Sausages are a staple of German street food, and yet most places serve sausages in a round “semmel” bun. But the sausages are long (duh) so they just beg for a longer bun. Why do you think hot-dog-style buns aren’t more popular?

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    If the buns were longer, you couldn’t eat the delicious pure sausage first. Best technique is to extract the sausage bit by bit by drawing it with your teeth out of the bun. As dessert you’ll get a sausage-and-mustard flavoured bun.

    That’s not possible with hot dogs, as neither the sausage nor the bun taste on their own. I’d even doubt they taste at all…

    • @nodimetotieOP
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      51 year ago

      So that’s how you supposed to eat it…

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        It’s just one of my favourite ways of eating it.

        The only real requirement for correct Bratwurst im Brötchen eating is to fight everyone tooth and nail who dares to doubt that your local Bratwurst variety is objectively the best of all.

        • @nodimetotieOP
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          11 year ago

          As a non-German eating a local Bratwurst im Brötchen, I think it would be wise to acknowledge that the local one is great =) Actually, I haven’t travelled all that much to distinguish between different varieties. I’d be curious to try them out. Are there the varieties that are a must-try? Someone mentioned the Nuremberg ones.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            I am strongly biased towards Franconian Bratwurst and spoiled for the other varieties.

            I personally think Nürnberger are a very good Bratwurst species – flavour famously compressed in a shape small enough to fit through a medieval key hole to circumvent medieval sales restriction, or so the myth is told.

            My absolute favorite are Coburger. These are Thuringian sausages grilled with pine cones as burning material. The pine cones give a very distinct flavour to the sausage. As you have to visit the marketplace of Coburg to get them, this might be quite an effort. Coburg is not on the Europe/Germany-in-x-days tours list, but still a nice town worth a visit. (Especially if you are aware that in the 19^th century the main export article of Coburg used to be princes and princesses and every single royal house of Europe is Coburgian, sort of. And no, I’m not from Coburg.)

            • @nodimetotieOP
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              11 year ago

              Thanks for the detailed answer!

              flavour famously compressed in a shape small enough to fit through a medieval key hole to circumvent medieval sales restriction, or so the myth is told.

              What?! =)

    • Turun
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      -21 year ago

      Was zum fick bin ich lesend? Du isst Wurst und Semmel getrennt?!?!?!