@@krisdunwoody7037 The name does not sound familiar, but it was many years ago. I attended Lunds Privata Elementarskola (also known as Spyken) back in 1967-68!
I am a Finn, and I always have Kalle's Kaviar in the fridge. I live currently in Poland, and they have it here as well, although in Poland there is another Swedish brand of fishroe paste that is more common. Jansonsfrestelse (janssoninkiusaus) is also very common in Finland, although we do not eat it during Christmas. It is a regular food. Also, Kebab pizza for the win. The best thing. I also love reindeer pizza. I am sure they have that in Sweden as well. Also, pickled herring is eaten all over the Baltic Sea. In both Finland and Poland, it's super popular. Saltliqourice seems to be a Nordic thing. Smörgåstårta (voileipäkakku) is very popular in Finland especially in summer.
Definitely have reindeer pizza in sweden! probably way more common the further north you go, but i see it from time to time even in the central parts of the land
Gothenburgian here. Ate Surströmming for the first time on New Year's eve 1999/2000 when I was like 12. Remember that we had to open the doors and windows on both sides of the house to air the smell out, but that the smell was worse than the taste.
Surströmming is actually really good! It smells worse than it tastes 😄 I eat it at least once per year with my family and relatives as a tradition called "surströmmingsfest". It's one of the few times I get to meet my cousins and more distant relatives. It's almost like a holiday.
As a swede I can tell you this. In a "smörgåstårta" you can mix creamcheese or cream fraiche with paté or Kalles or often time our swedish "mjukost" to make a soft filling. Then as you said we make them pretty with toppings to show the "theme".. shrimp, ham, cheese and pretty vegetables. It's realy not that crazy its like a sub or sandwich with some fillings. And yes... I do love "svenskjävlar" untill they hurt my mouth but cilantro taste like lavender... go chew on that. 😂
We have sandwitch cake in Estonia as well. Like you said, it can be done with fish (salmon, trout) or ham and cheese. The last one is maybe more popular among kids 🙂 Baltic herring is also a traditional food here, not a fan of it either.
Here in Norway, we also eat taco on a Friday,but before that it was Grandiosa pizza on Friday. not just any pizza, but from this brand. BTW: You can take your mom to Germany, there can she get kepab pizza as well😀
I suggest you try some more traditional old swedish dishes. Like pölsa, made from liver, lard and barley groats. Served with potatoes and pickled red beets. Leverstuvning (Liver stew) Blodpudding, Kroppkakor made from potatoes, weat flower and salty pork and onions inside. Kroppakor are served with melted butter and off course Lingonsylt (Lingonberry jam)
Stefan, I have heard in previous videos that your Swedish has improved a lot and you start to speak fluently now. I’m impressed. As a Swede I want to help you with just a few things and that is the å, ä and ö sounds. In the beginning of this video you said språk several times but used the a sound instead of the å sound. It should be språk where å sounds like o in adorable. Then you said smörgåsbord where your ö sounded like the english o or the swedish å, as if you said smårgasbård. Try to say ö as you do ea in learn. Smörgåsbord is diffcult as you both have an ö and an å and also an o, pronounced as the oo in food. Swedish is not easy though, I know. Just trying to help you a bit. Keep up the good work with the Language lock down. That’s a great business idea anyways. All the best wishes. 🌸🌸
I was going to make the same comment. It’s really important if you want to speak proper Swedish and not so hard to learn. Note the difference in meaning between spraka and språka, räka, råka and raka, or höra and hora (!) Å sounds like like the ’o’ in ’Orchard’ Ö like the vowel sound in ’learn’ and the Ä sound is used a lot in US English, like ’last’ I had to learn quite a few tricky sounds in both Castilian Spanish, Russian and Turkish!
Salty licorice is great! And there's nothing wrong with banana and curry on a pizza! You should try "varma mackor" with "Kalles Kaviar" and banana slices under the cheese...
Grynkorv with mashed potatoes and senapssås (mustard sauce)! Mmmm, tasty! It is a thick sausage made from mainly pork meat and barley grains and it is boiled, not fried. It is the "national" course in the part of Sweden I am from, Västergötland. More specifically Skaraborgs län, we even have a Grynkorv Academy, acting to preserve the grynkorv. Grynkorvens dag is celebrated on the third thursday in October every year.
Not a type of food but the package of it: the tubes, never seen it used to the same extent as in Sweden Violet (viol) is a common flavor for candy, never liked it myself but most others do I think cinnamon is the US version of Sweden's licorice. It can be sweet or hot and it takes some time to get used to but everyone who grew up with it seems to enjoy it
8 หลายเดือนก่อน
Here in Handen I think it is called "Flygande Jakob" (Flying Jacob) and is made of "Kyckling/chicken, banan/banana, ananas/pineapple, jordnötter/peanuts and curry", it is rathey yummy as long you can overcome the trauma of seeing fruit as a "natural candy", it is rather healthy (I think) and full of energy.
you miss a lot of traditional foods like blodpudding, råraka, potatisbulle, raggmunk, rotmos, fläskkorv, different kinds of porridge, all the diffrent kinds of salmons, gravad, rökt etc. som local foods like kroppkakor, pitepalt, some places in the north eat soup with what they call ''klimpen''.
@@Snorpish Reindeer blodpalt mixed with renskav, heated over a fire outdoors wintertime, while seated on a reindeer fur. That's a great memory with my family of polar ni**ers.
@@wilhelmmoller960 En helt vanlig Frödinge ostkaka kan bli så jävla mycket bättre om du hackar upp den och lägger till mer vispgrädde och finhackad mandel, innan du kör in den i ugnen.
Blodpudding is a Swedish variety of Black Pudding. I'm not that fond of it but I can eat it once in a while, with fried bacon, fried onion and fried apple slices. Kroppkakor, potato dumplings, filled with finely chopped pork, onion and allspice is delicious, it takes a while (like 3 hours) to make them though. In Italy theres a dish called gnocchi which is made from the same type of potato dough, but smaller and without filling.
I have a theory that swedish "pita-bread" culture just migrated to tacos sometime in the late 90s/early 00s. Basically all the wird ingrediants and you upraded with some spices and different bread.
We have put banana on our tandoori chicken pizza for years now, and it's so good. BTW I'm Swedish born, but married to a Kiwi (New Zealander) living in Australia. We've made this pizza for our son and his friends many times and they all loved it, although at first they thought the banana was weird. I think we had it for the first time at a restaurant in NZ.
Im an American and I love the Kallies fish row in a tube, it's really just like caviar with some fillers, such as potato flakes. I use to be able to find it in the Swedish neighborhood here in Chicago, now I just get it at IKEA. Hey, how about doing an episode about doing laundry in Europe and how to use the drying rack and waiting forever for jean to dry and how all the towels come out extra crispy and uncomfortable.
Sandwich cakes are pretty much food in cake form; they generally contain ingredients like eggs, ham, vegetables, caviar, and similar food items like that. You can definitely use them as actual foods every now and then, at least as long as they don't contain too much whipped cream.
Hi Stefan. You say you don't like surströmming - most Swedes don't either...but when it comes to taste cleansing, I think you should try to find an English grocery store and ask for a (small) can of Marmite. THERE you can talk about strange foods. It's a dark brown batter that you spread on the sandwiches. It is disgusting but useful because the misery contains a lot of B vitamins. The product is made from the bottom residues that form when brewing beer ... Try it!
I am an American, I love the banana pizza. Here in my home state of Georgia, we have roasted peaches on pizza...and that is even better than banana and pineapple combined!
Janssons I would describe more as a potato gratain with anchovies :) (its my Maltese husbands favorite on the julbord/christmas buffet ❤) but most of us "kids" in the family dont like anchovies so my mum makes one extra alternative version with Kalles kaviar in it instead and its so good :)
@@starvictory7079 Exactly. One way of translating the Swedish word "ansjovis" that I found when searching, is "tinned sprats cured in brine"...if that makes any sense. Swedish ansjovis is actually more related to "sill" mentioned in the video.
Surströmming I eat every year. Preferably with the red onion, sour cream, dill and potatoes, never on bread. Surströmming has an incredible amount of Umami, and doesn't taste at all like it smells :)
2:16 As a Swede who's tried it once as a kid - it's not bad, very sweet tasting buuuuut...It's, from what I understand, considered a "Dessert pizza", like a nutella sandwich or something. More as a movie night snack maybe rather than dinner. And yeah I definitely would take the Kebab pizza over that any time. Cinnamon tastes very sweet in cooking and so does banana, fruits in general means it's not dinner. Now I have seen people order chicken pizza with peanuts and curry like some Tikki Masala nightmare and that is by far much worse, not to mention Danes putting (day old cold) spaghetti on a pizza which is atrocious... I don't eat fish but I make two exceptions - Kalles Kaviar on an egg sandwich, and Canned tuna (I guess it's just the meaty consistency) with whatever. But some people put tuna on Pizza, now that is awful.
There is the meaty and the fishy "smörgåstårta", some are filled with soft cheese, and shrimp and smoked salmon, others are "leverpastej" and smoked ham ... Anyway, tacofredag is sort of like the "fredagsmys", cozy friday. Not much cooking, just fry upp the ground beef (or whatever), mash the avocado and mix it, chop some stuff and put it on the table, heat the tortillas (or not, whatever you use), lay the table, and everybody can help out, and then sit down and pick your taco together, sort of like a julbord. But the children like it. It is fast and easy, celebrating that the work/school week is ended. Then for dessert a big bowl of "lösgodis", small candy.
The salt in Svenskjävlar isn't regular old salt, it is ammonium chloride or sal ammoniac (salmiak). If you want to try the stuff I recommend this order: Tier 1 - Salta Katten Tier 2 - Djungel vrål ??? Tier 15 - Svenskjävlar
Isn't the banana curry pizza just a really watered down version of the traditional swedish dish "Flygande Jacob"? Ham instead of chicken and bacon, curry instead of chili sauce and cheese and bread instead of rice. Also in some places you can get your banana curry pizza with salty peanuts on top which is like the staple of Flygande Jacob.
Svensk jävlar exist in a couple of different varieties: 1. The original recipe which comes in two different sizes:bite sized and XL. 2. Chocolate coated:the original recipe with a coat of semi sweet Belgian chocolate. 3. Spicy strawberry:the original recipe with a strawberry flavored coating and Carolina Reaper hot pepper extract. So far i have only tasted the original recipe and the chocolate coated varieties. The idea of consuming Reaper extract is a little scary to me.
Other Swedish foods you might explore or discuss in a video are messmör (which you of course can get in a tube), all the weird processed cheese you can get in tubes, and all the foods that are mixed in with them, right in the tube (like a toothpaste type tube). Shrimp cheese, crayfish cheese, skagen cheese moldy cheese, smoked reindeer cheese, blue cheese with apple and cinnamon. All in nice little toothpaste tubes! and lets not forget the ham cheese and the bacon cheese, or even the processed squeezable brie cheese. But enough about cheese. Also, Swedish sausages which range from fthe beloved staple alukorv (more or less a ring bologna) to isterband, a more ‘controversial’ sausage that I love and dream about, though I haven’t eaten one in more than three decades. Pölsa, which looks kind of what I imagine scrapple would look like after pulsing it in a blender with some oatmeal. Flygande Jakob (Flying Jacob). Princesstårta (Princess Cake). Ugnspannkaka (Oven Pancake. Semla.
I've introduced banana curry pizza to more than a few foreigners and most of them either enjoyed it or downright loved it! And this includes Americans. Sure, one or two said "I would not order one for myself, but I like it well enough". _No one_ so far has said "I hate it and will never eat it again". That said, kebab pizza always blows all competition out of the water. ---------- _Sill_ is *Atlantic* herring! it's called _strömming_ when caught in the Baltic north of a small village outside of Kalmar. The pickled version is unequivocally _sill_ as it's caught in the seas to the west. ---------- Why did you open a can of _surströmming_ out in the open? The way veterans do it is in a bucket of water. At least you put it in a flatbread wrap with the traditional ingredients :) ---------- I'm Swedish born and bred, with Finnish ancestry, and I don't get salty licorice either. Sweet black licorice is nice but I really _do not_ like salty. That said, it's pretty easy to avoid, so I do just that and anyone liking stuff coated in salmiak (that salty stuff) is on their own.
I love the salty Swedish licorice. I think it's an acquired taste of you're not from Sweden. I'm not but I just really like it and have since I was a kid
I am swedish if you like pizza try it like this; thin crust garlicsauce on the crust instead of tomoatosauce then have lots of cheese and if you like crunks of gorgonzola cheese as well i prefer when my pizza is less time in the oven so i ask for less baked
Kaviar is a must on the breakfast egg (which of course is hardboiled) instead of salt, or spread on a slice of bread with fresh cucumber slices or sliced egg. Smörgåstårta is great, but I'm not a fan of those with a layer of canned tuna. As for surströmming, I've never had it, nor do I have a desire to try it. Swedish pizzas are a bit exotic. I just wonder how much the fact that most pizza places are run by people from the Middle East influences the styles that have developed.
I LOVE Svenskjävlar! And surströmming! And Im from northern Sweden (Jämtland) ^^ Maybe that's why! Edit: Norway also have the exact same tradition with taco friday. With the same bread and toppings :)
Well most of those are common Finland too. Bananas and bearnise sauce on pizza are not our thing for sure. Those are youst weird. Kalles regular caviar ain´t very good, but the "rundiga" is delicious. Spread it on your bread after you´ve spread butter to it and spread it same way as the butter. Thin layer on top of your bread is great. I just love everything with shrimps. I used to buy that Rydbergs räkksallad and it is so good with boiled potatoes and pan fryed sausage. Slice of Skogaholmslimpa with rundiga kaviar and glass of milk, there is a good Swedish dinner 😄. Well at least for my Finnish taste.
You say you don't appreciate Kalles Kaviar. Most Swedish kaviar is smoked. Try an un-smoked variant instead. That is what I prefer, e.g. with hard-boiled egg on knäckebröd.
The amount of people that dont understand the majesty of swedish pizza should hop on the next train across europe and try some. You will be blown away how well we have it in that regard. been trying pizzas on 3 continents in a score of countries and nothing even comes close to ours.
The idea of putting banana & curry on pizza, or any bizarre topping is probably a assyrian idea, since most pizza bakers in Sweden are assyrians/arameic (syrian-orthodox christian minority people from Turkey-Syria-Iraq). There are no Italians making pizza in Sweden for decades, the last pizzeria owned by Italians I know of was La Luna in Norrköping, owned by the Santoro family, late 1980s. Speaking of weird food - peasoup and pork, with warm Swedish punch and pancakes for dessert. Peasoup with cured pork, some mustard on the side and dried sage & thyme sprinkled over it, it's not that odd really. But whoever came up with the idea that this requires WARM sweet punch (it's sweet arrak liquor) along with it!? And, as if the soup wasn't rich enough, PANCAKES with whipped cream and jam after that!? And only for Thursday lunch!? Haha, that's weird.
Trust me, a lot of us Swedes are as baffled by banana on pizza as you are. I would fight for smörgåstårta and salty liqorice though (even Svenskjävlar).
In my opinion, Svenskjävlar was one of those things that just had to happen, for the same reason as to why there are eating as many raw ghost pepper friuts as possible competitions. And also why there used to be a hot dog stand in Gamla stan that claimed to sell the spiciest hot dog in the world, and offered a refund to anyone who managed to eat an entire sausage. That koriander thing is just weird. I see women on dating sites writing in their profile that they don't like koriander, or that they do. Which always confuses me as I personally don't give a damn if my food contains koriander or not.
Banana pizza is one of my all time favourites but i like most variants as well, i have never heard of löjrom pizza that seems far more strange than banana on a pizza but i would love to try it since i really like löjrom. Smörgåstårta is absolutely fantastic
If you want to try some more really wierd/nasty foods you have to try blodpalt/paltbröd, pölsa (sausage made from intestines), isterband, kalvsylta and aladåb
I love licorice, the salty licorice is even better! I might as well be an honorary Swede. Licorice is one of my favorite ice-creams as well. My fiancé is Swedish and does not like it.
I’d rather suck on a bar of soap than eat coriander. Another weird food that I didn’t realize was weird until fairly recently is the variety of tubed foods. Perfectly normal growing up but I’ve started questioning it since the dawn of TH-camrs born in other countries.
Jag har en stor buske med koriander. Jag smakade den som den var och det var väldigt intensivt. Men lite som smaksättning i asiatisk i mat är supergott!
Kalles "Kaviar" (it's not allowed to be sold as caviar any more, due to the low roe content, now it's only Kalles) is a poor man's version of taramasalata (greek) or salata de icre (romanian), roe sallad. It's supposed to be made of salted fish roe, oil and lemon juice. The Kalles "fake-viar" also contains sugar, potato flakes, tomato puré and other cheap ingredients. The roe is smoked, salted and sweetened whith sugar. Yuck. It has very little to do with caviar.
They say that surströmming comes from an shipload of fish gone bad. And som finns wanting to buy them anyways. Next time they met they finns the wanted to buy more. Finland and sweden has been the same country for many years. And Stockholm is placed to be in the middle of both countrys
Surströmming came about during the 16th century when Sweden had a salt shortage. Basically they tried to stretch out their salt supplies, but just enough salt was used to prevent the raw herring from rotting while allowing it to ferment.
Du borde prova varm smörgåstårta! Hönökaka/jubileumsbröd med köttfärs, bacon, lök, tomat och ost. Den är god👌 ps. Jag har svenskj*vlar hemma. Jag gillar dem!
Ansjovis is not anchovies. Anchovies are called sardeller in Swedish. Baltic herring? That's strömming (same as sill really). Abba is from Bohuslän...so nowhere near the Baltic. The herring is caught in the North Sea for Abba's sill.
And - by the way - Kalles Kaviar (and the 2 other brand names of kaviar that exist on the Swedish market) is somewhat controversial even in Sweden. Appr 60-70% of swedes like kaviar, but 30-40% hate it.
I spent a year as a high school exchange student in Lund, and I love Kalle's kaviar!
Did you know of a teacher named Kristofer Rosfjord, teaches Math and Computer Science at Lund High School?
@@krisdunwoody7037 The name does not sound familiar, but it was many years ago. I attended Lunds Privata Elementarskola (also known as Spyken) back in 1967-68!
@@carolynpearce7338 Oh, this would have been in the last few years, he is my Pen Pal for Decades, and started working there at Lund HS!
Me too especially with dill! Any brand works though!
i just love "Svenskdjävlar" the salt really get you awake, but take it easy with the "heta Svenskdjävlar"
I am a Finn, and I always have Kalle's Kaviar in the fridge. I live currently in Poland, and they have it here as well, although in Poland there is another Swedish brand of fishroe paste that is more common.
Jansonsfrestelse (janssoninkiusaus) is also very common in Finland, although we do not eat it during Christmas. It is a regular food.
Also, Kebab pizza for the win. The best thing. I also love reindeer pizza. I am sure they have that in Sweden as well.
Also, pickled herring is eaten all over the Baltic Sea. In both Finland and Poland, it's super popular.
Saltliqourice seems to be a Nordic thing.
Smörgåstårta (voileipäkakku) is very popular in Finland especially in summer.
Definitely have reindeer pizza in sweden! probably way more common the further north you go, but i see it from time to time even in the central parts of the land
I've seen pickled herring in Germany, Netherlands and Romania (!!) too.
Gothenburgian here. Ate Surströmming for the first time on New Year's eve 1999/2000 when I was like 12. Remember that we had to open the doors and windows on both sides of the house to air the smell out, but that the smell was worse than the taste.
Ouch, ät aldrig surströmming inomhus / västernorrland
Surströmming is not food, it's some kind of chemical weapon that should be banned in the Geneva convention on warfare.
Surströmming is actually really good! It smells worse than it tastes 😄 I eat it at least once per year with my family and relatives as a tradition called "surströmmingsfest". It's one of the few times I get to meet my cousins and more distant relatives. It's almost like a holiday.
App app app. Surströmmingsskiva is the correct word :P
As a swede I can tell you this. In a "smörgåstårta" you can mix creamcheese or cream fraiche with paté or Kalles or often time our swedish "mjukost" to make a soft filling. Then as you said we make them pretty with toppings to show the "theme".. shrimp, ham, cheese and pretty vegetables. It's realy not that crazy its like a sub or sandwich with some fillings. And yes... I do love "svenskjävlar" untill they hurt my mouth but cilantro taste like lavender... go chew on that. 😂
My fist sandwich cake, was only with creamcheese and leverpastej. I thougnt this cant be good!! it was good...
We have sandwitch cake in Estonia as well. Like you said, it can be done with fish (salmon, trout) or ham and cheese. The last one is maybe more popular among kids 🙂 Baltic herring is also a traditional food here, not a fan of it either.
Yes! And with shrimps, eggs, mayo, dill etc..yummy
Here in Norway, we also eat taco on a Friday,but before that it was Grandiosa pizza on Friday. not just any pizza, but from this brand. BTW: You can take your mom to Germany, there can she get kepab pizza as well😀
In denmark it's tuesdays
I suggest you try some more traditional old swedish dishes. Like pölsa, made from liver, lard and barley groats. Served with potatoes and pickled red beets. Leverstuvning (Liver stew) Blodpudding, Kroppkakor made from potatoes, weat flower and salty pork and onions inside. Kroppakor are served with melted butter and off course Lingonsylt (Lingonberry jam)
Stefan, I have heard in previous videos that your Swedish has improved a lot and you start to speak fluently now. I’m impressed. As a Swede I want to help you with just a few things and that is the å, ä and ö sounds. In the beginning of this video you said språk several times but used the a sound instead of the å sound. It should be språk where å sounds like o in adorable. Then you said smörgåsbord where your ö sounded like the english o or the swedish å, as if you said smårgasbård. Try to say ö as you do ea in learn. Smörgåsbord is diffcult as you both have an ö and an å and also an o, pronounced as the oo in food. Swedish is not easy though, I know. Just trying to help you a bit. Keep up the good work with the Language lock down. That’s a great business idea anyways. All the best wishes. 🌸🌸
I was going to make the same comment. It’s really important if you want to speak proper Swedish and not so hard to learn. Note the difference in meaning between spraka and språka, räka, råka and raka, or höra and hora (!) Å sounds like like the ’o’ in ’Orchard’ Ö like the vowel sound in ’learn’ and the Ä sound is used a lot in US English, like ’last’ I had to learn quite a few tricky sounds in both Castilian Spanish, Russian and Turkish!
You should mix candies that are really salty and really sour. Like a sour pacifier with "häxvrål". It's not life changing but quite good.
Salty licorice is great! And there's nothing wrong with banana and curry on a pizza!
You should try "varma mackor" with "Kalles Kaviar" and banana slices under the cheese...
Other very specific Swedish stuff :
Isterband
Grynkorv
Lutfisk
Grandma food. 😀
There is nothing better than Lutfisk. I could eat that every week,
We eat Lutfisk (lipeäkala) in Finland too.
Grynkorv with mashed potatoes and senapssås (mustard sauce)! Mmmm, tasty! It is a thick sausage made from mainly pork meat and barley grains and it is boiled, not fried. It is the "national" course in the part of Sweden I am from, Västergötland. More specifically Skaraborgs län, we even have a Grynkorv Academy, acting to preserve the grynkorv. Grynkorvens dag is celebrated on the third thursday in October every year.
Not a type of food but the package of it: the tubes, never seen it used to the same extent as in Sweden
Violet (viol) is a common flavor for candy, never liked it myself but most others do
I think cinnamon is the US version of Sweden's licorice. It can be sweet or hot and it takes some time to get used to but everyone who grew up with it seems to enjoy it
Here in Handen I think it is called "Flygande Jakob" (Flying Jacob) and is made of "Kyckling/chicken, banan/banana, ananas/pineapple, jordnötter/peanuts and curry", it is rathey yummy as long you can overcome the trauma of seeing fruit as a "natural candy", it is rather healthy (I think) and full of energy.
you miss a lot of traditional foods like blodpudding, råraka, potatisbulle, raggmunk, rotmos, fläskkorv, different kinds of porridge, all the diffrent kinds of salmons, gravad, rökt etc. som local foods like kroppkakor, pitepalt, some places in the north eat soup with what they call ''klimpen''.
Blodpalt, pölsa och isterband också😅
@@Snorpish svensk ostkaka är också ganska unikt, fiskpudding också kanske? Kålpudding kanske?
@@Snorpish Reindeer blodpalt mixed with renskav, heated over a fire outdoors wintertime, while seated on a reindeer fur. That's a great memory with my family of polar ni**ers.
@@wilhelmmoller960 En helt vanlig Frödinge ostkaka kan bli så jävla mycket bättre om du hackar upp den och lägger till mer vispgrädde och finhackad mandel, innan du kör in den i ugnen.
Blodpudding is a Swedish variety of Black Pudding. I'm not that fond of it but I can eat it once in a while, with fried bacon, fried onion and fried apple slices.
Kroppkakor, potato dumplings, filled with finely chopped pork, onion and allspice is delicious, it takes a while (like 3 hours) to make them though. In Italy theres a dish called gnocchi which is made from the same type of potato dough, but smaller and without filling.
Swedish Ansjovis is not at all Anchovies. Ansjovis is made of herring. Anchovies is called Sardell in Sweden.
I have a theory that swedish "pita-bread" culture just migrated to tacos sometime in the late 90s/early 00s. Basically all the wird ingrediants and you upraded with some spices and different bread.
Thanks for the interesting information.
Blodpudding med lingonsylt är gott😊
Riven vitkål skall med!
Och rivna morötter ❤️
@@superbird426näää riven vitkål 😜
@@engfoinroblox5710 vi gillar lite olika, men det är gott med 😉
Oj va gott!
We have put banana on our tandoori chicken pizza for years now, and it's so good.
BTW I'm Swedish born, but married to a Kiwi (New Zealander) living in Australia.
We've made this pizza for our son and his friends many times and they all loved it, although at first they thought the banana was weird.
I think we had it for the first time at a restaurant in NZ.
Im an American and I love the Kallies fish row in a tube, it's really just like caviar with some fillers, such as potato flakes. I use to be able to find it in the Swedish neighborhood here in Chicago, now I just get it at IKEA.
Hey, how about doing an episode about doing laundry in Europe and how to use the drying rack and waiting forever for jean to dry and how all the towels come out extra crispy and uncomfortable.
The Hawaii pizza (pineapple, no banana) is originally from Canada.
Thank you Canada!
But we swedes have ”inproved” this Hawaii pizza by adding banana. 😱😩🤬
There is no banana on a Hawaii pizza only pineapple
@@jurgen4466 Pineapple and ham. Some versions might also add bacon.
@@jurgen4466 precisely what I wrote. The one with banana is generally called Africana, because banana is a staple in food in east Africa.
Sandwich cakes are pretty much food in cake form;
they generally contain ingredients like eggs, ham, vegetables, caviar, and similar food items like that. You can definitely use them as actual foods every now and then, at least as long as they don't contain too much whipped cream.
Hi Stefan. You say you don't like surströmming - most Swedes don't either...but when it comes to taste cleansing, I think you should try to find an English grocery store and ask for a (small) can of Marmite. THERE you can talk about strange foods. It's a dark brown batter that you spread on the sandwiches. It is disgusting but useful because the misery contains a lot of B vitamins. The product is made from the bottom residues that form when brewing beer ... Try it!
I am an American, I love the banana pizza. Here in my home state of Georgia, we have roasted peaches on pizza...and that is even better than banana and pineapple combined!
One could also mention blodpudding!
I LOVE Svenskjävlar. Me and my partner eats them fairly often. Haupt makes some awesome licorice!
You have got to try some kroppkakor with lingonberry jam 😊
Have you tried the canned fishballs in lobster sauce wirh boiled potatoes? As a kid I really loved it 😋. Being vegeterian I don't eat it anymore...
Janssons I would describe more as a potato gratain with anchovies :) (its my Maltese husbands favorite on the julbord/christmas buffet ❤) but most of us "kids" in the family dont like anchovies so my mum makes one extra alternative version with Kalles kaviar in it instead and its so good :)
An unsmoked kaviar is even better.
@@michaelhansen5353 never tried it but that sounds nice too 👍
It's not anchovies at all. Anchovies is sardeller in Swedish.
@@starvictory7079 Exactly. One way of translating the Swedish word "ansjovis" that I found when searching, is "tinned sprats cured in brine"...if that makes any sense. Swedish ansjovis is actually more related to "sill" mentioned in the video.
and what swedish people mean when they say ansjovis is sprat (skarpsill) nor Anchovis nor sardeller@@starvictory7079
Surströmming I eat every year. Preferably with the red onion, sour cream, dill and potatoes, never on bread. Surströmming has an incredible amount of Umami, and doesn't taste at all like it smells :)
I love the "Svenskdjävlar" but if you eat more than 3-4 it might start to feel like it is caustic, then you take a few more and enjoy the pain 😂
2:16 As a Swede who's tried it once as a kid - it's not bad, very sweet tasting buuuuut...It's, from what I understand, considered a "Dessert pizza", like a nutella sandwich or something. More as a movie night snack maybe rather than dinner. And yeah I definitely would take the Kebab pizza over that any time.
Cinnamon tastes very sweet in cooking and so does banana, fruits in general means it's not dinner. Now I have seen people order chicken pizza with peanuts and curry like some Tikki Masala nightmare and that is by far much worse, not to mention Danes putting (day old cold) spaghetti on a pizza which is atrocious...
I don't eat fish but I make two exceptions - Kalles Kaviar on an egg sandwich, and Canned tuna (I guess it's just the meaty consistency) with whatever. But some people put tuna on Pizza, now that is awful.
Well, if yo like nutella, you should try a nutella and brie grilled cheese sandwich.
It's very common to have variants of smörgåstårta lined with cheese doodle crumbs, usually with cheese, ham, tomatoes on top.
There is the meaty and the fishy "smörgåstårta", some are filled with soft cheese, and shrimp and smoked salmon, others are "leverpastej" and smoked ham ...
Anyway, tacofredag is sort of like the "fredagsmys", cozy friday.
Not much cooking, just fry upp the ground beef (or whatever), mash the avocado and mix it, chop some stuff and put it on the table, heat the tortillas (or not, whatever you use), lay the table, and everybody can help out, and then sit down and pick your taco together, sort of like a julbord. But the children like it. It is fast and easy, celebrating that the work/school week is ended. Then for dessert a big bowl of "lösgodis", small candy.
Love, love, love banana pizza! 🤤 The first time I had it actually wasn't in Sweden but in Thailand.
The salt in Svenskjävlar isn't regular old salt, it is ammonium chloride or sal ammoniac (salmiak).
If you want to try the stuff I recommend this order:
Tier 1 - Salta Katten
Tier 2 - Djungel vrål
???
Tier 15 - Svenskjävlar
Isn't the banana curry pizza just a really watered down version of the traditional swedish dish "Flygande Jacob"? Ham instead of chicken and bacon, curry instead of chili sauce and cheese and bread instead of rice. Also in some places you can get your banana curry pizza with salty peanuts on top which is like the staple of Flygande Jacob.
Svensk jävlar exist in a couple of different varieties:
1. The original recipe which comes in two different sizes:bite sized and XL.
2. Chocolate coated:the original recipe with a coat of semi sweet Belgian chocolate.
3. Spicy strawberry:the original recipe with a strawberry flavored coating and Carolina Reaper hot pepper extract.
So far i have only tasted the original recipe and the chocolate coated varieties.
The idea of consuming Reaper extract is a little scary to me.
You should try Swedish "Kräftskiva", it's very traditional and very festive.
A taco section in every grocery store is true and kind of weird. But we do love tacos!
Smörgåstårta is the best! The most common flavors are leverpastej, ost & skinka, lax & räkor or rostbiff 😊
Other Swedish foods you might explore or discuss in a video are messmör (which you of course can get in a tube), all the weird processed cheese you can get in tubes, and all the foods that are mixed in with them, right in the tube (like a toothpaste type tube). Shrimp cheese, crayfish cheese, skagen cheese moldy cheese, smoked reindeer cheese, blue cheese with apple and cinnamon. All in nice little toothpaste tubes! and lets not forget the ham cheese and the bacon cheese, or even the processed squeezable brie cheese. But enough about cheese. Also, Swedish sausages which range from fthe beloved staple alukorv (more or less a ring bologna) to isterband, a more ‘controversial’ sausage that I love and dream about, though I haven’t eaten one in more than three decades. Pölsa, which looks kind of what I imagine scrapple would look like after pulsing it in a blender with some oatmeal. Flygande Jakob (Flying Jacob). Princesstårta (Princess Cake). Ugnspannkaka (Oven Pancake. Semla.
I've introduced banana curry pizza to more than a few foreigners and most of them either enjoyed it or downright loved it! And this includes Americans.
Sure, one or two said "I would not order one for myself, but I like it well enough". _No one_ so far has said "I hate it and will never eat it again".
That said, kebab pizza always blows all competition out of the water.
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_Sill_ is *Atlantic* herring! it's called _strömming_ when caught in the Baltic north of a small village outside of Kalmar. The pickled version is unequivocally _sill_ as it's caught in the seas to the west.
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Why did you open a can of _surströmming_ out in the open? The way veterans do it is in a bucket of water. At least you put it in a flatbread wrap with the traditional ingredients :)
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I'm Swedish born and bred, with Finnish ancestry, and I don't get salty licorice either. Sweet black licorice is nice but I really _do not_ like salty.
That said, it's pretty easy to avoid, so I do just that and anyone liking stuff coated in salmiak (that salty stuff) is on their own.
I love the salty Swedish licorice. I think it's an acquired taste of you're not from Sweden. I'm not but I just really like it and have since I was a kid
I am swedish if you like pizza try it like this; thin crust garlicsauce on the crust instead of tomoatosauce then have lots of cheese and if you like crunks of gorgonzola cheese as well i prefer when my pizza is less time in the oven so i ask for less baked
Kaviar is a must on the breakfast egg (which of course is hardboiled) instead of salt, or spread on a slice of bread with fresh cucumber slices or sliced egg. Smörgåstårta is great, but I'm not a fan of those with a layer of canned tuna. As for surströmming, I've never had it, nor do I have a desire to try it. Swedish pizzas are a bit exotic. I just wonder how much the fact that most pizza places are run by people from the Middle East influences the styles that have developed.
I LOVE Svenskjävlar! And surströmming! And Im from northern Sweden (Jämtland) ^^ Maybe that's why!
Edit: Norway also have the exact same tradition with taco friday. With the same bread and toppings :)
You are so correct. UN should put a world wide ban of eating tacos Saturday - Thoursday.
Denmark have tacotuseday!!@@brahand
Well most of those are common Finland too. Bananas and bearnise sauce on pizza are not our thing for sure. Those are youst weird. Kalles regular caviar ain´t very good, but the "rundiga" is delicious. Spread it on your bread after you´ve spread butter to it and spread it same way as the butter. Thin layer on top of your bread is great.
I just love everything with shrimps. I used to buy that Rydbergs räkksallad and it is so good with boiled potatoes and pan fryed sausage. Slice of Skogaholmslimpa with rundiga kaviar and glass of milk, there is a good Swedish dinner 😄. Well at least for my Finnish taste.
I live in Denmark, we also have “smörgåstårta” often white tuna 6:01
You say you don't appreciate Kalles Kaviar. Most Swedish kaviar is smoked. Try an un-smoked variant instead. That is what I prefer, e.g. with hard-boiled egg on knäckebröd.
"Svenskjävlar" are really good, very, very salty and i like them alot!
Hey man
What airline, as an American did you fly on? I'm trying to fly to Sweden
The amount of people that dont understand the majesty of swedish pizza should hop on the next train across europe and try some. You will be blown away how well we have it in that regard. been trying pizzas on 3 continents in a score of countries and nothing even comes close to ours.
Messmör is a Swedish thing, it kinda holds the place of peanut butter on the breakfast table.
I love svenskjävlar but you can only eat it a small piece at a time, gotta savour the salmiak before you take your next bite
I make Swedish-Mexican fusion tacos, with both cucumber AND cilantro on them :D
The idea of putting banana & curry on pizza, or any bizarre topping is probably a assyrian idea, since most pizza bakers in Sweden are assyrians/arameic (syrian-orthodox christian minority people from Turkey-Syria-Iraq).
There are no Italians making pizza in Sweden for decades, the last pizzeria owned by Italians I know of was La Luna in Norrköping, owned by the Santoro family, late 1980s.
Speaking of weird food - peasoup and pork, with warm Swedish punch and pancakes for dessert. Peasoup with cured pork, some mustard on the side and dried sage & thyme sprinkled over it, it's not that odd really. But whoever came up with the idea that this requires WARM sweet punch (it's sweet arrak liquor) along with it!? And, as if the soup wasn't rich enough, PANCAKES with whipped cream and jam after that!? And only for Thursday lunch!? Haha, that's weird.
7:57 tack för att du påpekar det här. Förbryllar mig att varenda svensk har gurka på sin tacos.
Trust me, a lot of us Swedes are as baffled by banana on pizza as you are. I would fight for smörgåstårta and salty liqorice though (even Svenskjävlar).
You missed 'flying jacob'. Also Mexico has a sandwich cake, Pastel de Atún (Mexican Tuna Cake)
In my opinion, Svenskjävlar was one of those things that just had to happen, for the same reason as to why there are eating as many raw ghost pepper friuts as possible competitions. And also why there used to be a hot dog stand in Gamla stan that claimed to sell the spiciest hot dog in the world, and offered a refund to anyone who managed to eat an entire sausage.
That koriander thing is just weird. I see women on dating sites writing in their profile that they don't like koriander, or that they do. Which always confuses me as I personally don't give a damn if my food contains koriander or not.
Banana pizza is one of my all time favourites but i like most variants as well, i have never heard of löjrom pizza that seems far more strange than banana on a pizza but i would love to try it since i really like löjrom. Smörgåstårta is absolutely fantastic
If you want to try some more really wierd/nasty foods you have to try blodpalt/paltbröd, pölsa (sausage made from intestines), isterband, kalvsylta and aladåb
i have worked whid sandwich cake , so i make one sea food and one meet kind, did do it for 14 days ago for my granchild birthday, the love it
I think you would enjoy a oxfile, ägg, bearnaisesås pizza it's a delicious combination and my favorite.
I love licorice, the salty licorice is even better! I might as well be an honorary Swede. Licorice is one of my favorite ice-creams as well. My fiancé is Swedish and does not like it.
I wish I had some nachos now with pico de gallo .
good stuff steff
With all the talk of pizza I was hoping you would mention “pizzasallad”
Böckling is the only Swedish food that I don’t care for. But, to be fair, I haven’t tried Surströmming.
I’d rather suck on a bar of soap than eat coriander. Another weird food that I didn’t realize was weird until fairly recently is the variety of tubed foods. Perfectly normal growing up but I’ve started questioning it since the dawn of TH-camrs born in other countries.
Jag har en stor buske med koriander. Jag smakade den som den var och det var väldigt intensivt. Men lite som smaksättning i asiatisk i mat är supergott!
smörgåstårta är bland det godaste som finns
Koriander is like a you either love it or hate it, but i know alot of people that both hate and love it, i think i am in between i like it in salads
Kalles "Kaviar" (it's not allowed to be sold as caviar any more, due to the low roe content, now it's only Kalles) is a poor man's version of taramasalata (greek) or salata de icre (romanian), roe sallad. It's supposed to be made of salted fish roe, oil and lemon juice.
The Kalles "fake-viar" also contains sugar, potato flakes, tomato puré and other cheap ingredients. The roe is smoked, salted and sweetened whith sugar. Yuck.
It has very little to do with caviar.
First time I tried sil, instantly liked it.
Have you tried smoked eel?
I love banana on pizza
You forgot kroppkakor!
+paltbröd med fläsk pitepalt och pölsa
I'm a big salty liquorice freak, but even I think svenskjävlar is a bit much. Djungelvrål is delicious however!
as a swede i didnt relize how much fish food types we have
They say that surströmming comes from an shipload of fish gone bad. And som finns wanting to buy them anyways. Next time they met they finns the wanted to buy more. Finland and sweden has been the same country for many years. And Stockholm is placed to be in the middle of both countrys
Svenskjävlar är ju jättegott!! =) Men så älskar jag allt salt godis, synd att de tog bort Gott å blandat Extra salt, den påsen var kanon!!
Paltbröd med fläsk och béchamelsås.
I eat fishballs even today as an adult
😂
Ja, svenskjävlar är jättegott! Men inget man äter massor av på en gång. Och det är inte salt, det är salmiak. Lite annorlunda smak. Gooood!
I like really spicy food and i'm a Swede 😁 I'm not eating Harakiri-korven though as my brother has done 2 times 😂😅🥵
Surtrömming är ett gammalt sätt att bevara fisken, innan kyl och frys fanns😃👍
Surströmming came about during the 16th century when Sweden had a salt shortage.
Basically they tried to stretch out their salt supplies, but just enough salt was used to prevent the raw herring from rotting while allowing it to ferment.
I love koriander. I can recommend la neta, really good mexican style tacos. Swedish tacos are for kids.
And USA have Hersheys chocolate that seems to be on the same level as Surströmming. Actually been warned not to try Hersheys.
Svenskjävlar is good. A bit heavy on the salt though
Du borde prova varm smörgåstårta! Hönökaka/jubileumsbröd med köttfärs, bacon, lök, tomat och ost. Den är god👌 ps. Jag har svenskj*vlar hemma. Jag gillar dem!
Ansjovis is not anchovies. Anchovies are called sardeller in Swedish.
Baltic herring? That's strömming (same as sill really).
Abba is from Bohuslän...so nowhere near the Baltic. The herring is caught in the North Sea for Abba's sill.
There is also hot sandwich cake, wich can be like pizzas.
You should stick with grits and possum!
Fiskbollar hade vi i skolan.
It tastes like soap to me too, but I still like it! I am insane!!!!!!
And - by the way - Kalles Kaviar (and the 2 other brand names of kaviar that exist on the Swedish market) is somewhat controversial even in Sweden. Appr 60-70% of swedes like kaviar, but 30-40% hate it.