Valdres Samband

The Oldest Bygdelag in America - 1899

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Norwegian Cuisine

Do you have a favorite Norwegian delicacy that either brings back memories or is part of your family traditions? Share the recipe with us by sending an email message to the Web Volunteer or by signing our Guest Book.

We will update this page as the information becomes available. Now, for a little history....

Flatbrod, Man's Earliest Cuisine

Perhaps the first bread made by humans was a form of flatbrod - a thin, crisp unleavened bread. Rolled out to a round thin disc, it is a cousin of lefse, but while lefse is a food fit for a king, flatbrod is food for the ordinary person.

...Sometimes the lady of the house had so much to do that she didn't have time to make flatbrod so a profession arose of "bakstedeie", a woman who went from farm to farm making flatbrod. She would come to the farm each spring and fall to bake a six-month supply of flatbrod. Along with producing flatbrod she would dispense a supply of news to be purveyed at future places. She labored from early morning until evening for many days at the "eldhus" baking a good output each day, sometimes 120 rounds of flatbrod if the meal was fine, the wood dry and of the right proportions.

...She took a small amount of dough, formed it into a round patty with a little peak on top. The patty was placed on the rolling surface, and the peak of dough removed and placed in the trough again, "one had to have dough for the next round, you know!"

The patty was rolled into a thin, flat round, adding the meal needed so it wouldn't stick to the surface or to the rolling pin. The pin was not smooth, but grooved. It was her principal tool, but she also had a thin "spade" which she could insert under the round if she needed to loosen it from the rolling surface. She also had a long tapered stick on which she rolled the flatbrod for transport to the baking surface, and with which to turn the flatbrod for baking on the second side. At the end of the day the stack of flatbrod would be transferred to the rodent-proof stabbur (storage house) to be kept until needed.

Flatbrod could be eaten with butter or cheese or meat on it, or crushed into soup or eaten as flatbrod 'soll', cracked up into milk or cream and eaten.

When the bakstedeie left they said, "summer stands on the doorstep", if in the spring, or "winter's coming", if in the fall. While the calling was an honorable and needed one, the bakstedeie was not highly paid. Often she was paid in meal, port, mutton or other foodstuff she could carry home.

Submitted by Betty Rockswold

Recipe submitted by Myrna Moe
If one can tolerate a change--here is a good fruit soup substitute.
In a 9 by 13 pan, mix 1 can of peaches, pears, chunk pineapple, mandarin oranges, apricots; drained. May add 2 cups of applesauce next. Cover with a can of cherry pie filling. Sprinkle with 1/2 cup brown sugar and 1 tsp of cinnamon. Bake at 350 until bubbly. Serve HOT  as a salad or better yet, as a dessert.  My family has chosen this as a favorite for the Holidays.


Recipe submitted by Cathy Paulson
I have a similar recipe to Myna Moe's - I call it the "5 P's" because there are 5 ingredients that start with the letter "P".

1 can (chunk or tidbits) pineapple - about 15 ounces, no juice
1 can or (home canned quart jar) of peaches - chunked, no juice
1 can or (home canned quart jar) of pears - chunked, no juice
1 can of cherry pie filling
Handful of dried pitted prunes
Put all into a crock pot.  Add brown sugar and cinnamon to taste.  Serve hot/warm.  This is wonderful and simple!


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For problems or questions regarding this web site, contact the Web Volunteer: Cathy Paulson
For suggestions or contributions to the content of this web page contact: ValdresSamband
Last updated: October 29, 2000.
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