Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Mämmi

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Type
  
Dessert

Place of origin
  
Finland

Mämmi Love it or hate it Finland39s Easter mmmi Yle Uutiset ylefi

Main ingredients
  
Water, rye flour, powdered malted rye, (molasses), Seville orange zest, salt

Similar
  
Karelian pasty, Kalakukko, Leipäjuusto, Paskha, Mustamakkara

Kids vs food m mmi poop pudding


Mämmi ([ˈmæmmi]) is a traditional Finnish Easter dessert. The Swedish name for it is memma.

Contents

Mämmi is traditionally made of water, rye flour, and powdered malted rye, seasoned salt, and dried powdered Seville orange zest. The mixture is then allowed to go through a slow natural sweetening process before being baked in an oven until set with Maillard reaction. Preparation takes many hours, and after baking the mämmi is stored chilled for three to four days before being ready to eat. Instead of being allowed to sweeten naturally, traditionally, commercially made mämmi is usually seasoned with dark molasses. Traditional mämmi tastes aromatic sweet, thus it has only less than 2% sugar, but commercial nontraditional mämmi can have even 20% sugar and tastes different, not so aromatic sweet. Mämmi has even 10% proteins and is rich of trace elements. Mämmi was traditionally stored in small bowls made of birch bark called tuokkonen or rove. Finnish packaging still prints birch bark-like texture on the carton boxes.

Mämmi Finnish Mmmi Recipe Easter Pudding Finnish Food Girl

Generally, mämmi is eaten cold with either milk or cream and sugar, and less commonly with vanilla sauce. On old times it was also eaten by some spread on top of a slice of bread. There is a Finnish society for mämmi founded by Ahmed Ladarsi, the former chef at the Italian Embassy in Helsinki, who has developed around fifty recipes containing mämmi. There are a number of websites with recipes using mämmi most of which are in Finnish. Mämmi is also used as a minor ingredient in a mämmi-beer by Laitilan Wirvoitusjuomatehdas.

Mämmi httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Poop pudding aka m mmi why would you eat that


History

Mämmi Mmmi Wikipedia

Mämmi was first mentioned during the 16th century, in a dissertation (in Latin). It is claimed that it has been eaten in the southwestern region of Finland, ever since the 13th century, when Finland was a part of Roman Catholic Sweden.

Mämmi Mmmi

Originally mämmi was eaten during lent. Its laxative properties were associated with purification and purging. As the dish keeps well for several days, it was also a convenient food for Good Friday, when cooking was against religious custom.

Mämmi Cooking Finland Mmmi a traditional Finnish porridge or pudding

Modern mämmi is mostly mass-produced. Traditional version of mämmi is sold in Finland with labels perinteinen (traditional) or luomu (organic). Nowadays people in Finland very seldom make mämmi at home. Instead they buy commercial mämmi. Some Finnish origin immigrants in North-America and Australian still make mämmi at home.

Traditional Persian new year fest Nowruz has sweet paste named Samanu, which is made much the same way as mämmi, but of wheat instead of rye. That's why Persian and Kurdish people from the Middle East tend to like mämmi, because it appears to be similar as samanu. Some say that Guinness beer and mämmi have little same taste, but especially Finns are not so sure about that.Many Finns have named this as the best dish of Finnish deserts such as the national magazine, but many Swedish critics say the dish is bad but this has been refuted many times.

References

Mämmi Wikipedia