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Things that are different in Sweden - part 4
We moved from South Africa to a farm in Northern Sweden! We love DIY, the outdoors, good food, family and friends. Come along on this journey with us!
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Your lemon butter sauce sounds like the Hollandaise sauce in Sweden.
I don't know what lemonbutter is obviously but we have a sauce called Hollandaise that is also with lemon and butter and very popular to fish.
After a winter is magical when it get to two figures temperature:) its har to imagine if you haven’t lived here that 10 degrees can feel that way :)
It's a common saying everywhere outside big cities, locked doors only keep neighbors and friends out, thieves get in regardless, break windows or break open the door.
Yeah, lemonbutter is lacking here. We have lemony-buttery sauces, but not the same. But we *do* eat rice with fish. Or potatoes. It's not *just* mash. I can't remember a power outage in the last 10 years here in southern Sweden. Load shedding doesn't even have a word in Swedish.
I am from Durban and have lived in Sweden for around 45 plus years in a town of today around 58 000 people and during this time we have only been without electricity both due to planned cut offs for maintenance and due to storms a maximum of around 15 hours. We live on the west coast.
I eat a lot of fish, would you have a recipe on the lemonbutter? Or is it just melt butter and squeese lemmon in it?
I ONLY eat Fish with mash exactly 1 time per year. And that's on 24 december. Then we have oven-roasted salmon with mashed potatoes. It's my family's one and only "religious" thing we do. I'm catholic (on paper) and, they apparently don't eat meat on christmas day. When we have fish on any other day we eather have it with cooked potatoes or rice. NEVER mash..