Bakeproof: Scandi baking

Indulge in sweet, spicy comfort food direct from the heart of Scandinavia. Anneka Manning’s Bakeproof recipes for buttery biscuits, luscious cakes and more-ish cinnamon buns from Sweden, Norway and Denmark will infuse your kitchen with irresistible aromas and captivate all who taste them.

Bakeproof: Scandi baking

Source: Alan Benson

Close your eyes as you tear apart a freshly baked kanelbullar or bite into a crunchy sweet serinakaker, and it’s almost like you can feel vivid puffs of reindeer breath on the back of your neck and hear the pounding of Viking feet returning to home soil after a session of pillaging. Scandinavia is a very special part of the world and I love its baking traditions as much as its modern reputation for über coolness in design circles.

Subtly aromatic with spices such as the long-ago Viking discoveries of saffron and cardamom, warming with cinnamon, allspice, black pepper, nutmeg, caraway and ginger, and so often comfortingly nutty and yeasty, Scandinavian baking offers a big, warm and deliciously edible hug. These recipes will take you on a quick but very satisfying bakery tour of Sweden, Norway and Denmark.

Let’s start with sweet little serinakaker. These delightful almond butter biscuits are often included in the ‘Seven Sorts’ – the traditional array of cakes and cookies you’ll find on a Christmas table in Norway – but worth cooking and eating any day of the year.

Next stop is Sweden for some kladdkaka. The word ‘kladd’ means sticky, and this chocolate cake is possibly Sweden’s most popular for a very good and gooey reason. It’s rich, dense and deliberately undercooked so the centre stays nice and sticky.

Toscakake is a favourite in Denmark and Sweden. A buttery cake topped with a baked-on caramel-almond topping, it’s beautiful to behold and amazing to eat.

For one with lots of kid appeal (and as a treat for your inner child), I highly recommend skoleboller. These sweet cardamom-spiced buns, at home on afternoon tea tables all over Norway, have a luscious vanilla custard centre and a topping of glace icing and coconut. Kind of like an Aussie finger bun, but with custard.

Made with almonds and cinnamon, and perfect for dunking in a mug of coffee (and to make on 4 October – Sweden’s National Cinnamon Bun Day), kanelbullar are a wonderfully warming morning tea twist.

Finish the day with the very traditional Norwegian eplepai. Really an apple cake rather than an apple pie, but best served warm in scoops and eaten with eyes closed, picturing those reindeer and Vikings…

 

 

Cook Anneka's recipes 


 

Norwegian almond butter biscuits (serinakaker)
Source: Alan Benson
Swedish sticky chocolate cake (kladdkaka)
Swedish sticky chocolate cake (kladdkaka) Source: Alan Benson
Caramel almond cake (toscakake)
Source: Alan Benson
School buns (skoleboller)
Source: Alan Benson
Swedish cinnamon and almond twisted buns (kanelbullar)
Source: Alan Benson
Norwegian apple pie (eplepai)
Source: Alan Benson
Photography by Alan Benson. Styling by Sarah O'Brien. Food preparation by Tina McLeish. Creative concept by Lou Fay.

 

Anneka's mission is to connect home cooks with the magic of baking, and through this, with those they love. For hands-on baking classes and baking tips, visit her at . Don't miss what's coming out of her oven via  and .

 


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3 min read
Published 4 April 2016 9:36am
Updated 22 August 2016 12:02pm
By Anneka Manning

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