• fyllning: (ex: jag tror att jag har tappat en fyllning)
  • hål i tanden: (ex: ...eller kanske har ett hål i tanden.)
  • tandläkare: (ex: så ringde jag tandläkaren)
  • akuttid: (ex: och frågade efter akuttiderna)
Posted Tue 22 Sep 2009 04:07:48 PM CEST Tags: sweden

the far right are now complaining that obama wants to turn the US into another sweden. wyatt cenac from the daily show investigates.

part one of "the stockholm syndrome":

part two:

i for one could cope, but then again i'm already living the socialist nightmare :)

Posted Thu 23 Apr 2009 11:42:42 PM CEST Tags: sweden

so today is international waffel day. a day celebrated world-wide where people unsurpisingly are supposed to make and eat waffles. but what of the origin of these festivities?

as the tale goes, something like ~2009 years ago this lady named mary was visited by some dude named gabriel tell her that she was going to give birth to the sun of god. flash-forward to the present, and the people eat lots of waffles every march 25th.

wait... what?

is there seriously some kind of link between the mundane waffel and the savior of the christian faithful? perhaps there is some arcane symbolism between the whipped cream and strawberry jam (or maple syrup...)? or is it the influence of some ancient pagan rituals, like one finds in some of the other more well known christian holidays?

but no... turns out that this proclamation of pregnancy (the annunciation as it is known in english), is known in swedish as Vårfrudagen (translation: Our lady day). It turns out that (a) "Vårfru" sound a lot like the word "våffla", which is swedish for "waffles" and (b) swedes love waffels.

Thus, våffeldagen aka international wafflesday is born.

some other interesting waffel facts:

  • there's a "national waffel day" in the states, which is conveniently on the other side of the calendar (August 24). this date commemorates the patenting of the first waffle iron by cornelius swarthout.
  • the first recorded use of the waffel was apparently in the 1300's, in either greece or medeival france, depending on which parts of teh internets you visit.
  • according to wikipedia's entry on waffels, in medieval france competition between after-church waffel vendors became so heated (get it??!? heated??? nyuk nyuk!) that king charles the ninth passed a law regulating a minimum distance between waffel vendors.
Posted Wed 25 Mar 2009 11:30:00 AM CET Tags: sweden