Today, as I headed to the library to pick up a book I ordered on interlibrary loan, I had the pleasant surprise of running into one of the faculty members in one of my courses. She was the organizer of a semiotics conference, and she and the participants were heading to lunch. They had extra places at the dinner, so she invited me along as a "hungry person" who needed to eat.
The menu was great and much better than the tuna sandwich I was heading home to prepare: cream of broccoli soup, pork chops potatoes with creamy dill gravy (chunks of pickles in this white sauce!), sauerkraut, and a fantastic Estonian desert of ingredients that don't fully exist in the same way in my world of English: "Kohupiim jakama moosiga." It was lovely enough to warrant a fuller description and a future repeat appearance in my Estonian diet.
Kohupiim (curd) Kama (grain mixture) moosiga (with jam).
Everyone warned me that I wouldn't like it. It was supposed to be strange. Grain sprinkled in sour cream/curd/cottage cheese/cream cheese. . . "Foreigners just don't like it," I was told. I was prepared to try it out but not anticipating anything scrumptious. It was really fantastic and defies a translation or simple explanation.
A website put out by the Ministry of Agriculture explains: Kama is a quite traditional, however initially only a seasonal dish and it is one of the undisputed classics of Estonian cuisine. The kama flour is a mixture of rough grain flour and peas. The composition of kama is not very clear. There is an Estonian saying about a situation when something does not matter: "It's kama to me!"
In the summer, many Estonians mix kama with keefir (sour milk) for a refreshing drink as pictured here, above.
For more about Estonian food and how Estonians eat it, visit Estonian Food!
This is an aimless blog that gives voices to small joys, quirky happenstances, everyday occurrences, and occasional pesterings as the author navigates her life paths as an educator, transplanted Wyomingite, traveler, and curiosity seeker.
Thursday, October 12, 2006
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1 comment:
Hi Dzen, thank you for visiting my blog and leaving a comment! Hope you're enjoying Tartu - I cannot wait to visit the place again, as I got my first degree there and love the city. Sadly I hardly ever made it to Tartu during my seven years in Scotland!
I've written about kama on my blog, too: http://nami-nami.blogspot.com/2005/07/cooking-estonian-kama.html - glad to hear you liked it!
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