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Packages of Goodness

136 bytes added, 23:23, 17 February 2020
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{{data|20 February 2020}}
The carnival is almost over. For Catholics worldwide, these are the last days to have fun and eat well before Lent – the 40-day period (not counting the Sundays) of fasting leading up to Easter. In Poland, quite adequately, Lent coincides with early spring, the dreadest gloomiest of Polish climate's six seasons.<ref>The six traditional (that is, pre-global-climate-change) Polish seasons are: ''zima'' (winter), ''przedwiośnie'' (after winter, but before early spring), ''wiosna'' (spring), ''lato'' (summer), ''złota jesień'' (golden autumn) and ''szaruga jesienna'' (gray autumn). Or, in the words of a poet:
{{Cytat
| <poem>In Poland there's six seasons
The funny thing is that if you showed the text above to anyone who actually lives in Poland they would be quite surprised by how many inaccuracies it contains. First of all, the correct spelling is "''pączki''", not "paczki". It's true that paczki means "packages", but it's a completely different (and unrelated) word than "''pączki''" (notice the little hook under the "a"?), which is the correct term for Polish doughnuts. Secondly, the correct pronunciation is more like ''{{small|PAUNCH}}-key'' than ''{{small|POONCH}}-key''. Thirdly, prunes and apricots seem pretty weird as pączki fillings; everybody knows that rose-hip jam is the most traditional and most aromatic one. And finally, the chief pączki-eating day is not Fat Tuesday, but Fat Thursday, six days earlier.
{{Video|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ozeLMbxEN0A|szer=400|poz=right|opis= The Foreign Citizen:<br>Pączki & Fat Thursday or Paczki & Fat Tuesday}}Tony Machalski, a Polish American who has immigrated to the country of his ancestors and now runs the ''The Foreign Citizen'' Youtube channel, did a pretty good job explaining the difference between what Polish Americans think they know about pączki and what the actual facts are back in the "old country". It would seem that Americans who proudly claim to be Polish are quite clueless about real Polish culture. But are they? Perhaps there's a good reason for these cultural differences? What if the Polish Americans are not entirely wrong after all?
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{{Nawigacja|poprz=Old Polish Cookery for Beginners}}
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