How is Easter celebrated in Slovakia?

How is Easter celebrated in Slovakia?

This custom, spread all over the territory of Slovakia, is known in villages as well as in towns and is performed on the last day of Easter – Easter Monday. Easter Monday is associated with the custom of bathing or sprinkling with water and whipping girls and women.

Do they celebrate Easter in Slovakia?

It’s that time of the year again when Easter eggs and bunnies invade all the stores and adverts, we eat too many cakes and enjoy a long weekend.

What do Slovakians eat Easter?

The foods most typical for the Easter are Paska bread, egg cheese – Hrudka, smoked pork ham (of lamb), bacon and sausages, hard boiled eggs and various pastries.

What is unique about the Austrian custom of egg throwing?

This is how it works: children take a peeled hardboiled egg and stretch it towards the adults. The adults now have to throw a coin onto the egg. When the coin gets stuck into the egg, the adult has won and takes the money and egg.

What is Cirek?

This Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) is a traditional Eastern European egg cheese ball served on Easter Sunday for breakfast or the main meal. My family has been making cirek, or Ukrainian hrudka, every Easter for years.

Do Australians have the Easter Bunny?

The greater bilby, a threatened marsupial with rabbit-like ears, digs burrows that provide habitat for dozens of species, a new study says. Australia’s own “Easter bunny,” a burrowing marsupial with rabbit-like ears, is even more crucial to the ecosystem than we thought.

How do Australia celebrate Easter?

People might head to Mass at their local church, gather for a meal with family, or catch up with friends. A common tradition for children (but you can enjoy it, too!) involves embarking on hunts in the park or backyards to find chocolate eggs delivered by the mythical Easter bunny or bilby.

What are some Austrian traditions?

Six unique traditions that Austrians love to love

  • Easter Egg battle (‘Eierpecken’)
  • Autumn Cow train (‘Almabtried’)
  • First day of school cone (Schultüte)
  • Stealing the Bride (‘Brautraub’)
  • Lead pouring, Molybdomancy (‘Bleigießen’)
  • Scary mask processions (‘Perchtenlaufen’ or ‘Krampuslauf’)

What do Austrians eat Easter?

On Easter Sunday you usually eat the “Jause” (=snack or tea) made out of cured ham, boiled eggs, horseradish and easter sausage. This is usually placed in a basket and taken to church on Saturday, where the priest will bless it.

What does Slovak Easter cheese taste like?

A traditional Slovak Easter Cheese served with the Easter meal. This is served sliced and cold. It tastes like a sweet custard.

What does egg cheese taste like?

While it may be called “egg cheese” it does not taste like scrambled eggs or cheesy eggs. It’s smooth and slightly sweet, and not quite as salty as other cheeses. It is definitely more mild, not like a sharp cheddar, and perhaps more similar in texture to mozzarella. And it goes well along with an Easter ham.

What are Slovakia’s Easter traditions?

The men in my family took their Easter traditions seriously, and dousing women in water on Easter Monday is one of Slovakia’s most treasured traditions. In some cases, after they are splashed with water, women are also whipped with a whip braided from thin branches of a willow.

Do Slovaks throw buckets of water at girls at Easter?

Easter Monday tradition of whipping girls into health? No thanks Young Slovaks dressed in traditional costumes throw a bucket of water at a girl as part of Easter celebrations in the village of Trencianska Tepla, Slovakia in 2012. Photograph: Samuel Kubani/AFP/Getty Images

Why do Slovaks get drenched in ice cold water for spring?

Getting drenched in ice cold water in Slovakia is meant to symbolise youth and make women healthy for spring but this treasured tradition has its sceptics.

Where do Slovak men hit Girls with willows?

Young Slovak men dressed in traditional costumes hit a girl with a willow in the village of Trencianska Tepla, 145km north of Bratislava on 1 April 2013. Photograph: Samuel Kubani/AFP/Getty Images