In a secluded lot next to a former gasworks in suburban Berlin, Martin Rotzel is breathing new life into a tradition of centuries past: the monastery garden.
Rotzel’s “Monk Garden” is home to between 150 and 200 types of herbs, leaves and trees, including many that are unlikely to be found at any German supermarket. There are numerous varieties of mint, oregano and cilantro, hyssop and New Zealand spinach, four-leaf sorrel, yarrow and a local variety of tarragon.
Rotzel has built Monk Garden as a business since 2022, delivering to high-end restaurants that want flavorsome local plants for their dishes. It also organizes “wild herb walks” and workshops showing people how to make skin cream, wine and other items from the plants.
Photo: AP
Packed into about 2,000m2 in Marienfelde, each of the plants has its own flavors and tangs and, in many cases, medicinal properties.
Rotzel, a trained hotelier who also has worked as a dancer, said his knowledge of plants came from his father, while his passion for them goes back to the age of four or five, when he started collecting wild herbs.
During an illness 13 years ago, he deepened his knowledge of herbs and made teas that he said helped him regain his health. He also set up a medicinal monastic garden next to a church in the German capital, mirroring those grown in the Middle Ages to provide plants for food and healing.
Photo: AP
“At some point, the knowledge was lost,” which was exacerbated by “the industrialization of food,” Rotzel said, adding that these days, “something like 99 percent of people don’t know a single name of a plant.”
Rotzel has used his garden to counter that loss. There are occasional dinners in the garden bringing people together at a table in the middle of the herbs. Five courses are each accompanied by a different herbal tea.
After a first course of crayfish and peas with basil, diner Britta Rosenthal said she wanted to find out “what herbs can do” and “perhaps to become a bit more courageous preparing food, not just with pepper, salt and paprika, but also with green fresh stuff.”
Rotzel said he enjoys reviving people’s memories of flavors past.
“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.”
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