Reykjavík Grapevine - 24.06.2005, Side 30

Reykjavík Grapevine - 24.06.2005, Side 30
30 Oddities: Shark, Salmon Roe and Skate fall into this category. All might be worth trying, but few people make meals of any of these items. Other advice: the most-recommended fish monger in the 101 area is Fiskbúðin Vegamót. Otherwise, Hagkaup gets praise, as does Sægreifinn and the booths at Kolaportið, the flea market open on weekends. Fresh fish lasts up to two days before preparation, assuming you have a good refrigerator. If going to a cookout, bring a cooler. Finally, Icelanders are famous for being extraordinarily picky about fish: if you can get one to help you choose, you’ll be treated very well. Fiskbúðin Vegamót, Nesvegur 100, 170 Seltjarnarnes, Phone: 562-1070. Sægreifinn, Verbúð 8, Geirsgata, 101 Reykjavík Hagkaup, Kringlan, 103 Reykjavík, Phone: 568-9300. Haddock (Ýsa): While cod is the most famous fish export and has been the lifeblood of the local economy, locals have always preferred haddock. Both are white fish and taste excellent breaded, and both taste a good deal better fresh than frozen. Easily cooked in a saucepan, but not to be grilled. This typically costs 1200 ISK a kilo. Cod (Þorskur): Served in fish sticks and fried patties throughout the world, you don’t know how delicate and flavourful this fish is until you’ve eaten it fresh. Cook in a saucepan or in the oven. Typically 1200 ISK a kilo. Salmon (Lax): You know the fish. Fresh it’s great. Grilled is good. But for the real speciality, try graflax, something between smoked and a kind of pickled salmon. DO NOT COOK THIS! If it is red, it is ready to eat. Slice it against the grain, serve on bread or, if you can somehow find one, a bagel. Price of graflax ranges from 1800 ISK up. Salmon steaks typically 1000 to 1200 ISK per kilo. Monkfish (Skötuselur): Hands- on ugliest and tastiest animal in the planet, this fish was featured in this year’s Bocuse d’Or, the premiere culinary competition in Europe. Only the tail of this beast can be eaten, but oh the delights. Like lobster, only much much better, you can cook this on a grill, pan or oven, but it is highly recommended that you marinate overnight in a garlic and butter mixture to maximize on the flavour. Typically 1400 ISK a kilo. Catfish (Steinbítur): Extremely popular ocean-going catfish, this is a darker, stronger tasting fish, and is good on the grill. Halibut (Lúða): A light, loose flounder type fish. This is a good summer fish, to be cooked under a broiler. Typically 1200 ISK a kilo. First of all, you need to know that there is a quota on imported cheeses and meats in Iceland. In fact, you may have found this out if you tried to bring a sausage or cheese back from your visit abroad. With this in mind, realize that you can go upstairs at Iða, the large bookstore on Lækjargata, and come face to face with a refrigerator full of prosciutto, jamón Serrano, a range of cheese from France, Italy and Spain, the works. In fact, happy as you may be to discover this, you may become ecstatic to find that you can get all these foreign meats and cheeses thrown onto a home-baked roll and served to you for 700 ISK. To repeat: foreign meats and cheese, Yndisauki. Okay, if you’ve got that down, we can move on to foie gras, truffle oil, caviar, black rice vinegar, high-quality olive oil, and olives. The shelves at this deli are stocked with the dozens of items that expats from throughout Europe and beyond force their relatives to mule to Iceland during visits. Iða, Yndisauki Lækjargata 2a. Phone: 511-8090. by Bart Cameron Don’t Make Your Family Mule Those Sausages: Stock Up at Yndisauki Buy Fish FOREIGNER’S GUIDE TO BUYING FISH The Grapevine Celebrates Ichthyology 3 Luxus Dried Banana Slices. 129 ISK for 250 grams at, you guessed it, 10-11. True, when dried you don’t get vitamins from fruit, but you do get roughage. Mmm. Roughage. And the package, if not the product itself, is from sunny Kópavogur, home of the largest shopping mall in the country. GRAPEVINE’S PURCHASES THAT JUSTIFY EXISTENCE 1 Picture postcards from The Museum of Photography. Beautifully shot black and whites of Iceland during less developed times available for 50 ISK a pop. No waterfalls, puffins or geysers. Perfect not only for friends back home, but for your desk or wall. The Museum of Photography, Tryggvagata 15, 101 Reykjavík. 2 Wool. For people learning the language, the lady working in the tourist shop gives you the Icelandic lesson of the day, and the wool you get can be worked into a handy pair of mittens or socks. 296 ISK per 100 metres of wool at Vík Wool, with similar prices at other shops. Available throughout the country. Shopping 4 Old School University Book Bag. Good quality canvas and handsome 70s styling come together in the Háskóli Íslands book bag, great for use as hand luggage or shopping. Available at the University Book Store for 500 ISK, with a Reykjavík City Library version for the same price available... at the Reykjavík City Library. by Bart Cameron You’ve come to an island in the middle of the Atlantic, home of the best fishing waters in the world, and you’re ready to get to eating the local specialities. The difficulties are that fish has different names locally, and walking into a fish monger doesn’t feel like the easiest thing for a tourist to do. Here the Grapevine attempts to explain and translate the essentials in buying fish. How to plan: First you need to know what occasion you plan on cooking for. If you’re at a hostel or guesthouse, check to see if you have an oven. All you need for good fish is a saucepan or a barbecue, but it’s best to know what you have when you go to buy. H .S .

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