Last month, twas my honor to witness something magical, a grandmother passing a family tradition along to two of her granddaughters. I took a few pictures so that readers might tag along too. Here's how to make homemade Swedish potato sausage, the classic Swedish dish, with step-by-step photos and tips.
It happened like a scene right out of Carl Larsson, the renowned Swedish painter who captured home and family scenes in the Swedish countryside in the last 1800s and early 1900s.
There we were on an unseasonably warm afternoon on the last day of November, the grandmother all organized and prepared, the kids smart from school, me bearing a camera and a tin of allspice -- all gathered in the kitchen to make one of the family's traditional Swedish recipes, an important dish for the feast on Christmas Eve.
The dish? Homemade potato sausage, 'potatis korv' en svenska. Here's how it's made, with love.
TESTIMONIALS
"We had a ball this afternoon grinding everything, cleaning the casings and just putting it all together." ~ The Larson Family
"I followed the recipe (except I used a sausage stuffer) and it turned out fantastic! My brother-in-law claimed it is the best he has ever had!" ~ Grant
"We had a ball this afternoon grinding everything, cleaning the casings and just putting it all together." ~ The Larson Family
"I followed the recipe (except I used a sausage stuffer) and it turned out fantastic! My brother-in-law claimed it is the best he has ever had!" ~ Grant
(This post contains meat, a note to vegetarians.)
Doris (she's the proud grandma in the center), Erika (left) and Livvy (right) invited me over to watch the preparations. It was such a fun afternoon, watching the tradition being passed from one generation to another. |
Get ready, it's going to be a fun afternoon making homemade Swedish potato sausage! |
Who can blame her? The spirit of her grandmother, it lives on in those young hands that wo-manned the grinder that afternoon. |
(I'm just sure Carl Larsson would have loved Livvy's stool and unmatched pink socks as much as I did!) |
The casings are shimmied onto a slip of plastic (that's the red thing). A half pound of casings was two, maybe three times as much as needed for this recipe. |
Slip the casing over the center tube, getting it as high as you can. Because the casing is quite slippery, wrap a paper towel around the center tube too, so that you're hanging onto the paper towel, not the casing itself. |
With your hands, gently press the meat mixture into the center tube. Long fingers like Erika's make it easier, Livvy's are shorter and so it was harder. I tried the end of a wooden spoon to press it in, that helped. |
As the tube fills, the sausage will make its way into the casing. Use your hands to move it further into the casing. |
On Christmas Eve, she'll thaw the sausages and then fry them and sprinkle with a little parsley. |
One granddaughter plays the role of St. Lucia and wears a crown of candles. Then there are Star Boys and Tomtons. True story: I was staying with a Swedish family on St. Lucia Day in 1976. Early that morning, their blond-haired, blue-eyed daughter, Annikka, delivered sweet buns to all of us wearing a crown of candles, real candles, real flames, really beautiful! |
These kids love their family tradition! And I loved sharing it. Thank you, Doris and Max, thank you Erika and Livvy and Brian! |
MORE SWEDISH RECIPES
~ Swedish Red Cabbage ~
~ Swedish Beets ~
~ more Scandinavian recipes ~
collected on Kitchen Parade, my food column
~ Swedish Red Cabbage ~
~ Swedish Beets ~
~ more Scandinavian recipes ~
collected on Kitchen Parade, my food column
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© Copyright Kitchen Parade 2009
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