Memories of Sunday lunch, when I was a child living in the North-east of England, include large plates piled high with roasted meat, potatoes (maybe even two types), two or three other vegetables and Yorkshire puddings all moistened with rich dark gravy.  I enjoyed it a lot but as I’ve grown older, even though my stomach has grown bigger, my preference these days is for more proportionate plates of food.  Don’t get me wrong I can still work my way through a large portion of stew and dumplings, sausages and mash or very large fish and chips!  But, not every day.

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The problem with the food on my recent trip to Bavaria was two-fold.  On the one hand the portions were generally enormous and on the other, eating out each evening, it was almost impossible to find a satisfactory lighter dish to break up the monotony of a very large pieces of meat accompanied by two very large bread dumplings, a pile of boiled potatoes and a mountain of sauerkraut.

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I couldn’t fault the hospitality in the restaurants I used in Garmisch-Partenkirchen and Munich and the warm feel of them was comforting in a deeply homely way, but after the first meal I really felt as though I was set-up for the next 48 hours  – sleep in this state came easily, followed soon afterwards by indigestion!

Some relative respite was found by substituting sausage and chips for meat, dumplings and potatoes.  I recall one particular dish in Munich which consisted of a range of different sausages, (including bratwurst, blutwurst and bockwurst) each of which was delicious (and frankly a meal in itself).  I didn’t get to try the (in)famous Currywurst, which I believe to be a German sausage smothered in a tomato and curry sauce – next time.

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To be fair, I know little of the cuisine of the rest of Germany, except for having once eaten at a restaurant in Berlin (Margaux) where one tiny element of dish has remained in my memory for what must be at least 10 years.  It was the intense salty taste of a small cube of jelly made from Badoit mineral water – the antithesis of the Bavarian carb overload.

I took no pictures of the food in Bavaria as I was too occupied with the herculean task of trying to clear my plate but trying to find some examples of these gargantuan dishes on -line as I write this is proving difficult  Maybe the German tourist authorities have edited all of the images to make the portion sizes seem smaller and more elegant.

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The Apple Strudel of course was delightful but was impossible for me to eat at the end of a large meal – better with a mug of hot chocolate for a mid morning snack!

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