teaspoonsful szegedi paprika 
handful of lebbencs 2 pints water. 

Cut bacon into squares and fry till red. Remove bacon 
from fat and put a handful of lebbencs in fat. Fry till red. 
Add paprika, salt and water. Cook till soft. Add bacon and 
serve hot. 

Preparation of ,,Lebbencs". 
12 



From ] /2 pint of flour, 3 whole eggs and a small amount 
of water roll a hard cake. Allow to stand and then roll out 
thin, cut in squares. Dry on sieve. 

FINE NOODLES FOR MEAT SOUP. 

(Finom metelt huslevesbe.) 

Place flour in center of rolling board. Make small hole in 
center of flour and break an egg into it; add a little salt and 
mix well with a knife. Knead with hands, till forms a smooth 
mass. Divide in two parts forming little loaves and 
let it rest under cover for 15 minutes. Now roll out one af- 
ter the other, using as little flour as possible into trans- 
parent thinness. Place on a white cloth and let dry. After an 
hour cut into l l /2 inch strips, place three, four on top of each 
other and cut either into hair-width thinness or into small 
squares. Place on sieve where it is to dry completely. Use half 
of it in soup and put the other half away in a tightly closed 
bottle. 

HAM DUMPLINGS FOR SOUP. 

(Sonkas gomboc lev e she.) 

1/8 Ib. lard 1/8 Ib. chopped ham 

2 eggs yokes roll crumbs 

1 whole egg 

Mix together lard, yolks of eggs and egg; now add ham 
and as much bread crumbs as for liver dumplings. Form 
into little balls and cook in soup. 

13 



FISH 

MUSHROOMED PERCH-PIKE OF THE BALATON. 

(Gombas baL&'Mt fogas.) 

S perch-pikes (14 Ib. each) 2 yolks of eggs 

1/4 Ib. mushrooms grated cheese 

2 ounces butter parsley 

2 1/2 ounce flour seasoning 

1 ounce white wine lemon juice. 

Wash and clean fish and let it stand. Wash and 
clean mushrooms, cut into fine slices and fry in butter with 
a little pepper, and finely chopped parsley. Place fish on 
fireproof dish, pour mushrooms over it, place in hot oven 
and bake under slow fire. While baking, prepare a sauce by 
mixing and cooking together butter, flour and wine, add 
lemon juice, yolks of eggs and a little water. Pour sauce over 
fish, sprinkle with grated cheese and place small pieces of 
butter on it. Put back into the oven for three or four minutes 
and serve hot. 

FISH SZEGED STYLE. 

(Szegedi halaszle.) 

The greater variety of fish used, the better. Wash carp, 
perch-pike, sturgeon, sheat-fish; clean and cut into large pie- 
ces: salt each piece separately. (Let it stand for an hour.) 
Chop fine 6 or 7 onions. Place fish in cooking pot, al- 
ternately one row of fish and one row of onions. Add three 
teaspoonsful paprika and as much water as will cover fish an 
inch. Cook slowly for two hours. Do not stir - - only 
shake the pot. 

14 



FRIED SHEAT-FISH. 



(Rantot! harcsa.) 



1 large sheat-fish 
flour 



eggs 

bread crumbs 




Clean and slice fish into slices one inch thick; salt and 
allow to stand for an hour. Dip in flour, eggs and bread 
crumbs and fry in hot lard to a nice yellow colour, Fried carp 
prepared in this way is also delicions but it is a little bony. 

PAPRIKA CARP. 



(Racponty. ) 

4 Ib. carps 

salt 

4 tablespoonsful sour cream. 



% Ib. butter 
6 potatoes 
Szegedi paprika 
2 onions 

Place in a fire - proof dish 14 Ib. sliced butter, potatoes 
cooked and cut into rings, onions chopped in rings and the 

15 



carp which has been cleaned and salted inside and outside. 
Pierce either side of the carp in four places with a sharp knife 
and stuff fissures with pieces of butter. Add the milk 
of the carp and sprinkle with paprika. Pour sour cream 
over the whole and bake in oven sprinkling with butter and 
gravy. Serve in the dish it has been prepared. Requires an 
hour to prepare. 

CREAMED PERCH-PIKE WITH BACON LARDING. 

(Szalonnaval spekelt tejfeles jo gas.) 

Mix butter, sour cream, finely chopped onions and a 
few drops of lemon juice together. With this mixture smear 
well a cleaned, and bacon-larded perch-pike. Place in hot oven 
in a fire-proof dish, and bake till half-done. Then add 
sour cream and continue to bake till well done. Serve in the 
fire-proof dish, with buttered potatoes and lemon slices. 



ENTREES. 

CRAY-FISH STEW. 

(Rak porkolt. ) 

20 cray-fish pinch of paprika 

1 onion 1 green pepper 

parsley 

Scrub cray-fish well with a small brush; clean, wash and 
cook in salt water with parsley and fry till red. Grate onion, 
add paprika, green pepper sliced in rings, little flour and 

16 



crab juice. After one boiling add cray-fish meat that has been 
removed from shell; salt according to taste and steam for 

5 or 6 minutes. Serve with rice. 

PREPARATION OF GOOSE LIVER. 

(Libamaj keszttese.) 

liver little salt 

l /2 onion % lb. goose fat 

l /2 clove garlic paprika. 

Wash liver in abundant water. Cut heart in half, wash 
out blood carefully so as not to sever from the liver. If gall 
is still attached to it cut around it and remove. Place liver 
in sufficiently large pan, add l /2 onion and little salt. Melt 
goose or pork lard and when hot, pour on liver. Cook in 
oven slowly for a half hour.. When ready place on a plate, 
strain lard aaJ POIT on liver, adding a little paprika to it. 
It will keep for days. The lard can be used separately too, 
greasing bread, served with tea. 

COUNTRY MEAT JELLY. 

(Malac kocsonya.) 

I onion salt 

6 cloves of garlic 4 quarts of water 
15 black pepper seeds paprika 

2 l /2 Ibs. meat jelly, pig skin, head, hoof, nails, tail. 

Cook meat, onion, garlic and seasoning in water until 
meat becomes entirely soft this requires about three 
hours. Now divide and place into deep soup plates and when 
set sprinkle with paprika. 

17 



STUFFED GREEN PEPPER. 

(Toltotl paprika.) 

12 green peppers salt 

1 Ib. ground pork meat 1 Ib. fresh tomatoes 

14 Ib. rice 2 tablespoonsful lard 

1 onion 2 tablespoonsful flour 
3 4 sugar cubes parsley 

2 eggs 

Wash peppers, remove stem and seeds. Mix meat with 
rice, eggs, little salt and stuff peppers with this mixture. 
Cook tomatoes with a little parsley and an onion in a little 
water. When cooked, strain tomatoes and place the green 
peppers in the tomato sauce. After an hour's cooking prepare a 
thickening from the lard, flour, sugar and little water. Add 
to the tomato sauce and slowly cook peppers for two more 
hours. If one wishes a thicker sauce the thickening must be 
increased, if a more liquid sauce is desired add more water. 
Sour cream may be added before serving. 

POTATO LAYER. 

(Rakott burgonya.) 

15 potatoes 5 tablespoonsful sour cream 
6 eggs roll crumbs 

1/2 Ib. raw smoked sausage 2 teaspoonsful butter 
or cooked ham 

Cook potatoes in hot water with skin on. In another 
pan cook hard boiled eggs. When ready, peal both and slice 
in rings. Slice sausage or cooked ham in another dish. Put 
butter and 2 tablespoonsful of sour cream in fire-proof 
dish; place one row of sliced potatoes in it; then a 
row of sliced eggs, a row of sausage or ham and sprinkle 

18 



with 2 tablespoonsful of sour cream, add one teaspoonful 
of butter, salt, and add another layer of potatoes proceeding 
as before, until ingredients are all used. Finish with a layer 
of potatoes on top. Sprinkle with 3 tablespoonsful of sour 
cream, and sifted roll crumbs. Cook for % of an hour. Serve 
in fire-proof dish. In many places this dish is served as an 
entree but at large country dinners it is served with the meat 
and vegetables. 

HUNGARIAN PEASANT'S SUMMER DINNER. 

(Lecso.) 

2 onions 1 teaspoonful paprika 

l /4 Ib. lard 2 Ibs. sliced green pepper 

1 Ib. sliced tomatoes V2 Ib. sausage sliced in rings. 

5 eggs 

Chop onions fine and fry in lard; add paprika salt, 
sliced green peppers and tomatoes together with sausage. 
Cook under cover till soft. Before serving break five or six 
eggs on it, stir and allow to cook five or six minutes. Serve 
hot. 



MEAT DISHES. 

STUFFED ROASTED CHICKEN. 

(Toltott suit csirke. ) 

Raise the skin on the breast of the. chicken and stuff 
with the following filling: a roll soaked in milk, the yolk of 
an egg, a tablespoonfull of butter, little salt and pepper, the 
strained liver of the chicken and of little finely chopped stew- 

19 



ed mushrooms and parsley. Mix all this together well, 
and stuff the chicken. Place on roasting pan, pour lard over 
it and roast to a good red colour. Serve with rice, potatoes 
and salad. 

FRIED CHICKEN. 

(R&ntott csirke.) 

Young fried chicken is a so called sign of spring in 
Hungary. It can be had throughout the year but according 
to gourmets really delicious fried chicken can be eaten 
only in the early spring. Tourists often go on long trips in 
the spring to the summer garden-restaurants where it is 
known that spring fried chicken is served. Its preparation is 
really simple but for salting and frying great practice is ne- 
cessary, because in this lies the secret of preparing excellent 
fried chicken. Buy a live chicken and kill two hours before 
preparing it. Clean and wash well, chop in eight pieces be- 
cause this way it can fry through well and this is important. 
Salt and place in a sieve to dry. Prepare sifted roll crumbs. 
Turn chicken first in flour, then, in eggs and at last in fine 
bread crumbs. Fry immediately in abundant clean, hot lard, 
first on one side under cover and then on the other side 
removing the cover. If possible serve at once with green 
lettuce. 

NEW YEAR SUCKING PIG. 

(Ujevi malacsult.) 

Buy a 6 8 weeks old sucking pig. Clean and wash tho- 
roughly and dry well. Salt inside and peg out stomach ca- 
vity with small sticks. Place in an adequately large pan. Press 
mouth open and place either a lemon or an apple in it. 

20 



Grease ears and legs well cover with white paper. Pour 
hot lard over the entire pig and roast slowly in an already 
heated oven. Place a small pot of beer on the stove and 
with a thick piece of bacon dipped in the beer, grease the 
pig quite often until its skin becomes red and crisp. Serve 
with red cabbage and potatoes. 

GIPSY ROAST. 

(Nyarson suit ciganypecsenye.) 




On a wooden spit place slices of pork and bacon alter- 
nating until spit is entirely covered. Then place it across two 
bricks, build a fire under it and turn until meat roasts to a 
red color. Place a long pan under the spit so that fat can 
drip into it. In large country towns during folk festivals 
whole calves are roasted in this manner. On the Hungarian 
Plains (Puszta) entire chickens are prepared the same wav- 

MUTTON IN CAULIFLOWER. 

(Birkahus kelkdposztaban.) 

Mutton potatoes 

cauliflower carrot 

parsley celery 

21 



Chop mutton into three inch squares and scald with hot 
water. On the bottom of a large pot place a layer of meat, a 
layer of chopped cauliflower, another layer of meat and a 
layer of peeled potatoes cut in squares. Add a chopped car- 
rot, parsley, cellery and again place layers of meat, cauliflo- 
wer and potatoes. Salt each layer; add enough water to cover 
ingredients and cook for two hours. 

HORTOBAGY STEW 

(Tokany.) 

3 tablespoonsful lard pepper, salt 
2 onions green pepper 
V2 teaspoonsful paprika tomato 

2 Ibs. lean beef 1 tablespoonsful flour 

Fry chopped onions, add paprika and cut beef into slices. 
Steam a little; add l /2 glass of water, salt and pepper and 
continue stewing till meat becomes soft. Cut green peppers 
and tomato into rings, add to the meat together with flour and 
1 2 tablespoonsful water. Stew for % of an hour. Serve 
with noddles or ,,tarhonya". 

COUNTRY STUFFED CABBAGE. 

(Toltott kaposzta.) 

4 Ibs. sourkraut 1 Ib. pork leg 

3 or 4 onions ^ Ib. beef 
2 tablespoonsful paprika 2 eggs 

l /2 Ik. rice seasoning 

cabbage leaves ! /2 Ib. smoked meat. 

2 cloves of garlic 

22 



From abundant lard and 3 4 chopped onions, make a 
brown thickening adding a tablespoonful of paprika and sour- 
kraut. Dilute Nvith cold water (or liquid in which ham 
has cooked) adding a large onion cut in half and two cloves 
of garlic. Cook slowly for a half an hour while stuffing is 
being prepared. 





Staffing: 

Grind pork leg, beef and smoked meat and mix with 
rice, a teaspoonful of paprika, ] /2 clove of garlic, little salt, 
pepper and two whole eggs. From half of the ingredients 
form meat balls and with the other half stuff the cabbage 
leaves. One by one place balls of stuffed cabbage into boiling 
cabbage making room for each with a spoon. If cabbage is 
too thick dilute with water. Cover and allow to cook slowly. 
The longer it cooks or is heated over, the better the taste. In 
the country at the killing of pigs, white sausage and black 
pudding and potatoes are served with it. In many places they 
prepare the cabbage with abundant sour cream . 

This is called the feast in celebration of the killing of 
Pigs. 

23 



,TRANSYLVANIAN" STEW. 



(Szekely Gulyas.) 



2 Ibs. pork 

2 Ibs. cabbage 

3 ounces of sour cream 



paprika 

lard 

1 tbs. flour 



onions 



Stew meat with onions and paprika. In another pot 
steam cabbage and a little lard being careful that it does not 
become brown. When, both meat and cabbage become soft, 
mix together. Mix flour and sour cream together and pour 
on meat and cabbage mixture. Serve immediately. 

TRANSYLVANIAN WOODEN PLATTER. 

(Erdelyi jatanyeros.) 




This is an old Transylvanian dish which is put on 
a thin spit and roasted over an open fire. Some people place 

24 



a grill over the ashes and roast the meat on that. The cleaned 
meat slices are well beaten, salted, sprinkled with pepper, 
smeared with lard and allowed to stand for a few hours. 
Then the meat is pur on the spit in the following way: a 
slice of mutton steak, one slice of pork and a slice of 
veal. Bacon is put berwen the meat. Place over fire, turn 
continually, and roast a good red colour. If prepared over 
a grill the meat slices are placed in the same order on the 
spit and roasted on both sides to a red color. Place on a large 
wooden platter, tastefully arranging it, and garnish with po- 
tatoes, beets, pickles and cabbage. 

GARLIC MUTTON ROAST. 

(Foghagymas birkasiilt.) 

Leg of mutton y 2 tomato 

garlic 1 green pepper 

lard vinegar and water 

Clean meat and remove suet. Pour boiling vinegar-water 
over it and dress with garlic cloves. Place in pot and scald 
with abundant hot lard. Sprinkle with salt, add tomato and 
green pepper. Steam under cover till meat begins to soften. 
Then remove cover and place pot in oven; sprinkle with 
water continually, adding a little water each time untill meat 
slowly roasts red. 

FRANCIS DEAK ROAST. 

(Deak Ferenc pecsenye.) 

Beef carrot 

onion salt 

Y 2 Ib. lard pepper 

25 



Place beef in a pot, and add onion and carrot rings, 
salt, pepper. ]/2 Ib. lard and vinegar. Stew under cover till 
soft. Slice into thin pieces and pour its own gravy over it. 

COUNTRY CABBAGE PIE. 

(Rakott kdposzta.) 

1 large onion 2 Ibs. pork 

Vs Ib. lard seasoning 

14 Ib. rice sourkraut 

sour cream 1 Ib. smoked saussage 

Chop onions fine and fry in lard. Add pork chopped 
in squares, season and steam in a little water occasionally 
adding water until meat becomes soft. 

In a separate pot steam sourkraut in lard and a little 
water. In another pot steam rice in a little lard and water 
till soft. Now place these ingredients in a well greased pot 
in layers together with the smoked sausage which has been 
chopped into rings. Sprinkle the cabbage layer with two tab- 
lespoonsful of sour cream each time. Place in a hot oven 
for a half an hour. 1 Turn out into a dish and pour a few 
ounces of warm sour cream on it. Garnish with sausage rings. 

PAPRIKA VEAL CUTLET. 

(Paprikas borjuszelet.) 

1 Ib. veal sliced 1 grated onion 

2 tablespoonsful lard 1 tablespoonsful szegedi 
2 tomatoes or tomato juice paprika 

] /2 cup water 3 tablespoonsful sour cream 

26 



Salt veal slices. Melt lard, add onions and fry till yellow. 
Add paprika and the beaten, salted veal slices, tomatoes and 
water. Allow to simmer till meat becomes soft. Then pour 
sour cream on it, bring to boiling point and serve. 

STEW OF SUCKING PIG. 

(Malac porkolt.) 

4 5 weeks old pig paprika 

3 tablespoonsful lard 1 tomato 

3 onions 1 2 green peppers 

potatoes or ,,tarhonya" 

Fry chopped onions in lard; add cleaned and chopped 
up pigs meat, salt; add plentiful red pepper, a whole tomato 
cut into half, green pepper and cook slowly and carefully 
because it burns easily. Serve with this stew potatoes or 
,,tarhonya" which has cooked in salt water. 

PIG FESTIVAL MEAT WITH HORSERADISH. 

(Tormas disznohus.) 

At pig killings, hot meat with horseradish is a favorite 
dish. 

Remove meat from the head and trotters. Wash well 
and cook in water to which pepper, salt and an onion have 
been added. When serving place meat on a dish; pour a 
little sauce over it and garnish with grated horseradish. 

HUNGARIAN RUMP STEAK. 

(Serpenyos ro tfelyos. ) 

Onions tomatoes 

paprika potatoes 

rump steaks 

27 



Fry a good many chopped onions in lard with a little 
paprika; dilute with a little water. Salt and beat meat well; 
fry instantly. When fried, place on onions. Pour a 
a little tomato over it and stearrt till soft. Cut potatoes in 
long strips and place on top of meat. Do, not stir only 
shake once in a while, adding a little water from time to 
time. 

PAPRIKA CHICKEN STEW. 

(Paprikas csirke.) 

1 well fed chicken 2 tablespoonsf ul paprika 
2 3 tablespoonsful lard 1 small tomato 

2 onions 1 large green pepper 

Cut cleaned chicken intd; small pieces. Place in a pot 
together with onions, chopped fine, lard, tomato, green 
pepper, and salt. Steam slowly adding a little water to make 
a nice gravy. 

The stew differs from the chicken ,,Paprikas" in that 
sour cream is never added, no matter what meat it is made 
from. If two or three tablespoonsful of sour cream are added 
to the above recipe it becomes what is called a ,,Paprikas". 

VEAL STEW. 

(Borju porkolt.) 

2 Ibs. veal ] / 4 Ib. lard 

2 large onions 3 tablespoonsful paprika 

2 spoonsful tomato juice 

In tomato and green pepper season: 

1 large tomato 

2 green peppers 

28 



Cut meat into small squares, wash and allow to stand in 
water until lard and onion is prepared. Chop onion fine and 
fry in hot lard; when nice and yellow, add paprika, the meat 
which has been standing in water, add salt, tomato and green 
pepper. Stir well and allow to cook slowly under cover until 
gravy cooks away. Then add two small glasses of water and 
allow to cook till time to serve. It is ready in an hour and 
a half. 

Potatoes, or gnocchi cooked in salt water are served 
with the stew. 

LEMON SAUSAGE. 

(Citromos hurka.) 

V/2 Ib. fatty sausage lemon 

] /2 Ib. veal sausage guts 

salt, pepper 

Prepare in such a proportion that to a pound and a half 
of sausage half a pound of veal is taken. Chop up meat 
and grind twice in succession. Place in a deep dish, ad salt, 
red pepper, black pepper, the finely chopped rind and juice 
of a lemon. Knead together with a little warm water and 
with a sauge-filler stuff the washed guts which have been 
soaking in salt water. Garlic sausage is prepared in the same 
way -except that in the place of the lemon rind and juice, 
when kneading, warm water is added in which a few cloves 
of garlic have cooked. 

BLACK SAUSAGE, 

(Veres hurka.) 

is prepared in the same way but insted of liver, bloody meat 
and blood are used and in place of the rice, soaked rolls are 

29 



used. In addition to the above-used seasonings dill seed is 
also added. 

WHITE SAUSAGE. 

(Majas hurka.) 

Liver onion 

bacon pepper 

rice guts 

Cook liver, bacon and an adequate amount of rice 
together. Grind the liver and bacon together with steamed 
onions, salt and add, pepper, and the half-cooked 
rice; knead together with warm water. Stuff ingredients into 
cleaned and salt-water-soaked guts. Close ends with small 
stick, thrust through guts and cook in the water in which 
live rand bacon has been cooking, for a little while. Then 
place in cold water for a few minutes. Remove and dry in 
clean cloth. Keep in cool place. 

COUNTRY PICKLED HAM. 

(Falusi pacolt sonka.) 

1 large ham 4 cloves of garlic 

Vfe Ib. salt black pepper 

1 Ib. saltpeter 2 bay leaves 

2 onions 

Rub ham with salt and saltpetre and allow to stand 
in a cold place for eight days, turning it in this salt juice 
each day. Prepare a sauce for pickling from the following 
ingredients: in 4 quarts of water boil sliced onions, garlic, 
bay leaves, and pepper. Cool and pour on ham. Leave for 
twelve days in this sauce, wash in lukewarm water; dry and 
smoke for 10 12 days. 

30 



VINTAGE MUTTON STEW. 

(Sziireti birkagulyas.) 



2 Ibs. mutton 

3 onions 

3 tablespoonsful lard 
potatoes, noodles 



1 tablespoonful paprika 

1 tomato 

2 green, peppers. 




After the vintage is over, it is a custom that the wine- 
grower invites all his workers to a dinner cooked in the 
open. The amount of meat used depends on the num- 
ber of guests. In the old days there were homes where 
ten sheep were killed during the vintage and the festival 
lasted till morning with eating, drinking, dancing. 

The mutton stew is prepared in the following way: 
Cut into squares many onions and fry in hot lard adding 
paprika and mutton chopped into squares; add fresh tomatoes 
and green peppers, salt, and allow to stew adding a little 
water from time to time. When meat is soft serve and gar- 
nish with potatoes cooked in salt water. 

31 



ARTEMISIA LAMB-MEAT. 

(Tarkonyos bar any.) 
2 Ibs. lamb ^ head onion 

2 tablespoonsful lard 1 tablespoonful flour 
15 artemisia leaves little paprika 

3 tablespoonsful sour cream 1 tablespoonful vinegar. 

Wash and cut meat into small pieces. Fry finely chopped 
onion in one tablespoonful of lard until yellow, add meat, 
salt and stew for a half an hour then add 1 quart of water 
and cook meat till soft. In a small pan prepare a thickening 
from 2 tablespoonsful of lard, flour and paprika. When 
thickening becomes pink, add artemisia, steam a little and add 
the meat, vinegar and sour cream. Bring to a boil and serve. 

GAME. 

MUSHROOMED PARTRIDGE STEAK. 

(Gombas jogolysiilt.) 

Clean partridge, lard with bacon; salt and turn in flour. 
Fry in hot 1 butter. Steam a generous 1 amount of mushrooms 
in butter and pour on fried partridge. Add half a glass of red 
wine and steam under cover. Slice partridge and pour mush- 
room sauce over it. Serve with rice. 

STEAMED PHEASANT STEAK. 

(Pacolt jacanpecsenye.) 

Clean pheasant, salt and steam with the following 
ingredients in a pot: 1 carrot and white beet sliced in rings, 
1 small onion, 2 slices of lemon, 2 tbs lard, 3 ounces wine. 
When soft, strain gravy through sieve, add 4 tbs. sour cream 
and pour mixture on sliced pheasant steak. 

32 



ROE-LEG WITH GRAVY. 

(Ozcomb mart as sal.) 

Wash meat well, remove bones, salt and lard with % Ib. 
smoked bacon. Cut 1 carrot, and 1 beet-root in rings. Place in 
pot, and add 2 glasses of water, 1 tbs. vinegar, 1/2 grated lemon 
rind and 1 bay leaf. Boil these ingredients and then put meat 
in it. Roast in oven and when soft, remove from gravy; strain 
vegetables through sieve. Prepare a light thickening from 3 
ounces of butter, 2 tbs. flour, and dilute with strained vege- 
table gravy; add 2 ounces sour cream, flavor with lemon 
juice according to taste. Pour a little of this mixture on the 
sliced meat and serve the rest in a separate sauce dish. 

WILD BOAR CUTLET. 

(Vaddiszno kotlett.) 

Salt meat, sprinkle with pepper, smear with fine oil and 
allow to stand % of an hour in a cool place. Now dip in eggs, 
then in sifted bread crumbs and fry slowly until well done. 
Serve with potatoes. 

BACON LARDED VENISON. 

(Szalonnaval spekelt szarvasgerinc.) 

Wash meat well and lard with a generous amount of 
bacon strips. Place in a pot and anoint with hot melted but- 
ter. Fry under cover, sprinkling meat often with its own gravy. 
When beginning to soften, fry without cover and pour 1 2 
ounces of white wine over it. When ready slice and serve 
with the gravy poured over it. 

33 



RABBIT HASH. 

(Nyulvagdalek.) 
2 rabbits ] /2 Ib. pork 

2 eggs salt 

3 Ibs. lard. pepper 

Remove meat from bones and grind up with pork meat. 
Mix together in a deep bowl with eggs, salt and pepper. 
Form into long shape, place lard on it and bake slowly. Serve 
with tomato sauce. 

RABBIT STEW. 

(Nyulporkolt.) 

1 smaller rabbit 4 tbs. lard. 

3 onions 2 tbs. sour cream, 

salt 2 tablespoonsful paprika 

Chop rabbit meat into small pieces and salt. Chop onions 
fine and fry in hot lard till red. Now add meat, paprika, 
and steam under cover, always adding a little water to it that 
it should not burn. When meat is quite soft, pour on sour 
cream; boil and serve with tarhonya or galuska. 

DRESSINGS AND VEGETABLES. 

TOMATO SAUCE. 

(Paradicsom mart as.) 
3 Ibs. tomatoes salt 

1 onion 1 Ibs. lard 

parsley 3 tbs. flour 

Wash and clean tomatoes, place in pot with enough 
water to cover. Add half an onion, parsley and a little salt. 
When cooked, strain through sieve. 

34 



Melt a tablespoonful of lard and with the flour pre- 
pare a light thickening. 




Add a large spoonful of meat soup to the thickening > 
stirring quickly, and pour on the tomatoes. If desired, 
sugar can be added, 2 or 3 lumps, according to taste. 



BARBERRY-SAUCE. 

(Soska martas.) 

2 Ibs. barberry meat soup 

thickening 2 3 tablespoonsful sour cream 

Wash barberry carefully and grind through meat grin- 
der. Prepare a light thickening without onions and place 
barberry in itj salt immediately (to keep its green colour) 
steam for a few minutes, dilute with meat soup and bring to 
a boil. Season with sour cream. Another way of preparing 
barberry is by cooking it first in salt water, straining it and 
then adding the thickening. Dilute with its own juice and add 
sour cream. 

35 



MUSHROOM SAUCE. 

(Gomha martas.) 

Mushrooms meat or bone soup 

butter black pepper 

flour 2 yolks of egg 

2 ounces of sour cream lemon juice 

Fry finely chopped mushrooms in butter; sprinkle with 

flour and dilute with meat or bone soup; salt and add black 

pepper; boil. Mix egg yolks with sour cream; pour on 

mushrooms and serve heated. Flavour with a little lemon 

juice. 

SOUR POTATO DISH. 

(Savanyu bur go nyajozelek . ) 
2 Ibs. potatoes pepper 

thickening 2 tablespoonsful sour cream 

2 bay leaves 

Wash and pare potatoes; chop in squares and cook in 
salt water. When soft add a thickening prepared from the 
usual ingredients and chopped onions and parsley. Add bay 
leaves and a little pepper. Bring to a boil, before serving add 
sour cream. 

GREEN BEANS WITH CREAM. 

(Zoldbabjozelek.) 

2 Ibs. green beans 2 3 tablespoonsful cream 

thickening 

Wash and clean beans. Chop in oblique squares and 
cook in salt water till soft. Prepare a thick thickening, add 
to the beans; bring to a boil and before serving pour sour 
cream in it. 

36 



CARROTS. 

(Sargarepa-jozelek.) 

2 Ibs. carrots milk or bone soup 

1 tablespoonful lard sugar 

few tablespoonsful flour 




Clean and chop carrots into squares. Stew in lard till 
soft, adding only a very little water. When soft add flour 
and fry till rosy. Dilute with bone soup or milk and allow 
to boil. Sugar can be added if desired. 

DILLED PUMPKIN SAUCE. 

(Tejfeles kapros tokjozelek.) 

6 Ibs. pumpkin handful of dill 

weak thickening 1 green pepper 

vinegar 3 4 tablespoonsful sour cream 

Peel pumpkin; grate, salt and allow to stand an hour 
under cover. Then squeeze out the salt-water thoroughly. 
Prepare a weak thickening without onions; add pumpkins, 
dilute with a little vinegar water, add a large handful of 

37 



chopped dill. Even the stems of the dill can be cooked in 
the pumpkin but must be removed before serving. Add sour 
cream and serve. During the summer a green pepper gives it 
a very pleasant taste. 

,,TARHONYA". 

One of the oldest of Hungarian cakes Hungarian house- 
wives prepare it in the summer time when eggs are cheap- 
er and they can dry the cake in the sun. It is put away for 
the winter in white linen bags and used from time to time 
with meat or soup. It is prepared in the following way in the 
country of course a smaller quantity is used here: 

Beat eggs with a little water and add by ladles to the 




flour which has been placed into a large bowl; meanwhile 
continually rub the flour between palms of the hand. When 
it has become even grained sift through sieve on the table, 
rubbing with the hands all the time. Place on white cloth 
and allow to dry in the sun one or two days. When used, 
either cook in salt water or fry in Paprika and lard, dilute 
with water and serve with meat. 

38 



GNOCCHI WITH EGGS. 

(Tojasos galuska.) 

Served with paprika veal stew or paprika-chicken. 
1 Ib. flour 3 tablespoonsful of water 

3 egg yolks 1 tablespoonful sour cream 
salt 

Stir ingredients together in a mixing bowl and allow 
to rest till serving time. Then with a teaspoon cut little 
gnocchi from the cake and cook in abundant hot, salt water. 
Cover the pot for a little while. When gnocchi all rise to 
the surface, drain off water and place them in a sauce, made 
of hot lard and sour cream. Serve hot. 

If preferred with eggs, do not add sour cream to the 
lard, but just before serving break two or three eggs on the 
gnocchi and mix well. Keep on fire until eggs become a 
little hardened on the gnocchi. 

POTATOES WITH ONIONS. 

(Hagymas burgonya.) 

4 tbs. lard 3 Ibs. potatoes 
3 onions 

Wash potatoes and cook with skin on in hot water. In 
another pot, fry finely chopped onions in lard till rosy and 
add to it the cooked, pealed and cut up 1 potatoes. Salt ac- 
cording to taste and stir well with wooden spoon. When 
serving place little mounds of this potato mixture around the 
meat. 

PAPRIKA-POTATOES. 

(Paprikas krumfli.) 

This is one of those typical peasant dishes which ap- 
pears so frequently on their table. It is usually the main 

39 



dish and even is regarded (almost as a holiday dish, of 

course without meat. 

potatoes paprika 

2 3 onions 2 large green, peppers 

little lard 

To a little lard add the onions chopped fine, a gene- 
rous amount of paprika, green pepper in season, salt and the 
potatoes cleaned and cut in length. Dilute with a little water 
and cook till potatoes are entirely soft. In the past, sour cream 
and sausages were cooked in with it. Its thickness is more 
like a vegetable's than a soup's. 

SALADS. 

GREEN PEPPER SALAD MIXED WITH CUCUMBERS. 

(Paprika-salata uborkaval keverve.) 

4 large green peppers 4 cucumbers 

vinegar, oil, pepper salt, papirka 

Take four large cucumbers; cut off two ends and taste 
to see if it is not bitter; slice thin and let stand for a short 
while; press out water and salt well. Allow to stand for 
another half hour and press out juice again. Slice four large 
green peppers in thin rings, salt and let stand also for a 
while; then press out liquid. Place cucumbers in the centre 
of a salad dish, put pepper around it and pour on oil and 
vinegar mixture. Sprinkle cucumbers with paprika and black 
pepper. It is even more delicious if allowed to stand at least 
two hours. 

If only cucumber salad is made, often a few spoonsful 
of sour cream are mixed in with the salad which is then 
sprinkled not with black pepper only paprika. 

40 



GREEN HEAD LETTUCE. 

(Fejes salata.) 

Remove the outer leaves of the lettuce head. Slice each 
head into quarters, wash well and place in sieve so that 
water should drain off. Prepare a dressing from either vine- 
gar or lemon juice, a little water, salt, sugar, according to 
taste and pour on the lettuce which has been placed on a 
dish. Turn heads well in dressing. Garnish with hard boiled 
eggs sliced in quarters. 

ONION POTATO SALAD. 

(Hagymas burgonyasalata.) 

2 Ibs. potatoes 

2 onions 

seasoning vinegar 

Cook potatoes with skins on. When cooked, peal and 
cut into rings. Place in a salad dish so that one layer potatoes 
is followed by one layer of onion rings. In a small bowl pre- 
pare a dressing from a little luke-warm water, vinegar, sugar 
and salt. Pour on the salad and draining off, repeat pouring 
on a number of times. Sprinkle top of salad on one side with 
black pepper and on the other side with red pepper. 

MIXED HUNGARIAN SALAD. 

(Vegyes magyar salata.) 

Place in the centre of a glass dish white cabbage which 
has been salted beforehand and chopped into thin strips, 
sprinkle with a few caraway seeds. Surround cabbage with 
sliced tomatoes and green peppers. Pour vinegar and oil 
mixture on it and serve in two hours. 

41 



BEAN SALAD. 

(Babsaldta.) 

] /2 Ib. small white beans 3 hard boiled eggs 

2 tablespoonsful fine oil milk of 2 herrings 
2 teaspoonsful mustard vinegar, seasoning 

Cook beans till soft. Mix the strained yolk of three 
eggs with the oil in a bowl, add mustard, milk of two her- 
rings and season with salt, sugar, vinegar according to taste. 
Now mix in the cooked, cooled beans and the whites of 
three hard boiled eggs chopped fine. Decorate with sliced 
herring. 

WEETS, CAKES AND PASTRY. 

RETES - - (STRUDEL.) 

2 Ibs. sifted flour 4 ounces water (lukewarm) 

VQ Ib. butter lard 

2 tbs. sour cream cabbage, nut, cheese or 

apples poppy-seed stuffing 



Mix together flour, butter, sour cream, eggs, a little salt 
and the water, working it with the hands till cake-mass 
separates from hand and rolling-board. Divide into two parts, 
roll into round form and allow to rest for half an hour. 
Place a white tablecloth on the table, sprinkle with flour 
and roll out cake into a thin round shape, pulling towards 
the edge of the table. Sprinkle with lukewarm lard and 
stuff with either cabbage, nut, cherries or poppy seed, or 
apples, roll into rolles, sprinkling it constantly with lard. 
Smear top with lard and bake. 

42 



APPLE STRUDEL FILLING. 

(Almas retes toltelek.) 

1 Ib. grated apples 6 ounces sugar 

1 Ib. fine roll crumbs 3 ounces currants 
Vs Ib. grated nuts 

Steam grated apples and sugar, till soft, also the cur- 
rants. Sprinkle strudel cake with abundant melted butter and 
put filling in half the cake, sprinkle with grated nuts, and 
sugar, according to taste. Roll together, but meanwhile 
sprinkle constantly with melted butter. When already rolled 
together, smear top with butter too. 

CABBAGE STRUDEL FILLING. 

(Kaposztas retes toltelek.) 

2 Ibs. cabbage 2 Ibs. lard 

1 teaspoonful pepper sugar 
salt 

Grate cabbage, salt and let stand % of an hour. Press 
out juice and put in hot lard with 2 squares of sugar, frying 
till rosy. Season according to taste with pepper. Instead of 
smearing top of strudel with butter, smear with sour cream 
and bake nice crispy red. 

WHITE CHEESE FILLING. 

(Turos toltelek.) 
5 eggs 5 tbs. sugar 

2 tbs. sour cream 1 Ib. sweet grubber 
1 tbs. vanila sugar mixture 3 ounces currants 

Mix egg yolks with sugar, add sour cream and after 
beating whites of eggs, mix in with the ingredients. Now 
add grubber strained through sieve, vanilla sugar and 

43 



currants mixing in carefully. Further proceedings are similai 
to that of preparing apple, or other kinds of strudel fillings. 

POPPY SEED FILLING. 

(Mdktoltelek.) 

14 ounces poppy seed 2 grated apples 

7 ounces sugar 1 tbs. peach preserve 

3 ounces currants 1 ounce cream 

Cook grated poppy seed with cream, till half done, then 
add currants, apples, peach preserve and cook till soft. Smear 
on caake and proceed as in case of the apple strudel recipe. 

LAYER CAKE 

(Dobos torta.) 

6 eggs For the filling: 

1/4 lb. sugar 6 ounces sugar 

1/4 lb. flour 6 eggs 

vanilla 

6 pieces of chocolate grated 
6 ounces of butter 

Beat egg whites stiff. Mix in with sugar, yolks of eggs, 
and, flour. Bake six equal cake layers from mixture and 
when ready stuff with a filling prepared from sugar, eggs, 
grated chocolate, a little vanilla and butter cooked over a 
pot filled with hot water until thick and creamy. The butter 
should be added last. Spread between and around entire cake. 
On top a coating of burned sugar-glaze is spread. 

HUNGARIAN CAKE. 

(Kalacs.) 

3 ounces yeast 7 ounces melted butter milk 

2 Ibs. flour 1 yolk of egg; 1 egg 

44 



Soak yeast in a little milk. Add a little salt and sugar. 
Allow to leaven. Now add flour, little salt, sugar, melted but/ 
ter, lukewarm milk and knead in the following manner: 
pinching, pull upwards until it does not stick to the hands 
any longer and becomes bubbly. Place on a dish in a 
warm place and allow to leaven. Now place on a floured; 
board, knead a little and braid, twisting only once each time 
because from this it will become more flaky. Place cake in a 
greased baking pan and allow to leaven until it rises well. 
Then smear top with yolk of an egg, place in a hot oven and 
bake for an hour. If top reddens suddenly, place a white pa- 
per upon it. This same cake can be stuffed with a nut or jam 
filling. 

PANCAKE 

14 Ib. flour salt (Palacsinta.) 

2 eggs milk 

Mix together flour, eggs, butter, salt; if sweetened 
pancake is prepared, also a little sugar and enough milk, 
without making ingredients too thin. Put a teaspoonful hot 
lard in frying pan and then pour a little of the mixture in it, 
frying first on one side and then the other. When all the 
pancakes are ready, stuff with white cheese, or nut filling. 
If served as an ,,entree" , do not put sugar in the ingre- 
dients and stuff with ,,Paprikas chicken" , (removing 
meat from bone), or fill them with chopped ham. 

CSOROGE BISCUIT. 

(Csoroge fank.) 

1/2 Ib. flour small piece of butter 

yolks of 5 eggs milk 

salt lard 

juice of V2 lemon 

45 



Knead together flour, egg yolks, lemon juice, a little 
salt, butter and as much milk as will keep mass; soft. Roll 
out to an inch thickness and cut into one inch wide ribbons 
plait or turn into various shapes and fry red in plenty of 
lard. Serve sprinkled with vanilla and sugar. 

CARNIVAL DOUGHNUTS. 

(Farsangi fdnk.) 

3 ounces cream 1 ounce yeast 

6 eggs 8 10 squares of sugar 

Vi cup milk, to soak yeast lard 
in 1 Ib. flour 




Soak yeast in milk with sugar. Put flour which has 
to be lukewarm on rolling board. Add eggs, lukewarm 
cream and dissolved yeast. Knead into a soft mass; place in 
a deep bowl and for a half an hour work with a wooden 
spoon until the mass becomes bubbly. Cover and let stand 
in a warm place for about an hour. When it rises turn 
out on a floured board, with the hands carefully pull 
cake apart and pluck into small pieces. Cover and allow to 
rise another half-hour. Put an abundant amount of lard in 
a pot and when it is hot, place doughnuts with floured side 

46 



down in it. Fry quickly under cover. Taking off cover turn 
doughnuts on the other side and fry without cover. This 
proceedure gives it a nice ribbon. Sprinkle with vanilla, su- 
gar mixture, serve hot with peach or strawberry preserve: 

HUNGARIAN HONEY CAKE. 

(Magyar mezeskalacs.) 

10 ounces powdered sugar 11 ounces lukewarm honey 
3 eggs juice of ]/2 lemon 

V/2 tablespoonful sour cream 10 ounces of flour 
1 ounce currants 1 teaspoonful clove 

1 ounce thinly sliced melon 1 teaspoonful soda- 
preserve bicarbonate 

Mix sugar, eggs, honey, sourcream. juice of J /2 lemon 
and its grated rind, flour, spices, soda bicarbonate, currants, 
nuts, melon. Stir ingredients well and bake in 
floured long, narrow baking pan for three quarters of an 
hour. 

HUSSAR'S KISS. 

(Huszar csok.) 

14 Ib. butter 3 ounces sugar 

6 ounces flour 1 lemon 

yolks of 2 eggs 

Mix and knead together butter, flour, egg yolks, su- 
gar, grated lemon-rind and juice. Roll out and cut small bis- 
cuits. Place jelly; in the centres according to taste. Bake in 
pans under slow fire. Sprinkle with sugar and vanilla 
mixture. 

47 



,,WASP'S NEST". 

(Darazsfeszek.j 
2 tablespoonsful yeast 14 Ib. butter 

1 Ib. flour 14 Ib. powder sugar 

yolks of 5 eggs 3 tabelspoonsful sour cream 

Allow yeast to leaven in lukewarm water. Knead to- 
gether flour, egg yolks and yeast and roll out thin. Spread 
sugar and butter on rolled out cake. Roll together in long 
rod-like shape and cut into one inch pieces. Place cakes 
cut-side down in greased and floured baking pan and allow to 
leaven a little longer. Now place in hot oven and bake till 
half-done. Remove and pour on sour cream bake till 
done. Before serving, turn out entire mass on a plate and 
sprinkle with sugar. 

HORSE-SHOE NUT CAKE. 

(Diospatko.) 

2 tablespoonsful yeast 1 slice chocolate 
1/2 Ib. flour 4 eggs yolks 

14 Ib. butter little salt, sugar 

3 tablespoonsful powdered 1/2 Ib. nuts 

sugar 1 tablespoonful honeycloves 

Beat into a dough, yeast, a little flour and milk, When 
dough rises mix butter and flour together; in the center of 
this mixture put the yolks of eggs, yeast, a little, sugar, salt 
and knead together well. Divide into little loaves and allow 
to rest. During this time prepare the following stuffing: Cook 
together nuts or popply seed, honey, powder sugar in a little 
water. Cool and add grated chocolate and cloves. Roll our 
cakes into one inch thickness, spread on the nut stuffing 
and roll together. Place in baking pan and spread top with 
yolk of egg. Bake to a nice read colour. 

48 



PLUM AND POTATO DUMPLINGS. 

(Szihas burgonya-gomboc. ) 
4 large potatoes 2 ounces of butter 

2 yolks of eggs 1 tablespoonful sour cream 

2 tablespoonsful flour 2 tablespoonsful porridge 

stoneless, sweetend plums buttered bread crumbs 

Cook potatoes till soft, clean and crush through sieve, 
add eggs, butter, sour cream and mix well. Knead the mass 
together with a little salt, and flour; roll it flat to about 
half an inch thickness, cut it into small squares and insert a 
plum in the centre of each, rolling it into small balls. Cook 
in boiling water and roll in buttered bread crumbs. Serve hot. 

COUNTRY POTATO GRIDDLE CAKE. 

(Burgonya-ldngos. ) 
2 tablespoonsful yeast salt 

8 potatoes milk 

flour garlic 

1 tablespoonsful lard. 

Dissolve yeast in a little milk. Cook and wash potatoes 
and add as much flour as the weight of the potatoes, add 
lard and a little salt. Knead together well with yeast and set 
aside for a half hour. Then roll out to thickness half an inch 
and cut into pieces the size of a hand. Allow to rest 10 15 
minutes and fry to a nice red colour in a little lard. Rub with 
a little garlic and serve. 

HUNGARIAN TOAST. 

(Bundas kenyer.) 

Soak sliced bread or rolls in a little milk. Dip in 
beaten, slightly salted eggs and fry in skillet of hot lard till 
pink and crisp. 

4 49 



POTATO CAKE. 

(Bugonya pogacsa.) 

1 Ib. potatoes 1 Ib. butter 

1 Ib. flour pinch of salt 

Peal and cook potatoes, when soft mash and knead 
with flour, butter and salt on a pastry board. With rolling 
pin roll out to an inch thickness. Place a small amount of 
flour in one corner of the board. Dip round biscuit mould in 
flour and cut out small biscuits, placing them directly in 
baking pan. The pan is not to be greased or sprinkled with 
flour. Brush the tops of the biscuits with yolk of egg and 
bake till nice and red. 

CHEESE DUMPLING. 

(Turds gornboc.) 

2 Ibs. cottage cheese salt 

2 eggs bread crumbs 

1/4 Ib. butter 

Crush cheese through sieve and mix with the yoke 
of two eggs, 1 ounce butter and a little salt stirring 
with a wooden spoon. Whip the whites of two eggs stiff and 
add to the mixture slowly; then add as much porridge as is 
necessary to hold its form. Now heat water in a two pint 
saucepan, add salt and when boiling form round balls 
from the cheese mass, drop in water and cover the 
pan. In ten minutes the dumplings will all rise to the top 
of the water. With a spoon sieve remove dumplings from 
water and allow the water to drip off place on a plate. , 
Melt 3 ounces butter and add as much sifted bread crumbs ' 
as it will take without becoming lumpy. Roast till golden 
brown and pour on dumplings. 

50 



CABBAGE CAKE OF THE ,,HORTOBAGY". 

(Hortobagyi kaposztas gomboc. } 
] /2 lb. flour 2 pounds cabbage 

2 eggs lard 

salt, sugar pepper 

wine 

From the flour, eggs and seasoning make a cake, mix- 
ing it with a little wine. While cake is resting, chop up cab- 
bage and fry in lard till nice and yellow adding a little pep- 
per. From the cake roll out % of an inch thick pancakes. 
Stuff with cabbage, roll together and place in a greased pan 
smearing each with egg yolk. Bake and serve hot. 

CHEESE MUFFIN DEBRECEN STYLL. 

(Debreceni turos pogacsa,) 
1% Ibs. flour 1 egg 

1% Ibs. cheese sour cream 

V 2 lb. lard 

Knead together flour, cheese, lard and the egg with 
enough sour cream to form a compact mass. Salt a little, roll 
out and cut into biscuit shapes smearing the top of each bis- 
cuit with yolk of an egg, Bake in a hot oven till red. 

COUNTRY CHEESE CRACKNEL. 

(Falusi turos berec.J 

1/2 quart of flour 5 egg yolks 

2 ounces yeast 1 tablespoonful sugar 

4 tablespoonful sweet salt 

butter lard 

sugar cinnamon 

milk 



51 



Prepare a leaven from flour, yeast and a little milk. 
When the dough rises, add egg yolks, a little butter, sugar, 
salt and grubber. Knead into a cake and allow to rest an hour. 
When it has risen place on a floured board and form into 
cracknels. Allow to rest another half hour and fry in hot 
lard. Place on sieve and allow lard to drip off. Sprinkle 
with cinnamon and sugar. 

GREAVES CAKE. 

(Tepertos pngacsa.) 

VB Ib. lard 2 cups sour cream 

4 egg yolks 1% Ib. sifted flour 

1/2 Ib. ground pork greaves 1 tablespoonful salt 
3 ounces yeast 

Knead together lard, yolks of eggs, greaves and the yeast 
which has been soaking in a half a cup of water, add sour 
cream, flour and little salt. After working it well allow to 
rest for 14 an hour. Roll out to a half an inch thickness. 
With biscuit form cut out little cakes and place on baking 
pan in a hot oven. 

WHITE CHEESE NOODLES. 

(T tiros metelt.) 

] /2 Ib. flour grubber 

2 eggs ] /2 pint sour cream 

Knead together flour and eggs and roll out into knife 
edge thickness; cut into long strips as wide as they are thick. 
Cook in hot salt water and place on a platter. Pour sour 
cream in hot lard and add to noodles. On the top of the 
noodles put in wreath-like arrangement grated, salted 
grubber. 

52 



This is how real ,,Hungarian Turos Metelt" is pre- 
pared. 



MAIZE CAKE. 

(Kukorica male.) 
5 tbs. sour cream 
1/2 lb. corn flour 



VA lb. butter 
3 tbs. sugar 
5 eggs 

Beat butter and sugar till frothy; add egg yolks, sour 
cream and flour. Beat whites of eggs stiff and carefully stir in 
with the mixture. Pour into well-greased baking pan into 
] /2 inch thickness and bake. 

HUNGARIAN WHITE CHEESE CAKE. 

(Magyar os turoscsusza.) 
2 Ibs. flour 2 ounces sour cream 

1 lb. grubber 3 tbs. lard of butter 
] /2 lb. smoked bacon salt 

2 eggs 




53 



Knead together into compact mass, flour, eggs, a little 
salt and % ounce cold water. Let rest a little while and then 
roll out thin. Dry on the rolling board one side, then other. 
Cut into palm width strips and pick into an inch pieces with 
two fingers of the hand. Place lard in a large pot, when hot 
add sour cream. Cook noodles in salted water, strain water 
off and place noodles in, with the lard and sour cream mix: 
ture, stirring well together. Cut bacon into squares and fry. 
Mix half of bacon squares in with the noodles and place the 
other half on top, to garnish after sour cream has been 
poured over noodles. Put white cheese around noodles. 



DILL CHEESE FRITTERS. 

("Turds kapros derelye.) 

1 Ib. flour 2 Ibs. strained cheese 

6 eggs 1 handful of chopped dill 

salt sour cream 
lard 

Knead together flour, three eggs and salt; roll out thin 
into two parts. Make the filling from the cheese, three eggs, 
dill, little sour cream and salt. Do not use much sour cream, 
because the filling must not be thin as it will pour out from 
the cake. Place little mounds of the filling on one layer of 
the cake, place the other on top and press with fingers 
around each mound. Cut around with fritter knife and cook 
in salted hot water. Turn in a sauce of hot lard and sour 
cream and serve immediately, sprinkling cheese on top of 

the dish. 

i 

54 



HUNGARIAN CHEESE. 

HOME-MADE CHEESE. 

(Hazi tejjelsajt.) 

1/2 pint sour cream. 

Salt according to taste. Pour in the centre of a clean 
cloth and tie tightly so that buttermilk is pressed out. Hang, 
in a day see whether it has become concrete. If still liquid tie 
again and in one or two hours remove from cloth. Place on 
dish and decorate with raddishes. 

MIXED HUNGARIAN CHEESE. 

(Korozott.) 

} /2 lb. white cheese % Ib butter 

1 tbs sweet paprika kummel 

salt 1 green onion (chopped) 

1 tbs mustard 1 tbs ale 

Mix the ingredients add paprika till pink, season, stir 
till creamy and serve with red radishes. 

COUNTRY-MADE CHEESE. 

(Falusi turo. ) 

1/2 pint sour cream 

Salt according to taste. Pour in the center of a clean 
cloth and tie tightly so that buttermilk is pressed out. Hang in 
a cool place in the pantry and place a small pan under it. In 
a day see whether it has stabilizied. If still liquid tie again 
and in one or two hours remove from cloth. Place on dish 
and decorate with raddishes. 

55 



MENUS. 



Chilian Supper 

Cabbage Layer 
Stuffed pancake 
Liptoi cheese 
Somlay white wine 



Chilian Dinner 

Creamed potato soup 
Veal-stew with ,,tarhonya" 

Cheese dumplings 

Fruit 

White Badacsony wine 

Dinner for a small dinner party. 

Cream of mushroom soup 

Stuffed Green pepper 

Fried chicken with bacon, parsley potatoes 

Pickle salad 

Fritters (csorge) with peach jam 

Fruit 

Cream cheese 

Beer, red and white wine (Tokaj) 



56 



Dinner for a small dinner party. 

Creamed and peppered mushrooms with rice 
Pork steak with buttered, baked potatoes 

and pepper salad 
Plum cake (lepeny) 
Palpuszta Cheese 
Fruit 
Beer, wine red-and white 

Hungarian Lent Dinner 

Szeged style fish soup 

French bread 

Potato and plum dumplings 

Fruit salad (vegyes befott) 

Cheese 

Black coffee 

Beer, wine 

Hungarian Lent Supper 

Danubian Serb fish 

Potato griddle cake 

Apple pie 

Fruit 

Cheese 

Black coffe 

Beer, wine 

Holiday County Dinnet. 

Hen soup 

Pillan with Goose liver 

Sirloin slices with green beans 



57 



Chicken paprikas with egg galuska (noodles) 

and rice 

Carnival Cream fritters (doughnuts) 
Goose and duck steak with dilled pickles 

and green salad with eggs 
Dill, cheese, cabbage and apple strudel 
Layer cake- peach ice 
Fruit 
Black Coffee 

Holiday Caunty Supper. 

Warm ham with horseradish 
Hortobagy tokany stew with rice 
Pork stew with ,,tarhonya" 
Cheese cake with squares of bacon 
Cherry Strudel 
Bride cake 
Rasperry ice 
Small cakes 
Fruit 



58 



HUNGARIAN 
SPECIALITIES 



PAPRIKA. 

(Sweet peper.) 

Hungarian paprika is the only seasoning which con- 
tains the fine qualities of all the other seasoning. Its beauti- 
ful shade gives a good colour to the food; its pleasaant fra- 
grance, sweet taste and fine aroma are unexcelled. The effect 
of the sweet, pure paprika seasoning is acknowledged 




throughout the world. It has been found that the Hungarian 
pepper has the highest Vitamin C content of all plants. 

Beside this sweet paprika, rye paprika is worthy of 
mention. The Hungarian ,,gulyas" is seasoned according to 
taste with stronger or sweeter paprika. 

The sweet paprika is carefully cleaned by hand, remo- 
ving the strong veins and seeds. Government control and 
seal insures and protects the excellent quality and purity of 
Hungarian Paprika. 

,,PINCESZER" CELLAR GATHERING 
(FESTIVAL, MEETING, ETC.) 

The favorite recreation of the man living in the Bala- 
ton region is the cellar gathering. For the country man 
this is the substitute of the club or coffee-house where the 
townsman finds his amusement. The wine grower works 

61 



from morning till noon and four or five hours after noon 
but at five o'clock he slings his knapsack over his back, 
wraps some ryebread, bacon or dry sausage in a white cloth 
and goes out to the cellar. On the way he always meets some 
friends who accompany him and often several go together 
who partake of the food in the knapsacks and the wine in 
the cellar. Many an evening is spent thus. 

Many times it happens that a birthday, nameday or 
an important guest arrives and then a larger cellar gathe- 
ring is prepared. The village notables, and neighbour wine 
growers are invited. The host himself prepares the stsew or 
fish paprikas. 

In the autumn mutton stew is fashionable, in the 
winter fish paprikas or shod and whiting fried in lard, or 
fish stew are popular. 

Naturally the housewife has something to say, in this 
matter but she does not appear at the gathering. She sends 
down with the maid some delicious flead cakes of her own 
making. 

The mutton stew is prepared in a glazed pot. No other 
pot will do. The lard, an abundant supply of chopped onion, 
meat cut into squares and red pepper are put in the pot over 
an open fire. All cellars have an open fire, and the guests 
watch the cooking proceedure while drinking the strong Ba- 
laton wine as an appetiser. 

A cellar gathering is always a very gay affair, the 
guests joke and perhaps begin to sing some old songs and 
it is dawn before they realize that it is time to disperse. 

As this is the only amusement and recreation the coun- 
try man has, it is still in existence and will remain until 
there are cellars left in which to meet. 

62 



HUNGARIAN FOLK CUSTOMS OF THE YEAR. 

The interesting variety of Hungarian cooking speciali- 
ties gathered together in this little book for the reader's in- 
formation prompts us to add Hungarian folk customs of the 
year in our foreword. As there are many holidays and fes- 
tivals, so there are many different customs, new colours, and 
variety of dishes in the Hungarian land, and Hungarian vil- 
lage. On the various holidays the special dishes and foods 
have different roles. 

The new year is celebrated by a toast. Old wines and 
various whiskys are served for the guests. It is a very beauti- 
ful custom on Jan. 6. (,,Vizkereszt" Day) Epiphany in me- 
mory of the theree kings in the New Testament who visited 
the child Christ, that the young men of the village go from 
house to house reciting verses and asking God's blessing 
on the homes they enter. 

On February second ,,Gyertyaszentelo Boldogosszony" 
day, new candles are lit to drive away the dark spirits of 
winter. 

March 12, St. Gergely's Day, the children's ,,Gergely" 
walk is an interesting custom. The little boys walk from 
house to house and in Hungarian and Latin mixture of 
verse form sing, requesting eggs and bacon. Zoltan Kodaly, 
the famous Hungarian composer gathered material for his 
compositions from these songs. This is in memory of olden 
times when students practiced this custom. They drive the 
animals out for the first time into the spring air over burning 
branches to cure them of all winter ills. 

During the Easter holidays there are many customs 
handed down for generations which are still practiced. 
Easter Monday the young men sprinkle the girls at the well, 

63 



on Tuesday the girls return the showering. The sprinkling 
symbolizes the productive power of water. Gaily colored 
Easter eggs symbolize the beginning of new life. Of the 
Easter feasts we shall speak in separate article. 




May first, at midnight the young man erects a ,,May 
pole" in his beloved's yard. The May pole is a slim young 
tree whose branches are removed except for the top of the 
tree, which is decorated with paper ribbons. 

At Pentecost in some places a ,,Pentecost" king and 
queen are chosen. The pentecost songs are famous for their 
rich melody and interesting verse. 

Zoltan Kodaly's composition of one of these pentecost 
song-cycles is a jewel of the Hungaran children's choral 
literature. 

The summer season's famous holiday is ,,St. Stephen's 
Day". At night, fires are lit and the girls jump over these 
fires in loud merriment. While one jumps, the rest of the 
girls standing in a ring shout out the secret lover's name. 

64 



If the jump is successful the two young people will marry 
in that year. 

June 29th Peter-Paul's Day the harvest begins in gene- 
ral. The end of the harvest is celebrated by a large harvest 
festival. The Hungarian language often uses the word 
,,life" for wheat, this descriptive word reveals that we are 
an agricultural land where the wheat itself means life and 
life possibility. At the harvest celebration the land owner 
receives a crown, woven from golden coloured wheat shea- 
ved by the harvesters. He in turn invites them to celebrate 
with him and after the tiring hard labour there is dancing 
till dawn. 

In the autumn the harvest festivals bring much joy and 
merry-makking. On St. Martin's Day, Nov. 11. geese are 
killed and they put the breast-bone of the geese in the win- 
dow; if it turns white, snow is promised. 

During the Sundays of the Advent the girls and wo- 
men of the village wear black dresses to church. 

Dec. 13. Luca Day, the young people wear masks and 
go in masquarade from house to house singing. On this 
day they begin to carve the ,,Luca chair", every day carving 
on it until Christmas Eve. Every part of it is carved, from 
different kinds of wood. They take the chair with them to the 
midnight mass on Christmas Eve. After the service, they 
stand on the chair, close their eyes and according to tra- 
dition, they are supposed to recognize the features and 
character of their future bride or groom. 

Nov. 30, Andrew's Day they melt ore and from the 
figure's shadow cast on the wall, they foretell the future. 

On the Christmas vigil they spread the finest white 
tablecloth and place freshly baked bread upon it: ,,the bread 

65 



of Little Jesus", so that one should find something there 
and not go hungry. Children bearing a miniature Bethlehem 
go from house to house singing. They make the little Beth- 
lehem from carboard and decorate it with various colours. 
The wise men, and the cut out animals are illuminated by a 
candle placed within. The boys dressed as shepherds greet 
the birth of Christ by the ringing of bells, the swishing of 
whips and the blowing of horns through the village. 

WEDDING CUSTOMS. 

In> certain parts of our country as in Kalocsa, the an- 
cient tradition of holding the wedding ceremony at the 




home of both the groom and bride is still practiced. The 
larger ceremony is always held at the bridegroom's home. In 
the morning the suitors and Bestman go to the bride's 
house and quote verses to win the bride. Someone is ap- 
pointed to give away the bride, usually a witty man is 
chosen, and he answers, also in verse, but in such a clever 
way, that for hours the suitors must recite in an effort to get 
a favourable answer. This half humorous, half serious cere- 



66 



mony sometimes lasts for hours. Then they begin to dress 
the bride - - which is a slow process and meanwhile the 
men drink and dance in the courtyard. The ceremony is 
held at noon. The Bestman leads the procession with a 
flowered rod in his hand and cake, wine and apples for 
the priest. 

There were times when as many as 150 200 fami- 
lies were invited to the marriage. Entire households appe- 
ared, which meant at least 300 400 people. Whole calves, 
pigs and cattle were killed and as many hens, as there were 
families present. It was a custom for each family, to bring a 
hen, 10 12 eggs, 6 8 pounds of flour and a cake. 

Usually so much food was brought together, that the 
young couple could live on the food left over for weeks and 
even the village poor could partake. 

The feast always began with soup. Fowl and beef 
is cooked with bones. The cooked fowl is served 
with tomato sauce or a sour sauce. After this dish little 
cakes are served which are prepared from fatty, sweet 
dough. This is followed by either veal or beef stew with 
rice, followed by fowl and veal cutlet fried. The third course 
is cabbage in which a ham is cooked. The ham is sliced 
at the table to the joy o the marriage guests. In some country 
places the last course consists of white or poppy-seed cake, 
which is served with milk and coffee. The major dish is the 
toasted almond layer cake, upon which a Bethlehem manger 
lies and which is placed before the bride. The courses are 
served by the young men and the Bestman who recites a 
verse at each course. 

After dinner there is dancing while the bride packs her 
trousseau. She leaves with the guests for the groom's home 

67 



amid great tears and crying. At the bridegroom's home the 
eating, drinking and merry making continues. 

The marriage ceremony of course differs in every loca- 
lity, as the thousand year old tradition is brouht down from 
generation to generation. 

The ,,Matyo" people of Mezokovesd also have 
very interesting and unique wedding customs. 

On Sundays the attractive girls of the village who are of 
marriageable age, gather in the public square. Slowly swing- 
ing they walk in a ring, singing. Their richly decorated, 
colorfully embroidered, beautiful dresses make a pictu- 
resque sight. Is it any wonder that the marriageable young 
men's gaze lingers on one or another of the girls? 

It is an old custom in general, that theV young lass or 
lad marry only a girl or boy living in the neighbouring street. 
The two mothers-in-law arrange the match. 

,,My daughter is much too poor for your rich son" 
says the girl's mother. 

,,It doensn't matter, dear; beauty is of real value" 
too answers the lad's mother. 

And when the time comes that the young man is al- 
lowed to visit the girl's house, he comes with a company of 
friends, towards evening, and knocks at the girl's window 
asking for a match. If the girl at the window presents 
him with a box of matches, it means that she is glad to wel- 
come him. 

The engagement lasts two to three months. During this 
time the young people are not allowed to appear together in 
the street, and the bridegroom is only allowed to go under his 
bride's window in the evening. 

Before the wedding, the parents of the bride and bride- 

68 



maids make a great pretence of crying and bereavement. This 
is a form of ,,etiquette" even if the marriage promises to be 
very happy. When the couple return from the church cere- 
mony, the groom's mother offers the bride a piece of sugar, 
saying: 

- May your life be as sweet in this house my dear 
daughter-in-law! 

Now begins the bridal dance. Everyone pays for the 
privilege of dancing with the bride. The one who pays most, 
dances first with the bride. Finally the groom seizes his bride 
from the others and ,,kidnaps" her. The rest depends on the 
cleverness of the groom. 

In the town of Bata (Tolna County) there is an inter- 
esting wedding-dance. The girls place bottles on their 
heads and the lads place one on the floor and dance around 
it very skilfully. 

In Ocseny (County of Sarkoz) a cook's dance is popular. 
The 1 women who have cooked and baked for the wedding, 
line up and dance to the rhythm of drumming with wooden 
ladles on large pots and pans. 

An hour from Budapest in the village Eoldog (Pest 
County) at weddings a ,,bridal cake of happiness" is baked, 
which is l l /2 2 meters long. It is prepared from the finest 
flour. On top, this enormous cake is decorated with colou- 
red ginger-bread figures. 

EASTER CUSTOMS. 

In country villages where ancient Hungarian customs 
and traditions are still kept, from Shrove Tuesday till after 
the Easter Sunday church Mass, neither meat nor fatty foods 
are eaten. During this period only vegetables, egg and milk 

69 



dishes are served. There are certain days on which for ge- 
nerations almost all families eat the same kind of food. For 
example on ,,Green Thursday" spinach with poached eggs 
is served and on Good Friday sour egg soup and poppy seed 
cake. While on Saturday of the Holy Week dinner is meagre, 
because during Lent abstinence is a virtue. After the Resurrec- 




tion in many places a large supper is prepared but the truly 
religious man eats for the first time after Lent at the Sun- 
day mass, when sacred meat is offered. The sacred foods 
(ham, bread, eggs, cake, salt a little of each) are packed 
in a white cloth on Easter* morning and are blessed at the 
altar during first Mass. 

Easter Sunday dinner is a big meal. Hen and beef soup, 
fowl meat with tomato sauce and potatoes, stuffed cabbage 
with ham, fried lamb-chops with onion and potato salad, 
strudel and good wines are served. 

On Easter Sunday morning the young men of the vil- 
lage go from house to house and sprinkle the girls with per- 
fumed water receiving beautifully painted eggs in return. 

70 



THE HUNGARIAN COUNTRY. 

We have given you a short summary of the specialities 
of the Hungarian land and life; now we wish to introduce 
you in brief to the Hungarian country, and the interning 
things one ought to know about country life. Do not leave 
Hungary having only seen her magnificent capital, Buda- 
pest; visit the country too, travel about the land here and 
there. You will leave with unforgettable memories stored 
away for a whole lifetime. 

If one comes to Budapest from Vienna, especially by 
automobile, the highway runs along the wide ribbon-like ma- 
jestic Danube river almost the entire journey. One of the 
lovelist spots along the road, bordered by cherry trees, is 
Esztergom. It lies along the main road; but one can reach 
it easily by a little detour. Esztergom is the ancient 
seat of the Archbishop. Its Cathedral is the largest church 
of Hungary, built upon a mountain top above the Danubian 
Valley. For the first opening ceremony of this beautiful 
church, Francis Liszt, the world famous Hungarian compo- 
ser wrote one of his greatest masterpieces: the Esztergom 
Mass in 1856. Do nor fail to visit the Esztergom ruins while 
there. 

Not far from Esztergom is Visegrad, where the river 
cuts a way for itself through the steep mountains. In Viseg- 
rad are the ruins of the ancient castle of King Matyas, a 
monument of Hungarian Renaissance. On a smaller hill stands 
the tower of King Solomon. This lovely region is reminis- 
cent of the most beautiful era in Hungarian history. 

East of Budapest lies the Matra mountain region, on its 
highest mountain, Kekes (1010 m.) there is the Kekes- 
Hotel, built recently with every modern convenience. The 

71 



view is lovely from this elevation. One can see the great Hun- 
garian plain and the High Tatra to the north. Kekes is 
the center of winter sports. It has two skiing fields. Not far 
is Parad, famous for its thermal and arsin bath and cures. 

It is worthwhile visiting the little villages at the foot 
of these mountains to study their folk costums and costumes. 
In the village of Boldog (near to Hatvan, one and a half hours 
distance from Budapest) the Sunday morning church pro- 
cession at 10 a. m. is so picturesque, that one must take pho- 
tographs or make films of this scene. At the foot of the 
Gyongyospata and Bujak, at the foot the Matra, are also 
full of colour, and interesting sights. 

Going further on we come to Mezokovesd. (2y 2 hours 
from Budapest), the birthplace; of Matyo embroideries. At 
the 9 10 Mass and 3 p. m. Littany, the whole town lines up 




72 



in picturesque and richly coloured national dresses. It is an 
unique sight in Europe. 

In the Bukk mountains, near Miskolc is Lillajiired. 
Beside a romantic lake stands the Palota-llotel, built 
in the style of a Hungarian hunting lodge. It is the favorite 
resort of foreign visitors who gather here to shoot, swim or 
take part in other recreations. 

From Miskolc going towards the Hungarian border, 
we reach the Tokay mountians. Its wide and large peak can 
be seen from far. At the fork of the rivers Tisza and Bodrog, 
standing out from the valley are the gigantic vineyards which 
produce ,,the king of wines and the wine of kings". 

The other famous vineyard centers of the Tokay region 
are: the Mad, Tallya, Monok, ( with the birthplace of 
Kossuth), Sdrospatak, the ancient town of the Protestant col- 
lege, with English dormitories and lastly Sdtoraljaujhely, 
the present -- Hungary's border city. 

In the Great Hungarian Plain, so romantically described 
by our famous poet Petofi in his poems, stands Debrecen, 
the ,,Calvinist Rome". Near to Debrecen is the famous ,,Hor- 
tobdgy" plain where horses and cattle are raised. 

The Tisza plain's greaest city is Szeged. In the open 
,,Dom" Square, before the magnificent ,,Fogadalmi" church, 
open-air plays are presented each summer. Kecskemet is 
the home of peaches. Bugac, not far from Kecskemet, is also 
famous for horse and cattle raising. 

We can see beautiful national dresses in Kalocsa, Szek- 
szard, (the Center of Sarkoz, famous for embroideries), 
Ocseny and Decs. Across the Danube the most beautiful re- 
gion is the Balaton with the Bakony mountains. Beautiful 
old cities across the Danube are: Pecs, Veszprem, Szekes- 
fehervar, Gyor, Sopron and Koszeg. 

73 



From village to village we can discover new characteris- 
tics, curiosities, new colours of which Petof i wrote with every 
right ,,If the world is God's hat our land is the bouquet 
upon it". 

THE 
HUNGARIAN FRUIT LEADS IN VITAMIN CONTENT! 

This is not an advertising slogan, Hungarian fruit leads 
in vitamin content. In a few years the whole world will 
know this slogan. 




The vitamin content of the Hungarian fruits achieves 
the result that where it is not missing from the table, the 
health of individuals is in order and the body awaits any 
attack of illness well prepared. 

The apples from the upper Tisza region, the peaches 
of Kecskmet, the juicy Tokay grapes of Zemplen County, 
the melons of Heves and Szabolcs counties, and the 
pears; the vegetables, the tomatoes and green peppers 
prolong life. Grape-cures are advised by famous specialists 
for anaemic children. 

74 



HUNGARIAN TOBACCO. 

The Hungarian soil produces an excellent quality of to- 
bacco. The rich black humus of the Hungarian Plain is 
very well suited for tobacco growing. Particularly fine to- 
bacco is produced in the county Heves. 

The crowning success of a good supper is carefully 
selected cigars and cigarettes, satisfying, if possible, every- 
one's taste in tobacco. 




At one time, long ago, when women dared only smoke 
in private, smoking was not an important problem to them 
and they could not understand why it was such a necessity 
for men to have to go the smoking room after supper. 
To day it is different, because the hostess herself smokes 
and is able to appreciate a good cigarette, mereover, she 
understands the importance of smoking after meals, and not 
only the importance but the necessity of crowning a delicious 
dinner or supper with a fine cigar or cigarette. 

Often one hears: ,,The only reason this meal tastes so 
good is that I know I can light a cigarette afterwards." Per- 
haps for those who do not smoke it seems a little humorous 
when we say that it gives the hostess a serious task to choose 
cigars and cigaarettes suitable to every guest's taste. Many 
times it happens that no money is spared to serve an excellent 

75 



meal but the host or hostess forget about after dinner and 
offer the cigars and cigarettes to which they are accustomed 
at home. They forget that a good host must provide cigars 
cigarettes of various kinds because there are, as many smokers 
as there are tastes in tobacco. We do not mean to say that wo- 
men in general prefer the fine, thin little ,,Dames" while the 
men's choice is a good ,,Regalia Media", or ,,Royales" cigar 
and for our foreign visitor's tastes we offer the slightly scen- 
ted ,,Darling". We are listing these, and throwing light on 
this subject only because we want to stress the importance 
of keeping good cigars and cigarettes for the guests. 

We do not believe there is anything more unpleasant and 
embarrassing for the hostess who has done her best to enter- 
tain her guests, than to see one or two guests take out their 
own cigars and cigarettes in secret. Therefore it is important 
for the good host to keep several kinds of tobacco at home. 

THE ST. STEPHEN'S WEEK WITH. ST. STEPHEN'S 
DAY, (AUG. 20) THE GREATEST ANNUAL FESTI- 
VAL OF THE WORLD FAMED ,,PEARLY BOUQUET 

(GYONGYOS BOKRETA) 

Budapest, a great, modern metropolis, world famed 
also as the City of Medicinal Springs and Mineral-Baths, 
provides a Western frame for the setting of the traditional, 
richly-coloured, Oriental pomp displayed by the Hunga- 
rian nation in its annual celebration of the memory of its first 
king; and this national Hungarian Festival, with the meet- 
ing of West and East, the blending of reality with the 
world of dreams profoundly touches all beholders, and re- 
mains also indelibly impressed on the memory of our foreign 
visitors. 

76 



The Festivals, beginning on August 14, culminate on 
St. Stephen's Day, the 20th of August, in the great Church 
Procession, the most sublime occasion on which devout Hun- 
garians from every part of the country flock to Budapest, to 
manifest their gratitude and devotion in the presence of the 
Right Hand of St. Stephen's, the Sacred Relic which has 
been preserved intact for upwards of a thousand years; that 
Holy Right Hand which, in life, lavished so many blessings 

ji 




on the nation under its rule. On St. Stephen's Day, in 
fore-noon, the Sacred Relic, enclosed in its reliquary of glass 
and gold, is taken from its jealously guarded sanctuary in the 
Royal Palace, to be borne in solemn procession to the 
Coronation Church. At the head of the Procession is the 
Regent of Hungary; then follow the Church dignitaires in 
their ornate robes, the military and civic notabilities, res- 
plendent in the traditional Hungarian gala-dress, with its 
wealth of precious stones and fine goldsmith's work; then 
come the groups of Hungarian peasants, in their infinite 
variety of bright and gorgeous folk costumes, testifying that 
heart and soul, in love for their native land. Towards noon, 
the sublime ecclesiastical festivals come to an end, and then 



77 



supervenes, to the 1 far-ringing strains of military music, the 
ceremonies of the Changing of the Palace Guard in the Buda 
Fortress and the changing of the Guard of the National Flag 
on Liberty Square (Szabadsag-ter), while in the early after- 
noon numerous interesting events of a lighter character 
await the throng of citizens and visitors in Budapest. In 
the evening the festive throngs proceed to the Danube, 
where, from the decks of the promenading steamers, or 
from the Danube-shores, or from the restaurant-terraces on 
the Danube promenade, they feast their gaze on the Buda- 
pest Danube-panorama, transformed into a veritable fairy- 
land by the St. Stephen Day illuminations, and delight, till 
late at night, in the marvellous display of fireworks soaring 
above the massive, romantic cliffs of Mount St. Gellert. 

An attraction of peculiar interest during the St. Ste- 
phen Festival- Werk in Budapest is the famous Hungarian 
Folk-Costume Revue, presented daily, beginning from 
August 14, in the City Theatre (Varosi Szinhaz), under the 
title of ,,The Pearly Bouquet" (,,Gyongyos Bokreta"). 

The Pearly Bouqet (,,Gyongyos Bokreta") is a fragrant 
bunch of those simple, bright-coloured flowers, characteris- 
tic of the Hungarian prairie lands; a choice collection of 
sweetly-melancholy melodies, of old, rhythmic Hungarian 
dances, of gorgeous folk-costumes, and of Hungarian folk- 
customs which have survived through a history of a thou- 
sand years. The Pearly Boquet is a Festival Play, frequented 
from year to year by the cream of the Hungarian people, 
who come from every part of the country to bear testimony 
to their ancient, Eastern origin. Hither come the horseherds- 
men (csikos) and the cow-herds (gulyas) from the Hunga- 
rian Plain, the land of the mirage; the shepherds from the 

78 



green pastures and from the slopes of the forest-clad moun- 
tains; and groups of stalwart youths and smiling maidens 
come from many a Hungarian hamlet, where still prevail 
those old Hungarian customs which have acquired world- 
wide celebrity. 

The Pearly Bouquet is a Festival Play and, as such, an 
acclaimed succes. In this play the Hungarian peasant-folk 
have their roles and present the Hungarian soul itself to 
crowded houses of Hungarians and of foreign visitors, who 
greet the performance with delight and ecstatic applause. 
The curtain rises on a stage flooded with light. We hear 
the plaintive violins, the reverberating cymbals, the clear- 
ringing clarionets; and then, to the passionate strains of the 
Hungarian gipsy-orchestra, are displayed the Hungarians 
dances, in all their exquisite charm and) variety; now slow 
and stately, now fast and furious; the csardas, the dreamy 
Kallai couple-dance, the mart o gat 6s and ugratos (dipping 
and skipping-dances). Bright and hilarious are the dances of 
the swiftly revolving couples, while the thrilling solo-dan- 
ces of the men reflect the earnestness, dignity and resolution 
of the Hungarian character. You must see the toborzo 
(recruiting-dance), the csapdsolds (trapping-dance), the 
sapka (cap-dance), and the kampos, the shepherd's-crook 
dance. All these must be seen, and others, too numerous to 
mention. You must see and hear the horse-herdsmen, cow- 
herds and shepherds from the taverns of the Plain, carou- 
sing in true Hungarian fashion, see the mystic midsummer 
dance of the maidens around the St. Ivan fire, and hear the 
choirs of village children and youthful peasants; see the 
bride-wooing and peasant-wedding, and the typical Hun- 
garian harvest festival on the wheatlands of the Great Plain. 

Together with the performance of the Pearly Bouquet 

79 



there will be shown to those interested, at a brilliantly 
colourful exhibition and fair, a selection of the finest spe- 
cimens of Hungarian peasant art. 

LAKE BALATON. 

Having introduced the finest Hungarian fish, the perch- 
pike, we are prompted to say something about its place of 
origin: Lake Balaton. The Balaton is one of Europe's largest 
lakes. The temperature of the water in July is 23 C. In the 




winter the ice is sometimes as much as 1.5 meters thick and 
lasts for as long as three months. 

The climate of the Balaton region is warm and mild. 
The sky is sparkling blue, mostly clear. If swift storms sweep 
across the water the sight is beautiful but boats are put to a 
severe test. 

Sunset on the lake is one of the most magnificent natu- 
ral pictures, never to be forgotten. The colour of the water 
changes from hour to hour, and at sunset it is glorious when 
all the colours of the rainbow are reflected on the water. 

On the southern shore the water is shallow, one can 
walk 100-200 yards until it sweeps overhead. On the north- 

80 



ern shore, bordered by mountains - - (Badacsony, Tihany 
and Balatonfiired are on this part of the lake) - - the water 
is deep. 

The Balaton is a favourite resort in winter and summer. 
Especially yachting is pusued here. In winter ,,sleigh 
yachting", ,,fakutyazas" (sleighs which are driven by two 
nailed sticks) and skating are popular on middle Europe's 
,,largest skating rink". 

Of the more famous and well-known summer resorts we 
mention Balatonf tired the Mecca of people afflicted witn 
heart desease, Balatonalmadi the middle class's most elegant 
and gay resort, Balatonjoldvar the summer resort of exclusive 
aristocracy. The popular bathing beach and casino of Siojok, 
and the historical past and sport life of Tihany are worthy 
of mention. 

Siofok is 115 km., Balatonfiired 156 km. from 
Budapest. During the season fast autobuses run between 
Budapest and these two summer resorts. They can also be 
reached by automobile on fine highways. 

If you have come as far as Budapest visit the Balaton 
region too. 

HUNGARIAN WINES 

We need not draw your attention to the world- 
wide fame of the Hungarian wines. In every land they know 
and praise the Hungarian wines, especially Tokay. But 
it is not only Tokay which is famous among Hungarian 
wines. Hungary has seventeen winne districts, each one pro- 
ducing a particular speciality. The character of the wine 

81 



varies according to the region in which it grows depending 
on the quality and mixture of the soil and the climatic con- 
ditions of the particular region. 

The best-liked Hungarian wines are the following: 
White wines: Inarcsi, Badacsonyi, Keknyelii. 

(Light wines)) Somloi, Debroi, Harslevelti, Lanyka. 

(Medium strong wines) Tokaji, Szamorodni, Tokaji 

Maslas, Tokaji aszu. 
Red wines: Villanyi, Nemes Kadarka, Dukcsardi Kadarka, 

Szekszardi, Egri bikave*r. 




Of the stronger wines we mention the wine and fruit 
distilates. Of the latter, Kecskemet ,,Barack Palinka" (peach 
brandy) apricot leads. King Edward VIII made this drink 
very popular on his two visits to Hungary, as the Prince 
of Wales, 

We mention here the Hungarian dark and light beers 



which can compete with even the best foreign beers. The 
favourite Hungarian mineral waters are: ,,Harmatviz", 
,,Kristalyviz", ,,Margitviz" and ,,Kenes paradi viz". 

The history of Hungarian culture dates back to 1700 
A. D. It is an historical fact that Probus, the Roman Emperor, 
founded grape and wine culture in the province once known 
as Pannonia a region across the Danube. The soldiers who 
settled there planted vineyards along the hill sides. In the 
fourth century A. D. one could frequently find grape orna- 
ments and decorations on the tomb stones of Pannonia. 

But the world-wide fame of Hungarian wines really 
only started in 1560, when vineyards were planted in the 
Tokay mountains. And as the fame of the Tokay wine grows, 
they try to imitate the king of wiines with moore or less suc- 
cess. To guard against imitations the genuine Tokay wine 
bottles are marked with a seal. 

The Tokay wine is a veritable medical wine and it is 
listed among the drugs in the official Hungarian drug ma- 
nuals. This wine consists of certain matter which acts as a 
strengthener, therefore it partly prevents sickness and partly 
acts as a stimulant and strengthener in cases where the body 
has become weak through illness. Owing to its high grape- 
sugar content it has a good effect on functions of the heart; 
it is generally known that in cases of a weak heart grape 
sugar injections are given. 

The Hungarian vintage usually starts in October in the 
Tokay mountains it starts after the fifteenth of October and 
lasts sometimes till the middle of November. The late har- 
vest (depending on a dry, sunny autumn) yields the vine 
with the greatest sugar content. 

Upon the chosen and gathered aromatic ,,aszu" grapes 
fresh Tokay juice is poured, and this juice dissolves and ex- 

83 



tracts from the aszu the rich sugar content. This is how the 
Tokay aszu is prepared, and its value depends on how many 
aszu grapes are put into one barrel (135 liters) of Tokay juice 
We can differentiate between 1 5 barrel aszu wines. The 
wine with even more ,,aszu" content is very rare and is called 
,,aszu essence." 

The French king, Louis XV. offered Madame Pompa- 
dour Tokay aszu wine remarking that ,,this is the king of 
wines, and the wine of Kings". The thrifty Napoleon III, paid 
10,000 francs for 200 bottles of Tokay wine. Maria Theresa 
sent Pope Benedict XIV. Tokay wine as gift and Francis 
Joseph sent Quen Victoria several bottles on the occasion 
of the Diamand Jubilee. 

In America recently they discovered that the delicious 
flavor of the Tokay wine gives an unimaginable pleasaant 
and piquant taste to cocktails. 

At the vintage in the Balaton region the people of the 
whole village help the farmers. The harvest gathers together 
the young folk and more than once two hearts starts out from 
these gay harvest days towards marriage ... At the close 
of the vintage harvesters take large decorated bunches of 
grapes to the owner of the estate which he hengs up is his 
rooms. This is similar to the autumn festivals and is a 
fit ending to the gay and happy harvest. 

To the Hungarian spirit and good wine belongs the 
famous gypsy music. The gypsy music in its parti- 
cular way interprets Hungarian folksongs, new and old dan- 
ces, slow parlando rubato, ,,hallgatok". The talent of the 
gypsy musicians is inherited and polished through genera- 
tions; veritable gypsy dynasties exist in our country which has 
given famous violinists to the Hungarian music. 

84 



HUNGARIAN EMBROIDERY. 

The textile art, embroidery and lace stands on a high 
place in Hungary. The ancient culture of the traditional 
homecraaft is the reason this is so. The Hungarian peasant 
women's artistic sense, gift of creating, and skill of hand- 
ling material, is really remarkable. The desings in the wo- 
ven and embroidered materials are their own creation 
drawn on the goods or made without drawings at all. There 
is an imagination for colour, excellent proportion and good 
style in their works of art. The style varies from place to 
place so that an expert readily recognizes the region, an 
embroidery originates from. 

Of the embroideres the Sarkoz and Buzsak (Turkish 
ornamentation) stand out the Kalocsa and world- wide 
known Mezokovesd, Maty 6 work. Embroidery bought at 
the place where it is made remains an everlasting memory. 

Carpet weaving also plays an important part in Hun- 
garian textile art. But the lace of Halas is even more famous. 

In Kiskunhalas they erected government-lace-house, 
where there is a great variety of feather light, exquisite laces. 

HUNGARIAN JEWELRY INDUSTRY. 

Hungary's jewelry industry is several hundred years old. 
Already at the time of King Matyas (1458 1490) it was 
famous; and written records and precious pieces of jewelry 
witness to this fact. 

The work of goldsmiths and silversmiths in the 17 th 
and 18 th century were much admired at great exhibitions 
and art collectors favor these beautiful works of fine craft. 
It is no wonder, since these useful and decorative pieces 
combined the rich ornament and form of Hungarian fine 
arts with the practical methods of western craft. 

85 



In the 16 th and 17 th centuries gold craft became great 
through the generosity, taste and love of pomp of the aris- 
tocracy. Jewellers in those times made beautiful richly de- 
corated spurs, swords, chains, belts, bracelets, rings, ear-rings 
and bag decorations. In many noble families today there 
are goblets and exquisitely decorated cups that been handed 
down from olden days. . 

The ,,Diszmagyar", the richest and most beautiful 
national costume worn, has decorations of buttons made by 
lace drills with intricate technique, and other jewel orna- 
ments and silver decorations which are in remarkable accord 
with the color of the dress, and its embroidery. 

It has become fashionable to use these old buttons from 
the costumes for cuff buttons. From the jewelry and cape- 
chains they have made clips and dress pins. 

The favorite motive of the Hungarian silver and gold- 
craft is the folk ornamention which reminds us of the de- 
corative technique of the once Asiatic olden country. 

Do not leave Hungary before taking with you some 
article of jewelry as a remembrance of the beautiful, tasteful 
Hungarian craft. 

SHOOTING IN HUNGARY. 

We can say with every right about Hungary that it is 
the paradise of shooting. Her richness in both small and large 
game places her in the first rank in Europe, and this is pro- 
ved by many Hungarian world records. 

In latter years innumerable foreigners have visited the 
country to take part in her unique shoots. 

Partridge shooting begins in August. This af- 
fords as good shooting as of pheasants, even better 

86 



in September and October when it is more difficult to shoot 
partridges. The partridge which has been disturbed and 
driven several times flies with great speed. In some regions 
there are so many partridges that a good shot can get as 
many as 100 brace in a day. While a shooting party 
of four or five can reach a bag of 3 4000. 




Pheasant shooting is particularly popular among the 
English since the Hungarian pheasant is stronger and more 
tenacious than its western relations and what is more im- 
portant to sportsmen, flies with greater speed. 

At well arranged shoots in the winter season, shooting 
the high-flying pheasant cock affords the greatest pleasure. 
For one who has taken part in the pheasant shooting on 
the Hungarian Plains, it is a never-to-be-forgotten sight to 
watch a bunch of about 100 birds flying at once. 

The host sees to it that only the high flying cocks 
should receive the shots. 

The result of a day's shooting, if well arranged reaches 
the bag of 2 3000 pheasants. 

87 



Hungary's position in wild fowl shooting is also the first 
in Europe. The great Hungarian plain Hortobagy (160.000 
acres) affords an unusual shooting ground for foreign visi- 
tors. In the spring and autumn millions of wild 
fowl sweep down on the plain. On favorable days a good 
shot can get 100 150 wild geese on a morning or evening 
flight. It is an unforgettable sight for the shot to watch from 
his hiding place thousands and thousands of a mixed variety 
of wild geese flying overhead. 

This shooting is unusual because it is free of mosquito 
and malaria. At the same time the Hortobagy Inn affords 
excellent comfort and service where even bath rooms are not 
lacking. Besides the Hortobagy there are other fine wild fowl 
shooting grounds 40 minute's drive by car from the capital. 

Hare shooting yields many thousand game per day. 

The excellence of game opportunities, roe and deer 
is proved by Hungary's world record. The forest aare crossed 
by trails and there are hunting lodges for the hunter's com- 
fort. 

Wild boar shoots are also remarkable; 30 40 head can 
be bagged in a day, some weighing several hundred pounds. 

From all this it is evident that Hungary is the ideal 
sportsman's country of Europe where with the exception of 
bears and chamois all of Europe's game can be found. 

Hungary through her geographic position is the last re- 
serve of wild game in Europe owing to her large forests and 
fields, far from the noise of cities, railroads and high ways 
it affords a sure place of safety for the small and big game. 

Since in latter years great interest has been shown 
in shooting, Hungary has been able to afford greater 

88 



comfort to the foreign visitors. Shooting offices have been 
established to arrange and give information about shooting 
and hunting to the smallest detail. Such offices are; the 
,,Sporttours Limited", Budapest, V., Wurm-utca 3. and ,,Hu- 
bertus", Budapest, V., Dorottya-utca 7., which give every 
information desired. 



89 



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