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Kissel

Kissel or kisel is a dish with the consistency of a thick gel, and made of sweet fruits such as berries, grains, peas, or milk. It is commonly thickened with potato starch or corn starch and may be served either as a drinkable dessert or as a thicker, jelly-like dish. It belongs to the group of cold-solidified desserts, although it can be served warm.

Etymology
"Kissel" is derived from a Slavic word meaning 'sour', after a similar old Slavic dish—a leavened flour porridge (or weak sourdough) which was made from grain, most commonly oats, but any grain, including legumes like peas or lentils could be used. Bean kissels were typically not leavened, and lacked the sweetness of the modern variants. == History ==
History
Grain-based kissels were known 9000 years ago in ancient Anatolia and Mesopotamia, they are mentioned in Sumerian and Akkadian texts. In ancient times, oatmeal kissel was prepared by fermentation of oat milk. In old Polish cuisine, the name kisiel or kisielica was used for thick soups (slush, , plural breje) made of fish gelatin. In French cuisine there was a similar dish known, called gelée – a berry-fruit jelly-kissel made with addition of gelatin based on fish waste. In Western European languages, fruit and berry sweet kissels based on starch do not have a common name and are attributed to "fruit cereals", "gravy", "sautés", "fruit sauces" etc. Among other dishes closely related to starch-solidified kissels are: rice pudding, flummery (British cuisine), Haferschleim (German), Lokum (Turkish), polenta (Italian) or mamalyga (Eastern-Roman). File:Oats kissel 6.jpg|Sourdough kissel from oat flakes and rye bread File:Podlaski kisiel owsiany.jpg|"Podlaski oat kissel" entered on the Polish List of Traditional Products == Fruit kissel ==
Fruit kissel
Fruit kissel is a viscous dish, popular as a dessert and as a drink in Northern, Central, and Eastern Europe. It consists of the sweetened juice (or puree) of berries. Sometimes red wine, fresh, or dried fruits are added as well. may be used as a substitute as well. The thickness varies depending on how much starch is used and on temperature. Thin kissel is most easily consumed by drinking, while thicker versions are almost like jelly and eaten with a spoon. Kissel can be served either hot or cold. Can be paired with sweetened quark or cream, can also be served on pancakes or with ice cream. It is similar to the Danish rødgrød and German Rote Grütze. Today, most Polish households prepare fruit kissel from instant mixes instead of the traditional way. The most popular flavours are strawberry, gooseberry, and raspberry. In Russia, the most popular flavours are cranberry, cherry, and redcurrant. In Lithuania, cranberry kissel () is a traditional meal on Kūčios (Christmas Eve supper). In Finland, kissel is often made of bilberries (since they can often be found growing wild in forests, and are thus both easy to gather and free) as well as from prunes, apricots, strawberries, etc. Rhubarb can also be used (see #Vegetable kissel), but is often combined with strawberries to produce a sweeter flavour. ('Queen's kissel') is made with mixed berries and berry juices, generally bilberries and raspberries. Prune kissel () is traditionally eaten with rice pudding at Christmas. File:05166 Kissel, with bananas and grapes, Sanok 2011.jpg|Commercial strawberry flavour kissel from Poland File:RusSyrnikiKissel.JPG|Russian syrniki with kissel File:Kusil 020.jpg|Ukrainian blackcurrant kissel as a drink File:Finnishkiisseli.jpg|Finnish fruit kissel File:Red Currant Kissel.jpg|Red currant and gooseberry kissel == Vegetable kissel ==
Vegetable kissel
Less common, vegetable kissel is made from boiled or baked vegetables such as rhubarb, pumpkins, or beetroot. == Milk kissel ==
Milk kissel
( or ; ) is a creamy pudding, similar to semolina pudding or budino. It is made from milk and potato starch (Poland) and flavoured with sugar and vanillin (or vanilla) or cocoa powder. It can also be enriched with the addition of butter and yolks. It may be eaten as a dessert, alone, or garnished with fruit syrups, sauces, jams, fresh or dried fruit, or with cookies and biscuits. It may also be used as an ingredient in cake creams (i.e. for karpatka or napoleonka). Most Polish households prepare milk kissel from instant mixes instead of the traditional way. Pudding sprinkled with chocolate.JPG|Milk kissel sprinkled with chocolate Vanillepudding mit frischen Erdbeeren.JPG|Vanilla milk kissel with strawberries ==Cultural references==
Cultural references
from the Radziwiłł Chronicle. Kissel is mentioned in the Primary Chronicle, where there is a story of how it saved the city of Belgorod in Kievan Rus', besieged by nomadic Pechenegs in 997. When the food in the city became scarce, the population followed the advice of an old man, who told them to make kissel from the remnants of grain, and a sweet drink from the last mead they could find. They filled a wooden container with the kissel, and another one with the mead drink, and put those containers into the holes in the ground, and built two fake wells over them. When the Pechenegian ambassadors came into the town, they saw how the inhabitants took the food from those "wells", and the Pechenegs even were allowed to taste the kissel and mead beverage. Impressed by that show and degustation, Pechenegs decided to lift the siege and to go away, having concluded that the Ruthenians were mysteriously fed from the earth itself. In Russian fairy tales, the land of marvels (similar to Cockaigne) is described as the land of "milk rivers and kissel banks". This expression became an idiom in Russian for prosperous life or "paradise on earth". Another phrase common in Russia and Poland, "the seventh water after kissel" (, ), is used to describe a distant relative. Russian phraseological references also gloss the expression as describing someone in an extremely distant degree of kinship and connect its origin to the layered ‘water’ that can separate from standing kissel. ==See also==
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