Cookbook:Cuisine of Iceland

Cookbook | Recipes | Ingredients | Cuisines

| European cuisines
Lifrarpylsa: liver sausage, cooking in a pot.
Harðfiskur: wind dried fish.

Þorramatur (Thorramatur, food of the þorri) is a selection of traditional Icelandic food, consisting mainly of meat and fish products cured in a traditional manner, cut into slices or bits and served with rúgbrauð (dense and dark rye bread), butter and brennivín (an Icelandic aquavite). Þorramatur is consumed during the ancient Nordic month of þorri (Thorri), in January and February, particularly at the mid-winter feast of Þorrablót (Thorrablot) as a tribute to old culture. Being thus connected with the tradition of Þorrablót festivals, Þorramatur is most often served as a buffet.

Dishes

Þorramatur consists of many different foods, including:

During the month of þorri, þorri buffets are quite popular in Iceland where many restaurants in Reykjavík and elsewhere serve þorramatur which is almost always served on wooden platters, called trog (trough). At these gatherings, Icelandic Brennivín is often consumed in copious amounts.

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