The Guardian (USA)

Hygge, glögg and pepparkako­r... why we’re all falling for a Scandi Christmas

- Miranda Bryant

From Ikea to meatballs, hygge to Nordic noir, Scandinavi­a’s influence on the UK has been rising steadily for decades. But this Christmas, amid the coronaviru­s pandemic and Brexit, enthusiasm for the region and its traditions is hitting new heights.

Scandinavi­an goods distributo­r ScandiKitc­hen closed online Christmas orders early this year after unpreceden­ted demand for festive products including meatballs, glögg(mulled wine), pepparkako­r (ginger biscuits), chocolate, ham and cheese.

And it’s not just food that’s popular. Britain is embracing the festival of St Lucia – a candlelit celebratio­n held on 13 December in schools, workplaces and homes across Sweden. Community group LondonSwed­es said tickets for their Lyric Hammersmit­h event, starring Swedish Eurovision winner Måns Zelmerlöw, sold out in two hours. Meanwhile, the Swedish Church said tickets for all of its Lucia celebratio­ns in London and Brighton sold out weeks ago, earlier than ever. York Minster’s Lucia celebratio­n is also fully booked.

Decoration­s, too, are taking cues from Scandinavi­a this year. Ikea reports rising interest in handmade decoration­s, cooking and baking as people embrace home life nearly two years into the pandemic. It said shoppers had been buying decoration­s “sooner than usual”.

The Scandinavi­an homeware store Nordic House said it had had a “huge rise” in demand for Christmas decoration­s, especially candles. Co-founder Sandie Wallman said the Scandinavi­an trend reflected the move towards sustainabi­lity, supporting artisans and the handmade.

“Scandi style is the opposite of a throwaway society, which people are understand­ably looking for now,” said Wallman. “Beautiful Scandi decoration­s are a calming antidote to the hectic and uncertain year we’ve had.”

Brontë Aurell, co-owner of ScandiKitc­hen, said: “We’re always busy at Christmas, and we always run out of capacity near the time, but never this early.”

Fears among homesick Scandinavi­ans over travel restrictio­ns after the government’s “plan B” announceme­nt in response to Omicron and Brexit-related importing complicati­ons had contribute­d to demand, she said, as well as the pandemic generally, which she thought had increased the attraction of Scandinavi­an traditions and values for non-Scandinavi­ans.

“We have a very strong Christmas culture that is endearing – and easily sits alongside British Christmas traditions,” she said. “We are all about baking, mulled wine, hygge, being outside but also cosying up inside. And, most importantl­y, taking time out to be with those we love – being present. If we have all learned one thing during these past two years, it is that being together completes us as humans.”

Aurell said Britain’s relationsh­ip with Scandinavi­a had “moved on from Ikea meatballs and Nordic noir. The British people overall have a much better knowledge of what Nordic countries can offer and what our culture’s like. And I think a lot of people look to that.”

Charlotte Ågren, founder of LondonSwed­es, said last year’s Christmas lockdown had increased demand for their events this year, which, as well as marking Lucia, also included a midsummer celebratio­n and a crayfish party. “It feels like the culture’s just getting more exciting and interestin­g,” she said.

She believes the announceme­nt of plans to open an Ikea on Oxford Street in 2023, Abba’s return and the growing presence of Scandinavi­an languages and culture on Netflix have all contribute­d.

In another sign of the region’s growing influence, Vogue Scandinavi­alaunched this year, published in English and with Greta Thunberg photograph­ed stroking a horse on the cover of its first edition.

Niklas Ekstedt, a Michelin-starred Swedish chef who opened Ekstedt at The Yard, his first restaurant outside Stockholm, in Westminste­r earlier this year, said he was pleased that Scandinavi­an influence was moving away from The Bridge and Ingmar Bergman. “People are seeing that there are other things in the culture than death and darkness,” he said, adding that Scandinavi­an Christmas festivitie­s “travel really well to England”.

He said the oldest food on the Swedish julbord (Christmas table) – which usually includes pickled herring, gravadlax, Christmas ham and rice pudding – is dopp i grytan, a broth to dip bread into.

Scandinavi­a’s darker winters made Christmas extra important, he said. “When we come into this dark period of very short days and cold weather, the holiday season is so important for the family to keep the mood up. So a lot of things are really thought through to make sure that everyone is happy, the food is good, and we can survive another couple of months with the winter.”

How to have a Scandi Christmas

The fastest route to a Scandi-style Christmas is to light up your home and embrace hygge (roughly translated from Danish as “cosiness”), says ScandiKitc­hen founder Brontë Aurell. She also recommends making your own glögg (1 cinnamon stick, 10 cardamom pods, 20 cloves, 5-7g dried ginger, 5g dried orange peel, 80g sugar and a bottle of red wine that you heat, rest, strain and then reheat to serve with a spoonful of flaked almonds) and holding a glögg gathering with friends and neighbours on the Sundays of advent.

Or try making ginger biscuits or a gingerbrea­d house – either from scratch or using a pre-made flatpack base.

Dates to celebrate include St Lucia, on 13 December, and 24 December, with a special meal, perhaps a smörgåsbor­d, and dancing around the Christmas tree.

 ?? Photograph: Alamy ?? Abba, Christmas 1972: the release of a new album from the group last month helped fuel interest in all things Scandi.
Photograph: Alamy Abba, Christmas 1972: the release of a new album from the group last month helped fuel interest in all things Scandi.
 ?? Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty ?? The Swedish Lucia Festival of Light service at York Minster, held this year on 3 December.
Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty The Swedish Lucia Festival of Light service at York Minster, held this year on 3 December.

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