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"True love is like ghosts, which everyone talks about and few have seen."

Francois de La Rochefoucauld



 


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Featured Food Articles

Four Changes You Need To Be Aware Of In The New Food Pyramid
It has been twelve years since the United States Department of Agriculture has updated the Food Pyramid. Most of us are familiar with the old one. That pyramid emphasized foods you should eat more of on the bottom of the pyramid with foods to be eaten in ...

The Importance of Food Intolerance Testing
If you find that certain foods make your body react adversely then you might have food intolerance. Having a food intolerance is not dangerous but it can produce cause unpleasant symptoms when you eat food that your body finds it difficult to cope with. ...

What Is A Raw Food Diet?
Raw food is food that is uncooked and unprocessed. It still contains important enzymes which assist in the digestion and absorption of food. Only this kind of food has functional "live" enzymes, which die when food is cooked over 118 degrees F. ...





'Thorrablot': An Icelandic Winter Food Festival
 
Holidays and festivals are among the most important aspects of Icelandic culture. They mirror not only Iceland's character but also that of its people. Icelanders await and prepare for these lavish celebrations with reverence and anticipation.

An Age-Old Custom
=============
In Iceland, as in any other country, a combination of nature, folklore, religious beliefs, socioeconomic factors, and history influences every celebration. However, it is the tenacious adherence of Icelanders to their ancient customs-which date back to Iceland's pre-Christian, heathen history-that best characterizes their festivals such as 'Žorrablot' (Thorrablot).

A Feast of Traditional Viking Food
=====================
One of the most awaited Icelandic event is Žorrablot, 'The Blessing of Žorri,' which commences on the first day of Žorri, the fourth month of Icelandic Winter. In standard calendar, it always begins on a Friday between the 19th and the 25th of January and ends on a Saturday between the 18th and the 24th of February. The highlight of this month-long annual festivity is the consumption of traditional Viking food. These delicacies include 'sviš' (boiled lamb's head), 'hįkarl' (putrefied Greenlandic shark meat), 'skyr' (yogurt made with 'rennet' [a dried extract made from the stomach lining of hoofed mammals such as cattle, sheep, and goats]), 'flatkokur' (flat, thin rye breads eaten with butter), 'hardfiskur' (dried fish, eaten with butter), 'lifrarpylsa' (pudding made out of lamb's liver), and 'brennivķn' (an alcoholic beverage distilled from potatoes and flavored with the seeds of caraway herb).

The diet and eating habits of the Icelandic people, like those of many other nationalities, have largely changed in the passing of time, so it is unsurprising to know that many Icelanders now eat food prepared in the old fashion only during festivals.

In a Nutshell
---------------
'Viking' is any of a seafaring Scandinavian people who raided the coasts of northern and western Europe from the eighth through the tenth century.

Tracing the Origin
============
Many Icelandic historians say that the earliest extant reference to the word Žorrablot can be found in the late-fourteenth-century Old Icelandic collection of manuscript 'Flateyjarbók,' (the Flatey book). According to the book, a certain King Žorri held a festive offering every late Winter to ask the deities to spare his kingdom from the harshness of the freezing season. Thus, many people believe that Icelandic Winter's fourth month, 'Žorri' (Thorri)-when the season is at its mildest-was named after the said king, who started the festival in the first place. Through the passing of time, Icelanders eventually came to regard the king as an Icelandic Winter god. To other people, however, Žorrablot means 'Feast of Thor'-an ancient feast originally celebrated back during Iceland's pagan times in honor of the Norse god Thor.

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Celebrating in the Modern Day
===================
Whatever its real origin, Žorrablot to this day remains to be a standard part of the Icelandic social calendar, and it has even been adopted by many neighboring countries like Denmark, Greenland, Norway, and Sweden.

As festivities take place in Winter, most of the food served are preserved in some way-dried, pickled in whey, putrefied, salted, or smoked. And amidst this food galore are children playing traditional games, dancing, singing Old Icelandic songs, and heavy drinking (especially that 'brennivķn' and other alcoholic beverages are, in Winter, ideal for warming the body and stirring the spirits).

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References:
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"High Days and Holidays in Iceland." [http://www.randburg.com/is/mm/high.html] 06/06/04.

[http://travel.yahoo.com/p-travelguide-759291-iceland_eating-I] 06/06/04.

[http://www.vnlnd.net/author/FB01A400.htm] 06/07/04.

The Icelandic Society of Greater New York. "Why Do We Celebrate Žorrablót." [http://www.icelandicsocietyny.com/thorri_whycelebrate.htm] 06/06/04.

'The Troth Official Homepage.' "Rites and Ways of the Troth."
[http://www.thetroth.com/ourfaith/rites.html] 06/08/04.

"Žorrablót."[http://www.icelandichorse.is/thorrab.html] 06/08/04.




Food News



French Tribune

Which foods contribute most to our sodium intake?
Washington Post
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Asset tests put food stamps out of reach in some states
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Business Insider

Food price rises fuel inflation
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Inhabitat

Walmart Announces Healthy Food Label and Effort to Reduce Sodium, Fat and ...
Inhabitat
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NY caterer accused of violating kosher food laws
Broadcast Newsroom
Morrell claims the attorney for the chef and the general manager is trying to get him to drop an unrelated lawsuit. Among observant Jews, kosher law defines how foods must be prepared and what foods are unfit for consumption, such as shrimp and pork.

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