Multer i Krukke, Preserved Arctic Cloudberries
Arctic cloudberries barely cooked with sugar, jarred: a clear, amber preserve with intact honeyed acidity. The light of the polar summer sealed in a jar to last through the night.
Arctic cloudberries barely cooked with sugar, jarred: a clear, amber preserve with intact honeyed acidity. The light of the polar summer sealed in a jar to last through the night.
Do you know the *multe*? It is the gold of the northern bogs, a berry that ripens only where few men venture, under the sun that never sets. We pick it in high summer, we keep it in jars for the long dark months — for it carries within it, I assure you, enough to keep scurvy at bay. Taste it: tart and sweet at once, it is the whole wild North you bring to your lips. We cherish it as a treasure, and rightly so.
- •Fresh Arctic cloudberries (*multer*) — a full summer's picking (fruit, vitamin C)
- •Sugar — as available (preservation, sweetness)
Multer i Krukke, Preserved Arctic Cloudberries
Arctic cloudberries barely cooked with sugar, jarred: a clear, amber preserve with intact honeyed acidity. The light of the polar summer sealed in a jar to last through the night.
Why this dish? The Arctic cloudberry is the queen berry of the Far North that Nansen traversed; precious for its vitamin C, it was preserved in summer to combat winter monotony. An evocation of the deep bond between the explorer and the wild resources of the Arctic.
Do you know the *multe*? It is the gold of the northern bogs, a berry that ripens only where few men venture, under the sun that never sets. We pick it in high summer, we keep it in jars for the long dark months — for it carries within it, I assure you, enough to keep scurvy at bay. Taste it: tart and sweet at once, it is the whole wild North you bring to your lips. We cherish it as a treasure, and rightly so.
Ingredients (period version)
- Fresh Arctic cloudberries (*multer*) — a full summer's picking (fruit, vitamin C)
- Sugar — as available (preservation, sweetness)
Ingredients
- Arctic cloudberries (or substitute blackberries + raspberries) — 500 g (fruit)
- Sugar — 200 g (preservation)
- Lemon juice — 1 tbsp (acidity, set)
Method
- Gently sort the berries without crushing them.
- Heat them with the sugar over low heat just until the sugar dissolves and juices run.
- Cook for barely 8–10 min to preserve acidity and whole berries; add lemon juice.
- Pour hot into sterilized jars, seal immediately, and invert.
- Store in a cool, dark place; enjoy on bread, *rømmegrøt*, or alone by the spoonful.
How it was made : Without refrigeration, northern berries were preserved with sugar (when available), or simply in cold fresh water — the cloudberry, naturally rich in benzoic acid, keeps remarkably well with little effort, a fact long known to northern peoples.
The contemporary twist : Served as *multekrem*: whipped into lightly sweetened cream, an express version of the great Norwegian festive dessert.
Sources : Berry preservation tradition in northern Scandinavia · Fridtjof Nansen, *Farthest North* (Fram over Polhavet, 1897)
Fridtjof Nansen · Charactorium