26 German-Inspired Recipes To Help You Celebrate Oktoberfest (2024)

26 German-Inspired Recipes To Help You Celebrate Oktoberfest (1)

We don't need much convincing to grab a frosty mug of

beer and start celebrating Oktoberfest. And with all these German-inspired recipes, like sausages and sauerkraut, pretzels, chicken schnitzel, and spaetzle, we could celebrate it all year long. Try any (or all!) of these recipes, and they'll have your tastebuds saying, "Jawohl!"

It just wouldn't be an Oktoberfest feast without the perfect beers to pair with your meal. But how to choose? Luckily, we've ranked all the best beers so you can get to cooking. No surprise, beer is one of our top secret weapons for making all our German faves too, like in our grilled beer brats, pretzel ring beer cheese, beer-braised cabbage, and skillet beer cheese.

German food isn't just about beer cheese and pretzels, we promise. Lighten things up by making our sweet and sour red cabbage, cucumber salad, and herb roasted potatoes. Germany is also well-known for their incredible sweets that make for amazing all-year treats, like German apple cake, spritz cookies, apple strudel, and pfeffernüsse. If you've never tried sweet noodle kugel before, make the sweet casserole ASAP. It will (literally) sweeten up any occasion.

On the hunt for more fall-inspired recipes? Toast to the season with our favorite fall co*cktails before trying all of our favorite pumpkin recipes, apple recipes, best fall dinners, and fall desserts (for balance). And if you've got a serious beer-lover in your life, treat them to one of our top favorite beer gifts or beer subscriptions.

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1

Sausages and Sauerkraut

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Some things go perfectly together. Peanut butter and jelly. Bacon and eggs. Sausages and sauerkraut. (Seriously!) In this cozy one-pot dinner, you'll nestle beer-braised bratwurst and tender baby potatoes into sauerkraut and finish the dish with fresh herbs and spicy mustard. (If you've never beer-braised anything before, you're sure to love it. Try this technique with chicken nachos or cabbage.)

Get the Sausages and Sauerkraut recipe.

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2

Homemade Soft Pretzels

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Homemade soft pretzels are better than any mall pretzel you can find. Soft and pillowy, they're a dream for dipping in mustard or nacho cheese. You could even skip the pretzel salt and toss them in a little cinnamon sugar for a sweet treat!

Get the Homemade Soft Pretzels recipe.

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3

Sweet & Sour Braised Red Cabbage

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One of our favorite ways to prepare cabbage is to braise it. The best part about braising? You can impart a TON of flavor into your cabbage. We love pairing this sweet and sour cabbage alongside creamy mashed potatoes and a pork chop.

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4

Chicken Schnitzel

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In its most traditional form, schnitzel is made with veal, but this chicken version is common throughout Germany and is just as tasty. The key to good schnitzel is pounding the chicken to ensure that the meat is well tenderized and there are no thick and thin parts to ensure even cooking. Serve the finished schnitzel with some roast potatoes or german potato salad and tons of freshly squeeze lemon.

Get the Chicken Schnitzel recipe.

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5

Homemade Bacon Spaetzle

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Spaetzle is a traditional German pasta-like dumpling made eggs, and it's great as a side or a full meal. The joy of spaetzle lies in their irregular shapes and sizes, so have fun with it. The one thing that's mandatory: Serve spaetzle with a frosty beer.

Get the Homemade Bacon Spaetzle recipe.

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6

Pretzel Ring Beer Cheese Dip

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Looking for an amazing dip sure to start your Oktoberfest party off right? Look no further. This beer cheese dip is calling your name. We use refrigerated biscuit dough for our pretzel ring, but feel free to use our homemade pretzel recipe for the full experience!

Get the Pretzel Ring Beer Cheese Dip recipe.

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7

Potato Kugel

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Think of this savory variety of a sweet noodle kugel as a giant latke. Grated onion and potato are combined to create a crispy, slightly sweet dish that's great on its own, but even better with a dollop of sour cream and/or applesauce.

Get the Potato Kugel recipe.

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8

German Apple Cake

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The secret to this gorgeous apple cake? After you peel and quarter the apples, you cut them hasselback-style (yep, just like in these cheesy garlic butter potatoes). That way, you don't have to worry about stacking the slices, and they stay together perfectly while baking! Dust this with powdered sugar and served with a dollop of freshly whipped cream, or a scoop of vanilla ice cream. 😉

Get the German Apple Cake recipe.

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9

Hot German Potato Salad

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Unlike the chilled, creamy, mayo-dressed picnic staple we're familiar with, German potato salad is served warm, or even hot, with a bacon vinaigrette. I repeat, bacon vinaigrette. If you've never made a dressing with bacon fat, you're in for a treat. The best part of this is that there's no need to wait for the potatoes to get to room temperature before tossing everything together and heaping it on your plate.

Get the Hot German Potato Salad recipe.

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10

Skillet Beer Cheese

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One of our top hall of famers, this dip will get any campfire party started. The pinch of cayenne really adds that special something to this melty, creamy beer cheese. This is best served with toasted baguette, good company, and a cold beer.

Get the Skillet Beer Cheese recipe.

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11

Beer Braised Cabbage

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Don’t overlook the humble cabbage! This straight cabbage braise (without meat!) is the perfect way to experience cabbage in all its vegetal glory.

Get the Beer Braised Cabbage recipe.

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12

Pork Schnitzel

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There’s not much that rivals a thinly pounded piece of meat, breaded and fried until perfectly golden brown. This recipe for pork schnitzel is just that. Pounding the meat until you have a thin cutlet creates a super tender bite. If you have access to a butcher, you can also ask them to do this for you, getting you one step closer to golden brown perfection when you get home.

Get the Pork Schnitzel recipe.

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13

German Chocolate Cake

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German chocolate cake is a sweet chocolate cake that is filled and frosted with rich, sticky coconut, and pecan filling. Despite its name, the cake isn't German at all. In fact, it's an American creation. The cake was originally created using a specific type of chocolate that a chocolatier named Samuel German had created: German chocolate. We call for the use of German chocolate in this recipe (you can find it in most supermarkets), but any chocolate around 48% cocoa will work.

Get the German Chocolate Cake recipe.

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14

Grilled Beer Brats

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It takes almost zero cooking skills to get perfectly charred brats topped with flavor-packed caramelized onions and peppers. First, the brats get burnished on the grill, then they finish off in a simmering beer bath alongside the veg. Use whatever beer you like to drink, but not IPAs (India Pale Ales), which are brewed to be hoppy (i.e., bitter).

Get the Grilled Beer Brats recipe.

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15

Bourbon-Vanilla Spritz Cookies

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Very similar to sugar cookies, spritz cookies are soft and buttery, and perfect for decorating. They come from the German word "spritzen", which means to squirt—a nod to the process of making these since you load these into a cookie press!

Get the Bourbon-Vanilla Spritz Cookies recipe.

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16

Pork & Sauerkraut

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Pork and sauerkraut is traditionally eaten on New Year's Eve as a good luck tradition (may we suggest alongside some black-eyed peas?!), but don't let that not inspire you to eat it throughout the year, too.

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17

Rye Bread

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While you won’t need a stand mixer to make this caraway- and flax-studded rye bread, you will need a bit of patience. There’s not a lot of kneading required for it, so it can be a relaxing baking project for when you’ve got a loose and flexible schedule. And worry not, there’s no need to cultivate a sourdough starter for this bread, because instant yeast will do the trick just fine.

Get the Rye Bread recipe.

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18

Classic Latkes

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Why limit these latkes to just the holiday season? We love topping these with sour cream and smoked salmon for an easy weeknight meal. You also can never beat serving these with homemade applesauce for the prime latke experience.

Get the Classic Latkes recipe.

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19

Cucumber Salad

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This is one of those classic summer salads that we weren't sure about until we took a bite for ourselves. Now we're hooked on the cucumber slices in a lemon juice, Greek yogurt, and dill dressing. Your BBQ guests will thank you.

Get the Cucumber Salad recipe.

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20

Apple Strudel

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Strudel is a layered pastry with all types of gooey fillings. The most popular is apple, and this one is made even more delicious with the addition with cinnamon, lemon zest, and raisins.

Get the Apple Strudel recipe.

26 German-Inspired Recipes To Help You Celebrate Oktoberfest (2024)

FAQs

What are the traditions of Oktoberfest in Germany? ›

Besides the food and beer, the festival is full of traditional Bavarian music, open-air performances, a grand entry and parades, vendor tents, carnival rides, a shooting competition, and traditional German outfits. The two-week fair wraps up in dramatic fashion with a boisterous brass band and a gun salute.

How does Oktoberfest relate to food celebrations? ›

With roots in Germany, the annual celebration calls to mind beer steins, lederhosen, and pretzels, but with a history that goes back more than 200 years, the story of Oktoberfest is deeper than that stereotypical image. Oktoberfest now inspires celebrations heavy on the food and beer-drinking all over the world.

What is the traditional food for Oktoberfest? ›

Here are a few must-try foods that make it onto the Oktoberfest food menu.
  • Pork Shank (Schweinshaxe) ...
  • Knödel. ...
  • Kartoffelpuffer (Potato Panckaes) ...
  • Bratwurst. ...
  • Käsespätzle (German Cheese Spaetzle) ...
  • Kasbrettl. ...
  • Wiesnhendl or Halbes Hendl (Roast Chicken) ...
  • Bretzeln (pretzels)
Sep 11, 2023

What kind of food is at Oktoberfest? ›

Popular cold dishes are headcheese (Presssack), sausages, salted radish (Radi), pickles (Essiggurken), sausage salad (Wurstsalat), cold pork roast, and spread cheese (Obazda/Obatzter). All tents offer mixed platters of cold dishes (Brotzeitbrettl). Some of them even include chicken or duck.

What is the most important thing on Oktoberfest? ›

Beer Tents

One of the most important things about Oktoberfest are the tents (which are more like permanent looking warehouses than tents). There are fourteen of them scattered around the fair grounds, mostly along the main avenue. Every tent has a different personality.

What are the top 5 German dishes? ›

The foreign picture is correct when it comes to these German (or Austrian) dishes:
  • Schnitzel. Very popular when made from pork. ...
  • Gulasch. A favourite of home-cooking.
  • Bratwurst. Mostly eaten as a snack from street stands etc., but also on grill parties.
  • Sauerbraten. ...
  • Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte (Black Forest cake).
Feb 22, 2024

What is the most famous German dish? ›

These German recipes celebrate some of the dishes Germany is most known for: crispy fried schnitzel, robust sausages, chewy pretzels, and all manner of mustard-tinged delights. We've even included a handful of items on the sweeter side, too, like a tangy apricot kuchen and a berry-studded German pancake. Guten appetit!

What is German stomach dish? ›

Saumagen ([zaʊ̯ˈmaːɡŋ̩], "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.

What food do Germans eat at Oktoberfest? ›

Here are 10 must-try German dishes for Oktoberfest (or anytime you are in Munich).
  • 01 of 10. Weisswurst. GettyImages / Westend61. ...
  • 02 of 10. Schweinshaxe. Bernt Rostad. ...
  • 03 of 10. Brezen. GettyImages / Maria Fuchs. ...
  • 04 of 10. Spätzle. ...
  • 05 of 10. Hendl. ...
  • 06 of 10. Fischbrötchen. ...
  • 07 of 10. Steckerlfisch. ...
  • 08 of 10. Obatzda.
Aug 4, 2019

What is the snack food for Oktoberfest? ›

The staples of most of a Bavarian charcuterie board are smoked and cured meats, sausages, cheese, radish, grapes, and onions. Ingredients that are simple but of great quality. The so called "Bayerische Brotzeit" is served with pretzels or bread and washed down with a refreshing mug of Oktoberfest beer.

What do you drink at Oktoberfest? ›

What to drink? Beer, of course. All the beer that is served at the Oktoberfest comes from famous Munich breweries, such as Paulaner and Augustiner. If you don't like one of Germany's favorite beverages, you can also get all kinds of other drinks, including non-alcoholic beverages, wine and cider.

What food is usually served at Oktoberfest? ›

From pretzels as big as your head to sizzling sausages and heavenly pastries, Oktoberfest is a foodie's paradise. From delicious deep-fried dishes like Kartoffelpuffer or slow-roasted Schweinshaxe (pork shanks) to refreshing beers like Hofbräu Maibock, it's hard to go wrong at this traditional food at Oktoberfest.

What kind of food do you have at Oktoberfest? ›

The classics below are available in almost every tent.
  • Roast chicken (Halbes Hendl) This is the classic Oktoberfest meal: half of a chicken spit-roast on an open flame. ...
  • Bratwurst. ...
  • Pretzel (Brezn) ...
  • Sweet dumpling (Dampfnudel) ...
  • Candied almonds (gebrannte Mandeln) ...
  • Kaiserschmarrn. ...
  • Leberkas. ...
  • Gingerbread heart (Lebkuchenherz)

What is the famous food at Oktoberfest? ›

Brezen (pretzels)

You can't have Oktoberfest without pretzels. Large and soft, they're the perfect accompaniment to beer. Try making your own with this über-authentic recipe for German-style pretzels.

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