Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

smorgasbord

 
Dictionary: smor·gas·bord   (smôr'gəs-bôrd', -bōrd') pronunciation
n.
  1. A buffet meal featuring a varied number of dishes.
  2. A varied collection: "a smorgasbord of fashionable paranormal beliefs" (Martin Gardner).

[Swedish smörgåsbord : smörgås, bread and butter (smör, butter , from Old Norse + Swedish dialectal gås, lump of butter , from Old Norse gās, goose; see gosling) + bord, table (from Old Norse bordh).]


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wordsmith Words: smorgasbord
Top

(SMOR-guhs-bord)

noun
1. A buffet featuring various dishes, such as hors d'oeuvres, salads, etc.
2. A medley or miscellany.

Etymology
From Swedish Smörgåsbord, from smörgås (bread and butter), from smör (butter) + gås (goose, lump of butter) + bord (table).

Usage
"The line-up has been settled for next month's Women in Voice season, with Katie Noonan from George making her first appearance at Brisbane's annual smorgasbord of music and cabaret." — Noel Mengel, The Line-up, The Courier-Mail (Brisbane, Australia), Apr 17, 2000.

"Indeed this is a smorgasbord in which there is a comparison (and contrast) between Mexican and Indian artists and their reaction to America." — Minakshi Raja, Indian Artists, Business India, May 13, 2002.


Food Lover's Companion: smorgasbord
Top

Sw. smörgåsbord [SMOHR-guhs-bohrd; SCHMOHR-guhs-bohrd] Swedish for "bread and butter table," smorgasbord has come to refer to a buffet consisting of a variety of foods such as various hors d'oeuvre, open-faced sandwiches, salads, cooked vegetables (which may be served hot or cold), pickled or marinated fish, sliced meats, cheeses and desserts. A smorgasbord may be simple or elaborate and can consist entirely of appetizers or make up the entire meal.

Wikipedia: Smörgåsbord
Top
Smörgåsbord, Swedish buffet. The curved table maximizes the number of guests who can access the buffet simultaneously.

Smörgåsbord (Swedish pronunciation: [ˌsmœrɡɔsˈbuːɖ]) is a type of Scandinavian meal served buffet-style with multiple dishes of various foods on a table. In Norway it is called koldtbord and in Denmark it is called kolde bord. Smörgåsbord became internationally known as Smorgasbord at the 1939 New York World's Fair when it was offered at the Swedish Pavilion's "Three Crowns Restaurant".[1] It is typically a celebratory meal and guests can help themselves from a range of dishes laid out for their choice. In a restaurant, the term refers to a buffet-style table laid out with many small dishes from which, for a fixed amount of money, one is allowed to choose as many as one wishes.

Contents

Etymology

A plate from a smörgåsbord

The Swedish word smörgåsbord consists of the words smörgås (open-faced sandwich) and bord (table). Smörgås in turn consists of the words smör (butter) and gås (goose). Gås literally means goose, but later referred to the small pieces of butter that formed and floated to the surface of cream while it was churned.[2]. These pieces reminded the old Swedish peasants of fat geese swimming to the surface.[citation needed] The small butter pieces were just the right size to be placed and flattened out on bread, so smörgås came to mean buttered bread. In Sweden, the term bredda smörgåsar (buttered open-faced sandwiches) has been used since at least the 16th century.

In English and also in Scandinavian languages, the word smörgåsbord (or in English, more usually without diacritics as smorgasbord) refers loosely to any buffet with a variety of dishes — not necessarily with any connection to the Swedish Christmas traditions discussed in this article. In an extended sense, the word is used to refer to any situation which invites patrons to select whatever they wish among several pleasant things, such as the smorgasbord of university courses, books in a bookstore, etc.

Smörgåsbord and Julbord

A traditional Swedish smörgåsbord consists of both hot and cold dishes. Bread, butter and cheese is always part of the smörgåsbord. It is customary to begin with the cold fish dishes which are generally various form of herring, salmon and eel. After eating the first portion, people usually continue with other cold dishes, and round off with hot dishes. Dessert may or may not be included in a smörgåsbord.

Julbord

Julbord Christmas dinner in Sweden

A special type of smörgåsbord is the julbord which is the standard Christmas dinner in Scandinavian countries. Julbord is a word consisting of the elements jul, meaning Yule (today synonymous with Christmas) and bord, literally table. The classic Swedish julbord is the highlight of Swedish cuisine, a traditional smörgåsbord starting with bread dipped in the ham broth and continuing with serving the table, a variety of fish (salmon, herring, whitefish and eel), ham, small meatballs, head cheese and sausages, potato, boiled or potato casserole, soft and crisp bread, butter and different cheeses, beetroot salad. cabbage (red, brown or green) and rice pudding and beverage.

As with the smörgåsbord, the traditional julbord is typically eaten in three courses. The dishes includes local and family specialties. The first course would typically be a variety of fish, particularly pickled herring and lox (gravlax). It is customary to eat particular foods together; herring is typically eaten with boiled potatoes and hard-boiled eggs and is frequently accompanied by strong spirits like snaps, brännvin or akvavit with or without spices. Other traditional dishes would be (smoked) eel, rollmops, herring salad, baked herring, smoked salmon and crab canapés, accompanied by sauces and dips.

The second course is often a selection of cold sliced meats, the most important cold cut being the Christmas ham (julskinka) with mustard. Other traditional cuts include homemade sausages, leverpostej and several types of brawn. It is also common to serve the cold meats with sliced cheese, pickled cucumbers and soft and crisp breads.

The third course would be warm dishes. Traditionally, the third course begins with soaking bread in the stock from the Christmas ham. Warm dishes include Swedish meatballs (köttbullar), small fried hot dog sausages (prinskorv), roasted pork ribs (revbenspjäll), and warm potato casserole, matchstick potatoes layered with cream, onion and sprats called Janssons frestelse (literally "Jansson's Temptation").

Other dishes are pork sausages (fläskkorv), smoked pork and potato sausages (isterband), cabbage rolls (kåldolmar), baked beans, omelette with shrimps or mushrooms covered with bechamel sauce. Side dishes include beetroot salad in mayonnaise and warm stewed red, green or brown cabbage.

Lutfisk, lyed fish made of stockfish (dried ling or cod) served with boiled potato, thick white sauce) and green peas that can be served with the warm dishes or as a separate fourth course. Lutfisk is often served as dinner the second day after the traditional Christmas Yule-table dinner.Julbord desserts include rice porridge (risgrynsgröt), sprinkled with cinnamon powder.photo Traditionally, an almond is hidden in the bowl of rice porridge and whoever finds it receives a small prize or is recognized for having good luck. Julbord is served from early December until just before Christmas at restaurants and until Epiphany in some homes.

History of the smörgåsbord

The members of the Swedish merchant and upper class in fourteenth-century Sweden and Finland served schnapps table (brännvinsbord), a small buffet presented on a side table offering a variety of hors d'oeuvres served prior to a meal before sitting at the dinner table[3]. The most simple brännvinsbord was bread, butter, cheese, herring and several types of liqueurs, but smoked salmon, sausages and cold cuts were also served. The brännvinsbord was served as an appetizer for a gathering of people and eaten while standing before a dinner or supper, often two to five hours before dinner, sometimes with the men and women in separate rooms[4]. The smörgåsbord became popular in the mid-seventeenth century, when the food moved from the side table to the main table[4] and service began containing both warm and cold dishes. Smörgåsbord was also served as an appetizer in hotels and later at railway stations, before the dining cars time for the guests. Restaurants in Stockholm at the 1912 Olympic Games stopped serving smörgåsbord as an appetizer and started serving them instead as a main course.

Other use of the term in English

The term is also used as a metaphor to indicate any diverse group, synonymous with array. [5]

In Canada, Chinese smorgasbord is a buffet style used for Canadian Chinese cuisine. This tradition dates back to Gastown, British Columbia, which later became Vancouver, when Scandinavian-immigrant mill workers and loggers encouraged their Chinese cooks to arrange Chinese food as it was done in their homelands.[citation needed]

See also

References

External links


Translations: Smorgasbord
Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - smørrebrødsbord

Nederlands (Dutch)
smörgåsbord, mengelmoes

Français (French)
n. - (Culin) buffet à la scandinave, (fig) assortiment (de)

Deutsch (German)
n. - Sammelsurium, Vorspeise, Buffet

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - καπανεδάκια, μπουφές, ποικιλία

Italiano (Italian)
smorgasbord, buffet con molti tipi di vivande

Português (Portuguese)
n. - serviço de bufê (m)

Русский (Russian)
"шведский стол"

Español (Spanish)
n. - buffet sueco

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - smörgåsbord

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
瑞典式自助餐

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 瑞典式自助餐

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 스칸디나비아식의 전채, 바이킹 요리, 뒤범벅

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - スモールガスボールド, ごったまぜ

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) ضرب سويدي من ألغداء أو ألعشاء‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מסעדת שירות עצמי, ארוחה מגוונת, אוסף מגוון‬


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wordsmith Words. © 2009 Wordsmith.org. All rights reserved.  Read more
Food Lover's Companion. Food Lover's Companion. Copyright © 2001 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Smörgåsbord" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more