Jabol
Bottles of Mamrot brand jabol
TypeFruit wine
OriginPoland, Central Europe
Alcohol by volume8–18%
Ingredientsfermented fruits

Jabol (Polish pronunciation: [ˈjabɔl]) is a slang name for a kind of cheap Polish fruit wine.[1] It is made from fermented fruit and is bottled at 8% to 18% alcohol by volume. Its name is derived from Polish: jabłko, "apple", from which it is often made. Though it is usually fruit flavoured, it can come in other flavours such as chocolate[2] or mint.[3] It comes in a variety of containers and is sold under a variety of names.

History

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Jabol was first developed in post-war Poland as a cheap alcohol produced from the apple orchards that had been cultivated in the former-Prussian areas of the Recovered Territories.[4]

The drink gained a reputation as an unsophisticated alcoholic beverage consumed by youths intending to get drunk quickly and cheaply.[4]

Slang names

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Apart from jabol or jabcok, this beverage has amassed a variety of colourful slang names. Two that are commonly encountered are sikacz (a reference to the effect of alcohol on urination) and siarkofrut (a reference to the Bobofrut brand of children's fruit juice, as well as to the wine's taste of sulfur, a result from its low-quality production process).[citation needed]

Packaging and price

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Jabol is sold in glass and plastic bottles[5] or cartons[6] (similar to milk or juice cartons). Sometimes a deposit is required on bottles, which is usually 20–30% of the wine price.[7]

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Polski jabol równie dobry jak bordeaux - Dziennik.pl". 27 November 2007.
  2. ^ "Czekoladowe Mocne, Agropol - Nalewka - Wino owocowe / Winka.net".
  3. ^ "Kuler Miętowy, Dwikozy - Białe, Nalewka - Wino owocowe / Winka.net".
  4. ^ a b Sajovic, Kaja (19 June 2019). "Organic Cider: the Polish orchards' renaissance". finedininglovers.com.
  5. ^ "Pektowin - Serwis Polskiego Przemysłu".
  6. ^ "Przegląd Techniczny - gazeta inżynierska".
  7. ^ "Jabol, Wino, bełt, Patykiem Pisane. Historia i tradycja spożycia – kompendium wiedzy. | Kontrowersje.net - portal niereglamentowany". Retrieved 2011-07-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

The Apple Game

The Apple Game (Czech: Hra o jablko) is a 1977 Czechoslovak comedy film directed by Věra Chytilová. Dagmar Bláhová - Anna Símová Jiří Menzel - MUDr. Josef

Polish language

written consonant would not be pronounced. For example, the ł in the word jabłko ("apple") might be omitted in ordinary speech, leading to the pronunciation

Czyżew

re-formed from three villages: Czyżew-Osada ("settlement"), Czyżew-Złote Jabłko ("golden apple") and Czyżew-Stacja ("station"). On the same date the district

Polish people

(żubr), the red poppy flower (mak), the oak tree (dąb), and the apple (jabłko) as the country's national fruit. Polonia has been the national personification

Kraina Grzybów TV

2019-05-05. Retrieved 2019-04-11. "Poradnik Uśmiechu 1 - Jak skutecznie jabłko". KrainaGrzybowTV. 2013-12-23. Archived from the original on 2019-04-16

Czech declension

song; postel – bed; dveře – door; kost – bone; ves – village město – town; jablko – apple; moře – sea; kuře – chicken; stavení – building, house; Latin words

Zlín

city, according to which it was derived from slín (i.e. 'marl') or zlaté jablko (i.e. 'golden apple'). However, the name Zlín was most likely derived from

Democrats (Slovakia)

preferenciído NRSR" (PDF). ako.sk (in Slovak). 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2021. "Jablko aj Modrá koalícia. Do boja o parlamentné kreslá vstupujú nové politické