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Koks

We were told to drive to the beach of Leynavatn and meet at the “Skerpi”, a fermenting shed commonly found on the Faroe Islands. Inside was a table where we were served our first dish, fried cod chips, and a choice of kombucha or Faroese beer. A Land Rover then drove us off-road for ten minutes to the restaurant, which is housed in a former farmhouse. We were served a tasting menu made of local ingredients and Faroese cooking techniques. Most of the dishes consisted of seafood and lamb, both fresh and fermented. The fermentation method, ræst, is unique and culturally significant to the Faroe Islands. With few trees and no salt production, the alternative for preserving food was to hang the fish and meat in sheds to dry in the salty sea air. Although no longer necessary, this process is still widely used on the islands and gives the food a distinctive flavour.

Mahogany clams

Fried cod chips

Scallops

Sea urchin

Halibut & Caviar

Horse Mussel

Langoustine and seaweed

Cod roe & root vegetables

Bacalao and blue mussel

Skerpikjøt

Garnatálg

Raest kjøt

Whale heart

Monkfish & celeriac

Sorrel

Flower current & buckwheat

Rhubarb &
spanish chervil

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