Sauerkirsch GaletteGermany is already in the full-on Christmas spirit, so we ate our Thanksgiving feast with red-and-green all around and this fine fellow to keep us company. I'll be posting about the Christmas markets and a few other things soon, but in the meantime, Happy Thanksgiving aus Deutschland!
1 pie crust
4 cups sour cherries (in juice if canned)
3/4 cup sugar
4 tablespoons cornstarch
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract or sugar
pinch salt
squirt of lemon juice
1 egg white, lightly beaten
- Make the crust according to the directions, making it at least 2 hours before you want to bake the pie.
- After rolling out the pie crust to fit your pan, lay the crust in the pan, but don't crimp or cut the edges as you'll be folding them over later. Put the pan in the fridge while you make the filling.
- If the cherries are canned, drain and reserve the juice. In a medium bowl, mix the cherries, 1/4 cup of the reserved juice, sugar, cornstarch, vanilla, salt, and lemon juice and let it sit for about 5 minutes to thicken.
- Scoop the cherry filling into the prepared pan, spreading them evenly. Dump some of the remaining juice over the top, about enough to come halfway up the cherries (there may be some leftover juice).
- Fold the crust edges over the filling. Brush the crust with the egg white, and sprinkle a bit of sugar over the top.
- Bake at 375F for about 45 minutes or until the crust is golden brown and the filling is bubbling. Let it cool a bit, then served with whipped cream!
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Thanksgiving in Deutschland + A Recipe
For Thanksgiving, we got gigantic Schntizel at Bei Oma Kleinmann's and ended our feast with a sour cherry galette. Galettes are basically the lazy person's pie, which was perfect since (a) I have no pie pan and (2) one pie is way too much for two people! Sour cherries (Sauerkirschen) are found in a lot of German desserts, including Schwartz Wald Kirsch Torte (aka, Black Forest Cake) and on top of waffles with a side of whipped cream.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
T-Minus One Month
our first 1. FC Köln game |
- Inexpensive, high-quality steak.
- Tacos, sharp cheddar, and good salsa.
- Maple syrup and brown sugar available at the grocery store.
- French toast, pancakes, scrambled eggs...eating at Parker's Maple Barn and Soundbites.
- Our stinky hound!
- Getting reacquainted with my kitchen gear and all my other clothes.
- Having a cell phone with a camera and being able to text family on the go.
- Seeing family and friends who we have only seen online for too long!
- Being able to effortlessly speak with shop owners, administrators, and pretty much everyone without having to compose each sentence in my head beforehand. (Though I will miss this, too!)
- Having a car! Oh, how I have missed the freedom of having a car! (And, yet, oh how I will miss the fabulous trains and public transport in Germany!).
- Go shopping for gifts at all of Cologne's Christmas markets.
- Visit a Christmas market in a small, charming village (Bad Munstereifel? Monschau? Münster? We shall see...).
- Eat schnitzel at Oma Kleinmann's.
- Eat saurbraten (J's favorite) at a Kölsch pub.
- See Radical Face at the Kulturkirche in mid-November.
- Cheer on FC Koeln at another soccer match.
- Attend mass at the Dom.
- A quick, 3-day trip to London, staying at a super posh hotel using our free Hyatt nights.
- Experiment with more interesting ingredients from the market.
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Ausflug: 4 Countries in 14 Hours
A few weekends ago, we spontaneously rented a car at the Cologne airport and visited a few places that have been on our 'to see' list, but are annoying to access by public transport. Our plans were loose, but we knew that we had the car from 9am to 11pm that day...and the sky was the limit!
First stop: the quaint Monschau, accessible only by bus (and webcam).
This little town is right on the border with Belgium and it at one point was part of France, so we saw a lot of Dutch and French in town. The best part of this cultural mixture -- poffertjes and waffles!
The winding, narrow streets, the castles on the hills surrounding the valley town, and the pretty stream flowing through town make Monschau the epitome of a small, German village.
We spent about 3 hours wandering around, then hopped in the rental car for the next leg of our trip.
First stop: the quaint Monschau, accessible only by bus (and webcam).
The winding, narrow streets, the castles on the hills surrounding the valley town, and the pretty stream flowing through town make Monschau the epitome of a small, German village.
We spent about 3 hours wandering around, then hopped in the rental car for the next leg of our trip.
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Word of the Week: Martinszug
This evening as I was getting ready for a class, I heard children singing outside. It's a bit early for caroling, so I looked out the balcony, thinking that it was probably coming from the music school behind our apartment. Instead, I saw hundreds of bobbing lights in the next street over, and heard trumpets, tubas, and drums accompanying kids singing. So I naturally had to check it out!
Turns out that it was a neighborhood parade (Zug) to celebrate the catholic holiday of the feast of St. Martin (Martinstag), which I mentioned last month when the Weckmann appeared in bakeries. Groups of kids had special, and often very creative, homemade lanterns, each lit with clever wands with hanging LED lights. It was so fun! I could tell the kids were having a blast, too, despite the cold evening and mist. There have been parades all over the city, including a big one from the Dom to Groß St. Martin--skip to the end of the video to hear some of the songs :)
source |
there were about 500 kids in the parade, with 4 bands spaced throughout to lead the songs -- so fun! |
Saturday, November 9, 2013
A Refresher in Field Biology
In early October, many trees around here began dropping loads of beautiful, shiny brown nuts. I watched kids and their parents at the park loading bags and boxes of gathered nuts into waiting wagons. It seemed like a perfect fall activity--the kiddos go on a treasure hunt, the adults catch up on adult conversation, and everybody goes home with...nuts.
almost as fun as Easter eggs |
making off with the spoils |
So I got in on the action.
Aren't they pretty?
I read online about the nuts, called Kastanien in German, and all my German-English dictionaries indicated that these were chestnuts. Having never seen chestnuts before (that I can remember), I happily looked up recipes and began to roast the nuts.
But they were horrible. Like, blech, patooey, ack, not even going to taste it twice, nasty.
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Adventures with Interesting Vegetables
Whenever I visit the market in Wilhelmsplatz, I try to look for interesting seasonal vegetables and fruits. So far, we have tried:
Plus various cheeses, flours (spelt, rye), and alcoholic beverages (port, vodka, calvados, various rums). It's been a blast! I'm hoping to work in a few more before we're back in familiar food territory :)
Kohlrabi
surprisingly sweet and crunchy
it was better raw than cooked
A giant radish, which I originally thought was a parsnip...but wasn't.
source |
Celeriac
aka, the brain vegetable
Physallis
which tastes like kiwi, starfruit, and watermelon
and comes in translucent, crinkly packages
Tiny plums (Zwetschgen)
Chestnuts
(more on this cooking adventure later)
and of course
Johannisbeeren
Plus various cheeses, flours (spelt, rye), and alcoholic beverages (port, vodka, calvados, various rums). It's been a blast! I'm hoping to work in a few more before we're back in familiar food territory :)
Friday, November 1, 2013
Ausflüge von Wien (Day Trips from Vienna)
enjoying the fall leaves in Slovakia |
Budapest
Our trip was a bit less planned than usual, so we read up on both stops the day before and then mostly wandered around. Getting off the train at the Keleti Station in Budapest was very much like what I expected from a post-Communist eastern European country--pretty bleak, with lots of concrete and moldering buildings and abandoned construction projects. We also discovered that Budapest isn't big on promoting tourism at the train station, so we pretty much had to pick a street and hope we were walking the right way.the statues are important people in Hungary's history, including fierce-looking Magyar chieftains (right picture) |
The baths are one of the many things I would like to try if we ever go back to Budapest. Unlike in Germany, it looks like most of the bathers wear swimsuits, which is a requirement if I'm going to be sharing any sort of water body with strangers. Next time! The castle was quite eclectic and housed the National Agricultural Museum that, according to TripAdvisor reviews, is actually pretty interesting. That's another thing for the 'next time list!'.
Vajdahunyad Castle |
home of the national ag museum, in the castle grounds |
looking across the Danube at the Buda side of the city |
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