<P> The most famous foods from Thuringia are Thuringian sausages and Thuringian dumplings . The state is also known for its sausages; steamed, scaled, and cured varieties are all prepared . Popular varieties include Thüringer Mettwurst (a spreadable cured sausage), Feldkieker (a cured, air - dried sausage dried up to eight months), Thüringer Leberwurst (a steamed pork and liver sausage), Thüringer Rotwurst (a steamed blood sausage packed in a bladder or other natural casing) and Mett (minced pork). </P> <P> In general the cuisine is very hearty and features many peculiarities of central Germany such as a great variety of sauces which accompany the main dish and the fashion to serve Klöße" or Knödel as a side dish instead of potatoes, pasta or rice . Also much freshwater fish is used in Saxon cuisine, particularly carp and trout as is the case throughout Eastern Europe . </P> <P> The rich history of the region did and still does influence the cuisine . In the blossoming and growing cities of Dresden and Leipzig an extravagant style of cuisine is cherished (one may only think of the crab as an ingredient in the famous Leipziger Allerlei). Other regions where the people had to work really hard to yield some harvest and were really poor like in the Erzgebirge peasant dishes play a major role and famous dishes originating there are e.g. potatoes with Quark, potato soup or potato with bread and linseed oil . Also in the region Vogtland there were many peasants but they were wealthier and that's why in this region the Sunday roast is a tradition that is nowadays still lived up to . </P> <P> Cereal grain cultivation occupies 62% of the cultivated land in Saxony - Anhalt . Wheat, barley, oats, and rye are grown, with the rye being grown near Borde, where it is used to make Burger Knäckebrot, a flatbread produced there since 1931 . Another 10% of the cultivated area is planted in sugar beets for conversion to sugar, popularized after the 19th century, when the region had an economic boom . </P>

Which of the following foods is popular in both germany and scandinavia