Germknödel ([ˈɡɛɐ̯mˌknøːdl̩] in Austrian German) is a fluffy yeast dough dumpling (knödel),[1] filled with spiced plum jam and served with melted butter and a mix of poppy seeds and sugar on top. It is occasionally – even though less traditional – served with vanilla cream sauce instead. It is a culinary specialty of Austria and Bavaria. The dish is served both as a dessert and as a main course.

Germknödel
Germknödel with butter sauce
Typesweet dumpling
Place of originGermany and Austria
Main ingredientsYeast dough, sugar, fat (usually butter), poppy seeds, sugar, spiced plum jam

Germknödel is usually a spherical or bun-shaped dessert. The dessert's main ingredient is a yeast dough enriched with sugar and fat, usually butter. The dumpling is filled with Powidl, a sweet plum jam flavoured with cloves and cinnamon. The dumpling is steamed and then served while still hot with either melted butter or vanilla sauce, and topped with crushed poppy seeds and sugar.

Differences between Austrian Germknödel (Germ being the exclusively Austrian word for yeast) and the very similar German and Alsatian dish, Dampfnudel, are that Dampfnudeln are the unfilled variant and can in some regions also be steamed or boiled in salt water and served with savoury side dishes, whereas Bavarian Dampfnudeln and Austrian Germknödel are steamed (and in the end of the cooking process, as the milk has evaporated, become lightly fried) in a small amount of a mixture of milk and butter and always served as a sweet meal.

Steamed sweet dumplings (buchty na pare) are also a typical food in Slovakia and Czechia, usually filled with plum marmalade and often served during winter by ski resort restaurants.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Aldred, Jessica (February 7, 2015). "Great little ski resorts: Alpbach, Tyrol, Austria". The Guardian. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
  • Erhard Spacek, Neue böhmische Küche: ...und Weine aus Böhmen und Mähren. 2005. ISBN 978-3-85002-545-4
edit