Finnish food
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Meats from Finland[edit]
Beef and pork meatballs (lihapullat), served with mashed potatoes, creamy roux sauce, salad, and lingonberry jam
Reindeer stew (poronkäristys), a Lapland favourite, served in a potato mash bowl with lingonberries
The most popular meats in Finland are pork (33.5 kg/year/person in 2005), beef (18.6 kg), and chicken (13.3 kg). Approximately one third of this is eaten as sausage (makkara), which is mostly made from pork but often mixes in other meats as well. Horse meat, lamb and reindeer make up a small portion of the total meat consumption, but they are widely available.
In addition to domesticated animals, there are long traditions of hunting and fishing in Finland. The hunters focus on deer, moose and bear, but small game such as hare, duck and grouse are popular. Approximately 70,000–80,000 moose are culled yearly, producing significant amounts of meat. Due to very strict food hygiene regulations, moose meat is mainly consumed within households and is rarely obtainable in restaurants.
Berries[edit]
Lingonberries (known in Finnish as puolukka) are common throughout Finland.
Typical kiisseli
Arctic wild berries are distinctively featured in Finnish cuisine with their strong flavor and high nutrient content. Traditionally, they were eaten fresh in summer and dried at other times of year. It is still quite common to go picking berries straight from the forests – in fact, wild berries are free to pick in any forest, state or private, except in close proximity to dwellings (see freedom to roam). Wild raspberries (vadelma), bilberries (mustikka) and lingonberries (puolukka) are found in almost every part of Finland, while cloudberries (lakka), cranberries (karpalo), arctic brambles (mesimarja) and sea buckthorns (tyrni) grow in more limited areas. The intensely flavored wild strawberry (metsämansikka) is a seasonal delicacy decorating cakes, served alone, with cream, or with ice cream. Farmed strawberry (mansikka) is also very common.
Today, berries are no longer dried for winter consumption but usually frozen. They may be used as ingredients, or eaten on their own, for example, with porridge and sugar. Kiisseli (a sweet soup of berry juice and berries thickened with potato starch) is a common dessert. Homemade berry juices and jams are common, especially among older people. While berries are most often used for desserts, they are also served with meat, especially the sour lingonberry relish.
Bilberry kissel|kiisseli (mustikkakiisseli) and pie (mustikkapiirakka), made from wild bilberries (Vaccinium myrtillus), are traditional Finnish desserts. Bilberries are frequently used in Finnish cuisine, both as an ingredient, such as bilberry pie, and also served with cream or ice cream. They are often used on top of viili and other yogurt-type dishes.
Fish[edit]
Fried vendace (Coregonus albula) is a traditional summertime dish in Finland. The fish are fried, served, and eaten whole, usually accompanied with garlic sauce.
Loimulohi (blazed salmon)
Fried Baltic herring is a popular Finnish dish. It is usually accompanied with boiled or mashed potatoes.
Lakes and rivers in Finland and the Baltic Sea provide many opportunities for fishing and fish has always been an important protein source. Numerous methods of preparing fish are used, including frying, boiling, drying, salting, fermenting, cold smoking or simply slicing sea fish and eating it raw. Salmon is a popular choice, both as kylmäsavustettu lohi: cold smoked salmon, lox, or served raw with lemon juice as graavilohi (gravlax in Swedish). The soup called lohikeitto is also one of the most popular salmon dishes in Finland. It is common to smoke any type of fish, like salmon, zander, pike, perch and Baltic herring. A popular dish among the Swedish-speaking population is smoked herring (Finnish: savusilakka, Swedish: böckling). There are many styles of pickled herring which is a common appetizer and also served around Midsummer accompanied by small potatoes called uusiperuna (nypotatis in Swedish) which means 'new potato', usually the first harvests of potato. Whitefish and vendace roe are Finnish specialties served on top of a toast or with blinis. Crayfish can be found in many lakes and streams in Finland and, in August especially, the Swedish-speaking population often arranges parties centered around eating crayfish and drinking.
Mushrooms[edit]
Chanterelles often grow near birch trees.
Various species of mushrooms grow in abundance in Finnish forests and false morels start the season in spring and are used in creamy dishes. Chanterelles and ceps pop up after Midsummer and are popular in the whole country, while in eastern Finland almost all edible fungi are consumed, including milkcaps and russulas. Mushrooms are used in soups, sauces, stews, pie fillings, or simply fried in a pan with onions as a side dish. They are preserved for the winter by pickling or drying. Chanterelles are frequently featured in Finnish haute cuisine with their relatives, winter chanterelles, which often end the season. Just like berry picking, mushroom hunting is also a popular outdoor activity among Finns.
Bread[edit]
Main article: Finnish bread
Rye and potato rieska
Dark and fiber-rich ruisleipä, rye bread, is a staple of the Finnish diet. Breads are made from grains like barley, oat, rye and wheat, or by mixing different grits and flours. For example, sihtileipä is made of a combination of rye and wheat. There is also a variety of flat breads called rieska, like maitorieska (milk flatbread), ryynirieska with barley grits from Savonia, läskirieska (lard flatbread) a somewhat flat barley bread with pieces of lard from Western coast, and perunarieska (potato flatbread). In Kainuu, North Finland, the flatbreads are very flat and baked on naked flame. Näkkileipä, crisp rye bread, is also common. Famines caused by crop failures in the 19th century caused Finns to improvise pettuleipä or bark bread, bread made from rye flour and the soft phloem layer of pine bark, which is nutritious, but rock-hard, bitter and poorly digestible. It was eaten also during the Second World War, and the tradition of making this bread has had a minor come-back with claims of health benefits.
Porridges[edit]
Vispipuuro
The Finnish breakfast traditionally includes a substantial portion of porridge. Rolled oats, rye or multi-grain porridge are most common. However, there are other options such as the milk-based mannapuuro (semolina-milk porridge) and helmipuuro (starch grain-milk porridge). Porridges are often eaten with milk, sugar, butter or berry kiisseli. The Christmas season introduces milk-based rice porridge (riisipuuro), sprinkled with cinnamon and sugar and often topped with prune kiisseli (luumukiisseli). There is also a semolina-based porridge flavored with fresh or frozen lingonberries called vispipuuro ("beaten porridge").
Beverages[edit]
A bottle of Finlandia vodka
Long drink (lonkero)
Water and coffee are the most common drinks in Finland, but during meals milk and sour milk (piimä, a fermented milk) are popular too, even among adults. Coffee is often drunk several times a day and Finland has the highest per capita consumption of coffee in the world. Tea is also available in most homes. There are several types of home-brewed alcoholic beverages, such as sima (mead) and sahti (traditional beer). Spirits brands include Koskenkorva (vodka-like clear spirit) and a salmiakki flavored shot Salmiakkikossu, Jaloviina (cut brandy), Finlandia vodka, and Marskin ryyppy (Marshal Mannerheim's shot). Around Christmas time a type of mulled wine called glögi is served, also often as a non-alcoholic version. Many berries are used to season liqueurs, such as cloudberry liqueur, and fruit wines are produced from red and black currants. A national specialty would be multiple brands of flavored hard ciders (as in Sweden) and long drink mixes with the pet name lonkero, which was originally a gin and grapefruit soda long drink.
The Finnish beer scene is dominated by pale lagers. Local brands with the highest market share include Koff, Lapin Kulta, Karjala, Olvi and Karhu and their taste is rather similar to the Danish counterparts like Carlsberg and Tuborg.[citation needed] Non-alcoholic beer has also become a popular alternative during recent years. Kotikalja (similar to Slavic kvass) is the traditional small beer. Kotikalja is a malty, sugar-containing sweet beer fermented only for carbonation, thus its alcohol content is low enough (<1.2%) to be served as a soft drink. Hops are often absent. Fresh kotikalja is unfiltered, cloudy and cannot be stored. A Finnish beer specialty is sahti, a traditional ale flavoured with juniper berries.
Desserts[edit]
See also: List of Finnish desserts
Pulla, sweet, cardamom-flavored bread eaten with coffee or as dessert
Cinnamon rolls (korvapuustit) – pulla made into a roll with cinnamon and sugar
Kiisseli – water, sugar, berry juice and berries (nowadays often canned or frozen) thickened with potato starch flour, served with milk/cream and sugar. These may be less liquid than drink-like. mustikkakeitto (Swedish: blåbärssoppa), depending on preparation, but not gelatinous.
Leipäjuusto, a soft cheese often served with cloudberry jam (lakkahillo) and coffee.
Runeberg torte, named after a national poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg and served on his memorial day on 5 February.
Rönttönen pastry with lingonberry filling
Uunijuusto, baked milk dish eaten with berries
Vispipuuro (whipped porridge) a sweet pink dessert porridge with lingonberries or other berries, served with milk and sugar
Sultsina, a cross between a crêpe and a flatbread, made of unleavened rye dough and a farina filling
Ruisreikäleipä (rye hole-bread)
Runeberg tortes
Several types of pulla sweet bread
Blueberry pie (mustikkapiirakka) is a very popular dessert.
Joulutorttu (Christmas pastry)
Funnel cake (tippaleipä)
Leipäjuusto (bread cheese) served with cloudberry jam
Mämmi (dessert during Easter time)
Sweets[edit]
Pihlaja marmalade candy
Salmiakki – salty black liquorice candy
Licorice pipe – sweet black liquorice candy
Sisu pastil – gum arabic manufactured candy
Fazer Blue (Fazer Sininen) – milk chocolate
Kismet – (waffle chocolate bar)
Tupla – (chocolate bar)
Pihlaja – marmalade candy
Kiss-Kiss – hard pink peppermint-flavoured shell and a sticky toffee filling candy
Marianne – hard peppermint-flavoured shell and a chocolate filling candy
Omar – caramel candy
Wood tar – (terva) flavoured candy, such as Terva Leijona
Jenkki – Finnish chewing gum
Mynthon – throat lozenge, pastille