Look absolutely fantastic. What is it? How is it normally eaten?
Extension-Street323 on
Looks delicious. Here in Ukraine we have similar thing called Verguny(Вергуни), often called Kihliata(Кіхлята), looks slightly different though, last time i ate them probably 15 years ago.
TheJiral on
No way. My grandmother used to make “Gebackene Mäuse” (baked/fried mice). The looked exactly like that and appear to be pretty much the same thing. I always wondered where those were coming from as they don’t appear to be terribly common in modern day Austria, at least nowhere is common as Krapfen or even Bauernkrapfen. I wonder if they were more common in the Old-Austrian days, also around Vienna.
That said, in modern day Vienna we do have a lot of Balkan food, for obvious reasons but I am not sure I have ever seen uštipci. Maybe I just haven’t looke out for them.
UltraSpeci on
Buhti
kloovt on
They look very reminiscent of oliebollen
delfinjoca on
I had them two days ago. Pure gold.
SleepLate8808 on
Why are they baking wooding blocks
Agile-Assist-4662 on
What is it ? What is it ? What is it ?
Isn’t it weird when you see an unfamiliar food but you immediately decide it needs to go in your face hole ?
Weekly_Astronaut5099 on
Weren’t uštipci supposed to be from minced meat on a grill? I am genuinely curios. Maybe the word is used as a blanket term for all food in small pieces.
Leopardo4990 on
I had them in Sarajevo in july, savory version with kajmak was wonderful
General-Ad1745 on
In Macedonia, these are widely popular and are called Pitulici (Питулици) they can be eaten with yoghurt,feta cheese and cheese but for a sweet version they can be eaten with Powdered Sugar or the younger generations love them with Nuttela
14 commenti
Look absolutely fantastic. What is it? How is it normally eaten?
Looks delicious. Here in Ukraine we have similar thing called Verguny(Вергуни), often called Kihliata(Кіхлята), looks slightly different though, last time i ate them probably 15 years ago.
No way. My grandmother used to make “Gebackene Mäuse” (baked/fried mice). The looked exactly like that and appear to be pretty much the same thing. I always wondered where those were coming from as they don’t appear to be terribly common in modern day Austria, at least nowhere is common as Krapfen or even Bauernkrapfen. I wonder if they were more common in the Old-Austrian days, also around Vienna.
That said, in modern day Vienna we do have a lot of Balkan food, for obvious reasons but I am not sure I have ever seen uštipci. Maybe I just haven’t looke out for them.
Buhti
They look very reminiscent of oliebollen
I had them two days ago. Pure gold.
Why are they baking wooding blocks
What is it ? What is it ? What is it ?
Isn’t it weird when you see an unfamiliar food but you immediately decide it needs to go in your face hole ?
Weren’t uštipci supposed to be from minced meat on a grill? I am genuinely curios. Maybe the word is used as a blanket term for all food in small pieces.
I had them in Sarajevo in july, savory version with kajmak was wonderful
In Macedonia, these are widely popular and are called Pitulici (Питулици) they can be eaten with yoghurt,feta cheese and cheese but for a sweet version they can be eaten with Powdered Sugar or the younger generations love them with Nuttela
Everyone has their own version of fried dough 🙂
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_doughnut_varieties](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_doughnut_varieties)
This version in particular:
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U%C5%A1tipci](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U%C5%A1tipci)
Dat zijn gewoon oliebollen.
Dat bint eulieboll’n