Rehydrate fish by soaking it completely in ice water for a day, changing water several times, and keep in refrigerator. Lutefisk can be baked, steamed or poached. Luann Boyer recommends baking. While ...
Chris Dorff, president of the 105-year-old Olsen Fish Co. in Minneapolis, thinks the way to save lutefisk is to innovate. The dried-rehydrated fish dish that’s been declining in popularity in recent ...
"Oh lutefisk, oh lutefisk, how fragrant your aroma. "Oh lutefisk, oh lutefisk, you put me in a coma." Stan Boreson's record was playing in the Scandinavian bakery in Stanwood where we stopped for ...
It's wiggly. It's jiggly. And it tastes like, well, you be the judge. Lutefisk has a bad reputation for being smelly and foul-tasting. But those who love it swear by it. Like Tom Swanson of rural ...
We've heard about good holiday foods, now it's time for the bad: Listeners share their tales of unappetizing seasonal dishes, from Jello with mayonnaise to heavy candied fruit bread to that dried ...
Lutefisk -- dried cod soaked in a lye solution and then rinsed and cooked -- is a traditional Scandinavian-heritage American food tradition, often prepared at Christmas. Pictured is lutefisk prepared ...
It's terribly stinky at our family Christmas Eve evening meal. Each year, the center platter dons a fish with a texture that reminds me of Jell-O. Fish Jell-O for Christmas? It's technically lutefisk.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Cut lutefisk into serving size pieces. Wrap each piece in tin foil. Punch holes in the bottom of each package. Put a baking rack on a baking sheet with sides, and put ...
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Place lutefisk pieces in a baking dish and sprinkle with salt. Let stand at least half an hour. Drain the liquid that the salt has drawn out of the fish and discard. Press ...
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