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7 Worst Rated Alsatian Foods

Last update: Sun Apr 20 2025
7 Worst Rated Alsatian Foods
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01

Salad

ALSACE, France and  one more country
3.0
Salade de saucisse
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Wurstsalat is a traditional salad from Germany (especially southern parts), Switzerland, Austria, and Alsace in France made with strips of sausage. It's a popular dish often consumed as a light meal in beer gardens or traditional inns, especially during the warm summer months.


The main ingredient in wurstsalat is thinly sliced sausage. The most commonly used type is Lyoner, fleischwurst, or stadtwurst, although the Swiss variant often uses cervelat. These are all types of cooked sausage that are similar to bologna or frankfurter. 
VARIATIONS OF Salade de saucisse
02
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Choucroute Garnie is a typical winter dish coming from the French Alsace region. At its base is the silky, pungent, fermented cabbage known as sauerkraut, infused with flavors of goose fat, onions, garlic, juniper berries, caraway, and white wine such as the local dry Riesling.


Sauerkraut is garnished with a hefty number of ingredients such as smoked or fresh beef and pork sausages, pork loin, pork shoulder, and bacon. The ultimate version of the dish, called choucroute royale is served with added calf or pork liver dumplings that are poached and sautéed with onions. 

MOST ICONIC Choucroute garnie

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03

Stew

ALSACE, France
3.6
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Simply put, this French classic is a stew-like dish of boiled meat and vegetables. However, it is not as simple as it might appear at first glance. Pot-au-feu, French for “pot on fire”, is one of the oldest French peasant winter dishes.


It was originally made over an open fire with cheap, inferior cuts of meat, vegetables such as potatoes, onions, carrots, leeks and turnips, and whatever other ingredients were available. The result was a savory stew that helped one make it through the cold season. 
04

Stew

ALSACE, France
3.7
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Baeckeoffe is a one-pot dish from the French region of Alsace containing vegetables, potatoes, wine, and three types of marinated meat - pork, beef, and lamb. The name of this typical peasant's dish is literally translated to baker's oven, as French women would leave the pots for the baker in the early morning.


They left to do the laundry, and when they would return home with their children after school, they would pick up the pot from the baker. Another theory about the origin of the dish says that it was made on Saturday evening and left in the bakers' oven overnight to cool. 

MOST ICONIC Baeckeoffe

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05

Tart

ALSACE, France
3.9
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Tarte à l'oignon is a fragrant, savory onion tart from the Alsace region in France. Essentially, it is an open-face pie that is filled with a rich and flavorful custard of eggs, bacon, and onions. Although it is a cousin to the famous quiche Lorraine, it is not as deep as traditional quiches.


The most popular story about the origin of the onion tart says that it was a baked good with which the bakers would test the heat of the ovens, depending on the time it took to bake it. If the tart was baked in a certain amount of time, that meant that the oven was hot enough for bread to be baked in it. 
06
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Knack d'Alsace are cooked and smoked sausages made from pork and beef, so they are darker pink in color than the famous Frankfurters. The sausages are produced in the French region of Alsace. Their unique name comes from the sound they make when they are bitten into (knack).


Pork and beef are made into a paste and mixed with sugar, crushed ice, salt, plasma, spirits, spices, aromas, and natural additives before being placed into sheep casings. The smoking process is done over beechwood exclusively. The sausages have a hard, crispy texture and a delicate, smoky, and meaty flavor. 
07

Stew

ALSACE, France
3.9
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An Alsatian version of the classic coq au vin, known as coq au Riesling is a dish consisting of chicken, mushrooms, onion, lardons, and dry Riesling wine from Alsace, recognized as one of the best wines in the world. It is said that the dish is even better when reheated the next day due to the flavors that deepen when left in the fridge overnight.


The chicken can be served over egg noodles, white rice, boiled potatoes, or the more traditional spätzle, making for a great comfort dish, especially on a cold winter's night.

MOST ICONIC Coq au Riesling

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TasteAtlas food rankings are based on the ratings of the TasteAtlas audience, with a series of mechanisms that recognize real users and that ignore bot, nationalist or local patriotic ratings, and give additional value to the ratings of users that the system recognizes as knowledgeable. For the “7 Worst Rated Alsatian Foods” list until April 20, 2025, 1,255 ratings were recorded, of which 1,093 were recognized by the system as legitimate. TasteAtlas Rankings should not be seen as the final global conclusion about food. Their purpose is to promote excellent local foods, instill pride in traditional dishes, and arouse curiosity about dishes you haven’t tried.

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