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Tushonka: Cultivating Soviet Postwar Taste (2010)

journal.media-culture.org.au

9 points by theletterf 14 days ago · 5 comments

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horsh1 12 days ago

This article positions as something invented between the USA and the USSR... But, just looking into wikiepdia:

"One such solution was a method proposed in 1809 by the French pastry chef Nicolas François Appert, which involved long-cooking meat or vegetables (approximately 1-2 hours) and pasteurizing the finished product in a brine solution. Appert received a personal award for this invention from Napoleon."

  • avmich 12 days ago

    Was it then re-invented or maybe popularized in these two countries?..

    • NoOn3 11 days ago

      Yes, as far as I understand, canned meat was not so popular among civilians in the USSR before tushonka. And tushonka is usually referred specifically to canned stewed meat, not ham or vegetables.

      Old tushonkka was tasty but many of those sold in stores now, especially the cheap ones, are not so tasty and good-quality.

sandy_coyote 12 days ago

Thanks for posting this. I knew what Tushonka is from the game Escape from Tarkov, but like other Russian food items in that game, it's presented in a limited, practical context, so it was cool to learn more about it.

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