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News, Uncategorized

Hard Rock Cafe Stockholm’s New Home

images courtesy Hard Rock Cafe Hard Rock Cafe Stockholm’s New Home Hard Rock Cafe opens a new chapter in Stockholm, settling into the corner of Vasagatan and Mäster Samuelsgatan with a refreshed space designed for the city’s steady flow of days and late nights. The new location spans over 600 square meters, offering room for more than 200 guests inside and an additional 80 seats on the terrace for when the weather turns warm. The menu brings back the classics, the Legendary Burger and the Messi Chicken Sandwich, alongside new additions like the Smashed Legendary with its caramelized crust, and wings in Stardust Dry Rub or Gochujang sauce. The cocktail list has been updated too, with drinks such as the Tiki Royale, the Lucky Penny, and a Jalapeño Peach Margarita that balances sweetness with heat. Throughout the restaurant, pieces from Hard Rock’s global memorabilia collection set the tone: Jimi Hendrix’s gold necklace, Taylor Swift’s Red‑era dress, Bill Wyman’s bass, and original items from ABBA. Each one anchors the space to the music that shaped it. A dedicated stage and professional sound system turn the venue into a mid‑size live space for up to 300 guests, adding a new spot for performances in central Stockholm. Next door, the Rock Shop opens early each day, offering the Play Louder collection and other signature merchandise. With its new address, Hard Rock Cafe Stockholm returns with a clearer focus: good food, live music, and a space built for both locals and visitors to settle into, from lunch to late.

Culinary, Uncategorized

A Visit to Allegrine by Danyel Couet, Stockholm

A Visit to Allegrine by Danyel Couet, Stockholm Allegrine, or the Art of Taking Your Time photography Stefan Anderson I always choose the front row. Not for attention, but for closeness. To the hands. To the silence between movements. To the quiet focus that exists just before something becomes finished. At Allegrine, that closeness feels essential. This is not a place to observe from afar. It asks you to lean in. Allegrine is Danyel Couet’s Parisian inspired refuge in Stockholm, though refuge might be the wrong word. It feels less like an escape and more like a return. A return to warmth, to rhythm, to the unhurried pleasure of being exactly where you are. From the moment you step inside, the world outside softens. Time loosens its grip. The room is generous, but never overwhelming. There is space to breathe, yet everything feels personal. Like a favorite brasserie you have known for years, even if this is your first visit. Conversations drift softly between tables. Laughter settles into the walls. The atmosphere holds that rare balance. Elegant without being distant. Intimate without being precious. Though the soul of Allegrine carries the light and ease of the south of France, it is unmistakably Stockholm that surrounds it. Water glimmers beyond the windows, replacing any imagined coastline. The contrast feels intentional. A reminder that identity is not about imitation, but interpretation. The name Allegrine suggests cheerfulness, but here it carries something far quieter and deeply personal for Danyel. It was the name of his grandmother. A presence that lingers, not through grand gestures, but through feeling. Through rhythm. Through care. You sense it in the way the restaurant moves. Nothing is rushed. Nothing needs to be explained. A meal that is allowed to take its time, much like the moments that matter most. From the room to the drinks, everything feels considered, almost tender in its restraint. Even the presence of Kronenbourg on tap becomes a small act of honesty. A beer that does not try to be more than it is, and in doing so becomes exactly enough. The meal begins without spectacle. Gaufrette potatoes, crisp and delicate, topped with bleak roe from Kalix (Sweden’s equivalent to caviar)  and sour cream. A small opening gesture. Confident in its restraint. It sets the tone for everything that follows. This is French cooking filtered through a Scandinavian sensibility. Clear, precise, respectful of ingredients. Steak tartare arrives dressed in richness, foie gras, truffle croutons, a whisper of Sauternes. Yet it never weighs you down. Each element knows its place. Rödräka is served clean and direct, as if to remind you that complexity is not always the goal. Then comes the agnolotti. Warm, grounding, quietly generous. The kind of dish that holds a meal together without asking to be remembered, and therefore is. The escargot pauses time. Removed from their expected shell and tradition, the snails meet mushrooms, pancetta, and a soft touch of balsamico. Familiar flavours, rearranged. Reimagined without force. The mushrooms linger. Earthy. Comforting. They stay with you long after the plate is cleared, like a thought you do not rush to replace. When the fish arrives, it is accompanied by an elderflower beurre blanc. Floral, light, almost fleeting. It lifts rather than leads, adding perfume instead of weight. Dessert follows the same unspoken rule. Nothing unnecessary. A yuzu pavlova with fresh blackberries. It is winter, yet the flavours feel honest and alive. Choosing restraint here feels generous. Seasonal. Almost radical. Allegrine is not a place for performance. It is a place for presence. For the joy of craft, of detail, of sharing something made with care. French gastronomy meets Scandinavian clarity, but what lingers most is not a dish or a flavour. It is a feeling. Of calm. Of intention. Of having been exactly where you were meant to be, for just long enough.

Culinary, Uncategorized

Pontus Wellén on a New Culinary Chapter at Sheraton Stockholm

Pontus Wellén on a New Culinary Chapter at Sheraton Stockholm Sheraton Stockholm Hotel is entering a new chapter and at the heart of this transformation stands its bold new restaurant concept, Mr. Bronck. Named after the Swedish-born settler Jonas Bronck, who gave his name to the New York borough of the Bronx, the restaurant draws inspiration from that same spirit of exploration and cultural exchange.  At Mr. Bronck, Swedish ingredients reinterpret classic American dishes through the lens of local produce and Nordic seasonality. The kitchen is led by medal-winning chef Pontus Wellén, whose craftsmanship and curiosity set the tone for a dining experience that is both confident and welcoming. To understand how the concept comes to life on the plate, chef Pontus Wellén offers his perspective on the ideas driving Mr. Bronck. Image Courtesy Sheraton Stockholm What kind of personality would you give Mr. Bronck? Mr. Bronck has a confident but unpretentious personality. He’s curious, social, and well-travelled — someone who appreciates craft and quality, but never takes himself too seriously. There’s a sense of ease and generosity to him: a place where you feel welcome whether you come for a full dinner, a drink at Sally’s, or simply to see what’s happening.   How does the story of Jonas Bronck and New York influence the restaurant? Jonas Bronck represents movement, exchange, and new beginnings. His journey from Scandinavia to what would later become New York mirrors the idea of cultural cross-pollination. That spirit lives in the restaurant through a meeting of Swedish ingredients and values with American flavours, techniques, and confidence — not as nostalgia, but as a modern interpretation of that transatlantic connection.   What makes Mr. Bronck different from other hotel restaurants in Stockholm? What truly sets Mr. Bronck apart is its breadth and generosity. The menu moves effortlessly from raw bar and seafood to grill classics, comfort dishes, and playful desserts — designed for sharing, mixing, and returning often.   Furthermore, we will offer an ambitious wine program that highlights the energy and curiosity of the New World, with a special focus on American wines. Guests are welcome to simply pop in for a glass at our vibrant wine bar counter.   It’s not a single-lane concept, but a place that works just as well for a long dinner as for a spontaneous bite or a late dessert. That flexibility, combined with a strong culinary identity, is still rare in Stockholm’s hotel restaurant scene.   Will the restaurant be open to the public, or only for hotel guests? Absolutely open to the public. Mr. Bronck is very much intended for Stockholmers as well as hotel guests — a place you come to because you want to, not because you happen to be staying here. Is the concept more casual or fine dining? It sits confidently in between. The food is ambitious and ingredient-driven, but the atmosphere is relaxed and social. You can dress up or dress down, come for a celebration or a spontaneous weekday dinner — the experience adapts to the guest, not the other way around.   How does Mr. Bronck fit into Sheraton’s overall transformation? Mr. Bronck is a key expression of Sheraton Stockholm’s transformation toward a more lifestyle-driven, culturally connected hotel. It reflects our ambition to be part of the city rather than separate from it — creating spaces that feel relevant, contemporary, and rooted in local culture while still international in outlook.   What gap in Stockholm’s restaurant scene does this aim to fill? There’s a gap for a restaurant that combines strong identity, warmth, and generosity with real culinary credibility — without becoming formal or inaccessible. Mr. Bronck aims to be that place where atmosphere and food carry equal weight, and where people genuinely want to linger.   What kind of American dishes are you planning to put on the menu? The menu takes cues from classic American cooking — shrimp cocktail, oysters, lobster roll, smash burgers, steaks from the grill, and iconic desserts like cheesecake and pecan pie. These are familiar reference points, but always executed with precision and restraint, and adapted to a contemporary European dining context.   How will Swedish ingredients influence the menu? Swedish ingredients form the backbone of the menu. From local seafood and roe to Nordic vegetables, apples, cabbage, and regional cheeses, seasonality and origin are central. These ingredients bring freshness, balance, and a lighter expression to dishes inspired by American comfort and confidence.   Could you give examples of how Swedish ingredients will influence American dishes? A classic shrimp cocktail might be lifted with Nordic herbs and bright acidity. American-style grilling is applied to Swedish meats and seafood. Roe from Kalix or Älvdalen appears where you might otherwise expect caviar. Comfort dishes are balanced with Swedish vegetables, apples, and fermented or pickled elements — creating familiarity without heaviness. What attracted you to this concept? I was drawn to the creative freedom of the concept and the cultural dialogue it allows. The idea of blending American food culture with Swedish ingredients and sensibility gives me room to be expressive — while still staying grounded in quality, craft, and simplicity.   How is Mr. Bronck different from your previous work? Mr. Bronck is less about making one strict culinary statement and more about creating a living, social place. It’s broader, more playful, and more people-driven — a restaurant designed to evolve with its guests and with the city.

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