BARK BREAD & TAR CANDY - Reviewing Interesting Foods in Finland

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  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024
  • BARK BREAD & TAR CANDY - Reviewing Interesting Foods in Finland
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 536

  • @WeirdExplorer
    @WeirdExplorer  3 роки тому +97

    What would you put on your bark bread?

    • @jcuppuzzles1480
      @jcuppuzzles1480 3 роки тому +30

      More bark because the more the merrier

    • @AllTheCloudsArePink
      @AllTheCloudsArePink 3 роки тому +35

      That Russian pine cone jam

    • @jonahlindhe756
      @jonahlindhe756 3 роки тому +28

      Hard boiled eggs and kaviar! Not the black fish eggs, but the pink fish eggs. A popular breakfast in Sweden.

    • @aidan4943
      @aidan4943 3 роки тому +7

      tomato paste, maybe some comte cheese

    • @scumteet
      @scumteet 3 роки тому +4

      Hummus, mackerel, and hot sauce.

  • @MrGlennJohnsen
    @MrGlennJohnsen 3 роки тому +250

    Tar is wood sap extracted from roots saturated with sap, the way you extract it is by heating the roots up and then naturally the sap will come out- or it's mechanically squeezed while the roots are hot. The "smoky" and "burnt" taste comes from that process, I don't like the taste either but it's one of those "hard times" traditional foods- same with the bark bread.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  3 роки тому +64

      Fascinating. Rewatching this I realized I didn't even know what tar was, thanks for the explanation.

    • @TheJerry834
      @TheJerry834 3 роки тому +10

      Tar is not sap, it's a hydrocarbon produced by distilling wood, bark and roots.

    • @jimmyg7100
      @jimmyg7100 3 роки тому +20

      In New England we have Pine Sap Gum. Its sweetened, and then dried pine sap. My Grandfather just used to pick the dried sap from the pine trees, and chew on it like gum. As a New Englander I respect the Finnish people. They understand what a cold winter is.

    • @kaisersose5549
      @kaisersose5549 3 роки тому +23

      @@TheJerry834
      It depends, my friend.
      Tar is a generic term that encompasses viscous, sticky and usually black substances.
      In the U.S. we specify what kind of tar by affixing the type. I.E. pine tar, roofing tar, etc.

    • @lottatroublemaker6130
      @lottatroublemaker6130 3 роки тому +7

      @@TheJerry834 - We made tar in school when I was a kid. We built the tar miln in the forest by the school (in the south of Norway). I remember us kids thought it was a lot of fun. Doing this was common practice here in the old days, when they used tar on the houses and boats (to protect the wood from rot), like we use paint today.

  • @lassemanninen4750
    @lassemanninen4750 3 роки тому +190

    Finland has wisdom of old:
    "If sauna, alcohol or tar don't help, it is deadly."

    • @leopartanen9431
      @leopartanen9431 3 роки тому +16

      "If sauna, liquor and tar won't help, the disease is fatal"

  • @kdonsky6
    @kdonsky6 3 роки тому +308

    "Most people would prefer this to not have wood in it." Yeah.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  3 роки тому +24

      🤣

    • @OsirusHandle
      @OsirusHandle 3 роки тому +6

      Its basically just fibre. Good for you, I guess. Plenty of veggies have high fibre.

    • @lubricustheslippery5028
      @lubricustheslippery5028 3 роки тому +5

      @@OsirusHandle There is lots of sugars in the phloem that is used for making bark bread. It's an old Sami tradition the used the layer between the bark and wood (Phloem) from scotch pine.

    • @jamaicaninsidernews7195
      @jamaicaninsidernews7195 3 роки тому

      I know, I would never think this would exist.

    • @sheep1ewe
      @sheep1ewe 3 роки тому +5

      I used to chew on that inner bark whan i was a little child, so i can imagine this is what people used before there was reffined or cane sugar easily available in the Nord and elsewhere.

  • @lbh704
    @lbh704 3 роки тому +109

    I actually really like the flavor of tar. My dad knew a guy who produced tar by himself, I got to taste it pure. Super intense. My favorite tar flavored thing is tar mustard, it is really good. I can't eat fish but my friend says that vendace in tar marinade is the best thing ever.
    Also tar is used in sauna scents. You put a few drops of it in the water you throw on sauna stove.

    • @jimmyg7100
      @jimmyg7100 3 роки тому +5

      I think you would like Retsina wine from Greece.

    • @bruhgamer316
      @bruhgamer316 3 роки тому +2

      Thanks for sharing this story👍

    • @SambodhiBhattacharyya0
      @SambodhiBhattacharyya0 3 роки тому +4

      Wow, interesting! Had no idea that tar can be eaten.

    • @sheep1ewe
      @sheep1ewe 3 роки тому +1

      @@SambodhiBhattacharyya0
      In small amonths, but reffined industrial turpentine is carcinogene as i heard.

    • @mirandamom1346
      @mirandamom1346 3 роки тому

      I want to try tar mustard...

  • @ayoitselaine
    @ayoitselaine 3 роки тому +68

    love all the history you explain behind the foods you review : )

  • @Quinnie789
    @Quinnie789 3 роки тому +33

    Bark bread reminds me of that one william osman video where he puts increasing amounts of sawdust in rice krispies treats to see what amount people notice it at

  • @friderosendal2164
    @friderosendal2164 3 роки тому +27

    My grandmother eat bark bread as a child here in Sweden during the war, I think. You usually put butter on it though with cheese or ham if you had it.

  • @QuiznosBear
    @QuiznosBear 3 роки тому +18

    I come from a long line of roofers and was pretty excited to see tar on the menu. Tar used to be the common chew substitute on the job / or bubble gum for kids. VERY popular in the 20's-30's.
    It's pretty much always been considered safe when the tar was pure.
    Tar nowadays (industrial use since the 70s - 80's) is not actually *tar* though - it's just black mystery cancer goo for the same usage.

    • @QuiznosBear
      @QuiznosBear 3 роки тому +3

      @@UCKY5 more than likely it did. Dental health wasn't a prime thought for those who chewed tobacco or kids wanting to "be like paw" chewing away on jobsites while stoking the kettle at 10yrs old.
      (I never did buy the "back when it was pure" my grandfather talks about though - then again he's in the upper 90s and fit as a fiddle - maybe that's the secret 😂)

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 3 роки тому

      "mystery cancer goo"
      There's no mystery.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_tar

  • @TheGrinningViking
    @TheGrinningViking 3 роки тому +119

    I can pretty much garantee that everyone watching this in the US has eaten something with sawdust as a filler. It's particularly common among low calorie breads and granola bars, but it finds its way into a bunch of places.
    The magical words that mean "sawdust" without saying it on the package are "cellulose powder." It could technically mean other things, but it doesn't. It's just bleached sawdust. Removes the wood flavor.

    • @fnamelname9077
      @fnamelname9077 3 роки тому +17

      It's often referred to as "cellulose gum", as well. A lot of low/no calorie drinks use it to mimic the smooth and weighty texture of oil-suspensions like creme.

    • @TheGrinningViking
      @TheGrinningViking 3 роки тому +4

      @PAUL GARCIA I refuse to buy the wood dust parmesan. Shredded is just so much nicer 👍🏼

    • @chrisdieguez1950
      @chrisdieguez1950 3 роки тому +7

      Cellulose =/= wood. Wood is lignin. Cellulose products have wide range of uses in food and cosmetics as binders, thickeners, and gelling agents.

    • @TheGrinningViking
      @TheGrinningViking 3 роки тому +3

      @@chrisdieguez1950 www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2014/07/10/329767647/from-mcdonalds-to-organic-valley-youre-probably-eating-wood-pulp

    • @fnamelname9077
      @fnamelname9077 3 роки тому +8

      @@chrisdieguez1950 Wood is both cellulose and lignin. Food usages of lignin are rare, but there have been periodic efforts to find more uses for it. I'm curious as to the lignin content of the cracker WE ate. I don't think the cambium is high in lignin. There are trees where people even just boil the cambium and eat it directly. It's called "tree bacon", lol.

  • @generalchicken3385
    @generalchicken3385 3 роки тому +76

    Knäckebröd (crispbread) is still very popular i Nordic countries. I don't know if it's also popular in other countries. Most are without any bark added though. Not very nice on it's own, but goes very well with creamy toppings. Like cheese & ham, hummus, räksallad (don't know the English word, shrimp mixed with crème fraiche and herbs), eggs etc. Nice crunch and something creamy so it doesn't become to dry.
    Honestly never tried tar candy. But think I will stay away from it xD

    • @almostliterally593
      @almostliterally593 3 роки тому +2

      Isnt this the bread they eat that stinky fermented canned fish with

    • @Glazkor
      @Glazkor 3 роки тому +2

      You don't know where it is eaten. Take a land in Europe, Russia, the baltic states or the arabic countries, they eat it. Goat cheese or cow cheese is a combination I can recommend. It goes well with any creamy cheese, but can also be eaten with beef, which makes it great. Most countries don't add the sawdust though...

    • @lunkel8108
      @lunkel8108 3 роки тому +8

      Knäckebrot as it's called here is also quite popular in germany. But it mostly comes in the form of small rectangles instead of a big circle like the one in the video

    • @mohnmann
      @mohnmann 3 роки тому +2

      ​@Lassi Kinnunen Liversausage is great, the kind we have in Germany is like a patee too.

    • @justahappyfellow
      @justahappyfellow 3 роки тому +1

      @@almostliterally593 no, usually use a softer variant for it in order to roll it up!

  • @shitpostcentraI
    @shitpostcentraI 3 роки тому +33

    I love tar flavored candies, those Leijonas are really good!

    • @antcommander1367
      @antcommander1367 3 роки тому +5

      also Tar Devil's (Tervapirut)

    • @jonaskarlsson5453
      @jonaskarlsson5453 3 роки тому

      havent hade thoes in years but then again thay are hard to comeby in my local stores (sweden but with a healthy finnish poulation in the area)

    • @juslitor
      @juslitor 3 роки тому

      Tastes great dissolved in vodka

    • @fredrik3614
      @fredrik3614 3 роки тому +1

      @@antcommander1367 Those are the best candies ever

  • @let_uslunch8884
    @let_uslunch8884 3 роки тому +55

    Finnish curiosity shop having a slow day.
    Jared enters said shop.
    The shop: " ladies and gentlemen we got him."

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  3 роки тому +25

      haha the lady selling the bark bread was very pleased

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al 3 роки тому +1

      Is that the same place that sells salmiak vodka ?

    • @poika22
      @poika22 2 роки тому +3

      @@Call-me-Al You can buy salmiak vodka at literally any liquor store in Finland

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al 2 роки тому

      @@poika22 fantastic! I will have to visit Finland some day.

  • @questconcrete
    @questconcrete 3 роки тому +24

    Not really wood dust or bark. The cambium layer of many trees is edible. It has been used as food likely before wheat ever existed.

    • @collecter3456
      @collecter3456 3 роки тому +2

      I was going to say this as well. Cambium is very nutritious, and it is much more digestible than actual bark.

  • @Jussi138
    @Jussi138 3 роки тому +12

    back in the days early 90's when I was in junior high school in Kokkola Finland... there was one Swedish teacher who hated the smell of Terva Leijona... that was the reason why students in her classes ate only Terva Leijona candy or similar tar candy 😅 Terva Leijona tastes amazing, it's one of my favorite candies 👌😋

  • @goofmuffin
    @goofmuffin 3 роки тому +6

    translations for products and brands in this video
    Skogs Knäcke: (Swedish) Forests crispbread (my swedish isn't perfect)
    Leijona: Lion
    Terva Lakritsi: Tar Liqourice

  • @ei96byod
    @ei96byod 3 роки тому +56

    Butter! You need butter for the bark bread! 🙂

    • @TheFloatingSheep
      @TheFloatingSheep 3 роки тому +4

      Is reindeer butter a thing there? I feel like only that would be fully appropriate.

    • @Hin_Håle
      @Hin_Håle 3 роки тому +5

      @@TheFloatingSheep The Sami people probably made reindeer butter at some point but I doubt that it's a thing these days. And if it is, it'll be a very local specialty to the northern parts of scandinavia. Maybe you can have it at some gourmet restaurant somewhere.

    • @TheFloatingSheep
      @TheFloatingSheep 3 роки тому

      @@Hin_Håle Next time Santa's in town I'll try milking his reindeer, and make some butter.

    • @-jank-willson
      @-jank-willson 3 роки тому +3

      @@TheFloatingSheep Don't milk the male ones...

  • @havrekli
    @havrekli 3 роки тому +2

    That bread is from Sweden. 'Skogs Knäcke med bark och enbär från härjedalen' literally 'Forest crispbread with bark and juniper berries from härjedalen' Härjedalen is a province in Sweden. And I love Leijona!

  • @LaineyBug2020
    @LaineyBug2020 3 роки тому +10

    It would be cool to see you do a tree foraging video and eat the cambium, drink the needle tea, and even sap of some trees! Maybe juniper berries & pine nuts? Could be interesting!

  • @TwistedAttitudes
    @TwistedAttitudes 3 роки тому +24

    Europe: Introduces the basis for the original government oversight food inspection system to make sure bakers don't bulk up bread with filler like saw dust
    *16th century Finnish* : "You guys don't put saw dust in your bread?"

    • @Kardinaalilintu
      @Kardinaalilintu 3 роки тому

      Welll.... it's better than not eating anything.

  • @Hhh3r
    @Hhh3r 3 роки тому +7

    You shoud try the berry called mesimarja/arctic raspberry.

  • @kehtux
    @kehtux 3 роки тому +1

    Pettu was not actually made from "saw dust" but from the layer between the bark and the wood called "nila" in Finnish, which is the part of wood that circulates nutrients from the leaves to the roots.

  • @perarne1387
    @perarne1387 3 роки тому +3

    I've always wanted to try bark bread. My grandmother told me they had to make it during the war and she told me it tasted like shit, they probably had to use a lot of bark. Her parents even had to trick her to eat her own dog, poor woman :(

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  3 роки тому

      That's terrible. Where is your grandmother from?

  • @Vvhappy
    @Vvhappy 3 роки тому +7

    The Tervaleijona you ate does not contain ammonium chloride, the cough-drop taste comes probably from the tar flavour mixed with liquorice extract. There is a 'salmiakki' aka ammonium chloride version of the Tervaleijona, but you ate the liquorice ('lakritsi') variation. If you ever come across 'Salmiakkipulveri' or 'Salmiakkijauhe' in finnish shops, I would recommend giving it a try. While both salmiakki and cough drops do contain ammonium chloride, salmiakki is not supposed to taste like cough drops but rather an intense mix of sweet and salty and the salmiakki powders are imo the best way to taste that difference.

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al 3 роки тому +1

      Fun fact: salmiak powder (Ammonium chloride) is fantastic to gargle with in water when you have a lot of phlegm in your throat. It's basically why us here got addicted to the stuff: it was a big part of cough remedies and cough drops, together with licorice, and then we just got so used to the flavour we wanted it even when we weren't sick.
      Also, apparently vets prescribe ammonium chloride to goats if they have kidney stones they need to dissolve.

    • @poika22
      @poika22 2 роки тому +1

      I don't think salmiakki version exists anymore. It's not listed on the manufacturer's website, and I've been looking for them for maybe 5 years now. Used to be one of my favorite candies.

  • @MissRepona
    @MissRepona 3 роки тому +1

    It is amazing how well you have found the most Finnish things there are. I've never had or tasted Pettuleipä (bark bread) but that is totally part of the Finnish national legend that is tought ti us in schools. But leijonapastillit are definitely something I crave at times :) There are not that many Finns commenting on your videos, but I've followed your journey couple of years now and was super confused/happy that you ended up in Finland on your travels :D

    • @MissRepona
      @MissRepona 3 роки тому

      I've been told the bread is not that good for you since the body is unable to digest it. It can just stay and build up in your digestion system.

    • @MissRepona
      @MissRepona 3 роки тому

      And I guess it is also debatable if tar is good for you. EU has a directive on tar that forbids its use, but Finland got an exeption from that because we simply LOVE to put tar on litteraly everything (candy, soap, boats etc). Can it cause cancer? Maybe. Do we just love the smell and don't care? Absolutely.

  • @basisti94
    @basisti94 3 роки тому +1

    As a Finn I love those tar candies. I can't explain why, the taste is just really good to me.

  • @danielk3919
    @danielk3919 3 роки тому +7

    Also that bread was vital well into the 1800s in Sweden and Finland. When there were bouts of shortages and periods of starvation people would make this and other not so tasty foods to survive. And there would be a high amount of bark in the bread.

  • @Dewkeeper
    @Dewkeeper 3 роки тому +7

    Just FYI he bark bread uses the cambium/phloem layers of tree bark (they transport nutrients basically) and is essentially the only part of the tree that isn't just straight up indigestible cellulose. Even then it was thought of as just a filler.
    PS: tar syrup in coffee is surprisingly good

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 3 роки тому +1

      "Even then it was thought of as just a filler."
      But, despite what they thought, you do get at least vitamins and minerals from it. Not sure about energy.

    • @McSlobo
      @McSlobo Рік тому

      @@seneca983 1/4 of energy of rye flour. Also harmful substances.

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Рік тому

      @@McSlobo "1/4 of energy of rye flour"
      That's still plenty more than "just a filler". It would matter a lot for survival in famine times.

  • @Aiwendile
    @Aiwendile 3 роки тому +6

    Watching this made me crave restaurant Harald's bark- and tar ice cream, and want to hunt down spruce ice cream made by Suomen jäätelö. All of them are so delicious.

  • @UnlimitedAuthority
    @UnlimitedAuthority 3 роки тому +19

    I can definitely see the Leijona candy be something you need to have a certain background to enjoy. Personally, being from northern Sweden, being outside in the woods, sitting around a campfire is something that's been a huge part of growing up for me. The candy really brings some of that feeling of the wilderness straight into your mouth, along with liking licorice(which it does contain) like many people up here, it's something I really enjoy personally, even though it is a very special kind of taste.

    • @Vivicci.x
      @Vivicci.x 3 роки тому

      ☺️☺️❤️

  • @rollmeister
    @rollmeister 3 роки тому +1

    They used to make flour from a thin layer of starchy bark beneath the outer layer of bark. I think this is what it is based on.

  • @user-mz1tk8un7l
    @user-mz1tk8un7l 3 роки тому

    What a great invention touch on food! Amazing tips.

  • @Cikeb
    @Cikeb 3 роки тому

    That bark bread you bought is apparently from the Härjedalen province in Sweden. I looked it up, and "Skogsknäcke" is produced in a small place called Lillhärdal.

  • @ZK-cd8jo
    @ZK-cd8jo 3 роки тому

    YT recommendations caused me to fall backwards into your videos, and I am now a man obsessed. Thank you for your service, Weird Fruit Video Guy.

  • @j.lahtinen7525
    @j.lahtinen7525 3 роки тому +2

    I love those tar candies. 😊
    But I can understand that it's an acquired taste. The candies have salmiakki in them in addition to the tar, which is why you tasted the ammonium chloride. Of course I - like many Finns - love salmiakki as well.
    I think a part of what makes the taste of those tar candies good to many Finns is that the smell of tar is often associated with sauna - there's even shampoo with tar-fragrance. My grandmother used to have that tar shampoo in the washing room of her sauna (she actually had two saunas - one a very old wood fire warmed sauna, and one smaller electric sauna). So the smell is very familiar and associated with good memories, with me, and I bet many other Finns. And, as you know, smell is a big part of taste.

  • @HORRIOR1
    @HORRIOR1 3 роки тому +1

    While I do not like tar candy, I do LOVE tar ice cream. It is like butterscotch ice cream but it has a smoky and earthy after taste to it. Kinda like maple syrup but stronger and less sweet. If you're still in finland or will visit again, I would suggest visiting Viking Restaurant Harald. They have a few locations across Finland. Very good food made out of somewhat unusual ingredients, such as berries, small and big game, mushrooms, and fish.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  3 роки тому +2

      Oh man I wish I visited that shop. I could have made a tar and bark bread ice cream sandwich!

  • @AuntyM66
    @AuntyM66 3 роки тому +1

    I would love to taste that bread. I love the smell of boiling tar.

  • @reishizuka
    @reishizuka 3 роки тому

    I live in Argentina and once, in a local fair, found sweetened edible wood: literal chunks of wood with a syrupy "marinade"! It was very sweet, with a nice bite to it. Flavourwise: quite woody and tar-y but in a good way 🧃

  • @alan2here
    @alan2here 4 місяці тому +1

    I'd like to try the tar, I love that french hard non-sweet liquorish layers, and I like toast.

  • @jadestrider2660
    @jadestrider2660 3 роки тому

    i love this channel just for how informative you are about the taste of these things! it allows us viewers to live vicariously through your videos

  • @HeyItsFreeman427
    @HeyItsFreeman427 3 роки тому

    I want to clarify in saying that the under-bark of a tree is not actually wood, but cambium, which people have survived off of for centuries, particularly certain Native American tribes. I’ve heard a few ways to make it more palatable such as frying it in animal fat, but at the end of the day yeah it’s still only especially useful if you’re starving in the woods. I would’ve never thought to use it in bread. Great video!

  • @amberpalmer444
    @amberpalmer444 3 роки тому

    I'm grateful that I was able to find a spot where my avocado trees can grow happily enough and I got prickly pear cacti and dragon fruit cacti. The dragon fruit cacti are so hardy that I can grow it in Fort Wayne IN without it dying, but I have to take it inside during the winter. I want to try growing more exotic fruit trees. I hope someday I can move into a much bigger place to have the room I need for all these tropical exotic trees and shrubs and cacti. Someday I want to grow the chocolate pudding fruit, different varieties of cacao trees, a macadamia nut tree, some different varieties of coconut trees, different varieties of guava trees, different varieties of kiwi trees, etc.

  • @Morhgoz
    @Morhgoz 7 місяців тому

    Tervalakritsi means tar liqourice, Leijona also has pure tar candies. And you can buy tar menthol candies from apotecharies and tar lollipops from different places like Arktos at Rovaniemi. Btw, those candies you rasted where one me favourite as wee kid!

  • @rictrues
    @rictrues 3 роки тому

    Leijona is suuuper, always bought them on the ferries to Finland, then in handy sheet metal boxes. A few years ago i introduced them to one of the blenders of Morrison Bowmore, i was a bit surprised...Having the peaty whiskeys they do, he did not appreciate it too much 🤣

  • @pkre707
    @pkre707 3 роки тому

    Here in CA, we call the oil that bubbles up from the ground and gets stuck on our feet at the beach “Tar”. I was like “no way” when you said they were making food out of it. Glad these comments cleared things up for me or I would have thought you were buying a ticket to cancer town.

  • @TheOneSevenNine
    @TheOneSevenNine 3 роки тому

    i've always wanted to try bark bread. something about the idea of looking at a tree and going "wait i can eat that??"

  • @damianlopez7630
    @damianlopez7630 3 роки тому

    Wow!!! Great Video. Thank You.

  • @TheMahtimursu
    @TheMahtimursu 3 роки тому

    Terva Leijona is one of my favourite candies. Traditionally it has been used a lot by smokers or alcoholics, as it masks other odors so well :) It has quite a strong smoky tar taste and definitely not everyone is going to like it. I would say that people who like smoked food or smoky whiskies can enjoy this candy a lot.

  • @christoffercarlstrom2468
    @christoffercarlstrom2468 3 роки тому

    I think the bark bread is made of the inner bark of pine. Which is dried and roasted before it is ground and mixt in with the flour

  • @YOUNOGUD
    @YOUNOGUD 3 роки тому +4

    Damn you always find a lot of interesting stuff and it's really interesting to see it

  • @TheFloatingSheep
    @TheFloatingSheep 3 роки тому +18

    "How much sawdust can you put in bread before people notice?"

    • @rifwann
      @rifwann 3 роки тому

      Yeah.. i also have some scientific question like their wood nutrients or something..

    • @TheFloatingSheep
      @TheFloatingSheep 3 роки тому +1

      @@rifwann There's some minimal amount of nutrients, but I'm not sure how much our bodies would really be able to extract considering they can't actually break down the cellulose and lignin which encase most of the nutrients. I suppose the only nutrients you might get are the ones which leaked out when the wood got chopped up, any others being encased in cells.

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams 3 роки тому

      Quite a lot actually.. That is why at one point and time during the medieval period they had to put laws into effect in what can be labeled as bread because bakers would cut their bread with different things (including saw dust) just to make their flour last longer.. Specially during hard times when there were crop failures.

    • @jvin248
      @jvin248 3 роки тому

      A recent UK lawsuit was brought against Subway bread for not being bread ... too much sugar and not enough flour.

  • @lottatroublemaker6130
    @lottatroublemaker6130 3 роки тому

    They made bark bread here in Norway 🇳🇴 during WW2, since they didn’t have enough flour. So they used bark to stretch the flour. But when they no longer had to eat it, they stopped making it! ☺️

  • @chewtime5836
    @chewtime5836 3 роки тому

    Love you channel. Thank for sharing you culinary experiences with us

  • @greenbriar07
    @greenbriar07 3 роки тому +1

    I like the smoky taste of toast charred on the grill, so I might like the tar candy... maybe...? Hmm...

  • @Wolf-Spirit_Alpha-Sigma
    @Wolf-Spirit_Alpha-Sigma 3 роки тому +1

    Oh man. UA-cam is pretty stupid for recommending your channel...so fricking late. I'm a sub since a week or so and I love your work so much. Best channel ever! I get a lot of inspiration, knowledge and enjoyment from your videos! And I'm trying to watch as much of them as I can and there are tons of quality stuff. Wish I discovered you earlier. Oh well, better late than never. Wish you all the best and thank you for your awesomeness. 🤩❤🧡💛

  • @wesariihinen9502
    @wesariihinen9502 3 роки тому +1

    Bark bread is called "pettuleipä" where my parents grew up in Finland. My grandmom claimed she had to eat is as a child, but I'm not sure times really were that bad... For my own part, I'd rather eat proper crispbread. 😁

  • @yesterdaydream
    @yesterdaydream 3 роки тому +1

    The ladder in the background is so interesting and I wanna know where it leads!

    • @poika22
      @poika22 2 роки тому +1

      A loft with a bed(room) in it. This is a pretty standard configuration for rentable cabins in Lapland.

  • @Feethei
    @Feethei 2 роки тому

    Anything with
    tar for me, yes please! And that candy on particular is delicious.

  • @DennisJrgensen
    @DennisJrgensen 3 роки тому

    It's called crispbread in English. Very common in Scandinavia. But not normally with wood in it. But it's saw dust you are eating, but the inner bark, and it is actually eatable

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus 3 роки тому

    Great video! Thanks!

  • @fredrik3614
    @fredrik3614 3 роки тому

    Tervapiru is my favorite candy, it's tar candy that is a lot softer than those pastilles and with stronger tar flavour in my opinion.

  • @jerkfudgewater147
    @jerkfudgewater147 3 роки тому +2

    I wanna see matzah ball soup made out of that wood bread

  • @mysterious7215
    @mysterious7215 3 роки тому

    Sounds absolutely delicious

  • @kissamakis
    @kissamakis 3 роки тому

    Of course, there's also tar-flavoured soda. A certain British UA-camr with a penchant to sample massively out-of-date foodstuff has tried it on their "extra" channel.
    On the topic of regional peculiarities, I have no idea if you're into eating/baking cinnamon rolls or similar buns, but the dough here (Nordic countries) is (usually?) flavoured with cardamom. If you visited a cafe on your trip, you may have noticed it.

  • @14zoedoucet
    @14zoedoucet 3 роки тому +3

    “It has a taste......” I thought you were just gonna stop there with the tar candies 😂

  • @TheInteriktigt100
    @TheInteriktigt100 3 роки тому +2

    Both of these are common in Sweden, and I presume, in the rest of the Nordics. I am from the far-north of Sweden and I have, however, not seen them since moving south.

    • @TheInteriktigt100
      @TheInteriktigt100 3 роки тому +3

      Butter and a mild cheese would be really nice on it. A cup of coffee or tea goes really nice with that as well

  • @astroidyeti2169
    @astroidyeti2169 3 роки тому

    The holes in the bread is there to help keep it from forming bubbles

  • @GoingtoHecq
    @GoingtoHecq 3 роки тому

    There are a lot of pine trees with an edible cambium (growing) layer.

  • @benny_lemon5123
    @benny_lemon5123 3 роки тому

    I remember seeing something years ago about a country in Europe that was using pulp left over from pulp mills as an ingredient in a margarine type product. That's all the context I remember, too.
    With stories like these, I've come to just associate the whole of Europe as a continent united in finding imaginative ways to eat trees.

    • @jordanfleming7022
      @jordanfleming7022 3 роки тому

      Heres an idea:
      Nettle soup, with a side of bark bread coated in wood pulp margarine.

  • @danshaku
    @danshaku 3 роки тому +1

    Try tar icecream if you ever get to visit Finland again. It is so good with cloudberry jam.

  • @somon90
    @somon90 3 роки тому

    I really love tar candy, but I'm a huge fan of smoked stuff, especially beer.

  • @errir4042
    @errir4042 3 роки тому

    Your channel is the reason why I decided to expiriement with my cuisine

  • @heraselvandanu950
    @heraselvandanu950 3 роки тому

    You should try bitter bean and jengkol or jering, its fruits that always be made into food or gourmet

  • @hx0ad5
    @hx0ad5 3 роки тому

    these both seem like something i would LOVE, also really want to try that tar jam bark bread combo

  • @waltergolston6187
    @waltergolston6187 3 роки тому

    Fiber is known as processed cellulose 1970's fiber enrich bread. Also used in WW2 prison food as well.

  • @shaynecarter-murray3127
    @shaynecarter-murray3127 3 роки тому

    The bark break sounds delicious to me. Juniper and a hint of sawdust? Sounds like it tastes like camping.

  • @Nurr0
    @Nurr0 3 роки тому +2

    New child behaviour management strategy unlocked: 'Be good or you'll be eating barkbread with tar jam for dinner!'.

  • @arit8009
    @arit8009 3 роки тому

    the holes in that bread are actually from a process called docking, you do it to the bottom of pies so they don't puff up, I'm assuming that's why they're in this bread, too.

  • @maaritlarinen9056
    @maaritlarinen9056 3 роки тому

    Okay. Tar candy is the best thing EVER. I could eat a few of those packs in one sitting!

  • @JD3Gamer
    @JD3Gamer 3 роки тому

    I feel like that bark bread just needs the right dip to be perfect.

  • @KingKevin108
    @KingKevin108 3 роки тому

    I'd try that bark bread, that looks pretty neat

  • @henrikousa7272
    @henrikousa7272 3 роки тому

    Just had smokey salmiakki tar liquor the other day, delicious

  • @user-cq3qf9dm7e
    @user-cq3qf9dm7e 3 роки тому

    i love this channel so much

  • @Hin_Håle
    @Hin_Håle 3 роки тому +11

    To be fair, all knäckebröd tastes a little like wood. The more, the better, I say!
    Oh, btw: that was swedish bark bread.

  • @Cadwaladr
    @Cadwaladr 3 роки тому

    I think I'd be good with the bark bread. Probably with you on the tar candy, though I've never tried either. I like Swedish Knäkebröd, which is just crisp rye bread, very tasty.
    Also how you described it as woody reminded me of Irish poitín, which is basically un-aged whiskey, and it tasted to me like birch wood. Birch is often used for wooden spoons and the like, because it doesn't impart flavours to the food, but if you just suck on a stick of birch, you get a taste from it. The wood smells nice when you cut it or burn it. It has a flavour, but it doesn't overpower the flavours in your food when you cook with it. Popsicle sticks are usually made of birch.

  • @foxmulder7616
    @foxmulder7616 3 роки тому

    You can make bread with 100% inner pine bark. Though it would probably be better half and half with grain/ seed flour lol but if it's all you got it'll taste like the best thing you've ever tasted!

  • @Hermod_Hermit
    @Hermod_Hermit 3 роки тому

    Hard bread is often or almost always used as a side dish to traditional meals all across Scandinavia.
    Simply put, this sort of bread is not to be eaten as a stand alone item. Either you just put some butter on it and enjoy as part of your meal. But if you want a quick and easy snack, then some hard bread and a cup of coffee will do nice. Then add a slice of ham or cheese, or any other toppings you might like, to your hard bread. But in fact, butter is often enough.
    On a personal level I eat a lot of hard bread, but none with bark added. My preferred variety is Wasa Husman, a hard bread where the only ingredients are flour made from whole grains of rye, yeast and salt (and an amount of water to make it into a dough).
    Dry and crumbly stuff for sure, but can be stored indefinitely I imagine. And it is widely available here in Sweden.

  • @nytrodioxide
    @nytrodioxide 3 роки тому +13

    Finnish food seems so... Intense. Rough & harsh. Black licorice, Salmiakki, bark bread, tar candy, like damn.

    • @danielk3919
      @danielk3919 3 роки тому +5

      That bread is Swedish, and I am pretty sure Finland got the tradition from Scandinavia.

    • @fyzix4277
      @fyzix4277 3 роки тому +8

      @@danielk3919 The particular bread he eats in this video is Swedish yes, but that might just be because very few companies will make the bread with actual wood in it nowadays.
      Historically though, the first known usage of bark bread comes from medieval texts regarding the indigenous Sami people, who live all across modern northern Finland, Sweden, Norway and northwestern Russia.
      The incident most people know bark bread from, and the one he mentioned in the video, is the Great Famine of the 1690s (literally known as the years of deadlyness in Finnish), which affected many northern European countries but particularly the area of Finland the worst. It should be mentioned that the geographical area known as Finland was mostly part of the Swedish empire at the time of said famine, so it could be argued that it is, in fact, Swedish bread :D

    • @KossolaxtheForesworn
      @KossolaxtheForesworn 3 роки тому

      @@danielk3919
      its not tradition to put bark in bread, its to survive over starvation.

    • @danielk3919
      @danielk3919 3 роки тому +5

      @@KossolaxtheForesworn It kind of becomes a tradition if you do it long enough.

    • @KossolaxtheForesworn
      @KossolaxtheForesworn 3 роки тому

      @@danielk3919 I dont think starvation is a tradition.

  • @packdemon
    @packdemon 3 роки тому +1

    Any cracker bread can be rehydrated with a damp towel wrapped around it, or steam.
    They can also be crumbled into soups.

  • @Radtastical
    @Radtastical 3 роки тому

    Anyone else experiencing ASMR from this video? Sooo relaxing.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  3 роки тому +1

      This Really should have been 7 hours of me tapping that bark bread....

  • @anka042
    @anka042 3 роки тому +4

    I love terva leijona!

  • @KARMABELLA24
    @KARMABELLA24 2 роки тому

    I love all your videos

  • @amberpalmer444
    @amberpalmer444 3 роки тому

    I'd love to try the bark bread. I can be picky with bread mainly the crust part but I enjoy dryer breads. I might enjoy that bark bread. I will have to see if they have it on Amazon. I may try the tar candy but your description of the taste somewhat deterred me but I am still very curious. I enjoy trying new things. I wish I could travel like you just to try fruits and vegetables and nuts around the world. That would be awesome.

  • @johnlittle8975
    @johnlittle8975 3 роки тому

    I've had tar candy as a kid in ND. I wouldn't say I liked it, but I liked it better than licorice. You're right that it's smoky, and to me has a milder flavor.

  • @oskarantola2616
    @oskarantola2616 3 роки тому

    Terva Leijonas are amazing! Gotta go buy some right now... :D

  • @mammamiia08
    @mammamiia08 2 роки тому

    That bread just needed some butter too! 😋

  • @seneca983
    @seneca983 3 роки тому

    I've always liked the tar flavored candies. One thing I've also liked was this sauce/dressing with tar and mustard flavor I've seen in some supermarkets. I've not seen it in years, though. :(

  • @magnus80a
    @magnus80a 3 роки тому

    Tar candy is getting hard to come by in Sweden, but I used to love it as a kid. As an adult I also love smokey Islay whisky. Go figure.

  • @merrituber1
    @merrituber1 3 роки тому

    I would have had it with some good fresh pine needle tea, which i like a lot

  • @jeremiahstromberg8940
    @jeremiahstromberg8940 3 роки тому

    Its not a cracker its a type of hard bread and it is still extremely popular in both finland and sweden and is usually eaten alongside staple foods with butter and cheese or just plain.