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HORSEMEAT SCANDAL

HORSE

Horsemeat fears prompt new Swedish recall

Swedish grocery chain Ica on Tuesday ordered a recall of two meat products over concerns they may contain horsemeat.

Horsemeat fears prompt new Swedish recall

The recall covers 240-gramme packages of Ica’s own-brand cheese sausages (ostwurst), as well as 600-gram packages of Ica Basic frozen cevapcici.

“Ever since horsemeat was found in lasagne, we’ve been conducting tests on our own products that contain beef,” Ica spokeswoman Sara Hjelm told The Local.

So far, Ica has received results from tests performed on 78 of 80 different meat products sold under Ica-brand labels in stores around Sweden, with the sausages and cevapcici testing positive for traces of horsemeat.

“The tests were very stringent. The amount of horsemeat is likely very low, but we decided to announce a recall as a precautionary measure,” said Hjelm.

According to Hjelm, the cheese sausages were produced in Sweden, while meat in the cevapcici came from Ireland and the Netherlands.

The two products are sold in stores across Sweden and Ica estimates that roughly two tonnes of each will be removed from store shelves as part of the recall.

She added that the products pose no health hazard to consumers, and that anyone who had previously purchased either of the products was welcome to return them to the nearest Ica store for a full refund.

“We want our customers to be able to trust our products. We have ultimate responsibility for the products sold under our brand,” said Hjelm, adding that Ica has also started asking suppliers to verify their meat products to ensure they aren’t contaminated with horsemeat.

“We’re committed to ensuring that food contains the ingredients that are listed on the label and nothing else.”

David Landes

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SAUSAGE

Norwegian expression of the day: Pølsevev

Norwegians share a national love for sausages - even if they know it's nonsense.

Norwegian expression of the day: Pølsevev
Photo: Jessica Loaiza on Unsplash

Why do I need to know pølsevev?

Because it’s a common expression that, when translated directly, it makes no sense.

What does it mean?

Pølsevev is put together by two words, pølse and vev. Pølse is Norwegian for ‘sausage’ and vev means ‘tissue' (not in the paper towel sense, but the tissue that's in skin).

It allegedly comes from the idea that sausages are made of those leftover pieces of meat that were too poor quality to use for anything else, and the pølse, by looking delicious, is something making out to be something it's not. 

Pølsevev is therefore an old school Norwegian way of saying that something is nonsense or to use harsher invective, 'BS'. 

For noe pølsevev! – What utter nonsense!

Other English equivalents would be 'gibberish', 'baloney', or 'rubbish'.

Synonyms

Sludder og vås – nonsense and nonsense (another common expression)

Snikk-snakk – chit chat

Tull – rubbish

Tøv – nonsense 

So do Norwegians hate sausages?

Not at all! 
 
You might be familiar with the Danish pølse, those thin, scarlet signatory hot dogs that the Danes love. The Norwegian pølse-craze is lesser known internationally, but it's not less true.
 
Eating pølse in Norway is an old ritual comparable to eating fish and chips in the UK.
 
Go to Norway during the May 17th National Independence Day celebrations and you will not be able to miss the many pølseboder (sausage vans) selling pølse i lompe (sausage in a traditional Norwegian wrap) or pølse i brød (regular hot dog) with ketsjup, sennep og sprøstekt løk – ketchup, mustard and fried onions – and, if you're lucky, potato salad (potetsalat).
 
The pølse is also a mandatory accessory to any ski trip. In winter, the slopes are filled with lycra-clad Norwegians devouring sausages during breaks.
 
Of course, Norwegian pølse-habits are changing. Even simple park barbecues now feature vegetarpølse and fancy bratwursts that make the basic grill or wiener seem slightly dull in comparison (grillpølse is the one you barbecue and wienerpølse is the one you cook in boiling water. If someone asks you, grill eller wiener? during a dinner party, this is code for what kind of sausage you'd prefer.)

Still, its simplicity has aways been a key feature of the pølse, and it might be a part of the explanation as to why so many Norwegians still are mad about it today.

 
Convenience stores sell pølse. Petrol stations too. Pølse is a legitimate road-trip snack. It's also one of the ultimate dishes to serve during a nachspiel (after party). It's cheap, easy to cook and extremely delicious (just beware of the ketchup spillers).
 
The sketch below mocks those who try to turn the pølse into something more complicated than it is, by ordering a string of different variants of the mustard, ketchup, bread and lompe (the wrap, remember).
 
Sophisticated pølse? Well, that's just pølsevev.
 

 

 

 

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