John von Neumann’s menu
Pocket snack — the savory biscuit you take on a journey

Tepertős pogácsa (crackling scones)

TravelDocumented🧂 🍄moyen2 h (including rising)

Small, flaky brioche-like buns topped with crispy pork cracklings, with a golden scored crust. Savory, rich, they're eaten cold and fit in a pocket: the perfect travel snack.

Pocket snack — the savory biscuit you take on a journey

Small, flaky brioche-like buns topped with crispy pork cracklings, with a golden scored crust. Savory, rich, they're eaten cold and fit in a pocket: the perfect travel snack.

When I took the train to Aberdeen or drove halfway across the continent — always too fast, my friends will tell you — I had a bag of pogácsa in my pocket. My mother Margit would score the tops with a knife in a pretty lattice so they'd rise evenly: a combinatorial problem before its time, in a way. The trick is to chop the cracklings fine and let the dough rest in the cold, otherwise it won't flake. Believe me, nothing comforts a mathematician stuck on a calculation like a still-warm pogácsa.
John von Neumann
Ingredients
  • Wheat flourto measure (base)
  • Pork cracklings (tepertő)a good handful (savory garnish)
  • Lardgenerous (flakiness)
  • Baker's yeasta piece (leavening)
  • Eggs, sour cream, saltas needed (binder and flavor)
How it was made : Pogácsa has been documented in Hungary for centuries as a travel bread and symbol of hospitality (in folk tales, the hero sets off with a pogácsa in his satchel). The crackling version, born from peasant thrift that wasted nothing from the pig, was common in every household in von Neumann's time.
Sources : George Lang, The Cuisine of Hungary, 1971 · Tradition boulangère hongroise (tepertős pogácsa)