Salzgurke
0 sources
Salzgurke
Summary
Salzgurke ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- Salzgurke's image is recorded as Polish style pickled cucumbers IMGP0413.jpg[2].
- Salzgurke's image is recorded as Leavened cucumbers Kovászos uborka (18997138710).jpg[3].
- Salzgurke's made from material is recorded as cucumber[4].
- Salzgurke's made from material is recorded as pickling broth[5].
- Salzgurke's subclass of is recorded as pickle[6].
- Salzgurke's subclass of is recorded as dish[7].
- Salzgurke's Commons category is recorded as Kovászos uborka[8].
- Salzgurke's pronunciation audio is recorded as Fr-pickle.ogg[9].
- Salzgurke's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0dwn8[10].
- Salzgurke's has characteristic is recorded as electrical conductor[11].
- Salzgurke's Open Food Facts food category ID is recorded as pickled-cucumbers[12].
- Salzgurke's different from is recorded as half sour pickle[13].
- Salzgurke's cuisine is recorded as German cuisine[14].
- Salzgurke's cuisine is recorded as Russian cuisine[15].
- Salzgurke's cuisine is recorded as Ukrainian cuisine[16].
- Salzgurke's cuisine is recorded as Polish cuisine[17].
- Salzgurke's cuisine is recorded as Belarusian cuisine[18].
- Salzgurke's cuisine is recorded as cuisine of the United States[19].
- Salzgurke's fabrication method is recorded as salting[20].
- Salzgurke's fabrication method is recorded as lactic acid fermentation[21].
- Salzgurke's Wolfram Language entity code is recorded as Entity["Food", "GherkinInBrine::8j7kq"][22].
Why It Matters
Salzgurke ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month).[1] Salzgurke has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] Salzgurke is known by 15 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]