And Swedish "ansjovis" is normally translated to English as anchovies, but they are rather different to Mediterranean anchovies. Really they are little sprats and they are normally cured in a spiced brine and sold as fillets in tins, but you can also get whole sprats in glass jars. Ansjovis have a sweeter, milder taste than Mediterranean anchovies, so they are not really interchangeable in recipes.
@@per-olamjomark7452 Anchovies, as well as cranberries, are arguably both superior ingredients, so...The potatoes are highly dubious. Fresh bread-crumbs probably work better.
Swedish "ansjovis" is normally translated to English as anchovies, but they are rather different to Mediterranean anchovies. Really they are little sprats and they are normally cured in a spiced brine and sold as fillets in tins. Ansjovis have a sweeter, milder taste than Mediterranean anchovies, so they are not really interchangeable in recipes.
pretty much everything is cross-cultural. Potatoes (in this recipe), along with tomatoes, corn, and bell peppers are from the Americas and there was not even one in Europe until 1500 or so.
With great appreciation and admiration of wonderful Swedish master! Everything is just perfect! I will try to reproduce the meatballs exactly as they are described. The details are given very carefully and openly. Special Thank you for uplifting manner of presentation. With the very best wishes, Yelena, Sunnyvale, CA, USA
1. Anchovies are seldom used in the sauce 2. Meatballs are often served without any sauce whatsoever (for instance on a traditional smörgåsbord and julbord) 3. Swedish cookbooks written prior to the reign of Charles XII include meatballs
Dishes like this we’re probably created by many, many people. I seriously doubt just one person thought to make meatballs, chicken fried in batter or breadcrumbs. I’m rather partial to Swedish style meatballs, I can’t stand meatloaf and meatballs in a tomato based sauce don’t tickle my tastebuds
Love DW Food Channel. Deep respect for every traditional food, just wanted to say that nothing beats my Albanian mom's meatballs.❤ Much love to you all people!
Don’t want to be disrespectful to the Swedish heritage, but the iKea meat balls taste all right. I would pick Thai food or Texas bbq over the meatballs.
Ikea is a furniture store, not a restaurant. Their meatballs can't be compared to properly cooked ones. Of course it's absolutely ok to prefer Thai or Texan food. But if you've only eaten at Ikea you haven't really tried proper Swedish food.
There's a few mistranslations here, Swedish ansjovis are NOT anchovies, they're not the same fish and they're pickled very differently. Just skip the ansjovis (and DON'T use anchovies!), it's very uncommon and not normally used. She said bouillon, what you want is veal stock or beef stock. Black currant jelly (just a little), butter, cream, a dash of soy sauce, and all the stuff left in the pan where you fried the meatballs.
Meatballs arent really something so hard and unique to think about. Its just a ball of fried meat. Romans already made pasta sheets altough it wasnt very popular so pasta doesnt come from china, it appeared in multiple places and just developed independently
Köttbullarna inte från Turkiet inte heller Itwlien sedan de är gjorda på helt olika sätt och äts på helt olika sätt. Pasta är inte sammasak som nudlar.
I really do hate when people seem to want to "copyright" a food item or preparation. People in America even try to attribute "barbecue" to specific cultures, as if smoking or grilling meat is something nobody in the world thought to do until so and so did it pretty recently in historical terms. If meatballs are made and served a certain way in Sweden, and we all associate this style of meatball, then they are a Swedish dish, regardless of who else has or had something similar. It seems to me a cheap attempt at deconstruction to attack national cultures, or a "gotcha" of some sort. I apologize if I'm making this political, but the "x food is exclusively owned by y people and you must praise them every time you eat it" crowd are pretty much always motivated by resentment against the country where they live. American food products and styles have had an influence in South Korea and Japan, for example, yet I would never say "this budae-jjigae has hot dogs and spam in it, so it's American, and not legitimately Korean," because that could only be a shallow and pathetic attempt to "own" Koreans.
@@tekinsal8396 yes they should. why tf would you even put it in there otherwise? Use shredded raw onions. they'll cook but add more flavor to the meat. COOK WELL
The question about köttbullars origine as turkish was at least very fast concluded to be false and made up by a turkish immegrant that had given the responsbilty for the official Sweidhs twitter acount. Since several recipe for köttbullar that is over 100 yeras older than Karl xii exist in Sewden. However if they were based on older recipe or of french/italian origin was never really resolved.
I was watching the video after, but after 1.5 minutes I was thinking noooo we ( I am Dutch Indonesian) do it better! A quick search on Indonesian meatball Goreng or Bakso Bakar and I found lots of examples on the internet and on RUclips. Give the search a try. Must admit the small meatballs in Italian tomato sauce is also a favourite of mine. I love a big meatball with mashed potatoes!
Wow, first impression: What a great Scandinavian pronunciation of meatballs. The same would work in Norway, and nobody would say "what?" or "what did you say?"
Swedish meatballs are never finished off by letting them simmer in a pan full of sauce. The sauce is supposed to be poured over the meatballs. Big sigh.. Study the original way of doing it. How hard can it be?
Köttbullar are okay, a comfort food, nice, but let’s not kid ourselves they are the height of Swedish cuisine or any cuisine. Like meatloaf isnt the best food the USA have to offer, or Bitterballen from the Netherlands. Nice food, but there is so much beter
@@robzsarmy5471 Outside of europe I would say places like Mongolia and pacific islands have quite bad food due to lacking access to spices and ingredients etc.
Ofcourse its bad if you eat it at IKEA. The best isn't at any big restaurant & definately not at a fkng furniture store but homemade as we make it or small lunch restaurants here in sweden
1:48 why are you showing us pictures of eggs, just get to the point, have more respect for your viewers' time please. EDIT: you don't even give an example recipe. Total waste of time. Whoever made this video should be fired.
I like them when i go to Ikea, and i am sure that they would make it even better in Sweden. Greetings from Turkey.
To all americans out there. Lingon berry jam or raw mixed lingon berries can't be replaced with cranberries. Sorry🙃
And Swedish "ansjovis" is normally translated to English as anchovies, but they are rather different to Mediterranean anchovies. Really they are little sprats and they are normally cured in a spiced brine and sold as fillets in tins, but you can also get whole sprats in glass jars. Ansjovis have a sweeter, milder taste than Mediterranean anchovies, so they are not really interchangeable in recipes.
🙄
Cranberries are not inferior, sorry. I also wonder whether the potato is about texture and good food, or just accommodating a special diet.
@@per-olamjomark7452 Anchovies, as well as cranberries, are arguably both superior ingredients, so...The potatoes are highly dubious. Fresh bread-crumbs probably work better.
Facts
Replacing bread crumbs with mashed potatoes. This is a gamechanger for me.
(:
Yes! My mind is kinda blown…I’ve just never thought of trying that before.
Swedish "ansjovis" is normally translated to English as anchovies, but they are rather different to Mediterranean anchovies. Really they are little sprats and they are normally cured in a spiced brine and sold as fillets in tins. Ansjovis have a sweeter, milder taste than Mediterranean anchovies, so they are not really interchangeable in recipes.
Thank you for the clarification. I am going to make it with regular anchovies to aid the saltines:)
Yes, very important! Do not make this mistake! What the English-speaking world calls Anchovies are instead called 'sardeller' in Swedish.
Thank you for that gem of information 😀 as a person who doesn’t know much at all about Swedish food (except ikea) I would have never known that 😀
That does sound better...
Thank you for the tip. I thought they looked much wider than the kind I am used to.
Awesome that it's a very cross cultural dish! My Polish grandfather made an amazing version of Swedish meatballs that he served in his tavern.
pretty much everything is cross-cultural. Potatoes (in this recipe), along with tomatoes, corn, and bell peppers are from the Americas and there was not even one in Europe until 1500 or so.
Those fantastic contrasts must produce an absolutely great taste. It really looks delicious.
With great appreciation and admiration of wonderful Swedish master! Everything is just perfect! I will try to reproduce the meatballs exactly as they are described. The details are given very carefully and openly. Special Thank you for uplifting manner of presentation. With the very best wishes, Yelena, Sunnyvale, CA, USA
A tip is to grate the onion instead of shopping it :)
But then they lose so much juice and overcook faster.
no thanks. Grating is what you do when you want to disguise the onion so the kids don't know they are in. Grownups eat them chopped
1. Anchovies are seldom used in the sauce
2. Meatballs are often served without any sauce whatsoever (for instance on a traditional smörgåsbord and julbord)
3. Swedish cookbooks written prior to the reign of Charles XII include meatballs
My mother didnt use anchovies in the sauce, she used blue cheese.
@@robertholmberg6325 Not very common, but I'm sure it tastes great. Thanks!
Did I miss the part with someone complaining & why do some cultures have a hard time giving credit to others?
My god, he sounds just like the Swedish chef from the Muppets!!
Bork Bork Bork???
@@gaurangkarmakar4046 oh yah Bork!!
@kevinn1158. The Swedish Chef from the Muppets is actually Norwegian. Not a lot of people know that.
@@mrfitz96 Dang really????
@@kevinn1158 I know, mind blown right? But despite his name he has a very clear & obvious Norwegian accent
Nice!!! I shall try the recipe ... thank you!
I know Spanish households that make big meatballs with lots of onion, so another possible link to ME cuisine, and the onions make a huge difference.
Yesss a gluten free recipe. Thanks chef!
Dishes like this we’re probably created by many, many people. I seriously doubt just one person thought to make meatballs, chicken fried in batter or breadcrumbs.
I’m rather partial to Swedish style meatballs, I can’t stand meatloaf and meatballs in a tomato based sauce don’t tickle my tastebuds
Love DW Food Channel. Deep respect for every traditional food, just wanted to say that nothing beats my Albanian mom's meatballs.❤ Much love to you all people!
Never compete with someone’s mom or grandmother 😉 it always come with a side of unconditional love
Uhm... Actually pea soup is swedens national dish. Meatballs are just more famous.
Swedish pea soup goes back to the 30 years war if not longer. It was the standing diet for the Swedish army.
What a beautiful culture.
Don’t want to be disrespectful to the Swedish heritage, but the iKea meat balls taste all right. I would pick Thai food or Texas bbq over the meatballs.
Ikea is a furniture store, not a restaurant. Their meatballs can't be compared to properly cooked ones. Of course it's absolutely ok to prefer Thai or Texan food. But if you've only eaten at Ikea you haven't really tried proper Swedish food.
As a swede I would say that the real swedish national dish is köttbullar med potatismos gjord på potatis och lingonsylt med brunsås.
Every thing about that swedish meatballs should be with something else is a tourist trap
What is the spice ?
I didn't understand the sauce. Is it BOULLION and cream? Black currant jelly and anchovies?
There's a few mistranslations here, Swedish ansjovis are NOT anchovies, they're not the same fish and they're pickled very differently. Just skip the ansjovis (and DON'T use anchovies!), it's very uncommon and not normally used. She said bouillon, what you want is veal stock or beef stock. Black currant jelly (just a little), butter, cream, a dash of soy sauce, and all the stuff left in the pan where you fried the meatballs.
complaining about Sweden having meatballs from Turkey is like complaining about Italy having pasta from China. Ridiculous!
It's not from there. It MAY have drawn some inspiration from köfte but sweden has had meatballs longer than that
Meatballs arent really something so hard and unique to think about. Its just a ball of fried meat.
Romans already made pasta sheets altough it wasnt very popular so pasta doesnt come from china, it appeared in multiple places and just developed independently
Köttbullarna inte från Turkiet inte heller Itwlien sedan de är gjorda på helt olika sätt och äts på helt olika sätt. Pasta är inte sammasak som nudlar.
I really do hate when people seem to want to "copyright" a food item or preparation. People in America even try to attribute "barbecue" to specific cultures, as if smoking or grilling meat is something nobody in the world thought to do until so and so did it pretty recently in historical terms. If meatballs are made and served a certain way in Sweden, and we all associate this style of meatball, then they are a Swedish dish, regardless of who else has or had something similar.
It seems to me a cheap attempt at deconstruction to attack national cultures, or a "gotcha" of some sort. I apologize if I'm making this political, but the "x food is exclusively owned by y people and you must praise them every time you eat it" crowd are pretty much always motivated by resentment against the country where they live.
American food products and styles have had an influence in South Korea and Japan, for example, yet I would never say "this budae-jjigae has hot dogs and spam in it, so it's American, and not legitimately Korean," because that could only be a shallow and pathetic attempt to "own" Koreans.
Ah yes, the Vikings in the 700s, famous for their meatballs. Lmao@@resorband
Omg I'm hungry now and its midnight i need to sleep😢
im so proud of my european heritage, i love meatballs be they italian or german or swedish
@baaa-uq8du please there is no need for your conspiracy theories
where can I find this recipe?
I heard these were made with humans that never found the exit at ikea?
As decadent as that recipe sounds, it's totally a special occasion dish.
What makes this swedish?
I love meatballs but hate onions! Is it possible to use shallots and garlic instead?
Shallots and garlic in the meatballs should be good, they will add some sweet and garlic taste to the meatballs.
Not garlic but shallots works just fine. Dont know why you would like shallots but not onion though as its also an onion😂 just a bit more delicate
Shred the onions and don't fry them. Also use less. You won't notice the onion flavor the same way and they blend in
@@tekinsal8396 yes they should. why tf would you even put it in there otherwise?
Use shredded raw onions. they'll cook but add more flavor to the meat.
COOK WELL
Absolutely, shallots should be excellent but you want just a hint of garlic, a tad too much and it's not Swedish meatballs!
Surströmming will work better than meatballs as a national dish and it has always been so.
1:35 byork byork byork!
Well, it's meatball in general not Swedish but now surely it's a Swedish dish.
For me, it looks like a Scandinavian version of Köfte. 😊
Abi, it's the other way round 😊
What's different?
The question about köttbullars origine as turkish was at least very fast concluded to be false and made up by a turkish immegrant that had given the responsbilty for the official Sweidhs twitter acount. Since several recipe for köttbullar that is over 100 yeras older than Karl xii exist in Sewden. However if they were based on older recipe or of french/italian origin was never really resolved.
Don't care I love meatballs from all over the world . Nothing beats a meatball and pesto sandwich.
I was watching the video after, but after 1.5 minutes I was thinking noooo we ( I am Dutch Indonesian) do it better! A quick search on Indonesian meatball Goreng or Bakso Bakar and I found lots of examples on the internet and on RUclips. Give the search a try. Must admit the small meatballs in Italian tomato sauce is also a favourite of mine. I love a big meatball with mashed potatoes!
Wow, first impression: What a great Scandinavian pronunciation of meatballs. The same would work in Norway, and nobody would say "what?" or "what did you say?"
I always quadruple the gravy/sauce portion of recipes. Animal flesh is overrated. The sauce IS the BOSS.
It’s all about the sauce!!!! I’m always wishing there was extra, great idea!
nobody in the middle of road has said lets have swedish for dinner, these words have never been uttered
Yes! And I don't think the turks uses pork meet.
I dont like the raw onion especially diced
If raw, grate it
If diced fri it first❤
Det är inte en nationalrätt. Det är väldigt populär rätt.
Köfte is those Mother called...
Swedish meatballs are never finished off by letting them simmer in a pan full of sauce. The sauce is supposed to be poured over the meatballs.
Big sigh.. Study the original way of doing it. How hard can it be?
Ours is spicier and served with potatoes.
Swedish meatballs are served with potatoes or mash potatoes, but ours are not spicy!
PLEASE stop saying köttbullar every time.
Meatballs is a word. You're butchering the language worse than a Peruvian speaking Tagalog
Is this some AI voice? wooot so strange
can always count on the internets to be triggered over something 🤣
No they come from turkey
It is pronouced 'ikea' not 'aikia' !!!!
Köttbullar are okay, a comfort food, nice, but let’s not kid ourselves they are the height of Swedish cuisine or any cuisine. Like meatloaf isnt the best food the USA have to offer, or Bitterballen from the Netherlands. Nice food, but there is so much beter
Pronounced SH*T-bullar? 😂
According to IKEA they're made with horse meat 🍖 😂
Sweden has worse cuisine than the british but Swedish meatballs are very nice
Yes Scandinavia might have the worst cousine on earth.
@@BigmanDogs I dont know for world but for Europe they do especially Iceland .
@@robzsarmy5471 Outside of europe I would say places like Mongolia and pacific islands have quite bad food due to lacking access to spices and ingredients etc.
you haven't had swedish food even. Also polish food exists
@@BigmanDogsFood in Denmark and Finland is actually decent. Simple but good.
Sweden and Norway have abysmal cuisine. Norway is worst 😮
Yes, I tried it in IKEA. It is bad.
Ofcourse its bad if you eat it at IKEA. The best isn't at any big restaurant & definately not at a fkng furniture store but homemade as we make it or small lunch restaurants here in sweden
@@affexxe maybe you are right. 😉
These guys don´t think so:
ruclips.net/video/qhrgYsQSyKI/видео.html
turkey instead of pork and its yummy
Turkey is dry and lacks flavor. The pork makes it juicy and helps shape the meatballs nicely
finnish meatballs much better
Go home Finland - you are drunk ;)
@@per-olamjomark7452Finns can hold their drink. Swedes are passing out by 22.30 😂
I'm Swedish, and I don't like cucumbers, they make me burp.
Anchovy sauce would really make it a wild experience. 🤣🤣🤣
wow, the swedish chef was perfect parody i guess
I thought kebab is the traditional Swedish food...
1:48 why are you showing us pictures of eggs, just get to the point, have more respect for your viewers' time please. EDIT: you don't even give an example recipe. Total waste of time. Whoever made this video should be fired.