Hungarian Spatzle

"Hearty wholewheat spatzle is delicious with a hungarian dish called Rakott Kaposzta (separate posting) and cucumber Salad (also separate posting). I like the pinch of nutmeg. Spatzle is served in lieu of pasta, dumplings, rice or potatoes. You may want to adjust the flour egg ratio, you can tell when you are pushing the spatzle through the colinder. Of course if you have a Spatzle maker all the better but the colinder works. There are many different recipes for Spatzel. Some use white flour, some have no milk and what you serve it with is up to you."
 
Download
photo by a food.com user photo by a food.com user
Ready In:
23mins
Ingredients:
7
Serves:
8
Advertisement

ingredients

Advertisement

directions

  • Whisk together the flour, milk,eggs, 1tbsp butter, salt& nutmeg if using, Blend until the batter is smooth (use your blender).
  • Let the batter rest for 30 minutes.
  • Set a colander over a pot of boiling water.
  • Put half the batter into the colander and with a wooden spoon push the batter through the colander and into the boiling water.
  • The size of the spatzle depends on how fast you push it through the colander.
  • Reduce heat, cover and simmer for 8 minutes.
  • Transfer the spatzle to a heated bowl, cook remaining half.
  • Toss with remaining butter.
  • Season, Serve.

Questions & Replies

Got a question? Share it with the community!
Advertisement

Reviews

  1. I've been wanting a recipe for spatzle that is more diabetic friendly for my dh. This will be the one. Thanks for posting it.
     
  2. this recipe works very well! i tried several recipes for spatzle and this one makes the most consistent results. plus i like that it uses whole wheat flour, as i use that whenever possible. and i find the directions more accurate, as i used to remove my spatzle from the water too soon, as many recipes say to remove them when they float to the top. i am lucky enough to have a spatzle tool (basically like a flat grating surface with a sliding feeder tube on top) and this is my go-to recipe now. served it last night with sauerbraten.
     
  3. There are many of us who do not have a spatzle machine and have to adapt to what we have and couldn't buy one in the areas that we we are located. This is a good recipe. Thanks for posting Bergy. I haven't done a review until now, too busy but I will make again.My family used water or milk in making spatzle and they were from Germany, depending on how "flush" they were,meaning if they had the resources for milk. They also served this with Scrapple made with pork, oatmeal, allspice and salt.(Not the cormeal kind). I was raised on Scrapple. Yumm! Again thanks Bergy.
     
  4. The most important thing was forgotten. You can not use just a regular colander, it has to be the special spatzle maker with the big holes. Also I believe that 8 minutes of cooking time given here, is could be too long. Noodles are almost ready when they come to the top of the boiling water. I did not try this recipe, since i have been makint spatzle all my life. I never use milk, or butter in the mix. only water salt and eggs. (nutmeg is ok) Spatzle never served with rakott kaposzta, (that served only with bread). Spatzle served with paprikash chicken, or beef or as spatzle with eggs and bacon as a meal itself. (this is customary in the spring with the first fresh head of lettuce)
     
Advertisement

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

On January 10 2010 I will celebrate 9 years of Life with Zaar. I can't imagine being without it! It has become part of my daily routine. I feel very privileged to be one of the hosts on the Photo Forum. Taking photos of my culinary efforts is a full time hobby and I love it. My friends all know what to expect when they come to dinner "Are you finished taking pictures?" or "Did you get a photo of so & so?" I never let them wait too long and the food is NEVER cold! I now have over 6000 photos on Zaar - some fairly good and some definitely not so good. I am happy to say that practice does help. My roots are in Vancouver BC Canada - a very beautiful city that holds many wonderful memories for me. In 1990, I decided that for my retirement years I may want to settle in a smaller community and found a slice of heaven in the North Okanagan B.C. I love living here but every once in a while I miss the bright city lights, the Broadway shows and some of the small wonderful ethnic restaurants that Vancouver abounds in. That is easily resolved. I just take a trip to the coast, visit with friends for a weekend see a show and feast on Dim Sum or other specialty foods. I am getting a bit long in the tooth but was a very adventurous person. I have river rafted Hell's Gate on the Fraser river, been up in a glider over Hawaii (no not a Hang Glider!), gone hot air ballooning in the Napa Valley & the Fraser Valley, driven dune buggies on the dunes in Oregon, Para sailing in Mexico and tried many other adventurous, challenging, fun things. I have yet to try bungee jumping or sky diving. I may do them yet. I love to travel and experience other cultures. Mexco has been a favorite haunt. I have visited that lovely country many many times. Australia is another favorite as is England! In the past 16 months I have taken off 61 pounds and feel wonderful. I am off all medications and all systems are GO! In years I may be 79 but in spirit I am still in my forties. We are only as old as we allow ourselves to feel. Always think positive. Do something a bit challenging every day & always do something silly every day. Be a kid again! Laugh every day - it is internal jogging. Here are a few of my photos <embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" allowNetworking="all" allowFullscreen="true" src="http://w615.photobucket.com/pbwidget.swf?pbwurl=http://w615.photobucket.com/albums/tt233/Bergylicious/ABM slideshow/d95d7a18.pbw" height="360" width="480">
 
View Full Profile
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Find More Recipes