Svið is a traditional Icelandic dish consisting of a sheep's head cut in half, singed to remove the fur, and boiled with the brain removed, sometimes cured in lactic acid.
Svið originally arose at a time when people could not afford to let any part of a slaughtered animal go to waste. It is part of þorramatur, a selection of various traditional Icelandic food that is served as a buffet, particularly at the Þorrablót mid-winter festival. It is used as the basis for sviðasulta (head cheese or brawn, made from bits of svið pressed into gelatinous loaves pickled in whey). Similar dishes can also be found in other Western Nordic countries, such as smalahove in Norway and seyðarhøvd on the Faroe Islands.

Characteristic of: Icelandic cuisine
Categories: Lamb dish Offal Sheep
Associated with: Þorramaturis
See also: Smalahoveno
Contains, including ancestors: Lamb
Also known as:
Wikidata ID: Q1757401
Wikipedia title: Svið
References:

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