The Best Neo-Nordic Restaurants in Scandinavia and America
Noma, the Danish restaurant that started the foraging movement, is just the tip of the neo-Nordic iceberg. Here are six places to try in Scandinavia, plus three places to get a taste of Scandinavia stateside.
By: Brett Martin and Mark Byrne
Noma, Copenhagen
The original and still champion.
Maaemo, Oslo
Go now, because soon everyone else will.
Lysverket, Bergen
Making a case for Norway’s second city.
Frantzén, Stockholm
Austere and passionate, all at once.
Relae, Copenhagen
Only four courses, still mind-blowing.
Oaxen Krog & Slip, Stockholm
A neo-Nordic O.G., reinvented in Stockholm.
No Airfare Required
How to get a taste of Scandinavia Stateside
Aska, Brooklyn
When Aska opened in the back of a gallery in an old garage in Williamsburg, it brought Nordic food to New York and won a Michelin star in its first year. Slated to reopen soon in a home it won’t have to share.
The Bachelor Farmer, Minneapolis
Minnesota might seem like an odd place for high-end locavorism, but Bachelor Farmer chef Paul Berglund’s commitment to farm-sourced food is straight out of the Old Country.
The Willows Inn, Lummi Island, WA
Chef Blaine Wetzel cooked under Redzepi at Noma before opening his restaurant in an inn on a small island north of Seattle. The food, in true Nordic fashion, is “fished, foraged, and farmed.”
More from GQ:
10 Best Store-Bought Hot Dogs for the Grill
How to Make the Perfect Burger With Bacon (On the Inside)
5 Cocktails That Will Please Any Crowd
Your Guide to Grilling Everything: From Appetizers to Desserts
The 10 Habits of Highly Unflabby People
How to Win Reservations and Influence Waiters
Photos: 1) Mikkel Heriba, 2) Maaemo, 3)Antoine Bouillot, 4)Frantzén, 5) Per Anders Jørgensen, 6) Oaxen Krog & Slip, 7) Signe Birck, 8) The Bachelor Farmer, 9) Charity Burggraaf