brinde777 Lessons From Germany on a Better Bratwurst

We spent the week in Jockgrim, Germany, under my fiancé’s great-aunt Margit’s roof. Every morning, before we woke, Margit bicycled to a local bakerybrinde777, curating a selection of the region’s rolls for me to try, because she knew I loved food. And every morning, a stainless-steel carafe of fresh black coffee awaited and awoke me. She would then prepare an elaborate breakfast featuring a selection of those breads, complete with cold cuts, cheeses, fruits, salads, butter, jam and tea, all laid out on a long wooden dining table by the kitchen.
Later in the evenings, we would meet up with Margit and her husband, Bertold, for a nightcap as they were winding down on the porch, glasses of Pfalz wine in hand, doors and windows of their 40-year-old house ajar. Built to their personal specifications, Margit and Bertold’s house breathed.
Recipe: Sizzled Bratwurst With Mashed PotatoesIn that house, I learned what “German bread” meant, and for the first time in four years began to understand why my fiancé eats so much bread. It’s his white rice. I also picked up other things: how to optimize a home in relation to its environment, how to document a life through photos and maps, how to buy only what you can eat (and grow the rest), how to take bratwurst from frozen to lunch in under 30 minutes and how that could make someone from far away feel close to home.
Bratwurst, spiced and savory sausages, are a popular street or festival food in Germany, especially in Bavaria, in which case they might be served with bread rolls called brötchen or semmel. But served at home, they are a juicy secret weapon for busy workdays. Cut them into little chunks and cook them like aromatic meatballs in a tomato sauce, as Luisa Weiss, the author of “Classic German Cooking,” does when she’s feeling pressed for dinner time. A standard cookout or canteen lunch,66br casino she told me, bratwurst can be pan-fried or grilled, commonly accompanied by mashed potatoes, sauerkraut and hot German mustard, all of which help to balance the rich deliciousness of the fatty sausages.
Campos-Pons, in blue, speaks to the “angels” before the beginning of the march at Harlem Art Park on 120th Street.Credit...Graham Dickie/The New York TimesImage
In her welcoming remarks, Campos-Pons told the crowd that, rather than a protest, “this is a walk of love, a walk for hope, a walk for the future, a walk for people who precede us and for people who are not yet here.” Billed as a “Procession of Angels for Radical Love and Unity,” the event spans two mornings in September. Last Saturday’s route started at the Harlem Art Park, a cobblestone site on East 120th Street in the heart of a neighborhood home to African Americans and people from Puerto Rican, Mexican, Caribbean, and African diasporas. The second procession is on Sept. 20 and will begin in Central Park and end in Madison Square Park, in the wealthy Flatiron district.
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