I found myself in Greenville,
SC recently, and tried out the
famous Schwaben House restaurant,
which serves authentic German cuisine.
They won an award for their Maultaschen (which I’d never heard of), so I
had to give it a try. It’s basically a
very finely ground combination of meats (this was pork and beef) inside pasta,
cut into strips. It was so wonderful the
Chef found a recipe for it and tried to recreate it when we got home. I have to say it was pretty darn close. The photo below shows the way the Schwaben
House served it. Quite different
presentation, I must say. I think it was
steamed in the mason jar (lid on). Then
you pulled them out with your fork and poured the broth/gravy over them. Wonderful!
We skipped the mason jars, and they turned out just as good. This recipe made quite a few, and we ended up
freezing the rest for later. Enjoy!
Maultaschen in the mason jar, gravy and German potato salad on the side. Yum! |
For the Dough
- 2 ¾ cups of flour
- 4 eggs
- pinch of salt
- warm water
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 6 slices bacon, cut into small pieces
- 3 onions, diced
- ½ lb. ground pork
- 1 hard bread roll, cut in half
- ½ lb. cooked spinach (drained)
- ½ lb. ground beef
- 3 eggs, beaten
- 3 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped
- salt to taste
- pepper to taste
- pinch of nutmeg
- 1 egg
- 3 tablespoons milk
- canned beef broth
·
Combine the flour, eggs, and salt in a bowl and
mix to make a dough. Add a little warm water and knead until it has a firm but
elastic consistency
·
To make the filling, melt the butter in a
skillet and fry the bacon and onions until both are translucent.
·
Combine the bacon mixture with the ground pork
and mix well
·
Moisten the hard roll in water, press dry, and
put through a meat grinder or food processor (the filling needs to be processed
almost to a paste consistency) along with the bacon mixture, cooked spinach,
and ground beef
·
Fold in the eggs, parsley, salt, pepper and
nutmeg and mix well
·
On a board dusted with flour, roll out the dough
into rectangular sheets (about twice as wide as you want your Maultaschen to
be)
·
Using a spoon, put some of the filling at
equally spaced 3-inch intervals all down the middle of one side of the sheet of
dough
·
Mix together the egg and milk and apply it to
the dough around the filling (to seal the edges)
·
Fold the
dough over to cover the filling and press down firmly on the spaces around the
filling
·
Use a pastry wheel or knife to separate into
3-inch squares or diamond- shaped ‘Maultaschen’.
·
Cook thoroughly in beef broth or simmering
salted water for about 10 to 15 minutes, depending upon the size of the
Maultaschen
·
When they rise to the surface they’re done. Drain thoroughly before serving.
·
Optional: you can fry a few onion
slices in butter and pour over the top of the Maultaschen when serving
·
Top with a little of the remaining beef broth/gravy from the pan (you
can thicken the broth with a little flour to make gravy if you prefer)
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