How To Use Lutefisk In A Sentence
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'Lutefisk' is an infamous Norwegian dish composed of fish soaked in lye.
Boing Boing: December 14, 2003 - December 20, 2003 Archives
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A 'lutefisk' maker as a boy, he had an unmatched run in politics.
Macleans.ca
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I suspect that for future generations of Ethiopan-Americans and others of East African ancestry, injera will be what lutefisk is for Scandinavian-Americans; the traditional food which most outsiders won't touch.
Science News From Science News
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The Norwegian word lutefisk means ‘fish washed in lye’ and refers to an ancient manufacturing process that involved drying fish and soaking it in lye.
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They ‘drive great distances and spend much money for the delicacy, they'll risk their lives on icy roads going to lutefisk dinners in faraway communities’.
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Christmas meal traditions vary by region and may include roast pork, other meat, or lutefisk.
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Because she looks lovely, and we would look like three-month-old lutefisk in some of these colors.
Barnstorming on an Invisible Segway
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(A college student who studied "The Zombie as Metaphor" is no substitute for radio detective Guy Noir, but a military-trained female diner owner offers some hope that lutefisk will one day again reign supreme at church suppers.)
5 books on zombies
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I then mapped it out and found that the line between General Mills HQ and Mecca went directly through Norway and Sweden, foreign places where the national dish is lutefisk--a kind of jellied fish much like the Arab dish, maraq samak sana'd except it's soaked in lye rather than tomato sauce and doesn't stink as badly.
Archive 2009-02-01
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STILL, way better than another upper midwest staple .... lutefisk!
Fried Carp, Anyone?
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In addition to skiing, the fjords -- miles and miles of dramatic landscape, salmon/lox, something called lutefisk.
C. M. Rubin: The Global Search for Education: A View from Norway
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At Christmas, many Finnish Americans eat lutefisk (lye-soaked dried cod) and prune-filled tarts.
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For the uninitiated, lutefisk is an infamous Norwegian dish made of dried cod fish soaked in lye.
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One of the most popular dishes is lutefisk, stockfish softened in a solution of lye.
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I then mapped it out and found that the line between General Mills HQ and Mecca went directly through Norway and Sweden, foreign places where the national dish is lutefisk -- a kind of jellied fish much like the Arab dish, maraq samak sana'd except it's soaked in lye rather than tomato sauce and doesn't stink as badly.
Jesus' General
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That night I was aboard the Kottur og Stulka preparing lutefisk for 90 burly sailors with fairy tale accents and tattoos of anchors.
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Poor Mr. Petersen must be half-starved if he thinks lutefisk is delicious.
The Trouble With May Amelia
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..speaking of tools, ahhh, that is axes & hammers, thor 'hammer smash' hushovd must be singing that ol' norwegian favorite, "the lutefisk lament"...
Heat-Addled: Cooler Heads Will Prevail
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Lutefisk is a traditional Norwegian dish featuring cod that has been steeped for many days in a solution of lye, until its flesh is caustic enough to dissolve silver cutlery.
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After midnight, talk turned to ghosts, then moved on to lutefisk recipes.
Latest Freemason Conspiracy: Recruiting Younger Bros
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These are cleared, and a hot entrée is brought out - in their case usually a fruit-filled pork loin with red cabbage and boiled potatoes rather than the more traditional lutefisk.
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Not a single boy thanks me when I put the lutefisk on his plate and I know why.
The Trouble With May Amelia
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We have German bratwurst and beer, we have Scandinavian lefse (a potato-based soft, flat bread) and lutefisk, we have greens and chitlins.
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One of the most popular dishes is lutefisk, stockfish softened in a solution of lye.
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Which explains all those lutefisk festivals in MN and ND.
Matthew Yglesias » US Against Them: Ethnocentic Foundations of American Opinion