According to legend, the dish was invented in
Leipzig after the
Napoleonic Wars to protect the city from beggars and tax collectors: in storing the more sustaining and more expensive meat-based dishes, and serving vegetables instead, city officials hoped to encourage beggars and tax collectors to move on to neighbouring cities. City clerk, Malthus Hempel, is said to have suggested to the city fathers: "Let's hide the bacon and bring only vegetables to the table, on Sundays maybe a piece of sausage or a crab from the
Pleiße. And if you come and want something, you get a bowl of vegetable broth instead of meat and all the beggars and tax collectors will orientate themselves to Halle or Dresden." However, the dish is first attested in a 1745 cookbook.
[2]
According to other sources, Leipziger Allerlei represented an intermediate dish in a festive
menu for which young early vegetables were used.
[3]
Leipziger Allerlei also found its way into the kitchen of privy councillor and poet,
Goethe.