cowdery wrote:As I read this thread and statements such as "when I want classic middle european cuisine," part of me, at least, thinks, "and why would you?"
Having traveled in Middle Europe, I can't say that the food was ever the best part of the trip. It has its charms, I suppose, and there is the occasional marvelous dish (a pasta-based dessert with nuts and honey in Hungary and some soups in Romania come to mind), but generally it is heavy, fatty and bland.
In Bohemia, the best food by far is pivo.
(Beer)
While it is surely so that there are people who come to the conclusion that the to varying degrees related cuisines of 'Mittel-Europa' (at its core Germany, Austria, Hungary, Czechia, Slovakia and Poland, but some may include other countries here) are not to their tastes on the basis of reasonably broad experience (and I have no reason to doubt that Chuck Cowdery's negative personal opinion is in that sense well-founded), I think it also the case that many people denigrate these cuisines without much real knowledge of the object of their contempt, either with regard to the quality of the representatives of these cuisines to which they have been exposed or the breadth of their exposure to a variety of dishes and different styles of preparation used in these cuisines.
At the same time, it seems to me many folks are these days -- in the joyous spirit of "multiculturalism" -- far more inclined to believe or assume that the exotic is necessarily better. Aside from the inherent interest that exotica may hold, it is of course true that 'exotica' (from a European perspective) often is in many ways especially interesting. And one can, I'm sure, argue in a factual and aesthetically and philosophically informed way that, for example, the cuisines of South India or of South East Asia or of Northern China are more interesting, more developed, more... better than the cuisine of old Mittel-Europa. I can see that and may very well concur.
And yet, I maintain that many of those who have an ill opinion of Mittel-Europa's culinary offerings might well change their minds
to at least some small degree if they but had the opportunity to sample especially well-prepared renditions of many standard dishes and in addition also had the chance to try some lesser known dishes. Of such standard dishes, I call to your attention
Sauerbraten, which is generally speaking not all that well made in restaurants in the States but, when made by a skilled chef -- professional or domestic -- can be a really beautifully complex dish. A less well-known dish that comes to my mind in this context is
Königsberger Klopse, which to be made properly requires a good amount of care and, with the best ingredients, the right effort produces what is in my opinion probably one of the most interesting and subtle and delicious "meatball" recipes in the world. While I will join the throngs who sing in praise of Chinese potstickers, of Turkish
manti, and of Sardinian
culingionis, Poland's pierogi pack a considerably pleasurable punch when it comes to stuffed dumplings and Swabia's best
Maultaschen need take no backseat to the Riviera's
raioli.
While poverty, both real and state-induced, has surely had a very negative influence on the development of the culinary arts in the former Warsaw Pact countries over much of the past 60 years, there are nonetheless both interesting and delicious basic products and dishes from all over the region. In Germany and Austria, on the other hand, prosperity has been no stranger for most of that period and I am always struck by the availablity of so many comestibles and potables of outstanding quality in those two countries. In addition, I think it fair to say that the cuisine of Austria is particularly interesting, in part due to its long-standing position as the heart of a variegate empire but also surely in part to a particularly strong native interest in eating and drinking well. And for what it's worth, the Germans and Czechs of Bohemia were long regarded in Europe as people who really knew what they were doing when it came to food and drink.
Certainly there is, as Chuck says, a lot of heavy, fatty and bland food served up in central and eastern Europe, but I also maintain that the cuisines in question have in some cases suffered as the result of long-standing socio-economic problems and in all cases offer many more genuinely interesting and delicious dishes than is generally thought to be the case these days.
Prost/Na zdrowie!
Guten Appetit/Smacznego!
Antonius
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.