Difference between revisions of "Alternative:Senf"

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{{recipesummary|Sauce recipes||prep: 10 minutes<br/>cooking time varies|2||~100 Cal}}
 
{{recipesummary|Sauce recipes||prep: 10 minutes<br/>cooking time varies|2||~100 Cal}}
  
{{recipe}} | [[Cookbook:Sauces|Sauces]]
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'''Senf''' is German for "mustard". This particular senf, known as 'Süßer Senf', has a sweet, yet sharp taste that makes it great on sandwiches and crackers.  While this recipe is from a 3rd or 4th generation German American, such recipes are said to originate from the southern parts of Germany (Bavaria).
 
'''Senf''' is German for "mustard". This particular senf, known as 'Süßer Senf', has a sweet, yet sharp taste that makes it great on sandwiches and crackers.  While this recipe is from a 3rd or 4th generation German American, such recipes are said to originate from the southern parts of Germany (Bavaria).
  
 
==Ingredients==
 
==Ingredients==
*1.7 oz. dry ground [[Cookbook:Mustard|mustard]]
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*1.7 oz. dry ground [[Mustard|mustard]]
*1/2 tsp. [[Cookbook:Sugar|sugar]]
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*1/2 tsp. [[Sugar|sugar]]
*1/2 cup [[Cookbook:Vinegar|vinegar]]
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*1/2 cup [[Vinegar|vinegar]]
*1/2 tsp. [[Cookbook:Salt|salt]]
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*1/2 tsp. [[Salt|salt]]
*[[Cookbook:Pepper|pepper]]
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*[[Pepper|pepper]]
  
 
==Procedure==
 
==Procedure==
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It gets better as it cools and ages awhile.
 
It gets better as it cools and ages awhile.
  
[[Category:German recipes|{{PAGENAME}}]]
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[[Category:German cuisine]]
[[Category:Sauce recipes|{{PAGENAME}}]]
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[[Category:Sauce Recipes]]

Latest revision as of 17:34, 9 May 2012

Alternative:Senf
Category: Sauce recipes
Energy: ~100 Cal
Time: prep: 10 minutes
cooking time varies
Difficulty: Easy


Senf is German for "mustard". This particular senf, known as 'Süßer Senf', has a sweet, yet sharp taste that makes it great on sandwiches and crackers. While this recipe is from a 3rd or 4th generation German American, such recipes are said to originate from the southern parts of Germany (Bavaria).

Ingredients

Procedure

  1. Mix sugar, mustard, salt, and pepper together, then add water.
  2. Add vinegar last, as the mustard will lose some of it's flavour if vinegar is introduced too early.
  3. Stir using a wire whisk to prevent lumps.
  4. Add some water if too thick.

Notes, tips, and variations

It gets better as it cools and ages awhile.