Julegrøt is the heart of a Scandinavian Christmas. This creamy rice porridge has been served in Norway and Sweden for generations as a symbol of warmth, family, and winter celebration. The rice slowly cooks in milk and cream until it becomes thick and velvety, then it is seasoned with cinnamon, sugar, and vanilla for gentle sweetness. A pat of butter melts on top and creates the signature golden pool at the center. The dish is simple, comforting, and deeply tied to holiday lore, especially the tradition of hiding a single almond inside the pot to bring good luck to whoever finds it. It is the perfect winter breakfast or Christmas Eve treat and captures the timeless coziness of Scandinavian cooking.
Cook Time 40 minutesmins
Ingredients
1cupshort-grain white riceArborio works extremely well
1 ¾cupswater
4cupswhole milk
½cupheavy creammodern boost for richness
½teaspoonsalt
2tablespoonssugaradd more to taste
1 ½teaspoonsground cinnamon
1teaspoonvanilla extractoptional but beautiful
2–3 tablespoons butter for serving
1blanched almondoptional for the tradition
Optional toppings (modern but culturally fitting):
Cinnamon sugar mix
Honey drizzle
Toasted almond slivers
Lingonberry jam
Brown butter drizzle
Instructions
Start the rice
Add rice and water to a heavy-bottom pot. Bring to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes until the water is mostly absorbed.
Add milk + cream
Pour in the milk and cream. Keep heat low to prevent scorching.
Slow cook
Let it simmer on low for 25–30 minutes, stirring often, until thick and creamy.
Season
Stir in:
salt
sugar
cinnamon
vanilla
Taste and adjust sweetness.
Serve
Spoon into bowls and top with:
a generous pat of butter
extra cinnamon sugar
the hidden almond in one bowl
Video
Notes
Stir often to prevent scorching. Milk-heavy porridges burn easily, so use a heavy-bottom pot and stir frequently, especially in the last 10 minutes when it thickens.
Adjust the thickness to your liking. If you prefer looser porridge, add a splash of warm milk at the end. For thicker julegrøt, simmer a few minutes longer until the spoon stands up on its own.
Do not skip the butter. The pat of butter melting in the center is not just tradition. It adds richness, balances the sweetness, and honors the ancient Scandinavian custom of leaving porridge out for the household nisse.