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Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine is the typical and traditional fare of the Pennsylvania Dutch.

Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine reflects influences of the Pennsylvania Dutch's German heritage, agrarian society, and rejection of rapid change.[1]

It is common to find Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine throughout the Philadelphia, Allentown and Lancaster regions of Pennsylvania.

Techniques

In the 18th century, baking was still done in wood-fired ovens that produced inconsistent results and could easily become too hot. The Pennsylvania Dutch baked pastries on cabbage leaves to provide some protection from hot spots that could develop in the oven.[2]

Soups

Soups, often featuring egg noodles, are characteristic of the Pennsylvania Dutch.[1] Pennsylvanian Dutch homes have traditionally had many broths on hand (vegetable, fish, poultry, and other meats) from the saving of any extra liquids available: "The Pennsylvania Dutch developed soup making to such a high art that complete cookbooks could be written about their soups alone; there was an appropriate soup for every day of the year, including a variety of hot and cold fruit soups."[3] Soups were traditionally divided into different categories, including Sippli, which is a light broth, Koppsupper, a cup soup, Suppe, which is a thick, chowder soup often served as a meal with bread, and G'schmorte, a soup with no broth often like a Brei or gravy.[4]

Pennsylvania Dutch soups are often thickened with a starch, such as mashed potatoes, flour, rice, noodles, fried bread, dumplings, and Riwwels or rivels, which are small dumplings described as "large crumbs" made from "rubbing egg yolk and flour between the fingers", from the German verb for "to rub."[4]

Pennsylvania Dutch specialties

Working birch beer at the Kutztown Folk Festival in Kutztown, Pennsylvania
Apple dumpling
Shoofly pie from Good N Plenty Restaurant
Whoopie pie

Beverages

Dishes

  • Amish potato salad
  • Apple butter
  • Apple dumpling—cored and peeled apple, covered in a pie-crust, dusted with sugar or cinnamon, and baked. Served in a bowl with milk. Sometimes eaten as dessert, but generally a meal in and of itself.
  • Beef or venison jerky
  • Bova Shankel—a pierogi-type dish of potato dumplings and sauce.
  • Brown butter noodles—egg noodles combined with butter that was melted and browned in a pan.
  • Hot bacon dressing—cooked, drained, crumbled bacon in a thickened sweet dressing, served hot over fresh salad greens; often used with dandelion greens to offset their tart taste.
  • Bacon gravy
  • Chicken and waffles
  • Chicken corn soup—made with egg noodles and sometimes saffron, which has been cultivated in Pennsylvania Dutch country since the early 19th century; egg noodles, corn, hard boiled eggs, and chicken.[1] Sometimes an addition is rivels, small dumplings.
  • Chow-chow
  • Coleslaw
  • Cup cheese
  • Gingerbread, ginger snaps, ginger cake, and pot roast spiced with ginger and other aromatic spices.[5]
  • Hamloaf—a meatloaf-like dish made of ground ham, often baked with brown sugar on top, lacking the spices and bread crumbs found in meatloaf.
  • Hog maw—pig's stomach, called Seimaaga in the Pennsylvania Dutch dialect.
  • Lebanon bologna
  • Peanut butter schmear
  • Pepper cabbage—a sweet and sour dish[6]
  • Pork and sauerkraut
  • Potato filling
  • Potato rolls
  • Pot pie—not the baked pie with a pastry top, but a meat stew with large noodles (pot pie squares); often features chicken, flour, salt, vegetables (such as celery, onion, and carrots) as well as spices (such as parsley, thyme, black pepper, and bay leaf).[1]
  • Pretzel
  • Red beet eggs (pickled beet eggs)
  • Sauerbraten—sour roast, is any one of various meats and spices that are marinated for several days in vinegar or wine, vegetables are added to the marinade during the final day. Sauerbraten was traditionally made using horse meat, but beef or other cuts of meat are now favored. It is often served with dumplings and red cabbage. Sauerbraten remains very popular throughout Germany.
  • Schnitz un knepp
  • Scrapple

Desserts

  • Angel food cake
  • Apple dumplings
  • Dutch baby pancake
  • Church spread—made from molasses or corn syrup, marshmallow cream, and peanut butter, often found at Amish church services and community events.
  • Cracker pudding—thickened with saltine crackers
  • Fastnachts
  • Funnel cake
  • Funny cake—a combination of pie and cake that is made by baking a cake surrounded by pie crust, marbled throughout with chocolate streaks.
  • Whoopie pie
  • Montgomery pie—buttery crust with a gooey molasses and lemon filling and a buttermilk cake topping.[7]
  • Moravian sugar cake
  • Shoofly pie—molasses crumb cake with a pie crust for easier eating.
  • Sugar cookies

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d David Rosengarten, It's All American Food: The Best Recipes For More Than 400 New American Classics (2003). Hachette Digital.
  2. ^ Fieldhouse, Paul. The World Religions Cookbook. Greenwood Press. p. 37.
  3. ^ William Woys Weaver, Sauerkraut Yankees: Pennsylvania Dutch Foods & Foodways (2nd ed.) (2002), p. 93.
  4. ^ a b William Woys Weaver, Sauerkraut Yankees: Pennsylvania Dutch Foods & Foodways (2nd ed.) (2002), p. 94.
  5. ^ Evan Jones, American Food: The Gastronomic Story (1975). Dutton: p. 77.
  6. ^ "Pennsylvania Dutch Pepper Cabbage". A Coalcracker in the Kitchen. 2018-09-19. Retrieved 2021-03-22.
  7. ^ "Montgomery Pie Recipe". Martha Stewart. Retrieved 2021-03-22.