SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

INSIDE SWEDEN

Inside Sweden: How to make pickled herring that even newbies will like

The Local's editor Emma Löfgren writes about the biggest stories of the week (and shares her favourite pickled herring recipe) in our Inside Sweden newsletter.

Inside Sweden: How to make pickled herring that even newbies will like
Brantevik Herring is the first and third from the left. Photo: Jurek Holzer/SvD/Scanpix

It’s almost Easter, and in Sweden that means witches, pick ‘n’ mix and pickled herring.

I grew up in Sweden’s southernmost region, Skåne (Scania in English), where herring was historically such a staple food that a group of locals – including among others teachers and a priest – even set up the so-called Scanian Herring Academy to keep the tradition alive.

One of their flagship recipes is relatively modern, from the 1970s, and it’s the first pickled herring I learned to like (it’s an acquired taste for Swedes, too). It’s sweeter and therefore tastes less acid than a lot of other Swedish pickled herring recipes, so it’s perfect for beginners.

It’s called Brantevikssill, named after a tiny fishing village on the south-east coast.

Here’s the recipe I use:

Ingredients

1 kilo herring fillets

1 dl spirit vinegar (24 percent acidity)

7 dl water

0.5 dl salt

4 dl sugar

2 yellow onions

2 red onions

1 tbsp lemon pepper seasoning

3 tbsp allspice (buy it whole and crush lightly before use)

2 tbsp white peppercorns (again, crush before use)

2 bay leaves

1 bundle of fresh dill

Method

Mix the vinegar, salt and water. Soak the herring fillets (skin-free) in the pickling marinade (it’s important they’re completely covered by the marinade) and leave them for 24 hours in the fridge.

The vinegar used in herring recipes is referred to as ättika in Swedish. If you can’t get hold of this, you can use malt vinegar (5 percent acidity) instead, but you then need to use more vinegar and less water to get the proportions right. It is important that the right amount of ättika, salt and sugar is used when pickling herring, as the pickling process prevents harmful bacteria from growing.

The next day, drain the fillets. Mix the chopped onion with the herbs and spices. Add the sugar and stir. Now put the herring and the new marinade in layers in a glass jar and leave it in the fridge.

Eventually, the sugary marinade will melt and form its own liquid, so you shouldn’t add any other liquid. After around two days in the fridge, the herring is ready to eat.

Serve the herring with for example, potatoes, egg and crispbread.

In other news

Sweden’s climate watchdog this week delivered a scathing judgement on the country’s new climate plan, saying the government’s claims that it points the way to net zero in 2045 are “misleading” and “not based in fact”.

Hugh O’Brian, an American who has lived in Helsingborg in southern Sweden for 26 years, took a fight about unfair tax rules for people born in 1957 to the government – and won. The Local spoke to him about how he managed to win the 3 billion kronor fight.

What makes a person want to learn Swedish? The Local’s reader Sunny Das, from India, tries to answer a question that’s bigger than quantifiable goals in this column, which I really enjoyed reading.

How happy are people in Sweden compared to the rest of the world? Sweden climbed two notches in the annual World Happiness Report, but is still behind its Danish and Finnish neighbours.

In a recent article in Dagens Nyheter, journalist Alex Schulman praised the Danish coach of Sweden’s football team for speaking English in press conferences. But wouldn’t it be better to embrace language barriers instead of avoiding them, asks The Local’s deputy editor Becky Waterton.

As always, there’s plenty more to read on www.thelocal.se

Have a good weekend,

Emma Löfgren

Editor, The Local Sweden

Inside Sweden is our weekly newsletter for members which gives you news, analysis and, sometimes, takes you behind the scenes at The Local. It’s published each Saturday and with Membership+ you can also receive it directly to your inbox.

Member comments

  1. I’m afraid the only way I’d ever like pickled herring it to first remove the herring and then remove the pickling solution. 🙂

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

INSIDE SWEDEN

Inside Sweden: Friendship, work permit threshold and healthcare strike

The Local's editor Emma Löfgren rounds up the biggest stories of the week in our Inside Sweden newsletter.

Inside Sweden: Friendship, work permit threshold and healthcare strike

When a survey by national number-crunchers Statistics Sweden this week showed that 13 percent of foreigners don’t have a close friend, double the proportion of native Swedes who said the same thing, it got me thinking about what counts as a “close friend” anyway.

Are they our childhood friends whom we leave behind when we move countries? The ones who knew us through our childhood, our awkward teenage years and wild university days, who know all our past positives and negatives inside out, but not much about our day-to-day life?

Are they our new casual friends, who maybe aren’t yet our first call when we’re feeling down, but who know what we think about Swedish politics, what our favourite bar is, what music we like, but not anything about who we used to be (and that can also be a good thing)?

What do you think?

We’ve written many times before on The Local about how difficult a lot of foreigners find it to find friends in Sweden and this time we wanted to look at the issue from a more constructive and hopeful viewpoint, so we asked readers to tell us how they met their friends in Sweden.

I enjoyed reading all of their responses and was struck again by how these articles based on reader surveys are some of my favourite articles to write. I’m always very grateful for the fact that so many of our readers are so generous with their time, stories and insights. 

Here’s the article if you haven’t yet read it, and keep reading for more of what we’ve covered this week.

In other news

Sweden’s main business group this week attacked a proposal to exempt some jobs from a new minimum salary for work permits (as well as the bid to raise the threshold), calling it “unacceptable” political interference in the labour model which risks hurting national competitiveness.

A nationwide overtime ban involving tens of thousands of Swedish nurses and midwives got under way on Thursday afternoon, after negotiations about salaries and rotas broke down. Strikes are rare in Sweden, but what should you do if your union asks you to strike?

Planning a train trip in Sweden this summer but don’t know where to start? Try our top picks for railway travel across Sweden.

Sweden is one of many European countries struggling with brain waste, a situation where immigrants struggle to find suitable full-time work or are overqualified for their roles due to their education not being recognised. So how many immigrants in Sweden are overqualified?

Speaking of brain waste, a new analysis by Sweden’s main business group found that 51 percent of the labour migrants likely to be blocked by the new higher salary threshold I mentioned above will be graduates – not low-skilled workers as the government has claimed. The Local interviewed Karin Johansson, deputy director-general of the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise, about what this means for businesses.

Inside Sweden is our weekly newsletter for members which gives you news, analysis and, sometimes, takes you behind the scenes at The Local. It’s published each Saturday and with Membership+ you can also receive it directly to your inbox.

SHOW COMMENTS