NATIONAL KRAUT AND FRANKFURTER WEEK
NATIONAL KRAUT AND FRANKFURTER WEEK
National Kraut and Frankfurter Week reminds us to savor the tasty goodness of sour cabbage and hot dog. This German meal is celebrated every year during the second week in February.
#KrautAndFrankfurterDay
Kraut is a shortened version of the word sauerkraut. Fermentation gives shredded cabbage its sour flavor. During World War I, American sauerkraut producers were afraid of labeling it with a German word, so they called it “Liberty Cabbage.”
Frankfurters are stuffed meat casings in single-serving size, perfected in Frankfurt, Germany. They're often served in buns at beer gardens and topped with kraut.
All about Kraut
You can order a sauerkraut of the week from sauerkraut clubs.
Germany eats the most sauerkraut.
Sauerkraut is packed with nutrients and vitamins, maybe even more than raw vegetables.
Metal ruins sauerkraut. According to the Farmers Almanac: The old jingle “A hand in the pot spoils the lot” is entirely accurate. Keep your hands, and any metal object, out of the crock. Use wooden spoons and mashers and glass or crockery for dipping and weighting.
HOW TO OBSERVE #KrautAndFrankfurterDay
Try some!
If it's not too late, make up a batch of your own sauerkraut to celebrate the week. It takes a least a week of fermentation to get it right, so plan ahead.
Otherwise, buy commercially available sauerkraut at your local grocery store. Then experiment with how much to add to the biggest thickest bratwurst, polish sausage or hot dog you can find. Experiment with different types and brands of sauerkraut to put on a hot dog.
Visit the nearest ethnic German community and sample their authentic versions of sauerkraut and or frankfurters.
Use #KrautAndFrankfurterWeek to share on social media.
NATIONAL KRAUT AND FRANKFURTER DAY HISTORY
The first observance of the week is hard to pin down, but it appears it started in Pennsylvania among the Dutch and German settlers there in the mid-1800s or before.
Merriam Webster Dictionary notes the first known use of “kraut” was in 1855.
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