Cayenne pepper

Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”

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Image - Property of Panoramio

Image: Property of Panoramio

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Click here for a short Video of Hotel Wiedenfelsen
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It  seems about time that I dedicate a dish and name it for the place which started it all for me, the wonderful, elegant and classy “Hotel Wiedenfelsen” in the  Black Forrest  in  Germany.
Before and during the time I was lucky to be am apprentice in this gem of a hotel, the tourist industry in Germany was dominated by hotels like this.
Medium in size, family-owned hotels and restaurants which were the pride of families which, in many cases, had operated these hotels and restaurants for generations. Sadly, because of changing demands, the industry took a sharp turn during the 70’s and many of these wonderful places became obsolete in a fast changing landscape of mostly chain-operated hotels. Only the strongest and the luckiest survived, while the rest gave way to cookie-cutter operations without charm and soul, or they just ceased to exist (including Hotel Wiedenfelsen). It has since seen various attempts to re-invent itself under different ownership, but has never managed to come even near it’s former glory).
Things were of course very different during the hotels heydays, the time during which I had the fortune to be accepted for a three-year apprenticeship under the tight and competent leadership of the Executive Chef (and son in law of the then-owners) Karl Mueller. Karl was a generous and warm person, taking care of us apprentices as if we were family. He was also extremely professional, strict and a severe applier of high culinary standards.
Although ours was a relatively small hotel (about 70 rooms, two restaurants and one banquet space), the standards with which our hotel operated were very high and impeccable indeed.
It was mostly because of these high standards of the whole family who owned and operated “Hotel Wiedenfelsen” that I have become the person I am and the chef I was for nearly five decades. Admittedly, it took an iron hand,  a (seemingly at the time) short leash and not a few “fresh ones” to shape me (and a bunch of other apprentices) into the professional I became, but, looking back today, I am grateful to the Mehr family and the Mueller family to have never given up on me and guided me into the right professional and personal direction.
All of this (and more) went through my head yesterday while I was cooking this dish which was the first lamb dish Chef Mueller taught me so many years ago………..
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Thanks Karl, Uschi, Herr und Frau Mehr. God Bless ! 🙂
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Lamb Stew

Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”

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Lamb Stew

Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Shrimp And Vegetable Salad With Cheese/Garlic Bread

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Last  night proved to be one of these dreary nights when I am not able to sleep, so at 5.00 am I decided to give it up, get up and start the day. I had my usual breakfast of two bananas and a glass of ice-cold, reduced fat milk, which usually carries me for a few hours until the early afternoon or even early evening. Not so today. At 10.30 am I decided I needed something a bit more substantial, which lead me to prepare this great concoction. Because of the delicious but very filling large amount of  garlic/cheese bread I devoured,  I’ll be fine for the rest of the day and will probably just have a few fruits for dinner 🙂 😦
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Shrimp And Vegetable Salad With Cheese/Garlic Bread

Shrimp And Vegetable Salad With Cheese/Garlic Bread

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Shrimp And Vegetable Salad With Cheese/Garlic Bread

Shrimp And Vegetable Salad With Cheese/Garlic Bread

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Cheese/Garlic Bread

Shrimp And Vegetable Salad With Cheese/Garlic Bread

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Petti Di Pollo Alla Fiorentina

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Quote from Ciao Italia :
“Anything  alla fiorentina,  meaning Florentine style, usually signifies that spinach is in the dish”.
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If  you wonder why I put this quote at the beginning of this post, the answer is simple:
Petti Di Pollo Alla Fiorentina” is traditionally (originally?) prepared by stuffing a chicken breast with a mixture of chopped blanched spinach and grated cheese, then sauteed in fat or baked in the oven.
While this can be a very enjoyable variation, I have seen many other ones, some even just grilled, served with or without any spinach. This was actually in  Florence  some years back, when Maria and I visited a fancy restaurant off the beaten track and I ordered a  “Bistecca Alla Fiorentina”  for myself (beef-heaven on earth) and Maria ordered the “Pollo Alla Fiorentina”, which was presented as a simple grilled chicken breast served on a bed of spinach.
As for the reason I prepare my version the way I do is simply because I feel it is a far more tasty and juicy version of the widely touted as  original version  of “Petti Di Pollo Alla Fiorentina”.
Coating the chicken allows the breast to stay very most while you can cook the meat to just being done, while if you stuff the breast and then cook it, by the time the stuffing is heated to a safe temperature, the breast will be much too dry.
So, as usual, while I don’t claim that my version is the “Original”,  I strongly believe that it is the improved version of a venerable, classic dish 🙂
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
(Controversial, sometimes) 😦 🙂
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Petti Di Pollo Alla Fiorentina

Petti Di Pollo Alla Fiorentina

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Petti Di Pollo Alla Fiorentina

Petti Di Pollo Alla Fiorentina

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Spinach Wrap With Curried Garbanzos And Shrimp

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Once  in a while I prepare for myself curried garbanzo beans (chick peas) as a snack.
Today I took it a step further and gave the garbanzos the honor to be the center of this delicious culinary concoction.
Quick and easy to prepare, it is a great dish to showcase to full advantage the sum of its simple individual parts.
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Bon Appetit !   That’s a Wrap !  (That’s the movie director in me trying to surface) 🙂
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Spinach Wrap With Curried Garbanzos And Shrimp

Spinach Wrap With Curried Garbanzos And Shrimp

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Spinach Wrap With Curried Garbanzos And Shrimp

Spinach Wrap With Curried Garbanzos And Shrimp

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Pulled Pork “Havana Loco”

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havana
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For  most of my life I detested the very idea of pulled pork. My professional training as a cook had taught me that if something falls apart, it is overcooked and therefore non grata. In addition, the pulled pork I was introduced to during my early years in the USA was almost always smoked for many hours, then completely inundated in (most of the time crappy) “bbq sauce”.
The whole thing seemed to me to have the texture and taste of some lousy half-smoked cigars mashed-up and mixed with ketchup and vinegar, more often than not served on a limp, tasteless burger bun. As a result, for many years I stayed away from pulled pork.
This changed when I got to travel in Latin America and in Latin American-circles, where pulled pork took on a very different dimension, one which I was finally able to wholeheartedly embrace. Usually braised in the oven for hours, with lots of cilantro, lime, garlic, various citrus juices and sometimes the addition of onions and/or chilies, the pork tastes lively and fresh, not at all heavy or greasy or overly sweet. Usually, it is served with white rice and yucca or a simple salad and most of the time with some kind of spicy, vinegar based condiment.
Below find my own take on pulled pork, as I imagine I would serve it at my imaginary, popular nightspot in a Havana of long-gone times, with hot girls dancing to the Rumba, Mojitos flowing freely and eating, drinking, dancing, making love and enjoying life being the only thing on everybody’s mind……………..
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Bon Appetit ! Life is Good !
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Pulled Pork

Pulled Pork “Havana Loco”

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Pulled Pork

Pulled Pork “Havana Loco”

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Pulled Pork

Pulled Pork “Havana Loco”

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Chicken-Noodle Soup With Spicy Sausage And Napa Cabbage

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So  now that summer is finally over (at least according to the calendar), soups will be on the menu more often to warm our frozen bones (or we could turn the A/C from 72F to 78F ?) 🙂
Anyway, I myself never need an excuse to prepare myself a pot of soup, especially any variation of chicken-noodle soup, which I eat as often as twice a week. Following is today’s version :
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Chicken-Noodle Soup With Spicy Sausage And Napa Cabbage

Chicken-Noodle Soup With Spicy Sausage And Napa Cabbage

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Chicken-Noodle Soup With Spicy Sausage And Napa Cabbage

Chicken-Noodle Soup With Spicy Sausage And Napa Cabbage

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Meat And Potatoes

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Many  a person declares them self to be a “Meat and Potato Person“, meaning no fancy concoction, just the basics without a fuss.
After looking at these pictures, most of us will probably concur, at least some of the time 🙂
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Bon Appetit ! Umph 

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Meat And Potatoes

Meat And Potatoes

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Meat And Potatoes

Meat And Potatoes

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Meat And Potatoes

Meat And Potatoes

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Preparation :
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Obatzda (Bavarian Cheese Sandwich – Boss Level)

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Sadly,  most of us will not be able to attend the real  Oktoberfest  in  Munich  this month 😦
So, to help you dream about actually being there in person, here is one of the quintessential dishes one might consume together with a  Maß Bier  (or  even a few Maß )  at the Oktoberfest  or any other beer-garden, or, as I did today, in my chair in front of the TV, watching the Oktoberfest on Deutsche Welle TV and having a Maß  of iced tea 🙂
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Guten Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Obatzda (Cheese Sandwich - Boss Level)

Obatzda (Bavarian Cheese Sandwich – Boss Level)

Obatzda (Bavarian Cheese Sandwich – Boss Level)

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Obatzda (Cheese Sandwich - Boss Level)

Obatzda (Bavarian Cheese Sandwich – Boss Level)

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Salade Lyonnaise

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Here  we have another  classic that shows and proofs why the classics don’t die: They are simply the best !
When all the pretty (and sometimes not so pretty) newfangled high flyers have simply faded away because of lack of substance, practicality and being too heavy on looks and too light on taste and texture, out come the classics again to remind us why they were our favorites in the first place : Taste, texture and simple, appetizing presentation, free from superficial nonsense. What better dish to proof my point than with this wonderful salad which will be equally good as appetizer, side dish, snack or even main course (See below )
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P.S.
Usually the poached egg is served liquid in the center, but, while I love eggs prepared this way, for my salad I prefer them a bit more waxy (depending on the size of the egg, add about 1 to      1,5  minutes to the cooking time of soft-poached egg)
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Although smoked bacon is widely used, I prefer the taste and texture of fresh bacon for this dish. If you choose to use smoked bacon, you can forgo the step of simmering the bacon before sauteing.
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Salade Lyonnaise

Salade Lyonnaise

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Salade Lyonnaise

Salade Lyonnaise

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Salade Lyonnaise

Salade Lyonnaise

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Schwäbischer Zwiebelrostbraten Mit Bratkartoffeln

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There  are two way’s of preparing the onions for a traditional Schwäbischer Zwiebelrostbraten : Dusted with flour, then deep-fried until crisp (click here to see that version), or sautéed in the pan without the flour. While both versions are excellent, the one with the flour-dusted onions is usually prepared when larger quantities are required (the onions keep well when kept in a sealed container and are ready when needed). On the other hand, when preparing at home one usually sautés  the onions in order to be more efficient. So as a rule of thumb, when I cook for guests, I fry my onions; when I just cook for myself (and Bella), I usually sauté the onions. Decisions, decisions :-). When I was preparing the potatoes I pondered about the fact how we are always looking for more complicated, prettier and more exclusive food, while something as simple as these Bratkartoffeln can be wonderfully beautiful and delicious in their simplicity.
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Schwäbischer Zwiebelrostbraten Mit Bratkartoffeln

Schwäbischer Zwiebelrostbraten Mit Bratkartoffeln

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Schwäbischer Zwiebelrostbraten Mit Bratkartoffeln

Schwäbischer Zwiebelrostbraten Mit Bratkartoffeln

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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