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Archives for: May 2008

Wurstsalat

by Oregano @ 2008-05-16 - 01:54:32

Over the last 10 days we have had great late spring weather where I live. It has been regularly between 20-25°C which has been a great start to May. I found it strange last Saturday morning Mrs Oregano said to me "you know this reminds me of the weather we had when we would cycle to a Biergarten for a Wurstsalat und Radler". Wurstsalat means literally "sausage (cold cut) salat" and Radler means literally cyclist but is basically a lager shandy.

Well, it is a decade since we lived in Bavaria but a few hours earlier I had thought exactly the same. In a decade back in the UK we had only made one attempt to make a Wurstsalat. We then disputed over what we recalled as a "Wurstsalat". I recalled that a Biergarten near my office (in Zamdorf) offered a bayerische Wurstsalat which was a Bavarian salad of cold sausage and vegetables and a schweizer Wurstsalat (Swiss sausage salad) which was essentially the same but with Swiss cheese and a bit less sausage. In both cases I recall there being thinly sliced sausage combined with firm vegetables such as red onion, fennel (and maybe white radish). Both my wife and I recall thinly sliced pickled gherkins in many instances. I also recall the use of a few young sprigs of lovage. There was always a fairly watery salad dressing very evident on the plate.

The idea of "cold sausage salad" is foreign in the UK. However I am convinced that some better-prepared simple but hearty German dishes would find a great resonance in the UK; especially with a beer or cider.

Last Saturday I decided to visit my Lidl to get at least a limited choice of German cooked sausage and made the following. There is absolutely no claim (indeed more like a disclaimer) on authenticity.

Serves 4

Ingredients

1 red onion
half fennel bulb
100 g radishes
half a cucumber
50 g pickled gherkin
100 g bockwurst
100 g thinly sliced garlic sausage or paprika salami
100 g Emmentaler cheese
75 ml vegetable oil
25 ml white wine vinegar
1 tsp whole grain mustard
25 ml water
salt and pepper

Method

1. Slice the red onion, fennel, cucumber and radishes into 1 mm slices
2. Thinly slice the pickled gherkin
3. Slice the bockwurst into 3 mm or thinner slices
4. Slice the cheese into thin strips
5. Toss the sausage, cheese and vegetables thoroughly together
6. Mix the oil, vinegar, mustard, salt, pepper and water as a dressing,
7. Toss the salad with the dressing then serve.

I just wanted to share that spontaneously as most meat-eating people in the UK have not been exposed to the idea.

Now, back to reality of today...I have been in Munich for the last two days on business. Tonight I went to the Weißenfeldenerhof for dinner with old friends. This was opened shortly before we moved back to the UK but seemed a decent restaurant and Biergarten. I have not been there for at least seven years but around 2000 it had a good repuation for food generally but specifically for spare ribs and Flammkuchen. In about 2001 I organised a team meeting in Munich and promised spareribs in Weißenfeld during Winter only to find it was off the menu .

  weissenfeldenerhof

Tonight I met old friends from our time in Bavaria and despite the temptation to go for spareribs or flammkuchen, I thought I should order a Wurstsalat to settle the argument at home.

 wurstsalat 

This was a good Biergarten but despite that the salad was much simpler than what Mrs Oregano or I were proposing. It was simply a cooked sausage - thinly (~1 mm) thick - thinly sliced red onion and a dressing. The remaining garnish was a sprig of lamb's lettuce, a slice of tomato, a lettuce leaf and slice of cucumber. It tasted pretty good with a Weißbier. Guten Appetit!

Vibrant Wild Garlic Soup

by Oregano @ 2008-05-03 - 16:31:42

Now that we are in May we are nearing the end of the wild garlic season. The leaves are still looking good but as more an more flowers appear the leaf quality and growth rate will go down.

I have tried a few wild garlic soup variants and our family likes the vibrant, "in your face", simple watery soup with no cream. This is what it is:

Serves 4-8 (4 if as a main course with bread and cheese, 8 if served as a starter)

Ingredients
100 g wild garlic (rule of thumb is that if I have a 20 cm diameter colander and if I fill it with leaves it works out at very close to 100 grams)
two medium onions
a roughly 2 cm cube of ginger
1 litre vegetable stock
1 tbsp vegetable oil

 wild garlic soup jug

Method
1. Finely chop the ginger and onions (coarse chopping is fine if you use a large food processor rather than a hand blender) and sweat in the oil at a medium heat for 10 minutes
2. Wash the wild garlic leaves and rougly chop them (set a few smaller leaves aside if you want to use them for garnish)
3. Add the wild garlic, then the vegetable stock to the onions
4. Leave on the heat for about 2 minutes
5. Blend the soup until the wild garlic pieces are fairly fine. The soup will have a vibrant green colour.
6. Heat for a few more minutes then serve
7. Optionally add small leaves or wild garlic flowers as a garnish

 wild garlic soup cup

NOTE:

While wild garlic leaves are mild if wilted or cooked, the raw flower may have a strong garlic "kick"!