Grandma's Lefse Recipe: A Scandinavian Holiday Tradition - Awake at the Whisk (2024)

I’m a proud Scandinavian. Eating lefse, a potato-based flatbread, for the holidays is one of my favorite traditions. This week, I finally had time to sit down with my grandma and learn her recipe and technique.

Lefse served for the holiday on Grandma's Scandinavian dishes from Norway.

My grandfather on my mother’s side (or as they say in Norway, my “morfar”) was full-blooded Norwegian. I spent a year of high school as a Rotary Exchange Student in Denmark learning the language and culture. Of the many Scandinavian recipes I’ve learned (including aebleskiver), lefse is an all-time holiday “must.”

Lefse is a simple bread made from potatoes and flour. It looks a lot like a flour tortilla. In fact, the first time my grandma Betty saw a Mexican tortilla, she asked, “Where did you get the lefse?”

The bread itself is unsophisticated, and the way it’s served is equally rustic. Simply smear one side of the lefse bread with good quality butter (I use Kerrygold), sprinkle sugar over the top, roll and eat. My mom insists this be eaten with coffee. As a little girl, I ate mine with a tall glass of milk.

In Norway, I was served a thick version of lefse alongside a hearty winter stew. We spread it with butter, but not with sugar, as a savory side to sop up the soup’s juices.

When I recently spent the afternoon making lefse with my grandma, I gleaned some critical tips:

1) Fold the flour into the potato mixture—don’t stir it. These aren’t mashed potatoes after all.

2) When rolling the dough for each piece of lefse, be careful to make the outer edges as thin as the rest of the dough.

3) If too much flour builds up on the hot lefse griddle, it takes longer for the lefse to cook. Be sure to keep the surface of the griddle clean.

Making lefse requires lots of special equipment, which I was surprised to find online through Target. I don’t own my own equipment, but that’s part of the fun. Every time I make it, I’ll have to do it with Grandma!

Butter and sugar spread on top of lefse makes the perfect treat!

Lefse Recipe
4-5 large baking potatoes, peeled and cut into wedges
½ cup cream
3 Tablespoons butter
1 cup all-purpose flour
Pinch of salt

Farmers’ Market Ingredients: potatoes, cream, butter
Supermarket Ingredients: flour, salt

Boil potatoes in a large pot of water until tender. Drain.

In a large mixing bowl, use an electric beater to mix the potatoes, butter, cream, and salt until well blended and creamy.

Using a large mixing spoon, fold the flour a third at a time into the potato mixture until it forms a firm, unsticky dough. The dough will be soft, but not sticky. You may need a little extra or a little less flour depending on the moisture in your potatoes.

Preheat lefse griddle to 375 degrees.

Break off a piece of dough about the size of a golf ball. Roll in the palm of your hand to form a ball. Place this on a generously floured board (preferably one covered with rolling cloth designed for making lefse), and gently pat the top with your hand to flatten slightly. Using a rolling pin designed for lefse, roll the dough until it’s quite thin, about ¼-inch thick, and almost translucent.

Gently slide a lefse stick under the rolled dough to loosen all the way around. Now, slide the stick under the middle of the dough and raise it off the floured board. Carry the dough on the stick to the heated lefse griddle (or a cast iron skillet) and place one side of the dough onto the surface of the griddle. Roll the stick to one side to lower the remaining dough onto the griddle.

Bake for about 3 minutes, or until golden brown spots begin to form. Flip over using the lefse stick and cook an additional 3 minutes, or until the lefse has formed golden air bubbles. Use the lefse stick to remove the finished piece of lefse from the griddle and place it on a towel to cool.

Repeat until all the dough has been used.

The lefse is wonderful eaten immediately, warm or at room temperature. Once cooled, store it in an air tight container in a cool place (Grandma set hers on the front porch or in the garage) for about a week.

Yield: 24 pieces

Grandma's Lefse Recipe: A Scandinavian Holiday Tradition - Awake at the Whisk (2024)

FAQs

Is lefse Norwegian or Scandinavian? ›

Lefse is a Norwegian treat that is especially popular around the Christmas holidays. Many Scandinavian-Americans eat lefse primarily around Thanksgiving and Christmas.

How was lefse traditionally made? ›

Lefse is a soft Norwegian flatbread, made using traditional recipes and baking methods. Lefse is usually made with potatoes, flour, butter, and milk, cream, or lard. Traditionally, lefse is cooked on a flat griddle, with particular wooden utensils used in the process. Lefse has its roots in Viking food traditions.

What do Norwegians eat with lefse? ›

Lefse is a type of Norwegian flatbread that is often (but not always) made with potatoes, flour, butter, and milk. It has a similar texture to a thin pancake and is often eaten with butter, sugar, cinnamon or brown cheese on.

What is lefse in Swedish? ›

Lefse is a delicious Scandinavian flatbread made from potatoes that's topped with delicious ingredients like butter, sugar, cinnamon, jelly or even meatballs.

Do you eat lefse warm or cold? ›

There's always a potato or two hanging around the kitchen. You will love the simplicity and versatility of this recipe. Whether you are serving these lefse warm or cooled, I guarantee they will be eaten in a flash. For another Norwegian treat, try my rosette cookies.

What does lefse mean in English? ›

ˈlefsə plural lefsen. -sən. or lefses. : a large thin potato pancake served buttered and folded.

Did Vikings eat lefse? ›

There have been claims that lefse was what sustained the Vikings on their long sea journeys, however lefse is actually a fairly new food since potatoes were introduced to Norway about 250 years ago. Its predecessor was a type of flatbread that was possibly eaten by the Vikings.

Is lefse a Christmas tradition? ›

As Christmas is quickly approaching, now is the time when family traditions are at large. One of my family's traditions around Thanksgiving and Christmas time is the making and eating of Lefse. My mom grew up in Minnesota and we have a little bit of Norwegian blood in us.

What is a famous Norwegian breakfast? ›

An extremely common breakfast dish you'll more than likely come across throughout your Norwegian cruise is laks og eggerøre, or smoked salmon and scrambled eggs.

How many times a day do Norwegians eat? ›

Norwegians typically have three or four meals a day.

What is klenning? ›

Klenning – The Trøndelag region's version of sweet lefse with butter, cinnamon and sugar. Kling – The name for sweet lefse in Buskerud, Eastern Norway.

What does lefse stand for? ›

LEfSe (Linear discriminant analysis Effect Size) determines the features (organisms, clades, operational taxonomic units, genes, or functions) most likely to explain differences between classes by coupling standard tests for statistical significance with additional tests encoding biological consistency and effect ...

Do you put lefse in the fridge? ›

Lefse should be refrigerated or frozen. Our lefse is made with no preservatives, so it can take a week or so in the fridge. In the refrigerator, it needs to stay in its sealed package or it will dry out. If you don't plan on eating it right away, toss it in the freezer.

Is lefse just a tortilla? ›

Lefse is a Norwegian flatbread that is a lot like a tortilla, but more delicate. After from intense research (Wikipedia), I found out that lefse is traditionally served with lutefisk, whitefish meat (often cod) and lye.

What is Scandinavian bread called? ›

Danish Pumpernickel is a thinly sliced coarse heavy bread made from dark rye flour. Swedish Limpa Bread is sweet rye dough flavored with anise oil. Very popular during the Christmas holiday Limpa Bread with its soft thin crust is often served with creamy butter and Lingonberry Jam.

Are potatoes native to Scandinavia? ›

The potato originated in the Andes in Latin America. They had been growing potatoes for 10,000 years when the first Europeans arrived. These early explorers brought the potato to Europe.

Is lutefisk Swedish or Norwegian? ›

Its genesis is credited to the Norwegians, but it's a dish that's served across the Nordic countries and parts of North America where those immigrants typically settled. It is called lutefisk (in Norwegian) or lutfisk (in Swedish), ludefisk (in Danish), and lipeäkala (in Finnish).

References

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