Gravlax with Chef Marten Karlsson of Sweden's Fjäderholmarna Krog

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  • Опубліковано 4 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 75

  • @ahsir8
    @ahsir8 2 роки тому +1

    great communication on the process!!! The best i have seen

  • @opwave79
    @opwave79 2 роки тому +1

    The tips were excellent. I will look for a loin portion next time. I love salmon and will enjoy it prepared any and all ways.

  • @dbassir87
    @dbassir87 3 роки тому +3

    This guy does it legit

  • @garrettlees
    @garrettlees 4 роки тому +19

    Gimme four pints of Belgian and the whole loin, and stand tf back

  • @watchingyou5003
    @watchingyou5003 4 роки тому +4

    Where was this video taken??? Beautiful inlet or lake background.

    • @permelin2824
      @permelin2824 4 роки тому +3

      It's in the archipelago of Stockholm, actually just a couple of minutes boat ride from the inner city.

  • @EazyZen369
    @EazyZen369 3 роки тому +3

    HI, can you cure the salmon only with salt?

    • @morganrussell5744
      @morganrussell5744 3 роки тому

      Ya you can, it just won't have an as balanced flavour. Equal parts salt and sugar is much better tasting

  • @stevetautog880
    @stevetautog880 6 років тому +7

    Every other recipe I have seen says that a weight must be placed on top of the fish
    I noticed that your method does not require the weight
    can you comment on this

    • @rillepwn1
      @rillepwn1 6 років тому +7

      You do not have to weight it down no. I've made hundreds of gravad lax and it makes no difference whatsoever.

    • @ArgaAnders
      @ArgaAnders 6 років тому +7

      If you use the middle part (Or loin as the chef called it) you don´t need to weight it down. The weighting down/pressing option is preferabable if you´re using a whole side of salmon, because that will make the fish cure more evenly.

    • @MaZEEZaM
      @MaZEEZaM 6 років тому

      @@ArgaAnders Thanks for the clarification :) I also previously used a recipe that weighed down the fish.

    • @elbadryislam4632
      @elbadryislam4632 5 років тому

      IAM wondering , isn't keeping it for 24 hours would make it tooooo slaty !!! ... I tried once but with tuna belly it was too salty

    • @jesper10201
      @jesper10201 4 роки тому +2

      @@elbadryislam4632 You're not supposed to use a tuna for it. Its a recipe unique to Salmon.

  • @trabiccolo879
    @trabiccolo879 6 років тому +3

    Can same process be used for other fish(es) sorts?

    • @elias_toivanen
      @elias_toivanen 6 років тому +5

      Yes. For example, we eat whitefish prepared using the same method. But be aware that fresh water fish may have parasites so eating them raw may not be the best idea.

    • @metalsnake00
      @metalsnake00 6 років тому

      u can use any fish you want, as long is fresh from water and cooked properly

    • @ArgaAnders
      @ArgaAnders 6 років тому +1

      Yes. Any fatty fish that can be eaten raw can be prepared this way. The sugar and salt reacts with the natural fats and then cures the fish through osmosis.
      It works great with trout f.e! :)

    • @MaZEEZaM
      @MaZEEZaM 6 років тому

      Just make sure you are using very fresh fish.

    • @holben27
      @holben27 4 роки тому +3

      you can use any fish as long as you freeze it for a week to kill any potential parasite eggs.

  • @Techfree815
    @Techfree815 8 років тому

    Very nice. Made this many times. I you want less firm reduce curing time.

  • @SoffiavGeyso
    @SoffiavGeyso 5 років тому +3

    the sauce recipe please!!! : ) thanks in advance

    • @gregjohnson720
      @gregjohnson720 4 роки тому +1

      I want the sauce recipe also. It is not in the link in video description.

    • @erkjan
      @erkjan 3 роки тому

      Hovmästarsås

    • @lottalarsson4121
      @lottalarsson4121 3 роки тому +1

      @Soffia v.Greyso It's called head chef sauce. The technique propably come from the french cuisine. You need a sweetstron finely grained mustard 0,5 dl, custer suger 1 tablespoon, a pinch of finely grained salt, white pepper a small pinch, white wine vinegar 1 tablespoon, Rape seed oil 1 dl, chopped dill 1 dl. Mix the mustard with the salt, sugar, vinegar, white pepper. Then you continue like a mayonnaise, drip the oil in, while mixing.

  • @xetaprime
    @xetaprime 3 роки тому +1

    Where is the pickled Herring?

  • @AnnieGrier
    @AnnieGrier 8 років тому +1

    do you need to weight is down when it's in the fridge?

    • @Techfree815
      @Techfree815 8 років тому

      +Annie Grier no.

    • @garrettlees
      @garrettlees 4 роки тому +1

      Yes! (some like Mike Burg say "no", but I say "yes") -- Actually, to be perfectly precise, the correct answer is "no" (Mike Burg is "technically" right) because in your question you used the words "need to". No, you don't "need to", but try both ways and you'll see weighing it down comes out better (imo).

  • @Master_Blackthorne
    @Master_Blackthorne 4 роки тому +4

    Swedish sashimi!

  • @hohohaha3229
    @hohohaha3229 3 роки тому +1

    I always taste it salty after this curing process ... dont know why !!!.. i think i should put more sugar than salt ..

    • @9hundred67
      @9hundred67 2 роки тому

      yeah you should put much more sugar than salt, this recipe is not correct and the culinary institute person is clueless.

    • @MeldinX2
      @MeldinX2 2 роки тому +1

      @@9hundred67 It's nothing wrong with the recipe the used. 50/50 is pretty standard.

  • @9hundred67
    @9hundred67 2 роки тому +1

    some say use citrus juice and others not so wtf is it?

  • @chefsvision6351
    @chefsvision6351 3 роки тому +2

    Delicious !!! I have as well a gravlax recipe, if you want to check it out

  • @usasedona
    @usasedona 7 років тому

    Tack so mike!

  • @supratoyodah6330
    @supratoyodah6330 6 років тому +1

    Where is he putting it away for 24hrs? Fridge??

    • @MeldinX2
      @MeldinX2 6 років тому +2

      Yes :) But leave it out for a couple of hours before you put it into the fridge.

    • @Avidcomp
      @Avidcomp 4 роки тому

      "This is what it looks like after 24 hrs"... it's called a video edit; 24 hrs later

    • @burneggroll
      @burneggroll 3 роки тому

      @@Avidcomp
      Where did the salmon go during the video edit?

  • @HdHd-cg4nz
    @HdHd-cg4nz 2 роки тому

    I’ll have the gravlax please.

  • @stevenlancaster5537
    @stevenlancaster5537 6 років тому

    What is the name of that bread?

    • @mrjohnwayne72
      @mrjohnwayne72 6 років тому +1

      Steven Lancaster It's called "kavring" . I think it is a typical kind of "northen rye sweet tasty bread". But he says that it's swedish. I would say Danish. It's perfect for smørrebrød for example. In Finland there is "Malaxlimpa " , even better from my point of view.

    • @lottalarsson4121
      @lottalarsson4121 3 роки тому

      @@mrjohnwayne72 It's not danish. Please don't just make stuff up about others culture. Kavring is from Skåne, the southernmost county.

    • @burneggroll
      @burneggroll 3 роки тому

      Skåne also called Scania, was part of Denmark for over a 1000 years. Unclear when the bread came into being?

    • @lottalarsson4121
      @lottalarsson4121 3 роки тому

      @@burneggroll Why do you explain my history and culture to me?

    • @burneggroll
      @burneggroll 3 роки тому +1

      @@lottalarsson4121 Sorry. Edited it now. The comment was meant for everyone. Line two was a question: When was the bread first made?

  • @jussipoikulainen8195
    @jussipoikulainen8195 Рік тому

    No lemon if it's truly classic

  • @gschady
    @gschady 6 років тому +3

    aaaaaaahhh .. homina homina homina ........... aaaaaaaah homina homina ........aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

  • @Rawflcounsel76
    @Rawflcounsel76 6 років тому

    doesn't all that salt and sugar penetrated and get in the fish?, also would you taste of that sugar/salt less if you rinse it?

    • @BigShticks
      @BigShticks 5 років тому +1

      Rawflcounsel76
      It does get into the fish as moisture is expelled. But, as the chef said it doesn’t matter how much you put on it. It only matters that it’s equal parts S & S. That’s because any piece of meat can take on only so much of the S & S. The fishes oils/ natural flavor balance out with the S & S.

    • @HATINTHEKAT
      @HATINTHEKAT 4 роки тому +5

      Don’t use table salt, the grains/crystals are too small and they’ll absorb more readily and heavily into the meat, just like with salt curing or dry burning beef and such, you use a coarse sea salt or coarse kosher salt, the bigger crystals draw out the moisture but at the same time do not go into the meat as much, which stops it from over salting the meat,

    • @HATINTHEKAT
      @HATINTHEKAT 4 роки тому

      Marie Selby it’s not that it’s not as salty it’s just that the salt crystals themselves are bigger than your average sea salt crystals and even kosher salt crystals, so a 1/4 tsp of that bigger crystal salt takes up note room for less actual salt, if I’m explaining that clearly, it’s like filling a potato chip bag with flour, vs chips, the chips may fill up the bag but there’s def less chips vs flour in the two bags

    • @lottalarsson4121
      @lottalarsson4121 3 роки тому

      @Marie Selby For health reasons you need to salt it, if you don't want food poisining. So you have to use sodium chloride salt finely grained.

    • @lottalarsson4121
      @lottalarsson4121 3 роки тому

      @Rawflcounsel You don't rinse it.

  • @pfutzerhans-klaus5331
    @pfutzerhans-klaus5331 9 років тому

    Kasper >>Lachs nicht wie vor 50 Jahren hergestellt ich habe das aber anderst Gelernt

  • @ouou-db9pw
    @ouou-db9pw 5 років тому +5

    You supposed to use a non-reactive pan chef.

  • @brandonlasvegas
    @brandonlasvegas 2 роки тому

    😋😎

  • @patriciaweaver7735
    @patriciaweaver7735 8 років тому

    can you use a drop of liquid smoke on it to finish it

    • @PixelatedSpirit
      @PixelatedSpirit 8 років тому +12

      I would not do that. This dish is a quite light and fresh dish, the liquid smoke would ruin it in my opinion. You are better of with cold smoked salmon if you are looking for that smokey flavor. I'm no chef, but i am Swedish and have eaten this dish about a thousand times =)

    • @avega2792
      @avega2792 6 років тому +3

      Liquid smoke tastes terrible. It would ruin a great dish like this.

  • @Riot228
    @Riot228 6 років тому

    Olga. Y

  • @krysswietlicki8276
    @krysswietlicki8276 6 років тому +3

    Definitely, I would not do it in an aluminum container....

    • @johnniecaminante
      @johnniecaminante 5 років тому

      Why?

    • @alvinwe8396
      @alvinwe8396 4 роки тому +1

      @@johnniecaminante because it can react with the food and make it poisonous

    • @georgewbushcenterforintell147
      @georgewbushcenterforintell147 4 роки тому +4

      That's some Hopkins hoopky logic. Things get cooked in foil all the time no one is dying .

  • @skyfairy1959
    @skyfairy1959 8 років тому +6

    beautiful fish, too bad he did not scallop slice the fish and garnish the tray properly!~

  • @lordplaton4065
    @lordplaton4065 3 роки тому

    In 2000 l worked in restaurant branches, in Malmö, every monday, restaurant chef check every employees to fingernails, rings, piercings rings,armbands, watches and asers stuff, you must know that if you pretend to be a master chef, l am very sorry to inform you, don't take me so rude but wen you working in front of camera you must show, * YOU ARE THE BEST* don't be made on me

  • @konsultarvode6527
    @konsultarvode6527 5 років тому +1

    Hahaha was thinking, who the hell would be named Marten in sweden. Forgot muricans are absolutely incapable of importing characters. Should be Mårten (Roughly pronounced as Morten).

  • @robbyrobi758
    @robbyrobi758 6 років тому

    Looks bad no Abstract at all in colors