Category Archives: ricette tedesche

Roulade

Roulade
Roulade

Despite the French sounding name roulade is a typical German recipe I learnt from my German flatmate Anna. It is quite similar to what in Italy we call involtino.

Ingredients
4 beef steaks in large, thin slices
Slices of ham or bacon
4 carrots
1 celery
1 leek
2 onions
6 big gherkins – from the Spreewald if you can!!!
Mustard
Salt
Pepper
1 glass red wine
olive oil

Preparation
1. Prepare the Fillung (filling) by chopping half the carrots, celeries, leeks, onions and gherkins and seasoning them with salt and pepper. Mix everything up with a mixer until you reach a spreading texture.
2. Make the beef steaks flat and softer by hitting it with a glass or something similar – this is what the Germans call plattieren!
3. Spread a layer of mustard, add one or two slices of ham or bacon and then add a layer of filling.
4. Roll the steak and tie it up with a string.
5. Cut the rest of the carrots, celeries, leeks, onions and gherkins, and season it.
5. Oil the casserole with olive oil, add the meat, cook it alone for some minutes then add the wine and chopped vegetables. Add some water and braise it for at least 40 minutes at low temperatures.
6. Serve the roulade with the gravy and a green salad.

The filling
The filling
Spreading the filling
Spreading the filling
Rolling it up - hence the name Roulade!
Rolling it up – hence the name Roulade!
Binding the beef steak with a string
Binding the beef steak with a string
Cooking the roulade
Cooking the roulade
Braising the roulade
Braising the roulade
Preparing the gravy and the salad
Preparing the gravy and the salad
Serve the roulade with gravy & salad
Serve the roulade with gravy & salad
In Germany crossing the cutlery at the end of the meal means: "I've not finished yet - I want more!"
In Germany crossing the cutlery at the end of the meal means: “I’ve not finished yet – I want more!”
And this means: "ok, I've finished - fertig!"
And this means: “ok, I’ve finished – fertig!”

Kirsch-Streusel-Kuchen

Kirsch-Streusel-Kuchen
Kirsch-Streusel-Kuchen

Katja and Diana came to my place to prepare – and eat! – this classic German cake. All the pictures are from Diana. Lecker!!!

Ingredients
120 gr. sugar
200 gr. butter
1 egg
350 gr. flour
1 tea spoon of baking yeast for cakes
1 glass of sour cherry
1 small packet of vanilla sugar
cinnamon

Preparation
Make a pastry dough by mixing sugar, egg and butter. Add the yeast and work the pastry until the dough is soft.

1
The dough – mix egg, sugar and butter
2
The dough when it’s ready

Butter the baking pan, grate some old bread in order to get a tin layer of breadcrumbs and spread the dough using the fingertips. Keep apart half of the dough for the crumbles.

4
Spreading the dough

Separate the cherries from the juice using a colander. Keep the juice.

3
Sour cherries – Sauerkirschen

Warm up the juice in a small pot, add slowly 4 spoons of flour and mix until the juice becomes a thick liquid.

5
Preparing the cherry juice

Add the cherries in the pot and pour everything on the dough.

6
Spreading the cherries and the juice

Use a palette knife or a spoon to spread the cherries and the juice so that the dough is fully covered.

7
Help yourseful with a palette knife or a spoon

Prepare the crumbles: mix the rest of the dough with 4 spoons of flour, vanilla sugar and a sprinkle of cinnamon and breake the dough into crumbles.

8
Preparing crumbles

Sprinkle the crumbles on top of the cherries…

9
Sprinkling crumbles

… until the cake is fully covered and ready to go into the oven. Bake  for 35-45 minutes at 175 degrees.

10
Kirsch-Streusel-Kuchen before baking
11
Kirsch-Streusel-Kuchen after baking

Und dann genieß mit deutschen Freunden!

12
Kirsch-Streusel-Kuchen