Finnish food

pure_1

New member
Hi! I am new to this group. I've started a blog for my family, my
husband is from Finland and I wanted my kids to have a record of
traditional foods. Hoping that someday they will look back and enjoy
the recipes from their childhood, plus this way we really make an
effort to eat traditional foods and expose the kids to Finnish
culinary culture!

My latest post is on jelly rolls, my husband's favorite childhood
treat. You can find it at http://cookingfinland.blogspot.com/.
 
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 08:57:25 -0800 (PST), cookingfinland
wrote:


Yea - I found pulla! Welcome to welcome to rfc. I make Swedish
cardamom bread which is very similar. I'm passing this site along to
my Fin-friend. Hopefully you'll continue to participate in the future
(you can put your website in your sig line) and not turn out to be
just be another random drive-by website dropper.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On Feb 16, 10:57?am, cookingfinland wrote:

Hi! I am Norwegian and live in the Upper Midwest. I hate Lutefisk
and Garrison Keillor. I hope you aren't one of *those people*.
 
On Feb 16, 3:17?pm, projectile vomit chick
wrote:


Not too sure what you mean by "those people!" I had no intention of
spamming, just trying to find the right audience for my small blog,
and thought there might be others interested in Finnish cooking. I'm
confused about the connection between Garrison Keillor and Finnish
cooking. I don't care for lutefisk much either, but there is so much
wonderful cooking in Scandinavia that that shouldn't be a problem!

Thanks to sf and Roy for the kind comments!
 
On Thu, 17 Feb 2011 19:35:04 -0800 (PST), cookingfinland
wrote:


Me either, he's of Scottish and Norwegian extraction... although he is
from Minnesota. Maybe the person you're responding to lumps all
Scandinavians together.


I sent your url on to my "Fin Friend" who was interested. If you have
time, please return and participate in rfc as an ordinary poster. I
think you'll be a valuable asset.

FYI: He's not here much anymore, but we used to have a poster who was
married to a "short Fin", if I remember it correctly. So you have
something in common with at least one semi-regular poster here.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
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