LUTEFISK & LEFSE Taste Test | Norwegian lye-treated fish Christmas Dinner
Вставка
- Опубліковано 4 лют 2025
- Lutefisk, dried and lye-soaked white fish is a traditional holiday meal of Norwegian-Americans in the upper Mid-West. 🎣 Big thanks to Theresa for sending me the lutefisk and lefse to make this episode possible. 🙌🏻 New videos every Thursday and Saturday!
Join the Emmy League of Adventuresome Eaters & find me here:
👚 Merch: www.bonfire.co...
❤️ Subscribe: ua-cam.com/users/sub...
👩🏻 Website: www.emmymade.com/
🐦 Twitter: / emmymadeinjapan
🌈 Instagram: / emmymade
🙃 Facebook: / itsemmymadeinjapan
⏰ Tiktok: / emmymadetok
🎂 Cameo: www.cameo.com/...
🐝: emmymade extras: / emmymadeextras
To find links to the tools and books I use in the kitchen visit my Emmymade Amazon shop: www.amazon.com...
Heart: Gutmas Day 1: bit.ly/2Ds1coE
Stomach: Gutmas Day 2: bit.ly/2D067MD
Feet: Gutmas Day 3: bit.ly/2BZkC3Y
Emmy Eats Wisconsin: bit.ly/1YDNEZK
Bugmas 2016: bit.ly/2icnS48
Bugmas 2015: bit.ly/1Zl96sq
This video is NOT sponsored. Just trying some lutefisk. 😁
"The Twelve Days of Christmas" courtesy of www.epidemicsound.com and royalty-free Sprightly from iMovie. If you're reading this, you know what's what. Comment: "❤️ 💚 ❤️ 💚 ❤️ 💚 :)
Always wanted to try Lutefisk ever since that one King of the Hill episode. Bobby Hill made it look so appetizing and you've definitely helped boost his case.
Yessssss!!! I remember grandpa hill blaming the fire on "the man with the bad smell"😂😂😂
😂 that’s why Im here
@@nlwolslegel same! lmao just watched the episode and got curious
King of the hill brought me here lol
That shit made me vomit
In Norway we use to drown the lutefisk in finely chopped bacon. Because then the lutefisk tastes bacon, but you can still brag to your friends that you like/eat lutefisk.
That is exactly what I was going to say.
We do that with cheese sauce on broccoli here in there U.S..😂
Thats what we do to vegetables in the states, we also cheese everything.
I wish my Norwegian grandparents had done it this way (with bacon)... I probably wouldn't have PTSD about Christmas food!!!
This! Perfect description😂😂
Coming from an authentic Norwegian who loves your videos, I was so happy to see this! Potetlefse is a crowd pleaser, definitely, and I was very pleasantly suprised to see that you enjoyed the gelatinous texture, as very jelly-like lutefisk is considered botched lutefisk. The best way to cook your lutefisk is by oven baking, that way you preserve the taste(so it's saltier, and not as bland) and get a better, firmer texture. And, yes, I can confirm that lutefisk served with cream sauce, mushed peas, potatoes and brown cheese is absolutely delicious!
I think "delicious" is a bit far, I douse mine in bacon and I probably eat twice as much bacon and potatoes than I do the actual fish. :P
Great tip! Brown cheese? I've never tried that before. We tend to use bacon and some raw carrot.
I am Swedish and I am so happy you made lutfisk! We always had that for Christmas. (Swedish: lutfisk, Norwegian. lutefisk) I have learnt that you should not boil it in water, because it dissolves, you put it in an empty saucepan and heat it slowly, then water comes out of the fish, and it will be nicely boiled. We always had it with cream sauce and boiled potatoes and a little strong mustard and it is delicious.
Nowadays you buy it ready, but we also made the lye process. The fish is dried in summer to preserve it, then it is hard like wood, like a thin sheet of wood. To get it soft you must put it in strong lye (water does not work) for a couple of days. Then you must soak it in water for I think a week or two to get rid of the lye, and change the water every day. I remember the bucket with the fish soaking long time, it hade some smell but it became good.
I grew up eating lutefisk and lefse every Christmas. My grandmothers were from Minnesota and first born Americans from Norwegian parents. I can confirm that baked is better than boiled, but both ways are ok. I don't think I ever had it with cream sauce or brown cheese. We always ate the lefse together with the lutefisk and potatoes. I always use salt and pepper though.
Ingeborg Mikkelsen I am so happy to see this too! I feel like not many are familiar. Lutefisk while not my favorite definitely has some meaningful memories. Never enough Lefse to go around! ❤️
"It's like jell-o but it's hot and fishy" is probably the most unappetizing description i ever heard.
I'd give it a try. Then again, I'm not squeamish but am food adventurious.
She hit that nail right on the head.
Accurate. What she was very kind about was the SMELL. Cooking the stuff really really reeks lol.
Lutefisk is not nice.
It is accurate :) It is also an acquired taste reall, you like it.. or you dislike it, nothing inbetween unless you have not tried it at all. I love it, with crunchy bacon and bacon fat, mashed and stewed rutebaga, and boiled potatoes:)
I absolutely love how much respect she has for culturally diverse foods.
You’re amazing, Emmy!
You know, I love how you actually make attempt to eat the food in the way as it is supposed to be eaten (unlike many channels that eat canned soup as a "dip" and such and then complain it's not good).
And as usually... you are so good in describing the actual flavors. One can actually tell if they would like it or not based on your videos. Very helpful.
INSTEAD OF A BEAUTY GURU, YOU'RE A FOODIE GURU
AYYYYY!
You saying she ugly? WHAHAHAHAHA!!!
She's called a cook hun. Totally different field of work
WHY ARE YOU YELLING???
She’s both
So SO many memories came flooding back when I watched this video. I never liked lutefisk. But 'that smell' in my grandparents house always signalled Christmas Eve and some of the most wonderful, loving memories that I have of my family. We're all descendants of a norwegian tile setter and his Swedish (GASP!) wife that uprooted from Trondheim in the 20s with their young children, and relocated to northern Minnesota. Once the language faded, all we had left was the food. So powerful, thank you for making this!
How about trying traditional christmas/holiday meals from all around the world next year, Emmy? I think it would be a neat idea. In Poland we traditionally have 12 meals on Christmas, most important part is the carp, but there’s also pickled herring, ham with plum in it, bigos, cabbage-and-mushroom filled dumplings, poppy seed cake (& poppy seed pasta!) as well as sometimes cheesecake.
Viktor Chmiel Wesołych Świąt!:))
What are bigos?
it's like a meat and cabbage stew
Viktor Chmiel wow, 12 meals. That's a lot of work. Merry Christmas!
Viktor, there's a very large Polish population in my city, but I've never heard of poppy seed pasta, would love to know more about that.
My little Norwegian heart swells with joy at seeing this video! :) You're the only one I've ever seen actually make Lutefisk sound good. LOL My family would mash the fish in with mashed potatoes, add garlic, onions, and gallons of melted butter. And we would wrap it up in the lefse. We were traditionalists, but being Norwegian, we made it tolerable. :) The lefse just plain was always so good. Homemade lefse bread is super good!
I love how the lutefisk was twerking. Lol
Nadesico ND 😂 What the 😂
i love the music she played over the slow mo lutefisk jiggling. that was such a great touch that i was not expecting.
Yeah dude I jammed out to that song 😂😂
I consider myself a pretty adventurous eater, but there are definitely things out there like this and balut that I always thought “I’d never try that.” Then Emmy eats them and describes them and it takes all the disgust away and makes me want to seek those things out too. She just has an incredibly positive energy that is absolutely infectious. Merry Christmas Emmy!!!
Heidi Longueuil Lutefisk I would try, but balut is on my “NEVER” list.
Balut is delicious! Like a very textured egg haha!
Good balut tastes a bit like chicken soup. Bad balut just tastes like a dry egg. I'm not a fan of either though. Too many bits for my american sensibilities.
Lutefisk is really not that bad, like Emmy says it doesn’t taste like much. It’s a lil like cod that’s been boiled for too long haha. Nothing visually icky like with balut.
Heidi Ruth My great grandfather was a Norwegian immigrant so I usually eat lutefisk on Christmas. it isn’t bad but it doesn’t taste like anything and has a strange texture so it isn’t very appetizing. I still recommend you try it though just to see what it’s like!
Merry Christmas Emmy!!
TabiEats Merry Christmas, fellow Emmy-admirers!
Fancy seeing that! One fav YT creator on another fav YT channel?! 🤗💜❤️
TabiEats Merry Christmas to you two as well!
TabiEats Merry Christmas
Merry Christmas Satoshi and Shinichi!
🎶 I don’t think you’re ready for fish jelly, I don’t think you’re ready for fish jelly! 🎶
slimkt that is now how I will sing this song!
😂
😂😂😂
Okay now Weird Al Yankovic. Lol!
slimkt this made me legit lol
"Tootle-loo, take care, byeee, _BURRRP!_ "
Hahahahaha!
adam mac soooo sweet
Standard Emmy protocol, at this point.
"WHY DOES IT COME OUT LIKE THAT"
My Nana was from Norway and every Christmas she had this- she grew up eating it- thanks for the video- it made me smile and realize how Christmas is missing something in our family since she passed.
We always had Lutefisk on Christmas eve, but a couple years the family who hosted stopped doing it because nobody ate it! It was a pleasure to see you try it Emmy!
Same here! We finally gave up and have "Swedish salmon" 😂
I don't know why I've never seen this video. I'm a regular follower. I like to make my lutefisk baked with butter & lemon pepper. We make lefse every fall before Thanksgiving, and I like it hot or cold. I spread a thin layer of butter on it, and sprinkle brown sugar. Roll it up and enjoy. 🥰😊😋
Emmy you are so calming and friendly to listen to, i think you would be great as a childrens television presenter :)
I am living vicariously through you. This way I don't have to try all the foods that scare me. I can watch you try them!
Lutefisk???? oh Goodness!!! Oh and Emmy next time you go Thrift Shopping I want you to film it!! You find so many more treasures than I do by myself!!
Barb, the trick is to visit thrift stores in various areas, often, but ONLY buy what you actually need (it's so easy to overspend your budget, because there are so many curious things)
I know! She’s got such a good radar for the goods.
You are so soft spoken sounds and feels kinda like therapy
You forgot some of the staple side dishes. Piping hot, fried, diced bacon, warm, boiled potatoes and a white sauce flavored with mustard. Also the fish can be served with a green pea stew, the warm, diced bacon and potatoes. It can also be wrapped in the lefse you show in the video. Hold the sugar but use hot, running grease from the bacon or salty butter and a smidgen of mustard. You will only get the full experience of lutefisk if you eat it with the more flavorful bacon toppings and hot, running bacon grease plus any of the side dishes and mustard. Best wishes from a native Norwegian. :)
I wish more channels were like you. I hate the ones where “_____ try ___ for the first time” and nine times out of ten, the people come off as arrogant and immediately assume the worst. Thank you Emmy, for always trying to be positive with your food tasting and being honest without sounding uneducated or condescending.
It's Christmas in South Korea today. Merry Christmas-Eve, Emmy!
how sweet
Merry Christmas to you South Koreans!
I’m in South Korea as well! Merry Christmas to ya
Merry Christmas to EVERYONE!!
Anime FanGirl South Korea isn’t a perfect country even if you like a band there
Also - re: lefse. From a package is OK, but imagine it freshly made, hot off a griddle - best thing ever
My gran used to make Lutefisk with Herring, none of us kids really liked it, i think it was the texture. Lefse on the other hand we couldn't get enough of. My brothers also loved Springerlee cookies which you probably wouldn't like as they're an Anise cookie and we all know you are not fond of licorice. Thank you for the blast from the past.
Oh and hope the rest of your Holiday season is full of good things. Merry Christmas
Having grown up in a household that always had traditional Norwegian foods for the holidays, I can honestly state that no one likes Lutefisk, you just survive it. Every damn year. Even now, grown up and everything, you do it because of tradition, not because you like it! As for Lefse. Love it, Krumkake, amazing, Vínarterta, heaven on earth! We can't make fish, but we sure make up for it with our desserts!
In Portugal we also eat codfish around the holidays but it's only salted, we soak it for a day, boil it for about 5/10 minutes and it becomes flaky yet firm. Without the lie it retains the consistency, its ALMOST like flaky salmon. It's served with boiled potatoes, carrots and cabbage.
It tastes fishy but in a good way 😊
I love how much respect you have for the cultures from which all the foods that you taste come from. You can really tell that you do your research!
This video melts my cold Minnesota heart.
I live in Madison, MN. Lutefisk capital.
You are the only person I've ever seen try to eat lutefisk and not gag on it. I'm from Minnesota, and I've never met anyone who claimed to like lutefisk. Lefse, on the other had, is awesome! I remember my grandmother making it fresh every Christmas when I was a kid.
My mummum immigrated from norway, and we used to eat this with the cream sauce, but I really enjoied the fiskboller (fish balls) better. Which you eat in the same way.
Meanwhile, I think fiskbullar (fiskeboller in Swedish) is the worst food I've ever eaten ._.
McDucky yeah if u buy canned stuffed it usually taste bad. Try making them yourself them they are good........
Yes, we pretty much make the same bechamel sauce for fiskeboller, only we then add the fish broth that the fish balls come in to the sauce, so it’s a bit thinner than when you make white sauce for lutefisk, then you only use full fat milk. Fiskeboller is amongst a few things I have missed since going plant based, but recently I was so excited to find a recipe for an authentic vegan fish ball, can’t wait to try it! ☺️👏👏👏💚
McDucky - Fiskeboller (Norwegian), fiskbullar (Swedish)! 😊 Sooooo yummy if you get the right ones and make it right! 😋
@@lottatroublemaker6130 YES! MMMM I havn't had Fiskballer in so long!!!!
My sister and I were so nervous about this one, but it’s a Christmas miracle! Lutefisk is actually good. Merry Christmas!
Lutefisk in it self isn't great, to be honest. Also depends much on the fish, if it is firm or not. Have tasted a lot of bad lutefisk in my time, and I looove lutefisk. However, what makes it delicious is the sides! Bacon, peastew, potatoes, carrots & mustard sauce. It is delicious!
I agree with you. Good comment.
Lutefisk alone is better then normal fish alone.
But bacon makes it fantastic
Aw, warms my heart to see you (really) enjoying the lefse! Thanks to your detailed description, I was salivating by the end of the video. Watching you fawn over your favourite food texture (gelatinous - didn't even know that was a word till I was your fan!) made me smile too. Happy holidays, Emmy! Never stop being you! :D
Xarrieal Lim Xarrieal, what is your Korean name?
I... I'm not Korean. >
This company was founded by my mother in law’s father! The picture on the package is in our family docs!
😅
So cool!
Lutefisk is, so far, tje only thing on earth I haven't been able to bring myself to swallow. It left me shaken and traumatized with recurring nightmares. I can't get over watching you enjoy it. I'm stunned.
I'm from Finland and my family usually eat it for Christmas. But with boiled potatoes, lutfisk (in Swedish), bechamel sauce and some white pepper. That way it's really good
What's in bechamel sauce?
@@ricktreas3728 the one we make is just a big slice of butter melted in a pan, then wheat flour is mixed in until it's one hard lump and then adding a little cream at a time while whisking until you have to right thickness of the sauce. All done over medium heat. Just keep whisking so no lumps form
I just found this video. I’m Norwegian Canadian from Naicam Saskatchewan. We indulge every year with both. We wrap the lutefisk in cheese cloth and boil in salted water. Eat with ham, riced potatoes, lots of melted butter and s&p. Really only a few of us eat it in my family. It’s soooooo yummy!!!
Yes!!! Finally something Norwegian!!!
Helene Moen ikke sant?? har ventet på noen norsk mat siden de svenske blodpannekaker 😂
Hahah ja er på tide
I want Emmy to do brunøst. My favvvvvvorite! With some knekkebrød and strawberry jam. So gooooood!!!
goestplus think she's done brunost. However, as we celebrate Christmas today, it was nice to get a norwegian video
Vi har lutfisk i Sverige också :P
My favorite thing about Emmy is she's so open and willing to try almost any kind of food
I've got to try the butter next time we have lutfisk (which is the Swedish spelling)! My mother serves it with bechamel and freshly cracked allspice, which is INCREDIBLE. I noticed you have some over, and please try it that way too! Happy holidays!
My mom always made mustard sauce, basically bechamel with lots of mustard in it.
My introduction to lutifisk was at my cousins resort in northern Minnesota. They always had homemade pickled lutifisk at every meal for the guest to try. It was so nasty and harsh but the old Norwegian folks loved it. It was many years later as an ,adult, our cousins invite us to a lutifisk dinner, it looked and tasted just like the version you made, so it's all about the preparation. My sister's and I have been making lefsse for 30 years, a tradition passed down in our family from my grandmother, and her grandmother.... Ours is made of 4 ingredients, potatoes, cream, butter, flour, dash of salt. We only butter ours and eat it cold. Yummy!!!!!
I've made lefse before (only once, because it takes forever, and when you're halfway through, you have a mound of super buttery mashed potatoes, so they get eaten). My former mother-in-law was half Norwegian, and she gave me the idea to adapt the recipe to make it kosher for Passover.
I'm from Minneapolis. My Highschool English teacher is Scandinavian, and talked about Lutefisk. This is just really cool to watch after all these years.
Not gonna lie, I 'bout gagged at the slow-mo jelly jiggle. Lol
winkerbean1 I can get behind this. Those pigs feet though. Nooo
Had you smelled it too you would have thrown up.
SonsOfLorgar No doubt!
winkerbean1 you mean, not going to LYE? 😂😂
Yep
I live in Norway, and my family eats lutefisk during the holidays, but with slightly different additions to the fish. We usually have boiled potatoes and carrots, bacon, pea puree, and sometimes we have a little bit of brunost (the norwegian brown, sweet cheese). A little bit light syrup on the fish is also very nice. The sweetness of the syrup goes very well with the fish. 😊I love the fact that you actually liked it, because it is a special dish, and the fact that it is made and eaten in the US surprised me! Thank you for such great videos, and for showing such different types of food to the world!😁
The music effects have me laughing. the lyric of your conversation about food tickles all the chef bones in me.
My grandfather from loved Lutefisk, but my mom always felt grateful that she had the excuse of being allergic to fish not to eat it. She said the smell was something else, but when my grandfathers family would serve it in the middle of "no Fing and where" North Dakota they would do everything from the lye treatment to washing and rinsing the lutefisk themselves.
Also lefse is the best. I love it with very thinly sliced Gjetost and lingonberry jam myself.
Who else thought about that episode of King of the Hill with “the smelly man!” ?
mst3kanita yes! I did.
same! "Where's my lutefisk?! I left it right next to the Frito pie and the Frito pie!"
This guy too
The man with the terrible smell
Count me in! One of my favorite episodes!
As a Norwegian; Lutefisk is best served salted and oven roasted with boiled potatoes and carrots, lots of bacon + melted butter, mushy peas and flatbrød(flatbread). Try this the next time :) Love your channel btw!
Merry Christmas. I just wanted to tell you that lutefisk is served with mashed dried peas and a lots of bacon fat with bacon. Some like mustard too and others sugar or brown cheese. Never only potatoes and butter. :) ...best regards from Norway;)
Kim cool here in the US we only do butter and maybe lemon
What's Brown cheese
@@curiousme113 its a norwegian sweet cheese made of cowsmilk or goatsmilk. For lutefisk we uses the brown cowsmilk cheese. Its made of whey boiled down to cheese. It tastes sweet and sort of fudgy. I dont eat it much. But its really good in greavy when i make raindear.
@@78teili that sounds so fictional to me, I know you're being truthful, but fudgy brown cheese & reindeer is unheard of in the southern US.
@@curiousme113 haha yes. But its totally normal here in Norway. The greavy gets a sweeter taste with the brown cheese and it fits beautiful to the raindear. We also eat lingonberry or lingonberry jam with it. Sweet and tangy/sour. Its really good.
Eat Lutefisk and Lefse every year for christmas! Thanks for the video, Emmy!
You should really try the full Lutefisk-meal! We typically serve it with bacon, butter, mashed peas, potatoes, sauce and lefse. Considering how much you loves lutefisk. :)
You are the only person who could even make me think about trying the lutefisk. You actually made it sound good while everyone else ever has said that it sucks, lol.
We had Norwegian Neighbors when I was growing up. We always knew when they were having lutefisk for dinner..their daughter would show up at our house to eat. Her mom made lefse every Christmas. I used to bribe their daughter to get some for me. I loved it. That stuff you have doesn't look right. It should be very soft..not rubbery at all.. Butter and sugar... Yummmmm! I always snitched from them Maybe I'll try and make it.
What she has looks more like lompe to me :) Im norwegian.
NamiBot It does! I'm not Norwegian but I was very good at pilfering treats. I need to try making lefse.
HAHAHAHAHA I am half Norwegian and all my Norwegian side is no longer alive. I heard that when I was a baby my grandma use to make this. I don't care much for much seafood but it was nice seeing this. Now I have picture in my head of what this stuff is. I don't know if this is a Norwegian thing or just my grandma's thing, but I heard she also always kept Pistachio Ice Cream in her freezer. She also made The BEST Homemade waffles ever! She would send me waffles cold packed from Minnesota to me in CA. All other waffles, and I have tried quite a bit, suck in comparison.
Thank you for the enlightenment in proper preparation of other culture foods instead of the skew dare you eat their disgusting food ingredient (although entertaining but warped representation). Please do other others especially the infamous sustromming, hakarl & marmite/vegemite. Show us the proper way you prepare & dine with love & respect towards other people's food culture. Keep up the good work.
Terence Teh Yes! It is wonderful is it not? She ALWAYS tries with respect-even things such as licorice which she hates. That is why we love her. Btw she HAS done marmite/vegemite and she likes it. Someday I hope to try it-and many other things she has shown us. I hope maybe you have something special you could send her to make an episode of? I am still trying after years to find something special here-US midwest-but alas she has so far received and eaten way more than what we have. Merry Christmas to you!🎄✌☺
I would love a proper surstromming and durian review.
She has a durian video for her Fruity Fruits series!
Except marmite. If you weren’t born with it in your mouth there’s no amount of preparation that will make it ‘food’
Oh I can't believe I missed this!
My mom's side of my family is Norwegian. My grandmas always botched the lutefisk and boiled the heck out of it. Until I turned 18, I was forced to eat it at Christmas. And I have oral sensitivities to jelly textures - as a result, I can't stand the stuff.
I know this video is 3 years old but another great way to eat lefse is with some butter and cut up leftover meatballs! In case you don't like the sweet version.
Another dish I remember intensely disliking from my childhood but I enjoy now that I decided to try to make it, is risgrøt! It's a rich rice pudding usually served on Christmas morning.
You forgot to unrap the free pack of Loneliness Pills that comes with every carton of Lutefisk..
What? ☺️
Lefse is also great for making wraps - specifically turkey and cranberry after Thanksgiving dinner. And a non-traditional way to fix lutefisk is baked with bacon. So delicious. I’m delighted that someone enjoys it who didn’t grow up eating it.
I like baking the lutefisk, what is important is to NEVER over cook lutefisk or it turns mushy quickly. It is tricky to cook until you get it done right. Lutefisk should be flakey and somewhat firm in the core, lutefisk is best served piping hot with melted butter and pepper.. Enjoy..
Wow! You are the first person I've ever seen who actively likes lutefisk! I may actually need to seek it out now. Thank you for the experience! :)
Has she tried Surstromming yet?
Bill Ing If she does try surstromming, then I hope she also gets a guide to how it is eaten. Most who put out videoes about it try it plain but that is not how it gets eaten as someone in comments on one video said. They said it was eaten with potatoes and other stuff, like a lot of strong-flavoured foods.
That was a great demonstration. I grew up with lutefisk in Upper Michigan with my Norwegian mother. I plan to enjoy it today also with my family. Thanks!
I would very much like to know how the lutefisk turns out when it is baked instead of boiled, if that changes the texture or flavor, or if it changes the exterior. Anyway, great video, Emmy. As always. And thanks to Theresa, too. "❤️ 💚 ❤️ 💚 ❤️ 💚
Seach Lutefisk on youtube, lots of norwegian videos explaining and showing how to prepare lutefisk that way. :D I think baking lutefisk is the best way, the meat turns out a bit more firm... or as we say in norway... Fastere i fisken. :)
My grandmother used to Poach the fish until it was almost "flaky" and then take it out, brush it liberally with browned butter, and stick it under the broiler/grill until the tips turned crusty.
She ate it with mashed green peas (dried peas) and brown goat cheese.
Joseph Charles agreed, I'd love to see it baked
Fascinating, thanks for the responses, guys.
a little flakier. hers was over cooked. it shouldn't be that jiggly.
My grandmother is norwegian, and as i was home for the holidays first time in 4 years, i requested we eat lutefisk and lefse. Also got to meet her brother for the first time, and they were quite pleased that i enjoyed all the food (i think i'm the only grandchild who can tolerate that fish). We got the same brand as in this video. Boiled it really doesn't have a strong taste.
Anyway, good video. I like that you gave it a fair chance, instead of doing what a lot of those "Americans try to eat X" videos do, where they're clearly just expecting to gag, and only doing it for bragging rights. People should really just be willing to try anything with no prejudice.
BUT, how could you not try rolling up some of the 'fisk in the lefse?? Norwegian burrito, sister!
You should try Surströmming it’s a very pungent canned fish that’s made in Sweden. I would never ever eat it but you should do an episode of eating Surströmming.
I love your videos! ❤️
Andrew
I believe she already did that :)
It's actually OK if you eat it right ;)
#IUsedToBeReal Have you ever noticed that no one ever has to say that “beef is okay if you cook/eat it right?” LOL.
There's a show produced in Norway called New Scandinavian Cooking. It features all fresh, quality ingredients grown locally in the Nordic countries. The freshest fish and game and the freshest herbs, fruits and vegetables, all cooked the same day with bread straight out of the hearth with butter. Yet THIS is what the descendants of Odin want to remember and eat every year in America. Not even salt cod, which is good in a soup. Fish poisoned with lye.
Great video! I lived in La Crosse County, Wisconsin for 21 years. I love lefse, but never once tasted, or even saw, lutefisk because so many people said it was disgusting. Now, thirty-four years later and 2000 miles away, I wish I’d given it a try!
Love salted Cod, Lutefisk on the other hand is a culturally acquired taste. I’ll leave it at that!!
I grew up 5 miles away from where that Lefse was made. A lot of folks in that area buy it and eat it all year around. I’ve never seen anyone put melted butter on it before, we would typically spread soft butter on it, roll it and eat it like a bread side with our holiday meal. Also in that area lutefisk is typically severed along side Norwegian meatballs with brown gravy which is different than Swedish meatballs which is served with cream gravy, mashed potatoes and also mashed rutabagas, also sometimes corn.
💚❤💚❤💚❤💚❤💚❤💚❤
*MERRY CHRISTMAS, EMMY AND FAMILY!* (AGAIN 😅)
(and EVERYONE ELSE watching this video!)
((or whatever you celebrate!))
adam mac Merry Christmas!!
Yes merry Christmas to you too( and everyone else watching) I was born and raised eating these foods every year at Christmas with my Norwegian family... we, as Norwegians NEVER EVER put sugar and cinnamon on our lefse.. that practice was rumored to be the SWEDISH CUSTOM... WHICH OF COURSE Ws always frowned upon by the norwegian families .. who would only butter half of the circle.. then fold it over and butter the remaining half/ quarter and fold that side over again and then cut into wedges layered with the lefse, butter lefse butter, and so on, and servedwith all of the points toward the outside edge of the plate in a concentric circle.. which had meaning to it for my mom anyway?! But it was chilled and or frozen and then served at room temperature with our meals during Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving , weddings..sometimes, or whenever there was a family reunion.. we never could get enough lefse... the Lutefisk, however .. went by the wayside since nobody but my Father was fond of it, the ensuing generations could not bring themselves to swallow it, I myself, must admit, I had a tough time to eat it , the melted butter did make it tolerable, and the potatoes filled me up. How come she did not have any aklavit?(sp.?)now thats a real traditional taste!
HAPPY NEW YEAR ALL,!🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴EH⁉️⁉️🔆⚜️🎵🎶🥂🥂🍸🥟🍤🍱🥮🍦🥛🍬🍭🍿🍯🥂🍷🍺🏵🥁🎯🎻🎸🎺🎷
@@cherylidler2386 what is aklavit? I googled it and it came up with nothing. She can't make it if we can't tell her what it's actually called lol.
I remember it well, I liked in small town in Minnesota. My grand parents and parents always ate Lutefisk and Lefse at Christmas time. The fish was always served with melted butter and potatoes. Tasted Like rubbery Fish (Hard to describe). The Lefse was always a treat. Made with graded potatoes into a pancake and baked on the stove. Put on a plate with butter on it, then added sugar with Cinnamon, Delicious. I still make the Lefse today. During the year. Not just for Christmas.
It's Christmas Day here in Sydney , it's beautiful cool and drizzly so merry Christmas to you and your family xoxoxo
Love that Emmy is clearly so interested in food & food culture!
Me and my grandpa eat lutefisk once a month! Olson fish company is the only company that makes the lutefisk! So delicious 😋😋😋😋😋
❤️❤️❤️❤️💚💚💚💚💚
Ps you need some salt and pepper on that fish!
All our Norwegian traditional christmas food generally stems from times when conservation of food was harder. We have the lutefisk, and we have rakfisk (which is fermented fish) and pinnekjøtt (which is salted and dried lamb ribs). All things that were not in season in the middle of winter, so we had to save the goodies in various ways.
I feel like the only norwegian-american that hates lefse. I loved making it though! The rolling pins we had were so old (because they're so hard to find) that sometimes you'd get a little wood in your lefse lol
Dalton Croy they sell the rolling pins in our Walmart here in N.D. You can actually buy the whole kit. Griddle, flipper and rolling pin. 🙂
Lutefisk gets a bad rap, but growing up across the street from my Norwegian grandmother, this was a staple during Christmas. She was a great cook and baker.... such fond memories! Thanks for taking me back for a few minutes.
Those jiggle physics though...
Hi Emmy! We are Norwegian Canadian and I love lutefisk we always eat it with melted butter. We also have lefse and Krumkaker usually. I made the lefse this year (I have helped since I was small but this year is the first year I have had responsibility for mixing and rolling! It is surprisingly easy to make. We have always eaten ours cold spread with butter or margarine and sprinkled with brown sugar. So fun to see you try them!
Bobby Hill!
amaihito that's how I learned about Lutefisk. Always been kind of curious of what it takes like. Now that I've seen Emmy eat it and describe it for us...I can tell it's not for me. Not a fan of gelatinous and gelatin textures. Let alone fishy and hot. XD
The man with the terrible smell
Hopefully Emmy didn't become "the woman with the terrible smell" later on like Bobby did 🤣
Omg! When Bobby ate the lady pastor's ludafisk...lol
🤣🤣🤣
You are brave; I grew up in Minnesota and lutefisk was a Christmas Eve tradition along with potato dumplings.
I could never get past the smell to try.
I'd fill up on potato dumplings.
Lefsa I can get behind I make my own, yum.
Krumkake, sandbakkels, Fattigmund, and rosettes were also holiday treats
First heard of lutefisk from that Kirsten Dunst comedy with a teen girl beauty pageant. I forget the name. But yep from the description in that movie. I thought it would be super nasty tasting. I mean if Andrew Zimmerman dislikes it. But then he doesn't like Spam either. So yeah... Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays for everyone doesn't celebrate Christmas.
Yes! Drop Dead Gorgeous!
'Lutefisk, it's a cod fish that's been salted and soaked in lye for a week or so...it's best with lots of butter.'
T. Begay Drop Dead Gorgeous. I love that movie. That's where I remember it from too. They did make it sound really gross.
I'm obsessed with Emmy. whenever I eat, I describe everything like she does and my boyfriend be killing himself laughing
Im Sweden you eat it with peas, potatoes and cream sauce but you have to put different types of pepper and salt since it doesn’t taste like anything
I just found out that I have a lot of Swedish DNA, now I feel like it is my genealogical duty to try lutefisk at least once. Is there anything else I should try? I don't know anything about traditional Swedish food.
I love how open-minded you are about food. I see too many people actually all grossed out about food from other cultures. It's totally okay not to try something, but don't call it gross! I won't eat many of these dishes (vegetarian), but I'm curious about what they taste like, so I love these kinds of videos and the positivity.
Hello Emmy maybe you should try do Lutefisk in a recipe named Bacalao, its noruegan fish in tomato, garlic and potato sauce its delicious :P in México is very tradicional for this season :3
Sariza In Puerto Rico we have Bacalao en Salsa Criolla (which is similar to your description) we serve it with verduras (yuca, calabaza, malanga, yautia etc)
That is not lutefisk, but klippfisk. Somewhat different, but still using traditional, dried Norwegian fish! Very popular in Spain,I guess that is where Mexico has got it from. Norway has exported fish for many centuries...😊
As a Minnesotan with primarily Norwegian family, I clicked on this video so fast lol. Also a lifelong hater of lutefisk. Lefse needs to be shared with the world however. Yummmmmmmmm....
We eat lutefisk in a cream sauce/gravy over toast or a cinnamon roll. Had mine this morning!
Kat Murphy Fish on cinnamon? Wild!
Fish and cinnamon sounds about as odd as a frid breakfast with maple syrup to my Aussie palate, but if people like it, then goodo.
Do you bake the cinamonrolls with litefisk? How do you make this? My lutefisk-loving heart wants to try this 🙈
Some Norwegian foods I highly recommend trying are risgrøt, gjetost, and svele with rømme and jam. Risgrøt is best if you melt a pat of butter in the center and sprinkle sugar on the top, then kind of dip the bottom of your spoon in the butter with each bite. Gjetost is nice on buttered bread. Just thinking about these makes my mouth water. I love lefse! I'm glad you tried it.
So a fish jello?
MatJan86 it has the most terribilis texture 🤢 I hate it. But ya gotta eat it once a year.
Yep but we usually don't eat it for the fish, it's all about the condiments.
Pea mash (made from dried green peas), crispy meaty bacon, Brown cheese (basically milk toffee) and so on. The fish itself is rather bland and mixes with the condiments that has texture and flavor.
We have this every christmas eve, as part of a traditional Swedish meal we do. My grandmother was swedish and we have continued after her passing.
I live in Minnesota. I've never had lutefisk but people have told me stories about it. I had a teacher in high school that told me she couldn't be in the same room when it's cooking because it smells so bad. She said she stands outside while it cooks.
Jason Mims it doesn't actually smell
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I love lutefisk and your description of it is exactly what I remembered. The lefsa is also awesome.
I love that pot
Herbert The pot I have is pretty good. Kinda making me sleepy though. 😂
I love it,
One of the clients I had would always make a bunch of lefse with her family from Norway when they had their big family reunion. And it was awesome for me because I would get a bunch of lefse. She always told me about lutefisk and told me to try it but, I could never find it! But OMG! Lefse was soooo good!
I LOVE LUTEFISK ❤️ in finnish it is called ”lipeäkala” :D
I am a proud Wisconsinite with a Scandinavian heritage. Thank you for the kind comments about my lovely state. I hope you get to visit some day.
"It's like jello, but it's hot & fishy"
No thank you.