Spring arrives and with it yeasty lemonade
A recipe for Finnish sima and impressions of Mayday
Coming, as I do, from England, I’m pretty familiar with people doing strange things on Mayday.
In Cornwall, they enjoy a bit of this.
And, elsewhere around Britain, dancing around like this is entirely to be expected.
Most people in England, of course, don’t spend their time dancing on Mayday. It’s just another bank holiday, the eccentricities being left to other people of a more colourful, potentially more interesting, disposition.
And that’s one of the differences I’ve found between England and my new home of Finland. In Finland, the eccentricities don’t exist out on the fringes by a small, dedicated, and largely misunderstood sort. Instead, the eccentricities are manifested more broadly to the point that they aren’t eccentricities at all.
And that is no less obvious than at Mayday.
Spring has finally arrived here in Pori, Finland where I live. On Mayday last week, the spring sun shone with such conviction that, even with the snow yet to fully melt, summer just no longer felt so far away.
My wife and I were headed to a park to enjoy the weather with our kids and my wife’s parents. But before they left the house, being Mayday, my Finnish family all required a very specific item of clothing before they stepped outside: their high school graduation hat.
This hat is a little white thing that, to me, looks much like a sailor’s hat. And, to a large majority of Finns, it’s imperative it be worn throughout May 1, wherever they go.
Some people even where their “student jumpsuits”. I can’t really explain the phenomenon that is the Finnish student jumpsuit. But, in short, it is a jumpsuit that students in Finland wear and progressively add more and more badges to after they complete specific university/college courses.
The jumpsuit, and the little white hat, for some reason, is Mayday’s uniform.
Being from the country that just spent 100 million quid putting a 700 year old crown on an old man I probably shouldn’t comment on eccentric traditions.
But it is part of the fun of moving abroad. Getting a chance to see normal things that seem new and interesting from your own, immigrant perspective.
Much as I was jealous of enjoyed my wife’s little hat, Mayday in Finland (or Vappu as it’s called here) is particularly interesting to me for its culinary traditions.
On Vappu, it’s traditional to eat donuts (munkki in Finnish) and a truly delicious cold, fermented drink called sima.
Sima is basically a fermented lemonade. And if you’ve ever sat there in your kitchen looking up at your cupboards thinking: “What can I do with all this yeast I have other than make bread again?” then, boy, is sima the recipe for you!
It is easy, delicious, fun, and a genuinely good alternative for people who are staying away from alcohol (though, if I’m to be proper, I should say that the yeast fermentation does make sima very slightly alcoholic, though even a long-fermented sima would be hard to reach over 1% alc vol).
Here’s how I made mine last week.
Ingredients.
4 litres water
2 lemons
250g dark muscovado sugar
250g white sugar
1/4 tsp dry yeast
2 tbsp honey
a few raisins
Day 1
Bring half your water to a boil and add it to your dark and white sugar and the peel of your lemons (peel it in long strips so you can easily remove it later). Dissolve your yeast in a bit of the remaining water then add it to the rest. Once the sugar water has cooled add everything together including juice of the lemons (in a preferably non-metallic bowl) and cover with clingfilm. Leave it somewhere dogs or children can’t knock it over.
24 hours later and you should see lots of bubbles appearing on the surface.
Now, get your bottles and put into the bottom a tablespoon of honey in each along with a few raisins. We will talk about why these are important later…
Fill the bottles with the sima, removing the lemon peel, and close the lids loosely so the gas can escape and the bottles don’t explode. There is conflicting guidance in Finnish recipes I’ve read about where to ferment sima. Some suggest somewhere warm for a few days. Some both warm then cold. I went with leaving my bottles out on the kitchen table for 3 days, then into the fridge for a further 4 days.
The raisins, as the image shows, will start to float when the drink has started to ferment enough and the raisins have absorbed enough CO2. At this point the further time in fridge helps develop the flavour.
And there you have it. Delicious, cheap, and the kind of fun, totally unnecessary cooking project I really love.
Let me know if you try it out for yourself!
My wife is going to be all over this - going to try it out this weekend. Love these recipe articles you mix into the dough, so to speak, of your publication.
Thank you for sharing
My first reaction was a sort of curious revulsion, but now I absolutely want to make this when I get back home. Also, how many glasses until I get bombed?