Partners

Hirtshals Museum and Hirtshals Fishing Festival

Bjesken at Hirtshals Museum

Over time, people came from near and far and wanted advice and guidance in relation to collecting plants and brewing bjesk, and at the same time you could have a bottle of Brøndums Snaps turned into one of Signe's many types of bjesk. That could be done at Signe's home without charge.

Hugo Nielsen, who was the first manager of Hirtshals Museum and before that a fishing skipper, and Signe had known each other for several years, and they were both interested in beer brewing. Together they developed new recipes, and in 1981 the Hirtshals Museum opened an exhibition about "Signes klitbjesker". At the opening, Signe presented her recipe book to the museum with the recipes for 66 of her bjesk mixes. The recipes can be seen in the book which was published by Hirtshals Museum in 2001 with the then manager Christian Hansen as the author. It has the title – leaves from Signe Hansen's book...

After some TV people made the documentary "Signe and Bjesken" in 1982, there were even more - both private people and companies all over the country - who wanted to make bjesk at Signe. She found it very difficult to say no to people, and therefore local friends such as Hugo Nielsen stepped in and helped to collect plants for Signe's garden. Her leggings could no longer withstand the same long trips after the plants as before.

After Signe's death in 1985, Signe's sideboard and decanters were donated to the Hirtshals Museum and Hugo continued in Signe's spirit as Denmark's leading bjesk brewer by transforming the bottles of Brøndums Snaps that the guests brought to the Hirtshals Museum into one of the many types of bjesk that Signe had developed and there were also some pieces of his own recipe.

In addition to the exhibition in here and the laboratory in the kitchen, a "bjesk garden" was also set up in the garden, where you can see the various plants that can be used for bjesk brewing all year round.

At the Hirtshals Museum you can still have bjesk made today, it is incl. in the price, when you have paid for an entrance ticket, which costs DKK 30. From time to time, Bjesk lectures are also held at the museum during the year. In the month of July, it has for many years been a weekly event with Bjeskinfo as part of the summer garden activities, and otherwise it is held a few times a year as an evening event - usually in the spring with a small preview of the new Bjesk of the Year and one in the month of November about the Christmas tree, which is a little special compared to the dune trees.

Arcus and Hirtshals Fishing Festival

The ideal gastronomic partnership between aquavit and fish
Fish must swim, and they do so naturally in water. But gastronomically, fish swims best in aquavit or bjesk, and preferably served with beer. Akvavit is Danish like Harald Blåtand and Holger Danske and is excellent as an accompaniment to both fresh and cooked fish. Therefore, it is quite natural that you often hear the words at a well-laid fish table: "Let the fish swim" - which means let's toast in aquavit and send the fish on from the mouth to the stomach.

"Bjesk or akvavit taste really well with fish. For example, the fish's often discreet, sweet sea taste is ideal together with the sweetness found in the aftertaste of a well-distilled aquavit, which has a discreetly sweet taste of anise. In addition, the spices found in the aquavit, dill, cumin, anise, amber, lemon peel to name just a few, are often the same ingredients that are used when cooking fish. It is thus a completely natural partnership between the ingredients in prepared fish and aquavit - yes, they are naturally related to each other. In addition, fish from Hirtshals locally are almost neighbors with Aalborg Akvavit, which is produced in Aalborg. Some talk about the taste of North Jutland," says Lars Kragelund.

Sip and taste
There are many myths about the way to drink akvavit, but Lars Kragelund states that it is always permissible to sip and take your time to taste: "It is perfectly OK to sip and enjoy your akvavit, so that you get with all the nuances of taste. With its high alcohol strength, an aquavit unfolds quite naturally in the 32° heat of the mouth. A good akvavit is as complex as a whiskey and should be enjoyed in all its nuances. By consuming the aquavit in small quantities, the aromatics are released from the alcohol and provide full enjoyment - both if you drink the aquavit alone and with food. This way of consuming the aquavit also extends the enjoyment of the aquavit over the individual course.”

Akvavit may be taken with food
Lars also looks at the overall meal experience, and says that this is enhanced by consuming aquavit with food - both gastronomically and socially. "The experience you get when you drink aquavit with food, especially if you chew the food first and then drink aquavit afterwards, is often an explosion of aroma substances - an interplay of aroma substances from both aquavit and food. There is also the social atmosphere that arises when good food and drink are on the table," says Lars.

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