NORWEGIAN MUST TRY FOOD: Traditional Snacks from the local supermarket 😉

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июл 2024
  • Norwegian food and snacks you must try when you are in Norway! Selection of traditional supermarket snacks Norwegians tend to love a lot! Budget Traditional Norwegian Food & Snacks.
    ⏱⏱⏱ TIME CODES ⏱⏱⏱
    00:00 - Norwegian Food & Snacks - most popular question
    01:38 - 3 Courses Meal from Supermarket
    02:21 - Starters: Norwegian Cheese, Meat, Fish
    07:34 - Main Course: Norwegian Pizza
    09:21 - Dessert: Norwegian Sweets
    13:10 - STOCKFISH - Arctic Circle Special
    Some of these traditional Norwegian food you will find strange, some of it really interesting but all of it automatically unique and so typical for Norway 🇳🇴
    In this video I’ll show you:
    ✅ Starters:
    ▫️ Knekkebrød - Traditional crispy bread
    ▫️ Cheese Jarlsberg
    ▫️ Cheese Brunost
    ▫️ Leverpostej - traditional Scandinavian Liver pâté
    ▫️ Kaviar original - Fish caviar in a tube
    ▫️Stabburet Mackerel - Marcel in tomato sauce
    ▫️Sildacongen - Norwegian anchovies/ herring
    ✅ Main : Norwegian most popular pizza Grandiosa
    ✅ Desserts :
    ▫️ Drink Solo - fizzy orange flavoured drink
    ▫️ Freya - local most traditional / most loved chocolate bar YOU MUST TRY
    ▫️ Freya - large chocolate bar - great to get it as a present from Norway
    ▫️SMASH - salty crisps covered in milk chocolate
    ▫️ Freya Chocolate Easter Eggs with Oreo mousse
    ❇️ BONUS SNACK: STOCKFISH
    I brought it from Lofoten, Arctic Circle. It’s a dry fish snack typical for Northern Norway.
    I highly recommend you trying this interesting snack if you are planning to go to Arctic Circle.
    Planning to move to Norway? This PLAY LIST IS FOR YOU 👉🏻
    • Living in Norway 🇳🇴: t...
    Planning to go to Norway winter time? Check out this PLAY LISR first 👉🏻
    • Winter in Norway 🇳🇴 Wh...
    〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️
    🆓 DO YOU HAVE ANY QUESTION ABOUT TRAVEL TO NORWAY, living in Norway or travel in general?
    Send me a message, I’ll be happy to help 🤗
    Stay in touch! Stay safe! Be happy!
    #norway #livinginnorway #norwegianfood

Комментарии • 438

  • @navn_ukjent
    @navn_ukjent 3 года назад +79

    Brown cheese is technically not a cheese, as it's not made from curds. When making cheese, some poor Norwegians boiled down the whey after removing the curds, and that is the basis for the brown cheese. As you saw in the supermarket, there are different verisions of brown cheese. You choose "Fløtemysost", which is a very mild version made from cows milk. Some types are made from a mix of cow and goat, while others are made from pure goat milk. One serving tip is to put it on warm toast together with some jam.
    "Leverpostei" is quite popular with kids, which is one reason why they put pictures of kids on the label. I prefer to eat it on good bread with pickled cucumbers and black pepper.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +11

      WoW! Thank you very much indeed, Navn!
      Very informative and useful comment.
      Pined 🙂
      Have a nice day 🤗

    • @pep456
      @pep456 3 года назад

      which brand or color would be the one made of 100% goat?

    • @NavnUkjent
      @NavnUkjent 3 года назад +2

      @@pep456
      If you want a pure goat cheese you can try "Ekte Gjeitost" (translates to "real goat cheese"), which is in a blue packaging.
      I personally prefer a blend of goat and cow milk, generally just called "Gudbrandsdalen" or "G35", that is in a red package. The name is the same as the valley where it originated. All of these are from the brand "Tine". Other brands might have different packaging.

    • @pep456
      @pep456 3 года назад

      @@NavnUkjent i have tried brown cheese and absolutely loooove it but i tried the version you named. I remember we didnt found in the supermarket one with pute goat which is weird..is the taste very different?

    • @NavnUkjent
      @NavnUkjent 3 года назад +1

      @@pep456 Where are you located? The selection will vary between different stores (and countries). Here are the brown cheeses that are available for delivery in Norway from one of the online shops - oda.com/no/categories/1283-meieri-ost-og-egg/142-ost/151-brunost/
      It's been a long time since I had a pure goat cheese, as I prefer the blend. I recall it having a sharper and less creamy taste than the blended version.

  • @bearofthunder
    @bearofthunder 3 года назад +59

    A few notes from a Norwegian: (probably telling you things you already know)
    - That mackrel in tomato sauce goes very well with mayonaisse. Try it ;)
    - The Jarlsberg is you chose is aged, so it has more flavor than the standard one.
    - Freya got it's name from the Viking godess of Love.
    - We put salt in everything because everybody lives along the coastline and grow up with the taste of the salty sea water spray on our lips.
    - The person who invented Smash was evil. She is in hell now. (Hell is a place in theTrondheim area.)
    - Tørrfisk in the norwegian idea of beef jerkey. Healty snacks, but not all norwegians like it.

    • @staalefosse2649
      @staalefosse2649 3 года назад +1

      makrell å fårepølse er også bra

    • @staalefosse2649
      @staalefosse2649 3 года назад

      or mackerel with cucumber

    • @knutgrnseth7544
      @knutgrnseth7544 3 года назад +1

      "Everybody lives along the coastline"??? What the hell of a bullshit is that???

    • @bearofthunder
      @bearofthunder 3 года назад +2

      @@knutgrnseth7544 ok, sorry...90%

    • @CheesecakeEatingMonke
      @CheesecakeEatingMonke 2 года назад

      ok so i jut gotta tell u that u are wrong abt the freia one. i was at the factory and they litarly told us the whole story abt the factory- idk where u heard that it got its name from freya but thats a lie mah dude-

  • @kmhob
    @kmhob 3 года назад +13

    The salt on everything is a common Nordic tradition, that we share with sweden and Finland. All these countries has used salt for concervation. From old ages, salt dryed fish was considered a snack.

  • @MikeKobernus
    @MikeKobernus 3 года назад +26

    When I first visited Norway in the 1990s, I was told that one should throw away the Grandiosa Pizza, and eat the box. It would be better, they said. Over the years, however, people seem to have become quite nostalgic for Grandiosa, and in spite of the influx of more exotic pizzas, such as Peppe's, the Grandiosa still maintains a solid base of support. Even the crowned prince eats it...

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +4

      Eat the box 😂😂😂 that’s interesting! Well.. it’s quite difficult to cold Grandiosa ‘pizza’ but seems like people like it 🙂

    • @vikinnorway6725
      @vikinnorway6725 2 года назад

      @@AnnaGoldmanTravel i think is just because its cheap and simple. No one in norway is craving grandiosa😂 but its better if you leave it for a few more minutes. Great vid

    • @DillaryHuff
      @DillaryHuff 2 года назад +1

      Nostalgia sums it up pretty well. I also think the fact that it's a relatively healthy pizza, appeals to some people. The more exotic alternatives contain a lot more fat, salt and whatnot.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад +2

      @@DillaryHuff true! ☺️
      Also everything should be balanced. You can’t have pizza every day neither you can’t have only apples for a long time 😉
      Happiness as well as Heath is all about balance 🤗

    • @entropyshield
      @entropyshield 2 года назад +1

      He he he - laugh in Italian -

  • @isabeljrgensen1197
    @isabeljrgensen1197 3 года назад +40

    I think it is funny how you say "super interesting tool" to a couple of cheese slicers, its like the most normal tool in our home😂

    • @thomasjefferson6225
      @thomasjefferson6225 2 года назад

      It's not that interesting, and it isn't even Norwegian.
      Men jeg forstår at nordmenn må føler seg stolt... Selv når det er dumt.

    • @DillaryHuff
      @DillaryHuff 2 года назад +3

      ​@@thomasjefferson6225 I like how you're debunking the claim that the Cheese slicer is a Norwegian invention, through an account called Thomas Jefferson :P I don't know if it's a Norwegian invention, and I've never really cared. Some people also used to claim that the paper clip was a Norwegian invention, but that's apparently also not true.

    • @felicious6384
      @felicious6384 2 года назад

      When I visited Norway, I had no clue what to do with it. :D In Germany, we usually use a cheese knife (probably stole that habit from the French). I think cheese knifes look funny, like the tiniest sabre.

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 2 года назад

      As far as I know is the cheese slicer only common in Scandinavian countries.
      And @Thomas Jefferson, the cheese slicer was invented by Thor Bjørklund.

    • @thomasjefferson6225
      @thomasjefferson6225 2 года назад

      @@reineh3477 it's a common tool everywhere. I highly doubt that a Norwegian made it first. but i guess Norwegians gotta try to find pride anywhere possible considering how awful their country and culture is.

  • @lpdude2005
    @lpdude2005 3 года назад +17

    The goat cheese has been at room temperature for too long - into the fridge with it - then you get proper slices. You can buy Jarlberg in many stores all over the world - large exports to the US.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +2

      I thought so 😆 totally my fault, I was filming Brunost for some time in frond of the window 🙄 but now it’s fine 😉
      Lucky States! I have never tried Jarlsberg before ☺️ but now I’m definitely getting it for my friends, I have plenty of cheese lovers who would absolutely love to try Norwegian cheese

    • @lyn1896
      @lyn1896 3 года назад +1

      @@AnnaGoldmanTravel Also, the first slice will never be nice looking, because of the wrapping paper fucking it up.
      The most popular one is the red one (Gudbrandsdalsost).
      At Chistmas they have a special edition one (Julebrunost) with a little cardamom. Personally that is my favorite.

  • @Ludwig98000NL
    @Ludwig98000NL Год назад

    Good morning Anna 🙂 Thank you for this nice video. I got a real pleasure for watching it with some short time funny. And about the contain, this will give me a good idea of what to expect when I'm in Norway. Have a sunny day. So, I hope 😉😎Take good care of yourself, Anna🙏🌞🙂

  • @espekelu3460
    @espekelu3460 2 года назад +4

    I think most people use butter on the bread, and there are many healthy types of butter, just ask in the store. And crispbread is not the typical Norwegian bread, it is also Kneip bread, sourdough bread or sunflower bread. YOU should try Caviar with white cheese on, it tastes good. Something that is good is Herring with hard-boiled eggs underneath, and yes, mayonnaise is good with Mackerel in tomato, try it! Here in the house, it is very popular to make pizza yourself, you can buy ready-made pizza bases in the store, and at the same time you take what you want on the pizza. Is at least much better than Grandiosa!

  • @Andaars
    @Andaars 2 года назад +5

    You should try the Kaviar on the Jarlsberg. The 2 taste so good together!

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад +1

      🤩🤩 great idea! Ill definitely try it! As I have both in the fridge already ☺️
      Thank you very much 🤗

  • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
    @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +11

    ⏱⏱⏱ TIME CODES ⏱⏱⏱
    00:00 - Norwegian Food & Snacks - most popular question
    01:38 - 3 Courses Meal from Supermarket
    02:21 - Starters: Cheese, Meat, Fish
    07:34 - Main Course: Norwegian Pizza
    09:21 - Dessert: Norwegian Sweets
    13:10 - STOCKFISH - Arctic Circle Special

    • @jeffstevens156
      @jeffstevens156 2 года назад

      I could live well on that menu. I’d blow up as big as a whale. About all I eat now is cheese. In moderation.

  • @erlendandreaga3438
    @erlendandreaga3438 3 года назад +8

    Most of the Norwegians use a Grandiosa as a substitute bottom for the pizza
    You get a little more flavor
    with a little pinch of sea salt

  • @staalefosse2649
    @staalefosse2649 3 года назад +1

    😃
    hehe nice video

  • @joshuadobbins3448
    @joshuadobbins3448 3 года назад +1

    Anna Ilove your videos you do a great job and I love your smile!

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +1

      Aww thank you so much indeed, Joshua 🤗
      I’m so happy you enjoyed them 😉

  • @treaveweiss8774
    @treaveweiss8774 2 года назад +1

    Great videos!

  • @MrPh30
    @MrPh30 3 года назад +3

    The best browncheese is the almost chokolate color looking of goat milk. Very good in " Klubb and duppe" sauce with the chesse, milk and flour dumplings to go wih crispy pork " sideflesk".

  • @_Viking
    @_Viking 3 года назад +19

    God damn! You must be the first foreigner that actually liked kaviar, leverpostei _and_ makrell i tomat! Well done :)

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +1

      Aww thank you so much ☺️🤗 I actually love it so much 😁

    • @DivineFalcon
      @DivineFalcon 2 года назад +2

      @@AnnaGoldmanTravel If you haven't yet, then you should try a slice of bread with hard boiled egg and kaviar. It's really nice.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад

      @@DivineFalcon that sounds like a great idea actually ☺️ definitely! As soon as I’m back to Norway 😉🤗

    • @aspir133
      @aspir133 2 года назад

      hahaha, there's an explanation for that, MrViking :D In Russia many people eat those foods too. And I'm sure Finns, Swedes and Balts eat them as well. Moreover, some of ethnicities in Russia even have rakfisk / surströmming analogues.

    • @_Viking
      @_Viking 2 года назад

      @@aspir133 general caviar and paté maybe, but not mackerell in tomato juice. That's unique to Norway as far as I know. The pink caviar of cod in tubes are also not common elsewhere but Sweden and Norway.

  • @joebaumgart1146
    @joebaumgart1146 2 года назад

    I'm going on a cruise next year and I'll be visiting your beautiful country!

  • @JeFilm94
    @JeFilm94 3 года назад +8

    I think we probably have an acquired taste for salt after centuries of curing meats and fish for preservation. Just a wild guess. Also salt and sweet is just a great combo in snacks. Milk chocolate and sea salt is dangerously good.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +2

      Ohh so true! That Freya chocolate bar with waffles and sold 😌 I can never get enough of it 😁

  • @etraaseth1035
    @etraaseth1035 3 года назад +5

    9:55 Accurate reaction if you say Kit Kat and Kvikk Lunsj are the same, only difference is, you might get a rock or stick instead of pillows, or what ever else is in arms reach

    • @ChocolateMilk..
      @ChocolateMilk.. 2 года назад

      Kvikk Lunsj is a copy-cat product adopted by Freja after the son of the chocolate factory tasted Kit-Kat.

  • @ole-kristianhennumgulbrand7277
    @ole-kristianhennumgulbrand7277 2 года назад +1

    I would recommend using a cheese slicer with a "wave" pattern for soft cheese(brunost) and the straight pattern for harder cheese (Jarlsberg)

  • @Pcontracts83
    @Pcontracts83 3 года назад +1

    knekkebrød, imgen feil uttale der. Energien din er utrolig bra!

  • @panzerveps
    @panzerveps 3 года назад +2

    The first commercials for Smash was with the slogan "you can't have only one", so your reaction gave me a chuckle. ;)

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад

      This is so true 🤣🤣🤣 terrible people! I smashed the whole pack in 1 weekend 🙄

    • @panzerveps
      @panzerveps 3 года назад

      ​@@AnnaGoldmanTravel They did something even more sinister around 5 years ago!
      You could order a single piece of Smash for a friend or enemy.
      Someone had one sent to me. I still have it somewhere. Never found out who did it...

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад

      @@panzerveps 😱😱😱😱😱 thats a crazy one indeed! Gosh how could the create such an idea 🤣🤣
      Brilliant marketing!

  • @andersgulowsen2814
    @andersgulowsen2814 14 дней назад

    My great grandmother was part of inventing the cheese slicer.. Her name was Anna. And at our cabin.. 2km away.. Anne invented brown cheese. Small world.

    • @andersgulowsen2814
      @andersgulowsen2814 14 дней назад

      Our old cabin is Still called Annasæter.. Googlie it if you dont trust me

  • @Einungbrekke
    @Einungbrekke 2 года назад +4

    I was a solder once, on tour of duty in Kosovo. While there, I was working with some Italian soldiers. They got to try Grandiosa. It was the only thing to eat other than military rations. I asked how they liked the pizza and was told sternly that it wasn't pizza! :D
    PS. There is a crisp you should have tried that I haven't seen anywhere else. Pig skin that have been fried and seasoned and sold as crisps. Its silly good!

    • @entropyshield
      @entropyshield 2 года назад

      Well me too would go for the pig skin doubt free. Pizza is something not to mess with (in presence of armed Italians...) :v

    • @Kraakesolv
      @Kraakesolv Год назад

      Pork cracklings are all over 😊

    • @irenestrmnss4496
      @irenestrmnss4496 Год назад

      Fleskesvor

  • @lesliestrout5121
    @lesliestrout5121 2 года назад +1

    Have you done a video on traditional Norwegian breakfast foods? Several of these items are also common in Iceland too!

  • @MYMALegalAwareness
    @MYMALegalAwareness 3 года назад +1

    Nice video

  • @PiercedBrosmen
    @PiercedBrosmen 3 года назад +1

    Not sure if it is widely available in eastern Norway, but if you would like to challenge yourself (and perhaps keep the puke bowl really close by), you could try out Gammalost (translate to Old Cheese - Which is based on how it looks and smell. Interestingly it is a cheese that matures really quickly, so it is in fact anything but old 😂). It is something that absolutely is an aquired taste. I would recommend it on either knekkebrød or a loaf of bread with a decent layer of butter (that will make the taste a bit milder). Personally I absolutely love it... But I'm kinda weird 🤣
    Loving your content, Anna. If your stay here ends while we still have the pandemic restrictions, I hope you get to come back and work here again sometime, when our society is a bit more normal 😊👍

  • @markwitte303
    @markwitte303 2 года назад +1

    i love ry krisp here in usa.dry breads are awesome.

  • @TheLatiosnlatias02
    @TheLatiosnlatias02 3 года назад +2

    Jarlsberg looks nice.
    Freia products looks nice too

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад

      They are indeed 😉🤗

    • @diazinth
      @diazinth 2 года назад +1

      Freia is quality. Satdly it has been bought by "mondelez" recently.

  • @marijacvetkovic1965
    @marijacvetkovic1965 2 года назад +2

    I am from Serbia and for me the most schoking food in Norway was "souerkraute", or sweet and sour cabbage. The rest was eatable 🙃, even Grandioza, especially if you add some extra cheese and ham on top.

    • @musc1esman
      @musc1esman 9 месяцев назад +1

      We love sauerkraut in the United States! Especially the midwest.

  • @markmcgee2417
    @markmcgee2417 2 года назад

    I just got back from Norway and I tried all these food items.

  • @BrasileiraNaNoruegaLU
    @BrasileiraNaNoruegaLU 3 года назад +4

    Hey! Nice video! 🤩I eat this brown cheese every morning! 😃Are you having a Norwegian course?

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +1

      Aww thank you so much 🤩🤗🤗🤗 Norwegian language you mean? No, I don’t 🙂 I’m temporary in Norway and will leave the country as soon as my contract here is finished 😉

  • @arnehauge
    @arnehauge 2 года назад

    Anna you made me proud with this vdeo...

  • @LairMistress
    @LairMistress 3 года назад +1

    Do you make your own lefse over there? I was raised on the brown goat cheese (my folks just called it "gjetost"; and I still love it... :)

  • @rathbonebasil4377
    @rathbonebasil4377 2 года назад +1

    You should also try Nokelost (cheese), Stratos Chocolate, Lefse (potato pancakes) w/ fresh crushed strawberries just to name a few. Lol now I am hungry.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад

      🤩🤩🤩 definitely in my list!! Cheese and chocolate can never go wrong for me 😁

  • @sabyegrp
    @sabyegrp 2 года назад +1

    I can tell you that you haven't experienced Norwegian food until you have eaten Lutefisk. I'm 74, and can still remember pretending to be to sick to eat when my mom made it. Legend has it that half the Norwegians who immigrated to the U.S. from Norway did so to get away from the Lutefisk tradition, only to find it again in Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota, and of course Seattle.

    • @Vikinggirl1679
      @Vikinggirl1679 9 месяцев назад

      NOOOO not ludefisk! I live in Minnesota and they have darn lutefisk feeds all the time! I am of Swedish origin.

  • @rasspikk
    @rasspikk 3 года назад +2

    The face part of the ''Leverpostei'' has just always been like an ''tradition'' in Norway.
    They represents the brands core values, charm, playfulness and a ''twinkle in the eye''.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +1

      🤩🤩 great comment! Thank you very much indeed 🤗
      Have a great week ahead ☺️

    • @rasspikk
      @rasspikk 3 года назад +1

      @@AnnaGoldmanTravel You aswell, Anna!

  • @giornalinodp
    @giornalinodp 2 года назад

    "Why you have to put salt everywhere?!"
    "OMG you cannot stop eating this..."
    :)

  • @sigmundfjelde2358
    @sigmundfjelde2358 Год назад

    Haha jeg er fra Norge dette er så morsomt å se på dette for meg😂

  • @edgarbalagezyan6166
    @edgarbalagezyan6166 8 месяцев назад

    Hey Anna! Im new at your channel! You are super girl and your blogs are much appritiate! Could you please make a video about work in Norway? Thanks

  • @alva6098
    @alva6098 2 года назад

    I live in norway and I love the food

  • @jniska
    @jniska 2 года назад

    You are crazily funny!! 10 points….

  • @stalebotn8921
    @stalebotn8921 Год назад

    Try all of it.👍

  • @borgerborgersen372
    @borgerborgersen372 3 года назад +3

    Jarlsberg cheese is exported to many countries and many love the special taste not found in similar cheeses.
    The brown cheese shown in the video is not goat cheese. The real goat cheese is called Geitost in Norwegian. Brown cheese should be served cold from the refrigerator. Otherwise it will be hard to slice as shown in the video.
    The chosen brown cheese in the video is called Fløtemysost and is made of cow milk. This is the one with the most gentle taste and probably most suited to foreigners trying brown cheese for the first time.
    The most purchased one in Norway is probably Gudbrandsdalsost. It's made from both goat milk and cow mild and has a slightly stronger taste. This is the one the Norwegians love the most.
    Geitost is made of only goat milk and has a sharper taste. This version is loved by older Norwegians and those who like the stronger taste from goat milk.
    In Norway we usually eat brown cheese with Norwegian butter (the best variant is the pure butter called Meierismør). One way to eat this is to use toast bread slices and put butter and slices of brown cheese on them. Then the warmth from the toast will slightly melt the butter and brown cheese. Very delicious.
    Another way of eating brown cheese is with knekkebrød with butter and brown cheese. The most used knekkebrød is the Swedish brand Wasa (Husman and Frukost are the most used).
    A third and quite popular way is to use brown cheese with butter on Norwegian waffles. It's very tasty. Some even add strawberry jam on the waffles with brown cheese. It sounds weird, but is supposed to be a great combination.
    static.wixstatic.com/media/65b21e_072f7a1b57224533b460aa49b7f8460e~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_740,h_416,al_c,q_90/65b21e_072f7a1b57224533b460aa49b7f8460e~mv2.webp
    The reason children faces are shown on the Stabburet liverpaste package is because the taste is so mild even children can eat it. It's liverpaste made for children. We have liverpaste with much stronger taste. Another reason is that the first boy used as a motive was the son of the Stabburet CEO and the tradition has been kept since then. The first boy is now 68 years old.
    Many Norwegians use liverpaste on slices of bread or knekkebrød with butter and sliced pickles.
    cdn.blogg.no/content/uploads/sites/533/2018/12/08163522/20170410_155452-2006418-11-1491856291661-n400.jpg
    Caviar is often eaten using slices of break or knekkebrød with butter and hard boiled egg slices. Then you add the caviar on top of the egg in stripes like this.
    www.matstart.no/oppskrifter/etter-skoletid/brodskive-med-egg-og-kaviar/

  • @holliegeorge5933
    @holliegeorge5933 2 года назад

    Ohhhhh I’m a chocoholic…… so now I have to find that brand of chocolate!!!! Where am I going to find that in Canada?! 🇨🇦
    Thanks for a great video!!!!!! I always find food from other countries so interesting!!!

  • @Hjylps
    @Hjylps 2 года назад +1

    Next time you do this I suggest to try Hockey Pulver, it is delishious. 🤣

  • @frostblackmoon2878
    @frostblackmoon2878 2 года назад

    Hello from northen America.
    My family on my mum and dads side are from norway and Sweden.
    Ha en flott dag.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад +1

      Hello there ☺️🤗🤗
      Ohh wow! Great combination!
      Have you ever been to Scandinavia yourself? 🙂

    • @frostblackmoon2878
      @frostblackmoon2878 2 года назад

      @@AnnaGoldmanTravel no but i dream of going and even living there one day. Im working on learning the language as well.

  • @benartee9493
    @benartee9493 Год назад

    Judging from my family members that emigrated to Norway the most Norwegian comfort food is Fiskepudding or fishpudding. Sliced, fried it’s seemingly typically served in Kindergarten and school

  • @LSF000
    @LSF000 Год назад

    I can confirm Jarlsberg can be eaten on its own. I'd wind up having that whole wedge by the end of the day if I didn't feel like exercising any self-control. 😎

  • @neoandlykkecat
    @neoandlykkecat 2 года назад

    Anyone who visit Norway should try the soda called Urge. Then there is the Vestlandslefse, Vossafår, raspeballer, flest and duppe and lutefisk. Kjøttkaker is a very good dinner.

  • @lindaneilsen5604
    @lindaneilsen5604 2 года назад +1

    I like Norwegian food. Lefse, sardines, pickled herring, salted dried fish, lutefisk in melted butter, krumkake and lingonberries.

    • @Kevin-rz6lm
      @Kevin-rz6lm Год назад

      The puke bowl is for lutefisk. My mom (rip) told us tales of her parents (from Bergen) making lutefisk in the traditional way. I was told it is just rotting herring, hence the puke bowl. Warning: steer clear. Still have cousins in Bergen and have been trying to contact them by phone. One of them is the Olympic race walker, Trond Nymark. The public parks are wonderful :) in the summer (schwing). Norwegian Nordic team comes over to acclimate and practice on our Olympic facilities before competitions in North America. Love to have dinner conversations with the athletes.

  • @tordlindgren2123
    @tordlindgren2123 2 года назад

    when it comes to the grandiosa i prefer to put extra ingredients ontop of it. like whatever you think fits. it's an alright base for most things.

  • @codenamezz9993
    @codenamezz9993 2 года назад

    Freia chocolate is part of Kraft/Mondelez group if you want to know, difficult indeed to be in competition with them.
    For the leverpostei, when I was a kid, I used to make sandwiches made of this in the end of month in Canada, we call it in French Paris paté.
    I really like knokkbrød and Jalsberg cheese. I would like to try the boiled cheese if I can find any in mt cheese shop near home. I will be looking next time.
    Great videos and informative by the way👍👍

    • @In_my_own_mind
      @In_my_own_mind 2 года назад +1

      Its called brown cheese, not boiled cheese and its amazing on either new baked bread, crisp bread….or my favorite on Norwegian waffles with strawberry jam and butter, you can probably buy Tine brunost online. «Fløtemyseost» is my favorite, its a bit milder than the G35 original brunost.
      Btw Freia was founded in 1889 by Throne-Holst. Based on the success in Norway, the Throne-Holst family founded the Marabou chocolate factory in Sundbyberg outside Stockholm in Sweden in 1916. So Marabou (one of Swedens most popular chocolate brand) was actually founded by a Norwegian. Due to an existing Swedish trademark, a different name had to be chosen for the Swedish factory, and it was then chosen to take the species name of the bird in Freia's logo, the Marabou stork, as a starting point.
      In 1990, Freia bought all the shares in Marabou. In 1992, Norsk Hydro sold its shares in Freia Marabou to the Philip Morris company Kraft General Foods. From 2012 the owner has been Mondelēz International.
      After Kraft's acquisition, most of the operations and production of Feia chocolate are still left at Freia's factory in Oslo. (thank god for that cause Freia chocolate is something that can never be tampered with, cause the chocolate is amazing and taste natural not artificial as most American candy does).

    • @codenamezz9993
      @codenamezz9993 2 года назад

      @@In_my_own_mind thanks for the tip for "buying online brunost cheese", but I won't. I have great cheese shops here and since we have free exchange rules with EU (I'm 🇨🇦), I will haunt one these there first.
      Marabou was once sold here also...and thanks for the infos for Freya brand candies, I've already read it online.
      Hope to visit this great country in my lifetime...and maybe retire there. I don't mind the heafty tax when the community receives services in exchange.
      Have a great day.

  • @123bilcross
    @123bilcross 2 года назад

    You should try arne børresen sausage with Jalapeño grill with cheese, those sausages beat Gilde's sausages👌

  • @Kvannkjos
    @Kvannkjos 3 года назад +4

    In northern Norway, whale meat is a tradition, and much of it in the spring and summer in connection with barbecue.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад

      Whale bbq?? Wow! This is what I never tried yet ☺️ I bet it is very nice 🙂

    • @MrPh30
      @MrPh30 3 года назад

      Whale steaks is to be found both on the store ,fishtrucks and other places.

    • @CupOfThea97
      @CupOfThea97 2 года назад

      never had whale meat here down south lol

  • @DEMONIC_ROSA
    @DEMONIC_ROSA 2 года назад

    You Have My Favorite Soda *Solo.* 😃

  • @brianvirgin2995
    @brianvirgin2995 Год назад

    When I was studying I lived on makrel i tomat på knekkebrød, or maybe rice

  • @xasanth6318
    @xasanth6318 2 года назад

    sweet + salty = delicious!

  • @XxXNightcoreQueenXxX
    @XxXNightcoreQueenXxX 2 года назад

    Basically, it has a face of a kid on it, to make it more appealing for kids to eat. And it's working so that's why we have this arrangement.

  • @deborah5215
    @deborah5215 2 года назад

    I have tried all

  • @markwitte303
    @markwitte303 2 года назад

    squeeky fresh cheese curds and string cheese are very popular in usa. colby cheese and sharp cheddar cheese are very popular in the usa.

  • @marcospaulolima642
    @marcospaulolima642 3 года назад +1

    I'm going to Kongsberg next month and I did like your channel very much! Keep doing these content! The pizza that you tried in this video is from local supermarket, right? Did you eat some pizza from local pizza stores?

    • @panzerveps
      @panzerveps 3 года назад +1

      There's plenty of great smaller pizza restaurants in Norway, but stay away from the bigger chains like Peppes or Dominos.
      I've heard good things about Jonas B pizza in Kongsberg, but they are quite popular so I couldn't get a table last time I was there.

    • @Maryklokkis
      @Maryklokkis 2 года назад

      If you are going to Kongsberg you should check out the old mines. There is a lot of them underground the city

    • @Maryklokkis
      @Maryklokkis 2 года назад

      @@panzerveps Jonas B is the best 🙌🏻

  • @markwitte303
    @markwitte303 2 года назад

    would love to see you visit the usa and go to a hyvee or a jungle jim store. even a super target food store is massive.

    • @Aexiee
      @Aexiee 2 года назад

      Man i went to usa and got shocked from Just a single gas station. Its was almost as big if not bigger than most stores in norway 😂

  • @Moni_892
    @Moni_892 Год назад

    Solo is sooooo gooood

  • @monicabredenbekkskaar1612
    @monicabredenbekkskaar1612 Год назад

    Salt makes the flavor pop

  • @weedmood
    @weedmood 3 года назад +1

    God bless U.

  • @drewber565
    @drewber565 11 месяцев назад

    For non-Norwegians, and mostly for Americans, keep in mind that Anna is originally from Russia. So, the caviar paste and other fish, might not be too different than foods she's used to. I'll try anything. But, some fish is too much for me....I'm sure the American candy company got the Kit-Kat idea from this Norwegian treat. That happens, often.

  • @0Toast_rblx
    @0Toast_rblx 2 года назад

    This is my daily day

  • @tonje_gram
    @tonje_gram 3 года назад

    Try smoked whale. Even though it's typical Norwegian I eat it with ruccula and tzatziki. In most areas, this whale meat is only available at the fishmonger (fiskebutikk). A bit expensive but oh heavenly.

  • @markwitte303
    @markwitte303 2 года назад

    i would like dry fish. i never thought i would like herring until i tried it in austria.

  • @Abbadonhades
    @Abbadonhades 3 года назад +5

    You even enjoyed the herring, that's impressive! Some years ago I was visiting Namibia. I am very fond of chips, but each an every one of the chip-types had vinegar in it. Which is something that I don't like. I couldn't understand why all this vinegar?

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад

      ☺️ I absolutely love trying new things 🙂 especially local food.
      Chips with vinegar? That sounds more like England 😁 any seaside there will serve you fish&chips and offer to cover your dish in vinegar 😁
      Namibia! WoW! Sounds so cool! I would love to visit one day

    • @SYLFan2008
      @SYLFan2008 Год назад

      Namibia was a German colony. That may be a possible explanation for the ubiquitousness of vinegar there.

    • @Abbadonhades
      @Abbadonhades Год назад

      @@SYLFan2008 So it's not just an english tradition then? Well, it still won't change my mind about it.

  • @ahsanhabib6353
    @ahsanhabib6353 2 года назад

    So very beautiful and good

  • @Solumsen89
    @Solumsen89 3 года назад +3

    Don't know if you have watched the Smash advertising, but it actually says " Det skal godt gjøres å spise bare en " which basically means. " It will be a good job if you can eat only one "

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  3 года назад +1

      For real?? Well they are so right saying this 😆 I couldn’t stop until I smashed almost all of them!
      Very tasty but really addictive 🙄

    • @diazinth
      @diazinth 2 года назад

      @@AnnaGoldmanTravel rumors has it that is was made to stop us from going raiding, and thus it stopped the viking age.

  • @imoddi
    @imoddi Год назад

    In Norway we don’t have tradition to use Solo Super, it is a new Solo! We have tradition to use original Solo with sugar!

  • @emuemu1971
    @emuemu1971 2 года назад +2

    Guys i live in Norway and i know the foods is sooo yummy

    • @rekzvs8547
      @rekzvs8547 2 года назад

      What is your favorite Norwegian food?

  • @rhondabrizan9490
    @rhondabrizan9490 2 года назад +1

    Anna, I am loving the Solo ... not kidding. I am a Grenadian living in Toronto, Solo is usually found in the Caribbean or Asian food stores here. To see Solo in a regular food/grocery store is quite interesting; in fact, that have me thinking about its origin. By the way, I am a new subscriber.

    • @Kraakesolv
      @Kraakesolv Год назад

      Norwegian here. The brewery who first started making Solo in 1934 (Tønsberg Bryggeri) brought the recipe from Spain. Not so strange I guess since the oranges came from there as well! After a while it spread to Sweden as well. I am, however, so curious as to how it ended up in Asian/Caribbean food markets in Canada.

  • @bjrnharaldbrodersen9910
    @bjrnharaldbrodersen9910 Год назад

    I am from Norway😊

  • @Mizioo-i2s
    @Mizioo-i2s 2 года назад

    Well the cheese slicer is a thing what i dont have used bc i HATE cheese so yea but my mom and dad and just my whole family uses it

  • @elsemaritjrgensen2473
    @elsemaritjrgensen2473 2 года назад

    I lovey dovey grandiosa

  • @fredwk2550
    @fredwk2550 3 года назад

    What is the big black wall in the kitchen? Is that a backsplash? I originally thought it was a roaster/smoker for whale or reindeer. Jarlsberg is one of the cheeses high in vitamin k2. I eat muenster for vitamin k2. My dad was Finnish-American so I grew up eating fish and crispbread.

  • @Emilie_gjb
    @Emilie_gjb 2 года назад

    peperoni pizza rustica is with double pepperoni and double cheese and we just really love salt to answer 2 questions

  • @7Constanti
    @7Constanti 2 года назад +1

    Constantí Montsó i Cadena
    fa 15 minuts
    Great video and very well explained! My wife and me are thinking about moving to Norway and your channel is very helpful! Keep it up!
    One question though: it's striking for us to notice all the videosabout groceries and food products in Norway are only considering supermarkets and all of them packaged! there are little to none fresh products! Even fish! What a lot of plastic waste!
    Have the norwegians gone more environmentally friendly recently and thought of other more eco-friendly ways of shopping? Also eating healthier with fresh food?

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад +1

      Thank you very much indeed 🤗 I’m so happy to help!
      Regarding packing - you can choose paper option 🙂 but yes, I agree, it’s still a lot of products packed in plastic. No matter that it’s called ‘recyclable’ it’s still plastic.
      Fresh fish and meat you can buy from the butcher or fish market; or from a special counter in some larger supermarkets here. If you like things like octopus and squid you’ll be very happy with the prices here 😉 as they are even lower than in Italy

    • @7Constanti
      @7Constanti 2 года назад

      ​@@AnnaGoldmanTravel We love octopus! Ever heard of "pulo a feira"? It's a delicious Galician dish... You should try if you ever go to Spain!
      Anyway, thanks for the tips. Indeed, it's surprising for us. Although it's not very common here yet, more and more shops are adapting to allow their customers to purchase in bulk so we can reuse tupperwares and bags. Maybe there's something similar in Norway but is even less known than in our contry.
      Thanks again, bye

  • @Ways-lol..
    @Ways-lol.. Год назад

    My favorite flavor is 3 cheeses
    and im from Norway/Norge

  • @bfallingstar
    @bfallingstar Год назад

    You should try the salty licorice. The salty Licorice we had in Finland and Sweden is super popular. The salty taste is actually from ammonium chloride. To be honest, it is unpleasant to people who expected “candy” to be sweet. It was so popular in Finland that they threatened to leave the EU if they went ahead with their plan to restrict its sale. The EU relented and just had them place a warning on the labels that it was not for kids.

  • @reineh3477
    @reineh3477 2 года назад

    Intresting to how similar Sweden and Norway are, everything was almost the same only the brand names differ

  • @bunchofbaloney2439
    @bunchofbaloney2439 Год назад

    Brunost actually means «brown cheese» brun means «brown» and ost is «cheese» if you didnt know. :) (yes i am Norwegian and if you wanna know more let me know)

  • @KR-ki9hw
    @KR-ki9hw Год назад

    I've eaten versions of the crispy bread. Not bad.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  Год назад +1

      🤩🤩🤩 aww that’s great! I bet it’s also very nice 🙂

  • @user-bu7oz1lx4e
    @user-bu7oz1lx4e 2 года назад

    The liver postei has a kids face bc it's the kids favourite spreading !!

  • @arcticblue248
    @arcticblue248 3 года назад +1

    Also, like the Kaviar as you can eat only that on the bread ... but it is very very good when you combine it with boiled eggs, same with the Liverpate you can buy something more tasty ofcourse I ate one a couple of days ago that had bacon in it and it was sooooo good, but sometimes I only eat the type you had there but I also combine them with Norwegia cheeze ... and it actually taste really really good (ofcourse in my view).

  • @iuciubbb
    @iuciubbb 2 года назад +2

    Hi Anna, you're so funny! I guess you might get along with Helén Skogstad (check her out!).
    I must confess I absolutely love cripbread, especially with seeds.
    Greetings from Germany by a Southern Italian!
    Hei Anna, du er veldig morsom! Jeg synes at du kunne komme godt ut av det med Helén Skogstad (se på henne!).
    Det må jeg innrømme, jeg elsker knekkebrød absolutt, framfor alt med frø og kjerner.
    Hilsen fra Tyskland av en syditaliener!

  • @baldrian22
    @baldrian22 3 года назад +2

    i love the jarlsberg it got great taste, the cheese that just got the name "gulost" dont taste a lot in my opinion its just to mild.

  • @NafanuaisMYnick
    @NafanuaisMYnick 2 года назад

    Just had to mention - try KitKat and KvikkLunsj side by side, you will definitly taste the difference.

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад

      So true 😁 Thank you ☺️🤗 happy new year! 🎊🎄🎁

  • @reyalPRON
    @reyalPRON 2 года назад +2

    the kids on the liverpaste cans are a tradition from before oil. It was meant to showcase the health of he children eating it. For adults there are maaaaany other liverpastes to explore here. in norway
    Macrill in can with tomato saus, we call it "fly krasj" or "Linjefeil hos nsb." it looks like a trainwreck does it not? Add coarse black pepper, on rye or grov kneip... Damn... that shit is good. few "snake cubumer" slices on that thing... maybe go all out and add extra a crapload of thinnest slices know to man,
    Frossen pizza. Prøv dr oetker fire oster. legg på det du har i lkøleskapet som topping fem minutter for endt steketid :)

  • @imortaliz
    @imortaliz 2 года назад

    you need to try the mills kaviar tube thats more a red/orange color. it has more mayo in it so its not as strong as the blue one

    • @AnnaGoldmanTravel
      @AnnaGoldmanTravel  2 года назад

      🤩 WoW! Thats interesting! I will definitely try it ☺️ love Norwegian kaviar! Great stuff!

    • @imortaliz
      @imortaliz 2 года назад

      @@AnnaGoldmanTravel might sound disgusting but its actually really good on Norvegia or jarlsberg cheese to :)

  • @TrymYoutubeMainChannel
    @TrymYoutubeMainChannel 2 года назад

    I find it so funny how you say knekkebrød xD it sounds like an russian accent almost

  • @BelieveNoGod
    @BelieveNoGod 3 года назад +1

    "Smash" are my absolute favorite snack. (I'm Norwegian).
    But it's so expensive, i almost never buy it.

    • @ludicolo378
      @ludicolo378 3 года назад

      I've just noticed that Smash has gotten less expensive recently for some reason.
      "Toffin" and "m" by Freia on the other hand are still WAY too expensive IMO.
      Frustrating really, one is just those little chocolate covered toffee spheres and the other one is peanuts with a crunchy chocolate shell, and the bags aren't even that big!
      I don't get why they have to be so darn expensive??
      Same with Opera Mints too, but at least they are imported from Denmark so it makes more sense for them to be expensive but still... The candy prices in Norway are ridiculous sometimes.

  • @Aysorgaming
    @Aysorgaming Год назад

    Yes solo are good

  • @adrianhuseth2105
    @adrianhuseth2105 Год назад

    The reason that leverposteien has a childs face is because it is a finer grinded versjon for kids. There is also a less fine versjon with the face of a teenager/adoult

  • @emuemu1971
    @emuemu1971 2 года назад

    And then i am in England then i am gona do the same and ur good at norwich i mean well❤💖🇬🇧🇳🇴

  • @DivineFalcon
    @DivineFalcon 2 года назад

    Kvikk Lunsj DID start out being based on the original Kit Kat recipe, but we Norwegians hated it. So a much better version was made, and thus Kvikk Lunsj was born. It has been the most eaten chocolate in Norway ever since. Try to compare a Kit Kat and Kvikk Lunsj side by side, and the differences are quite noticeable.