The typical ingredients are boiled
potatoes and
flour, but may also include
eggs,
salt, and other
seasoning. The Polish dish is usually cooked in salted water, whereas in Belarusian and Lithuanian cuisines kapytki is baked first, then stewed or boiled in water. Kopytka can be either a main dish or served on the side. Kopytka can be served savoury (baked with
cheese, fried
bacon, fried
onion, or with a variety of sauces such as
goulash or
mushroom sauce); they can also be served sweet (with melted
butter and
sugar,
cinnamon, or sweetened
quark), or sugar with sour cream. File:06379 potato noodles, sanok.png|Kluski with fried bacon (in Galicia,
Poland) File:Litowskija kapytki.jpg|Lithuanian kapytki in a mushroom sauce () File:Kopytka in creamy mushroom sauce, Brisbane, 2020.jpg|Kopytka in creamy mushroom sauce == Etymology ==