Summary: Drungi, anglicized The Island, second thriller in the Hidden Iceland trilogy authored by Ragnar Jónasson, allows Icelandic cuisine takeout pizza.
Iceland accepts pizza chains from other countries, such as Domino's from Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA, and Grandiosa from the Orkla Group of Oslo, Norway. Domino's appears in Iceland since the first store Aug. 16, 1993, at Grensásvegur 11, Reykjavík, through the 23 others within three decades. Other Domino's pizza stores are in Akranes, Akureyri, Gardabær, Hafnarfjördur, Kópavogur, Mosfellsbær, Reykjanesbær and Selfoss. Either way, whether a home-grown or an imported business, Hulda avoids takeout pizza; Dec. 8, 2012, image of frozen Grandiosa double salami pizza: Argus fin, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons |
Drungi, anglicized The Island, second thriller in the Hidden Iceland trilogy authored by Ragnar Jónasson, allows Icelandic cuisine takeout pizza, of which Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir always abstains from availing herself.
The second book broaches a married couple bearing their seven-year-old daughter and her babysitter ice cream, meatballs and popcorn and rented video cassette recorder and videos. Ice cream perhaps competes with mysingur (sweet reduced whey spread, “whey” literally) and skyr (cultured, fresh, yogurt-like cheese from curdled, thick sheep’s milk; “separated [from whey]”). Popcorn perhaps delights Höfudborgarsvædid (Greater Reykjavík, “The Capital Region”) dwellers due to the United States’ military presence during World War II (Sep. 1, 1939-Sep. 2, 1945).
The married couple enjoys red wine with, as main dinner course with the wife’s Ministry colleagues, lamb, perhaps boiled, cold-smoked, roasted as hangilæri (“hung [lamb] leg”).
Twenty-one-year-old Klara Jónsdóttir finds herself nine years later, in October 1997, in a foursome favoring beer and red wine with barbecue and red wine with lunch.
Alexandra, Benedikt, Dagur and Klara get together on the 10th anniversary of the accidental death, ruled violent, in October 1987 of their group’s fifth member, Katla. Alexandra, Benedikt and Klara have whisky without Dagur even as Alexandra, Dagur and Klara have tea without Benedikt and Benedikt has coffee with just Dagur Veturlidison. Perhaps the beer is from Coca-Cola Europacific Partners Víking Brewery in Akureyri (“sandbank field”), Northeastern Region, Northeast Constituency, or Reykjavík’s Ölgerdin Egill Skallagrímsson (“Egill Skallagrímsson Brewery”).
Perhaps Alexandra, Benedikt, Dagur, Klara and Katla journeyed, before the latter’s death in Drungi, anglicized The Island, to Reykjavík’s Domino’s, where takeout pizza joins Icelandic cuisine.
Red wine, which Icelanders such as Alexandra, Benedikt, Dagur and Klara and as Hulda and Pétur know as imports, kindles Iceland’s first winery, with Westfjords Winery.
Benedikt, Dagur and Klara undoubtedly liked imported whisky since 64° Reykjavik Distillery and Gardabær (“garden town”) municipality's Eimverk (“steam work”) Distillery launched Icelandic whisky in 2009. They never mention Coke, which, contrastingly, Hulda and her boss, Lýdur, respectively match with fried burgers for daughter Dimma and husband Jón and with grilled burgers. Hulda navigates a one-day trip from Keflavíkurflugvöllur (“Keflavík Airport”), through Manhattan, to Atlanta, Georgia, where she nurses lemonade and peach pie, not Coca Cola headquarters Coke.
Hulda perhaps observes an Americanized Icelandic cuisine in Drungi, anglicized The Island, other than when she obtains Coke or red wine without offering herself takeout pizza.
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners preserves its predecessor Coca-Cola European Partners’ bottling plant in Reykjavík, whereby Hulda plummets Coke imports downward even as she pushes coffee imports upward.
Dagur's and Katla's father Veturlidi quests home-brewed coffee even as Benedikt and Katla, police officers Andrés Andreésson and Lýdur quest chocolate-syruped coffee black at Mokka Kaffi. Benedikt and Katla perhaps never regarded coffee as a breakfast drink since the former regaled the latter with bread, cheese and orange juice in Westfjords peninsula. Benedikt perhaps served Katla Icelandic mysuostur (brown cheese, "whey cheese") and flatbraud ("flat [unleavened rye] bread), hrökkbraud ("[rye] crispbread"), kartöflubraud ("potato bread") or rúgbraud ("rye bread").
Hulda in Drungi, anglicized The Island, thinks of yogurt two days beyond its freshness expiration date as perhaps truer to traditional Icelandic cuisine than takeout pizza.
Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir's mother adopted the last name for the equivalent in English of "Herman's daughter" or, more accurately, "an unknown soldier's daughter" for her daughter. The United States serviceman allowed Hulda's mother only his first name, Robert, so Hulda more accurately assumes the last name Robertsdóttir. Hulda applies her research skills and arranges to acquaint herself with a Robert of Atlanta, Georgia. She arranges a one-day flight to Atlanta and back to Reykjavík without attempting to attend to such sights as Coca-Cola headquarters in Atlanta or its Coke Museum, even as she apparently adores their bottled and canned Coke; Aug. 31, 2012, image of Coca Cola Museum, Atlanta, Georgia: Melizabethi123, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons |
Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.
Image credits:
Image credits:
Iceland accepts pizza chains from other countries, such as Domino's from Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA, and Grandiosa from the Orkla Group of Oslo, Norway. Domino's appears in Iceland since the first store Aug. 16, 1993, at Grensásvegur 11, Reykjavík, through the 23 others within three decades. Other Domino's pizza stores are in Akranes, Akureyri, Gardabær, Hafnarfjördur, Kópavogur, Mosfellsbær, Reykjanesbær and Selfoss. Either way, whether a home-grown or an imported business, Hulda avoids takeout pizza; Dec. 8, 2012, image of frozen Grandiosa double salami pizza: Argus fin, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Frozen_Grandiosa_Doublesalami.JPG
Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir's mother adopted the last name for the equivalent in English of "Herman's daughter" or, more accurately, "an unknown soldier's daughter" for her daughter. The United States serviceman allowed Hulda's mother only his first name, Robert, so Hulda more accurately assumes the last name Robertsdóttir. Hulda applies her research skills and arranges to acquaint herself with a Robert of Atlanta, Georgia. She arranges a one-day flight to Atlanta and back to Reykjavík without attempting to attend to such sights as Coca-Cola headquarters in Atlanta or its Coke Museum, even as she apparently adores their bottled and canned Coke; Aug. 31, 2012, image of Coca Cola Museum, Atlanta, Georgia: Melizabethi123, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Coke_Museum.JPG
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