Brotknoedel (Bread Dumplings)
Submitted by daisies
German bread dumplings (Brotknödel) made from milk-soaked Kaiser rolls, eggs, parsley, and butter. Classic Bavarian side for sauerbraten, goulash, or mushroom gravy.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
50 minCOOK
25 minREADY
75 minA frugal German classic that turns stale Kaiser rolls into pillowy dumplings tender enough to soak up gravy and firm enough to hold their shape in the simmer. The rolls drink in lukewarm milk over half an hour, softening completely without turning to mush, and eggs bind everything when the kneading begins.
The trick is in the texture before shaping. The mix should hold together when squeezed but not feel sticky or wet. Add breadcrumbs by the spoonful if it slumps, you want dumplings that ride out a 25-minute simmer without breaking apart.
Drop them into water that’s barely simmering, never boiling. A hard boil tears the surface and turns the dumplings ragged.
Kitchen Tips
- Use day-old or stale rolls, fresh bread is too soft and the dumplings won’t hold structure
- Test one dumpling first before cooking the whole batch, if it falls apart, work in more breadcrumbs
- Wet your hands lightly when shaping, the mixture sticks less
- Keep the water at a bare tremble, full boil is the enemy of a clean dumpling
Variations
- Add diced bacon or speck crisped in butter for a Tyrolean version (Speckknödel)
- Stir in sautéed mushrooms or chopped onion for more savoury depth
- Use rye rolls instead of Kaiser for a darker, earthier dumpling
Ingredients
Directions
Soak the rolls in lukewarm milk for ½ hour.
Add the remainder of the ingredients and mix well.
If mixture is too wet, add some breadcrumbs.
Shape into dumplings.
Carefully put dumplings into barely salted, simmering water and cook for 25 minutes.
Serve as accompaniment to sauces, mushrooms, or in soups.
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