Friday, September 14, 2018

Lefse/Norwegian Potato Flatbread

Norway is one of the most known Scandinavian country. With Oslo as its capital, Norwegian cuisine is a traditional form of their own cuisine cooked with the ingredients really available in Norway. However this cuisine is influenced by some globalization hence pastas, pizzas, tacos are easily available in Norwegian cuisine. Bread is a staple food of Norwegian cuisine. Hence varieties of breads are available. One of the most known Norwegian bread is Lefse, this is a soft flatbread made out of potato,milk or cream and flour. Lefse is a traditional Norwegian flatbread which is quite soft and bit tricky to handle. Usually prepared with mashed potatoes, this flatbread is worked with little flour and roll out flat as much as you can. Once cooked on stovetop, this bread can be enjoyed with different sorts of spreads. From butter to jam, peanut butter to nutella, you can also eat them with savoury fillings as well. Just make some wraps with this Lefse stuffed with meats and cheese, am sure these wraps will definitely fill your hungry tummies. When conserved properly, lefse stays prefect for a week in fridge. Once freezed, lefse can be conserved for almost three months.

Norwegian Lefse, Lefse
Lefse can be eaten cold however you can also warm it through microwave cooking for few seconds. Some regional variations do exists in Norway, though this bread is flatbread, some versions are very interesting to know. Tynnlefse which is made in Central Norway is rolled very thin and stuffed with butter, sugar and cinnamon while Tjukklefse is a thicker version and its served as cake with coffee. Check Wikipedia to see the varieties of lefse exists in Norwegian cuisine.Do you know,  Scandinavian Americans eats lefse for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Family members often gather together to cook lefse as this flatbread needs some skills and patiences which is passed down from generations to generations. Nowadays Lefse can be found in grocery stores easily as most of the Norwegian families tends to purchase them easily rather than making it. If you are an expert in rolling our own Indian rotis, trust me you will definitely roll out some prefect Lefse with less efforts. Am running a month of blogging marathon with A-Z International flatbreads as theme for this whole month of September. And here comes Lefse from Norway for this month's theme.

Lefse, Norwegian Flatbread,Norwegian Potato Lefse

Recipe Source: Here

1/4kg Potatoes
1+1/2cups Flour
1tsp Salt
1tsp Sugar
75grams Butter
1/2cup Cream

Peel and cook the potatoes with enough water until they turns soft. Now mash them well and keep aside.

In a large bowl, beat the butter, cream, salt and sugar until they turns smooth.

Add the mashed potatoes, flour and mix everything slowly well until the mixture turns as a smooth dough.

Norwegian Lefse, Norwegian Potato Flatbread


Make a medium sized balls from the dough.

Lightly flour the worked surface and roll the ball with rolling pin as thin as possible.

Heat a griddle, drop the rolled lefse and cook until the bubbles form, cook on both sides until lefse turns golden brown.

Place the lefse on a dam towel to cool slightly and cover them with a towl until they are ready to serve.

Lefse, Norwegian Flatbread

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Check out the Blogging Marathon page for the other Blogging Marathoners doing BM# 92

13 comments:

Gayathri Kumar said... Reply To This Comment

Very interesting to read about the different varieties of lefse. The addition of cream, butter and potatoes must give this bread a really soft texture. Looks so yum, Priya.

vaishali sabnani said... Reply To This Comment

Very interesting bread with potatoes and cream . When I read the word Cream , I rubbed my eyes twice , then I realised that we use malai in our Indian breads :))
Excellent choice and a super duper bread which I would love to taste as well as try .

Sowmya :) said... Reply To This Comment

Potato and butter and cream in a flatbread would be so awesome!I so wish I could grab them off the screen and chomp away! Bookmarking!

code2cook said... Reply To This Comment

Priya 100 percent you are ready to participate in geographical contests or can become a lecturer for this subject. So much about the international cuisine, I am yet to finish Indian stuff. This bread Looking absolutely a comfort food to me.

code2cook said... Reply To This Comment

Priya kuch bhi bana sakti hai, baking expert@<a href="

Harini R said... Reply To This Comment

That is such an amazing flatbread. Is it maple syrup you dunked it in? I want that bite :)

cookwithrenu said... Reply To This Comment

Interesting bread is this with cream and potatoes and an Interesting pick for the letter N.

Srivalli said... Reply To This Comment

Priya I am so surprised that you are yet to make Lefse! I enjoyed it so much when I had made it previously. and your bread has turned out so well. Agree with honey and butter it tastes out of the world!

Mayuri Patel said... Reply To This Comment

These flatbreads definitely must be so soft because of the potatoes. What a lovely contribution for Letter L and also love all the information you write with each flatbread.

Sandhya Ramakrishnan said... Reply To This Comment

That is such an interesting bread Priya! Love all the different kinds of Lefse and Great to know that they can be frozen and used later. Great choice for the alphabet.

preeti garg said... Reply To This Comment

Such a interesting and soft bread with addition of cream and potatoes.

Ritu Tangri said... Reply To This Comment

Oh my! How soft this bread would be with cream, butter and potatoes! You really have done a thorough research on International flatbreads.

Padmajha said... Reply To This Comment

Nice to read about this bread Priya. The flatbread looks so good and must have tasted so good with the cream and potatoes in it!