Kalops (Swedish Beef Stew)
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A soul-satisfying stew that is filling and flavorful, this traditional Swedish Kalops recipe is just what the cold weather calls for! This beef stew is slow-simmered with vegetables, white pepper and allspice for a unique and delicious flavor profile. It is Swedish comfort food at its best!

Swedish Beef Stew
This Swedish Kalops recipe was one of the very first recipes I published on my blog back in January 2013. When I first launched my blog I had a “Make a Request” feature where readers could write in to make a request for recipes. It wasn’t long before traffic started to pick up and I was inundated with requests that, as much as I wanted to fulfill, I simply couldn’t keep up with. But this dish was one of those requests early on that I made and I’m so glad I did because it has remained a family and reader favorite. This request came by way of Danny and Theresa Hjelm who wrote in requesting “something Swedish that isn’t meatballs”. And so I created this Kalops recipe, a traditional Swedish stew that is wonderfully flavorful, filling, and soul-satisfying!
What is Kalops?
Kalops is a traditional Swedish beef stew dating back to at least the 18th century. The name “Kalops” is derived from the English word “collops,” which means “small pieces of meat.” This suggests that the dish may have been influenced by English cuisine. This wouldn’t be surprising because Sweden’s cuisine has been influenced by other countries for centuries and the 1800’s were were largely influenced by Great Britain. At the same time, the earliest known recipes for Kalops are from Swedish cookbooks, so it is also likely that the dish originated in Sweden but borrowed its name from English. Whichever the case may be, Kalops has remained a well-known and beloved dish in Sweden for at least 200 years.
Kalops is a beef stew that is slowly cooked with onions and carrots and seasoned with bay leaves, white peppercorns and allspice, the latter of which gives it its distinct and unique flavor. Traditional accompaniments are potatoes and red pickled beets. It is a hearty and flavorful stew, so perfect for the cold winter months.

Swedish Kalops Recipe
Let’s get started!
Cut the beef into 1/2 inch cubes and dry with paper towels. This step is essential or else the meat will not brown. Sprinkle the flour over the beef cubes and turn to coat. Dice the onions and mince the garlic.
Heat the butter in a Dutch oven (I used a skillet and then transferred it to a Dutch oven – I was trying to cook and supervise a toddler using finger paints at the same time, so was a little sidetracked! But yes, use a Dutch oven in the first place)…heat the butter on medium-high and fry the beef on all sides until browned.

Remove the beef and set aside. Add the onions to the Dutch onion along with more butter. Saute until the onions are translucent and just beginning to caramelize. Add the garlic and saute for another minute.
Add the flour and stir for one minute to combine.

Add the wine and bring to a boil for one minute. Add all remaining ingredients and just enough water to cover the meat. Bring it to a boil, reduce the heat to low, cover, and simmer for 1 hour. If the sauce is to thin at that point, remove the lid and simmer for another 20 minutes or until the desired consistency is reached. (You can also make a flour-water slurry and add that for thickening if you prefer).
Remove the bay leaves and allspice berries before serving.

Serve with potatoes and pickled beets.
Enjoy!

For more delicious beef stews from around the world to try my:
- Hungarian Goulash
- Guinness Stew
- Pörkölt
- Beef Bourguignon
- German Goulash
- Pichelsteiner
- Beef and Cabbage Soup
- Sega Wat
- Hachee
- Old Fashioned Beef Stew
- Domoda
- Szegedin Goulash
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Kalops (Swedish Beef Stew)
Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 1 lb beef chuck , cut into 1/2 inch cubes
- 1 tablespoon flour
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 2 medium onions , diced
- 2 cloves garlic , minced
- 3 tablespoons flour
- 1/4 cup red wine (not traditional but I love the depth it adds to the stew)
- 2 large carrots , sliced into 1/4 inch thick rounds
- 4 bay leaves
- 10 whole allspices berries
- 10 white peppercorns
- 2 tablespoons beef broth base or 2 beef bouillon cubes (e.g., Better Than Bouillon base)
- water
- Salt to taste
Instructions
- Dry the beef cubes with a paper towel. Sprinkle the flour evenly over the beef cubes and toss to coat.
- Heat the butter on medium-high heat in a Dutch oven or heavy pot. Generously brown the beef on all sides then transfer to a plate and set aside.
- In the same Dutch oven, heat another 2 tablespoons of butter and sauté the onions until translucent and just beginning to caramelize. Add the garlic and sauté for another minute. Add the 3 tablespoons of flour and stir for 1 minute. Add the wine and bring to a boil for one minute. Add all remaining ingredients, adding just enough water to cover the meat. Bring it to a boil, reduce heat to low, cover and simmer for 1 hour. If the sauce is too thin at that point, remove the lid and continue to simmer for another 20 minutes or until the desired consistency is reached. Remove the bay leaves and allspice berries before serving.
- Serve with potatoes and pickled beets.
Nutrition
Originally published on The Daring Gourmet January 18, 2013
Red wine vinegar?
Hi Jeanine, not vinegar, just red wine.
I’ve cooked Kalops using this recipe many times now, and I just want to say thank you for putting it up here. It’s delicious, easy to make, full of flavour and my son doesn’t mind it.
Not sure what an ‘authentic’ kalops is like, but I love the flavour from the wine and the garlic.
Thank you, Andy, I’m so glad you’ve been enjoying this!
I concure with Kimberly! It is never garlic or wine in the Kalops! That is more like a Beef Bourguignone with the wine and garlic. So please remove it from the recipe if you want it to be like a real Swedish dish!
Im sure your stew taste great, but it´s not Kalopps. Ingredients in kalopps is prime rib of beef, unions, carrot, butter flower, bay leaf, meat stock and allspice berries. You just chop the meat into cubes, fry them in a pan with butter, putt them in a boiling pan, sprinkle them with some flower and stir. Put some water in the frying pan and whisk it out and poor the water over the meat. Add the stock and water, shop the unions and carrots trow them in there together withe bay leaf and allspice berries and let it boil for 1-2 ours. You might need to add water once and a while, and maybe more stock. But that´s it. Serve with potatoes lingon berries and ore beetroot.
Hi IDL, I’m a little perplexed why you think this isn’t Kalops. Look over the ingredients again and I’m sure they will look familiar to you. It is true of any traditional dish that slight variations of methodology and ingredients will exist from household to household. Whether you boil the onions with the beef or caramelize them first to enhance the flavor of the stew, or whether you add red wine to further tenderize and flavor the meat (an age-old practice for centuries across Europe), the end result is the same – one simply has more flavor than the other.
As a swede, I disagree with adding wine and garlic to kalops. Otherwhise it’s as we normally do it.
nice one, I did this yesterday using a recipe I got from my mom, I am from Sweden and this is what I used
1 kilo of Beef chuck
8 dl Sage veal stock
4 yellow onions
6 carrots
3 bay leaf
12 allspice berries
and salt and pepper for tasting
I removed the carrots after the 2 hour cooking, a personal thing ;)
http://s10.postimg.org/ee7chv694/kalops.jpg
[img]http://s10.postimg.org/ee7chv694/kalops.jpg[/img]
Sounds great, Kalle, thanks for sharing the photo! Smaklig måltid!
Thank You. It will be Sundays meal.
The perfect Sunday meal! Be sure to use whole allspice berries rather than powdered. And above all, be sure to return and report! :)
is it possible to use allspice powder rather than the berries? if so, how much should i use?
Hello aisling! Sure, you can use it in powder form. 1 teaspoon of ground allspice is about the equivelant of 5 allspice berries. You definitely want to use far less in powder form though, because the powder is far more potent than the berry, which releases the flavor more slowly in the cooking process. Using it in powder form you’ll have to do the “taste test” to make sure you’re getting enough of the flavor but not too much. I’d start with about 1/4 teaspoon of allspice powder and go from there.
I think I got them at Marlene’s. I would call first to ask if they have them.
This looks very easy to make!…where do you get your allspice berries?….:)
Yes, it is very easy! I think I got the allspice berries at Marlene’s. I would call first to ask if they have them.