Multekrem Recipe (A Whipped Cream and Cloudberries Norwegian Dessert) (2024)

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Grace your humble abode with the splendor of a little Norwegian festive spirit with our sumptuously soft and creamy Multekrem recipe, and take your tastebuds on a journey through the wild snow forests of Scandinavia.

Multekrem Recipe (A Whipped Cream and Cloudberries Norwegian Dessert) (1)

Multekrem Recipe

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In a similar vein to its cousin Trollkrem, Multekrem delivers some truly mind-blowing levels of texture and flavor when you consider how few ingredients the dish uses.

Literally meaning ‘multe (cloudberry) cream’, Multekrem can be made in a matter of minutes, yet can leave a smile on the face of you, your family, and dinner guests for hours on end!

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What is Multekrem?

In essence, Multerekm is a gloriously simple dish of cloudberries mixed with whipped cream. The result is a fluffy, creamy dessert that has a dreamy soft texture, and delivers a tart, sweet, yet well-balanced flavor.

In Norway, Multekrem traditionally is prepared as part of a conventional Christmas dinner. Hence, if you wanted to add a dash of authentic Norway to your household on Christmas day, preparing this dessert is a glorious way to do it.

Our recipe uses chilled cloudberry jam, making it wonderfully refreshing to enjoy during the summer months. However, Norwegians also prepare Multekrem with heated cloudberries or cloudberry jam, which can be a great way to enjoy it during the colder months and over the festive period. It’s entirely up to you!

What are Cloudberries?

Cloudberries grow in cool, alpine, and arctic regions. Wild cloudberries grow in snow forests in the likes of Canada, Greenland, North America, and the Nordic countries, and can be found in alpine regions further south, in the likes of the Scottish Highlands and Baltic states, such as Latvia and Lithuania.

Known for their tart, juicy flavor, cloudberries are somewhat of a hybrid between, say, a raspberry or blackberry, and a red currant. They are sweet, with hints of floral undertones, and very much a versatile fruit when it comes to cooking.

While not well known on a global scale, in Scandinavia, in particular, cloudberries are seen as something of a delicacy. Hence, it should come as no surprise they take center stage in this beloved Norwegian festive dish.

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Our recipe calls for cloudberry jam, which naturally will be difficult to find in conventional supermarkets. However, we were lucky enough to find cloudberry jam sold in Ikea, so if you do want to make this creamy dessert, be sure to take a trip to your nearest branch of arguably the world’s favorite Swedish department store before you begin in the kitchen.

Ingredients

To make our simple Multekrem recipe, you will only need the following four ingredients:

  • Double Cream or Heavy Cream – 250 ml or 1 cup
  • Cloudberry Jam – 200g (7oz)
  • Vanilla Extract – 1/2 tsp
  • Salt – a pinch of salt
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Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1 – Add the cream, vanilla extract, and a pinch of salt to a mixing bowl, and use your electric hand whisk to whip the cream into a lusciously thick yet fluffy consistency (soft peaks), as shown below.

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Step 2 – Add your cloudberry jam to the mixture, and use a spatula to fold the jam into the thick, fluffy cream until everything is mixed.

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Step 3 – You are now ready to serve! Divide up the Multekrem, and serve each portion in a bowl or tall glass.

What to Serve with Multekrem

You can garnish it with various fruits, and a dollop of cloudberry jam on top is a common way to enjoy Multekrem.

We have opted for a sprig of mint, to add a wonderfully fresh aroma and a dash of glorious green color to the dish.

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Multekream truly is wonderfully creamy. By whipping and then folding the cream, you create this luscious texture that has the dollops and folds of, say, clotted cream, while retaining the fluffiness of whipped cream.

The cloudberries mixed in add a beautiful shade of salmon to the snow-white cream, with speckles of indigo and orange. It’s such an easy-to-make dessert, and yet it brings a staggering amount of beauty to the table.

However, whenever, and for whomever you prepare this dessert, we hope its creamy texture and sweet flavor reserve a spot in both your heart and stomach for more than a little traditional Norwegian love!

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Multekrem Recipe Card

Multekrem

Multekrem Recipe (A Whipped Cream and Cloudberries Norwegian Dessert) (10)

Prep Time5 minutes

Total Time5 minutes

Ingredients

  • Double Cream or Heavy Cream - 250 ml or 1 cup
  • Cloudberry Jam - 200g (7oz)
  • Vanilla Extract - 1/2 tsp
  • Salt - a pinch of salt

Instructions

  1. Add the cream, vanilla extract, and salt to a mixing bowl, and use your electric hand whisk to whip the cream into a lusciously thick yet fluffy consistency (soft peaks), as shown below.
  2. Add your cloudberry jam to the mixture, and use a spatula to gently fold the jam into the thick, fluffy cream until everything is mixed.
  3. You are now ready to serve! Divide up the Multekrem, and serve each portion in a bowl or tall glass. You can garnish it with various fruits, and a dollop of cloudberry jam on top is a common way to enjoy Multekrem. We have opted for a sprig of mint, to add a wonderfully fresh aroma and a dash of glorious green color to the dish.

You Might Also Like to Read

  • Trollkrem Recipe (A Norwegian Lingonberry Mousse-Like Dessert)
  • 14 Popular Norwegian Desserts You Should Try in Norway
  • Norwegian Food: 15 Most Popular and Traditional Dishes

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Author: Doina is a content creator and home chef, passionate about traveling all over the world to try new foods and using them to evolve her cooking back home.

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    Hey there! We are Dale and Doina, the founders of Nomad Paradise. We traveled full-time for over three years, and while we now have a home base in the U.K., continue to take trips abroad to visit new places and try new cuisines and foods. Our food guides are curated with the guidance of local foodies, and their contribution is indicated under each article. We also cook the foods we try abroad, and you can discover how to make them in our 'recipes from around the world' category.

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Multekrem Recipe (A Whipped Cream and Cloudberries Norwegian Dessert) (2024)

FAQs

How to use cloudberries? ›

Mature cloudberries are very juicy and can be eaten raw or made into jams, jellies and syrups. Recipes from Scandinavia use the berries to make a “cloudberry cream” by mixing berries or prepared jam with sweetened whipped cream.

How to eat cloudberry jam? ›

Traditionally, cloudberry jam is eaten warm with vanilla ice cream in Sweden. Yes, we know you all like to put cloudberry on your toast, but don't usually eat it like that – it's more of a dessert jam, owing to the fact that it's not a cheap berry as it is quite difficult to harvest and source at times.

What is the English name for cloudberries? ›

Cloudberries are also known by several other names: bakeapple or bake-apple berry in Atlantic Canada, knotberry or knoutberry in England, and averin, evron or highland gold in Scotland.

Why is cloudberry so expensive? ›

They're even pickier about the soil: both humidity and moisture are needed, but not too much moisture...they apparently hate too much moisture as well. All this is funnily enough so very 'lagom” (inside joke for the Swedes). This scarcity makes cloudberries quite expensive and more of a delicacy than a common dish.

What does cloudberry do for your skin? ›

Cloudberries and their seeds are great sources of Vitamin E and cartenoids, more powerful antioxidants that protect against skin damage brought on by the sun and other environmental factors, like pollution—and can help strengthen the skin's protective barrier.

How healthy are cloudberries? ›

In addition to vitamin C, cloudberries have phytosterols, carotenoids, and ellagic acid, which has powerful effects. They have been linked to decelerating down the ageing process, making wrinkles less noticeable, and reducing the risk of getting chronic diseases.

What the heck is a cloudberry? ›

Cloudberry is a circumpolar boreal plant, which can be naturally found throughout the northern hemisphere. The berries are very appreciated and considered a delicacy. They are packed with vitamin C and can be used for alcoholic beverages or served with ice cream or a certain kind of cheese.

How do you eat cloudberries? ›

These golden berries taste as good as they look!

... dessert! Many Norwegians enjoy this golden delicacy at Christmas and other special occasions. You can eat them on their own, heat them up, use them as topping on vanilla ice cream or Norwegian waffles, or try Norway's traditional and delicious cloudberry cream.

Why are cloudberries so rare? ›

Rare May Always be Rare

Cloudberries will never flood the market, no matter how much they are loved. A single female plant may take seven years to mature enough to produce flowers. They also need male plants to pollinate. One reason why the cloudberries of the UK are so rare is that most of the vines are male.

What Flavour is cloudberry? ›

Cloudberry Soda Flavor

The cloudberry is quite tart unless it's fully ripe. It has a little bit of acidity but not as much as in raspberries. The taste is somewhere in between a red currant and raspberries or blackberries. But the only way to truly know is to hunt down some berries to try.

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