FERMENT · FERMENTED CONDIMENTS

Gravlax

Gravlaxgravlax (Swedish) / gravlaks (Norwegian) / gravad lax (full Swedish)

Scandinavian salt-and-sugar-cured raw salmon — historically buried in sand for slow fermentation; modern preparation cures cold for 2-3 days

Fermentation time Modern preparation: 48-72 hours refrigerated; traditional preparation: 1-3 weeks at cellar/ground temperatures
Temperature range Modern: 2-4°C (35-39°F) refrigerated; traditional: 4-12°C (40-54°F) cellar/buried
Salt / brine Cure is typically 50:50 salt and sugar by weight; ratio to fish about 1:5 to 1:8
Difficulty Easy
Significance Established

Profile

Gravlax is Scandinavian cured salmon — fresh salmon fillets coated with a mixture of salt, sugar, and dill, weighted, and refrigerated (or, historically, buried) for 2-3 days. The name literally means 'buried salmon' (from Swedish grav = grave/burial + lax = salmon), referencing the original preservation technique of medieval Scandinavian fishermen who buried salt-coated salmon in beach sand above the high-tide line for slow cold-fermentation over weeks. The modern refrigerated version preserves the basic technique but compresses the timeline to days and produces a milder, more uniform result.

The technical process is a salt-sugar cure with minimal active fermentation by modern standards — the cure rapidly draws moisture from the fish through osmosis, denatures surface proteins, and inhibits bacterial growth. Sugar's role is to balance the salt and produce the slightly sweet, integrated flavor that distinguishes gravlax from straight salt-cured fish. Dill is the traditional aromatic, sometimes joined by white peppercorns, juniper berries, or a small amount of aquavit or vodka. The buried traditional version included a small amount of active fermentation by halophilic bacteria during the long burial, contributing more complex aromatic compounds; the modern refrigerated version is functionally cured-but-not-significantly-fermented.

The historical buried gravlax is rarely produced today — the timeline and food-safety concerns of weeks-long ambient-temperature preservation make it impractical and somewhat risky. Modern Norwegian and Swedish home cooks make the refrigerated version, which is reliably safe and produces an excellent product in 48-72 hours. Some artisanal Scandinavian producers maintain longer-cure versions (5-7 days) that approach the historical buried version's flavor depth without the safety concerns of true room-temperature aging.

Gravlax is sliced thin (very thin — almost transparent at the high-end preparation) and served with mustard-dill sauce (hovmästarsås), crispbread, and accompaniments. It is foundationally a smörgåsbord item, served at Christmas (julbord) and Easter (påskbord), and increasingly available in international cooking. The product is distinct from lox (American Jewish-tradition brine-cured salmon, often cold-smoked) and Nova (cold-smoked lox-style salmon). All three are cured salmon traditions, but the techniques and resulting flavors are meaningfully different.

Key techniques

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Common mistakes

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Cross-references