As new books pile up on my desk each fall, in the predictable publishing rite that anticipates holiday buying, there are always surprises.
This year was no exception as seven — yes, seven — cookbooks on Nordic cuisine arrived, rivaling all but the many new Southern cookbooks for Next Big Trend.
If there ever was a time to expand your knowledge of Scandinavian fare beyond meatballs and gravlax, this is it.
"The Nordic Cook Book," by Magnus Nilsson (Phaidon, 768 pages, $49.95). Wow. By weight alone, this volume makes a statement. Nilsson, the head chef of Fäviken Magasinet restaurant in Sweden ( included among the best restaurants in the world), turns his attention to a comprehensive look at the foods and food culture of this vast area of Far North country, embracing not only the usual nations (Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland), but also Greenland, Iceland and the Faeroe Islands (between Norway and Iceland).
He offers more than 700 recipes that define the many regional cuisines, not all of which can be adapted to Minnesota kitchens (reindeer heart stew and Icelandic rotten shark are two that come to mind). However, his commentary — historical and personal — is worth a read even when the ingredients are obscure.
From instructions on how to clean a baltic herring, to how pizza landed in the Nordic region and how a Faeroe Island whale hunt takes place, this book is much more than a collection of recipes.
Nilsson's skills aren't limited to the kitchen or the keyboard. His photographs fill the book with a visual sense of place that will make some readers (this one included) want to book a flight soon.
Many of his photographs will be on display next summer at the American Swedish Institute in Minneapolis, when Nilsson visits for a weeklong conversation on Nordic cuisine.