Uunijuusto

Finnish dessert made of colostrum From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uunijuusto (Finnish pronunciation: [ˈuːniˌjuːsto]) is a Finnish dish made from cow's colostrum, the first milk of a calved cow,[1] salted and baked. Sometimes uunijuusto is also made from ordinary milk and eggs. In Sweden, the dish is named kalvdans (calve's dance).

Place of originFinland
Main ingredientsColostrum, salt; or milk and eggs
Quick facts Type, Place of origin ...
Uunijuusto
TypeDessert
Place of originFinland
Main ingredientsColostrum, salt; or milk and eggs
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The word uunijuusto literally means "oven cheese", but uunijuusto is not properly a cheese.[2]

Uunijuusto is sometimes eaten for dessert with berries (often cloudberries) or jam or mehukeitto, a soup made from fresh berries such as lingonberries or redcurrants.

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