In the 1940s, kesäkeitto (lit. ‘summer soup’) was among Finland’s most popular home-cooked dishes. Traditional kesäkeitto is a milk-based soup prepared of early summer vegetables. In this recipe, its flavour is ennobled with the Swiss Le Gruyére AOP cheese.
Swedish-speaking Finns call the soup snålsoppa, snål meaning stingy. Everything was rationed due to the shortage those days, but you could usually get ingredients for a vegetable soup from your own garden right after Midsummer. And, in the best case, milk from your own cows as well. While the classic recipe entails potatoes, carrots, cauliflower, peas and herbs, you can also use any other vegetables of your own choosing for the soup.
Kesäkeitto is one of the most misunderstood Finnish dishes. If your opinion of this traditional vegetable dish is based on your experiences back in school, you may be totally oblivious to the real delicacy that is kesäkeitto. Nevertheless, the dish polarizes the people: it is either loved or hated.
6 to 8 servings