@@David-hv1me Bei den Spätzle wär ich mir nicht so sicher. Die könnten vom Brett geschabt sein. Ich persönlich bevorzuge aber auch die geriebenen "Knöpflespätzle"
12:10 Eating the skin of the Weißwurst doesn't hurt you but on bavaria we don't eat it because it's to rubbery. Weißwurst is softer and tastes better. It is even softer than the Leberkäse without the skin 🙂
There is not having any eating manners and there is feeding like a pig. This one crossed the line. It is disgusting to look at. I am not going to finish this vid.
The best way is to visit Germany and Austria and taste the regional specialties on the spot in a village restaurant. The Wiener Schnitzel is originally prepared from veal. The pork version is of course cheaper in price. I have also never heard that you eat a pretzel with sweet mustard, you eat the mustard with the white sausage.
@@woodstock1969-ls och..bitte nich jede noch so winzige Kleinigkeit "korrigieren",wenn man das in diesem Fall überhaupt so schimpfen darf..es sind doch eh alle schon so kleinlich in Deutschland..gefühlt wohl überwiegend in Bayern. Prinzipiell kann jede/jeder ihre/seine Mahlzeiten zu sich nehmen,wie sie/er möchte 🤝 darf ich fragen,ob du Bier als Grundnahrungsmittel bzw Tradition siehst?
Die haxe hätte noch bisschen braten können, das schnitzel ist platt und sieht nach Hoffmann Fertigmenü aus, der Leberkäs sieht ok aus, aber so wie sie ihn beschreibt klingt es etwas untypisch in sachen konsistenz. Die Brezel ist wirklich das geringste Übel hier 😄
As a Bavarian, I surely tested pretzel with sweet mustard. I´ve tried pretzels with many things. Tried! But pretzels with mustard is an American myth - I´d say. Recently I was shivering, because I saw a "ready made dish" in a German supermarket. "Weisswurst mit Sauerkraut und Bratkartoffeln". Each single one is good, but please not combined! Weisswurst with pretzel, sweet mustard and (wheat)beer is the way to go!
Thanks for this nice Video.But Germany is not just Bavaria.It´s really sad that a lot of Countrys outside of Germany thinks that Germany its just Bavaria in food and lifestyle.Germany has much more to offer than that.Come to this beautiful Country and visit the North,West,East and South.You will see its much more than this stereotype.Sending love from Germany.
That is correct. But everyone who makes videos about German food thinks we all eat like in Bavaria, that every German consumes this food. There are 100k other recipes.
In Thüringen bekommt man nirgends eine Rostbratwurst die so von der Flamme geküsst ist wie hier auf dem Teller. Nirgends in Thüringen es sei denn im rohen Zustand. 😂
As someone who comes from a family that owned 3 restaurants in Germany my culinary heart is bleeding ! so many parts of traditional/stereotypical southern german /austrian dishes mixed into a weird combination no german/austrian would ever order ! grilled sausages and Leberkäs (bavarian meatloaf) with red cabage ? no go ! (hot mustard, Sauerkraut and mashed potatoes/Bread is fine, ketchup for kids) munich white saussage with red cabage and sauerkraut ? Thats BLASPHEMY ! it's eaten only with sweet mustard and a Bretzel. You also don't eat the casing, either peel it off or suck the actual sausage out of it. the Bretzel is just to pale and misses salt and also "his partner in crime", a cheese speciality called OBAZDA. (or "Spundekäs" in other parts of Germany). The pork hook looks like, that it, halfway in the oven, decided to be a "Berlin Eisbein" instead of a Bavarian "Grillhaxe", it looks to pale and undercooked and the skin not crispy at all ! Schnitzel with red cabage and Spätzle ? never ever, BIG NO GO ! also it looks overcooked and dry ... way to thick (more like japanese tonkatsu), like it was just cut and not thinned by pounding to the desired thickness of 0.16-0.19in. The breading sticks to the meat, not airy and fluffy "souffléd" like it should be. I bet they just thrown it into the deep fryer instead of a frying pan with lard or clarified butter. The traditional "Vienna Schnitzel" (made of veal) or "Vienna style Schnitzel" (pork or chicken) is served with warm potato- and cucumber-salad an a slice of lemon. If you like fries or roasted potatoes better and a small mixed salad at the side .. fine. that is also acceptable. I you want to add a sauce like mushroom gravy (Jägerschnitzel/ huntsmans Schnitzel), bell pepper sauce (formerly known as gypsy style schnitzel) or cream sauce, french fries or roasted potatoes are fine as a side order. But NEVER EVER with spätzle and red cabbage ! (The east German "Jägerschnitzel" is a whole other story.) cooked red cabage and spätzle are typical side dishes for dark meat with heavy thick dark gravy, like beef (Gulasch, Sauerbraten, Rouladen), hunting game (deer, wild boar, pheasant) larger poultry (goose, duck, turkey) and horse (Rhinelandish Sour Roast). for these dishes, the spätzle can be changed with several kinds of dumplings. Also: they have Spätzle and only offer it as a side dish and don't serve the typical and traditional Käsespätzle, the German Mac'n'cheese, as a main course ? Girl ...you need to get your ass on a plane to Germany a.s.a.p. and check out the real deal, not that mock up !
I hear that in the US, Sauerkraut is often just pickled white cabbage, while in Germany and France it is produced by lactic acid fermentation. Big difference.
You can find fermented sauerkraut in the refridgerated section. Usually near the meat. It comes in plastic bags. The shelf stable kind is processed with vinegar.
one thing though guys, the taste of food changes when it is'nt warm anymore, thats why in europe if you eat differnet dishes you ask to bring the dishes one by one after you finished a dish
great work, greetings from Germany, we have many traditional dishes, and the taste depends on the region you are in, which also applies to the taste of the beer!
My bavarian heart broke when I saw that white sausage on that red cabbage and I can believe this restaurant is actually run by Germans. You had everything you would need for a traditionally Bavarian breakfast: White sausage, pretzel, sweet mustard and wheat beer (even though it was way too clear, because they left the yeast inside the bottle). eat the pretzel with sweet mustard, but she couldn't tell you to combine that with the white sausage? WHY????
It is a Weißwurst, but the whole platter is not "thats authentic bavarian food", but more of: "Here, have a taste of a variety of different foods available in bavaria". So the cabbage makes sense, eaten with the bratwurst. I would also not combine the "Leberkäse" on top with the rest,.... Also as an Austrian i was quite surprised by the Jägerschnitzel, because here a Jägerschnitzel does not have breading on it, but is more like a "Naturschnitzel" with mushroom sauce. And the pork knuckle was not brown and crispy enough. The skin should be really delicious and crisper than potato chips And dont get me started about the "typical bavarian" applestrudel.....my viennese heart is broken.
@@anashiedler6926 I get that it's a sample platter, but the reason I got so upset is, that they ordered everything else needed for a typical white sausage breakfast anyways, so it would have been very easy to just take the white sausage off the platter and serve it with the pretzel and the sweet mustard and if that is too much flexibility for the kitchen, she could've at least told them that this is the traditional combination. Also, there are better sausages to combine for a sampler than these. And if they really wanted to have the white sausage in there, at least plate it separately and not on top of the cabbage, which makes it look like they belong together. The pork knuckle looked disgusting. With the Jägerschnitzel I was not too upset, because I've seen breaded Jägerschnitzel in Germany a lot. Yes usually its not breaded, but at a lot of places, especially where food isn't the main attraction like bowling centers it is done with breaded Schnitzel as well to cut costs.
Many Germans consider French fries from the Netherlands superior to the ones from Germany. If I could get them here in Upper Bavaria, I would check that.
@@Astrofrank You mean Belgium not Netherlands. French fries from the Netherlands are just like the ones in Germany, so some better, some worse, most just the standard you can expect.
@@chrisb2942 No, fries from the Netherlands are considered good and are offered on fun fairs and local festivals, fries from Belgium are rarely available. :-( Btw: if possible, try the fries from Big Potato in Siegen, together with mayo.
i m a german. i like sauerkraut, red cabbage, home made schnitzel. what i see on this video is fake german food. it will be called geman food. but it isnt, it s extreme better
I'm german from the north of Bavaria (Franken). And I love all of this to eat. But I'm an addict to Wieder Schnitzel added with lemon. Especially with fries! The only thing I don't like much is "Red cabbage". Don't need it. But the Schnitzel...looks yummy
An interesting fact why Germany is popular for beers and why there are so many breweries around is that in the medival times the water was not really drinkable and it was healthier to drink a beer with a very very low percentage of alcohol even for the kids. So beer was basically a back in the day softdrink :D
And with the bad water, you can made in good beer? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Neer ever! remember the "Reinheitsgebor", "Wasser, Hopfen and Malz", with these 3 you have to make your beer. They prefered light light light beer or whine with water, coz the taste of water stocked the whole day in a wooden bucket is not very tasty.
@@alfonsoandjessica As a German and as a schnitzel lover and connoisseur. This schnitzel is not good! It looks terribly dry, the breading is firmly attached to the meat! This is technically incorrect and makes the schnitzel dry. For a good schnitzel, the breading has to separate from the meat and make waves. If you think that's good, then you have to try a real schnitzel! This is what our schnitzels from the supermarket look like. Not tasty and dry like the Sahara. That's why it's important to try a real schnitzel that's been made correctly. You'll never want to eat a schnitzel like that again. If that's supposed to be a "Haxen" and not a "Eisbein", then it's not technically correct. So the good taste is missing. The skin must be crispy when you eat it. It's like eating bacon chips. The fat must be gelled and the meat must still remain juicy. The spaetzle is also a supermarket product! I'm going nuts, this has nothing to do with real spaetzle! It tastes completely different in comparison! The pretzel looks as if no lye was used, which is absolutely essential for the taste, it has absorbed moisture and the salt has completely turned into water!OMG! I can't judge the rest based on appearance. It looks quite good. But if you use the schnitzel, haxen, pretzel and spaetzle as a reference, it becomes difficult for me to assume that it is good. 😫😫😫😫😫😫😫😫
As a German and as a schnitzel lover and connoisseur. This schnitzel is not good! It looks terribly dry, the breading is firmly attached to the meat! This is technically incorrect and makes the schnitzel dry. For a good schnitzel, the breading has to separate from the meat and make waves. If you think that's good, then you have to try a real schnitzel! This is what our schnitzels from the supermarket look like. Not tasty and dry like the Sahara. That's why it's important to try a real schnitzel that's been made correctly. You'll never want to eat a schnitzel like that again. If that's supposed to be a "Haxen" and not a "Eisbein", then it's not technically correct. So the good taste is missing. The skin must be crispy when you eat it. It's like eating bacon chips. The fat must be gelled and the meat must still remain juicy. The spaetzle is also a supermarket product! I'm going nuts, this has nothing to do with real spaetzle! It tastes completely different in comparison! The pretzel looks as if no lye was used, which is absolutely essential for the taste, it has absorbed moisture and the salt has completely turned into water!OMG! I can't judge the rest based on appearance. It looks quite good. But if you use the schnitzel, haxen, pretzel and spaetzle as a reference, it becomes difficult for me to assume that it is good. 😫😫😫😫😫😫😫😫
The ham hock dish is very familiar I'm from Eastern Kentucky and my mother is of German descent so this makes sense. I appreciate the fact that a young person can jump in and try these foods without hesitation.
I know that people do/say stupid things in videos to gain comments/clicks. But this eating with the fingers is a massacre. I was already on fire then the "Schnitzel" went to the mouth. But then Obelix enterd the room with the ""Haxn" in the hand and finally you put icecream with your fingers on the "Strudel" .... speechless. Brave action!🙄
Zu einer Bretzel gehört ein Obatzda. Oder eine paar Weißwürste. Weißwurst auf Rotkraut... Zum Schnitzel sage ich jetzt mal nichts. Ich sollte vielleicht ein Restaurant in Amerika aufmachen...
I love your video ❤ As a bavarian i'm only a bit confused because the server said she was bavarian and told you we like our pretzel with mustard... I know noone. We like our pretzel the most only with butter or even better with Obazdn (a cheese spread) 🤤. I'm sure it was def. good anyway but that was a little bit confusing to me 🙂
@@mucxlx I only dip the pretzel if there is mustard left, if not then dry when the pretzel comes with white sausage. When no sausage is involved i eat them with butter or with Obazdn 😊
for your information: you never eat red cabbage with mustard Sauerkraut yes but never red cabbage. otherwise everything looked quite authentic and delicious.
Only if the Schnitzel is very thin and you use a lot of oil. A more solid cut doesn't "bubble" and the one she had was about 3 times as thick as I do my own.
Ja,aber das Essen ist sehr sehr grenzwertig. Ich denke,Du denkst das gleiche wie ich. Um dieses Restaurant würde ich einen Bogen machen. Bei der/dem Haxe/Eisbein(oder was auch immer es ist) fehlen mir die Worte. Schnitzel aus der Fritte geht erst recht nicht.
@@dasrostkehlchen6942 Diese merkwürdige Drei-Würste-Kombination mit dem Leberkäse (?) oben drauf ist auch sehr eigenwillig. Hab ich jedenfalls noch nie gesehen... :D
I just find it weird, that the sweet and the hot mustard come together in the same bowl. You usually get it seperated. But otherwise, it all looks great! :)
It's not really "German" Food, ist Bavarian Food. In all Parts of Germany, there are a lot of Lokal Dishes. It will blow your Mind, how many different Meals exist, and also how tasty their are... You have no Idea... 😉😉
@@yunnoo2847 nein, definitiv nicht! Das war kein deutsches Essen, das war via Internetrecherche zusammengesuchte und irgendwo als Industrieware zusammengekaufter Mist - also nix. Dieses Lokal hat keine Ahnung was deutsches Essen ist, wie es serviert wird, wie man es ißt. Alleine schon der Senf... die matschigen Beilagen... einfach alles - ne, sorry - ne !! Nicht deutsch - nicht bayrisch - gar nichts, US-Disneyidee wie man denn "deutsch" verkaufen könnte. Ach ja - in so ein "authentisch eingerichtetes" Lokal würde hier auch niemand mehr reingehen.
Das stimmt so nicht ganz Schweinshaxe mit Knödel und Sauerkraut ist man in ganz Deutschland nicht nur in Bayern und das seit langer Zeit also ist es ein typisch deutsches Essen und nicht nur regional
I have visited Germany several times over the past 10 years, and it's hard to duplicate their food here in the USA. It's the ingredients that determine the final outcome of the meal. Go to Munich to sample real Bavarian food.
You can't seriously think about coming to Germany in 10 years to reproduce our recipes. Shame on you, as punishment you eat 10 pork knuckles in 1 hour. 😘
we normally eat the sweet mustard whit the Weisswurst, and the hot mustard with the other sausages and Leberkas. And the Sauerkraut without mustard :)...but you can do what ever you want of course🤗
Two things are missing for someone from nothern Hesse (in the middle of Germany): 1) a coarse Bratwurst (not from Thuringia because this is made with caraway which I and many others don't like) and a "ahle Wurscht" (=old sausage because it takes some month until it tastes the best. There are two types, an air dried and a smoked one. I prefer the smoked one. Both are a kind of Salami but to my mind better, because a Salami is a bit rubbery).
There are over 6000 beers. From quite bitter to sweet. The malsbier is for children, without alcohol but sweet. Becks beer from Bremen is available in many countries. Everyone will find their favorite beer. Tip: if it is too bitter, mix it with a final malt beer.
I am german.. and i must say: i would like to eat at that place. Looks very good and unlike a lot of other "authentic german restaurants" it actually makes a decent impression.
@@Insulinjunkie_München Was ist denn bei dir kaputt? ... Ich bin 37, geboren in Deutschland, aufgewachsen in Deutschland und immernoch wohnhaft in Deutschland. ... Nein, ich habe mir absolut größte Mühe gegeben, deutschem Essen aus dem Weg zu gehen. Nicht ein einziges Mal in meinem Leben habe ich deutsches Essen zu Gesicht bekommen, nicht mal aus Versehen.
@@BlazingDrag00n na dann erklär du Feinschmecker mir doch bitte mal was da "very good" aussehen soll... etwa die in einem Tiegel zusammengekippten verschiedenen Senfsorten? Oder die Weißwurst die einfach zwischen andere Würste auf Rotkohl und Sauerkraut gepackt wurde (macht man ja so - nicht war ?😂) ? Oder turnt dich die überrfettete matschige Haxe ohne Kruste etwa an? Ach ja, ich vergaß noch das köstliche Industrieschnitzel aus der Friteuse - hmmmmmmmm, lecker !!! Und die blasse salzlose Brez'n MIT SENF DAUFGEKLATSCHT !!! erst, echt, die ist gewissermaßen das tüpfelchen auf den i - - oder was sieht da so gut aus? Erzähl mal, würde mich echt interessieren was da angeblich "German Food" sein soll. Vergiß nicht mit dem abgestandenen Weißbier nachzuspülen, gibt nämlich noch den Endkick. Scheinst ja ein echter Gourmet zu sein... wow. An Guadn mit den besten Grüßen aus München
Für jeden hier in der Kommentar-Runde dieses Essen hochleben lässt und fest stellt in Deutschland selbst nichts besseres gegessen zu haben , meine große Anteilnahme und gleiches Unverständnis. Da wirft sich mir echt die Frage auf wo seid ihr deutsches Essen in unserem Land essen gewesen ! Solch eine Thüringer in der Farbe weiß, würde einem in Thüringen nirgends angedreht werden. Nirgends. Eine Weißwurst mit Rotkohl verlange mal in Bayern oder Franken da erntest du Verständnis loses Kopfschütteln. Gehe mal in ein Schnitzelhaus im Umkreis von vier Kilometern gibt's hier drei Stück. Ein Schnitzel wo die Panade wie eine zweite Haut daran klebt hat nix mit traditioneller deutscher Küche zu tun. Das nennt sich in Fachkreisen "Flussigpanade" und ist eine Optimierung in einem Herstellungsprozess für Tiefkühlkost. Brezeln kann man natürlich in den Senf tauchen. Wer es mag. Aber traditionell bekommt auch im deutschen Restaurant zur Brezel keinen Senf dazu . Auch nicht im tiefsten Bayern. In Baden-Württemberg ist da eher Butter drauf. Also wer das ganze als traditionelles Essen verkauft hat wohl etwas zu viel selbst davon gegessen oder war noch nie hier. 😂 Unbedingt zwei dieser riesen Schnitzel drauf zu packen ist wohl auch eher eine amerikanische Interpretation des ganzen. Schade eigentlich. Denn deutsches Essen gibt echt was her und ist regional sehr verschieden.
@@Insulinjunkie_München I only know austrian Brezels, but are German Brezels really that light? I thought they are supposed to be made with lye, and therefore have that dark brown color and stay soft instead of being crispy like a normal breadroll?
Ja und dein 1/2 Brathänchen ist du dann mit Messer und Gabel. Yes, and you eat your 1/2 roast chicken with a knife and fork. Lass sie essen wie sie mag / Let her eat as she likes
me as a Bavarian, i was lost watching this video, Brezn with mustard omg, and weisswurst only with sweet mustard. The way you mixed everything made my eyes watering xDD but if it was good, it was good... lmao
This is not real german food. Let's say it's german inspired... Die "Grillhaxe" sieht eher aus wie ein gekochtes Eisbein, das nochmal ein paar Minuten in den Grill geschoben wurde um ein bisschen bräune zu generieren
Im german and basicly nothing looks authentic, the pork knuckle is way to pale and should be super crunchy and everything else is also missing color. Ok the red cabbage looks about right but im sure its not selfmade anyway and from a jar. Even the cake is not right. It should have layers of puff pastry and not just 1 big filling. The Schnitzel looks like frozen Schnitzel you can buy here but certainly not handmade.
The sweet mustard and the brezel goes with the weißwurst. Whether the meat love has to go with the sweet mustard or the regular one is a matter of a "religious debate" 😁
uff. well it looks like german food but there are some mistakes. weißwurst, pretzel and sweet mustard needs to be eaten together. and of course you need to peel the weißwurst at first. in germany you will never see that kind of sausage served with red cabbage. red cabbage is never eaten with mustard together in germany. the pretzel itself is not dark enough. i assume its not the correct dough and they used the wrong "lauge". the sweet mustard belongs to the weißwurst not to the pretzel. the beer i s served a bit wrong too. that kind contains a bit of yeast in the bottle and has to be in the glas too. anyway, they did a good job but if you ever visit germany and try exact the same you would be surprised. greetings
... and now imagine she would come to germany and taste the real fresh cooked german food (and yes this is at least 80% premade food, and maybe in a nice looking german restaurant. this looks like an nightmare, piccasso would have of a 200 year old german restaurant.)
Oh boy, all these "smarta**" comments on how to eat what... I love the way you are not shy to touch food with your hands and just enjoy things you havent eaten before :-)
My first time to the US my company invited us (Germans) to a German restaurant. It was really good food, but I was surprised of what was considered German 😀 ... The obligatory Wiener Schnitzel is (as the name already should tell) from Austria, well the Jägerschnitzel is pork so just the German copy of the original, but I cannot see any Jägersauce there. In addition I have the feeling that German food is always seen as from the more southern regions.
As already mentioned by others. Some items look good, some not. I wonder what you would say if you come to Germany ant try all these food freshly made from the scratch. Like the pretzl .. it should have a little darker and a thin but crispy (sound) skin and be soft inside.
I didn't taste the dishes you tried but just by looking at it, I prefer the dishes you tried in the way they are served over here in Germany. Especially the pork hock and the pretzel looked pretty bad to me. Oh, I shouldn't forget the rock hard Schnitzel....
As a German, I would say come to Germany and try the original. Each region has its local specialties. The restaurant they visited at least tried to seem German, but doesn't come close to the original. Well and the food, anyone who wants to sell something like that here in Germany could close their shop immediately. Still, nice video and makes me smile. Or as we say in Germany: Schmunzeln.😊
Sorry, but NO ONE eats Breze ("Pretzel") with mustard! The mustard goes with th weißwurst (=the left one). And neither weißwurst nor the "meatloaf" (Leberkäse) are eaten with sauerkraut, and also not with the red cabbage.
I am a bavarian native, living in Germany. I have lived in the US and I understand, that restaurants want to squeeze as much 'germany' as possible into one dish. However it triggers me, whenever I get to see these combinations. I hope, it helps with your next order in a german restaurant!
Normaly you eat all with Potatos in Germany. The Sauerkraut normaly with mashed potatoes or Knödel (in Elsass with normal potatos). Never seen "roasted" potatos with Sauerkraut. Seams adapted for the US, as the Bretzel with mustard. And we have other vegetables than kraut or red cabage in germany also. But think this is was people expect when they will eat "german" food :) Here you have meals no German eats every day (will get a head attack after two years :), and you have food only from bavaria reagion. In Hamburg you have more fish, as the sea is near by. In Westfalia you have Töttchen and Potthas or the Grünkohl with "Mettwurst", in Thürngen you have a specific sausage and knödel named klösse or a Geschmink etc. But the most important, you have enjoyed your meal there. Living in France and missing my german meals (same when I was in the south of germany, was missing my nordic kitchen :))
Sorry Jessica, but this "Schnitzel" looks like the crap that you may find in your local Aldi. Don't get me wrong, it might taste good, but you'll find the best Schnitzels ever in Austria.
oh und ganz wichtig....... das ist NICHT deutschland. Das ist typisch Bayrisch, ein region von deutschland, es gibt viel viel viel mehr......... das war typisch bayrisch, es gibt noch so viel in deutschland
To be honest, I am Hessian and I'd eat every single one of those dishes - Actually had pork hawk yesterday because our local restaurant had Oktoberfest Week. Of course you don't get the real deal in Vancouver because you have to source your meat locally but I'd eat there without thinking twice about it - It looks pretty darn close to what I'd get here in Germany outside of Bavaria. Yeah, maybe I'd skip the apple strudel because I hate raisins...
Tut mir sehr leid wenn du tatsächlich in Deutschland solche kuriose Zusammenstellung von typischen Essen bekommst. Sowas ist mir noch nie passiert. Nicht einmal auf einer Raststätte.
The schnitzel looks industrially made. If the schnitzel is well done, the breading has a wavy shape and is fried in clarified butter.
Spätzle also
I wonder if they have industrial made schnitzel in Amerika ;)
@@David-hv1me Bei den Spätzle wär ich mir nicht so sicher. Die könnten vom Brett geschabt sein. Ich persönlich bevorzuge aber auch die geriebenen "Knöpflespätzle"
genauso ist es!
and out from the deep fryer
12:10 Eating the skin of the Weißwurst doesn't hurt you but on bavaria we don't eat it because it's to rubbery. Weißwurst is softer and tastes better. It is even softer than the Leberkäse without the skin 🙂
Was that a real white sausage. The skin is so tough that you pick it, we know that even in the north.
The biggest charm of the hock is the crispy skin. Usually it is darker & bubbled. It looks absolutely fabulous.
Looked horrible. Like a Stelze/Haxe and an Eisbein had an unholy baby that lost the charms of both of them.
Weißwurst is normally served separately in hot water. Not with other sausages on a plate. This restaurant tries, but is not very authentical.
Usually we enjoy only the white sausage with sweet mustard and the rest with "normal" or hot mustard. A pretzel we eat without mustard just besides.
Eating Schnitzel by hand makes me cry.
Ok table manners are a matter of luck. ;)
She seems not very used to eat with knife and fork *lol*
Ach, ruhe.
Wir haben Schnitzel für den Toaster...
@@janp5063 Don´t call it Schnitzel. ;)
@@janp5063 Bester Kommentar xD Ich heiße übrigens auch Jan P. xD
There is not having any eating manners and there is feeding like a pig. This one crossed the line. It is disgusting to look at. I am not going to finish this vid.
The best way is to visit Germany and Austria and taste the regional specialties on the spot in a village restaurant. The Wiener Schnitzel is originally prepared from veal. The pork version is of course cheaper in price. I have also never heard that you eat a pretzel with sweet mustard, you eat the mustard with the white sausage.
Yeah, though you can use the pretzel afterwards to clean up any leftover mustard. That's not something anyone will consider weird.
man kann die Bretzel sogar mit der Weisswurst und dem Senf zusammen essen..wird auch gerne so zusammen serviert
kapier die Pilzsoße nicht. Schnitzel, Zitrone vielleicht noch Ketchup. Ende.
@@ParanoideFeinkost Nicht gerne. In Bayern ist das Tradition das gehört zusammen.
@@woodstock1969-ls och..bitte nich jede noch so winzige Kleinigkeit "korrigieren",wenn man das in diesem Fall überhaupt so schimpfen darf..es sind doch eh alle schon so kleinlich in Deutschland..gefühlt wohl überwiegend in Bayern.
Prinzipiell kann jede/jeder ihre/seine Mahlzeiten zu sich nehmen,wie sie/er möchte 🤝
darf ich fragen,ob du Bier als Grundnahrungsmittel bzw Tradition siehst?
Iam so happy you like it ❤ best regards from Germany Stuttgart
Ich hab noch nie jemanden so ein Schnitzel essen sehen wie bei 15:00. 🤣
As a Bavarian I have to say, that the pretzel looks very sad 😭
Rest is ok 🙂
Das Schnitzel ist auch Formfleisch aus der Fritteuse.. 😒😖☹️
Die Haut bei der Haxe findest du auch okay?? 😳
@@yvonneanitakramer7536 ne 😂
@@yvonneanitakramer7536 Mir ist die Haxe auch etwas zu blaß
Die haxe hätte noch bisschen braten können, das schnitzel ist platt und sieht nach Hoffmann Fertigmenü aus, der Leberkäs sieht ok aus, aber so wie sie ihn beschreibt klingt es etwas untypisch in sachen konsistenz. Die Brezel ist wirklich das geringste Übel hier 😄
My German husband loves pretzels and mustard but I don't remember him eating pretzel with mustard.
never!
And sweet Mustard only with Weißwurst
On Weißwurstfrühstück I often eat pretzel with mustard. But this pretzel looks like it is made with a too small amount if lye to be honest
As a Bavarian, I surely tested pretzel with sweet mustard. I´ve tried pretzels with many things. Tried! But pretzels with mustard is an American myth - I´d say.
Recently I was shivering, because I saw a "ready made dish" in a German supermarket. "Weisswurst mit Sauerkraut und Bratkartoffeln". Each single one is good, but please not combined!
Weisswurst with pretzel, sweet mustard and (wheat)beer is the way to go!
Its basicly bavarian food.
Most germans would agree that this isnt german food, but "german" speaking foreign country.
No, we eat that in the north too.
Thanks for this nice Video.But Germany is not just Bavaria.It´s really sad that a lot of Countrys outside of Germany thinks that Germany its just Bavaria in food and lifestyle.Germany has much more to offer than that.Come to this beautiful Country and visit the North,West,East and South.You will see its much more than this stereotype.Sending love from Germany.
That is correct. But everyone who makes videos about German food thinks we all eat like in Bavaria, that every German consumes this food. There are 100k other recipes.
Dankeschön für Ihren Kommentar. Sie waren nur schneller als ich .
@@Swammy68Echt schlimm dieses blöde Klischee.
In Thüringen bekommt man nirgends eine Rostbratwurst die so von der Flamme geküsst ist wie hier auf dem Teller. Nirgends in Thüringen es sei denn im rohen Zustand. 😂
Zeigt doch einer mal bitte wie das mit Messer und Gabel geht. 😂😂
You must eat the white sausage with sweet mustard and the others with regular mustard
The waitress didn't tell her .
Also to eat red cabbage with mustard shocked me . I would never ever have this idea by myself .
As someone who comes from a family that owned 3 restaurants in Germany
my culinary heart is bleeding !
so many parts of traditional/stereotypical southern german /austrian dishes mixed into a weird combination no german/austrian would ever order !
grilled sausages and Leberkäs (bavarian meatloaf) with red cabage ? no go ! (hot mustard, Sauerkraut and mashed potatoes/Bread is fine, ketchup for kids)
munich white saussage with red cabage and sauerkraut ? Thats BLASPHEMY !
it's eaten only with sweet mustard and a Bretzel. You also don't eat the casing, either peel it off or suck the actual sausage out of it.
the Bretzel is just to pale and misses salt and also "his partner in crime", a cheese speciality called OBAZDA. (or "Spundekäs" in other parts of Germany).
The pork hook looks like, that it, halfway in the oven, decided to be a "Berlin Eisbein" instead of a Bavarian "Grillhaxe",
it looks to pale and undercooked and the skin not crispy at all !
Schnitzel with red cabage and Spätzle ? never ever, BIG NO GO !
also it looks overcooked and dry ... way to thick (more like japanese tonkatsu), like it was just cut and not thinned by pounding to the desired thickness of 0.16-0.19in. The breading sticks to the meat, not airy and fluffy "souffléd" like it should be. I bet they just thrown it into the deep fryer instead of a frying pan with lard or clarified butter.
The traditional "Vienna Schnitzel" (made of veal) or "Vienna style Schnitzel" (pork or chicken) is served with warm potato- and cucumber-salad an a slice of lemon.
If you like fries or roasted potatoes better and a small mixed salad at the side .. fine. that is also acceptable.
I you want to add a sauce like mushroom gravy (Jägerschnitzel/ huntsmans Schnitzel), bell pepper sauce (formerly known as gypsy style schnitzel) or cream sauce, french fries or roasted potatoes are fine as a side order.
But NEVER EVER with spätzle and red cabbage ! (The east German "Jägerschnitzel" is a whole other story.)
cooked red cabage and spätzle are typical side dishes for dark meat with heavy thick dark gravy, like beef (Gulasch, Sauerbraten, Rouladen), hunting game (deer, wild boar, pheasant) larger poultry (goose, duck, turkey) and horse (Rhinelandish Sour Roast).
for these dishes, the spätzle can be changed with several kinds of dumplings.
Also: they have Spätzle and only offer it as a side dish and don't serve the typical and traditional Käsespätzle, the German Mac'n'cheese, as a main course ?
Girl ...you need to get your ass on a plane to Germany a.s.a.p. and check out the real deal, not that mock up !
Thank you for the clarification. America, Canada and German food - it's a stereotypical disaster.
Love everything about your comment.
🤩🤩🤩
Sehr ausführlich und absolut nachvollziehbar kritisiert 👏🏻
Jupp da hat er Recht, aber den letzen Satz, kann man freundlicher rüber bringen. Sie muss nämlich gar nichts und schon nicht mit dem Allerwertesten.
@@Swammy68 Doch! 🤣
I hear that in the US, Sauerkraut is often just pickled white cabbage, while in Germany and France it is produced by lactic acid fermentation. Big difference.
That's correct, yes.
Yep correct.
What brand in the U.S. is the real sauerkraut?
You can find fermented sauerkraut in the refridgerated section. Usually near the meat. It comes in plastic bags.
The shelf stable kind is processed with vinegar.
Sehr Gut )))))
Especially with that music lol and that bear !
The word "Bier", before 30 years I wish to certified. My idea find no regard. Today a very money source.
in germany we never eat red cabbage to weisswurst. thats absolut a no go!!!!!
one thing though guys, the taste of food changes when it is'nt warm anymore, thats why in europe if you eat differnet dishes you ask to bring the dishes one by one after you finished a dish
I really like how she isn’t squeamish about wolfing down the heavy skin and fat part of that Haxen. 👍🏻
great work, greetings from Germany, we have many traditional dishes, and the taste depends on the region you are in, which also applies to the taste of the beer!
My bavarian heart broke when I saw that white sausage on that red cabbage and I can believe this restaurant is actually run by Germans.
You had everything you would need for a traditionally Bavarian breakfast: White sausage, pretzel, sweet mustard and wheat beer (even though it was way too clear, because they left the yeast inside the bottle).
eat the pretzel with sweet mustard, but she couldn't tell you to combine that with the white sausage? WHY????
maybe a white Bratwurst not a Weißwurst?
you are right with the Weißbier
It is a Weißwurst, but the whole platter is not "thats authentic bavarian food", but more of: "Here, have a taste of a variety of different foods available in bavaria". So the cabbage makes sense, eaten with the bratwurst. I would also not combine the "Leberkäse" on top with the rest,....
Also as an Austrian i was quite surprised by the Jägerschnitzel, because here a Jägerschnitzel does not have breading on it, but is more like a "Naturschnitzel" with mushroom sauce.
And the pork knuckle was not brown and crispy enough. The skin should be really delicious and crisper than potato chips
And dont get me started about the "typical bavarian" applestrudel.....my viennese heart is broken.
@@anashiedler6926
I get that it's a sample platter, but the reason I got so upset is, that they ordered everything else needed for a typical white sausage breakfast anyways, so it would have been very easy to just take the white sausage off the platter and serve it with the pretzel and the sweet mustard and if that is too much flexibility for the kitchen, she could've at least told them that this is the traditional combination.
Also, there are better sausages to combine for a sampler than these. And if they really wanted to have the white sausage in there, at least plate it separately and not on top of the cabbage, which makes it look like they belong together.
The pork knuckle looked disgusting.
With the Jägerschnitzel I was not too upset, because I've seen breaded Jägerschnitzel in Germany a lot.
Yes usually its not breaded, but at a lot of places, especially where food isn't the main attraction like bowling centers it is done with breaded Schnitzel as well to cut costs.
Where do you see white sausages? Bratwurst and red cabbage fit, only the dumplings and sauce were missing.
Mustard does not really go with this dish.
i see a white sausage on the plate that should have been on an extra plate with the pretzel
German food is very much underestimated. It's the biggest secret in the world cuisines. I'm Dutch, but fortunately I live close to the border.
pssssst domnt tell anyone or they come and eat all our delicious food away
Many Germans consider French fries from the Netherlands superior to the ones from Germany. If I could get them here in Upper Bavaria, I would check that.
@@Astrofrank You mean Belgium not Netherlands. French fries from the Netherlands are just like the ones in Germany, so some better, some worse, most just the standard you can expect.
@@chrisb2942 No, fries from the Netherlands are considered good and are offered on fun fairs and local festivals, fries from Belgium are rarely available. :-(
Btw: if possible, try the fries from Big Potato in Siegen, together with mayo.
Belgium makes the best fries, the Netherlands with Switzerland makes the best cheese
Funny, I could instantly tell within the first 20 seconds that this not here in Germany. The look of the sausages tells you all.
i m a german. i like sauerkraut, red cabbage, home made schnitzel. what i see on this video is fake german food. it will be called geman food. but it isnt, it s extreme better
I'm german from the north of Bavaria (Franken). And I love all of this to eat. But I'm an addict to Wieder Schnitzel added with lemon. Especially with fries! The only thing I don't like much is "Red cabbage". Don't need it. But the Schnitzel...looks yummy
An interesting fact why Germany is popular for beers and why there are so many breweries around is that in the medival times the water was not really drinkable and it was healthier to drink a beer with a very very low percentage of alcohol even for the kids. So beer was basically a back in the day softdrink :D
cooooool! thanks for that info!!
that
That's just a myth.
And with the bad water, you can made in good beer? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Neer ever! remember the "Reinheitsgebor", "Wasser, Hopfen and Malz", with these 3 you have to make your beer. They prefered light light light beer or whine with water, coz the taste of water stocked the whole day in a wooden bucket is not very tasty.
@@alfonsoandjessica As a German and as a schnitzel lover and connoisseur. This schnitzel is not good! It looks terribly dry, the breading is firmly attached to the meat! This is technically incorrect and makes the schnitzel dry. For a good schnitzel, the breading has to separate from the meat and make waves. If you think that's good, then you have to try a real schnitzel!
This is what our schnitzels from the supermarket look like. Not tasty and dry like the Sahara. That's why it's important to try a real schnitzel that's been made correctly. You'll never want to eat a schnitzel like that again.
If that's supposed to be a "Haxen" and not a "Eisbein", then it's not technically correct. So the good taste is missing. The skin must be crispy when you eat it. It's like eating bacon chips. The fat must be gelled and the meat must still remain juicy.
The spaetzle is also a supermarket product! I'm going nuts, this has nothing to do with real spaetzle! It tastes completely different in comparison!
The pretzel looks as if no lye was used, which is absolutely essential for the taste, it has absorbed moisture and the salt has completely turned into water!OMG!
I can't judge the rest based on appearance. It looks quite good. But if you use the schnitzel, haxen, pretzel and spaetzle as a reference, it becomes difficult for me to assume that it is good. 😫😫😫😫😫😫😫😫
@@BigBenGermany1983 Ernsthaft noch einmal gepostet? Bist du nen Bot oder, brauchst du Aufmerksamkeit??? Das hier ne völlig andere Frage, warum ??
Every tourist should always ask for the local dish in Germany, Swiss or Austria. It's every time amazing !
As a German and as a schnitzel lover and connoisseur. This schnitzel is not good! It looks terribly dry, the breading is firmly attached to the meat! This is technically incorrect and makes the schnitzel dry. For a good schnitzel, the breading has to separate from the meat and make waves. If you think that's good, then you have to try a real schnitzel!
This is what our schnitzels from the supermarket look like. Not tasty and dry like the Sahara. That's why it's important to try a real schnitzel that's been made correctly. You'll never want to eat a schnitzel like that again.
If that's supposed to be a "Haxen" and not a "Eisbein", then it's not technically correct. So the good taste is missing. The skin must be crispy when you eat it. It's like eating bacon chips. The fat must be gelled and the meat must still remain juicy.
The spaetzle is also a supermarket product! I'm going nuts, this has nothing to do with real spaetzle! It tastes completely different in comparison!
The pretzel looks as if no lye was used, which is absolutely essential for the taste, it has absorbed moisture and the salt has completely turned into water!OMG!
I can't judge the rest based on appearance. It looks quite good. But if you use the schnitzel, haxen, pretzel and spaetzle as a reference, it becomes difficult for me to assume that it is good. 😫😫😫😫😫😫😫😫
Thank you for sharing :) and thank you for watching our channel :)
In Bavaria we don't eat Pretzel with Mustard, only with Butter sometimes.
Schnitzel is TK. industriell and frosted.
The ham hock dish is very familiar I'm from Eastern Kentucky and my mother is of German descent so this makes sense. I appreciate the fact that a young person can jump in and try these foods without hesitation.
Thank you for sharing :) and thank you for watching our channel :)
jägerschnitzel with red cabbage ist the next no go! with mushrooms. yes. red cabbage never. pfui.
I know that people do/say stupid things in videos to gain comments/clicks.
But this eating with the fingers is a massacre. I was already on fire then the "Schnitzel" went to the mouth. But then Obelix enterd the room with the ""Haxn" in the hand and finally you put icecream with your fingers on the "Strudel" .... speechless. Brave action!🙄
At a real Haxn the meat has to fall from the bone by itself....Like with a good spare rib Barbecue Style.
@@martinkasper197 But one can use still a fork or a spoon. In special for the ice cream.
@@claudiaernst6225 I fully agree with that... You don't want to have fat or cream at your fingers...
Zu einer Bretzel gehört ein Obatzda. Oder eine paar Weißwürste.
Weißwurst auf Rotkraut...
Zum Schnitzel sage ich jetzt mal nichts.
Ich sollte vielleicht ein Restaurant in Amerika aufmachen...
Danke 😂
I love your video ❤ As a bavarian i'm only a bit confused because the server said she was bavarian and told you we like our pretzel with mustard... I know noone. We like our pretzel the most only with butter or even better with Obazdn (a cheese spread) 🤤. I'm sure it was def. good anyway but that was a little bit confusing to me 🙂
If you eat white sausage you take a bite white sausage then a bite pretzel and both with sweet mustard. Thats the way.
@@mucxlx I only dip the pretzel if there is mustard left, if not then dry when the pretzel comes with white sausage. When no sausage is involved i eat them with butter or with Obazdn 😊
I am also from Bavaria (Chiemgau) and nobody is dipping the Brezen in mustard.
@@matteorose5435Ahh Landkreis Miesbach in mein Foi. Samma ja need weid weg vonanand 😊👍
for your information: you never eat red cabbage with mustard Sauerkraut yes but never red cabbage. otherwise everything looked quite authentic and delicious.
You can eat whatever you want and combine whatever you want. Stop pretending that it's like a law or something..
That Schnitzel was from the deep fryer and not from a pan, also it looks very like frozen fast food. Greetings from Berlin/ Germany 👋🏻🙂❤️
I've been watching all your videos and just had a suggestion. First try the food by itself and then try it with the sauces and then a mix and match
Looks like a Baverian Restaurant back in the 90ties
in home made schnitzel you have bubbles in the breading. like real wiener schnitzel or wiener art
Only if the Schnitzel is very thin and you use a lot of oil. A more solid cut doesn't "bubble" and the one she had was about 3 times as thick as I do my own.
It all looks so good! Danke schön.
Zumindest die Bedienung ist authentisch. :)
Ja,aber das Essen ist sehr sehr grenzwertig. Ich denke,Du denkst das gleiche wie ich. Um dieses Restaurant würde ich einen Bogen machen. Bei der/dem Haxe/Eisbein(oder was auch immer es ist) fehlen mir die Worte. Schnitzel aus der Fritte geht erst recht nicht.
@@dasrostkehlchen6942
Diese merkwürdige Drei-Würste-Kombination mit dem Leberkäse (?) oben drauf ist auch sehr eigenwillig. Hab ich jedenfalls noch nie gesehen... :D
@@Nazdreg1 Die wollten viel deutsche Wurst auf einem Teller bringen.
I saw the light in your eyes. Apfelstrudel! 🥰
It is good that you like our food but sorry - we use knife and fork not fingers like in medieval ages
I hate such restaurants where am imprtant part of German gastonomy is missing: Gemütlichkeit! - Heinz
I just find it weird, that the sweet and the hot mustard come together in the same bowl. You usually get it seperated. But otherwise, it all looks great! :)
THIS looks great: ruclips.net/video/KzGxq_KDwt8/видео.html
It's not really "German" Food, ist Bavarian Food. In all Parts of Germany, there are a lot of Lokal Dishes. It will blow your Mind, how many different Meals exist, and also how tasty their are...
You have no Idea... 😉😉
Ofcourse its a German food
@@yunnoo2847 nein, definitiv nicht! Das war kein deutsches Essen, das war via Internetrecherche zusammengesuchte und irgendwo als Industrieware zusammengekaufter Mist - also nix. Dieses Lokal hat keine Ahnung was deutsches Essen ist, wie es serviert wird, wie man es ißt. Alleine schon der Senf... die matschigen Beilagen... einfach alles - ne, sorry - ne !! Nicht deutsch - nicht bayrisch - gar nichts, US-Disneyidee wie man denn "deutsch" verkaufen könnte. Ach ja - in so ein "authentisch eingerichtetes" Lokal würde hier auch niemand mehr reingehen.
@therealtomf9974 You can tell that you have no idea - here you can see what Bavarian food looks like: ruclips.net/video/-8uSGQpxR0M/видео.html
@@yunnoo2847 it's typical food from one region of Germany exactly from Bavaria.
Das stimmt so nicht ganz Schweinshaxe mit Knödel und Sauerkraut ist man in ganz Deutschland nicht nur in Bayern und das seit langer Zeit also ist es ein typisch deutsches Essen und nicht nur regional
I have visited Germany several times over the past 10 years, and it's hard to duplicate their food here in the USA. It's the ingredients that determine the final outcome of the meal. Go to Munich to sample real Bavarian food.
We'd love to visit and try the real thing :)
You can't seriously think about coming to Germany in 10 years to reproduce our recipes. Shame on you, as punishment you eat 10 pork knuckles in 1 hour. 😘
@@alfonsoandjessica It will make a significant difference and really delight them ;-))
@@alfonsoandjessica But don't visit the Hofbräuhaus. It is expensive and much overrated
Weißwurst with sweet mustard, please! And it is better to peel it.
Well, it would have been beneficial for them to find out beforehand how to eat this and that correctly 😉
I've never seen anyone in Bavaria/Munich dip their pretzel in the sweet mustard.
we normally eat the sweet mustard whit the Weisswurst, and the hot mustard with the other sausages and Leberkas. And the Sauerkraut without mustard :)...but you can do what ever you want of course🤗
Two things are missing for someone from nothern Hesse (in the middle of Germany): 1) a coarse Bratwurst (not from Thuringia because this is made with caraway which I and many others don't like) and a "ahle Wurscht" (=old sausage because it takes some month until it tastes the best. There are two types, an air dried and a smoked one. I prefer the smoked one. Both are a kind of Salami but to my mind better, because a Salami is a bit rubbery).
There are over 6000 beers. From quite bitter to sweet. The malsbier is for children, without alcohol but sweet. Becks beer from Bremen is available in many countries. Everyone will find their favorite beer.
Tip: if it is too bitter, mix it with a final malt beer.
I am german.. and i must say: i would like to eat at that place. Looks very good and unlike a lot of other "authentic german restaurants" it actually makes a decent impression.
Echt jetzt? Hast Du eigentlich je in Deinem Leben deutsches Essen gesehen?
@@Insulinjunkie_München Was ist denn bei dir kaputt? ... Ich bin 37, geboren in Deutschland, aufgewachsen in Deutschland und immernoch wohnhaft in Deutschland. ... Nein, ich habe mir absolut größte Mühe gegeben, deutschem Essen aus dem Weg zu gehen. Nicht ein einziges Mal in meinem Leben habe ich deutsches Essen zu Gesicht bekommen, nicht mal aus Versehen.
@@BlazingDrag00n na dann erklär du Feinschmecker mir doch bitte mal was da "very good" aussehen soll... etwa die in einem Tiegel zusammengekippten verschiedenen Senfsorten? Oder die Weißwurst die einfach zwischen andere Würste auf Rotkohl und Sauerkraut gepackt wurde (macht man ja so - nicht war ?😂) ? Oder turnt dich die überrfettete matschige Haxe ohne Kruste etwa an? Ach ja, ich vergaß noch das köstliche Industrieschnitzel aus der Friteuse - hmmmmmmmm, lecker !!! Und die blasse salzlose Brez'n MIT SENF DAUFGEKLATSCHT !!! erst, echt, die ist gewissermaßen das tüpfelchen auf den i - - oder was sieht da so gut aus? Erzähl mal, würde mich echt interessieren was da angeblich "German Food" sein soll. Vergiß nicht mit dem abgestandenen Weißbier nachzuspülen, gibt nämlich noch den Endkick. Scheinst ja ein echter Gourmet zu sein... wow. An Guadn mit den besten Grüßen aus München
Für jeden hier in der Kommentar-Runde dieses Essen hochleben lässt und fest stellt in Deutschland selbst nichts besseres gegessen zu haben , meine große Anteilnahme und gleiches Unverständnis.
Da wirft sich mir echt die Frage auf wo seid ihr deutsches Essen in unserem Land essen gewesen !
Solch eine Thüringer in der Farbe weiß, würde einem in Thüringen nirgends angedreht werden. Nirgends.
Eine Weißwurst mit Rotkohl verlange mal in Bayern oder Franken da erntest du Verständnis loses Kopfschütteln. Gehe mal in ein Schnitzelhaus im Umkreis von vier Kilometern gibt's hier drei Stück. Ein Schnitzel wo die Panade wie eine zweite Haut daran klebt hat nix mit traditioneller deutscher Küche zu tun.
Das nennt sich in Fachkreisen "Flussigpanade" und ist eine Optimierung in einem Herstellungsprozess für Tiefkühlkost.
Brezeln kann man natürlich in den Senf tauchen. Wer es mag. Aber traditionell bekommt auch im deutschen Restaurant zur Brezel keinen Senf dazu . Auch nicht im tiefsten Bayern. In Baden-Württemberg ist da eher Butter drauf.
Also wer das ganze als traditionelles Essen verkauft hat wohl etwas zu viel selbst davon gegessen oder war noch nie hier.
😂
Unbedingt zwei dieser riesen Schnitzel drauf zu packen ist wohl auch eher eine amerikanische Interpretation des ganzen.
Schade eigentlich. Denn deutsches Essen gibt echt was her und ist regional sehr verschieden.
@@Insulinjunkie_München I only know austrian Brezels, but are German Brezels really that light? I thought they are supposed to be made with lye, and therefore have that dark brown color and stay soft instead of being crispy like a normal breadroll?
red cabbage is traditional wih potatos, knödel or mashed potatos!
Thanks for sharing this
And after a feast like that, you gotta take a nap... probably one or two... weeks... worth.
Very good work ❤️ Love from INDIA
Thank you :)
Can this restaurant offer courses on table manners?
It would absolutely spoil my appetite if I had to dine with the presenter.
In Germany we use the cutlery to eat.
Ja und dein 1/2 Brathänchen ist du dann mit Messer und Gabel. Yes, and you eat your 1/2 roast chicken with a knife and fork. Lass sie essen wie sie mag / Let her eat as she likes
me as a Bavarian, i was lost watching this video, Brezn with mustard omg, and weisswurst only with sweet mustard. The way you mixed everything made my eyes watering xDD but if it was good, it was good... lmao
Yes,It's good.I grew up on German food and aunts and mom speaking German in the kitchen.
Thanks for sharing!
Well done😊
This is not real german food. Let's say it's german inspired...
Die "Grillhaxe" sieht eher aus wie ein gekochtes Eisbein, das nochmal ein paar Minuten in den Grill geschoben wurde um ein bisschen bräune zu generieren
Warum isst sie das Schnitzel mit der Hand? And what kind of processed Toasty faux-schnitzel was that?
Im german and basicly nothing looks authentic, the pork knuckle is way to pale and should be super crunchy and everything else is also missing color. Ok the red cabbage looks about right but im sure its not selfmade anyway and from a jar. Even the cake is not right. It should have layers of puff pastry and not just 1 big filling. The Schnitzel looks like frozen Schnitzel you can buy here but certainly not handmade.
The sweet mustard and the brezel goes with the weißwurst.
Whether the meat love has to go with the sweet mustard or the regular one is a matter of a "religious debate" 😁
Thank you and thank you for watching our channel. Stay tune for more videos coming up :)
That Stelze looks sad, it should be really crispy on the outside and have a whole different color from roasting.
uff. well it looks like german food but there are some mistakes. weißwurst, pretzel and sweet mustard needs to be eaten together. and of course you need to peel the weißwurst at first. in germany you will never see that kind of sausage served with red cabbage. red cabbage is never eaten with mustard together in germany. the pretzel itself is not dark enough. i assume its not the correct dough and they used the wrong "lauge". the sweet mustard belongs to the weißwurst not to the pretzel. the beer i s served a bit wrong too. that kind contains a bit of yeast in the bottle and has to be in the glas too. anyway, they did a good job but if you ever visit germany and try exact the same you would be surprised.
greetings
... and now imagine she would come to germany and taste the real fresh cooked german food (and yes this is at least 80% premade food, and maybe in a nice looking german restaurant. this looks like an nightmare, piccasso would have of a 200 year old german restaurant.)
Sweet mustard mixed with regular mustard. HAYIAAAAAA
The portion size is americanized. You wouldn't get such big portions in normal german restaurants.
I am from Bavaria, and i've never seen someone eating a breze with mustard 😂 maybe this freaking munich people😂
nuddles with red cabbage next no go!
Oh boy, all these "smarta**" comments on how to eat what... I love the way you are not shy to touch food with your hands and just enjoy things you havent eaten before :-)
😊 thank you
This bothers me too. Great video and nice person having a good chat. Let her eat as she likes.
My first time to the US my company invited us (Germans) to a German restaurant. It was really good food, but I was surprised of what was considered German 😀 ... The obligatory Wiener Schnitzel is (as the name already should tell) from Austria, well the Jägerschnitzel is pork so just the German copy of the original, but I cannot see any Jägersauce there. In addition I have the feeling that German food is always seen as from the more southern regions.
As already mentioned by others. Some items look good, some not. I wonder what you would say if you come to Germany ant try all these food freshly made from the scratch. Like the pretzl .. it should have a little darker and a thin but crispy (sound) skin and be soft inside.
We are hoping to go to Germany at some point. Hopefully soon :)
Haha. White sausage! Original you must peal it. Thats not the typical one.
Eating with hands? Das gefällt uns aber nicht 😂
Schnitzel is actually Wiener Schnitzel, from Austria and originally made from veal.
The best ❤👍 Grüße an den Lieblingsmachbarn im Süden 😁
@@Humpelstilzchen Na was machen machbarn denn so? 😋
I didn't taste the dishes you tried but just by looking at it, I prefer the dishes you tried in the way they are served over here in Germany. Especially the pork hock and the pretzel looked pretty bad to me. Oh, I shouldn't forget the rock hard Schnitzel....
Jägerschnitzel for the win^^ its everytime good^^
The Bratwurst in the middle is a perboiled one. Much better tastes a fresh coarse one. It's similar to the thuringian one but without caraway.
The "Weltmeister" sign only shows 3 (in words: THREE) stars😱
You can see the 2014 letters was added later, so an old sign with only three stars and 2014 extended ;-)
real food
from germany
As a German, I would say come to Germany and try the original. Each region has its local specialties. The restaurant they visited at least tried to seem German, but doesn't come close to the original.
Well and the food, anyone who wants to sell something like that here in Germany could close their shop immediately. Still, nice video and makes me smile. Or as we say in Germany: Schmunzeln.😊
as a german it looks prty authentic
What's the name of the restaurant? McWirtshaus?😅😭😭😭
Where do you come from when you eat with your fingers? 😱
Wie die Schnitzel und Weißwurst ist killt mich
You eat a schnitzel with a fork and a knife, not with your hands...
Sorry, but NO ONE eats Breze ("Pretzel") with mustard! The mustard goes with th weißwurst (=the left one). And neither weißwurst nor the "meatloaf" (Leberkäse) are eaten with sauerkraut, and also not with the red cabbage.
Thanks for the info and thank you for watching our channel :)
I am a bavarian native, living in Germany. I have lived in the US and I understand, that restaurants want to squeeze as much 'germany' as possible into one dish. However it triggers me, whenever I get to see these combinations. I hope, it helps with your next order in a german restaurant!
Nice. thanks!
Normaly you eat all with Potatos in Germany. The Sauerkraut normaly with mashed potatoes or Knödel (in Elsass with normal potatos). Never seen "roasted" potatos with Sauerkraut. Seams adapted for the US, as the Bretzel with mustard. And we have other vegetables than kraut or red cabage in germany also. But think this is was people expect when they will eat "german" food :)
Here you have meals no German eats every day (will get a head attack after two years :), and you have food only from bavaria reagion. In Hamburg you have more fish, as the sea is near by. In Westfalia you have Töttchen and Potthas or the Grünkohl with "Mettwurst", in Thürngen you have a specific sausage and knödel named klösse or a Geschmink etc.
But the most important, you have enjoyed your meal there. Living in France and missing my german meals (same when I was in the south of germany, was missing my nordic kitchen :))
Sorry Jessica, but this "Schnitzel" looks like the crap that you may find in your local Aldi. Don't get me wrong, it might taste good, but you'll find the best Schnitzels ever in Austria.
oh und ganz wichtig....... das ist NICHT deutschland. Das ist typisch Bayrisch, ein region von deutschland, es gibt viel viel viel mehr......... das war typisch bayrisch, es gibt noch so viel in deutschland
The Weisswurst usuallay is eaten with sweet mustard.
aMurican: _"Bigger is better!"_
Schweinshaxe: _"Hold my pork knuckle."_
The only people i saw until now who were eating schnitzel with their hands were dudes who were too drunk to use fork and knife. xD
To be honest, I am Hessian and I'd eat every single one of those dishes - Actually had pork hawk yesterday because our local restaurant had Oktoberfest Week. Of course you don't get the real deal in Vancouver because you have to source your meat locally but I'd eat there without thinking twice about it - It looks pretty darn close to what I'd get here in Germany outside of Bavaria.
Yeah, maybe I'd skip the apple strudel because I hate raisins...
Tut mir sehr leid wenn du tatsächlich in Deutschland solche kuriose Zusammenstellung von typischen Essen bekommst.
Sowas ist mir noch nie passiert. Nicht einmal auf einer Raststätte.
let´s wait till its all cold . . .