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Is Poolish Polish?

15 bytes added, 15:01, 4 August 2021
And now it's time for my own proposition: the poolish method was developed in France, but it gave the best results with the "nervous" Polish wheat, which was known in France as "Poolish" (among other misspellings) and lent its name to the method. Only once the name "poolish" had caught on, along with the pseudo-English pronunciation to match the butchered spelling, was the French phonetic spelling "''pouliche''" (which also happens to be the French word for "filly") coined.
Is this proposition supported by any historical sources? No. Is it far-fetched? Definitely. But is it more of a stretch than the other etymologies presented above? I shall leave it for the Reader to decide. So what do we know for sure? That poolish was invented in France rather than in Poland, and in the second half of the 19th century, so it couldn't have been popularised by August Zang – let alone by Marie Antoinette's court bakers. But the origin of its name will remain a mystery.
{{Przypisy}}