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Bunter Salat (very colorful salad)
The German style
"Chef Salad"
Made with
Fleischsalat
(meat salad)
Now if I say to my US friends let's make a Fleischsalat they think that sounds strange....
So first tell them this is what I call
"Flash Salad".
To make it sound prettier I wrote a song about it.
Flash Salad
Symphony
In Deutchland, where flavors meet,
Comes a salad that's a special treat,
Fleischsalat, oh so divine,
With every bite, like a very fine wine
Fleischsalat, a taste so grand,
A symphony of flavors, hand in hand,
From the meats that are finely sliced,
To the dressing that adds the perfect spice.
In a bowl, a colorful display,
Crisp veggies and meats, they all portray,
A harmony of textures, a feast for the eyes,
Try Flash Salad, a delicious surprise!
a cool salad with meat and cheese was a staple growing up in our family
in the summer, only we called it a Chef Salad
not a Bunter Salat.
In Germany you will see on some menus "Bunter Salat" which means
to the effect a "colorful salad"
In the U.S. it is generally a large entree salad with strips of ham, turkey and cheese
surrounded with colorful vegetables like tomato wedges, cucumbers,
olives,
and boiled egg wedges.
You will most likely get the dressing on the side.
While there are many theories on how this salad became popular in the U.S.
I think perhaps the German Fleischsalat may have had something to do with this,
and was brought over by our German ancestors.
While the internet is full of theories of famous chefs who invented
the Chef Salad, and served them at famous hotels like the Ritz Carlton
or a fancy restaurant, It really doesn't seem like a mystery to me.
I looked at many old newspaper articles and if you went to a restaurant,
they would have a Chef Salad that was basically the chef's
special salad of the day.
To this day many German's prefer to get their Fleischsalat made fresh in the deli or by the butcher.
The whole idea makes sense to use up end pieces or
yesterdays display, and repurpose it.
The word "Salad" was not originally lettuce with
tomatoes and radish, and a dressing.
The word was derived from the Latin "salted" and was most like a way of preserving
meats and vegetables, when you had no fridge to open and place your food in a nice
storage container.
Of cours being frugal, a German would not waste even a squeak out of a pig if he could eat it,
the Fleischsalat made so much sense.
It's still a great idea,
To make sure you optimize your cold cuts, that have been around a few days,
you can add a nice dressing to liven them back up and make a beautiful salad.
This dish has been around for centuries,
so there I don't think it will lose popularity any time soon.
What is Fleischsalat?
Most in Germany would compare this to our diced ham salad, chicken salad,
tuna salad, egg salad but that would be more like a Hackfleischsalat, where it is minced up.
Most Fleischsalat I see is cut into strips and then blended with a vinaigrette or a creamy,
mayonnaise or sour cream or a blend.
I always see pickles added, a tradition that we use in the US as well,
there is a purpose for both.
Like we would make a sandwich, in Germany you would more likely put this on a slice of bread
and eat it open face, like we would put peanut butter and jelly.
While I was doing this I made my wife and I a small Fleischsalat, not quite a
Bunter Salat but more a snack, with what we had on hand.
This light lunch on a 100 degree plus day was perfect.
The fun thing about this dish is the possibilities and creativity are awaiting your imagination.
and taste buds.
however I don't get crazy, I enjoy the simplicity, of the cold cuts, and cheese with pickle and a bit of mustard,
onion and maybe bell pepper.
Fleischman from a chef in a small cafe in Berlin ....
Corliss Cohan writes ....Working in a small Gasthaus in Berlin we had a Fleischsalat on the menu that was prepared daily. It was, as are almost all flash salts, prepared with Fleischkaese, (Meat Cheese), which is actually a type of large sausage baked in a loaf form.Kind of like a cured meat loaf. There were two forms: 1) fein,(fine) which, as the name suggests, was smooth, and the meat was ground very fine and paste- like. and 2) Grob, which means, rough. This was ground through a larger holed grinder and was quite coarse.
To dress the fleischsalat you can go two ways: A good vinagrette, (We would use a little German mustard salt, pepper, dill, a cider-type vinegar and salad oil...nuttin fancy...very basic.) The other alternative is a mayonnaise-based dressing, using salad creme ( a type of mayo ), a smidgeon of mustard, dill seed, pepper,pinch of cayenne, splash of vinegar (sounds like coleslaw?) but not too much...keep it thick.
This is the same salad with everything minced up.
This is of course a good choice if you have odds and ends that
won't make good strips. It also makes a nicer spread if you
are putting it on a bread slice.
This is a fun projectl, as you make your own lunch meat.
You can put anything you like in it, Olives, pistachios.
It is a simple process where you blend all the meat and spices in a food processor
Then bake it in a loaf pan
like a meat loaf. You can spice it however you like.
the most important tip to storing Deli Meats is obvious; keep the air off of it. My guess is
that most folks will keep it in the package and use a zip storage zip bag to put the package in.
I will do that and then rubber band it to keep more off it.
It is a good idea to label the date that you open it
Through modern technology we can enjoy music from Germany at the touch of your computer, there are many venues now, Pandora, Amazon music, and Youtube is free.
I love my noise canceling headphones that are completely wireless and give incredible sound!
over 2500 perfect reviews, it is a bit of an investment but worth every penny.
Du kannst nicht treu sein 2012
Funky Marys
Du kannst nicht treu sein, nein, nein, das kannst du nicht,
wenn auch dein Mund mir wahre Liebe verspricht.
In deinem Herzen hast du für viele Platz,
darum bist du auch nicht für mich der richtige Schatz.
Du kannst nicht treu sein,
nein, nein, das kannst du nicht,
wenn auch dein Mund mir wahre Liebe verspricht.
In deinem Herzen hast du für viele Platz, darum bist du auch nicht für mich der richtige Schatz.
Du kannst nicht treu sein, nein, nein, das kannst du nicht, wenn auch dein Mund mir wahre Liebe verspricht. In deinem Herzen hast du für viele Platz, darum bist du auch nicht für mich der richtige Schatz.
You can not be faithful, no, no, you can not,
even if your mouth promises me true love.
In your heart you have room for many
that's why you're not the right sweetheart for me.
You can not be faithful
no, no, you can not,
even if your mouth promises me true love.
In your heart you have space for many, so you are not the right sweetheart for me.
You can not be faithful, no, no, you can not, even if your mouth promises me true love. In your heart you have space for many, so you are not the right sweetheart for me.
Oktoberfest Hit 2010 "I am from Bavaria" (official version)
Schürzenjäger
Zillertaller Hochzeitsmarsch
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`
Our German Cookbook
A recipe book and short biography of my Grandmother Emma Block. Her recipes, culture and cooking styles that were brought over from Germany. How they evolved when she came to America in the early 1900s and settled in Portland, Oregon on the west coast of the United States. Over 100 recipes
Bonus Recipe CD with the Ebook and recipes with step by step pictures
Biography of my grandma
Emma Block From Germany with Love tells the story of my grandma, Emma Block, growing up in a little town in Baden/ Würtemberg, Germany near Heidelberg named Steinsfurt. Then at the age of 15 immigrating to the United States, taking a train with one of her sisters and brothers to Hamburg and sailing the Atlantic with other hope filled Germans wanting to make a life in the "New World". It was not easy but with good values learned in her German upbringing made a full life, had a wonderful family with lots of fun and celebration including the great German meals.
Karin Elliot born and raised in Germany
is a chef and wonderful friend giving me encouragement through the years here and donated her recipes for our newsletter. She also does wonderful volunteer work like providing meals for school children in need in Tuscon, Arizona.
Many German-Americans and German immigrants are interested in Native American items from books and movies to jewelry and arts and craft supplies. Karin will take care of you personally with her online store Native Rainbows
This is the newsletter you are reading now, called the German Goodies Recipe Newsletter. I have been publishing this for 20 years now and we have had a lot of fun doing it.
If you enjoy the history I talk about in this newsletter you will also love the history of other dishes and foods I like to do in my
Food History Newsletter