Käsespätzle Explained

Käsespätzle
Alternate Name:Käsknöpfle
Country:Germany
Region:Swabia
Type:Noodles
Main Ingredient:Spätzle, cheese, onions

Käsespätzle (German for "spätzle with cheese", also called Käsknöpfle in Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein or Kasspatzln in Tyrol) is a traditional dish of the German regions of Swabia, Baden and Allgäu, and also in the Austrian regions Vorarlberg and Tyrol, as well as Liechtenstein and Switzerland.

Preparation

Hot spätzle and grated cheese such as Emmentaler or granular cheese are layered alternately and finally topped with fried onions. After adding each layer, the German: käsespätzle is baked until all the cheese is melted.

Accompanying side dishes are green salads or potato salad. In some parts of Vorarlberg and also Liechtenstein German: käsespätzle is usually served with apple sauce. Leftovers of käsespätzle can be pan-fried with butter.

Regional specialities

In Tyrol, käsespätzle are prepared with Bergkäse or Emmental cheese, optionally with both. In Vorarlberg two different cheese varieties are dominating, so in Montafon the cooks use Montafon sour cheese and in Bregenz Forest they use Bergkäse and Räßkäse, a local hard cheese.[1]

Side dishes in Vorarlberg are butter and yellowly tarnished onion rings.[2]

Different variations are found with Limburger, Weisslacker or Vorarlberger Bergkäse.

Variations

A variation of German: käsespätzle is German: Kasnocken or German: Kasnockn from Salzburg[3] and Obersteiermark, both parts of Austria and are pan-fried instead. Grated cheese and spätzle, freshly scraped from a board, are mixed together and are heated in a pan.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Haubenküche zum Beisl-Preis. 5-Euro-Rezepte von Österreichs besten Köchen. page 130: Vorarlberger Käsespätzle; Krenn, Wien 2005, .
  2. Franz Maier-Bruck: Das große Sacher-Kochbuch, Schuler Verlags GesmbH, Herrsching, licensed edition 1975, page 397
  3. Web site: Ulli Hammerl. Rezept Pinzgauer Kasnockn. SalzburgerLand Magazin. 2016-12-09.