Some of the recent discoveries in Stockholm
Living in Stockholm is getting more interesting these days, partly because more and more unique and interesting places are opening up (such as Serrano and ZeeSide). But it's also because I was simply out of luck in the past four years: I didn't have a chance to visit a decent place, and even if I had, the place was packed with people and I was forced to leave for another mediocre place.
First, those newly opened. Restaurang Volt. I took a foreign visitor to our workplace to this restaurant a few months ago. In my view, this restaurant is simply the best in Stockholm. On the menu, they only mention ingredients. How meats or vegetables are cooked is totally hidden. Once they were served, it was clear why. For example, if you order carrots as the starter, carrots are cooked in several different ways (pickled, mashed, fried, etc.), a small portion of each is served on a plate. You'll be delighted by different textures and tastes out of the same ingredient. They also serve unusual drinks such as orange wine. If you want to enjoy a bit different dinner, this is the place to go.
Another newly opened place that I discovered recently is Juiceverket. What they serve is similar to Joe & The Juice in Copenhagen or Forbidden Fruit in Tokyo: freshly squeezed mixed fruit juice, smoothies, and nutritional boosters in a shot glass. But what's unique about this place is its interior. Very much inconsistent with our image of fruit juice, the wall behind the counter and the floor is what can be called rusty chic (which is by the way VERY unusual in fastidiously-clean Stockholm). Placed on the shelf are an antique television set, old books, mid-century jewelry boxes, and the like. Fruits are tacked together on one corner, unusual for a juice stand where oranges and apples and so on tend to dominate your sight. And I really love this place. It was only opened two months ago.
Then those that have always been there since I moved to Stockholm but which I didn't have a chance to visit until recently. Haga Forum. If you want to have a relaxed and tasty weekend brunch in Stockholm, this is the place to go. A view of the lake through the floor-to-ceiling windows and a restrained appearance of tables and chairs along with decently-cooked Swedish foods on a buffet create a cosy atmosphere from which you don't wanna leave.
Another gem found in Gamla Stan (the oldest part of the city) is Chaikhana (CAUTION: the linked website of theirs starts playing atmospheric music). The last time I came here, it was a winter Saturday and the place was packed (they don't have many seats here). On a weekday afternoon I recently visited the place, there were a couple of seats available. This is a colonial British India tea house (or so I feel). They serve a wide variety of proper tea (by which I mean NOT herbal tea or flavored tea). They also serve English afternoon tea with deliciously made sandwiches and cakes (I haven't tried English scones with clotted cream, but they do serve them). When they serve tea in a pot, leaves are taken away. So your second and third cup of tea tastes the same as the first one. When I asked for milk, they asked me back, "Cold or hot?" Milk for black tea has to be cold in my view (which is also what I heard as the proper way to drink milk tea), but they allow your preference to be reflected. Very professional. And if you like the tea you had, you can buy the leaf with a 10 percent discount. This is how all tea leaf sellers should do: have a cafe space and let customers try out different kinds of tea in a way they would enjoy tea at home (instead of serving tea in a tiny cup for trial). They also sell tea leaves by Mariage Freres, my favorite French tea house. I thought their leaves can be bought only when I visit Paris or Tokyo. But I no longer need to rush to Mariage Freres shops while being on a trip. In general, Swedes do not like tea unless it's flavored or herbal. Stockholm lacks a decent tea house that properly brew tea except Chaikana, an oasis for tea lovers in the capital of Scandinavia (I apologize to those in Copenhagen).
No comments:
Post a Comment