Herring, Eel and Schiller curl

Fish has a long tradition in Kappeln on the Schlei. You can see and taste it. Smoked fish, fried herring and matjes in many varieties are on the menus of the restaurants on the longest fjord in the Baltic Sea. We visit the Föh fish smokehouse, whose three chimneys labeled with the word “Aal” are the landmark of the town of Kappeln.

The three towers of the Föh smokehouse with the three letters for the word eel are something like the town's landmark in Kappeln / © Photo: Georg Berg
The three towers of the Föh fish smokehouse in Kappeln / © Photo: Georg Berg

How about fresh fried rings, pickled and accompanied by hearty fried potatoes? Or with Kappeln herb matjes, smoked eel or Baltic Sea turbot? The fish restaurants on the Schlei offer all this and more. In Kappeln, the first town that the Baltic Sea fjord Schlei reaches after the estuary, there is no way around the Alte Fischräucherei am Hafen and the Fischräucherei Föh.

Fischlokal Alte Fischräucherei in Kappeln an der Schlei. The Irishman Duncan Buckley has been the innkeeper and chef here since 1994. In the background the church of St. Nikolai / © Photo: Georg Berg
Fish restaurant Alte Fischräucherei in Kappeln. Innkeeper and chef since 1994 is Irishman Duncan Buckley / © Photo: Georg Berg

The last herring fence

The last herring fence in Europe is in the Schlei near Kappeln. 2,000 wooden stakes set into the Schlei’s bottom are a reminder of the great days of Baltic Sea fishing, when fishermen used this passive fishing method to reliably catch fat herring. The Kappeln herring fence is still ready for fishing, but the herring are no longer. The Baltic Sea and with it the Schlei are heavily polluted and biologically more dead than alive. Alongside herring, eel used to be the bread-and-butter fish of the Schlei fishermen. However, like herring, its population has dwindled rapidly in recent decades. Since 2010, Schleifischer has been releasing around 80,000 young eels every fall in order to regenerate the stocks. They know it will be a long road before a recovered eel stock will once again provide future fishermen and anglers with good catches. Even if the great time of the grinders is over, the excellent quality and variety of fish dishes remains. Traditional businesses and restaurants usually source their fish from other regions.

View from the pier warehouse of the Schleibrücke bridge near Kappeln with herring fence. This is the only herring fence still in operation in Europe / © Photo: Georg Berg
View of the Schleibrücke bridge and the only herring fence still in operation in Europe from the pier warehouse / © Photo: Georg Berg

Smoked fish since 1911

Weatherfish instead of weathercocks turn on the brick towers of the Föh fish smokehouse. That’s fitting, because down below in the 20 smoking ovens, everything has revolved around fish for over 100 years. The Föh family in Kappeln is now in its fourth generation of production. It all started with a small outdoor smoking area. Herring and sprats were the main products back then and traveled by rail to Saxony, Thuringia and Berlin. The Saxons preferred dark-smoked herring, which had a longer shelf life. This so-called long-life product was nicknamed “chimney herring”.

Matthias Föh, fourth-generation owner of Fischräucherei Föh, in front of the three smoking ovens. Smoked on beech and alder wood, the ovens date back to the 1920s and are connected by three iconic brick chimneys / © Photo: Georg Berg
Matthias Föh, owner of Fischräucherei Föh in front of the ovens. The fish is smoked on beech and alder wood. The ovens date back to the 1920s and are connected by three iconic brick chimneys / © Photo: Georg Berg
Fish smokehouse Föh, employee turns the fried rings in hot rapeseed oil. In the background, the smoking ovens from the 1920s / © Photo: Georg Berg
An employee turns fried herrings in hot rapeseed oil / © Photo: Georg Berg

Eel over everything

In the 1930s, the Föhs expanded their range to include smoked eel, says Matthias Föh. The eel became a bestseller and has remained so to this day. Due to the endangered stocks, eel is a high-priced smoked fish. Matthias Föh shows us how to fillet a smoked specimen. After removing the skin, he goes over the fillet flesh with a knife and scrapes off any excess fat. The eel meat is aromatic and fatty and also contains vitamin D. The trick with the knife makes it more digestible, explains fish expert Föh.

Matthias Föh removes the layer of fat on the eel fillet, making the smoked eel more digestible / © Photo: Georg Berg
Matthias Föh removes the layer of fat on the eel fillet, making the smoked eel more digestible / © Photo: Georg Berg

Spring and fall are high season for fish fans

The Schlei region is no longer an insider tip; it often gets crowded in summer. But spring and fall also invite you to go on bike tours or long hikes along the maritime landscape with its idyllic little villages. Spring is ideal for fish lovers, as this is the peak season for herring. Green herring, also known as Schlei herring, can be found on menus. It is dusted with flour and seared on both sides. October marks the beginning of the fishing season for Baltic silver eels, which can only be caught until the beginning of December.

Morning sun with fog over the herring fence and the Schleibrücke bridge near Kappeln / © Foto: Georg Berg
Kappeln in autumn with morning sun and fog over the herring fence and Schleibrücke bridge / © Foto: Georg Berg
Out and about by bike in the Angeln region near Kappeln an der Schlei / © Photo: Georg Berg
Out and about by bike in the Angeln region near Kappeln an der Schlei / © Photo: Georg Berg

A bed in the granary

The Südspeicher and the Pierspeicher are two stylish accommodations in Kappeln. A modern hotel and bistro with a sustainability concept and a cool mix of concrete and hygge with a view of sailing ships and the Schleibrücke bridge was created in 2022 from the former granary at the southern harbor from the 1930s.

Südspeicher in Kappeln, used as a granary from 1930 to 1942 and as a Reichsnährspeicher from 1936 to 1939. Since 2022, after renovation, it has been a hotel and bistro with a sustainability concept and modern design / © Photo: Georg Berg
Südspeicher in Kappeln was used as a so-called Reichsnährspeicher from 1936 to 1939 / © Photo: Georg Berg
View of the harbor of Kappeln with towers of the Föh smokehouse and the pier warehouse, former grain silo and Reichsnährspeicher at the end of the 1930s. Today a conference and boarding house with guest rooms / © Photo: Georg Berg
View of the harbor of Kappeln with towers of the Föh smokehouse and the pier warehouse, former grain silo and today a conference and boarding house with guest rooms / © Photo: Georg Berg

More information about the holiday region Ostseefjord Schlei.

The research was supported by the TH Hospitality Group

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