Suovas are a delicacy firmly rooted in the heritage and culture of Sweden's indigenous
Sami. Additionally, suovas are the first (and one of only two)
Slow Food Presidia products attributed to Sweden. In other words, special stuff.
Searching the links above, you'll quickly read that suovas officially refer to the dry-salted, cold-smoked (in an earthen hut and probably with birch) "inner loin" of the reindeer. I'm not too happy with the Swenglish "inner-loin" term used by Slow Food. It's actually the same cut I recently used for
preparing steak tartare(with beef) and seems to be a part of the bottom round/eye of round.
One quick word about the word "suovas". It simply means "smoked" in the Sami language and therefore is applied to any part of the reindeer that has been smoked. However, for the rest of Sweden, suovas refers to this particular cut of reindeer. Suovas is also the word that normally is used to described the finished dish even though the finished dish can be anything from a stew to a kebab-like roll. It's a pretty vague term.
I stumbled across some frozen suovas the other day at a speciality store in Stockholm and knew I had to make a batch.

This piece was a whole cut, weighed about one pound and cost (using today's exchange rate) about 20 bucks.
Ingredients:

Dried
winter chanterelles, an onion, the frozen suovas, creme fraich, beef stock, about 10 juniper berries and a pinch of thyme. If I'd have had more time and thought of it, I'd have made game stock from the frozen carcasses I'd saved from my
ptarmagin dinner.
Start by letting the suovas defrost slightly. Slice the meat across its grain and thinly.


Get a pan hot, throw in a knob of butter...

... and brown the meat:

Remove the meat from the pan when it has browned/is cooked.

Strangely, it isn't until the meat is cooked that the smoke ring becomes visible...
Lower the heat in the pan, add the minced onion and perhaps a little extra butter.

Scrape the crusty bits off of the bottom of the pan as the onions saute.
When the onions have softened and browned, add the meat back to the pan...

... and add the stock, spices and mushrooms:

I went ahead and reconstituted the mushrooms a little in the warm stock to speed things up a little. Cover the pan, reduce the heat to a simmer and let the stew simmer for about 10 minutes.
After 10 minutes, add the creme fraiche.

Stir and let simmer for another 5 minutes or so.
Ready to serve:

And served:

The suovas are, as expected, wonderful. The smoke flavor is pronounced and the salt in the meat is ample to not require any extra salt for the entire dish. The texture of the meat is, well, not unlike other cured meats and slightly tough. In good, chewy way, though. I wasn't more than two bites into dinner before I reached for the jar of lingonberry preserves as the sweet tartness of the preserves acts as a perfect offset to the rich, smoky stew.
All in all, an excellent dinner. Although, considering the limited availability of this delicacy, one you'll probably just need to take my word for...