Cute Finnish girl with some traditional Finnish food.

33 comments
  1. Yes, and? You’ve posted an image. Slow hand clap.

    It’s food. We eat it here. Not always the traditional stuff, of course.

    Was there a point, or was that whooshing noise the point going past me.

  2. Bit weird referring to the person eating as a “cute girl”… they seem to be an adult. Also why are they wearing army camo and why are their breasts massive?

    Food illustrations look nice though.

  3. Looking good!

    Except kalakukko is not eaten sliced up. You cut a round whole on top, and scoop up the filling with a spoon.

  4. Sautéed reindeer with mashed potatoes, and cloudberries on leipäjuusto… I haven’t eaten that well in ages. My favourite Finnish foods.

  5. Oooh I’m guessing karelian stew means karjalanpaisti? Fucking love that food, the big beef cubes are real yummy.

  6. Karelian stew is the bane of my existence. I might get banned for this but why on earth does anyone consider it a festive food?! I just don’t get it.

  7. Sauteed reindeer sounds so fancy. I’m gonna start calling it that even in finnish to make my 1,45€ micro dinner have that extra wealthy feeling.

  8. As someone with Karelian roots, it is not a stew (pata) it is a roast (paisti), understanding that difference immediately makes you better at cooking one, and it should have both pork and beef.

    Good ones have large pieces of meat (~5x5x5 cm), really fatty pork and tender beef, both pre-browned on pan or high heat oven before long and slow cooking. No adding too much water, it is there to keep them from burning and drying not to drown them. For festive versions, add game of the season (bear, moose, reindeer), lamb or horse and herbs depending on the meat choices.

  9. She’s far too happy to be a corporal 🙂 but other than that it’s a great drawing! Food is so well detailed. My thanks to the artist and thank you for sharing.

  10. This reminds me about the food in the army that was always very good… or then it was because I was always hungry there.

    Anyway, at least back in the army there was a dessert EVERY DAY after lunch, unlike in schools.

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