For Yvette's birthdaay we went back to Miod i Wino for the Hunter's Feast. This meal is a production and worth its not insubstantial expense. We started with mead again, of course. The feast starts with soup - Andreas and Yvette had the sour rye soup again. There were beets, mushrooms, pierogi, sauces, and more meat than imaginable. The menu describes the meal as good for three to four people. It's truly better for six, there's that much food. As you can see from the antler photo, serving this meal is a production. The waiter even had to put on a costume to wheel everything out. So yes, it's a lot of food and beautiful, but how did it taste? Everything was great, from the venison to the creamed mushrooms. We loved it. We'd definitely do it again. If you're looking for a signature dinner in Krakow, I'd say this is the place to get it.
Saturday, December 20, 2014
In Chapel
This shows some of the damage that happens to salt with moisture over centuries. The scene below is the story of how the mine was founded. Evidently Queen Jadwiga asked her father for a salt mine for a dowry, and on her way to marry her Polish husband stopped at this place and told people to dig to find salt. Since it's been shown the mine works were in place before her time ... it's a bit false.
Friday, December 19, 2014
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Disappointing Georgian Food
There is an upscale Georgian restaurant just off the square. We realized it was Georgian because we sounded the name out in Polish and it looked like hachipuri, which it was. We really hoped for good Georgian food, but it wasn't. It was greasy and just plain weird. Chisinau's Tblisi Restaurant is SO much better. A lot of the food doesn't even look the same.
Labels:
food,
non-stitching,
Poland
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