Käsekrainer sausages (2024)

Käsekrainer sausages (1)

You may associate Vienna with delicate cakes and Imperial dining. But the old stalwart of Viennese cuisine and a reliable solution to late-evening pangs of hunger is the humble and tasty fat bomb known as the Käsekrainer…

What is a Käsekrainer?

Käsekrainer sausages (2)

(Beer and Käsekrainer before the football game)

To answer the question in the headline: a large, thick parboiled sausage filled with small chunks of cheese (German: Käse) to which the Käsekrainer owes its name.

You typically fry or grill it, which melts the cheese to create the distinctive texture and taste. Escaping cheese often forms a crust across the outside during this process.

Sausage stands usually serve the Käsekrainer with a white bread roll or a slice of dark bread, plus mustard and/or ketchup.

There’s something strangely captivating about slicing into one of these delights and seeing hot, melted cheese ooze or squirt out.

In fact, if you’re not careful, a sufficiently-distressed Käsekrainer can propel hot fat huge distances, necessitating the wearing of protective goggles and clothes normally seen in radiation labs. Which is why some places cut it up for you before serving.

Käsekrainer sausages (3)

(Not likely to be confused with nouvelle cuisine)

You may find locals describing this traditional sausage variety as an Eitrige, from the German word “eitrig” which means ulcerous or pus-filled. A rather unpleasant description, but understandable when you see cheese seeping out of a sliced Käsekrainer.

(Debate rages as to whether this term is a real Viennese one or simply a devious invention to impress/scare tourists.)

The Käsekrainer enjoys particular popularity around football stadiums on matchdays, where it often appears inserted into a small baguette-like roll as a kind of hot dog.

This sausage holds a special place in my heart (presumably now blocked by cholesterol), as it was the first one I ate in Vienna. It continued to maintain a deep hold on my affections until I went vegetarian and will be my first meal if I ever reverse that decision.

Unfortunately, on my arrival in Austria, I misread the signs and called the Käsekrainer a Kaiserkrainer, which sounded entirely plausible given Vienna’s Imperial history (Kaiser is the German word for emperor). Franz Joseph, for example, was known for his love of plain Viennese food.

For the next fifteen years I kept ordering a Kaiserkrainer, to be met with the inquiry, “a Käsekrainer?” I always assumed this was local dialect for Kaiserkrainer and they were just checking whether they’d heard me properly. Fifteen. Years.

Käsekrainer sausages (4)

(Sliced Käsekrainer revealing the melted cheese texture within: usually served with bread, mustard and ketchup, rather than peas!)

A little bit of history

The Käsekrainer once almost caused a diplomatic incident between Slovenia and Austria.

The Slovenians persuaded the EU to give the Kranjska klobasa (German: Krainer Wurst; English: Carniolan sausage) the status of a “protected geographical indication”, reflecting its origins in the Krain region: an area that is now modern Slovenia and which includes the capital, Ljubljana.

This would normally make it illegal to sell any Krainer Wurst under that name, unless sourced from the area in question. Which would have spelled (literally) the end of the Käsekrainer, which is technically a variant of the Krainer Wurst.

Naturally, this didn’t sit well with the Viennese authorities, presumably concerned about the loss of such a culturally-significant icon (and the renaming costs). Fortunately, the Slovenians were kind enough to accept a compromise and the Käsekrainer can still be called as such.

Käsekrainer sausages (2024)

FAQs

How to cook Käsekrainer on the stove? ›

Prick the sausage all over with a fork. Cook the sausage by boiling, baking, or grilling at medium heat for approximately 8 minutes. If desired, cut the sausage in two or into small pieces. Serve sausage with the accompaniments.

How to serve Käsekrainer sausage? ›

Kasekrainer is a decadent, cheese-filled sausage and can be paired with salted, boiled new potatoes and a side of warm apple salad with grain mustard and parsley. Or simply heat to serve alongside sauerkraut.

What is Käsekrainer made of? ›

Käsekrainer is a type of Austrian sausage that is stuffed with small chunks of cheese. It is typically made using pork or a mixture of pork, beef, and various different spices. Generally Swiss Emmental is the cheese used to stuff the sausage.

What is the sausage in Austria bread? ›

The original Käsekrainer is served with mustard and freshly cut horseradish, other varieties with mustard and ketchup, optionally sprinkled with curry powder. A popular dish is the Käsekrainer hot dog, where a Käsekrainer is served in a hollow piece of white bread with mustard and/or ketchup.

How long to cook sausages for stove top? ›

Fill skillet with enough water to reach a quarter of the way up sides of sausages. Simmer, covered, until sausages are cooked through and water evaporates, 10 to 15 minutes. (If sausages have cooked through but water has not evaporated, uncover, and continue to cook until water evaporates.)

What to eat with Käsekrainer? ›

Sausage stands usually serve the Käsekrainer with a white bread roll or a slice of dark bread, plus mustard and/or ketchup.

What does krainer mean in German? ›

German: variant of Krainer a habitational name for someone from the former Habsburg Duchy of Carniola (Slovenian Kranjska German Krain) in present-day Slovenia. Both forms Kreiner and Krainer were also used as a translation into German of the Slovenian surnames Kranjec Kranjc and Krajnc (see Krantz ).

Is Käsekrainer already cooked? ›

Cooking instructions – German Kasekrainer (Cheese Frankfurter) The Krakauer Frankfurter German sausages, are pre cooked. You can cook them for about 6 to 9 minutes on the grill, in the pan, or air frying them conversely.

What is the difference between bratwurst and Krainerwurst? ›

Bratwurst is a German, mostly pork sausage. Krainerwurst is beef and pork, a cured and smoked version of the brat with a mild amount of garlic.

What is the most popular German sausage? ›

Bratwurst. One of the most famous of German sausages, second only to the Frankfurter Würstchen, the bratwurst—a.k.a., "brat"—is typically made from veal, beef or pork.

What is the famous Salzburg sausage? ›

The "Bosna" prepared there has enjoyed cult status for a long time. A unique sausage speciality started its culinary success story at Salzburg's Balkan Grill and has long since become an Austrian classic – although it actually comes from Bulgaria: the "Bosna", a kind of hot dog.

What is the difference between sausage and Vienna sausages? ›

After having been brought to North America by European immigrants, "Vienna sausage" came to mean only smaller and much shorter smoked and canned wieners, rather than link sausage, beginning about 1903. However, they have no federal standard of identity.

How do you heat a Käsekrainer? ›

Grill the Kasekrainer Sausages: Preheat your grill to medium heat. To cook the Franconian Kasekrainer Sausages, place them on the grill and flip them occasionally. Cook them until they are hot, the cheese is melted, and the outside is slightly burnt. Ensure they reach an internal temperature of 75°C.

How to cook raw breakfast sausage on stove? ›

Stove-top breakfast sausage

Cook the sausages over medium heat. Bring the water to a boil, cover them, and cook for 10 minutes. Take off the lid and continue cooking, turning the links every two minutes. Panfry the links after parboiling if you prefer a crispier skin.

How to cook brats on the stove? ›

Place the bratwurst in the pot and bring the water to a boil before turning the heat down to simmer until the brats have cooked through — about 20 minutes. After you finish boiling, transfer them to a hot skillet to cook covered for an additional three minutes to get their outsides crispy.

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