Latvian cuisine typically consists of agricultural products, with meat featuring in most main meal dishes. Fish is commonly consumed due to Latvia's location on the eastern shore of the Baltic Sea.

Latvian cuisine has been influenced by other countries of the Baltic rim.[1] Common ingredients in Latvian recipes are found locally, such as potatoes,[2] wheat, barley, cabbage, onions, eggs and pork. Due to pronounced four seasons, the Latvian cuisine is markedly seasonal and each time of the year has its own distinctive products and dishes.[3] Latvian food is generally quite fatty and uses few spices.[4]

Meals

Contemporary Latvians usually eat three meals a day. Breakfast is normally light and usually consists of sandwiches or an omelette, with a drink, often milk. Lunch is eaten from noon to 3 p.m. and tends to be the main meal of the day; as such it can include a variety of foods, and sometimes also soup as an entrée and a dessert. Supper is the last meal of the day, with some choosing to eat another large meal. Consumption of ready-made or frozen meals is now common.[4]

Common foods and dishes

Latvian "Lido" lunch with cold beet soup, sauerkraut, cutlet, gherkin, kefir and kvass

Latvian cuisine is typical of the Baltic region and, in general, of Northern Europe. The food is high in butter and fat while staying low in spices except for black pepper, dill or grains/seeds, such as caraway seeds. Latvian cuisine originated from the peasant culture and is strongly based on crops that grow in Latvia's maritime, temperate climate. Rye or wheat, oats, peas, beets, cabbage, pork products, and potatoes are the staples. Latvian cuisine offers plenty of varieties of bread and dairy products, which are an important part of the cuisine. Meat features in most main meal dishes, but fish also is commonly consumed, especially in the coastal areas next to Baltic Sea. Both are also smoked.[3]

A lot of common dishes in contemporary Latvia come directly from other countries, often as a result of their historical domination. Popular dishes adopted from Soviet cuisine include pelmeni (pelmeņi) with sour cream, borsch (borščs), stroganoff (stroganovs), dressed herring (siļķe kažokā), shashlik (šašliks), rasol (rasols). plov (plovs), kefir (kefīrs), kvass and solyanka (soļanka).[5]

The most consumed alcoholic beverage is beer.[6] A national liquor is Riga Black Balsam.[7]

Dairy products

Jāņi cheese, a caraway cheese traditionally served on the summer festival Jāņi.
Latvian cheese with herbs

File:Latvian Cheese.jpg|Latvian Cheese Latvia is much richer in dairy products than other Western countries. Cottage cheese (biezpiens), sour cream (skābais krējums), soured milk (rūgušpiens) and different types of fresh and dried cheeses are available. Kefir, soured milk and other fermented milk beverages are usually consumed with hot dishes.[3]

Cottage cheese is frequently mixed with sour cream and eaten for breakfast, as well as added to salads and used in cakes and other desserts like the curd snack (biezpiena sieriņš). In 2012, curd snack Kārums was voted favorite product of Latvian consumers, receiving 20% of votes.[8] For lunch, the cottage cheese is traditionally usually eaten with boiled potatoes, lightly salted herring, spring onions and sour cream.[3]

Since the early 20th century a distinct type of butter is made in Rucava – the Rucava white butter (Rucavas baltais sviests) that in 2018 received the Protected Designation of Origin classification in European Union.[9][10] Butter can also be mixed with roasted and ground hemp seeds and salt to make hemp butter (kaņepju sviests) that is usually eaten with rye bread.[3]

Seeds, nuts, dried fruits, clover or mixtures of dried herbs are often added to the cheese. It also frequently smoked or aged in oil, but fresh cheese is served with garlic or herbs.[3] Traditional Latvian cheese is the Jāņi cheese made and served during the summer festival Jāņi and considered a symbol of Latvian culture.[11]

Soups

Cold borscht served with fried potatoes.

Soups are commonly made with vegetables and broth or kefir. Cold borscht (aukstā zupa), fish soup (zivju zupa), sorrel soup (skābeņu zupa) and mushroom soup (sēņu zupa) are also consumed by Latvians.[3] A traditional Latvian dessert is rye bread soup (maizes zupa) made from rye bread, whipped cream, dried fruit and cranberries.[12]

Cold borscht is usually prepared in the spring and consists of kefir or soured milk, boiled beets, chopped radish, fresh cucumbers, boiled eggs and different greens.[3]

Bread

Slices of white bread and rupjmaize at a restaurant in Riga.

Rye bread (rudzu maize) has been a national food staple for centuries and is included in the Latvian Culture Canon. The bread is similar to a Russian or German black bread and is made from coarse rye flour, malt and caraway seeds and traditionally baked in a wood-fired oven. Another popular type of bread is sweet and sour bread (saldskābmaize) made from finely ground rye flour and caraway seeds. Fried rye bread with garlic (ķiploku grauzdiņi) and mayonnaise is often served as a starter in restaurants and bars. White bread (baltmaize) was considered a delicacy and was only eaten on festive occasions.[12]

Pastries

A popular pastry is the speķrauši, wheat or rye flour buns filled with finely cut streaky bacon and onions. Sometimes caraway seeds are also added to the dough. Speķrauši are common Ziemassvētki and Jāņi pastry.[3] Kliņģeris is a sweet pretzel-shaped bread that is usually served as a dessert on special occasions, such as name day. Sklandrausis is a traditional dish in Latvian cuisine which has a Livonian origin; it is a sweet pie, made of rye dough and filled with potato and carrot paste and seasoned with caraway. In 2013, sklandrausis received a "Traditional Speciality Guaranteed" designation from the European Commission.[13]

Drinks

Ancient Latvians brewed beer (alus), mead (miestiņš) and honey beer (medalus) before the 13th century for both celebratory occasions and everyday use. After the Baltic Crusades, the local beer brewing was influenced by the incoming Western European techniques. For example, prior to that many different herbs were used, but they were replaced by hops as a preservative and flavoring agent.[14] A craft brewery drawing upon the ancient brewing traditions is Labietis that uses a wide variety of herbs, flowers, berries and spices in their brews.[15]

A very popular drink in spring is fresh birch sap.[3] Traditionally, it was preserved by adding raisins, lemon rind, and blackcurrant twigs.[16] For a long time, birch sap was sold in plastic bottles in markets and roadside stalls until Linards Liberts revamped its image and started producing bottled birch sap, birch sap lemonade, birch sap still and sparkling wine, birch sap mulled wine and birch sap schnapps.[17]

Kvass, traditionally brewed from fermented rye or black bread, has also remained popular in Latvia. In the Latvian SSR, kvass was sold by street vendors from carts with big yellow canisters, while nowadays mass-produced kvass can be bought at supermarkets.[17]

With the development of cold-hardy grape varieties more suitable for the northern climate, winemaking has become more common in Latvia. In addition to that, raspberry, black currant, and other fruit wines are also being made, as well as ciders.[3] Wine Hill of Sabile used to be registered in the Guinness Book of Records as the most northern open-air vineyard in the world.[18] Since 1999 the town also hosts an annual wine festival.

Mushrooms

Latvia has ancient traditions involving edible mushrooms. Picking wild mushrooms is very popular in autumn. Modern, as well as traditional mushroom preparation, is very popular. There are around 4,100 known mushroom species in Latvia, 1,100 of those are cup mushrooms. About ¼ of these are edible. The most popular edible ones are various Boletus and Cantharellus.[19] From mushrooms, onions, garlic, sweet or sour cream and sometimes bacon a mushroom sauce is made and usually eaten with boiled potatoes and slightly salted cucumbers.[3]

See also

References

  1. "Latvian Cuisine." Archived October 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Latvian Institute. Accessed September 2011.
  2. "Potato maintains vegetable supremacy in Latvia". Public Broadcasting of Latvia. December 23, 2019. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Ošiņa, Sandra; Ošiņš, Valdis (2014). Traditional and modern Latvian foods and beverages (PDF). The Association of Latvian Rural Tourism.
  4. 1 2 "The Cuisine of Latvia" (PDF). Latvian Institute. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 September 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  5. From Peasant to Pleasant. The Cuisine of Latvia (PDF). Latvian Institute. 2014. ISBN 978-9-98-473651-8. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  6. Vladimir Poznyak; Dag Rekve, eds. (2018). Global status report on alcohol and health 2018 (PDF). World Health Organization. p. 273. ISBN 978-92-4-156563-9.
  7. Spratte Joyce, Katy (13 May 2020). "Move over world-famous Italian bitters, Latvia's funky, herby liqueur has arrived". Chilled Magazine. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  8. "Latvian buyers' favourite product – curd snack Kārums". Baltic News Network. November 15, 2012. Retrieved June 14, 2014.
  9. "No buts, it's Rucava butter!". Public Broadcasting of Latvia. LETA. 22 April 2017. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
  10. "Latvian butter receives European protection". Baltic News Network. 22 April 2017. Retrieved September 6, 2016.
  11. "Jāņi cheese – a symbol of Latvian identity". Public Broadcasting of Latvia. June 21, 2019. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  12. 1 2 Gross, Daina (June 10, 2016). "Rye Bread". Latvian Culture Canon. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  13. Strautmanis, Andris (October 13, 2013). "European Commission designates sklandrausis as traditional speciality". Latvians Online. Retrieved June 14, 2014.
  14. Zariņš, Viesturs (December 10, 2010). "History of beer in Latvia spans centuries". Latvians Online. Retrieved December 24, 2009.
  15. John A. Geck; Rosemary O'Neill; Noelle Phillips, eds. (2022). "Latvia's Labietis: Modern Craft Brewing Across the Pagan–⁠Christian Threshold". Beer and Brewing in Medieval Culture and Contemporary Medievalism. The New Middle Ages. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 181–183, 188–201. ISBN 978-3-030-94619-7. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  16. Guttman, Amy (May 21, 2012). "Move Over, Maple Syrup, Birch Syrup May Challenge Your Sweet Rule". NPR. Retrieved June 14, 2014.
  17. 1 2 Welscher, Alexander (December 23, 2020). "Raise a glass to the Baltics' most interesting drinks!". Public Broadcasting of Latvia. Retrieved September 6, 2016.
  18. Birziņš, Uldis (July 27, 2015). "Winemaking in Latvia - challenging but not impossible". Public Broadcasting of Latvia. Retrieved September 6, 2016.
  19. "Mushrooming". Celotajs.lv. Retrieved December 12, 2017.
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