Daetscher
Submitted by JudyH
Daetscher is a Franconian German potato flatbread made with yeast dough enriched with ground boiled potatoes and schmaltz, rolled thin, and topped with sour cream, butter, salt, and caraway seeds.
YIELD
2 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minDaetscher is a rustic Franconian flatbread from northern Bavaria. A yeast dough enriched with ground boiled potatoes and schmaltz (rendered lard or butter) gets rolled into thin, plate-sized rounds, spread with sour cream and butter, sprinkled with salt and caraway seeds, and baked at high heat until golden and blistered.
The potato makes this dough different from regular bread dough. Ground boiled potatoes add moisture and starch that create a softer, more pliable flatbread with a slight chew that wheat flour alone can’t produce. It’s the same technique that makes potato bread so tender.
Schmaltz (traditionally lard, but butter works) enriches the dough and gives it a savory, almost pastry-like quality. The combination of potato starch and fat means the rolled-out rounds bake into something between a pizza crust and a thick crepe.
The sour cream and caraway seed topping is quintessentially Franconian. Spread thin over the dough before baking, the sour cream bakes into tangy, slightly charred patches while the caraway seeds toast and release their warm, anise-like aroma.
Chef Tips
- Grind the boiled potatoes fine. Lumpy potatoes create uneven spots in the rolled dough.
- Roll the dough thin. This is a flatbread, not a pizza. Thick rounds don’t crisp properly.
- Bake at high heat until truly golden brown and blistered. Pale daetscher tastes doughy.
- Serve immediately with Franconian wine or a dark beer, as tradition demands.
Variations
- Onion topped: Scatter thinly sliced raw onions over the sour cream before baking for a Franconian onion flatbread.
- Bacon daetscher: Press small pieces of crispy bacon into the sour cream topping before baking.
- Herb version: Add chopped fresh chives or dill to the sour cream before spreading.
Ingredients
Directions
Crumble the yeast and mix with the luke warm milk and a little flour to form a preliminary dough.
Let it rest for 30 minutes.
In the meantime, grind the potatoes.
Combine with the preliminary dough, the schmaltz and the rest of the flour.
Roll out this dough to thin, plate sized rounds.
Place on a greased baking sheet, spread butter and sour cream on top, sprinkle with salt and caraway seeds.
Bake at 437 degrees F (225C) until golden brown.
Serve at once. Is usually accompanied by a good Franconian wine or dark beer.
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