Christmas Jansson’s temptation
- Published: 30 Nov 23
- Updated: 25 Mar 24
Brontë Aurell shares her recipe for Jansson’s temptation (Jansson’s frestelse), a classic Swedish potato dish traditionally made with cream and ansjovis (cured sprats). The perfect festive side dish.
Brontë says: “On Christmas Eve across Sweden, everyone sits down to a traditional Julbord (Christmas table) of herrings, meatballs, ham, sausages, cured salmon, beetroot – and this delicious potato dish. It’s a proper Swedish classic, loved by all.”
A Danish entrepreneur, restaurateur and cook, Brontë runs the acclaimed ScandiKitchen café and shop in central London with her Swedish husband, Jonas.
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Serves 6-8 as a side -
Hands-on time 20 min. Oven time 45-55 min
Nutrition
- Calories
- 422kcals
- Fat
- 28g (18g saturated)
- Protein
- 5.2g
- Carbohydrates
- 34g (7.4g sugars)
- Fibre
- 4.1g
- Salt
- 0.1g
delicious. tips
Find ansjovis at Ocado or online at scandikitchen.co.uk
This dish can be completely cooked up to a day in advance, cooled and chilled in the fridge, then gently reheated in the oven before serving. It will also freeze well once cooked.
Brontë says: “There are many recipes outside Sweden that suggest using actual anchovies. The thing is, Swedish ‘ansjovis’ are not actually anchovies (despite being named after them) but little cured, spiced sprats, which are a type of mini herring. Ansjovis are worth finding as they’re perfect for this dish. They melt while baking, giving a beautiful, rounded flavour. Using them, rather than oily anchovies, is the key to getting your Jansson’s temptation to taste like it does in Sweden.”