Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Russian Salad - Russisk Salat

LunchTove Balle-Pedersen3 Comments
Open faced sandwich with Russian Salad/Russisk Salat with a fried egg.

Open faced sandwich with Russian Salad/Russisk Salat with a fried egg.

This Russian Salad is not a Olivier salad or a potato salad, but a beet salad used in Denmark on an open faced sandwich mostly with some kind of egg.

This sandwich was a go-to for my mom, when she needed a quick and easy dinner. For a working mom you need some easy solutions. My mom just had to fry the eggs, the rest was store bought. 

I love the vibrant color of the salad, and the sweetness from the apple and the beets, pairs perfect with the dense rye bread and the fried egg.

Serves 4.

Ingredients:

Salad:

  • 3 beets, tomato-sized (cooked with skin on for about 45 minutes in salted water), cooled & diced

  • 1 green apple, peeled and diced

  • Dressing:

  • 4 tablespoons mayonnaise

  • 1 tablespoon creme fraiche or sour cream

  • ¼ teaspoon mustard

  • ½-1 teaspoon sugar, to taste

  • salt & pepper

Directions:

Mix the dressing first and add apple and beets. Let the salad rest in the refrigerator to let the flavors develop and mix. Season the salad with salt, pepper and sugar. 

Serve the salad on a slice of rye bread with a boiled or fried egg on top.

Enjoy!

Scallops with Elderflower Syrup

Appetizer, Dinner, Fish & seafoodTove Balle-PedersenComment
Scallops with Elderflower Syrup

Scallops with Elderflower Syrup

The smell of elderflower is the smell of summer. My mom always made her own elderflower syrup. We would go out and pick the flowers when they first start blooming. Mixing the flowers with a large amount of sugar, lemons, citric acid and hot water. After infusing the water for a few days, you would have the best sweet elderflower syrup, the taste of summer. During the summer we would get a splash of syrup in our water, just enough to infuse the water with the sweet flowering flavor.

You can use elderflower in drinks, punch and everywhere you like to add the sweet flowery taste. Here I paired with scallops, and the bright flavor worked perfect with the sweetness of peas and corn, and the hint of salt from the bacon perfected the dish.

Serves 2 for an entree. 

Ingredients:

  • 6 scallops

  • 2 slices bacon, cut in dices

  • 2 small shallots, finely chopped

  • 125 g peas, frozen and defrosted or fresh shelled peas

  • 2 corn on the co, corn cut off

  • butter and oil for cooking

  • lime juice from ½ lime

  • 75 ml elderflower syrup, I used D'arbo Elderflower Syrup

Directions:

Fry the bacon dices crispy, and let it drain to shed the excess fat on paper towel.

Sauté the shallots until translucent in a skillet, add peas and corn. Heat them through on medium low heat. 

Heat another skillet over high heat, add oil and butter. When the fat begins to brown and smoke sear the scallops for 1½ minutes on each side. The scallops should have a ¼-inch golden crust on each side, while being translucent in the center. Set the scallops aside on a plate. Pour the elderflower syrup in the skillet and reduce to about half. Remove from heat.

Mix mint and bacon with the pea/corn mixture, and plate it. Add the scallops to the hot syrup, and cover them with the syrup, just before you place them on top of the pea/corn mixture. drizzle the syrup on top and serve immediately.

Enjoy!

Profiterole

Desserts, CakeTove Balle-Pedersen3 Comments
Profiterole

Profiterole

Profiterole or ice cream filled cream puffs, are a classic French dessert. And it is so so good. The cold ice cream with the crispy puffs and the warm chocolate is everything you need in a dessert.

Makes a lot of small puffs

Ingredients:

Cream puffs (pâte à choux):

  • 100 g butter, salted

  • 200 ml water

  • 125 g all-purpose flour

  • a pinch salt

  • 1 pinch baking powder

  • 3 large eggs

Chocolate sauce:

  • 160 g dark chocolate

  • 250 g heavy whipping cream

  • 1 tablespoon sugar

  • 1 teaspoon espresso

  • 1 teaspoon unsweetened cocoa powder

  • ½ teaspoon vanilla paste

Filling:

  • vanilla ice cream

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 400℉ (200℃). Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

Put water and butter in a medium saucepan and bring it to a boil over medium heat. In a bowl sift flour, baking powder and salt. When the butter is all melted add all the flour at once, and stir the mixture with a wooden spoon. Lower the heat and keep stirring until a dough is formed and it pulls away from the sides of the pan and is slightly shiny. 

Keep beating the dough with the wooden spoon until slightly cooled, about 2 minutes.  

Beat all the eggs in a bowl. Add a little of the beaten eggs, incorporating it thoroughly before adding more. Add the egg in small amounts until you have a thick paste but not runny at all.

Fill a large pastry bag fitted with an open tip, with the cream puff dough. Pipe quarter-size circular mounds about 2 inches apart, onto the parchment paper. To get the best tops on the cream puffs stop pressing on the pastry bag before you lift it, make a small circular move with your wrist as you lift the tip of the puff. If you have small tips on the puffs anyway, dab the tops of each puff with a fingertip dipped in water to smoothen the tops. 

Bake the puffs for 18-20 minutes, until they are puffed up and golden brown.

DO NOT open the oven while baking cream puffs, it will cause them to deflate.

Let the puffs cool on a wire rack.

Chocolate sauce:

Heat the cream in a small sauce pan, add chocolate, cocoa, coffee vanilla and sugar, and stir while heating. You don't want it to come to a boil.

Filling:

Fill each puff with about a teaspoon good vanilla ice cream.

Serve the profiterole with the warm sauce on top.

Enjoy!

Red Curry with Seared Duck Breast

Dinner, Meats, PoultryTove Balle-PedersenComment
Red Curry with Seared Duck Breast

Red Curry with Seared Duck Breast

In Denmark we often had curries, but I have never had fresh bamboo shoots before moving to the States. Knowing how good fresh poached bamboo shoot tastes, I will never go back to the ones you can buy canned in the stores. They don't have the soft texture and sweet taste.

This is my take on a red duck curry.

Serves 2-3

Ingredients:

  • 1 duck breast, seared and roasted
  • 1 red or yellow pepper
  • ½ fresh poached bamboo shoot, thinly sliced (can be substituted with canned bamboo shoot)
  • 1 can baby corn (or fresh), cut bite sized 
  • 150 g mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 can coconut milk
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 teaspoon fish sauce
  • 1 handful sweet basil leaves
  • 8 lychee fruits
  • 1 jalapeño, sliced thinly for topping
  • vegetables oil for cooking

Curry Paste:

  • 2 dried red chili peppers
  • 1 fresh red chili pepper
  • ¼ red onion
  • 3 teaspoons lemongrass (minced or paste)
  • 1-inch (3 cm) ginger, peeled and sliced
  • 4 garlic gloves
  • 7 black peppercorns 
  • 3 teaspoons ground coriander
  • 1 teaspoon cumin
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon fish sauce
  • 1-2 teaspoons sugar

Directions:

Make the curry paste, by blending all the ingredients in a mini blender until you have a smooth paste. 

Chop all the vegetables in bite sized pieces, and set them aside. 

Heat some vegetable oil in a wok, add the curry paste and cook until fragrant. Add vegetables, a little at a time, so the wok don't cool down. 

Add sugar, coconut milk and fish sauce. Let the sauce thicken a bit while simmering. Season the sauce with fish sauce, pepper and sugar.

Just before serving, add the lychee fruits and basil leaves.

Serve the curry over rice and thinly sliced duck breast.

Enjoy!

 

Seared Duck Breast

Christmas, Dinner, Poultry, MeatsTove Balle-PedersenComment
Duck Breasts

Duck Breasts

In Denmark we have roasted duck for holidays like Christmas, but duck breasts is a great cut of meat, that works great in a lot of dishes. I love seared duck breast on a nice salad with blue cheese, berries or with a bunch of steamed vegetables. The possibilities are almost endless.

Serves 4

Ingredients:

  • 2 duck breasts
  • salt

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 400℉ (200℃).

Using a sharp knife, score skin in ¾-inch diamond pattern (do not cut into flesh). Sprinkle with a good amount of salt.

Place the duck breasts skind-side down in a cold skillet. Place the skillet over medium heat. The duck fat starts to render and will add enough fat to cook the breasts. This process will add to the crispiness of the skin. Cook the breasts like this for about 5 minutes. Turn duck breasts over and put the skillet in the preheated oven until to desired doneness, about 6-12 minutes depending on size and desired doneness.

Transfer to work surface, cover with foil to keep warm, and let rest 7-10 minutes. Thinly slice duck, and serve on a salad, curry or with all the christmas trimmings as Caramelized potatoes, pickled red cabbage.