Sopocka

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Sopocka in Polish cuisine is the name given to a salted (cured) and slightly smoked cut of pork. It is similar to the German kassler.

Polish cuisine Country-specific Cuisine of Poland

Polish cuisine is a style of cooking and food preparation originating in or widely popular in Poland. Polish cuisine has evolved over the centuries to become very eclectic due to Poland's history and it shares many similarities with other West Slavic countries like neighbouring Czech and Slovak. It has also been widely influenced by other Central European cuisines, namely German, Austrian and Hungarian as well as Jewish, French, Turkish and Italian culinary traditions. Polish-styled cooking in other cultures is often referred to as à la polonaise.

Curing (food preservation) Food preservation and flavoring processes based on drawing moisture out of the food by osmosis

Curing is any of various food preservation and flavoring processes of foods such as meat, fish and vegetables, by the addition of salt with the aim of drawing moisture out of the food by the process of osmosis. Because curing increases the solute concentration in the food and hence decreases its water potential, the food becomes inhospitable for the microbe growth that causes food spoilage. Curing can be traced back to antiquity, and was the primary way of preserving meat and fish until the late-19th century. Dehydration was the earliest form of food curing. Many curing processes also involve smoking, spicing, cooking, or the addition of combinations of sugar, nitrate, nitrite.

Smoking (cooking) exposing food to the smoke to flavour or preserve it

Smoking is the process of flavoring, browning, cooking, or preserving food by exposing it to smoke from burning or smoldering material, most often wood. Meat, fish, and lapsang souchong tea are often smoked.

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Chipotle smoke-dried jalapeño

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Lox

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Smoked meat Meat preparation

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Liquid smoke

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Cured fish fish treated by curing to reduce spoilage

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