Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Blåbärssoppa
Nordic soup made from bilberries From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Blåbärssoppa (Swedish lit. 'blueberry soup', Finnish: mustikkakeitto [ˈmustikːɑˌkei̯tːo], Icelandic: bláberjasúpa) is a Nordic fruit soup made from bilberries (European blueberries), which can be served cold or hot. It is sweet and contains starch, which gives it a fairly thick consistency. It is served either as soup, often together with porridge, or as a drink.
In the United States, Swedish blåbärssoppa is imported and sold under the trade name Blåbär. Blueberry soup can be home-made from bilberries, sugar, water and potato starch,[1] or it can be bought ready-made or in powdered form, to mix with water.
The Swedish word for bilberry, blåbär, literally means 'blueberry', but the beverage is not made from the North American blueberry (section Cyanococcus of the genus Vaccinium), but from the related but distinct European blueberry, Vaccinium myrtillus, which grows in the wild throughout Scandinavia and other parts of Europe.
Remove ads
Uses
Blueberry soup is traditionally served to the participants at the ski marathon Vasaloppet, as it is rich in energy. Bilberries have traditionally been used to combat mild gastrointestinal ailments,[2] and in Sweden and Finland, blueberry soup is often considered suitable food for people with an upset stomach, also because it is energy-rich.[citation needed]
See also
- Rose hip soup, another Swedish fruit soup
- Fruktsoppa, a Swedish mixed-fruit soup
- Krentjebrij, a Dutch soup or porridge-like dessert with fruit juice
- Kissel, a cold-solidified dessert made of grains, peas, sweet fruit and berry or from milk
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads