It’s 12:45 a.m., but I am still jet-lagged from arriving
home at 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, September 18.
Lufthansa took us first from Krakow, Poland, to Munich (1 hour and 15 minutes in the air) and
then, after a 4-hour layover, to Vancouver (a 10-hour flight).
Our wonderful trip to Poland had begun on Wednesday, September
5, when we flew to Wroclaw. Here is our itinerary:
DAY WEEKDAY
& DATE CITY HOTEL
1. Wed. Sept 5
FLY FROM VANCOUVER
2. Thurs. Sept 6 Wroclaw BNB
3. Fri. Sept. 7 Wroclaw BNB
4. Sat. Sept. 8 Kudowa Zdroj Willa
Sanssouci
6. Mon. Sept 10 Katovice Hotel
Diament
7. Tues. Sept 11 Krakow Hotel Amadeus
8. Wed. Sept 12 Krakow Hotel Amadeus
10. Fri. Sept 14 Zakopane Grand Hotel Stamary
11. Sat. Sept 15 Krakow BNB
12. Sun. Sept 16 Krakow BNB
13. Mon. Sept 17 Krakow BNB
14. Tues. Sept 18:
FLY HOME
We did do a lot of planning and
preparation first.
I really liked the pace and repetition of the Pimsleur tapes.
********
Duck appeared several ways on restaurant menus;
we could have duck salad, duck pierogi, or even half a roasted duck.
POLISH MARINATED DUCK (Kaczka Marynowana)
from WOMAN’S DAY ENCYCLOPEDIA of COOKERY
1 duck (about 5 lbs)
1 cup sour cream
MARINADE FOR DUCK:
5 cups water
1 large onion, sliced
15 allspice berries (or juniper)
15 peppercorns
10 tbsp cider vinegar
8 bay leaves
- Put onions, water, allspice berries, and peppercorns in a saucepan. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and cover. Cook for 5 minutes to soften onion.
- Add vinegar and bay leaves.
- Put duck in a glass bowl or pot. Pour hot marinade over the duck.
- Let cool, then put in fridge for one or two days.
Remove duck from marinade. Reserve one cup of liquid. Discard the rest.
Rub duck with salt and let stand in fridge for one or two hours.
- Preheat oven to 325.
- Put duck, breast up, on a rack in an uncovered roasting pan.
- Cook one hour.
- Sprinkle duck with ground allspice, ground ginger, and nutmeg.
- Roast another hour or until skin is crisp and bird is tender. (I cooked it for two hours -- the breast was still juicy and not overcooked. In fact, if you like duck well done, you may need to keep it in the oven another 15 to 30 minutes.)
-
- Remove duck and let rest while preparing gravy.
- Add about ½ cup water to the pan to scrape it up.
- Remove as much of the fat as possible.
- Stir one tbsp flour into the sour cream. Stir in some hot liquid.
- Whisk all of sour cream mixture into gravy.
- Taste for seasoning. Add more ginger and nutmeg if desired.
In addition to the sour cream gravy and a bowl of kacza, I served the duck with sweet-and-sour red cabbage, as recommended by Jean Karsavina.
*****
I'd also recommend:
IDA, set in Poland, 1962.
I was surprised at how many Polish words I had actually learned from the tapes I listened to . . . after the subtitles cued me!