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A Wiener schnitzel served at a restaurant in Carinthia, Austria A "real" Wiener schnitzel of veal, with potato salad, green salad and a slice of lemon, served at an Austrian restaurant. The designation Wiener Schnitzel first appeared in the 19th century, with the first known mention in a cookbook from 1831. [4]
Wienerschnitzel is an American fast food chain that specializes in hot dogs and other food products. The brand was founded in 1961 by former Taco Bell employee John Galardi and originally named Der Wienerschnitzel. Despite the name, the company does not ordinarily sell Wiener schnitzel, doing so once as a promotion. [2]
Austrian law requires that Wiener Schnitzel is made of veal. [12] A schnitzel made of pork can be called Wiener Schnitzel vom Schwein [12] [13] ('Wiener schnitzel from pork') or Schnitzel Wiener Art ('Viennese style schnitzel'). Popular unbreaded variants in Austria are: Jägerschnitzel ('hunter's schnitzel') is a schnitzel with mushroom sauce.
Wiener schnitzel, a popular Viennese dish. The Viennese cooking tradition developed from many different sources: "Viennese cuisine is all about—an eclectic mix of cuisines from Europe and beyond, of all regions and lands that were once part of the monarchy." [6]
The Austrian cuisine is internationally known above all for its pastries such as the Kaiserschmarrn, the Apple strudel, as well as for the Tafelspitz and the Wiener schnitzel. Wiener Schnitzel, a traditional Austrian dish made with boneless meat thinned with a mallet (escalope-style preparation), and fried with a coating of flour, egg, and ...
Wiener Schnitzel is a traditional dish in Viennese cuisine, and the national dish of Austria. Cotoletta with potato and lemon Veal piccata (bottom) This is a list of veal dishes, which use or may use veal as a primary ingredient. Veal is the meat of young calves, in contrast to the beef from older cattle.
Among many such specialities, Austria is famous for Wiener schnitzel, a breaded veal cutlet served with a slice of lemon; the Czech Republic for world-renowned beers; Germany for world-famous wursts, Hungary for goulash. Slovakia is famous for gnocchi-like halušky pasta.
Stojanović's son has claimed that the Zagreb steak (Zagrebački odrezak), made in Croatia, and the Ljubljana schnitzel, made in Slovenia, are variations of Karađorđeva šnicla. [13] The Zagreb steak is more commonly associated with the Wiener schnitzel and the cordon bleu, as it is filled with ham and cheese rather than kaymak. [18]