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A Fried Pie and a Fish Dish

No change in size, 17:59, 20 October 2020
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{{data|24 October 2018}}
[[File:{{#setmainimage:Paszteciki-Szczecinskie.jpg}}|thumb|250px|PS1]]
Szczecin – formerly known by its more pronounceable German name, Stettin – is a port city in northwestern Poland and home to two peculiar snacks. They’re called ''pasztecik szczeciński ''and'' paprykarz szczeciński'', pronounced: ''pash-<small>TEH</small>-cheek shcheh-<small>CHEEN</small>-skee ''and'' pahp-<small>RIH</small>-kash shcheh''-… oh, you know what, never mind, forget it; let’s just call them '''PS1''' and '''PS2''', alright?
But how much in common does the Senegalese dish of large chunks of fish and vegetables served on a bed of rice have with the Polish can filled with a “firm paste” that may be “juicy” or “slightly dryish” and whose surface may be covered with “a film of oil” (the quotations are from the [https://www.gov.pl/web/rolnictwo/paprykarz-szczecinski website of the Polish Ministry of Agriculture])?
[[File:{{#setmainimage:SG Paprykarz.jpg}}|thumb|upright|left|PS2 spread on bread]]
Well, the birth of PS2 is directly linked to an efficiency improvement project whose goal was to find some use for the scraps left over from cutting large blocks of frozen fish on Gryf’s freezer trawlers. Forget about entire steaks, which wouldn’t have fit into the cans anyway. The cans were packed with finely ground fish scraps (sometimes with fins, scales and all) and Bulgarian tomato pulp; only rice grains were visible with a naked eye.