vigorously. It will be light and somewhat fluffy. Transfer the pudding into the mold. Bang it on the countertop and smooth the top with a knife. (Norwegian cooking tends to get physical.) Seal the mold with the foil and place it in the baking pan. Pour in the boiling water and set the pan in the middle of the oven. Cook for one hour. Take the mold from the pan. Let it stand for five minutes and then unmold it on a decorative round platter. Drain off any liquid that may have accumulated. Spoon on some of the sauce (recipe follows) and garnish with whole shrimp and parsley sprigs. Serve the rest of the sauce separately. Don’t forget to serve with lingonberries and boiled potatoes. Faith actually likes this dish, but she uses steamed new potatoes or fingerlings instead of the boiled potatoes.
Serves 6.
Note: This can also be made in individual molds as a first course.
SHRIMP SAUCE
The sauce can be made while the pudding is cooking. Melt the butter in a heavy saucepan. Add the flour, cooking for two to three minutes over low heat, stirring constantly. Increase the heat slightly and slowly add the milk, whisking or stirring constantly again. Add the onion slice and continue to stir for five minutes. Remove from the heat, discard the onion slice, add the nutmeg, along with salt and pepper to taste. Return to the heat and add the shrimp, reserving some for the garnish. When the shrimp are pink, serve immediately. (You can make the sauce ahead and do this last step just before serving.)
Cook the shrimp for the garnish in rapidly boiling water until pink.
CUCUMBER AND DILL SALAD
Slice the cucumbers as thinly as possible, using a sharp knife or a food processor. One of my relatives uses a cheese slicer—an
Toss the cucumbers with one teaspoon of salt, cover, and refrigerate for at least thirty minutes. Drain the excess liquid.
Combine the vinegar, sugar, remaining salt, and pepper and pour over the cucumbers. Add the chopped dill and mix to be sure it is evenly distributed. Cover the cucumber salad and return to the refrigerator.
Before serving the salad, transfer it to a bowl, using a slotted spoon, and garnish with the dill sprigs. This
Serves 6 or more, depending on number of side dishes.
LUTEFISK
No, this is not a joke. I am reproducing my cousin Hege Farstad’s recipe verbatim, so you will know what people like Garrison Keillor are talking about. But Hege’s
The best raw material for
After the fish is removed from the water, the fish is peeled off the bones and put into
To serve
Trimmings: bechamel sauce, with mustard added according to taste; fried bacon strips and fat; steamed green peas; boiled potatoes. Serve
In this country, it may be more convenient to start with dry, unsalted cod. Norwegian-American cookbooks call for potash lye to make the
Now you know.
If you have traveled in Scandinavia, you have some idea how delicious—and addictive—these are. The point is to compose something as appealing to the eye as to the palate, and a buffet of several different kinds of
The bread, which may be white, wheat, rye, whole-grain, or whatever you like, acts as the platform for the creation. Slice the bread thin, but thick enough to hold what you will be arranging on top. Spread it with unsalted butter or herb butter. In addition to the butter, most sandwiches start with a lettuce leaf, but you can also use other thinly sliced vegetables.
Generally, white bread is used for more delicate flavors, such as shrimp. Heartier breads are used for things like smoked fish or roast beef.
To make Pix’s favorite, spread the bread lightly with unsalted butter, add a leaf of Boston lettuce, then arrange several rows of small cooked shrimp on top. Pipe some mayonnaise (Norwegian mayonnaise is a bit sweeter than Hellman’s) from a pastry tube on top of the shrimp. Cut a thin slice of lemon, remove the seeds, then cut the slice almost crosswise and twist it, placing it across the shrimp.
Other good combinations are:
Roast beef topped with a thin slice of tomato and horseradish mayonnaise
Thin meat patty (beef or veal) grilled, then topped with fried onions and served at room temperature
Smoked salmon topped with thin asparagus spears that have been marinated in a vinaigrette and a final dollop of creme fraiche
Smoked salmon topped with slices of cucumber and dill salad
Slices of hard-boiled egg topped with anchovies or herring and tomato slices
Smoked mussels or smoked eel on top of scrambled egg
Sliced liverwurst topped with crisp bacon and garnished with a sliced cornichon, the small, tart French gherkin
Jarlsberg cheese with turkey, topped with a spoonful of chutney
It is important to put enough on the sandwich so the bread is hidden. It is also important to decorate the surface with chopped parsley, a carrot curl, sprigs of herbs, capers, caviar, strips of pimento or peppers fanned to make a floral shape, or lemon.
The sandwiches are served on large trays or platters that have been covered with paper doilies.