European italian german pizza recipe?!


Question:

European italian german pizza recipe?

I just got back from germany...and i know it is known for the beer and brats...but the pizza there is AMAZING! it is made by italians of coarse, but how do they make it??! why cant i find anything like it in the states. does anyone know the secret or the recipe? its a great thin crusted pizza, not oily, and the cheese tastes different also.


Answers:
if u eat something in europe,then come home and try to find the ingredients,you probably won't even be able to find the basic ingredients.if you want to make that kind of pizza THAT bad, then i would say to try the internet.your stuff might take a while to get here,though.have fun looking!!!!!

It's probably not made by italians

Look for Dr Oetker pizzas in your local stores, they are made in Germany and exported worldwide

6 To 8Oz Spicy Fresh Bratwurst (See Note)
1 Prepared 12-Inch Thin-Style Pizza Crust
2/3 Cup Prepared Pizza Sauce
3/4 Teaspoon Dried Oregano
1/2 Teaspoon Garlic Salt
1/2 Cup Sauerkraut, Preferably A Sweet German-
Style
4 Ounces Shredded Swiss Cheese (About 1 Cup)
4 Ounces Shredded Mozzarella Cheese (About 1 Cup)
1/3 Cup Canned Sliced Mushrooms
1/3 Cup Chopped Green Peppers
1/3 Cup Chopped Onion
1/3 Cup Sliced Black Olives

Remove casings from bratwurst. Cook in skillet over medium-high heat, breaking
up meat as needed, until cooked through and crumbly.

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

Spread pizza crust with prepared pizza sauce. Sprinkle with oregano and garlic
salt. Distribute sauerkraut evenly over crust. Mix cheese together and
distribute evenly over pizza. Arrange bratwurst over crust and top with
mushrooms, green peppers, onions and olives.

Bake in preheated oven 10-15 minutes, until cheese is melted and crust is
lightly browned around edges. Cut into wedges. Makes 8 slices.

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The only German pizza I know of is Pfaffenglueck ("Parson's Luck") or German Cold Pizza

http://www.recipezaar.com/62336...

By the way did you know that "pizza" is a German(ic) word?

http://www.yourdictionary.com/library/pi...

Pizza is a German(ic) Word!
Martin Maiden
Professor of Romance Languages
Trinity College, Oxford University

Today "pizza" is a common part of the international food vocabulary, but it is only recently that both the name and the food itself have acquired widespread international currency. Only 50 years ago, it was principally associated with southern Italy, especially Naples, and there is evidence that even within Italy the word was not widely understood until at least the 17th century. Yet "pizza" has a historical pedigree of over a thousand years. It is first recorded in a Latin text from the southern Italian town of Gaeta in 997 AD, which claims that a tenant of certain property is to give the bishop of Gaeta 'duodecim pizze', "twelve pizzas", every Christmas day, and another twelve every Easter Sunday.

There has been much debate over the origin of the word itself but evidence suggests a common origin with the English words "(to) bite" and "(a) bit". English belongs, with German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish and Norwegian to the family of Germanic languages, all of which are decended from a remote common ancestor called 'Proto-Germanic'.

Italy in the second half of the first millennium AD was subject to the successive domination of two Germanic-speaking peoples, the Goths, who spoke an Eastern Germanic language, Gothic, now defunct, and the Langobards, whose language belonged to the same High Germanic group as modern German. "Pizza" is thought to derive from a Langobard word similar in form to the Old High German "bizzo" or "pizzo", a word related to English 'bite' and 'bit'. This word originally meant 'mouthful' (what you obtain by 'biting'), then later 'piece of bread' (the typical content of a mouthful)'. From there the sense of a particular type of bread-baked foodstuff is only a short hop. (In modern Italian the word has assumed a further life of its own, used metaphorically to denote the circular reel used on movie projectors and also--by a rather obscure development―a 'boring person', or a 'tedious, long-winded, speech'!)

Some scholars have sensed a connection between "pizza" and "pitta", a type of flat bread widespread in south-eastern Europe. In fact, it is possible that "pitta" reflects a form "petta" or "pitta" encountered in dialects of north-eastern Italy with the same meaning as "pizza", the Gothic equivalent of the Langobard word that gave rise to pizza.

For a more detailed overview of the etymology of pizza, see the article (in Italian) by G. Princi Braccini, in the journal Archivio glottologico italiano, Vol. 64, 1979.




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