The new story starts with a gruesome experience. This is what you get served as a 'bretzel au beurre' in the Voiture Restaurant of the SBB (Swiss Rail).
This indefinable pastry comes out of the fridge, is soft and without bite. Above all, the essential feature of a genuine Brezel is missing: The pastry does not have the shape through which the sun shines thrice.
So, who invented the real Brezel? There are various regions and places from Alsace to Tyrol that claim to have been the first to twist the dough in the elegant way.
The Swabian city of Bad Urach forwards the best legend about the original Brezel reported by the Badische Zeitung:
A baker named Frieder had fallen out of favor with Count Eberhard* im Bart. Frieder had committed a crime and was to be executed. The count gave him one last chance, coupled with a nearly impossible task: he was to shape a loaf of bread through which the sun would shine thrice.
*Earlier times glorified Eberhard as a benevolent sovereign, while modern historical research describes him as an anti-Semite.
The baker was lost. He ran back and forth in his bakery, while his wife stood in front of him with her arms crossed. That was the saving thought; the baker skillfully twisted the thin dough until it had the shape of today's Brezel. Count Eberhard, who resided in Urach at the time, was delighted when his subject presented him with the first Brezel. It has hardly changed since then - a perfect classic.
Still, there are regional differences in the form of the Brezel.
Today, the easier-to-form Bavarian
Brezn has pushed the Swabian Brezel out of the market, as
a 2023 blog confirmed.
There is a second place in Swabia that claims to be the originator of the
Brezel. Indeed, the coat of arms of Altenriet shows two Bavarian (!) Brezn
and a dachshund. To back up their claim, the Altenrieter hold an annual
Brezelmarkt on Palm Sunday.
The former mayor of Stuttgart, Manfred Rommel*, once wrote the following conciliatory-sounding verses about the baked wonder:
*Son of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, known as the Desert Fox.
Does Rummel support the Altenrieter in their claim to the primogeniture? In no way, for the last line of his quatrain is sneaky: In Swabian German, a Dackel is a mentally challenged person.
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The former mayor of Stuttgart, Manfred Rommel*, once wrote the following conciliatory-sounding verses about the baked wonder:
*Son of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, known as the Desert Fox.
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The wisdom of the Swabians is no mystery; The solution is called the lye pretzel. It illuminates with the torch of wisdom, The mind of the greatest dachshund. |
Des Schwaben Klugheit ist kein Rätsel. Die Lösung heißt die Laugenbrezel. Sie erleuchtet mit der Weisheit Fackel, Den Verstand vom größten Dackel. |
Does Rummel support the Altenrieter in their claim to the primogeniture? In no way, for the last line of his quatrain is sneaky: In Swabian German, a Dackel is a mentally challenged person.
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