Plevna, Tampere, Finland
Tampere, like most Finnish cities outside Helsinki, has surprisingly few Finnish restaurants. Every other restaurant seems to be a burger place or a kebab shop. Our flight got in very late, and the only open restaurant in our hotel was Amarillo (every Finnish town has a branch of Amarillo - some have two), a Finno-Tex-Mex. Remarkable stuff, like nachos made by people from the Frozen North who appear to have seen a picture of some nachos once upon a time. They came with bits of smoked Finnish sausage, smetana and soft Finnish cheese. Surprisingly tasty, but not nachos like you've ever seen them.
Happily for those looking for honest Finnish stodge that hasn't been interpreted through a Mexican filter, Plevna, a microbrewery in an old cotton mill by the city's rapids (incidentally, this was the first building in the Nordic countries to be lit by electric light back in 1882), produces some seriously stodge-tastic drinking food and some breathtakingly good beers. We've suggested to them that they send a couple of barrels to this year's Cambridge Beer Festival. You'll find local favourites like perry, cider and sparkling mead on the drinks list, along with light-(ish) choices like wheat beers and pilsners. Things start to get seriously, seriously good with the stouts, porters and syrupy dark lagers, which seem perfectly adapted for a cold, snowy Finnish March. There's a long list of hearty, beer-friendly food like reindeer steaks, sausages, pork knuckles and rostis with mushroom sauces.
It wasn't the recommended beer, but #11, the Rauchbier James was a wonderful accompaniment to the smoky sausages. It's a smoked, tarry drink; dark, fruity and syrupy. Don't worry about tomorrow's headache - you can deal with it in the sauna while you sit back and plan another meal.
Labels: beer, black pudding, Finland, restaurants, reviews, sausages, Tampere

5 Comments:
Sounds wonderful! I'd love to try those sausages. Not sure about the nachos though...
The nachos, although downright *wrong*, were actually quite tasty. I'd still have preferred a sausage, though.
I thought you'd never Finnish... Boom-boom. I'd love to try the tar beer.
Oh, I love Finland (my husband's sister-in-law is from Tampere so we've been a couple of times). Now I want sausages and a sauna (although not at the same time!)
Have you tried the doughnuts at Pyynikki Observation Tower? They are fabulous
Post a Comment
<< Home