German Food?
A few years ago I was visit Europe and it was stunning. We went to several places but my query is about Berlin Germany. When I go to Berlin Germany I ate something called a "dugen dogner"? I am not sure if I am truism it correctly but it really tasted right.
Can anyone show me the correct way to enunciate this? Also where can I find a recipe to generate my own?
Answers: mactheanimal is right. What you probably mean is a Dürüm D"oner.
What you stipulation to make it yourself is fairly easy to describe; but I doubt whether you can receive the ingredients everywhere. In an original D"oner, you use lamb roasted on a rotating spit, and that's not natural to do when you just want to prepare a small amount. But here's the replacement I found:
Make some spicy pancakes to replace the ingenious Turkish bread, or if you have a recipe to build Indian "pitta" or "naan", use that.
Then fry pieces of chicken in a container, add sliced fresh capsicum (make the pieces the size you like).
While the unbroken thing fries, cut fresh green salad, tomoatoes, and red cabbage into little pieces. Keep that separate from respectively other. Make some halved onion rings, if you close to.
Get some ready-made garlic sauce ready. (You can prepare one yourself, which would be more approaching the original. Use fine-cut garlic, fine-cut cucumber [just a bit] and yoghurt. Thin beside water if crucial, stir heavily, and let rest within the fridge for at least six hours. Take out one hour back use.)
Cut the hot chicken into small stripes with a sharp stick.
Roll your improvised dürüm into a funnel-like shape and start filling from bottom to top first near some of the green salad, and then verbs with the meat, capsicum, red cabbage, onions, make the addition of some sauce in between, and so on. When you start reaching the top, include the tomatoes, and top it with some extra sauce.
Wrap a daily napkin and/or some aluminum foil around the bottom, and start eating from the top.
In the imaginative recipe they don't fry the capsicum with the meat, but I do, as I find it more yummy when a bit fried. I also add some fresh hot chilies, when available. But you can experiment on it.
Hope you close to it.
u ate a doener ... Turkish fast food . Hi nearby again...I emailed a friend of mine who lives in Berlin and say he isn't familiar beside the phonetic pronunciation "dugen dogner". It may be helpful to describe what the food looked resembling as well as how it taste to something that would be familiar here within the U.S. Also if it was a snack, buffet or dessert that way other populace can help answer this put somebody through the mill.
[edit] looks like you rec'd some handy answers so you can look up recipes online.
I also looked-for to add to your previous give somebody the third degree about dog food...that if you are going to switch your chihuahua's food from one brand to another, it must be done bit by bit to avoid any digestive upset (e.g. vomiting, diarrhoea). Here are instructions on how to do this to minimize the digestive distress: http://www.peteducation.com/article.cfm?...
no idea? Do you suggest "Dürüm D"oner"?
It's like D"oner Kebab but near a flat bread (Pide/Pita) to roll up the meat and salat. "Dürüm" (Turkish) means "to roll".
mac donalds as Jane said, you show D"oner ! LECKER!
you can do this easy homemade. catch the paprikachilimix at the mexican stores, add piemento and some cumin to the meat (you can try roastbeef, or even meatballs, only make it tasti), weighty joghurt with garlic, green salat, cabbage (with vinegar, brackish oil-made) uh ja, and some bread as you find simular
Is it possible you mean a d"oner?? (dough-ner)? Turkish food, sandwich-like next to meat, salad, sauce, etc?? "D"oner Kebap"? Love it!!
I've read somewhere that one of the turkish words means roasting and the other rotating.
In Germany within some cities they just vote "D"oner", in others freshly "Kebap".
Or "Dürüm D"oner"? There are some sorts of variety, am not really decipherable with those ;-)
Here's an english page near pics and infos:
http://www.answers.com/topic/d-ner-kebab
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