World-Class Swedish Cooking: Artisanal Recipes from One of Stockholm's Most Celebrated Restaurants
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About this ebook
Frantzén and Lindeberg take readers on their journey to culinary stardom, and their passion shines through in this beautiful book. They weave their story and culinary theory together with the dishes themselves, including descriptions, recipes, and stunning photographs that capture their colorful and thoughtful design. Many dishes were created specifically for this cookbook, to be implemented in Frantzén/Lindeberg’s ever-changing menu following publication. Prepare to be amazed by this compilation of meat, poultry, fish, and vegetarian entrees; breads, cheeses/butters, and sides; salads and amuse-bouches; and desserts. This smorgasbord includes:
Swedish crayfish with late autumn flowers
Pork with caramelized sesame and apples and carrots and mild curry
Poached and grilled guinea fowl with fried rhubarb and sage
Roast duck glazed with white miso
White and green asparagus with cilantro, lime, and lemongrass
Sweet, salty, and sour macarons
Salted caramel ice cream with chocolate and toasted canola oil
With a foreword from novelist Mons Kallentoft and easy-to-navigate indexes of recipes and ingredients, World-Class Swedish Cooking is a must-have for every ambitious cook or restaurateur.
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Reviews for World-Class Swedish Cooking
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Book preview
World-Class Swedish Cooking - Björn Frantzén
World-
Class
Swedish
Cooking
Copyright © 2013 by Björn Frantzén and Daniel Lindeberg
English translation copyright © 2013 by Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.
First published by Norstedts, Sweden, in 2012, as Frantzén/Lindeberg by Björn Frantzén and Daniel
Lindeberg. Published by agreement with Norstedts Agency.
Photography: Fredrik Skogkvist
(Photos on pp. 42, 43, 160, 165, 190, 191 by Stefan van der Kwast Gissberg and p. 30 by Torbjörn Jonasson)
Transcription: Göran Lager
Art Direction/Graphic Design: Stefan van der Kwast Gissberg
Illustration: Martin Bergström
Image Processing: Anders Wandin
Prepress: Elanders Fälth & Hässler, Värnamo
All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018. Skyhorse Publishing books may be purchased in bulk at special discounts for sales promotion, corporate gifts, fund-raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For details, contact the Special Sales Department, Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018 or info@skyhorsepublishing.com.
Skyhorse® and Skyhorse Publishing® are registered trademarks of Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.®, a Delaware corporation.
www.skyhorsepublishing.com
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Frantzén, Björn.
[Frantzén/Lindeberg. English]
World-class Swedish cooking : artisanal recipes from one of Stockholm's most celebrated restaurants /
Björn Frantzén and Daniel Lindeberg ; foreword by Mons Kallentoft.
pages cm
Includes index.
First published by Norstedts, Sweden, in 2012, as Frantzén/Lindeberg
--Preliminaries.
ISBN 978-1-62087-735-7 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Cooking, Swedish. I. Lindeberg, Daniel. II. Frantzén/Lindeberg (Restaurant : Stockholm, Sweden) III. Title.
TX722.S8F6813 2013
641.59485--dc23
2013006015
Printed in China
WORLD-
CLASS
SWEDISH
COOKING
Artisanal Recipes from One of
Stockholm’s Most Celebrated Restaurants
BJÖRN FRANTZÉN AND DANIEL LINDEBERG
FOREWORD BY
Mons Kallentoft
TRANSLATED BY
Stine Østtveit
A surprising gastronomical journey led by the demand for authentic ingredients and sustained by the freedom to fantasize and create.
Daniel Lindeberg
Björn Frantzén
CONTENTS
Introduction
Foreword by Mons Kallentoft
History
It’s Not the Food That Causes Food Poisoning
Philosophy
Cooking vs. Technique
Shellfish
Japan Offers a Promise
Unexpected Solutions
Fish
The Napkin, an Environmental Villain and an Unresolved Issue
Bread/Dairy
Just Sea Salt
Meat
A Swedish Pork
Fowl
Someone Has to Move Forward for All of Us to Become Better
Vegetarian
The Most Important Tool
Greenest Greens
Dessert
The Full Scandinavian Ice Cream
Thank You
Recipe Index
Ingredient Index
INTRODUCTION
There lies a vested interest in publishing a book– to have everything we work to do each day in print and available for anyone who is interested. But it occurred to us that this was not the only reason to undertake this project. We realized there were many things we had not really thought out and that we still had so many unanswered questions. The awork to write a book over three hundred pages long made us sharpen our focus even more and gave us the opportunity to gain knowledge in order to develop our restaurant even further.
THIS BOOK GAVE US A DEADLINE TO WORK TOWARD. Over a year before the book went to print, we sketched out what we needed to achieve and complete. Before we delivered the manuscript to the publishing house, we went through every statement, fact, assumption, method, and ingredient to make sure the writing was accurate and crystal clear.
The journey of writing this book was absolutely amazing, not only because of the hours spent in the kitchen trying out new recipes–most of which were not served in the restaurant until after publication–but also because we found new challenges, suppliers, and techniques.
Some of our discoveries while working on this book came about through pure exploration and by confirming things we already knew. For instance, we didn’t understand why fish seemed to taste so much better when it was matured under ice and was no longer fresh
in the strict sense of the word. The same was true for our preference to receive live crayfish, lobster, and scallops in our kitchen and to kill them moments before serving. We believed they tasted far better prepared this way, but now we understand why. This understanding, in turn, resulted in our working with our fishermen to teach them how to use the Japanese method of killing fish.
To arrive at this conclusion, we had continuous contact and meetings with some of Europe’s sharpest researchers, some of whom combined an interest in the taste and texture of fish and shellfish with their scientific knowledge. Through our observation and their research, we determined when seafood is at its very best for serving; it’s all about the fishing methods, killing, draining, temperature, tenderizing, and preparation after it reaches room temperature.
Our cookbook project also increased our contact with the farmers at our two vegetable gardens. After closely following a full growing season, we became more familiar with their work. We came to understand how they work with old flavorful cultivars and fight against industrial sowing. We studied the deep knowledge these farmers hold and grew to appreciate how they developed various methods to create unique ingredients for us. To make full use of our vegetable suppliers, we adjust our menu based on what they deliver; we believe there is no acceptable reason to use unripe raw ingredients that are not at their absolute best in the mere interest of offering the same menu every night. A few years ago we introduced our "vita menyer (
white menus"), which means our guests have no idea what will be served that evening. This gives us considerable freedom to compose dishes in accordance with what is delivered fresh to our kitchen. In one dish, we go as far as to let the gardens decide the flavor, look, texture, depth, and preparation of the dish, and we’ve even named it accordingly: Satio Tempestas, which with a few added words translates to satisfaction based on season and time of year.
We had achieved such positive results with the fish and shellfish from the cold Nordic seas and the produce from the gardens in Malmköping and Askersund that we were very disappointed when we could not find a Swedish breeder who could deliver the quality we demanded of fowl, pork, veal, and beef. We felt that because our vegetable farmers find the best varieties that are not engineered for high yields and convenient transportation at the expense of taste, we should have the same approach to the meat we use.
As luck would have it, we met a pig farmer at one of our gardens who bred Linderöd pigs, considered the national pig
of Sweden. We had already experienced the genuine taste of Linderöd pork when we bought a 480-pound (220-kilogram) pig named Clarissa who provided us with her own lardo di colonnata for a long time. The Linderöd pork is often said to taste nostalgic, like pork used to taste
; it has a good fat content that carries a deep and mild meat flavor, with a little hint of the wild.
The same farmer also helped us breed cage-free chickens that are allowed to move freely outdoors and pick and choose whatever they want to eat. Sadly, a fox killed the first brood, but these things happen, and we could never imagine buying chickens of inferior quality to cover our losses. We cook according to season, without compromise, and the chicken season is short. It only lasted for a couple of weeks after the fox had killed all of our matured chickens.
During the year we worked on the book, we also looked for breeders who could deliver the absolute best beef. One who looks will find, and we struck gold in Gotland and in Jämtland with two different kinds of meat. The first is a cross between Simmental and Angus and is bred on spent grains (from beer brewers), and the other is a Swedish mountain cow.
We believe that through our selection and quest for quality, we end up with the ingredients we want. In return, we give back to a small group of enthusiasts who give their all to produce highquality products the old-fashioned way, with the accompanying hard physical work, low yields, and poor resistance to diseases. These are entrepreneurs who, as strange as it may seem, are propelled not solely by money, but rather by a kind of idealism. And it is no secret that we are extremely dependent on these people. They, in turn, are very dependent on us, as our payment for their products is income that usually goes right back into their business. If more people worked in this way, Swedish farming would be greatly enriched, and the quality of the work would improve along with the status of the industry.
We feel privileged to be able to write a book about our relatively short existence as a restaurant, over three hundred pages about our profession, a job that, to us, means working all hours of the day and night–a job that affects not only our own lives, but also those of our families and friends.
We’ve divided the book into a few very clear chapters and a few sections that overlap.
There are two reasons why the recipes in this book are not presented in the traditional way. Firstly, we never work with recipes in our kitchen, and secondly, our dishes demand so many elements and restaurant tools that few people would be able to prepare them in their homes. Just one recipe for one dish would be so specialized and extensive that there would simply not be enough space to list each element in this book.
We have, therefore, opted instead to describe various dishes and share our thoughts behind creating these dishes and menus. With a few exceptions. The ingredients command the cooking process, and every chapter has an introduction explaining our thoughts and philosophy as well as the scientific findings we’ve researched that enable us to serve the very best.
It is our wish to convey a sense of our work and our flavors, our uncompromising attitude, and our gratitude to all of our colleagues, those in the restaurant as well as our qualified suppliers.
Björn Frantzén / Daniel Lindeberg
FOREWORD–THE MAGIC OF THE NOW
Gastronomy is the art of the now and as such is intimately connected to our human nature.
Man takes his first breath in one moment.
He takes his last in another.
We all share this premise, rich or poor; wise or dumb; brown, white, yellow, or red. Life consists of a long string of nows that should be caught, twisted, turned, worried over, and enjoyed.
What happens after a baby takes its first breath?
It cries.
Then, it crawls towards the breast and food, hungry with its entire life and world ahead, in search of nurture for both body and soul.
Later everything changes.
And really, nothing at all.
Look up at the sky and notice that jets paint it white like never before.
Like ants, people keep marching across the entire planet.
We live in a world increasingly populated by people obsessed with trying to catch the present moment, define it, embrace it: adventure junkies adrift in a seemingly infinite universe.
The world is at our feet, and we take it; a playful or quiet moment is our right.
No journey is too long or too short. The jet streams take us around the world to meditate, climb mountains, take mindfulness courses at a spa, and in Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Shanghai, flustered Asians look for happiness in a slew of brand-name stores.
We jump from moment to moment.
In a never-ending frenzied dance.
And in this dance, we dance towards the planet’s culinary temple.
Nothing wrong with that.
For how many moments are spent in a restaurant visit?
Millions, millions, and millions more.
It can be like this: You’re sitting in your living room near Holland Park or Union Square or Circular Quay, and you read in a magazine about how the hottest restaurant on the planet is currently in Stockholm, on a small street in Old Town, and that it is impossible to get a table because the seats are few and the demand is immense.
Six months’ wait!
My God!
But something inside you stirs because, deep inside, you know that one night one of those tables will be reserved in your name.
You think about how it will be then.
Your lips smack, you get hungry, you feel the anticipation, and then an email drops in your inbox.
We have made a reservation. . .
The flight is booked, the websites are visited, and with your eyes and brain and imagination, you eat your way through the coming evening.
Another email arrives a few days before your visit.
We want to remind you. . .
By now you can barely contain yourself, you want to be there, at the restaurant, with your behind safely resting on the sleek chair.
But you need to be patient.
And then, you finally arrive in Stockholm, and maybe your legs are aching after a long flight, and it’s unbearably cold and dark here, and there’s ice in the air as you find your way to Lilla Nygatan.
But then he stands before you in the dark, the doorman of the restaurant.
Despite the cold.
Despite the fact that he makes a dent in the restaurant’s budget that every other restaurant in town finds unnecessary.
And now he opens the door, says Valkommen,
and even if you don’t understand what he is saying, you understand what he means. A few steps inside, candles light up the darkness, and the tattooed tough guys in cook’s clothing behind the shining counter smile at you, and you know you have arrived, your long wait is over.
But you also know that this is when it will all begin.
When does a life path become just slightly straighter?
Is it in a grandmother’s kitchen? Where a small child hangs on his grandmother’s legs and helps out as she bakes buns and cakes and tarts and bread and God knows what else? Is it the intoxicating goodness of the scents in such a kitchen that makes the small tot decide to go the restaurant route? That makes him want to be a pastry chef?
Maybe, maybe not.
It could just as easily happen when an eleven-year-old is invited to join a friend’s family at the restaurant Rendez-Vous in Apelbergsgatan and experiences the rich revelation of homemade béarnaise sauce. Or when, too soon, he sees his soccer career end because of an injury and wonders: What the hell am I supposed to do now?
The two boys’ roads crossed in the kitchen of a restaurant in Sollentuna.
It was decided: one day they would do something together.
Without throwing caution to the wind, however, nothing gets its continuation; without audacity, the world does not widen.
So, Frantzén and Lindeberg were left with a few options: Falsify work certificates to be employed as an apprentice at a two-star restaurant in London with a small space on lovely Charlotte Street?
Why not, when an opportunity for employment presents itself.
Work hard and work long hours for pocket change.
Live like a dog.
Burn your hands and scar your arms.
And every day come back for more and more and more in some sort of methodical, nearly unbearable, purposeful madness.
And later a boat crosses the English Channel.
There, in Paris’ seventh arrondissement, at dinky Rue de Varenne, the skin gets even more blisters and the bags under the eyes darken, but what does that matter when you can learn how Alain Passard draws the mystique out of his vegetables, despite a clattering chaos in the kitchen every night?
L’Arpège.
Few names command as much respect among gourmets. Why? Well, there is a standard in Passard’s cooking, a direction, and a clear ambition.
Then, it’s back home to Stockholm to look for a space; for now, years later, the boys, now young men, will do something together.
Ultimately, after a long search, the dreamers find a home on a sweet and cozy street in Old Town.
To paraphrase Raymond Carver, the phenomenal writer who portrayed the everyday in literature, there is an abundance of talent in humans, but talent properly utilized is much rarer.
I know that Carver’s words are true.
Evidence of utilized talent can be tasted in real life. Where?
At Lilla