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CHRISTMAS

How to make Swedish mulled wine: glögg

One drink in particular keeps the Swedes warm in winter: glögg. The beverage has been a Christmas tradition in Sweden since the 1890s. John Duxbury shares his favourite recipe with The Local.

How to make Swedish mulled wine: glögg
Swedish mulled wine served the traditional way. Photo: Vilhelm Stokstad/TT

Summary

Makes: 1 bottle (700 ml)

Time needed: 10 minutes (and at least 24 hours for the flavours to infuse)

Ingredients

100 ml (1/2 cup) vodka

3 cinnamon sticks

10-20 thumb sized piece of ginger (peeled)

1 tsp cardamom pods

½ a Seville orange (peel only)

1 bottle of red wine

220 g (1 cup) caster (superfine) sugar

1 tsp vanilla sugar

1 tsp raisins

1 tsp almonds (blanched and peeled)

Method

1. Pour the vodka into a small jar. Add the cinnamon, cloves, ginger, orange peel, and cardamom. Cover and leave to infuse for a few days.

2. Strain the mixture through kitchen paper or a coffee filter into a saucepan.   

3. Add the wine and sugars. Heat slowly, stirring until the sugar is completely dissolved. Pour into sterilised bottles* and keep until required.  

4. Heat gently before serving, but don’t let it boil.

* Sterilise by washing bottles and then placing in an oven at 120C for five minutes.

Serving suggestions

Place a few raisins and almonds at the bottom of each glass, then top up with glögg. Glögg and pepparkakor (ginger snaps) and/or lussekatter (saffron buns) go well together.

Tips

– Glögg is at its best when the flavours are plentiful – give them time to mature by making your drink a week in advance of planned consumption. The recipe is based on one bottle of red wine, which should serve six people. Scale up the quantities according to the number of guests you’re expecting.  

– Glögg will keep for several weeks and can be poured into sterilised bottles for storing. 

Recipe courtesy of John Duxbury, Editor and Founder of Swedish Food

For members

SWEDISH TRADITIONS

Why is Pentecost not a public holiday in Sweden?

Danes and Norwegians will get to enjoy three days off this weekend because of Pentecost and Whit Monday. But not Swedes. Why?

Why is Pentecost not a public holiday in Sweden?

Whit Monday, also known as Pentecost Monday (or annandag pingst in Swedish), falls on the day after Pentecost Sunday, marking the seventh Sunday after Easter.

It is a time when Christians commemorate the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples of Jesus, an event described in the Bible.

For a long time, it was a public holiday in Sweden, a country which is very secular today but where the old religious holidays still live on. In fact, up until 1772, the third and fourth day of Pentecost were also holidays.

In 2005, Whit Monday also got the boot, when it was replaced by National Day on June 6th. The Social Democrat prime minister at the time, Göran Persson, saw the opportunity to combine calls for National Day to get a higher status in Sweden with increasing work hours.

The inquiry into scrapping Whit Monday as a public holiday looked into May 1st, Ascension Day or Epiphany as alternative victims of the axe, but in the end made its decision after “all churches and faith associations in Sweden agree that Whit Monday is the least bad church holiday to remove”.

Because Whit Monday always falls on a Monday, whereas June 6th some years falls on a Saturday or Sunday, this means that Swedish workers don’t always get an extra day off for National Day.

This is still a source of bitterness for many Swedes.

And so it came to pass in those days, that apart from the occasional grumbling about Göran Persson, Whit Monday now passes by largely unnoticed to most people in Sweden. Unless they are active church-goers, or go to Norway or Denmark, where it’s still a public holiday.

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