How To Make Traditional Swedish Potato Dumplings ♥ Kroppkaka 🍴

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  • Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024

Комментарии • 43

  • @kjellniklasson5992
    @kjellniklasson5992 8 месяцев назад

    Never heard of this Swedish dish living in Sweden for 80 years. But I love the Danish dish "Burning love" (braenende kaerlighed).

  • @annburchill4676
    @annburchill4676 3 года назад +1

    My nana made these!

  • @brendarodriguez4497
    @brendarodriguez4497 2 года назад

    I’m so excited to try this

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  2 года назад

      So glad to hear this! Let us know how it turned out!

  • @sunkkist
    @sunkkist 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you again for another excellent recipe, I followed it precisely and it turned out ... amazing and so delicious. The all spice just brings it to a whole new level. Best regards!

    • @grettenielsen2137
      @grettenielsen2137 7 лет назад +1

      So nice to read that you enjoy the food. I really appreciate hearing from you. Be sure to let me know if you have any suggestions for other Scandinavian food. Have a great weekend.

  • @AussieAngeS
    @AussieAngeS 8 лет назад +1

    Wow this look really wonderful, I'm sure they are so tasty. Thank you

  • @seanhendrickson7627
    @seanhendrickson7627 7 лет назад +2

    Oh my god this is my childhood...

    • @grettenielsen2137
      @grettenielsen2137 7 лет назад +1

      Thanks for your comment. Hope you also will enjoy them.

  • @rachelwilliams431
    @rachelwilliams431 8 лет назад

    Thank you for your delicious recipe video! Success, my family loves them! Take care and thanks again for sharing your great recipes!

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад

      You are so welcome. I am pleased to read that you family enjoys our recipes and I really appreciate hearing from you. Have a great weekend.

  • @SALTYCOMBATDIVER-ExInstructor
    @SALTYCOMBATDIVER-ExInstructor 8 лет назад

    Never had these! My family never put anything in their dumplings, I definitely will try these this week. I'm excited about this recipe!

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад

      Great, I hope you will like them. I think it gives the dumplings a nice touch. All the best.

  • @MonikaBeautyandLifestyle
    @MonikaBeautyandLifestyle 8 лет назад +1

    Yummy! My mom used to make the best dumplings! These could rival hers for sure.

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад

      Thanks, hope you also will enjoy them. I understand your mother is a good cook.

  • @Grizzly_Lab
    @Grizzly_Lab 8 лет назад +1

    Nice and easy, and obviously seems delicious!
    Congrats and thanks for sharing so easy but still marvellous recipes ;)

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад +1

      Thanks! It is always so nice to read your comments. In my childhood my mother only made one dish with pasta. I realize, that today people eat it more often in the Nordic countries. Could you suggest a popular Italian dish for me to make? I would really appreciate it. In the US people eat a lot of Italian dishes, and I also like them. Recently we had a delicious lasagna for dinner. Hope to hear more from you.

    • @Grizzly_Lab
      @Grizzly_Lab 8 лет назад +1

      You have to try absolutely "eggplant parmigiana", indeed ^_^

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад +1

      Thanks, yes, I also love "eggplant parmigiana", I will have it on my list. THANKS. Have a great day and keep in touch!

  • @bsvenss2
    @bsvenss2 8 лет назад +2

    Swedish "Öländska kroppkakor" is the best you can eat! 😀 Never taste it with bacon though. It's usually made with "rimmat sidfläsk" in Sweden.

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад

      Thanks for your remark. In Denmark we also often used "rimmat sidfläsk" , unfortunately I was not able to find it here. Hopefully I will find it some day.

    • @johanfagerstromjarlenfors
      @johanfagerstromjarlenfors Год назад

      No, the best kroppkakor comes from Blekinge

  • @raympnt
    @raympnt 8 лет назад +1

    Looks good but what happened to the allspice?

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад

      Sorry I did not add allspice. Will remember to do it next time. I like spices.Thanks.

    • @raympnt
      @raympnt 8 лет назад +1

      I saw you add nutmeg but when you showed the ingredients at the beginning you said allspice, Maybe you got the terms mixed up?

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  8 лет назад

      You are right, sorry I mixed it up.

  • @oliverradio1448
    @oliverradio1448 2 месяца назад

    It's a very Americanized recipe for kroppkakor (Body Cakes). Never bacon. Never nutmeg.

  • @cindyolson5849
    @cindyolson5849 2 года назад +1

    we use both salt pork and bacon

  • @annburchill4676
    @annburchill4676 3 года назад +1

    My nana used ground pork instead of bacon :)

  • @Csanfer14
    @Csanfer14 8 лет назад +1

    What preserve shall I use in case I can't find the linginberry preserve?

  • @dvldwg8961
    @dvldwg8961 2 года назад +1

    My family reipe uses onion diced, diced salt pork and allspice. Trust me it's better. Potatoes are grated fine raw, then add flour to make the dough. Yes my recipe comes from my great grandma from Sweden

    • @dvldwg8961
      @dvldwg8961 2 года назад +1

      Also are great sliced and fried in butter

    • @ScandinavianToday
      @ScandinavianToday  Год назад

      Oh sounds so delicious sliced and fried in butter! Thank you for sharing!

  • @r.thomassen6285
    @r.thomassen6285 4 года назад +1

    That is the strangest lingonberry jam I have seen. As I understand, it is not the easiest thing to find in the states. But that one does not look nearly as it should, neither in color or texture. It looks nothing like the lingonberry jam we have in Norway and what I have seen they have in Sweden.

    • @r.thomassen6285
      @r.thomassen6285 4 года назад

      @Woiller- Relic Yes, that might be. But we make lingonberry jam at home too. I made some yesterday, actually. And it does not look like that. I have never made lingonberry jam by boiling it, only cold stirred jam. Maybe homemade boiled lingonberry jam will get brownish. Store bought in Norway is usually lingonberry only, and it is boiled. But it is red. But that doesn't mean it was red, it might be colored. I have read that jams often are colored with food coloring, to restore its color. At home, people don't do that, so that might explain the strange appearance of the lingonberry jam in this video. I will try to boil som jam one day, just to see what happens. Rhubarb jam gets brown, so that might also happen with lingonberries.
      Or, it can just be as simple as we might have different varieties of lingonberries. It is a huge distance between America and Europe, so it is necessary not the exact same lingonberries here and over there.