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Showing posts with label Jean Anderson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jean Anderson. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

German Appetizers and Soups by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



Exploring German Culture through Appetizers and Soups by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


When I went to live in Stuttgart (Germany) for five years, I was worried about what I would eat.  I knew about brats and Christmas cookies, but knew I could not subsist on those food items alone.

I read and bought German cookbooks before I left, so I could order German foods in restaurants and know what they were and buy ingredients for cooking at home.

I bought The New German Cookbook by Jean Anderson and Hedy Würz before going to Germany, because they had dishes from the Baden-Würtemberg state where Stuttgart is located.

The dishes from this region are sold in deli departments of supermarkets and in independent delis called “feinkosts.”  I learned how to ask for food items in both places in Germany in hochdeutsch, university – level German - not dialect.

Many appetizers and soups are sold in German bars and made from a mix of fresh food and bottled items traded by the ancient Hanseatic cities such as Hamburg, Lübeck, and Bremen. 

German bread is excellent and goes well with spreads like Liptauer cheese.  The Germans brag that they have a bread for each day of the year like the French have a cheese for every day of the year.

The New German Cookbook has 230 recipes, including many for appetizers and soup.  Knowing about the following recipes made it easier for me to live in a country that I did not know much about when I first went to live there. 

The cookbook provides the details, but I will provide the enticements to look up the recipes that Anderson and Würz developed, tested, and verified before publication:

Appetizers

-smoked salmon tartare with black caviar

-tiny potato pancakes with black caviar

-herring salad with apples, dill, pickles, and horseradish

-herring salad with potatoes, apples, hard-boiled eggs, onions, dill, peppers, mayonnaise, and yogurt

-rollmops – brined herring salad – hangover cure after Carnival

-herring in sour cream, onions, apples, cream, vinegar, mustard, and red pepper

-shrimp salad – shrimp with hard-boiled egg, green peas, and a dressing made with Dijon mustard, heavy cream, and lemon juice

-Liptauer cheese made with yellow onion, butter, cream cheese, Camembert, sour cream, plain yogurt, and Hungarian paprika

For a group of 6 people, 4 or 5 of the above appetizers with an individual bowl of a soup listed below with bread would be a nice meal for a brew pub where a house beer is brewed on the premises.

The New German Cookbook has detailed recipes for these delicious soups.  I tried many of them when I lived in Stuttgart, Germany for five years:

-beef broth with dumplings

-pancake soup – uses leftover pancake strips in the soup

-Maultaschen Suppe with Swabian spinach-and-meat stuffed ravioli

-Goulash – Hungarian beef stew flavored with sweet Hungarian paprika

-Pheasant with lentil soup


-Asparagus with rice soup

-Fennel with bacon soup

-Kale soup

There are more soups listed in The New German Cookbook.  I like this cookbook, because it uses many ingredients that you can easily find in American supermarkets with the exception of herrings. 

Those sour fish bites are good once in awhile, though.  Maybe we could make them easier to obtain in colder parts of the US.

By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



Ruth Paget Selfie