Sauerfleisch (Boeuf a la Mode)
Submitted by terrio
Sauerfleisch, a German sauerbraten-style pot roast where beef marinates two days in a tangy brine, then braises tender in a dark, sweet-sour roux gravy. Serve with potato or bread dumplings.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
2 daysSauerfleisch is German comfort cooking at its most traditional, close kin to sauerbraten and the French beef braise boeuf a la mode. The defining step is patience: the meat marinates a full two days in a tangy, spiced brine, which both tenderizes it and infuses the signature sour depth.
After the long soak, the beef braises low and slow right in that marinade until fork-tender, an hour and a half to two.
The gravy is where German cooking shows its hand. A dark roux of fat and flour is cooked until deeply browned, then loosened with the hot marinade into a rich, glossy sauce and balanced with a touch of sugar and lemon for that classic sweet-sour profile.
Slicing the meat and letting it steep briefly in the gravy before serving lets it soak up the sauce. Serve it the German way, with potato or bread dumplings to catch every drop.
Kitchen Tips
- Don’t shortcut the marinade. Two days is what gives sauerfleisch its tenderness and sour character.
- Cook the roux until genuinely dark for the deepest flavor, but watch it closely so it doesn’t burn.
- Balance the gravy with sugar and lemon at the end, tasting until the sweet-sour edge is right.
- Let the sliced meat rest in the gravy a few minutes before serving so it drinks in the sauce.
Variations
- Use a tough braising cut like rump or chuck, which turns silky over the long cook.
- Stir gingersnaps into the gravy, a classic sauerbraten trick, to thicken and sweeten it.
- Serve with braised red cabbage alongside the dumplings for a full German plate.
Ingredients
Directions
Prepare the marinade.
Soak the meat in it for 2 days.
Then remove the meat from the marinade and again bring the marinade to a boil.
Add the meat again and cook for 1½ to 2 hours.
Meanwhile, in a large pot, prepare a dark roux of the fat and flour.
Add the chopped onion.
Gradually add enough hot marinade to obtain a thick gravy.
Season to taste with salt, a bit of sugar, and lemon. Let the cooked, sliced meat briefly steep in the gravy before serving.
Serve with potato dumplings or bread dumplings.
Comments
This sounds a lot like my grandmother's recipe. What is in your marinade?