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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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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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- remove excess fat from a de-boned lamb leg
- cut into cubes, season with kosher salt and cayenne pepper
- saute lamb in olive oil until browned
- add sliced onions and garlic paste
- add tomato sauce, diced tomatoes and same amount (volume) of water (or red wine if you prefer)
- season with finely chopped fresh rosemary, kosher salt, cayenne pepper, a dash of ground cumin and a dash of dried or fresh oregano
- simmer slowly until lamb is tender but NOT falling apart
- add cooked chickpeas and small raw carrots
- simmer until carrots are tender
- add diced bell peppers, simmer two more minutes
- add grape tomatoes, remove from heat, check / adjust seasoning
- Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”
- Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”
- Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”
- serve stew over pasta, rice, mashed potato or cous cous
- Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”
- Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”
- Lamb Stew “Wiedenfelsen”
- Bella – first bite as usual 🙂
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