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Balls of lefse dough Lefse rolling pin. Lefse (Norwegian pronunciation: [ˈlɛ́fsə̌]) is a traditional soft Norwegian flatbread. It is made with riced potatoes, can include all purpose (wheat) flour, [1] and includes butter, and milk, cream, [2] or lard. [3] It is cooked on a large, flat griddle. Special tools are used to prepare lefse ...
Krotekake is a kind of lefse thin pastry. The name lefse covers many different kinds of thin or thick, soft or hard pastry. In the Norwegian language krote means "a scroll" and kake is a cake or pastry. Dried krotekake can be made in quantity and stored without refrigeration for extended periods of time. [3]
Lefse – a traditional soft Norwegian flatbread. It is made with flour, can include riced potatoes, and includes butter, and milk, cream, or lard. It is cooked on a large, flat griddle. [11] Tynnlefse ("Thin lefse") is a variation made in central Norway. Tynnlefse is rolled up with butter, sugar, and cinnamon (or with butter and brown sugar). [12]
In the 1880s, my great-great-grandmother, Kari Brandum, brought our family lefse recipe with her from the Lillehammer region of Norway when she immigrated to Central Wisconsin—where most of my ...
Meal: Lefse, wild rice soup, hot dish, Summit beer, bundt cake. In Minnesota, food traditions are deeply tied to its Scandinavian heritage and Midwest comfort. Lefse, a soft Norwegian flatbread ...
Lefse (North Dakota) As Norwegian immigrants made their way to states like North Dakota, they brought their beloved lefse bread. A soft flatbread made with potatoes, lefse is traditionally made on ...
Kringla, krumkake and lefse are found at church suppers throughout the holiday season when a typical lutefisk dinner would include mashed potatoes, cranberry salad, [66] corn, rutabaga, rommegrot, meatballs with gravy, and Norwegian pastry for dessert. [65] Recipes compiled and published by the Des Moines Register include salmon mousse, fresh ...
They are traditionally eaten using one's fingers, and served as a snack and sometimes served with beetroot, mustard, and fresh bread or with lefse or flatbread. Historically syltelabb is served with the traditional Norwegian juleøl (English: Christmas ale), beer and liquor (like aquavit). This is because Syltelabb is very salty food.