Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Holiday Culinary Inspirations from Sweden


Sweden’s holiday celebrations include some of the most unusual and delicious cuisine, beverages, and desserts you’ll ever find.

lussekatter (aka St. Lucia buns)
Courtesy of kungsomen.se
The darkest month of the year in Sweden, December is a month for celebration. In addition to Advent, the four weeks preceding Christmas, also known as Jul, Lucia Day falls on December 13. This holiday commemorates St. Lucia of Sicily, who was murdered for her religious beliefs. Lucia is depicted wearing a long, white dress or robe with a red sash or ribbons, with a wreath of candles and lingonberry leaves on her head.

On Lucia Day, the women of each home traditionally serve ginger cookies and lussekatter (saffron or St. Lucia buns) to their family before dawn. Churches and schools hold Lucia processions, where a woman dressed as Lucia leads girls dressed in white, as well as boys wearing cone-shaped hats, to an area where more lussekatter, ginger cookies, and glögg, which can be either mulled wine or a hot drink made with apple juice and berry syrup, are served.
  
knäck (toffee with chopped almonds)
Courtesy of Norrsken
During the weeks of Advent, families make desserts and sweets such as knäck (toffee with chopped almonds), buttery caramels, marzipan, and Christmas cookies. Other homemade Christmas cuisine includes pickled herring and pigs’ feet, meatballs, potato sausage, and pâté. Families work tirelessly during Advent to prepare for the largest feast of the year on Christmas Eve, or Julafton. Lunch on Christmas Eve is a smorgasbord of the meats, sweets, and breads the family has spent the last few weeks preparing.

For the Christmas Eve evening meal, families traditionally serve lutefisk, dried codfish with a dipping sauce, as the main dish. Julgröt, a porridge much like rice pudding, is also served, with one porridge containing an almond that brings luck to the person who finds it. Christmas Day feasts include Christmas pike or roasts of duck or goose, depending on local traditions. 

As the holiday feasts in Sweden typically feature several different meats, side dishes, and sweets for dessert, if you travel during Christmas, be prepared to sample a variety of treats, and rest assured that you’ll never go hungry. 

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