German breakfast spread

It occurred to me yesterday, while I was putting together a groaning board for our Sunday breakfast with our friends and their two boys, that you might like to see what a real German breakfast is like. After all, German breakfasts are the stuff of legend, at least based on my anecdotal reading of all the times people have mentioned to me their wonder upon experiencing their first German breakfast, whether as exchange students in college or as business travellers or tourists as adults.

The French and Italians are dainty eaters at breakfast. A cornetto dipped in coffee or a split piece of baguette with a café crème are about the norm. After all, the most important meals in those countries are at lunchtime and dinner. But the Germans like to pull out the stops at breakfast (especially weekend breakfasts). Lots of different cheeses, meats, multiple jams and honey, boiled eggs, fruit and vegetables, smoked fish and of course, every kind of roll or hearty, seeded bread your heart could desire.

German breakfast cheeses

In preparation for our Sunday breakfast, we went to the market on Saturday afternoon (this one, for a change) and made the rounds of the different stands. We bought a thick block of English cheddar and a piece of ash-covered French goat cheese from the cheesemonger. (On Sunday morning, I added a piece of Comté, a small round of Camembert, and some herbed fresh cheese to the table. The key to a good German breakfast is a feeling of surplus and bounty!)

German breakfast meats

Then we bought a piece of liverwurst (a must for any breakfast with German children and a special treat for those of us who were once German children (or, you know, Italian-American children growing up in Germany)) and Schlackwurst, a kind of German salami.

German breakfast jams

For the sweeter-toothed among us, there should be at least a couple of jams on a German breakfast table. (Homemade, of course!) I put out raspberry-mint, quince jelly, and strawberry-rhubarb, with spoons for each jam. That way, people could serve themselves jam with the dedicated spoon and skip putting their dirty knives into the jam jars.

German breakfast rolls

On Sunday morning Max and Hugo went out to fetch fresh rolls and bread. The rolls were still warm when they got home! Max also picked up two Laugenstangen, which are soft pretzel rolls, my favorite multi-seed Vollkornbrot, poppyseed-spangled Hörnchen, and some sweet rolls.

Then, while Max kept the baby occupied, it was time to set the table. I love this part of having people over – choosing the right tablecloth, folding the napkins just so, then arranging the food so the spread is well-balanced and bountiful. I picked a striped, colorful tablecloth that I bought years ago at a Bellora sample sale in New York and laid my mismatched French plates that I bought one by one when I lived in Paris and spent weekends trawling the flea markets. To fill in the holes on the table, I put out a jar of yellow honey, a dish of soft, sweet butter, bright stems of candy-like tomatoes, a bowl of cut-up melon, egg cups, some Greek olives, mugs for tea and a pitcher of cold water. A little vase of muscari made everything look more spring-like. All that was left, then, was to put the eggs on to boil and to make tea.

German breakfast table

And that's really the most wonderful thing about German breakfasts. There's hardly anything to actually cook. I don't usually think of that as a plus, but on Sundays, when I want to maximize every minute I have with my family, it's actually pretty key.

What do you think, would you ever serve a real German breakfast to your friends?

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102 responses to “A Real German Breakfast”

  1. Luisa Avatar

    Somehow, it’s not the same. I know what you mean!

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  2. Luisa Avatar

    I don’t know! If I ever hear of a good Brötchen recipe, I’ll be sure to share.

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  3. Luisa Avatar

    Sure they would.

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  4. Luisa Avatar

    We always take for granted the things we grow up with, I think. 🙂

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  5. Luisa Avatar

    Well…a late breakfast. Brunch! You could do it! 🙂

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  6. Luisa Avatar

    Come on over!

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  7. Luisa Avatar

    Oh, lovely!!

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  8. cybercita Avatar

    One of my favorite things about visiting friends in Germany is going to the bakery in the morning {a two minute walk} and bringing back a selection of Brezen, croissants, and Krapfen to eat with butter, cheese, and yogurt. So so so so wonderful! And I was once served a soft boiled egg that was so delicious I am still thinking about it ten years later.

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  9. Patricia Sheehan Avatar
    Patricia Sheehan

    Luisa,
    Reminds me of the breakfasts I had every day while visiting Vienna and Munich (and places in between). What a wonderful time it was and hope to revisit soon. So happy I found your book on David’s blog. I hope I can find a bakery in San Francisco with the breads you mention!

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  10. Sherri Avatar
    Sherri

    Luisa,
    Your table looks so welcoming. I remember when I visited Germany on a language trip in school I was enthralled with the German breakfast. What I remember most was the flavor of the butter. Coming from the States I had never tasted such sweet and delicious butter before. I could eat liverwurst, fresh bread and butter every day.

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  11. Amelia Avatar
    Amelia

    Wow, now I feel really really homesick. ‘Frühstück mit Oma und Opa’ was a veritable feast every morning when I visited them as a child. We would have radishes with salt as well, and plenty of coffee and tea for us poor half german English people. German breakfast are the best in the world.

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  12. Alexia Avatar

    I have family in Austria, and when I visited as a teenager, meine Tante would go out every morning and buy me got rolls. I am recreating this spread this weekend! Hooray for the German Breakfast!

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  13. Grace Kathryn Avatar

    This is so cool!!! Thanks for sharing – my relatives were from Germany and it’s really cool for me to hear about German traditions..the rolls and bread look so delicious!

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  14. Nina Avatar
    Nina

    Selbstgemacht Marmeladen, Quark, Hönig, und frischen Semmeln (Brötchen) sind am besten für jeder Frühstück 🙂
    Reading this, I’m home again.

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  15. Tey Cindy Avatar

    i went to Germany early this year & was shocked at first to see the same ‘groaning’ table every morning on my host’s dining table. in our country, it is rice & chili (called Nasi Lemak), or even fried noodles (Mee Goreng). took me a while to realize how MUCH i miss going out to buy hot buns & spreading all sorts of honey, jams, liverwurst, etc, etc… on, inside, or over them.
    then i see the similar-looking spread on this blog & thought: NOW i can make my own COMPLETE German breakfast spread, just like yours! with Nutella too, of course. again, thanks for the inspiration! 😀

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  16. Bethany Avatar
    Bethany

    Man, does this make me miss German breakfasts. You just forgot the coffee, and then it would be perfect. 😉 And Nutella. For the children of course (cough, cough).

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  17. Sasha Avatar

    What about hard-boiled eggs? To me, they are the only thing missing from your picturesque spread. I never quite fancied them myself (I’ve always been into a soft yolk) until I moved to Germany and slowly fell for them over many breakfasts.

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  18. Brenda Avatar

    What a beautiful and appetizing table! Thank you for this post. I have never eaten a German breakfast, but it very much appealed to me. I do not have much of a sweet tooth, so I like the lean toward the savory. Perhaps my tastes are such because my ancestry is about half German.

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  19. Lora Avatar

    7 members of my German (husband’s side) family just left from visiting us in NYC. I was exhausted after breakfast just putting everything out and cleaning up but the good part was all those forgotten jams, jellies, spreads in my fridge and cabinet were cleaned out pronto!

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  20. Tracey Avatar

    Now this is a spread! I dated a German guy for several years, therefore spending a lot of time there, particularly Bayern. Liverwurst is my fave paired with a warm Laugenbrötchen, oh yum!

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  21. michelle loh Avatar

    In Singapore we dont usually eat meat and cheeses for breakfast but when we were in Germany on holiday, it was always a great feast and it can last us till dinner. Thanks for reminding us of good times!

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  22. Stephanie Avatar

    Very fresh and pretty! I loved German (and Dutch) breakfasts when I was backpacking around Europe, a long time ago (thanks for refreshing my memory of that wonderful adventure, Luisa). One hostel, on a hill above the Rhein, provided large jugs of warm black tea, not too strong, on each table at breakfast. It was delicious. I drank it as was (with none of my usual milk) and filled up my water bottle for the day with tea too. So refreshing, and I’ve never seen the like before or since!

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  23. Luisa Avatar

    I wrote about them in the 7th paragraph! Breakfast isn’t complete without them (though I’m a soft-yolk girl myself).

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  24. Kimberley Avatar

    I love this. It makes me want to visit my family in Germany right away. I have the best memories of breakfast there when I was a kid – including an introduction to Nutella that my father wasn’t too fond of at the breakfast table – and I never even knew their breakfasts were the stuff of legend.

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  25. Familiego.wordpress.com Avatar

    Oh wow, what a lovely post. I am German, but so far have been completely unaware that there is anything special about a German breakfast! However, when I saw the photos it all did look typical German indeed. It’s great to see little everyday things (which are often taken for granted when you’ve grown up with them) from a different point of view. I also enjoyed the comments very much. Yay, the weekend breakfast that I cherish so much is appreciated even all the way over on the other side of the pond! 🙂
    When I spent some time in the US I loved waffles with maple syrup in the mornings. And pancakes, and bagels…
    I guess breakfast is always special when you’ve got time to enjoy it. Thank you so much for this post 🙂
    anne

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  26. freshfromevaskitchen@gmail.com Avatar

    Bei uns in Chicago gibt es eine Frühstücksgruppe, die sich einmal in der Woche zum guten deutschen Frühstück trifft. Vielen Dank für den schoenen Artikel.

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  27. Jack N. Mohr Avatar
    Jack N. Mohr

    As a German living in Santa Barbara for16 years now I fully understand and occasionally long for such breakfasts with friends… did some here, but never found the right kind of rolls. The ones in the picture look pretty much as those back home, where did you find those (same for Laugenstangen, Mohnbrötchen, Sesambrötchen, Kuchen- oder Rosinenbrötchen, and as we also had in Berlin, Knüppel and Splitterbrötchen)?

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  28. Luisa Avatar

    Just at the bakery down the street… 😉

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  29. Carola Avatar

    Thank you! ✿

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  30. KiezkickerDe Avatar

    Here, too. As a guy from northern Germany (Hamburg) I still miss some “Franzbrötchen” – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franzbr%C3%B6tchen – on the photos above, but I could second that the photos will look quite common to me discribing what a german Frühstück (spec. on weekends) mean to me. :o)
    But a Franzbrötchen need to be served and topped with some butter need to be served in northern germany, too damit es ein “richtiges Frühstück” ist. 🙂

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  31. KKRvF Avatar
    KKRvF

    I have the same problem as Jack, above. We do out best to occasionally put on a German Fruehstuck but I can never really find the authentic German Broetchen. (and it’s quite expensive to do in Canada! – but so worth it)

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  32. Andrea Avatar
    Andrea

    It’s very similar to our weekend breakfasts here in Norway. I moved to Norway 2 years ago and loved this concept when my husband started doing this on weekends. And like you said, there is no cooking involved! Maybe except a perfectly soft boiled egg and water for the tea.
    I was wondering if you could name the breads in the bread basket? I had a roll one day with cheese and ham in Frankfurt airport and while it was the simplest roll, it tasted heavenly and I put it down to the bread! It’s the roll on the left of the picture with the white dots on it – can you tell me the name so I can find a recipe for it?
    Many thanks again for sharing! Thank goodness it’s Saturday tomorrow!

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  33. Isabelle Avatar

    I’m German and was sceptical, when I read your title “A real German breakfast” – but it really is how you described it 😉 We celebrate the breakfast, especially at the weekend. And I just love salmon for breakfast, different jams… and I’m always excited how strangers love the German bread, when I lived in Budapest for the last six weeks, I really missed it.
    Love, Isabelle

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  34. g Avatar
    g

    Hm, “Ich bin ein Frühstücker!”, too. Love’em even during the week, I take my sweet time for a nice ( only the slightest stripped) version of it, if I overslept, bummer, but I wont rush my breakie unless it is a question of life or death…;b.
    To prevent the weight and still enjoy/ taste everything (veggies and poached egg, great dark rye roll with flaxseed oil, quark and metwurst, or/and cheeses or/and salami, ham, avocado, tomato, cucumber or homemade jam on cheese, honey on quark, carrot, grapefruit, yoghurt, strawberries with cacao;b)…I mastered the art of cutting my bread rolls in quarters and invented some kind of food jenga-ing;b…works great.
    Just had London friends over, who actually preferred more frühstück for dinner over another restaurant and went on to the market on their last day to take as much as possible back with them to resemble it a few times back home;b.
    But nevermind, yes, I do like me a great veggie fry up when over in London as well, especially after a night out soon :D…freu!xg

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  35. g Avatar
    g

    …forgot the lachs with sweet mustard;b

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  36. Sabine Avatar

    I’m from Germany and I didn’t know that German breakfast is famous! But I can confirm that breakfast is considered the most important meal of the day and it’s my favourite meal, too, at least at the weekends if you have time to enjoy it.

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  37. Shishi Avatar
    Shishi

    Typically Gouda (dutch), Emmentaler (swiss) or German cheese like Tilsiter, Bergkäse, Obatzder or Harzer is served.
    Cheddar is not very popular in Germany and typically not served for breakfast.

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  38. Anna Avatar

    It’s actually very similar to Scandinavian breakfast (as someone already pointed out), something I certainly miss myself living abroad.

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  39. Andrea Avatar
    Andrea

    Thank you for the help! Can’t wait to make it now for a weekend breakfast. 😀

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  40. Orchid Grey Avatar

    oh memories! Growing up, we had German breakfasts on the morning of every holiday and birthday. My favorite was dipping a liverwurst covered piece of pumpernickel into a soft boiled egg- ah the best!

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  41. Cri Avatar
    Cri

    What about Nutella and Muesli?!

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  42. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    Haha you did forget Nutella! One of the saddest things about the US is the lack of good bread, though I feel like stores like Whole Foods, Wegmans etc. are getting it more and more! I can even buy pretzel rolls at my local Wegmans nowadays! I can do PB&J on pepperidge farm, but any kind of sandwich is the worse for lack of good bread. My parents are both German and this reminds me of every time I go back and stay with family. Also, we added cornichons and radishes and omitted the sweet stuff for dinner when I was a kid, before my parents switched the big meal of the day for dinner because we were becoming more American.

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  43. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    Oh! And the last time I went to Heidelberg I had to buy egg cups! They just don’t do soft-boiled eggs here!

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  44. marketa Avatar

    when i was in austria it was exactly the same breakfast:)

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  45. Sonja Königsberg Avatar

    Hehe, I´m German and I live in Hamburg which is in the North. Guess what I bought today after work for tomorrow morning :-): bread, eggs, sausage, lots of cheese, strawberry marmelade, tomatos, fruits and orange juice!
    Your German breakfast is perfect, I have just one little thing to add: Nutella 🙂 It´s a must.

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  46. Sonja Königsberg Avatar

    Even in Berlin Splitterbrötchen are hard to find today. These bakery chains that pop up on every corner just don´t sell them anymore. How sad is that?

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  47. Emily Avatar

    German breakfasts always remind me of summers in Europe.
    Truly, nothing beats a good German (I had mine in Czech Republic) breakfast! Bring on the meat AND Muller yoghurt!

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  48. Crazy Dutch Foodie Avatar

    It looks a lot like our Dutch (weekend) breakfast!

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  49. belinda Avatar
    belinda

    I grew up in Germany and miss it so much! The bread! On Saturdays, me and my Dad would go walk to the metzger (butcher) and bakerei and get all the goodies. I always got free goodies because I spoke such good German. Sundays Dad would do a southern country breakfast. My german relatives loved it, me and Dad always loved Saturday! He’s gone now and I haven’t been back in 20 years. My mother is going back the visit soon tho. Last time she actually smuggled bread back the Texas! German food and memories are wunderbar!i

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