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German Cuisine varies greatly from region to region. The
southern regions of Bavaria and Swabia share many dishes among
them and with their neighbours to the south, Switzerland and
Austria. In the West, French influences are more pronounced,
while the eastern parts of the country have much in common
with Eastern European cuisine and there are marked Scandinavian
influences in the northern coastal regions.
Eating Habits
Traditionally, the main meal of the day is lunch, eaten around
noon. Supper (Abendessen or Abendbrot) is a smaller meal,
sometimes only consisting of a couple of sandwiches. However,
changing working habits have forced this to be changed in
recent decades; today, it is not uncommon for many Germans
to eat their main meal in the evening.
Breakfast (Frühstück) commonly consists of bread,
toast, and/or bread rolls (Brötchen) with jam, marmalade
or honey, eggs, and coffee (cocoa for children). Deli meats,
such as ham and salami, are also commonly eaten in the morning,
as are various cheeses. A variety of meat-based spreads such
as Leberwurst (literally liver-sausage) can be found during
breakfast as well. Muesli and cereals such as cornflakes are
also popular.
Meat
Pork, beef and poultry are the main varieties of meat consumed
in Germany, with pork being the most popular by a substantial
margin. Among poultry, chicken is most common, although duck,
goose, and turkey are also well established. Game meats, especially
boar, rabbit, and venison are also widely available around
the year. Lamb and goat are also available, but for the most
part are not very popular. Horse meat is regarded as a speciality
in some regions but consumption is generally frowned upon.
Meat is usually pot-roasted; pan-fried dishes also exist,
but these are usually imports from France. Throughout Germany,
meat is very often eaten in sausage form. There are more than
1500 different types of sausage in Germany.
Fish
Trout is the most common freshwater fish on German menus,
although pike, carp, and perch are also frequently served.
Seafood was traditionally restricted to the northern coastal
areas except for the once-ubiquitous pickled herring.
Nowadays many seafish like fresh herring (also as rollmops),
sardine, tuna, mackerel, and salmon have become well established
throughout the country. Prior to the industrial revolution
and the ensuing pollution of the rivers, however, salmon was
so common in the rivers Rhine, Elbe, and Oder that servants
complained about being served salmon too often. Freshwater
fish are often served grilled.
Other seafood is not often served, but mussels and North
Sea shrimp which unfortunately are very expensive nowadays
compared to imported shrimp can be found sometimes.
Vegetables
Vegetables are often eaten in stews or vegetable soups, but
can also be served as a side dish. Carrots, turnips, spinach,
peas, beans, and many types of cabbage are very common. Fried
onions are a common addition to many meat dishes throughout
the country, although they are almost unknown in Bavarian
cuisine. Potatoes are usually not counted among vegetables
by Germans. Asparagus, especially white asparagus, is particularly
enjoyed in Germany as a side dish or as a main meal. Sometimes
restaurants will even devote an entire menu to nothing but
asparagus. However, consumption of fresh asparagus is traditonally
limited to the time before St. John's Day (June 24th).
Side Dishes
Noodles are usually thicker than Italian pasta and often contain
egg yolk. Especially in the southern part of the country,
the predominant variety of noodles is Spätzle which contain
a very large amount of yolk. In recent years, however, Italian-style
pasta has very nearly supplanted the traditional varieties,
and even Spätzle are often made with durum wheat and
no egg yolk. Besides noodles, potatoes and dumplings (Klöße
or Knödel) are very common, especially in the south.
Potatoes entered German cuisine in the late 18th century and
were almost ubiquitous in the 19th and 20th centuries, but
their popularity is currently waning somewhat in favour of
noodles and rice. Potatos are most often served boiled in
salt water, but mashed and fried potatoes also are traditional,
and french fries have now become very common.
Drinks
Beer is very common throughout all parts of Germany.
In most of the country, the originally Czech Pils is predominant
nowadays, whereas people in the South (especially in Bavaria)
seem to prefer Lager or wheat beer. A number of regions have
some special kind of local beer, for example the dark Altbier
around the lower Rhine, the Kölsch of the Cologne area,
which is light but like Altbier uses a more traditional brewing
process than Pils, and the very weak Berliner Weisse, often
mixed with fruit syrups, in Berlin.
Wine is also popular throughout the country. German
wine comes predominantly from the areas along the upper and
middle Rhine and its tributaries; the northern half of the
country is too cold and flat to grow grapevines. Riesling
and Silvaner are among the best-known varieties. Traditionally,
white wine was more popular than red or rosé (except
in some regions), and sweet wine more popular than dry, but
both these tastes seem to be changing.
Coffee is also very common, not only for breakfast,
but also accompanying a piece of cake in the afternoon. Tea
is more common in the Northwest. East Frisians traditionally
have their tea with cream and rock candy ("Kluntje").
Germans are unique among their neighbours in preferring strongly
carbonated bottled waters to plain ones.
Spices and condiments
Mustard is a very common accompaniment to sausages and is
usually very hot. In the southern parts of the country, a
sweet variety of mustard is made which is almost exclusively
served with Bavarian specialities such as Weißwurst
and Leberkäse. Horseradish is also commonly used as a
condiment.
Garlic was long frowned upon as "making one stink"
and thus has never played a large role in traditional German
cuisine, but it has seen a rise in popularity in recent decades
due to the influence of French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese,
Greek, and Turkish cuisine.
Generally, with the exception of mustard for sausages, German
dishes are rarely hot and spicy the most popular herbs
are traditionally parsley, thyme, laurel, and chives, the
most popular spices are white pepper (used in small amounts),
juniper berries and caraway. Other herbs and spices like basil,
sage, oregano, and hot chilli peppers have become more popular
in recent times.
Desserts
A wide variety of cakes and pies are prepared throughout the
country, most commonly made with fresh fruit. Apples, plums,
strawberries, and cherries are used regularly on cakes. Cheesecake
is also very popular and almost always made with cream cheese.
German doughnuts are usually balls of dough with jam or other
fillings inside, and are known as Berliner, Pfannkuchen or
Krapfen depending on the region.
A popular dessert in northern Germany is "Rote Grütze",
red fruit jelly, which is cooked from black and red currants,
raspberries and sometimes with strawberries or cherries. It
is traditionally served with cream, but also common with vanilla
sauce, milk or whipped cream. "Rhababergrütze"
(rhubarb jelly) and "Grüne Grütze" (gooseberry
fruit jelly) are variations of the "Rote Grütze".
Ice cream and sorbets are also very popular. Italian-run
ice cream parlours were the first large wave of foreign-run
eateries in Germany, becoming widespread in the 1920s.
Bread
With regard to bread, German cuisine is more akin to Eastern
than to Western Europe. The country boasts at least 300 different
types of bread, ranging from white wheat bread to grey bread
(Graubrot) and "black" (actually dark brown) rye
bread (Schwarzbrot). Most types of bread contain both wheat
and rye flour (hence Mischbrot, mixed bread), and often wholemeal
and seeds (such as linseed, sunflower seed, or pumpkin seeds)
as well. Pumpernickel, a Westphalian black bread, is not baked
but steamed, and has a unique sweetish taste.
Bread is usually eaten for breakfast and as sandwiches in
the evening, not as a side dish for the main meal. The importance
of bread (Brot) for German cuisine is also illustrated by
words such as Abendbrot (supper, literally Evening Bread)
and Brotzeit (snack, literally Bread Time).
Specialities by region
Baden
- Snail soup
- Brägele, sliced potatoes pan-fried in lard
- Knöpfle, similar to Spätzle, but thicker rather
than long
- Schupfnudeln, pasta made from potatoes and flour, often
served with Sauerkraut
- Flädlesuppe, broth with thin strips of German-style
pancakes
- Bibbeleskäs, cottage cheese
Bavaria (Bayern)
- Weißwürste ('white sausages') a speciality
from Munich (München), traditionally eaten for second
breakfast. Served with sweet mustard, pretzels, and wheat
beer, even on working days, although companies usually set
a limit on the amount of beer that may be drunk during work
hours.
- Weizenbier (wheat beer)
- Knödel (dumplings made from potatoes or white bread)
- Schweinebraten (pot-roasted pork)
- Leberkäse (a type of meat pie)
Bremen
- Kohl und Pinkel (kale, very slowly cooked, with bits of
rather salty sausage; a typical winter dish)
Franconia (Franken)
- Bratwurst (Fat beef or pork sausages served grilled).
The best-known sausages are from Nuremberg (Nürnberg).
- Klöße (Large dumplings made from bread dough
and served with pot-roasted meats)
- Gingerbread (Lebkuchen). The most famous German gingerbread
is, again, from Nuremberg.
Frankfurt am Main and Hessen
- Green Sauce (Made from minced hardboiled eggs, oil, vinegar,
and an abundant amount of seven fresh herbs. Served with
boiled potatoes)
- Frankfurter sausage, a smoked sausage made from pure pork,
which is eaten hot and usually accompanied by bread and
mustard. Not to be confused with the American hot dog "Frankfurter".
- Apfelwein (dialect: Ebbelwoi), wine made of apples, somewhat
comparable to Cider and french Cidre.
Hamburg
- Labskaus (made from corned beef, mashed potatoes and beetroot
and served with a fried egg and a gherkin)
- Birnen, Bohnen und Speck (literally "pears, beans
and bacon". These ingredients are cooked together into
a stew)
- Aalsuppe (literally "eel soup") a sweet and
sour soup from meat broth, dried fruits, vegetables and
herbs, but normally without eel.
Palatinate (Pfalz)
Rhineland (Rheinland)
- Sauerbraten
- Potato fritters (Reibekuchen) with black bread, apple
syrup, sugar beet syrup or stewed apples
- Blood sausage (Blutwurst) crude or fried
- Hemmel on Äed (literally Sky and Earth) mashed potatoes
with stewed apples and fried blood pudding
- Halve Hahn (literally Half Rooster), actually not a rooster
at all but a cheese sandwich with onions, the name is based
on a wordplay (Cologne)
- Rice pies, apricot pies and pear pies in Eschweiler
- Mussels
Saarland
- Dibbelabbes (A potato hash prepared from raw grated potatoes,
bacon and leeks, and baked in a Dibbe, or pot)
- Geheirote (lit. "Married ones", Potatoes and
dumplings made of flour served with a creamy bacon sauce)
- Schwenker or Schwenkbraten (pork steaks, marinated in
spices and onions and broiled on a grill that hangs on a
chain over a wood fire)
Swabia (Schwaben)
- Maultaschen (A distant relative of Italian ravioli)
- Zwiebelkuchen (onion pie)
- Käsespätzle (Spaetzle (a kind of noodles) and
fried onions gratinated with cheese)
Thuringia (Thüringen)
- Thuringian Bratwurst, red to grey in color,stuffed in
genuine thin pig guts, unlike the white Franconian variety
- Dumplings made of raw potatoes
- Hearty meat dishes with rich sauces
- Mutzbraten: pound of pork, roasted on open birchwood fire,
served with sauerkraut
- Delicious cakes
Other famous dishes
- Hasenpfeffer (peppered hare)
- Schweinshaxe (pork hock)
- Spanferkel, a grilled whole young pig
- Speckpfannkuchen (large, thin pancakes with diced, fried
bacon)
- Sauerkraut (pickled shredded cabbage)
- Spaetzle (hand-made noodles used extensively in southern
Germany and Alsace)
- Stollen (a bread-like cake with dried citrus peel, dried
fruit, nuts, and spices such as cardamom and cinnamon, usually
eaten during the Christmas season as Weihnachtsstollen or
Christstollen). The best-known Stollen is from Dresden and
is sold at the Striezelmarkt Christmas market, which derives
its name from the cake.
- Marzipan f.e. Lübeck style (widely used in Christmas
specialities)
- Bratkartoffeln (fried potatoes, often with diced bacon
and/or onions)
- Currywurst, warm sausage cut into slices and seasoned
with ketchup and generous amounts of curry powder, usually
served with French fries a popular snack originating
in early 1950s Berlin. Boiled sausage is used for this in
northern Germany, Bratwurst in southern Germany.
- Kartoffelsalat (potato salad, which comes in many varieties,
for example in a cream or mayonnaise dressing or even in
meat broth. Often served as a side dish to bratwurst or
boiled sausages)
- Pfefferpotthast (pepper-beef stew)
- Rindsroulade (beef roulade, thinly pounded sirloin steak,
rolled around mustard leaf and a pickle, then baked)
Foreign influences
With the rising influx of foreign workers after World War
II, many foreign dishes have been adopted into German cuisine
Italian dishes like spaghetti and pizza have become
a staple of German cuisine. Turkish immigrants have also had
a considerable influence on German eating habits Döner
kebab, a meat sandwich invented by Berlin turkish immigrants,
is Germany's favourite fast food, selling twice as much as
the major burger chains put together. Chinese and Greek food
are widely available and popular. Indian, Thai and other Asian
cuisines are rapidly gaining in popularity. Many of the more
expensive restaurants used to serve mostly French dishes for
many decades, but they are increasingly turning to a more
refined form of German cuisine since the 1990s.
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