The Hamilton Spectator

Even with modern technology and strict regulation, penned fish have mixed with the wild population, introducin­g catastroph­ic parasites like salmon lice.

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difficult. Compared with Bergen’s rugged terroir, the area around Copenhagen, the birthplace of New Nordic is as bright and balmy as the South of France. Here, rain falls more than 230 days a year, only about 3 per cent of the land is arable and the winter is so long that it is divided into two parts. (Morketid, the “dark time,” starts in October and lasts until January’s Soldagen “sun day,” when the sun reappears but the weather grows colder.) Denmark has more sun, a longer summer and land that is flat and fertile enough for farming.

“The big question for Norwegian farmers was not which kind of apples to grow, but how to not starve to death,” Haatuft said.

Deliciousn­ess, he said, was a luxury they could not always afford.

“As recently as my grandmothe­r’s time, people used cod liver oil as a cooking fat when there was nothing else,” he said. “You could smell it for days.”

Instead of foraging in the past for inspiratio­n, Haatuft asked himself a hypothetic­al question: “If western Norway were a region of France, what would the chefs here brag about?”

Traditiona­l Norwegian food is famously bland, with infinite recombinat­ions of fish, potatoes, flour and milk. But those porridges and dumplings were often spiked with intense tastes like smoked lamb and reindeer, salt-fermented salmon, goat salami and pickled root vegetables. The country has top-quality dairy products, berries that grow sweet in the 18-hour days of summer and complex aged cheeses. Fresh seafood is harvested from the cold waters of the North Atlantic and the North Sea, and preserved using time-honoured traditions that are just as complex as French charcuteri­e.

“A FRENCH CHEF here would brag about the smoked mackerel,” he said. “He would clean out the dark parts to make it beautiful. He would add butter to make it rich and smooth, and make the flavour of the ingredient shine.”

That is precisely what Haatuft does at Lysverket.

Fiskesuppe, a traditiona­l Bergen fish chowder, was traditiona­lly thickened with flour. In modern times, cooks have added egg yolks and sour cream to enrich the broth. But to lift the flavours, Haatuft adds a bright green drizzle of leek oil, and diced carrots and celeriac pickled in distilled vinegar. “That’s what the grandmothe­rs used,” he said. “Why should I use wine vinegar?”

One dessert at Lysverket is an ethereal cake made with almonds, chocolate and gjetost: the caramelize­d, spreadable goat cheese that resembles Latin American dulce de leche and is a national obsession.

To procure the ingredient­s he needs, Haatuft spends much of his time on projects like nabbing loads of fresh herring before they are sent to the central market (Norwegian fishermen are not allowed to sell directly to chefs), tracking down divers and hounding the region’s farmers to grow more diverse crops.

To ensure a steady supply of flavourful, fatty pork, he prodded his friend Anders Tveite, a chef turned farmer, to start raising Mangalitsa pigs, whose woolly coats allow them to live outside all year, even in these rough mountains, still snowcapped in early July. In advance, Haatuft promised to buy all the meat that the farm wanted to sell him.

“There just isn’t enough good produce to go around,” he said, crawling up steep strawberry beds at a farm in the mountainou­s Voss region northeast of Bergen. “It’s not like being at Per Se, where there are seven other farmers I can go to for organic produce if my guy doesn’t have what I need. This is it.”

Although the movement toward local, sustainabl­e and traditiona­l food is relatively new here — frozen pizza is the unofficial national dish, particular­ly the beloved cult brand Grandiosa — it is growing quickly. In addition to offering generous farm subsidies, the government now funds agricultur­al education, food startups and gastrotour­ism by aggressive­ly marketing Norway’s seafood, its pristine terroir and its many accomplish­ed chefs.

NORWAY IS THE second-largest exporter of fish in the world, and seafood is the country’s second-mostvaluab­le export after oil. Seventy per cent of that export value is in farmed salmon, an increasing­ly controvers­ial product. Even with modern technology and strict regulation, penned fish have mixed with the wild population, introducin­g catastroph­ic parasites like salmon lice. Pesticides, food waste and sewage have seeped into fjords and rivers. Millions of farmed fish have escaped into inland rivers, upsetting the ecosystem of spawning.

Many restaurant­s do serve farmed salmon, and both the systems and the regulation­s for aquacultur­e are getting tighter.

“Norway is working strongly toward a sustainabl­e aquacultur­e industry,” said Silje Lesjo, a specialist in local food for Innovation Norway, a government agency that provides support for high-tech businesses.

Advanced aquacultur­e technology has also become a valuable Norwegian export. The halibut served at Lysverket is farmed in one of these innovative systems — in pens built on land, a more difficult and expensive method, but one that does not affect the water or wild fish. And Haatuft works only with fishermen who pull in wild creatures like cusk, sea urchins, langoustin­es and mahogany clams — big specimens with thick brown shells that live for up to 400 years.

In a storage shed in Sotra, an island just off the Atlantic Coast, surrounded by tubs of live seafood, Haatuft opened a salad-plate-size scallop, pulling aside the mantle and the roe to get to the plump meat. Slicing it up in the shell with his pocket knife, he relished the squirm and the salt water that made the flesh taste fully alive.

A few hours later at the restaurant, he grilled the scallops on just one side to firm up the muscle, then set off their sweetness with baby radishes and a bright, pleasingly bitter purée of nasturtium leaves. (Nasturtium­s, like dill, sorrel, ransom, lovage and other pungent herbs, thrive in Nordic climates.)

One commodity in short supply in Bergen is sous-chefs, but Haatuft is not planning an active recruitmen­t effort.

“Why would I encourage people to take a hard, hot job working 16 hours a day, when in Norway they could work seven hours in an office and still get free health care?” he said.

“I want the people who can’t do anything but cook, people whose only dream in life is to be a chef. People like me.”

“There just isn’t enough good produce to go around … if my guy doesn’t have what I need. This is it.” CHRISTOPHE­R HAATUFT NEW NORDIC CUISINE CHEF

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY DAVID B. TORCH, THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Knut Finne, right, at his farm, a source of fresh produce for the restaurant of Christophe­r Haatuft, left, in Voss, Norway.
PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY DAVID B. TORCH, THE NEW YORK TIMES Knut Finne, right, at his farm, a source of fresh produce for the restaurant of Christophe­r Haatuft, left, in Voss, Norway.
 ??  ?? Restaurate­ur Haatuft walks across a rocky landscape on Sotra, an island in the North Atlantic just west of Bergen, Norway.
Restaurate­ur Haatuft walks across a rocky landscape on Sotra, an island in the North Atlantic just west of Bergen, Norway.
 ??  ?? Roasted wild cusk with grilled cabbage.
Roasted wild cusk with grilled cabbage.

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