Kalvdans
Kalvdans | |
---|---|
Type | Dessert |
Place of origin | Scandinavia |
Main ingredients | Colostrum milk, water |
Cookbook:Kalvdans Kalvdans |
Kalvdans (lit. 'dance of calf') is a classical Scandinavian dessert. It is made from unpasteurized colostrum milk, the first milk produced by a cow after giving birth.[1]
Kalvdans has a long tradition in Swedish cuisine. It is mentioned in the encyclopedia Project af swensk grammatica from 1682. The encyclopedia mentions 'kalvost' (lit. calf-cheese) as an alternative name.[2] The name kalvdans refers to the jiggly pudding-like constistency of the dessert.[3] Swedish emigrants brought the tradition of kalvdans to North America, as well. It is however rarely consumed today, as very few families keep cows of their own.[4]
In preparing the dessert, the colostrum milk is mixed with water and carefully heated.[1][5] Due to the high levels of protein in the colostrum milk, it coagulates and hardens when boiled (much like eggs do). Thus the dessert gets a pudding-like consistency.[6]
Due to Swedish health regulations, unpasteurized milk may only be sold directly from the farms. Thus the capacity to produce kalvdans is somewhat limited.[6] As a consequence kalvdans is very rarely prepared in Swedish households today.[2] In 2008 kalvdans, along with four other Swedish dishes, was included in the 'Ark of Taste' of the Slow Food movement.[7]
A related dessert is råmjölkspannkaka.[2] Similar desserts like kalvdans exists in other countries. In Iceland, a pudding called Ábrystir is made out of colostrum milk. In England colostrum milk, or beestings as it is called locally, was traditionally used for puddings. In India Junnu is a dessert made out of colostrum milk from buffaloes.[6] In Norwegian and Danish dialects, the word kalvedans sometimes refers to a type of jelly made by veal meat.[3][8]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 receptfavoriter.se. Kalvdans med råmjölk
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Slow Food Göteborg. Kalvdans
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Svensk etymologisk ordbok (1922). p. 293 kalmera-Kalven
- ↑ Kaplan, Anne R., Marjorie A. Hoover, and Willard B. Moore. The Minnesota Ethnic Food Book. Saint Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1986. p. 137
- ↑ Svenska landsmål och svenskt folkliv, Vol 51–54. P.A. Norstedt & Söner, 1949 p. 62
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Taffel.se. Kalvdans: Utrotningshotad delikatess
- ↑ Borås Tidning. Prisad slow food i Eggvena
- ↑ Arkiv for/för nordisk filologi / Fjerde Bind. 1888. p. 137