Iceland review - 2016, Side 66

Iceland review - 2016, Side 66
64 ICELAND REVIEW ICELAND REVIEW 65 TRADITIONS REINVENTED Chef Gísli Matthías Auðunsson is reinventing traditional Icelandic recipes in a quest to get more of his fellow Icelanders to embrace traditional Icelandic food. BY ZOË ROBERT. PHOTOS BY ÁSLAUG SNORRADÓTTIR. Our goal is to make Icelanders proud of Icelandic traditional food. Not just during [the month of] Þorri—because that’s only part of Icelandic tradition- al food—but the whole year round,” 26-year-old chef Gísli Matthías Auðunsson tells me from the kitchen of his busy restaurant, Matur og Drykkur (‘Food and Drink’), located in the Grandi area near Reykjavík’s old harbor. The photographer and I visit during the Þorrablót midwinter festival, a time of year when Icelanders eat traditional food, mainly consisting of cured meats and fish, in celebration of old culture. The feast typically includes delicacies like blood sausage, ram’s testicles and singed sheep head. Gísli says the sheep’s head, which is first braised, then glazed, caramelized and served with Icelandic pancakes and sides, Peking duck- style, has been in such demand this year that the 750 heads he ordered are almost finished. “They’ve been so popular. Young people, too, have been ordering them, which has come as a bit of a surprise.” Foreign tourists have also been keen to try them, he adds. At Matur og Drykkur, which is named after a cherished Icelandic cook book by the same name, originally published in 1947, Gísli offers dishes which reference Icelandic food history but are prepared with a twist. “We make Icelandic traditional food—but try to make it more exciting,” he says. Dried double-smoked lamb with buttermilk; pickled herring with rye bread, beets and cured egg yolk; blood pudding, dried fruits and sherry glaze; sheep-dung-smoked Arctic char and horseradish on burnt flatbread; crispy seaweed with capelin roe; fishcakes with mashed potatoes; and rhubarb and fish stew with smoked haddock and potatoes are all among the highlights on the menu. FOOD
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