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Kräfta - a Swedish Crawfish Boil (Pic)

Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:00 pm
Posted by Stadium Rat
Metairie
Member since Jul 2004
10074 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:00 pm


quote:

The Swedish crayfish party

Crayfish have been eaten in Sweden since the 1500s. For a long while, only the aristocracy enjoyed these delicacies, as popular suspicion of shellfish was widespread. Originally, crayfish meat was used for sausage, ragout, patties or puddings.

In the mid-1800s, people started eating crayfish as they are eaten today. The crayfish feast or crayfish supper in the month of August spread through the middle classes. In the 1900s, crayfish became a national delicacy and people in all sectors of society began celebrating the occasion. The price of crayfish fell as a result of imports from Turkey and elsewhere. The crayfish feast, at which people gather to eat, drink and be merry, is a typically Swedish festivity marking the end of the summer.
This post was edited on 5/17/15 at 8:05 pm
Posted by Coater
Madison, MS
Member since Jun 2005
33488 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:02 pm to
Their lack of obesity is striking
Posted by Stadium Rat
Metairie
Member since Jul 2004
10074 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:05 pm to
At least they're wearing traditional Cajun headwear.

quote:

Due to the risk of over-fishing, restrictions on river crayfishing were introduced back in the early 1900s. The season was limited to a couple of months from August. Crayfish thus became an exclusive and much sought-after delicacy. The crayfish population in rivers and lakes has also been decimated on a number of occasions by a dreaded parasitic mould.

Today, imported crayfish are on sale all year round, but few Swedes are prepared to abandon the seasonal tradition. In early August, the media set the scene for the feast with detailed tests of the current year’s offerings, tips from celebrities and lists ranking the various brands.

In some years, Chinese crayfish are deemed best, in others those imported from the US. But Swedish crayfish - needless to say - always win. The trouble is, they are very expensive. Whatever their origin, crayfish in Sweden are cooked as the Swedes like them – in a brine, with plenty of crown dill.’

The very few who have private access, of course, catch their own crayfish. The little creatures are night animals, so fishing has to be done after dark. They are caught in wire traps and the bait is often rotten or raw fish. Crayfish must be alive when placed in the saucepan of boiling liquor.


LINK
This post was edited on 5/17/15 at 8:10 pm
Posted by hobotiger
Asbury Park, NJ
Member since Nov 2007
5353 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:07 pm to
IKEA celebrates this every year
Posted by MiloDanglers
on a dock on a bay
Member since Apr 2012
6558 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:07 pm to
Where can I get some of those crawfish party hats? Thats some next level shite
Posted by shawnlsu
Member since Nov 2011
23682 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:37 pm to
Those crawfish are huge and nicely white river crawfish. A+, do want.
Posted by RonFNSwanson
1739 mi from the University of LSU
Member since Mar 2012
24102 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 8:45 pm to
I really hate the word crayfish. I had to stop reading
Posted by hawgfaninc
https://youtu.be/torc9P4-k5A
Member since Nov 2011
52683 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 9:18 pm to
quote:

I really hate the word crayfish.
Posted by tigerfootball10
Member since Sep 2005
9848 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 9:25 pm to
More beer on the table than crawfish. Can't really bang on them
Posted by AppyTiger
God's Country
Member since May 2015
227 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 9:43 pm to
We did a deal over there 7-8 years ago. Brought our crawfish, rig and Zats products and showed them our way. They were dumbfounded at a 120 qt pot and cooking 40 lbs at a time. The Swedes take about a dozen at a time boil them in a sauce pan on a stove in crown dill, beer (stout), water, sugar, and salt. They prefer to eat them cold. They're really proud of the ones they let soak overnight in the dill mixture in the fridge. The Finnish do pretty much the same. They dissect them and pick them down like a crab. Ripping tails and sucking heads to the tune of 30 crawfish per minute blows their mind.
This post was edited on 5/17/15 at 9:47 pm
Posted by Stadium Rat
Metairie
Member since Jul 2004
10074 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 9:51 pm to
quote:

They prefer to eat them cold.
Can't say I disagree with this.
Posted by Zappas Stache
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
42278 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 9:54 pm to
It's that time of the year for the Swedish crayfish thread....like I've said before....they ain't that great....Aquavit and sills are more better.
Posted by SammyTiger
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Feb 2009
78123 posts
Posted on 5/17/15 at 10:48 pm to
Posted by pookiebear
TX
Member since Apr 2014
342 posts
Posted on 5/18/15 at 12:17 am to
first thought is that the word crayfish rlly kills me even tho im rlly tolerant with pronunciation and stuff.
but how do crawfish grow in sweden?!?
]
Posted by Kajungee
South ,Section 6 Row N
Member since Mar 2004
17033 posts
Posted on 5/18/15 at 7:45 am to
Had some crawfish in Jamaica a few years back.
Sitting in some side road Jerk shack when a guy comes walking down the road selling little plastic bag of boiled crawfish for about 35 cents a dozen.
Definitely a few different spices but were still damn good.

In Jamaica they call them "Janga". Not to be confused with the "Ganja" which they also have plenty of.
Posted by Stadium Rat
Metairie
Member since Jul 2004
10074 posts
Posted on 5/18/15 at 8:25 am to
Google is a great tool.

Jamaican Janga

2 cups distilled white vinegar
1 Scotch bonnet chili, seeded
1 clove garlic, minced
1 small onion, sliced
4 allspice berries, crushed
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 pound cooked crawfish tails

In a small nonreactive saucepan, prepare a marinade, using all the ingredients except the crawfish. Heat the marinade over a medium flame until it boils.

Place the cleaned crawfish in a crock. Pour the boiling marinade over the shrimp. Cover the crock and store it in the refrigerator for at least 12 hours before serving.

Serve chilled.
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