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German sausages

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Vienna sausage
type of sausage
currywurst
'''''' () is a fast food dish of German origin consisting of sausage (usually pork) with curry ketchup. It was invented in 1949 by Herta Heuwer, who began selling it at a food stand in West Berlin. The Deutsches Currywurst Museum estimated that 800 million currywursts are eaten every year in Germany, with 70 million in Berlin alone.
Bratwurst
Bratwurst () is a type of German sausage made from pork or, less commonly, beef, veal, or any combination of beef, veal, and pork. The name is derived from the Old High German , from , finely chopped meat, and , sausage, although in modern German it is often associated with the verb , to pan fry or roast.
Weisswurst
right|thumb|Traditional -meal, served with sweet mustard () and a soft pretzel thumb| is brought to the table in a large bowl together with the cooking water. '''''' (, literally 'white sausage'; ; plural ) is a traditional Bavarian sausage made from minced veal and pork fatback. It is usually flavored with parsley, lemon, mace, onions, ginger and cardamom, although there are some variations. Then the mixture is stuffed into pork casings and separated into individual sausages measuring about in length and in diameter.
Frankfurter Würstchen
sausage specialty from Frankfurt, Hesse
Cervelat
thumb|Cervelat cut in pieces typically used for Wurstsalat thumb|Cervelas ''à l'alsacienne'' with cheese and bacon Cervelat, also cervelas, servelat or zervelat, is a sausage produced in Switzerland, France (especially Alsace and Lyon), Belgium, the Netherlands and parts of Germany. The recipe and preparation of the sausage vary regionally.
bockwurst
thumb|230px|Bockwurst
kaszanka
Kaszanka is a traditional blood sausage in Central and Eastern European cuisine. It is made of a mixture of pig's blood, pork offal (commonly liver), and buckwheat (kasha) or barley stuffed in a pig intestine. It is usually flavored with onion, black pepper, and marjoram.
debrecener
thumb|Debrecener sausages in a plate thumb|Debreceni (indicated by green arrows) atop a wood platter (festival of meat) at a Cuisine of Hungary|Hungarian restaurant A debrecener (, , ) is a pork sausage of uniform fine texture and reddish-orange colour, named after the Hungarian city of Debrecen. The sausages are heavily spiced with paprika and other seasonings, like garlic, pepper and marjoram. Usually they contain tiny pieces of pork fat as well. They are usually unsmoked or lightly smoked, and sold in pairs joined at one end. Traditional cooking technique calls for the Debreceni to be tran
liverwurst
right|thumb|Slices of liverwurst right|thumb|Liverwurst, boiled and Smoking (cooking)|smoked Liverwurst, ', or liver sausage' is a kind of sausage made from liver. It is eaten throughout Europe, particularly Northern Germany, as well as North and South America, notably amongst the large German diaspora in Argentina and Chile.
Pinkel
thumb|Sliced pinkel thumb|Grünkohl with (sweet) [[roast potatoes, Pinkel, Kochwurst, Kassler, and bacon]] Pinkel is a smoked Kaszanka (), which is a type of sausage. It is eaten mainly in northwest Germany, especially the region around Oldenburg, Bremen and Osnabrück as well as in East Frisia and Friesland.
Mettwurst
Mettwurst () is a strongly flavored German sausage made from raw minced pork preserved by curing and smoking, often with garlic. The southern German variety is soft and similar to Teewurst. Braunschweiger Mettwurst is partially smoked but still soft and spreadable, while other northern German varieties such as Holsteiner are harder and more akin to salami, due to longer duration of smoking.
Teewurst
Saumagen
thumb|right|Pfälzer Saumagen Saumagen (, "sow's stomach") is a German dish popular in the Palatinate. The dish is similar to a sausage in that it consists of a stuffed casing; however, the stomach itself is integral to the dish. The stomach is not as thin as a typical sausage casing (intestines or artificial casing) but rather is meat-like, being a strong muscular organ. When the dish is finished by being pan-fried or roasted in the oven, it becomes crisp.
Brühwurst
Brühwurst ("scalded sausage" or "parboiled sausage") is the collective name for several types of sausages according to the German classification. They are a cooked sausage that are scalded (parboiled), as opposed to being raw. They are typically prepared from raw meat that is finely chopped, are sometimes smoked, and are typically served hot.
Volkswagen currywurst
currywurst produced by Volkswagen
Ketwurst
The ketwurst is a form of hot dog originated from the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). The word "ketwurst" comes from a combination of Ketchup and Wurst (German for "sausage").
Landjäger
thumb|Different types of Landjäger
Knackwurst
thumb|Knackwurst as typically served as a snack in Hamburg, Germany, on classic German dishware
Bregenwurst
thumb|200px|Bregenwurst Bregenwurst (also Brägenwurst) is a German sausage variety commonly served in parts of Lower Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt.
Gelbwurst
thumb|Sliced Gelbwurst on a bun Gelbwurst, meaning “yellow sausage”, is a traditional sausage and deli meat from Bavaria, Germany.
Bierwurst
thumb|upright|Bierwurst (Bierwurstkugel) thumb|upright|Bierwurst served in Göttingen Bierwurst ( ; ) is a German cooked, smoked Brühwurst sausage originally from Bavaria, with a garlicky flavor and dark red color. It is seasoned with black peppercorns, paprika and mustard seeds for flavor.
Kohlwurst
thumb|230px|left|Lungenwurst in a butcher's offer in Schwerin thumb|260px|Lungenwurst from Schwerin Kohlwurst, Lungenwurst or Lungwurst is a simple, fresh, strongly smoked sausage (Rohwurst) made of lights (lungs), pork and fat, which is mostly eaten cooked with kale (cabbage) dishes, such as Knieperkohl. (The word "Kohl" in German refers not only to kale, but to vegetables in the cabbage family; the sausage does not contain these vegetables but they are commonly served with it.)
Bierschinken
thumb|Bierschinken Bierschinken (in Austria and Switzerland Krakauer) or Schinkenwurst ("ham wurst", literally "ham sausage") is a form of sausage or cold cut particularly common in German-speaking countries.
Wollwurst
thumb|right|Wollwurst in gravy Wollwurst is a speciality similar to Weißwurst made from veal and pork. These sausages are also called "Nackerte", "Geschwollene", "Geschlagene" or "Oberländer" and are usually longer and thinner than Weißwürste.
Jagdwurst
thumb|Jagdwurst from Tyrol Jagdwurst (literally hunting sausage) is a German cooked sausage made with finely ground pork sausage meat and coarse chunks of lean pork or pork belly. Some recipes also include beef. The meat is usually seasoned with salt and flavoured with spices such as green peppercorns, mace, ginger and coriander. North German styles of Jagdwurst often contain mustard seeds, and in the south, pistachio pieces are a common ingredient.
Knipp
thumb|Knipp, raw thumb|Knipp, warm on wholemeal bread thumb|A plate of pan-fried Knipp with apple sauce Knipp (; in the Hanover area: Calenberger Pfannenschlag) is a type of sausage made by mixing meat with grains (Grützwurst) related to Pinkel which comes from the Bremen and Lower Saxon regions of Germany.
Braunschweiger
name for several types of sausages
Möpkenbrot
thumb|Möpkenbrot from Bochum, Germany. The top image is the raw lump product freshly sliced open. The bottom image shows it prepared as a typical dish in a frying pan with onions. Möpkenbrot, also spelled as Möppkenbrot, is a type of cooked German sausage prepared using pork, grain, apples and raisins. Its preparation is similar to that of blood sausage. The main ingredients are bacon, pig masks (consisting of pig's head meat, rinds and skin), pork rind, pork blood, and grated rye or wheat flour. The ingredients are formed into a dough, which is then boiled, after which it is typically sliced
Nürnberger Rostbratwurst
German sausage
Regensburger Wurst
Pork sausages
Frankfurter Rindswurst
sausage
Beutelwurst
A Beutelwurst () is a German blood sausage, which contains more pieces of fat and flour than a normal .
Ahle Wurst
kind of hard pork sausage made in northern Hesse, Germany
Stippgrütze
thumb|The shop version explains the name Wurstebrei. thumb|A slice of Stippgrütze is fried without fat. thumb|Stippgrütze freshly served
Extrawurst
thumb|Smoked Extrawurst
blood tongue
German head cheese with tongue
Weckewerk
thumb|right|Weckewerk as part of a meal Weckewerk is a sausage, native to Northern Hesse, Germany. It is made from cooked brawn and minced meat, veal or sausage, and broth of pork, sometimes from cooked meat, blood and offal. The sausage is stretched with stale bread, explaining the name: "Weck" or "Wegge" is the traditional term for roll in Northern Hesse. It is seasoned with onions, salt, pepper, marjoram, regionally also with caraway, allspice and garlic. The ingredients are ground and mixed. To be consumed within a short time, the mixture is packaged in pig intestines. If longer storage is
Panhas
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