Þorramatur

Þorramatur

Þorramatur (Thorramatur, food of the "þorri") is a selection of traditional Icelandic food, consisting mainly of meat and fish products cured in a traditional manner, cut into slices or bits and served with rúgbrauð (dense and dark rye bread), butter and brennivín (an Icelandic akvavit). Þorramatur is consumed during the ancient Nordic month of "þorri" (Thorri), in January and February, particularly at the mid-winter feast of Þorrablót (Thorrablot) as a tribute to old culture. Being thus connected with the tradition of Þorrablót festivals, Þorramatur is most often served as a buffet.

History

Þorramatur is an example of invented tradition that first emerged with the midwinter festivals of regional associations of migrants that had moved from the Icelandic countryside to Reykjavík during the urbanisation boom of the post-WWII-era. These festivals were very popular in the 1950's and 1960's and some of them are still held every year although their impact on Reykjavík nightlife has greatly diminished. Sometimes at these events, there would be served "Icelandic food" or "Icelandic food by ancient custom". This was usually a buffet of country food, often particular for the region in question and quite familiar to the people attending, but which had become rare on the tables of ordinary city-dwelling Icelanders by the middle of the 20th century.

The idea of connecting this kind of buffet to the month of Þorri and the Þorrablót festivals, which had been held by many student associations since the late 1800's, was of the restaurant "Naustið" in Reykjavík. In 1958 the restaurant started advertising "Þorramatur", which is the first mention of the word in Icelandic texts. The food was served in large wooden troughs, containing enough food for four people, that were copies of old troughs that could be seen at the National Museum of Iceland. The idea, according to the owner, was to give people who were not members of a regional association the opportunity to taste traditional country food. It was also an attempt to revive an otherwise rather dull season for restaurants. The attempt was successful, as the idea immediately caught on and boosted the popularity of Naustið, even though it was quickly copied by other restaurants. Very soon, many of the regional associations and the student associations which organised Þorrablót festivals every year, started serving Þorramatur buffets at their events.

Þorramatur has undergone many changes since the 1950s. The large midwinter festivals of associations in Reykjavík have been supplemented by many smaller ones and nowadays even informal family gatherings can be called Þorrablót, which has become defined by the serving of Þorramatur, i.e. the consumption of Þorramatur is the necessary and sufficient condition for any kind of party to be called "Þorrablót". Originally, this led to the standardisation of the buffet around a few foods mass-produced by large meat-production houses for the Þorrablót season, whereas before it often had to be locally procured. Not least, Þorrablót festivals have become one of the high points of the year in the rural countryside and villages around Iceland in the last three decades. Being thus exported from the city to the countryside the buffet has come to reflect again regional culture and traditions.

Þorramatur has also changed to reflect changing tastes. The traditional method of storing meat by laying it in lactic acid, which gives the food a characteristic sour taste, is unfamiliar to most generations of Icelanders living today and therefore a Þorramatur buffet usually has a choice between sour and unsour pieces of the same food, served on separate trays as the acid readily contaminates food it comes in contact with. Some of the food, for example the rams' testicles, has to be cured by the acid before serving though. A number of foods have been added to the buffet that have never gone out of fashion in Icelandic cuisine, such as smoked lamb, fermented shark and dried fish, which are still commonly consumed in all seasons. Þorramatur also has included some novelties, traditional food that was strictly regional and even rare as such, and unfamiliar even to the older generation. Examples include seals' flippers, known only from the Breiðafjörður area, which is sometimes, albeit rarely, served as part of Þorramatur.

Dishes

Þorramatur consists of many different foods, including:

* Kæstur hákarl, putrefied Greenland shark
* Súrsaðir hrútspungar, the testicles of rams pressed in blocks, boiled and cured in lactic acid.
* Svið, singed and boiled sheep heads, sometimes cured in lactic acid
* Sviðasulta, head cheese made from "svið", sometimes cured in lactic acid
* Lifrarpylsa (liver sausage), a sausage made from the offal and liver of sheep kneaded with rye flour
* Blóðmör (blood-fat; also known as slátur, meaning slaughter), a type of blood pudding, which is prepared like lifrarpylsa without the liver and adding blood.
* Harðfiskur, wind-dried fish (often cod, haddock or seawolf), served with butter
* Rúgbrauð (rye bread), traditional Icelandic rye bread
* Hangikjot, (hung meat), smoked and boiled lamb or sheep meat
* Lundabaggi, sheep’s loins wrapped in the meat from the sides, pressed and cured in lactic acid
* Selshreifar, seal's flippers cured in lactic acid

During the month of "þorri", þorri buffets are quite popular in Iceland where many restaurants in Reykjavík and elsewhere serve þorramatur which is almost always served on wooden platters, called "trog" (trough). At these gatherings, Icelandic Brennivín is often consumed in copious amounts.

References

* Þorramatur [http://www.grapevine.is/default.aspx?show=paper&part=fullstory&id=1059] from the Reykjavík Grapevine, Iceland's main English-language newspaper. Fetched 28 November 2006.
* [http://artruch.wordpress.com/2007/01/26/happy-thorrablot/ Þorrablot Menu]
* [http://www.isholf.is/gullis/jo/feasts_and_celebrations.htm#thorri Icelandic feasts]

Further reading

* Björnsson, Árni. 1986. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/16574737 Þorrablót á Íslandi] . Reykjavík: Bókaklúbbur Arnar og Örlygs.
* Björnsson, Árni. 2007. Everyday Life in Traditional Iceland: Marking the seasons. Paper presented at the Beck Lectures on Icelandic Literature, University of Victoria, September 26. Electronic document, http://gateway.uvic.ca/beck/wo_audio.html (around 1:14:00 - 1:16:45).
* Hastrup, Kirsten. 1998. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/37935069 A place apart: an anthropological study of the Icelandic world] . Oxford; New York: Clarendon Press; Oxford University Press. (see pages 96-107)
* Lacy, Terry G. 1998. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38024135 Ring of seasons: Iceland, its culture and history] . Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. (see pages 58+)
* Simpson, Jacqueline. 1987. Review of Þorrablót á Íslandi by Árni Björnsson. Folklore 98(2):243-244.
* Torres, Jessica. 2008. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-nJzn6tWJM Thorrablot: Consuming Icelandic Identity]


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