Bavarian cuisine

Schweinshaxn and Obatzda in a beer garden

Bavarian cuisine is a style of cooking from Bavaria, Germany. Bavarian cuisine includes many meat[1] and Knödel dishes, and often uses flour. Due to its rural conditions and Alpine climate, primarily crops such as wheat, barley, potatoes, beets, carrots, onion and cabbage do well in Bavaria, being a staple in the German diet.[2]

The Bavarian dukes, especially the Wittelsbach family, developed Bavarian cuisine and refined it to be presentable to the royal court. This cuisine has belonged to wealthy households, especially in cities, since the 19th century. The (old) Bavarian cuisine is closely connected to Czech cuisine and Austrian cuisine (especially from Tyrol and Salzburg), mainly through the families Wittelsbach and Habsburg. Already in the beginning, Bavarians were closely connected to their neighbours in Austria through linguistic, cultural and political similarities, which also reflected on the cuisine.

A characteristic Bavarian cuisine was further developed by both groups, with a distinct similarity to Franconian and Swabian cuisine. A Bavarian speciality is the Brotzeit, a savoury snack, which would originally be eaten between breakfast and lunch.

  1. ^ Bolt, R. (2005). Bavaria. CADOGAN GUIDES. Cadogan Guides. pp. 32–33. ISBN 978-1-86011-202-7. Retrieved November 30, 2017.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Reynolds, Catharine (1997-09-21). "CHOICE TABLES; Bavarian Cuisine Transformed". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-10-13.

Bavarian cuisine

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