8 Ways To Embrace Fika, Sweden’s Caffeinated Time Out For Grown-Ups
Modern coffee culture in the United States is largely grab and go: line up, get your drink, walk back to the office with it or drink it in your car. In Sweden, they have fika, a cultural institution that recognizes the need for short breaks in the day. One of these traditions sounds much more appealing than the other.
Fika, literally speaking, is the Swedish word for a coffee break—but that doesn’t really sum it up. It’s about taking a break during your day to socialize with friends and colleagues or simply to have a few minutes of quiet. It just so happens that this break, in the Swedish tradition, often involves a mug of coffee and a sweet pastry. “I think that really resonates with people,” said writer Anna Brones said of fika’s appeal outside of Sweden.
The tradition stems from post-church socials in the early 1900s, said Brones, author of the book Fika: The Art of the Swedish Coffee Break, which will be released on April 7 by Ten Speed Press. Brones herself is half Swedish, spent time in the country as a child, and lived there as an adult. “Fika is just something that I was aware of from an early age,” she said. The book’s recipes were developed by Brones and illustrator Johanna Kindvall, who is also Swedish.
That weekly chance to catch up with others in your community and share a snack together evolved into the daily ritual still popular today. Even in modern times—and Sweden is as modern a country as any other with a strong coffee culture—the tradition of fika is hanging on. “I think every culture has these social celebrations that they hold on to,” Brones said of its enduring appeal. Here are eight ways you can embrace the spirit of fika in your own style.
Leave your desk.
So many of us take our “breaks” during the day at our desks. We eat lunch there. If we get up to grab coffee, we head right back to the office with it. And we work late, so supper is rushed. Fika is not fika without a break involved—so even if it’s just for ten minutes, get up from your work, sit down with a hot drink, and relax. “It’s an intentional act,” says Brones. “It doesn’t just happen.”