Negative 24 degrees Celsius is not as bad as it sounds.
That’s what I tell my children when we board a wooden sled attached to a snowmobile and wrap ourselves in reindeer skins. It’s actually only negative 11 Fahrenheit! If my kids hear me, they give no indication. They’re buried in layers of long underwear, wool, down, more wool, probably some Gore-Tex, those foot heater things and whatever balaclavas are made of. I can’t even see their faces. The two huddled bodies opposite me on the sled may not even be my children for all I know.
My husband, kids and I are on our way, improbably, to get supposedly the best waffles in the entire country of Sweden. But first you have to get there.
The waffle promised land — Hemfjällstugen — is about three miles from the nearest road in Sälen, a town on Sweden’s western flank about five hours by car from Stockholm.
A few days earlier, a woman named Cissi Bjuredahl had warned me by email that Hemfjällstugen, which lacks electricity and water, wasn’t exactly a restaurant. “We only serve soups, waffles & fika,” she wrote. Ms. Bjuredahl also told me the only way to get there was by snowmobile or cross country skis. “But remember you are in the mountains, so if the weather is bad, don’t go if you haven’t tried skis before,” she’d warned. And then, perhaps walking back the very Swedish honesty: “Welcome!”
Ergo, the snowmobile. As Felix, our teenage driver, guided our sled toward Hemfjällstugen,we zoomed into a snow squall, shapes and shadows faded into nothingness. It was like watching a painting in reverse: from depth and perspective to a seamless white void until the landscape was simply erased and you couldn’t tell the difference between earth and sky.
It’s a little troubling to not know where the ground is. After about 20 minutes, my son peeked out of his scarf long enough to tell me he was scared, and could we please go back? But then, suddenly, we had arrived at Hemfjällstugen: a modest log cabin with a 30-foot pole with the flag of Sweden whipping around it in the icy wind — everything but Mrs. Claus opening the front door wiping her hands on her apron.
On the inside, Hemfjällstugen is lit entirely by candles and oil lamps. The dining area is a series of wooden tables and benches, a counter and a small chalkboard menu: waffles with homemade strawberry jam, waffles with homemade blueberry jam, and waffles with homemade cloudberry jam. I think there was a soup, too.
The fires blazing in every wood stove were soon crowded with arriving skiers and snowmobilers, shedding layers, waiting to regain sensation in their extremities. Soon enough, that little cabin in the middle of the snowy woods — full of people clicking off their helmets, helping themselves to homemade kanelbullar (Swedish cinnamon and cardamom rolls) and strong coffee — swelled with the volume of happy Nordic people.
“This must be the coziest restaurant in the world,” said my daughter, a connoisseur of these things.
Swedish, through and through
Broadly speaking, Hemfjällstugen is in the town of Sälen. I have Swedish cousins who come here every year to ski, and this year we’d come to join them for a few days. The town of Sälen is not well known outside Sweden. It’s not like flying to Europe to ski in Courchavel or Gstaad. On the other hand, it’s only a few hours from Stockholm, Gothenberg, or in the case of my family, Jönköping — which means the place is Swedish through and through.
The whole area is called “Sälenfjällen” (which means “Sälen mountains”). There are about half a dozen ski resorts in Sälenfjällen — Stöten, Hundfjället and Lindvallen are the ones we visited. Swedes call the whole place “Sälen,” for short, the way that Californians say “Tahoe” even though there are a dozen mountains there.
The mountains aren’t intimidating; they’re what you would get if you sanded the top of the Alps down to smooth, endless hills. At the bottom they’re blanketed in forest, but there are no trees at the summit, so you can ski down in almost every direction. The slopes are mostly gentle, and there are trails for every level skier, cross-country skier and snowboarder.
Possibly the best reason to get to the top of the mountains is to eat. There’s almost always a sit-down restaurant at the peak, with menus that are local, seasonal and prepared by French-trained chefs.
“When you’re skiing all day, you want a lot of good food,” said Daniel Ahlen, the head chef and owner of several restaurants in the area, including Lyktan, which sits atop Hundfjället, and Fompes Grill, which sits at the bottom of the same mountain and serves local sausages, vegan burgers and salty fries.
Mr. Ahlen centers his menus on Swedish comfort food. “I think people would get really mad if we removed the goulash from our menu,” he said. “In Dalarna, we have our own way of doing things. Our tradition here of hunting and fishing and outdoor life are things we want to take care of and show to the rest of Sweden.” On his list: “the elk, the birds, the fish, the berries in the woods.”
About those berries. Every menu, every drinks list, every candy store (and there are a lot of them) has cloudberry something. I asked Mr. Ahlen why cloudberries have celebrity status here, and he explained that they are the pride of the forest, the rare Arctic berry. “If you serve waffles to a Swedish person who is a grown up, you must serve it with cloudberry jam,” said Mr. Ahlen, who also owns Våffelstugen Hundfjället, a nearby cabin that specializes in waffles.
An après-ski party
A few days after our own waffle adventure, we spent a day skiing at Lindvallen, a few miles away. In the afternoon, as the sun was setting, we decided to end the day at a restaurant called Sälen Original, a log house with a high-pitched roof tucked on the side of the mountain.
From the outside, I realized, it looked like the gingerbread house my Swedish mother used to make, always coated in a generous layer of white icing as the finishing touch. But as thick white clumps of snow dumped and dumped on us, it was obvious my mother’s gingerbread house, with its artful icing accents and dripping icicles, was not nearly frosted enough to be from this part of Sweden.
The relationship between dark and light starts to play tricks on you in this part of Sweden, where the sun goes down around 3 p.m. in December. Long, menacing shadows start to follow you around by lunchtime, reminding you that your ski day is on a clock (although many slopes have lights). The sky swims between dusty pink, faded yellow and icy blue.
Sälen Original takes après ski to a whole new and extremely Swedish level. When we walked in at around 2:45, it was silent and almost empty. A man on a plain wood stage was tuning his guitar. Then, at precisely 3 p.m., with theatrical precision, the door was thrown open and Swedes clomped in with their ski boots, tables filled up and the guitarist started.
People ordered schnapps with whipped cream, shots of Jägermeister, giant steins of beer as well as burgers, pretzels, mountains of fries and, naturally, waffles. As the guy with the guitar began singing American rock songs and Swedish folk songs, the whole place came to life. It’s a part of Swedish culture that I have always loved: the mandate that if you’re eating and drinking with other people, there must be singing.
People ate and drank, clapped and sang along, and ordered more rounds of glögg (spiced mulled wine); kids climbed the stairs, dangling their feet off the balcony, while waiters carried skis — holes drilled to hold shots of schnapps — in every direction.
By the time we left, it was pitch black and completely silent outside. Maybe Sälen, I had started to think, claims more magic than other places. The kindly red farmhouses, the trails of chimney smoke curling upward from every village, the wise, endless forests with their precious berries, their creatures, their secrets. The warm cabins and homemade waffles hiding deep inside these woods. The whole place patrolled by elk, reindeer, the very real possibility of gnomes. There is such a sweetness to Sälen, like you have been transported into a snowy, benevolent Swedish fairy tale.
Our last night, we went to dinner at Gammelgården, a restaurant just outside of town. Gammelgården is probably the most traditional Swedish restaurant in the area, but at over 400 years old, “traditional” takes on a whole new meaning. Reindeer, elk, lingonberries: The menu makes you feel like a Viking. With its blazing fire, low wooden ceilings and an abundance of candles and bearded tomten — squat little gnomes with big noses and long hats, — on every surface, Gammelgården set off a familial debate on whether it might usurp Hemfjällstugen as the world’s coziest restaurant. Between courses, my son ran outside to coax four-foot-long icicles off the roof, and my daughter, on the other side of a mountain of mashed potatoes, grew sleepy.
We walked outside into the cold, snowy night. It had been a long day and a warm, abundant dinner. It was so dark outside, it felt like the sky had descended onto the land. We climbed into the car, bound for home, maybe a fire, and bed. It was 7 p.m.
Danielle Pergament is a frequent contributor to Times Travel.
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