Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Holiday

Pickled Herring in Dill Dressing

Christmas, Fish & seafood, Holiday, LunchTove Balle-PedersenComment
Pickled Herring in Dill Dressing

Pickled Herring in Dill Dressing

12th Day of Christmas.

When pickled herring being a vital part of the Danish holiday lunch parties, you sometime want to change up the flavor profile. The classic dressing/sauce is the curry version, is a must have. But this Dill version has a very delicate and fine flavor, and comes in as a close second in my home.

Ingredients:

  • 3-4 pickled herring fillets (marinede sildefileter)

Dressing:

  • ½ dl (¼ cup) creme fraiche or sour cream
  • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise
  • 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
  • 1 teaspoon pickling solution from the herring
  • ½ lemon, the juice from
  • 1 teaspoon capers
  • a good handful chopped fresh dill, cleaned well, and dried
  • salt & pepper to taste

Directions:

Mix all the ingredient for the dressing, and season with salt and pepper. Cut the herring fillet into bite-size pieces and cover the herring bites with the dressing. Let the herring marinate in the dressing for a few hours before serving.

Serve the herring on a pies of Danish rye bread.

Enjoy!

Peppermint Dots

Christmas, Holiday, Sweets and CandyTove Balle-PedersenComment
Peppermint Dots

Peppermint Dots

11th Day of Christmas.

Peppermint is one of the holiday favors. Last year I made peppermint marshmallows, and in 2013 I made Peppermint ice cream. Today I wanted to make these small peppermint dots. My dad made these for christmas, and I have only known them as a homemade candy. The dots are small in size, but Big in flavor.

Makes a lot.

Ingredients:

  • 1 egg white (35 g)
  • 225 g confectionary sugar (powdered sugar)
  • 2 teaspoons peppermint extract 
  • 50-60 g good dark chocolate or chocolate pearls, I use Valrhona
  • 1 tablespoon crushed candy cane

Directions:

Whisk egg whites with peppermint extract and sugar, until you have a thick dough. Put the dough in a pastry bag with a round tip. Pipe bite-size dots onto a jelly pan lined with sheets parchment paper. Decorate with chocolate pearls and/or crushed candy cane. 

Let the dot dry over night and keep them in an airtight container in the refrigerator.

Enjoy!

 

 

Christmas Lunch Dishes

Christmas, Holiday, LunchTove Balle-PedersenComment

10th Day of Christmas.

When hosting a Traditional Danish Christmas lunch you can serve these great dishes:

The lunch always starts with the fish dishes: pickled herring, smoked or/and gravad salmon (lax). Followed by the cold cuts like rullepølse, head cheese and things like hardboiled eggs and tomatoes. Then the warm dishes will be served: porkroast (flæskesteg) with picked red cabbage, liver pate with bacon and mushrooms and fried fish.

Pickled Herring-001.jpg

Pickled Herring

Served on rye bread, with sliced raw onions. Another favorite is adding curry salad on the herring, and maybe also some hardboiled egg.

 

 

 

 

 

Gravad Lax:

This gravad lax is to die for. It is so much better than any store bought kind I have ever had. 

Head Cheese (sylte) 

Served with mustard and pickled beets.

Rullepølse

Served with raw onion rings.

 

 

Liver Pate

My favorite warm dish, served with crispy bacon and sautéed mushrooms or with pickled beets

Pork roast

served with Pickled red Cabbage

Fried sole filet

 

Danish rye bread

Most of the dishes above is served on Danish rye bread or some kind of White bread.

 

After all this food, why not have some dessert? And of course it has to be Risalamande Danish rice pudding with cherry sauce.  



Pickled Herring

Christmas, Fish & seafood, Holiday, LunchTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
Pickled Herring

Pickled Herring

9th Day of Christmas.

Pickled herring is an acquired taste, but it is a staple at every holiday lunch parties in Denmark. The fresh herring is cleaned and salted before getting pickled, aka marinated in a sugary vinegar dressing. The flavoring can vary, but this is the most basic and classic version. 

Ingredients:

Herring:

  • 200 g salted herring fillets
  • 4-500 ml water

Pickling Solution:

  • 150 g sugar
  • 200 ml white vinegar
  • 100 ml water
  • 1 onion, thinly sliced
  • 6 whole allspice
  • 5 whole cloves
  • 2 bay leave
  • 10 whole black peppercorns

Directions:

Rinse the salted herring fillets, and place them in a large shallow pan where they need to soak in cold water for 12-18 hours. The fillets have to be completely covered in water, but you need to have as much water as you do herring. This will remove the worst saltiness from the herring. After 12 hours take a small bite to test the saltiness. The fish has to be more salty than you would like to eat, the saltiness will mix with the pickling solution.

 Put all the ingredients for the pickling solution in a large pan, and bring it to a boil. Let it simmer for about 15 minutes, and remove from heat, and let it cool completely. 

Place the herring fillets in a large glass jar and pour the cooled pickling solution over. Again you want to have as much pickling solution as herring. Let the herring pickle covered in the refrigerator for at least 3 days before serving. The herring will keep in the refrigerator 14-16 days.

Enjoy!

 

 

Checkerboard Cookies

Christmas, Cookies, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
Checkerboard Cookies

Checkerboard Cookies

8th Day of Christmas.

I only make cookies one time a year, around Christmas. Well, cookies like chocolate chip cookies, will be made all year round.

I really like vanilla cookies, and my husband loves everything chocolate. So these checkerboard cookies is the perfect compromise. They are fun to make, they look fancy, and luckily they are really tasty too.

Makes 100-120 cookies

Ingredients:

Vanilla dough:

  • 170 g butter, salted and room temperature

  • 100 g confectionary sugar (powder sugar)

  • 45 g almonds, bleached and grounded

  • 1 egg yolk

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 255 g all-purpose flour

Chocolate dough:

  • 170 g butter, salted and room temperature

  • 100 g confectionary sugar (powder sugar)

  • 40 g almonds, bleached and grounded

  • 30 g unsweetened cocoa powder, I use Valrhona

  • 1 egg yolk

  • ½ teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 255 g all-purpose flour

Directions:

Vanilla dough:

Cream the butter until soft and creamy. Add the confectionery sugar, mix until fully combined, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed. Add the ground almonds, egg yolk, vanilla and flour, and mix until  just blended. Be careful not to over mix the dough. 

Roll the dough between two sheets of parchment paper into a large rectangle about ⅓ inch (9 mm) thick. Transfer the dough onto a baking sheet and refrigerate for a minimum of 3 hours until hardened.

Chocolate dough:

Follow the instructions for the vanilla dough. Add the cocoa with the ground almonds. Roll and chill the chocolate dough as for the vanilla dough.

Assemble the cookies:

Remove one of  the doughs from the refrigerator, peel off the paper from both sides and set the dough onto a fresh sheet of parchment. Using a sharp knife, slice the dough lengthwise into square strips about ⅓ inch (9 mm) thick. Place the dough strips in the refrigerator, while repeating the other dough.

Remove dough strips from the refrigerator. Lay a strip of vanilla dough lengthwise on the baking sheet, then lay a strip of chocolate dough next to the vanilla, another strip of vanilla  and finally another chocolate, so you now have 4 strips alternating colors. Press the three strips gently together so that they stick to one another. You can brush the sides with some diluted apricot preserve, to help the dough to glue together.

Do this with the rest of the strips, so you end up with logs of striped cookie dough.  Place the logs on top of each other, so the chocolate and vanilla alternates and you have  4x4 colors per log.

Gently press the log together on all sides. Wrap the log with plastic wrap, a place in the refrigerator.   Make more logs with the remaining dough.

Chill the logs for at least an hour before slicing.

Preheat the oven to 375℉ (190℃). Line baking sheets with parchment paper.

Slice into cookies about ¼ inch (6 mm) thick. Set the squares ½ inch (1 cm) apart on the baking sheet and bake for about 8 minutes, until the vanilla parts are lightly browned. If your oven is baking unevenly rotate the sheet halfway through. Cool on the parchment paper on a wire rack. 

Store the completely cooled cookies in an airtight container.

Enjoy!