Norway Going Out
Food and Drink
The roadside kro (traveller's restaurant) is a good choice if one wants to sample traditional Norwegian fare.
Breakfasts are often enormous with a variety of fish, meat, cheese, sweet whey cheese and bread served from a cold buffet with coffee and boiled or fried eggs. Open sandwiches are topped with meat, fish, cheese and salads. Popular dinner dishes include meatballs (kjøttboller or karbonader) with boiled potatoes, boiled fish and bacalao, a spiced dried cod stew. Alcohol tends to be limited in availability and expensive, although beer and wine are generally available in restaurants. Licensing laws are strict and alcohol above 4.7% ABV for home consumption is sold only by the state through special monopoly stores. Beer and cider is sold in general stores. Illegal moonshine spirit is widely consumed.
National specialities:
• Brunost (a sweet brown cheese made with whey).
• Roast wild elk, or reindeer.
• Lutefisk (baked preserved cod).
• Grøt (a form of porridge).
• Multer (cloudberries - a summer delicacy).
National drinks:
• Aquavit (schnapps).
• Pils (light lager).
• Lagerøl (lager with less than 2.5% volume)
Legal drinking age: 18 (beer, wine and other drinks up to 22% ABV), 20 (drinks over 22% ABV).
Tipping: Waiters expect a tip of no more than 5% of the bill.
Nightlife
In the bigger towns and cities, the story is quite different, with a thriving arts scene including theatre, music and cinema. Restaurants and nightclubs tend to be concentrated in city centres, while in recent years the pub culture has been gradually arriving in Norway, often pioneered by the international ‘Irish' pub phenomenon. Cities like Bergen, Oslo, Stavanger and Trondheim are nowadays well supplied with a wide choice of watering holes, many of which offer food that is competitively priced compared to the restaurants.
Oslo's nightlife centres on the Aker Brygge waterside area, the city centre, and the Majorstua district.
Most Norwegians tend to go ‘out on the town' only on Fridays and Saturdays, the rest of the week being fairly quiet. This is in no small part due to the high prices of food and drink, and the fact that the working day starts early. And at weekends, it is normal for the Norwegians to enjoy a forspiel (drinks at home), before venturing out as late as 2300.
Shopping
Shopping hours: Mon-Wed and Fri 0900-1700/1800, Thurs 0900-2000 and Sat 0900-1300/1500. Supermarkets are normally open 0900-2000 on weekdays, and 1000-1800 Saturdays. Kiosken (small shops offering limited essentials) and petrol station shops are open late in the evenings and on Sundays.
Fresh ideas are just one click away...
Travel Deals
-
Finland Activity & adventure holidays Finnish Lapland has enormous areas of untouched wilderness and mile upon mile of wild rolling fells. This vast open countryside, sparkling in the winter sunshine, just begs to be explored by
-
Orlando Adrenaline Whether you’re enjoying the hair-raising delights of the world’s only flying rollercoaster called Manta at SeaWorld or racing through the Everglades on an airboat in search of alligators, one thing’s for
-
Cambodia Luxury holidays Today Cambodia is symbolised by awesome Angkor Wat, the largest man-made religious structure in the world. However, Cambodia is also home to some of the finest boutique hotels in the world
-
Laos Inspire Me When the French colonised Indochina they had a saying: "The Vietnamese grow the rice, the Cambodians watch the rice grow, and the Lao people listen to the rice grow." This is
-
Vietnam Cultural breaks Vietnam is a country with a rich and varied history that is now firmly focused on her bright future. This is why it has become one of the hottest destinations for
-
Dominican Republic Family holidays The Dominican Republic has soared in popularity as a tropical hotspot for families seeking sun, sand and an affordable holiday in the Caribbean. The island's main attraction is magnificent golden sand

