One evening we decide that is it time to
eat Polish. Paris has a choice of Polish restaurants. We choose the one that
has a combination of good reviews, close to a metro station and not expensive.
So, the result is Paris Polska. We book a table using an app called The Fork. A
reservation made with the The Fork app grants us a 20% discount on food at
Paris Polska. We make the reservation using the app as we walk to the RER station.

For main course I order Polish Golonka w Piwie (knuckle of pork with potatoes and sauerkraut/choucroute). The waitress warns that the sauerkraut is nothing like German or Alsatian suerkraut. I am willing to take my chances since I do not particularly care for German style sauerkraut. And I am not disappointed. The cabbage has been prepared in beer with meet for a few days and it is the best sauerkraut I have ever had. I am having a feast.
Meanwhile Jukka is eating through his tasting menu of 3 starters and 3 main courses. Fortunately, they are small portions so he can also enjoy the 3 desserts. I take a bite of his herring and it is fantastic. The Polish salad looks like a version of the globally known salad that has vegetables (potatoes, pickles, carrots, green peas) and mayonnaise. It is known as Russian salad, Macedonian salad, Italian salad depending on where you are in the world. For main course he gets hunter’s stew (called Bigos with a large amount of the fantastically tasty sauerkraut), Goulasch and Pierogi (that look like dumplings). He empties his plates so the food is to his liking.
We share dessert of cheese cake called Sernik, apple cake Szarlotka and Makowiec (poppy seed roll).
75020 Paris
http://www.parispolska.com/
We get a table for 2 with velvet covered
arm chairs. The table next to us is full of young Poles who are drinking beer.
And in the corner a very serious looking woman is hosting an amusing TV show in
Polish. The owner behind the counter looks Polish, speaks Polish and even has a
Polish t-shirt. We decide that this restaurant meets our requirements for a
Polish restaurant. Especially since the menu has food items that are impossible
to pronounce, such as śledź w oleju z cebula (oil marinated herrings with
onion), oscypek z gruska (grilled cheese with warm peaches) and kaczka
faszerowana (stuffed duck).
A look at the menu tells me that the Poles
must love potatoes and pork. That sounds a bit like Denmark where I currently
work. I choose items from the menu with
the kind help of the waitress. She asks whether we are Polish or have any
connection to Poland. She is excited when I tell her that we want to eat
genuinely Polish food. Jukka takes the tasting menu.
First a vodka shot. Jukka has plain vodka
and I have a shot called ‘mad dog’ which has tabasco at the bottom, raspberry
liquor next and on top a layer of vodka. There is no stirring, just drinking
the whole thing on one go. The Poles in the table next to up stop conversation
to see how I cope with a vodka shot but they do not realise that I am from
Finland and this not my first vodka shot. Owner teaches us that “cheers” in Polish is “Na
zdrowie!”( which means “for health”). This is the best vodka shot ever! The
raspberry liquor with a tabasco kick leaves a very pleasant after taste in the
mouth. Mad dog was not so mad.
For starters I have bread covered with fat
and side dish of pickled cucumbers. The cucumbers taste like Russian pickled
cucumbers that we sometimes had at home when I was a kid. Maybe I have already
had more experience with Polish-like food than I realized! For main course I order Polish Golonka w Piwie (knuckle of pork with potatoes and sauerkraut/choucroute). The waitress warns that the sauerkraut is nothing like German or Alsatian suerkraut. I am willing to take my chances since I do not particularly care for German style sauerkraut. And I am not disappointed. The cabbage has been prepared in beer with meet for a few days and it is the best sauerkraut I have ever had. I am having a feast.
Meanwhile Jukka is eating through his tasting menu of 3 starters and 3 main courses. Fortunately, they are small portions so he can also enjoy the 3 desserts. I take a bite of his herring and it is fantastic. The Polish salad looks like a version of the globally known salad that has vegetables (potatoes, pickles, carrots, green peas) and mayonnaise. It is known as Russian salad, Macedonian salad, Italian salad depending on where you are in the world. For main course he gets hunter’s stew (called Bigos with a large amount of the fantastically tasty sauerkraut), Goulasch and Pierogi (that look like dumplings). He empties his plates so the food is to his liking.
We share dessert of cheese cake called Sernik, apple cake Szarlotka and Makowiec (poppy seed roll).
While we were eating and drinking through our menu,
other people, French, tourists, Polish and non-Polish fill up the restaurant. Who knew that Polish food was so delicious? Apparently many
already did know and we do now, too.
Paris Polska Restaurant
42 rue des Vignoles 75020 Paris
http://www.parispolska.com/