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„Sauerbraten“ is a typical German dish—I think. Maybe it's regional, but it seems that most regions have a variant. And that makes it really difficult to find a typical recipe. Potentially it doesn't matter, but it would be nice to get something representative.
I have one recipe in my ancient Time-Life cookbook „Die Küche in Deutschland“, a translation of a 1969 English language book whose title they decline to mention. In general the series isn't bad, but some of the details puzzled me, so I went looking elsewhere.
What a mess! Once again I came to the conclusion that it's really difficult to find a good recipe on the web. In the end I came up with this recipe from Chefkoch, which has its own strangenesses (“½ litre raspberry vinegar, preferably home-made”). And like the other recipe, it wanted the marinade boiled.
The quantities are always an issue, but in this case they're extreme. Time-Life shows its origins by using tablespoons and cups, and it wanted to brown the meat in fat before marinating, which seemed wrong to me. So I started with the other one—and it, too, wanted a tablespoon each of salt and sugar. The other quantities were even more unbalanced:
Time-Life | Chefkoch | |||
Meat | 2 kg | 1 kg | ||
Wine for marinade | 125 ml | 750 ml | ||
Vinegar for marinade | 125 ml | 500 ml | ||
Water for marinade | 500 ml | |||
Marinade (total) | 750 ml | 1250 ml | ||
Marinade (per kg meat) | 375 ml | 1250 ml | ||
Marinate for | 2-3 days | 3 weeks | ||
I'm sure that the spice quantities are different too, but since they go by count rather than weight, it's hard to say. In the end I went for the Chefkoch recipe and modified it to my liking (including considerably more spices) and with a view to consistency.
quantity | ingredient | step | ||
750 ml | red wine | 1 | ||
500 ml | vinegar | 1 | ||
250 g | onion, sliced in rings | 1 | ||
100 g | carrot, in slices | 1 | ||
5 g | juniper | 1 | ||
2 g | allspice | 1 | ||
2 g | cloves | 1 | ||
2 g | bay leaves | 1 | ||
25 g | salt | 1 | ||
25 g | sugar | 1 | ||
1.4 kg | beef topside,lean | 2 | ||
40 g | beef dripping | 3 | ||
100 g | onion | 4 | ||
100 g | carrot | 4 | ||
100 g | celery | 4 | ||
Slice onion and carrot as described, crush the juniper in a mortar. Put all ingredients in the liquid, bring to boil and simmer for 5 minutes. Allow to cool.
When the marinade is cool, add the meat and ensure that it's covered by the marinade. Leave in the fridge for some while.
Following week: remove the meat from the marinade and dry. Brown in the dripping from all sides:
Cut carrots, onion and celery and fry in the remaining fat. This photo is missing the celery:
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Put in 600 ml of the marinade, bring to the boil. Add the meat and bake in oven at 170° for up to two hours. I've found that that's pretty much the outer limit for beef topside, which comes out very tender.
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Cut into thick slices in the kitchen and serve with red cabbage and dumplings:
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