• Sweden edition

Eating out with Alannah

A foodie's guide to where to wine and dine in Sweden - from low budget and fika spots to high class dining!

Archive for August, 2009

Is the food worse in Stockholm on Sunday evenings?

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Beirut Cafe has been one of my very favorite Lebanese restaurants for several years and one I recommend to most my friends – local and international – for romantic, group and business dinners. But Sunday evening is a bit of a disappointment – like Sunday evenings in other Stockholm restaurants which are also firm favorites of mine.

I’ve eaten at Beirut Cafe probably 15 times (weekdays and Saturdays) and always been happy with my staple meze choices like hoummus, grilled haloumi cheese, full artichoke with lemon and garlic, tiger shrimps and tabouleh. I love the decor as it feels like you step into the Middle East the minute you enter the place from a sleepy street bordering Humlegården in Östermalm.

But, this Sunday evening I have to say I left disappointed. The service was mediocre – every time our glasses of water were empty or we ran out of bread, we had to chase after our waiter and waitress to refill. Not once did they show any initiative to offer us bread or refill our glasses until we complained loudly amongst our group. Our halloumi cheese arrived cold and a good 20 minutes after the rest of our meze arrived. There was more garlic than usual on our food.

I don’t know if it is just eating out on Sunday evenings in Stockholm as several of my other favorite restaurants are also a let down on Sunday evenings. Perhaps it is the normal chef’s day off or maybe as the restaurants are rarely full on Sunday evenings, they just don’t try so hard as usual. Or maybe we get served the leftovers from Friday and Saturday?

The meze dishes at Beirut cafe cost between SEK 70 and SEK 120 and if you’re a group of people choose three each and there’s more than enough food for everyone! The Lebanese red wines are also worth a try. If you’re feeling adventurous, check out the lamb’s testicles!

Anyone else out there got similar feelings about dining out on Sunday evenings in Stockholm?

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Green dining at Rosendals Trädgård

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Located in the heart of the green island of Djurgården, lunch or coffee at Rosendals Trädgård is somewhat of a ritual for most Stockholmers. Famous for its freshly baked breads, garden-fresh vegetables and unpretentious atmosphere, the café/restaurant which resembles a big greenhouse, offers delicious and ecological food at a good price. Lunch or dinner at the café can be combined with a stroll in the luscious green surroundings or a visit to the nearby Skansen open-air museum or the Gröna Lund amusement park. 

Rosendalsterrassen 12, Djurgården. Tel: +46 8 545 812 70.

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Smaklust – food tasting fair in Stockholm

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Mingle in central Stockholm with over 300 of Sweden’s finest independent food producers, top chefs and over 100,000 visitors.

Taste your way through a mini culinary Sweden, discovering thousands of award winning delicacies that are every bit as distinctive as their regions of origin.

Salmon and seafood delicacies from crystal clear waters, salamis and hams from elk and reindeer, preserves from zesty northern berries and freshly harvested organic fruit and vegetables are just some of the products waiting to tempt you at this mouth-watering event.

In addition you’ll meet Sweden’s new wave of food and drink producers, who are combining national and international influences in ever more innovative ways. Along the way creating products ranging from asparagus schnapps, microbrewery beers and cloudberry wines to coffee cheese, elk salami and ostrich milk ice cream.

Some of the country’s top chefs will be demonstrating just what they can achieve with Sweden’s finest food and drink in special competitions to be held at the event.

The Fair will take place at Tantolunden and Hornstulls strand, close to Hornsgatan and the bridge of Liljeholmen.

See www.smaklust.se for more info!

Source: www.stockholmtown.com

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More than just rabbits and rocks

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Seafood Towers, local Maltese wines, restaurants carved into rocks, English breakfasts and steaks for 60 Euros – just some of my gourmet adventures on a recent trip to Malta, renowned for its rabbit stews, rocky cliffs and British colonial history.

Well, during the past week aside from enjoying an English breakfast or two, some touristy pasta and pizza joints, I’ve found some cozy local restaurants in Malta and enjoyed some great meals with first-class service.

Secluded and romantic

View of the Lupanara wine bistro.

View of the Lupanara wine bistro.

The first is a real hidden gem – and when I say hidden, I mean hidden as it’s literally carved into a wall of rock without any sign of a name or menu hanging outside. The only giveaway is a few scattered tables and lounge seats perched on the quayside. To find it, you pass the Birgu waterfront’s marina on the left hand side and the Vittoriosa casino on the right hand side before you reach what seems to be a dead (and dimly lit) end of the street. But venture around the corner and walk around the water’s edge to the other side and you’ll discover the Lupanara wine bistro. I liked it so much I went back twice during my stay – first for a cheese platter and bottle of wine with some local friends and the second time with my boyfriend for a romantic dinner. And both occasions were equally good.

 

The cuisine at Lupanara is a mix of everything from seafood dishes to cheese and ham platters – modern European food with a local flair – and with a great selection of local and international wines. It’s a classy but understated place where you hear nothing but the quiet murmur of voices around you and the occasional lapping of water, with the rocks illuminated as a backdrop behind you. Prices are very fair – a bottle of wine, two coffees and two main courses set us back just EUR 46 – the only thing that put up the price was a EUR 20 taxi ride each way from our hotel. But it was worth every penny.

Steaks and seafood towers
If you’re after a decent steak or an assortment of seafood, check out the newly opened Grill 3301 at the Corinthia Marina Hotel in St. George’s Bay. There’s a pretty nice view over St. George’s Bay and the Dragonara Casino – regardless of whether you are a sun-starved tourist who wants to sit on the rooftop to soak up al-fresco dining or if, like the locals, you prefer to sit indoors in air-conditioning (which might leave you stepping outdoors to warm up!!). No matter where you sit, you’re guaranteed a view!  

Tucking in to the Seafood Tower at Grill 3301.

Tucking in to the Seafood Tower at Grill 3301.

And then there’s Grill 3301’s house speciality, the Seafood Tower – a three tiered mountain of seafood where you’ll have to get off your chair to see what’s on the top. On the bottom there are clams, langoustines, mussels; on the second layer you’ll find shrimps, swordfish carpaccio, octopus and on the top lobsters. It’s perfect as a shared starter or main course and with some champagne. 

Then comes the tough decision of choosing a main course; unless you are like one member of our group who only eats chicken, then your choice is narrowed to the corn-fed chicken. But if you have your eye on a steak, it’ll take a while to decide if you want rib-eye Kobe beef, a fillet of grass-fed Aberdeen Angus, or, what I opted for – the porterhouse 600g Charolais steak. If you think selecting your meat is the toughest choice, then you have to choose between Madagascar peppercorn, organic mustard or Stilton cream sauces which come served in a cute little saucepan with a miniature soup ladle. If you’re neither a steak, seafood nor chicken lover, then there’s plenty of pasta and risotto dishes. As a crème brulée fanatic, I savoured every mouthful of my dessert, finishing up with a coffee and Baileys.

Dinner here can be pricey – a steak can set you back anything between EUR 19 and 60 – but in today’s recession-hit climate, Grill 3301 has been smart enough to also cater for those on a smaller budget. The pasta and risotto dishes start from EUR 8.50; and there are set menus including starter, main course, desert and coffee for around EUR 30 per person all in. This means it pretty much covers everything from a business dinner to a romantic meal to a group get-together … and with impeccable service.  

 

From wine tasting to rabbit stew
When you think of wine, you probably wouldn’t think of Malta as a major wine producing nation yet the island has some pretty good local vinos (and some not so good) as we discovered at the Delicata Wine Festival in the picturesque city of Valletta. For just EUR 10 you got a wine glass which you could use to sample as many wines as you could take between 19.30 and 23.30, accompanied by excellent live music by local bands and singers.
 

Rabbit stew is a national Maltese dish, often served with spaghetti.

Rabbit stew, a Maltese speciality, often served with spaghetti.

If you had time – or an appetite to eat – in between refilling your glass, the food stands offered rabbit stew, chicken tikka masala, pasta with meat sauce or pre-packaged cheese plates. But on hindsight as I chewed my way through a paper plate of pasta with meat sauce, it would have been smarter to eat first and wine later! The other two members of our party had downed sufficient wine to disguise the taste of the food!

 

When in Malta, do as the locals do
If you head further south in Malta, La Favorita in Marsaskala offers great seafood in a relaxed unpretentious atmosphere and is popular with locals. Other locals recommend the waterfront seafood restaurants in Malta’s main fishing village, Marsaxlokk.

So, after a great vacation, my conclusion is that if you are ever in Malta, don’t be put off on your first day by the McDonalds and pizza signs and “so so” pasta dishes in the touristic haunts. Like anywhere, there are plenty of great restaurants around, just be a bit adventurous and get off the beaten tourist track. If you don’t have any locals to ask for advice, check out the survey-based guide called The Definitive(ly) Good Guide to Restaurants in Malta & Gozo which lists the top 150 survey based restaurants in Malta & Gozo. See http://www.restaurantsmalta.com for more info.

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From Paris to Germany and Malta

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

During the past three weeks I’ve escaped the ‘on-off’ Scandinavian summer weather to spend my vacation in France, Germany and Malta enjoying bottles of Bordeaux wines in Parisian bistros, American-style dining at Disneyland Paris, bratwursts and sauerkraut in Germany and right now, pastizzis and pasta in Malta.

The weirdest food experience so far has to be Disneyland Paris where restaurants and menus cater (obviously) for families and kids … in the Disney Village there’s a Konig Ludwig Bavarian castle where you would expect to be served German cuisine but no, it’s half roasted chickens with chips, steaks and the occasional Frankfurter. Inside the Disneyland park the collection of themed restaurants – everything from Pirates of the Caribbean spots to Wild Western saloons and steakhouses – despite their different decor all offer the same kind of food so if you don’t like hotdogs, steaks, chicken wings or burgers, bring your own! We dined at Walt’s on Disneyland’s “Main Street” – a charming colonial style New England style wooden house with pretty good (and healthy) food. It’s probably the most upmarket restaurant in the park.

Paris didn’t disappoint me, well not the wines anyway and certainly not the fantastic pastries and croissants. Yet the very best meal we had during our three-day stay was a self-prepared picnic on the Sacre Coeur hilltop overlooking the city and enjoying a spectacular sunset, just like the locals. We scoured a downtown supermarket and raided their impressive cheese counter to put together our own picnic. Smoked brie, Camembert, fresh goat’s cheese and newly baked baguettes washed down with some great local Rose wines …. fantastic! If you’re a cheese addict like me, this is heaven!

Another taste of heaven … chocolate eclairs with a cafe au lait at a cafe close to the Opera in the center. The French certainly know how to make great croissants and even greater eclairs, not to mention the macaroons!

From Paris to Germany and wholesome hearty meals with bratwursts, plenty of pork, kartoffeln (potatoes) and hefty portions of cheesecake and plum cakes. Huge portions of food at a price that won’t make a hole in your wallet with alcohol (spirits, wines, beers etc) costing less than half the price of their counterpart in Sweden.

And now, I’m enjoying the scorching heat in Malta where pasta joints and pizzerias and English breakfasts have taken over the local menus but you’ll still find the occasional local dish like rabbit stew here and there. Portions are big, prices are good and you’ll need to know a few locals to find the real hidden restaurant gems as for every excellent restaurant, there’s also a tourist trap!

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