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    Post #1 - August 12th, 2011, 8:09 am
    Post #1 - August 12th, 2011, 8:09 am Post #1 - August 12th, 2011, 8:09 am
    We just returned from a week in Iceland. It's a beautiful, but rainy country with plenty to see and do for people that love the outdoors. Of course you can't spend a week hiking and swimming in geothermally heated swimming pools (every small town seems to have one) without getting a bite to eat.

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    The Icelandic diet is heavy on dairy. They're proud of their butter (smjor) and with good reason. Nearly every meal featured a bowl of butter to go along with dense rye bread. The butter is rich and creamy and surprisingly easy to spread, remarkable considering I only saw one brand of butter while I was there.

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    Skyr is a common breakfast food that's similar to thick yogurt in texture with a unique sour dairy flavor and a hint of sweetness. It's made with skim milk so it's a good lean source of protein. But more importantly, it's delicious. We ate it for breakfast nearly every day of the trip. It comes in a bunch of different flavors, but I enjoyed the plain with a small spoonful of sugar the best. They also have a strange thick milk they call AB milk which has a consistency similar to go-gurt. It's good with cereal, but be careful when you're buying milk at the market, it was quite a surprise to us.

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    Hot dogs are the street food of choice in Iceland. Their dogs have a richer, almost gamey flavor since they are made with a mixture of lamb and beef. The most famous hot dog stand in the country is called Bæjarins Beztu Pylsur, which has been visited by many famous people including Bill Clinton (there is a picture of him eating a hot dog up on the wall). It's located right in downtown Reykjavik and draws a crowd late at night after the bars close. It's a solid rendition and pretty cheap too, but I wouldn't rank it amongst the best I had on the trip.

    Bæjarins Beztu Pylsur
    Tryggvagotu 10
    Reykjavik

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    The best dogs I ate were at the gas stations along the Ring Road. The Ring Road is the highway that goes along the coast and it's pretty much the only way to get anywhere outside of Reykjavik. Nearly every town (in Iceland a town of 1000 people is noteworthy) has a gas station, a super market, and a swimming pool (and that's about it). The gas stations have a grill/restaurant attached that is always packed with tourists and locals alike. They ask you if you want your hot dog with grilled or fried onions, fried being the traditional Icelandic-style. Next to the counter are the typical condiments for an Icelandic hot dog (pylsur): sweet mustard and remouladi which is essentially mayonnaise with relish. The dog is boiled and has a thick casing which makes it pretty snappy. The contrast between the snappy dog and the crunchy fried onions makes for pretty great road food. The gas stations usually offer burgers and fries too, but neither were ever particularly good. They also serve a strange kind of soft serve that tastes wholly artificial, yet somehow creamy and compelling at the same time.

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    While most of the fries we ate in Iceland were typical food service fries, Icelanders have a spice mixture that they reserve particularly for fries. In fact, it's called kartoflukrydd which translates to french fries spice. It's a interesting mixture that's sweet and a little spicy. At the gas stations they have large shakers full of the stuff, which I recommend sprinkling liberally on the otherwise bland fries.

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    The city of Hofn is best known as the lobster capitol of Iceland and it hosts a lobster festival every July. So we were excited to try some fresh lobster when we got to town. Sadly, the handful of restaurants in town were selling lobster for more than it costs to get it in Chicago. We asked around for where locals get good, cheap lobster, but none was to be found. Instead we decided to eat with the locals at the small sandwich-shack by the harbor called Hafnarbúðin. They sell a decent but not great lobster roll and some pretty good sandwiches, but naturally, they specialize in hot dogs. I particularly enjoyed the deep fried hot dog (pictured above), that was juicy with a crunchy exterior.

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    They also offer an interesting local specialty, the lobster hot dog. Honestly, it didn't have much lobster flavor, but it did taste pretty good. Next to the counter is a large shelf of different candies (mostly candy bars) and they offer an impressive array of toppings for the standard (yet oddly delicious) soft serve served all over the country. This was an excellent find considering how over-priced the restaurants in Hofn were.

    Hafnarbúðin
    next to the harbor
    Hofn

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    Speaking of lobster, while we didn't find great lobster in Hofn, there is a seafood shack near the harbor in Reykjavik called Saegreifinn that specializes in lobster soup. The soup features a full flavored (butter figures prominently) broth with fluffy and generous hunks of lobster. It's excellent soul food for a cold, rainy summer's day. They also have grilled whale, but we didn't try it.

    Saegreifinn
    Geirsgata 8
    Reykjavik
    http://www.saegreifinn.is/

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    Across from Saegreifinn is an aptly named restaurant that specializes in fish and chips. It's named Icelandic Fish and Chips. From the name it sounds like a fish and chips shack, but really it's a modern, organically focused restaurant capitalizing on the nearby harbor to deliver fresh fish that is dipped in a spelt and barley batter and served with roasted potatoes. On our visit we sampled the cod, plaice, and wolf fish. The batter is thick and crunchy, yet surprisingly light with an almost nutty flavor. They serve the fish with an array of dipping sauces made with skyr that they call skyrrones (I'm guessing it's a play on skyr and mayonnaise). The sauces were decent, nice tang but not particularly flavorful, but the fish was fresh and well fried.

    Icelandic Fish and Chips
    Tryggvagötu 8
    Reykjavik
    http://www.fishandchips.is/

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    Another common food in Iceland is lamb soup. It's a simple soup of lamb stewed in a light lamb broth with carrots, onions, and turnips. It showed up on a number of menus and once again provided a nice warm base for their brisk summers. I imagine it really hits the spot when the temperature drops below freezing.

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    And of course, no trip to Iceland is complete without sampling their most famous local delicacy, hakarl. Hakarl is fermented shark and is the very definition of "acquired taste." Icelanders laughed when we told them we had tried it. It's typically eaten during the holidays and it didn't seem like very many people like it all that much. And I can understand why. When we opened the bag, the strong smell of ammonia immediately filled the room. I was the brave soul who took the first bite, and honestly, it wasn't as bad as I thought it was going to be. The texture is chewy, like low quality sushi, and the smell is stronger than the taste. Still, as the taste of ammonia rises up your nose like wasabi, you can't help but wonder who actually likes this stuff. They recommend taking a shot of brennivin along with it, and I'm really not sure which is worse. The brennivin tastes like a cheap vodka, with all the burn and harshness such a comparison brings with it. Apparently it's flavored with caraway, but I couldn't taste it. I think brennivin is just a way to drown out the ammonia flavor of the shark. Glad I tried it, though it was memorably bad more than anything else. If you are interested in trying hakarl while you're in Iceland, I highly recommend buying it from a grocery store rather than ordering it at a restaurant since the price difference is substantial.

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    While we're on the subject of Icelandic liquor, Topas is another local liquor. I'm not sure what the different flavors are, but the one I tried tasted like Jägermeister mixed with cough syrup and menthol. They seem to have a lot of specialties that are effective at warming you up on a cool day. It was more interesting than good, but it WAS pretty interesting.

    Finally on to the restaurant scene in Reykjavik. I was surprised and impressed by the variety of restaurants in downtown Reykjavik. I had read that the national cuisine was only recently making a comeback. This made a lot more sense as I was walking around Reykjavik seeing all the Indian, Thai, Italian, and vegetarian restaurants. Really, if you wanted Icelandic food that wasn't visibly catering to tourists on the hunt for exotic fare, it's pretty tough to find. Luckily I came armed with a couple good recommendations, and one not so good recommendation.

    3 Frakkar
    Pictured: whale steak
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    I had read a lot about 3 Frakkar before getting to Reykjavik. It was featured on No Reservations, recommended by all the tour books, and had a reputation for being the restaurant credited with reviving traditional Iceland cuisine in Reykjavik (funny since it opened in 1989). Not sure what it was like when it opened, but today it is clearly a tourist trap charging an arm and a leg for weird foods but not preparing them particularly well.

    We started off the meal with an order of the whale sashimi and smoked puffin. The whale was tough and stringy and served with soy sauce, wasabi, and ginger, obviously not a traditional Icelandic preparation. We had many smoked foods on the trip and they all shared a unique, campfire-like smokey flavor that is pretty different than what I'm used to. The puffin was tender, but lacked any character other than that smokey flavor that tasted good enough with mustard and rye bread. For entrees the table split an order of the cod chins, horse steak, and whale steak. The whale tasted like a poorly cooked tuna steak and was pretty tough on the outside and chewy on the inside. The horse tasted like a poorly prepared, tough steak. The cod chins were drowned in butter, making them the star of a pretty poor meal. I'm not sure what I read that convinced me this would be an authentic experience, but needless to say we didn't leave the restaurant feeling that way. I've never had puffin, whale, or horse before, so it was exciting to try them, but I suspect there are better renditions out there.

    3 Frakkar
    Baldursgata 14
    Reykjavik
    http://3frakkar.com/index.php

    Cafe Loki
    Pictured: pickled herring on rye bread
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    On the other end of the spectrum is the surprisingly low key and fun Cafe Loki. It's right next to Reykjavik's main attraction, the Hallgrímskirkja church with a statue of Leif Eriksson in front, and from the second floor windows you have a great view of it. They specialize in traditional Icelandic snacks served on rye bread and flat bread that are made in house. We ate a lot of rye bread and flat bread on the trip, and the versions served by Cafe Loki stood out as the best. The rye was moist with a little sweetness to round out the earthy flavor. The flatbread was dense and featured that same campfire-smokey flavor as the smoked puffin at 3 Frakkar that really worked to counter balance the grainy-sweet flavor. All the toppings were rich and flavorful without being heavy. I particularly enjoyed the seafood preparations. The pickled herring was sweet but still fishy (which I like!), the smoked trout was mellow and soft, and the cod mashed with potatoes (plokkfiskur) was fluffy and creamy. Also they serve something they call sheep-head jelly which I think was head cheese and the classic breakfast combination of smoked lamb with flat bread. For dessert they serve rye bread ice cream (really vanilla ice cream mixed up with crumbled rye bread) which was a big hit with my group. It's a nice casual atmosphere that was full of Icelandic families on a Saturday afternoon.

    Cafe Loki
    Lokastíg 28
    Reykjavik
    http://www.textil.is/

    Íslenski Barinn
    pictured: herring three ways with red currant mayo
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    Our last night in Iceland we had probably the best meal of the trip. Located right in the heart of downtown is a restaurant simply named Icelandic Bar. The menu posted on the wall looks a little hokey, but it was a convenient option both because it's located in the middle of the bar district and because the kitchen is open late. We showed up about 8PM on a Thursday and there were no seats available, so they took our name down and we waited at a nearby bar for a table to open up. This was the only time on the entire trip that we had any trouble finding space at a restaurant, so clearly they're doing something right (the population of Iceland is 320,000, Reykjavik 120,000, so they're not really used to crowds). The menu features new takes on Icelandic classics and everything was really well prepared. I'm sad we didn't order the horse, whale, and puffin here instead of at Three Frakkar, but my group really wasn't interested in eating that stuff again. Instead we ordered a variety of dishes ranging from pickled herring, salt cod dip in a jar, leg of lamb, grilled salmon, and the table's favorite, reindeer burger. It's definitely modern cooking with interesting dipping sauces and gourmet ingredients, but it really worked. Less impressive were the craft Icelandic beers that lacked body and balance. One interesting beer was smoked using lava, more gimmick than anything else, but worth trying once I guess.

    Íslenski Barinn
    Pósthússtræti 9
    Reykjavík
    http://www.icelandicbar.is/
    Last edited by turkob on August 12th, 2011, 12:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
  • Post #2 - August 12th, 2011, 9:46 am
    Post #2 - August 12th, 2011, 9:46 am Post #2 - August 12th, 2011, 9:46 am
    Great photos! I used to work with someone who was stationed in Iceland for a year. I always heard about eating puffin but I don't recall the seemingly obsession with hot dogs!
  • Post #3 - August 12th, 2011, 9:56 am
    Post #3 - August 12th, 2011, 9:56 am Post #3 - August 12th, 2011, 9:56 am
    Great report, Turkbob.

    Sorry to use your post as an occasion to editorialize, but this kind of post is one of my favorite things about LTH -- a thoughtful and realistic portrait of a place and time that most of us won't experience (but some will, making the thread especially helpful), and one that doesn't try to romanticize or gild the lily. You find and describe the good in things, but also round out the experience by documenting the mundane and worse. That's life. This is what many new or drive-by posters miss when they react to anything perceived as negative. This isn't a collection of paeans and potshots, thank God.
  • Post #4 - August 12th, 2011, 10:26 am
    Post #4 - August 12th, 2011, 10:26 am Post #4 - August 12th, 2011, 10:26 am
    Awesome post, and great pictures as well!
  • Post #5 - August 12th, 2011, 12:59 pm
    Post #5 - August 12th, 2011, 12:59 pm Post #5 - August 12th, 2011, 12:59 pm
    Mouthwatering, and a relatively inexpensive, short, and direct flight from the Twin Cities, I note. Time to start planning a vacation from within a vacation for one of the next few summers. Thanks for taking the time to research, taste, and share with us.
  • Post #6 - August 13th, 2011, 7:04 pm
    Post #6 - August 13th, 2011, 7:04 pm Post #6 - August 13th, 2011, 7:04 pm
    FYI: Icelandic Fish & Chips is co-owned by David Rosengarten, former contributing editor at Gourmet magazine/Food Network host.
  • Post #7 - September 2nd, 2013, 12:23 pm
    Post #7 - September 2nd, 2013, 12:23 pm Post #7 - September 2nd, 2013, 12:23 pm
    I recently spent a week in Iceland (also a week in Greenland). I'm not the photo essay type, but here are some general thoughts on Icelandic food:
    1. Reykjavik is becoming a real food destination with numerous high quality restaurants. They are part of the new Nordic cuisine movement, which is taking the traditional Nordic ingredients (fish, herbs, root vegetables) and applying sophisticated cooking techniques to them. The restaurant scene is fueled in large part by the tourist boom in Iceland, a country of 350,000 that will see over 700,000 tourists this year.
    2. Fish is, of course, the #1 ingredient and they have an excellent variety available. The most common items seems to be cod, salmon (I assume it's farmed) and langoustine.
    3. The single best piece of fish I had was arctic char, which tastes to me like a combination of salmon and trout. I assume it was farmed because I've read that Iceland is the leader in farming this kind of fish. I know that I should prefer wild fish to farmed (I certainly do with salmon), but this was one of the best hunks of seafood I've ever had, and it wasn't the way it was prepared; it was just damn good fish.
    4. Lamb is abundant, and I'd recommend trying Icelandic lamb if it's sold here. The animals run around wild, so this stuff is truly humanely raised, organic, etc., etc. I read that they once had a deal with Whole Foods, so the stuff should be available. It tends toward the stronger side of the flavor profile, and not super tender, which I think is true for animals that get to run around.
    5. Their sauces skew a bit more sweet than we're used to. Not overly so, just a bit more in that direction.
    6. Interesting that in one or two restaurants that seem to attract local families rather than tourists, the menu featured pizza, pasta and burgers. Not sure whether this is because they are tired of fish and lamb, or the pizza and pasta is cheap. Iceland is still recovering from going bankrupt not too many years ago.

    Iceland is an an absolutely stunningly beautiful country with some tasty food, to boot. Europeans have made it a major tourist destination, and it should be for us here, because it's pretty easy to get to. Of course, you have to be happy with summer days in the mid-50s and lots of clouds and rain.
  • Post #8 - July 21st, 2014, 11:34 am
    Post #8 - July 21st, 2014, 11:34 am Post #8 - July 21st, 2014, 11:34 am
    Went back to Iceland this summer and had two meals worth reporting on.

    First up, Dill is one of the top restaurants in Reykjavik. We made a reservation a few months in advance. A week before arriving we got an email asking us to confirm and telling us that the restaurant that night was featuring Esben Bang, the chef from Restaurant Maamo, a 2 star Michelin restaurant in Oslo, Norway. Fine with us. What followed was an amazing meal.

    Here's the menu, although the descriptions don't give a lot of information:

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    All cooking had been done in advance. There was a small prep area where they assembled the dishes. I didn't take pictures of all, but here are most of them.

    This is the crispy ray bread with Angelica. Ray bread is traditional bread prepared using a geothermal oven, and Angelica is a wild plant:

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    Not sure if this was the raw beef or beets (sorry):

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    This dish was a highlight. The chef said he made an emulsion with the raw oysters, almost like a mayonnaise, and topped it will a cream and dill sauce. You can't see it, but on top of the oyster puree there was a clear gelatinous film somehow made with mussels. It may seem a crime to puree oysters, but this dish burst with the flavor of the sea:

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    Bread, butter and local sea salt:

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    Next up mashed potatoes with the dirt smoked char and some chips on top. I'm not sure what dirt smoked means. It may be smoked using dung as that is a traditional technique for lamb:

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    This is the "porridge" with smoked reindeer heart. The porridge was a heavily soured dairy product (soured for a week) that was then cooked to stabilize it. The reindeer heart was essentially powdered. It didn't taste sour at all; it was thick and creamy with the saltiness of a jerky on top:

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    The lamb was great; note the edible wild flowers and pine needles on top:

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    Dessert #1 was skyr (a local, yogurt like product) with celery sorbet and a granola like coating. Celery sorbet, as least as they made it, should be staple:

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    I missed a photo of the last dessert (the wine paring at fault?), but it was butter in about three forms combined. The wine pairing was excellent, and they would generously provide additional pours of a wine if you ran out before the course did. Since I was walking back to the hotel that was a welcome generosity.

    All in all, a great evening. The chef from Oslo is standing on the right, and the chef of Dill is on the left:

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  • Post #9 - July 21st, 2014, 11:45 am
    Post #9 - July 21st, 2014, 11:45 am Post #9 - July 21st, 2014, 11:45 am
    Meal number two took place in Isafjordur, a small fishing village in the Westfjords. The proprietor of our lodging recommended Tjoruhusid. He said it was an all you can eat fish buffet, which is a turn off to me, but luckily we tried it anyway. It's one of the great fish restaurants anywhere.

    At the edge of town is a red building with no signage on it:

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    You can find the name on a small sign:

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    Go to the front door, again no sign;

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    Inside is a rustic shack with long, communal wooden tables:

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    For the food, there is no menu. They buy the best local fish available, and cook each fish up differently. They bring the pans of the fish out of the kitchen. They tell you what each fish is and what the sauce is. When the pans run out, new pans are brought out:

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    We had cod cheeks, salted cod, wolf fish, plaice, haddock, halibut and one or two others. What stunned me was how delicious the sauces were. Tasty, but never overpowering the fish, and the fish was perfectly cooked. It was killer. An Icelandic family sat at our table and one of two brothers was a fisherman. They said, and I quote: "We're Icelandic, so we know fish, and this is the best."

    It doesn't hurt, of course, that Isafjordur is a pretty romantic place even without great food:

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  • Post #10 - July 21st, 2014, 12:55 pm
    Post #10 - July 21st, 2014, 12:55 pm Post #10 - July 21st, 2014, 12:55 pm
    Jonah-

    Great stuff. Thanks for sharing.
    -Mary
  • Post #11 - July 21st, 2014, 5:42 pm
    Post #11 - July 21st, 2014, 5:42 pm Post #11 - July 21st, 2014, 5:42 pm
    I loved Iceland. Even after having tried rotted shark. One thing worth noting for any who might be interested in going, you can get some incredible deals in February. Because of the Gulf Stream, it's no colder than Chicago, and when I was there was actually a couple of degrees warmer. Plus the geothermally heated pools are much more exciting when it's chilly out. (Check out the Blue Lagoon.) Sure, you only get about 7 hours of daylight, but Icelanders make up for it with all the great restaurants. And Iceland is really beautiful in the snow.

    Plus February is when they celebrate Thorrablot, a traditional Viking holiday, so it's even easier than usual to find that rotted shark you wanted to try. (But fortunately, even the places that serve it to celebrating Icelanders only serve tiny pieces, and then serve real food.) Anyway, as winter approaches, check out Icelandair holidays -- for less than 1/3 of what it costs in the summer, you can get airfare and hotel that includes breakfast, and everything else is offered at off-season prices.

    Thanks to Jonah for reminding me that I really want to get back to Iceland.
    "All great change in America begins at the dinner table." Ronald Reagan

    http://midwestmaize.wordpress.com
  • Post #12 - September 13th, 2019, 5:04 pm
    Post #12 - September 13th, 2019, 5:04 pm Post #12 - September 13th, 2019, 5:04 pm
    We plan on going this December(great deal!). Any dining recommendations would be welcome!
  • Post #13 - October 29th, 2019, 5:33 pm
    Post #13 - October 29th, 2019, 5:33 pm Post #13 - October 29th, 2019, 5:33 pm
    hoppy2468 wrote:We plan on going this December(great deal!). Any dining recommendations would be welcome!


    In Reykjavík, we love Fiskmarkadurrin. Very central. I begin to smile when I make the reservation. Obviously fish forward. Every bite is delish and the full dinner with wine pairings cost us ~$375 for two, thanks to the strong dollar and weak Kroner. Smiling staff. Warm and Huggli, a treat.

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