Tom NJ mentioned cooking asparagus with a slice of bread in the pan, which intrigued me. So I pulled out all two of my German books, the Time-Life one he mentioned and a 70's or 80's era book by Mimi Sheraton of NYT fame. I purchased it last year upon reflecting that I really don't know or understand German very well, but I've never followed up on my intentions by actually opening it.
So, with lots of time on my hands at present I got both books out to read up on asparagus and things German in general. The Time-Life book is a blast. The author, whose father was a political ambassador of some sort, is an absolute snob rather obsessed with class distinctions in dining and everything he writes is colored by that hopefully now-useless POV. It IS entertaining, though. Of the five meals a day he claims Germans eat, or ate back then, for instance, the lower classes eat their heavy midday meal around 11:30 or 12:00 where the upper crusts wouldn't be caught dead dining before 1:00. As an example of the more enlightened choosing to eat lighter than their forebears, with tones of near worship he, he captions a full-page photo of a couple (he identified as a wealthy Hamburg antiques dealer) dining "informally" in their very formal red dining room under an imposing crystal chandelier on a meal of salad, rice and some veal dish most likely prepared by household staff, not the Frau.
Unfortunately I did not find Tom's asparagus recipe. In fact, this book doesn't have an index entry for asparagus at all. Mimi's book does, but nothing akin to what Tom described. So I'm dead-ended there. Tom?
Anyway, as a result of this foray sauerbraten--which I've never made before--is now on the docket for a few days from now. I'm making the marinade right now, and I am going with the version in the Time-Life book. Bay leaves, onions and black peppercorns are common to both recipes. But where Mimi's was white vinegar, no wine, 1:1 with water, adding cloves and finishing with raisins to sweeten the dish. the Time-Life version is a combination of red wine and red wine vinegar at 1:2 with water, adding juniper berries and finishing with ginger snaps to sweeten and thicken the gravy.
Not sure how I'll plate this, possibly with just boiled potatoes with butter and parsley. Though admittedly I'd rather eat spaetzle.
Any German food experts out there?