that the fireflies in the garden were almost invisible. When I arrived at Sebastian Myhre’s bistro, which opened last June, it was still so light out at 9 p.m. “Oslo is a bit like the little brother of Copenhagen and Stockholm,” said Anders Husa, and Oslo native and food blogger, over coffee at Tim Wendelboe, a renowned Oslo coffee shop, “but the dining scene here has been evolving really quickly during the past 10 years, and it’s super focused on quality.” There may also be an element of underdog complex at work in the current vivacity of the Norwegian capital’s restaurant scene. Scandinavian herbs and seasonings like wild wood sorrel, sea buckthorn berries and “Nordic capers” (pickled elderflower berries), punctuate this umami-rich food with their bracing acidity. Much of this cuisine is thrillingly primal, even a little bit blunt, as seen in a funky local love of smoked and fermented foods, the acidulated dairy flavors of brown butter, brown cheese (made from caramelized whey), buttermilk and soured cream. The best cooking in Oslo is often found at the growing number of friendly, casual and, for this expensive country, relatively affordable gastro pubs and modern bistro-style tables that serve food inspired by an edgier contemporary idiom of French cooking, la bistronomie. For me, though, the growing culinary appeal of the Norwegian capital isn’t best defined by Michelin - where the dominant DNA is Gallic gastronomic refinement - but rather a delectable local food culture that’s based on the country’s spectacular seafood and produce, amped up by the brevity of its growing season. Oslo first registered with many people as a possibly alluring new gastronomic destination in 2016 when the excellent restaurant Maaemo won three Michelin stars.
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