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Berlin Monk Garden: Herbs, Recipes & Reviving Ancient Flavors

Berlin, ⁤Germany⁣ – A unique ‌urban garden in Berlin is reconnecting diners and residents ‍with forgotten flavors and the medicinal power of plants. Rötzel’s Monk Garden, established in 2022, cultivates between 150 ⁢and 200 varieties of⁣ herbs, leaves, and ⁤trees, many unavailable in typical German supermarkets.

The 2,000 square meter (21,530 square feet) garden, located in⁣ Marienfelde on Berlin’s southern edge, supplies high-end restaurants⁤ seeking locally-sourced, flavorful ingredients. Founder ⁤and owner, Rötzel, a former hotelier and ‍dancer, also hosts “wild herb walks” and workshops teaching participants how too create ⁢items like skin cream, wine, and herbal⁢ remedies.

Rötzel’s ⁤passion⁢ for plants‌ stems from ⁢childhood, beginning around ages four or five with collecting wild herbs, and was further deepened during⁤ a‍ personal illness 13 years ago. He credits herbal teas with ‍aiding his recovery. This experience led ⁢him to establish‍ a medicinal⁣ monastic ⁢garden adjacent to ⁣a church in Berlin, modeled after similar gardens maintained‌ in the Middle Ages for food and healing purposes.

“At some point, the knowledge was⁢ lost,” Rötzel explained,⁣ attributing this ​decline to “the ⁢industrialization of food.” He estimates ⁣that “something‍ like 99% of⁢ people don’t know a single name of a plant.”

The garden’s offerings include numerous varieties of mint, oregano, and cilantro, alongside hyssop, New Zealand spinach, ⁢four-leaf ‍sorrel, yarrow, and a local‍ variety of tarragon. Beyond restaurant⁣ supply, Rötzel hosts occasional dinners *within* the ⁢garden itself, featuring five-course meals​ paired with⁤ different herbal teas.

Recent ‍diner Britta ⁣Rosenthal,⁤ after‍ enjoying a first course of crayfish and peas with basil, expressed a desire to learn “what‌ herbs can do” and “perhaps to become a bit⁤ more valiant preparing food, not just with pepper, salt and paprika but ⁤also with green fresh stuff.”

Rötzel ​finds ⁤particular satisfaction in rekindling forgotten culinary memories. “many⁣ people, above all older‍ generations, grew‌ up in ⁢a way that they still know​ some things that no longer exist today,” he ​said. “It’s a pleasure for me when people remember something really special.”

The Monk Garden‌ represents a growing trend ‍toward hyperlocal ​food systems and a renewed interest in‍ conventional​ herbal knowledge, offering ⁤a ​tangible ‍link to a past where plants played ‍a central role in both sustenance and well-being.

Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed to this⁤ report.

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