When Cooking Feels Like Too Much: Living Alone in Sweden

Living alone in Sweden, I didn’t expect cooking to become one of the most exhausting parts of studying abroad.
If I were to list the hardships of pursuing a master’s degree overseas, there would be many. But the first thing that comes to mind is surprisingly simple: feeding myself.

Having grown up in Seoul, I lived within the reassuring safety net of my parents’ home throughout both college and my early working years. Living independently in the city simply wasn’t realistic at the time. I did spend a year in the United States as an exchange student, but thanks to sheer luck, the school I attended was known for having one of the best cafeterias in the country. I never once worried about my next meal.

That changed when I moved to Sweden in my thirties. For the first time, I found myself responsible for planning, cooking, and eating three meals a day—every single day.

The Motivation of a New Beginning

During my first semester of graduate school in Gothenburg, I was full of motivation. I wasn’t squeezing onto a packed subway every morning or enduring a ninety-minute commute to an office I no longer wanted to be in. I had finally arrived in Sweden, living life on my own terms.

I was confident that something as trivial as meals wouldn’t stand a chance against my enthusiasm.

Grocery shopping soon became part of my daily routine. I filled my basket with vegetables and pasta and cooked simple dinners for myself. On other days, I relied on cup rice, instant noodles, and packaged food sent from Korea by friends and family who worried whether I was eating properly in such a distant country.

Their concern showed. Care packages arrived so frequently that even my Swedish landlord seemed amused by the sheer volume of Korean ingredients filling my kitchen.

Pantry shelves filled with Korean instant ramen, sauces, seaweed, and cooking ingredients in a student apartment in Sweden
My pantry overflowing with everything from instant ramen to bulgogi marinade and seaweed.

When Cooking Becomes a Burden

As weeks passed, I began to feel—quite viscerally—how much of my time disappeared into cooking, washing dishes, and cleaning. At some point, I started wondering whether I had come abroad to pursue a master’s degree, or simply to learn how to live on my own.

I wasn’t cooking for a family. I was feeding one person: myself. I would shop for groceries, prepare ingredients, cook a meal, finish eating in under ten minutes, and then face a sink full of dishes.

After suppressing the irritation that rose from deep within, I often found myself asking a strangely philosophical question:
Why do humans have to eat three meals a day, anyway?

Cooking Burnout When Living Alone in Sweden

That was when I turned to Sweden’s frozen food aisle. Microwave-ready hamburger steaks with mashed potatoes. Single-serving frozen pizzas. In exchange for meals that required no preparation and no dishes, I willingly gave up taste, pleasure, and even nutrition.

It was around this time that a Swedish friend, after listening patiently to my complaints, introduced me to what might be the ultimate solution to cooking burnout: Pytt i Panna.

Pytt i Panna literally means “small pieces in a frying pan.” Potatoes, processed meats like bacon or sausage, and an onion—finely chopped and fried together, then topped with a fried egg. That’s it.

In spirit, it’s a “clean-out-the-fridge” dish. Not unlike bibimbap made with leftover side dishes, or fried rice built from aging kimchi—comfort food born out of necessity.

Pytt i Panna, a traditional Swedish dish made with diced potatoes, meat, fried egg, and pickled beets
A plate of Pytt i Panna. (Source: swedishspoon.com)

Convenience at a Cost

Once I accepted Sweden’s frozen foods, Pytt i Panna led to an even bigger realization. I didn’t need to chop anything myself. Supermarkets sold frozen Pytt i Panna in family-sized packs, pre-cut and ready to go.

I stopped asking myself what to eat and began sustaining myself on Pytt i Panna and twelve-packs of eggs.

Frozen Pytt i Panna sold in Swedish supermarkets, pre-cut potatoes and meat for quick meals
A family-sized pack of frozen Pytt i Panna. (Source: scandikitchen.co.uk)

The ritual was always the same. A runny fried egg on top, ketchup drizzled over everything, and a side of pickled beets—the deep purple kind made from beetroot. Some people even added HP Sauce, a tangy British steak sauce.

Jar of Swedish pickled beets commonly served with Pytt i Panna and other home-style meals
Felix pickled beets — something I always kept in my fridge in Sweden. (Source: https://www.thepantry.co.th/product/felix-beetroot-370g/)

The taste hardly needs explaining. Butter-fried potatoes, onions, and meat—immediately satisfying, and surprisingly hard to get tired of.

And yet, because I began eating Pytt i Panna at a time when I was already neglecting myself, something felt off. After each meal, a quiet thought followed:
Today again, I chose convenience over taking proper care of myself.

Little by little, I started eating it less.

What Feeding Yourself Really Means

Until then, I had lived on warm meals of rice, soup, and side dishes—made possible because someone else carried the burden of cooking. Shopping, prepping, standing over a hot stove, washing dishes afterward.

Living alone in Sweden, that labor became unavoidable. If I wanted to be fed, I had to take it on myself.

I imagine many people—whether in Korea or elsewhere—are carrying this burden alone today. Feeding themselves, day after day. And in a foreign country, the weight of it often feels heavier.

Still, because emotional hunger has a way of catching up with you, I hope no one lives on improvised meals for too long. Even “cleaning out the fridge” shouldn’t rely on frozen food except in true emergencies.

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