Ten delicious Nordic treats you must try in Scandinavia
From herring to hotdogs to the humble Danish pastry, here are 10 delicious things you must try when you visit Scandinavia.
Success cake
Noma, Scandinavia’s greatest culinary success story, is to be no more by year’s end with the globally acclaimed fine-dining restaurant to close. Happily, the region’s underrated comfort food survives, including suksessterte (success cake), a Norwegian sponge and almond treat commonly served at celebrations such as wedding and birthday parties and aboard the Norwegian-flagged Viking Cruises vessels. See viking.com.au
Danish smorrebrod
A Scandinavian staple, smorrebrod or open-faced sandwiches, have absolutely nothing to hide with invariably delicious ingredients on full display for all to see and savour. There’s always a generous supply aboard Viking vessels (with a recipe included in The Kitchen Table, Viking’s own cookbook). On shore, enjoy open-faced sandwiches at Fru Nimb, a speciality smorrebrod restaurant inside the Hans Christian Andersen fairytale-like Nimb Hotel in Copenhagen’s historic Tivoli Gardens.
See nimb.dk
Hot dogs
Get ’em while they’re hot, and still available. Once ubiquitous, traditional hot dog stands are dying out in Norway and Denmark, with the classic snack more available nowadays at places such as service stations. Norwegian hot dogs come served between potato flatbread while in Denmark, the frankfurt is served between a more conventional bun and is almost always topped with crispy onions. See visitnorway.com visitdenmark.com
Norwegian-style meatballs
The Italians, a little cruelly, contend that the further north you go in Europe, the more inedible the food becomes. It’s hard to pass up a genuine Scandi comfort dish such as the Norwegian version of Italian meatballs. Eaten throughout the Nordic nations, they are a popular winter dish, often served over buttered egg noodles or with butter, parsley and boiled potatoes. See viking.com.au
Nordic gravlax
“Gravlax” literally translates, perhaps a little off-puttingly, as “buried salmon”, a reference to the ancient practice of curing raw fish by burying it in sand by the ocean so it becomes saturated and cured by seawater. Today the fish is salted and seasoned, weighed down and refrigerated until cured. A good place to sample it at its best is the modern Fjellskaal food hall on the lively waterfront at Bergen, Norway’s second biggest city. See fjellskaal.no
Norwegian brown cheese waffles
Mamsen’s, the Scandi-style deli aboard Viking ships, serves delicious waffles notable for the fact that they’re accompanied by a Norwegian delicacy, caramel-coloured brown goat’s cheese, or “brunost” (you can also opt for jam or even both). Norwegians consider brown cheese to be a national gastronomic treasure originating from its alpine farms with waffles typically not eaten at breakfast but at other times of the day.
Pastries
The sort of humble Danish pastries eaten in Australia are hardly representative of the sweet and doughy treats to be sampled across the breadth of Scandinavia. Serious bakeries and bakery cafes abound across all Nordic nations, with the Braud & Co chain in Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland, a standout. Along with organic doughs, Braud & Co’s bakers use Icelandic butter and sea salt in their artisan breads and cinnamon-rich buns. See braudogco.is
Split pea soup
Ertesuppe, the Norwegian version of this cherished and hearty dish, is a favourite hot offering at lunches and dinners, especially in the colder Nordic months. Served aboard Viking ships, the combination of ham and chicken broth creates a flavourful soup. Split peas, according to Viking, didn’t appear in Norway until the end of the 19th century, when a process for removing the skins became commonly used. They have become a culinary fixture ever since. See viking.com.au
Herring
The Italians may recoil at it but this rich, oily and marinated fish is a common and beloved ingredient in smorrebrod (see above) and teamed with everything from curry cream, egg, watercress and caper berries. Also eaten on its own, it’s typically consumed before other smorgasbord spread items, accompanied by sauces such as mustard or dill and onion.
Aquavit
With its distilled potato-based alcohol content rising to 40 per cent, Nordic schnapps, also known as aquavit (or akvavit in Norwegian) could fairly help fuel any Scandinavian space program. One of Viking’s onboard al fresco drinking holes, Aquavit Terrace, is named in honour of this robust spirit, the flavour of which is derived from herbs and spices, namely a distillate of caraway and/or dill seeds.
The writer travelled as a guest of Viking Cruises. See viking.com.au
Viking Cruises’ 15-day Northern European Viking Homelands voyage from Stockholm to Bergen, Norway, or vice versa, from $12,795 a person.
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