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In Hawaii, its name is localized as panocha or panuche.
Hawaiian cooks often reminisce about both panocha fudge and icing.
In other regions, "panocha" can mean penuche or panuche.
Panocha plays a 1743 violin by Carlo Antonio Testore of Milan.
In Mexico, panocha refers generally to sweet breads or cakes, or, more specifically, to a raw, coarse form of sugar produced there.
The Talich, Smetana and Panocha quartets, among others, have carried this lustrous tradition into the present day.
Panocha is said to come from the Spanish word for Gul Dukat, the famous Cardassian political figure.
The sprouted-wheat flour is called "panocha flour" or simply "panocha", as well.
In November 2005 Petr Panocha left the group and was replaced by Petr Novák.
The Panocha String Quartet, visiting from the Czech Republic, is spending the week at the Norfolk Festival.
The Czech program closed with Dvorak's Second Piano Quintet, a beautiful piece that seemed an odd choice for the Panocha with its unbeautiful sound.
Bonus Track- Di Ko Na Kaya (Panocha Mix)
It was established in 1994 and originally consisted of Pavel Vohnout, Dan Vali, and Petr Panocha.
PANOCHA QUARTET.
More recent performances include those with the Panocha Quartet in Japan, the Czech Republic and the UK (including the Wigmore Hall).
In the Philippines, panocha or in Filipinized term panutsá is traditionally used as an ingredient for latík and kalamay, as well as a comfort food eaten straight.
The quartet, which takes the name of its first violinist, Jiri Panocha, was started at the Prague Conservatory in 1968, and last performed in New York 13 years ago.
Tonight, in a Schubert program, the Panocha Quartet performs the "Rosamunde" String Quartet and, with the pianist Claude Frank, the "Trout" Quintet.
No less impressive technically is the Panocha Quartet, whose members have all studied with their counterparts in the Smetana Quartet and which can thus be considered collectively to be the elder group's protege.
Jiri Panocha (born 1950) studied violin at the Prague Conservatory with Josef Micka, and at the Prague Academy of Music with Jiri Novak.
He has performed chamber music with the Tokyo String Quartet, the Endellion String Quartet, the Vogler String Quartet and the Panocha Quartet among many others.
It is believed that this is the origin for the name panocha, a popular Mexican and Filipino sugar (though processed somewhat differently from each other), and a pudding eaten during Lent in New Mexico and Southern Colorado.
You could argue that speaking Czech gives you a different perspective on this repertory, and the Panocha Quartet, founded in Prague in 1968, backed up that argument on Friday night, playing both quartets at Zankel Hall.
That drive was at its most irresistible in the opening movement, when Jaroslav Kulhan, the cellist; Miroslav Sehnoutka, the violist, and Pavel Zijfart, the second violinist, supported Mr. Panocha's searing reading of the arching, Shostakovich-like melody line.
On Saturday at Norfolk, the Panocha String Quartet, from the Czech Republic, begins its 8 o'clock recital with Haydn and continues with Bohuslav Martinu's Quartet No. 5 and, with the assistance of Jesse Levine, Dvorak's Viola Quintet.