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When you think of Sweden, what comes to mind?
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Ikea? Abba?
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Maybe those delicious cinnamon rolls?
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But what about these?
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Swedish meatballs.
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Right?
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Well, maybe not.
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Welcome to the meatball mystery.
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Let's cut straight to the chase.
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It's hard to make the Swedes angry, but on one fateful day, something happened that fired up the whole country.
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This tweet was sent from the official Sweden Twitter account:
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Swedish meatballs actually based on recipe from King Charles XII brought back from Turkey in the early 18th century.
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Let's stick to the facts.
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Yikes.
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Did you catch that?
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The tweet said that Swedish meatballs actually come from Turkey.
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As you can imagine, the tweet went viral.
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Swedes were up in arms.
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It was picked up all around the world.
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The Swedish government has admitted Swedish meatballs are actually Turkish.
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What?
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What?
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No, that's not a fact.
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The fact is really interesting.
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Since we don't have any facts from that period.
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Wait, who are you?
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My name is Richard Tellström, and I'm a food historian.
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OK, here's what we know.
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In the 1700s, Swedish King Charles XII lost a battle in the Great Northern War.
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He was forced to flee to the where for several years he negotiated his return.
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The controversial tweets suggested that he brought back a local Turkish meat dish called 'koftas.'
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However, there is no documented interests from him in food; no mentioning of the meatballs there.
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They are not Turkish because we can't follow the original meatballs in the world.
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There is no zero meatball where everything started.
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Most likely, origin of the meatball is a development in parallel ways, in parallel food cultures.
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Therefore, meatballs are very different all over the world, but they exist all over the world.
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Today, it's one of Sweden's most popular dishes.
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Traditionally served with mashed potatoes, a brown gravy, and a sweet lingonberry sauce.
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Mh-mm.
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Food gives us an example of how we are connected when it comes to culture.
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Food is a sort of cultural network.
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So take pride in your meatballs, Sweden, and so should Turkey, China, Italy, and every meatball-rolling country.
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Because if there's one thing the world can agree on, it's that meatballs are delicious.