Jean Sibelius’s menu
Säilyke (salted-marinated preserved fish from Nordic larders)

Graavilohi — Dill-Cured Salmon

PreservingDocumented🧂 🍋 🫙facile30 min (+ 48 to 72 h curing)

Raw salmon fillet buried for several days under a mix of salt, sugar and a mountain of dill, which “cooks” it cold and preserves it; sliced thinly and served with a mild mustard sauce.

Säilyke (salted-marinated preserved fish from Nordic larders)

Raw salmon fillet buried for several days under a mix of salt, sugar and a mountain of dill, which “cooks” it cold and preserves it; sliced thinly and served with a mild mustard sauce.

Fish, in our lands, you learn to keep long before you learn to savor it. You lay the fillet under salt, sugar and a forest of dill, you press it, and you wait two or three days — patience again, always. The cold and the salt do the work for you, and the salmon becomes silky, translucent like a frosty morning. Slice it thin, a dab of mustard sauce, a little dark bread: that is how you receive a friend unexpectedly without disturbing the genius.
Jean Sibelius
Ingredients
  • Very fresh salmon fillet with skina nice piece (star ingredient)
  • Coarse saltgenerously (preserving agent)
  • Sugaralmost as much as salt (balance and preservation)
  • Dillin abundance (signature herb)
  • Coarsely ground white peppera little (seasoning)
How it was made : Graavilohi (“buried salmon”) continues a medieval Nordic technique where fish was literally buried and lightly fermented for preservation. In Sibelius's time, the milder salt-sugar-dill version, non-fermented, had become a classic of cold buffets (voileipäpöytä). The salt and sugar dehydrate and protect the fish without cooking by fire.