Field 01
The New Nordic movement, rewritten as landscape
A manifesto from the mid-2000s did not invent Nordic flavour — it asked kitchens to stop importing identity and start reading soil, wind, and season as the primary text.
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Essays on New Nordic cuisine, wild harvest, and the Copenhagen kitchens that taught a generation to taste moss, tide, and jar.
Read the field notesLead essay
Field 01
A manifesto from the mid-2000s did not invent Nordic flavour — it asked kitchens to stop importing identity and start reading soil, wind, and season as the primary text.
Continue readingField notes
Field 02
How Scandinavian wild food practice balances curiosity with regeneration — and why the best foragers leave almost no story on the path.
Field 03
Coast, bog, and spruce tip: reading the Nordic landscape as a seasonal inventory rather than scenery.
Field 04
Beyond tasting menus: bakeries, wine bars, and neighbourhood kitchens where New Nordic ideas became everyday craft.
Field 05
How one Copenhagen kitchen became a reference point for chefs worldwide — and why influence outlives any reservation book.
Field 06
Koji, garum, and berry vinegars — how a short growing season becomes a long conversation in glass.
Field 02 · reprise
Sea rocket, wood sorrel, and spruce: the everyday plants that rewired Nordic plating.
The publication
Foraging Journal publishes long-form essays on New Nordic cooking, wild food culture, and Copenhagen’s culinary conversation. We write about restaurants — including Noma — as cultural landmarks, never as a booking service. No tickets. No menus for sale. Only reading.
About the journal