German Bread
A Bavarian pretzel is an engineering decision. The knot, the lye, the coarse salt — none of it is decoration. A German bakery shelf is a federal matter and a regional one at the same time.
Featured german bread recipes
- The country, in a single pretzel — Hans Müller · Munich · Hans on the test the pretzel passes — and the test it fails when you skip the lye.
- Why pretzels are knotted, exactly — Hans Müller · Munich · Hans: the knot is a heat-distribution decision. (This is not optional.)
- Roggenbrot, dark rye sourdough — Iris · Bavaria · Dense, sour, sliceable thin. The bread the cheese sits on.
- Pumpernickel, twenty-four hours low — Iris · Westphalia · A whole-rye bread baked at low heat for a full day. Almost black, slightly sweet.
- Brötchen, the morning roll — Iris · Berlin · A crusty white roll, split, buttered, eaten standing in front of an open kitchen window.
- Laugengebäck, the lye-bath family — Iris · Bavaria · Pretzel sticks, lye rolls, lye croissants. Same bath, different shapes.
- Vollkornbrot, whole-grain block — Iris · Hamburg · A long, dense pan loaf, all whole grain, slices the size of a postcard.
- Christstollen, Saxon Christmas loaf — Iris · Dresden · A yeasted, butter-heavy, fruit-laden loaf. Dusted in powdered sugar. Kept four weeks.
- Schwarzbrot, the Berlin black loaf — Iris · Berlin · A pan-baked rye that lives in the rye family with everything sliced thin on top.
- Bauernbrot, the farmer’s loaf — Iris · Franconia · A round mixed-grain country loaf. The kind a baker dropped in your bag with a nod.
Bake German — other categories
German across the edition
- German cuisine hub — all six lanes
- Cook German
- Bake German
- Drink German
- Preserve German
- Decorate German
- Grow German