8:00 In Denmark somebody do like a funny game for kids, and also adults. You put one of the ends of the 'snørebånd' in your mouth and eat it so quick you can without your hands, only your mouth! :)
When I was younger, I always used those strawberry laces as straws! And for my birthday, my mum would bake a choux pastry cake (shape it as a girl or boy or anything you want really!) and she would braid the laces into braids and use as hair to decorate my birthday cake :-D
Yay!! Finally another Danish episode! I've been waiting sooooo long for this!!! Hope it tasted better this time! LOVE YOU, EMMY! xoxo, from Denmark!!! :-))
We have "shoelaces" in sweden too, and sometimes at family gatherings or parties we have competitions how fast you can eat one without hands. You stand up and puts one of the ends in your mouth and try to eat it, with your hands on the back. love your videos! And hope you feel better soon!
Haribo is not danish, it's german. Haribo means "Hans Riegel Bonn" (Hans Riegel was the inventor of the first gummi bear and the company is located in the city Bonn)
Sorry, Danish Girls, Haribo has never been a danish Company... maybe they bought a danish Company up in the 70th and produced Haribo-Konfect in Denmark too, but since Hans Riegel in Bonn established HARIBO, is was a german Company.
in denmark we use the snøre bånd in birthday party´s for kids and they also use them as straws i have done that lots of time when i was a little kid. and we also used to gather around and se hwo could eat one snøre bånd with there hands on there back and the winner gets a price. sorry for the spelling im from Denmark as you can se.
im from Denmark to, and i remember that at every childrens birthdayparty you would have a competition in eating the strawberry shoelaces. You would hold the shoelace in your mouth, and you would have to try and eat it as fast as you could, without using your hands. It was so fun.
Cool denamrk is my coutry : D im glad u like our candy ^^ and yeah we used to eat a lot of salty sweets xD but also my fav think is only denmark finland norwigan and sweden who eats it
Hi Emmy! I've been watching your videos for a few months now and I relly like them. :) We have the Haribo sweets here in Finland too, and my favorite in the click mix is actually the salted liquorice one, haha. And the strawberry shoelace was one of my favorite sweets as a kid. I loved to use it like a straw. :)
They also sell the brand Malaco in the Netherlands, but here it's called Redband. Fun to see that some brands are similair in other countries, except for the name.
Rice porridge is eaten during December here before Christmas and New Years eve. It's a meal used as lunch and dessert and as the base for rice pudding. It tastes reaaally good with a sprinkle of cinnamon and a tiny bit of butter on top when it's still warm and freshly made. It's one of my favorites and I could eat it all year long XD
Risengrød (Rice porridge) is the thicker kind with no almonds and served usually with cinnamon and sometimes butter on top to flavor the porridge. What you're thinking of is Ris a la mande, which is softened with cream and have chopped almonds in it. It's in ris a la mande that we put the whole almond in and when its found, there's a gift for the finder. (Sometimes the adults is nice enough to give the almond to the kids at the table if they find it).
The "snøre" you had (the red shoelace) Danes often use as 'hair' for some kind of cake called "kagemand", which is a humanshaped cake, we eat at birthdays. It's covered in frosting (not as creamy as frosting though. I think you call it glasiure) or chocolate and then you shape a face and clothes with the candy, that could potentially be the click mix. :)
+xxJulieFlugtxx Frosting (or icing) is a term that describes all kinds of cake, uhm, frostings. The kind of frosting you're thinking of as "creamy" is probably buttercream, which is popular on e.g. cupcakes. The traditional Danish frosting is what would be called a glaze, specifically, but still a frosting. :)
+xxJulieFlugtxx And yes, cakemen are awesome! They don't have to have frosting on them, though - that depends on the type of cake! But candy is a must. Emmy, you should try Googling "kagemand". :D
Hey Emmy I've been watching almost all you're videos and I really enjoyed them!Thanks for the great videos you made and I hope you make more! P.S. I'm from Japan.
Better than the last one :3 These are more like the snacks we have now. The last one was things I had when I was a kid, and you can barely find those. And I love how you pronounced the æ-ø-å things :3
You are so sweet and I love your hair and glasses and personality and your home (from what I can see) is sooo clean cut and modern and beautiful!! Wish you the best of luck!! Subscribed!!
Aaaaah! This is so cool, Emmy! Thank you! Btw. thank you for the sweets you sent in return! They were delicious. Except for the dried fish or whatever that was. They were kinda weird..
It's quite a tradition, to make a competition of the "snørebånd" at child birthdays. Kids would line up and be put one of the lines in their mouth with their hands on the back, and start to eat it. The one who would complete it first, wins!
9:23 - Those are called ''Bolshes'' (Sounds better in danish) And you're supposed to have them in your mouth for like 2 minutes until theyr melting a bit, then you can chew them a little easier. :)
Salty licorice is good if you have a cold. Once I bought a bottle of cough medicine at a pharmacy. When I came home I read the list of ingrediences. Active substances: licorice and ammonium chloride. I might as well have bought a bag of Piratos.
I love your videos! I know I'm a little late to comment on this one, but I just watched it for the first time... As a German, I just have to say that Haribo is definitely a German company. The name comes from an abbreviation of Hans Riegel, Bonn, which is the name of the founder and the city, I.e. Bonn in Germany... 😉
A popular game played in Denmark (at childrens birthday parties especially) with the strawberry shoelace is, that you have to stick it in your mouth, and then, without using your hand, you have to get it all in your mouth, and the first to eat it all wins :P
Oh my! The little wreaths (I think they're meant to be like the pastries), are some of the sweetest liquorice there is out there. Your pain at the Turkish Pepper must have been strong.
ya know, i don't really have much specific danish pride, but salt liquorice is the one thing that reminds me i'm home. and whenever i travel out of the country i miss sitting on a street corner in the old part of town watching people walk by while eating liquorice form a bag in my inner pocket. thats my denmark.
I just wanna say that the company who makes the Penguin candy is named Toms like the Guldkarrameller and that Haribo has never been danish but is being masspoduced in Denmark :)
about the shoelaces, I used to put them in soda and use them as a straw when I was younger, it work. Until it gets all gross and stuff from the liquid haha
Haribo was founded by Hans Riegel, Sr. (HAns RIegel, BOnn, now you know where the Haribo stands for) and he was a German entrepreneur. Later Hans Riegel Jr. took over the company. It is still located in Bonn and is now one of the biggest candy manufacturers in the world. The more you know! ;)
In Denmark we usually use the "shoelace candy" at kid's birthday parties where we play a game where each kid has to try to eat a "shoelace" the fastest without using their hands.
and you know what? about the red wire thing. in Denmark at kids birthdays, it is sort of a competition. you line up, bring the end of the red thing in your mouth, hands on the back, and then you like have to eat it first
At least you can now eat the salmiakki without crying! You're such a pro! Oh, those Favoritter remind me of the candies we had when I was little, late 60's. How we fought over the hearts! So delicious, all of them though. I could never find them, maybe now I can buy some online! What a great set of yummies! Get well soonest!
Ahaha! Thank goodness you didn't have to eat more Salmiak, apart from that one instance. I was afraid you'd gotten another licorice package when I saw you uploaded another Denmark vid. Lol.
A fun thing thing we used to do with shoelaces was make it a competition of who could eat a whole shoelace first without using hands; always good fun :D.
I believe Haribo is a german company, and Malaco a swedish, but I'm not sure. But those candies, and the ones in her first video, are still classics here in Denmark, and something we all grew up eating.
gosh I really dislike black licorice too. I rarely ever see it here in the US. I am used to the strawberry ones that are long and people sometimes drink pop or juice from when you bite the top. I usually only eat the red licorice string or pieces.
Haribo actually is originally german... it stands for "Hans Riegel Bonn". Which is the name of the 'inventor' or what its called and the place where he established it...
Emmy someone needs to buy you loads of soft eating licorice to try. I'm not sure but I think it's actually Australian, but here in the UK they sell huge bags of it in a shop call lakelands. It's got a really nice texture and they sell it in all different fruit flavours as well as actual licorice flavour (you can probably skip that one :P).
Love your chanel so much fun, it is a culturel difference between us that americans call these red long snørebånd licorise. In Denmark we only Call the Black licoris by that name if it has the licoris taste and is Black
I always watch these and wish I could send you something, but I'm just from the U.S. lol. I mean, my dad's side is Irish/white and my mom's side is Middle Eastern/Arabic. But I was born here and so were my parents. If anything, I'd send you Middle Eastern foods because that's the culture that is most engrained in me as far as food. But I wouldn't know what people from that area actually eat. I just know my Arabic/Greek/American hybrid of traditional foods lol. For example, I love stuffed grape leaves, but the ones I grew up with have rice and ground beef in them, not the marinated ones with just rice. I've known how to make hummus for ages and when I was little and was asked to be the taste tester, I always asked for more garlic lol to the point where almost no one else could eat it because it was so garlicky haha. But the American influence mixed in and a lot of my grandmas most famous dishes where American. But no matter what the main dish was, the appetizer was always hummus, feta, string cheese with seeds, and calamata olives! Haha hummus for an appetizer and Boston Cream Pie for dessert? So, I would love to send you a box of things but I wouldn't know what to call it. Maybe I'll just pack a box of my favorite snacks that I feel represent my family's hybrid culture and I'll send it to you just to enjoy. Not necessarily for a video. Hope you feel better soon! Love the video, as always :)
I love your videos by the way but I'm going to have to be a little pedantic. Technically red 'liquorice' is not liquorice as it does not contain liquorice in most of the cases. Anyways now that's over, great video. those laces are available via different brands all over Europe and what you can do is use them as a straw for fruit or fizzy drinks, its a little sickly though. what is good is if you get your hands on a Twirl chocolate bar or equivalent, bite of both ends and use as a straw for hot chocolate.
Kids here in Denmark has small competitions, where they all put one of the red "shoelaces" in their mouths, then put their hands behind their backs and then they just start eating.
Haribo never was a Danish company. It was founded in 1920 by Hans Riegel in his hometown Bonn. The name Ha-Ri-Bo derives from the first two initials of his name and Germanys former capital, Bonn. Hans Riegel might be the second most famous export from Bonn, right after Beethoven.
8:00 In Denmark somebody do like a funny game for kids, and also adults. You put one of the ends of the 'snørebånd' in your mouth and eat it so quick you can without your hands, only your mouth! :)
yay was an amazing video !!
i love the way you remember all the snacks from all the countries
Thanks, I do my best to remember them. :)
love you ^_^
Her memory is nothing short of amazing huh?? =}
:*
@@MsDreamcakes excellent.
I love the way she talks, very soft and she's seems so calm and collected. I love her videos, my favorite!
When I was younger, I always used those strawberry laces as straws! And for my birthday, my mum would bake a choux pastry cake (shape it as a girl or boy or anything you want really!) and she would braid the laces into braids and use as hair to decorate my birthday cake :-D
I swear I am ADDICTED to your Emmy Eats videos.
YES! :)
Yay!! Finally another Danish episode! I've been waiting sooooo long for this!!! Hope it tasted better this time! LOVE YOU, EMMY! xoxo, from Denmark!!! :-))
It is always fun to watch your videos Emmy. Great job on taking the chance that some of the candy was licorice. Love your expressions and endings.
We have "shoelaces" in sweden too, and sometimes at family gatherings or parties we have competitions how fast you can eat one without hands. You stand up and puts one of the ends in your mouth and try to eat it, with your hands on the back.
love your videos! And hope you feel better soon!
Haribo is not danish, it's german.
Haribo means "Hans Riegel Bonn" (Hans Riegel was the inventor of the first gummi bear and the company is located in the city Bonn)
It's so fun to see you eat our danish sweets (I'm from Denmark ;)) and hear you saying the danish names. I love this video ^^
Yay, i'm danish, and i have been waiting for this :)
Sorry, Danish Girls, Haribo has never been a danish Company... maybe they bought a danish Company up in the 70th and produced Haribo-Konfect in Denmark too, but since Hans Riegel in Bonn established HARIBO, is was a german Company.
You're right, according to Wikipedia they founded the Haribo Lakrids A/S Kopenhagen in 1935. Haribo itself was founded in Bonn in 1920! xx
still tastes delicious
You´re right! The name Haribo (HAns RIegel BOnn) woud be slightly weird for a danish company...
And it seems like it's going global, because in my country all Haribo jellies are from Turkey.
Haribo do have a headquarter in Denmark tho
I'm from Denmark!! This is awesome I rarely see these type of videos on Denmark!! Thanks!!
I think I've watched all your videos in the span of 4 days. Love them.
Thank you ;)
We love you glasses Emmy!
me too
love you kbdproductions tv i dont know but i like vids that people eat in front in my face
Its cute!
a trick : you can watch series on Flixzone. I've been using it for watching loads of movies lately.
@Ronin Alden Definitely, I have been using Flixzone} for months myself =)
I enjoy watching you try foods from different countries and cultures, I have started trying some as well!!!!!
in denmark we use the snøre bånd in birthday party´s for kids and they also use them as straws i have done that lots of time when i was a little kid.
and we also used to gather around and se hwo could eat one snøre bånd with there hands on there back and the winner gets a price. sorry for the spelling im from Denmark as you can se.
im from Denmark to, and i remember that at every childrens birthdayparty you would have a competition in eating the strawberry shoelaces. You would hold the shoelace in your mouth, and you would have to try and eat it as fast as you could, without using your hands. It was so fun.
Haribo Stands for 'Hans Riedel Bonn'
And Bonn is a City in gernany. So Haribo is Originally from Germany. :)
That's our Emmy always thinking ahead! lol Love your butterfly costume! =}
Cool denamrk is my coutry : D im glad u like our candy ^^ and yeah we used to eat a lot of salty sweets xD but also my fav think is only denmark finland norwigan and sweden who eats it
Salt stuff my fave x3
AlexDirEn
u had tried salty licorice xD
No :o
try is da best xD
Denmarks my country 2 :DD (Oh and was i the only 1 who realised she ate us??? ;O
Snørebånd recently changed flavours at least the strawberry ones. I liked the old flavour better.
Hi Emmy! I've been watching your videos for a few months now and I relly like them. :) We have the Haribo sweets here in Finland too, and my favorite in the click mix is actually the salted liquorice one, haha. And the strawberry shoelace was one of my favorite sweets as a kid. I loved to use it like a straw. :)
That shoelace candy looks so adorable. I totally would have tried tying something with it like it was actual shoe lace LOL.
Yay more danish treats! :D Hope we sent you something more pleasant Emmy :)
They also sell the brand Malaco in the Netherlands, but here it's called Redband. Fun to see that some brands are similair in other countries, except for the name.
HOW HAS NOBODY SENT HER FAXE KONDI!??!?!?!?!??!
SÅ RIGTIGT. FAXE ER DET BEDSTE..
Treqz YES!
JAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!
Intet bedre👍😱🔫
Elsker det 😍😍
YAY! Finally someone eating candy from my country!!
Rice porridge is eaten during December here before Christmas and New Years eve.
It's a meal used as lunch and dessert and as the base for rice pudding. It tastes reaaally good with a sprinkle of cinnamon and a tiny bit of butter on top when it's still warm and freshly made. It's one of my favorites and I could eat it all year long XD
at christmas there is also an almond in the rising rod and if you find it you are the lucky one
jeg elsker denmark
Risengrød (Rice porridge) is the thicker kind with no almonds and served usually with cinnamon and sometimes butter on top to flavor the porridge. What you're thinking of is Ris a la mande, which is softened with cream and have chopped almonds in it. It's in ris a la mande that we put the whole almond in and when its found, there's a gift for the finder. (Sometimes the adults is nice enough to give the almond to the kids at the table if they find it).
ok i did not know that
I'm actually having a holiday in Denmark and the food is lovely!
The "snøre" you had (the red shoelace) Danes often use as 'hair' for some kind of cake called "kagemand", which is a humanshaped cake, we eat at birthdays. It's covered in frosting (not as creamy as frosting though. I think you call it glasiure) or chocolate and then you shape a face and clothes with the candy, that could potentially be the click mix. :)
Cool!
+xxJulieFlugtxx Frosting (or icing) is a term that describes all kinds of cake, uhm, frostings. The kind of frosting you're thinking of as "creamy" is probably buttercream, which is popular on e.g. cupcakes. The traditional Danish frosting is what would be called a glaze, specifically, but still a frosting. :)
+xxJulieFlugtxx And yes, cakemen are awesome! They don't have to have frosting on them, though - that depends on the type of cake! But candy is a must. Emmy, you should try Googling "kagemand". :D
I have never seen one without it, but I don't doubt that it exists! Emmy, make one! They are delicious!
Hey Emmy I've been watching almost all you're videos and I really enjoyed them!Thanks for the great videos you made and I hope you make more!
P.S. I'm from Japan.
I am also from denmark, and like to see your reactions to danish food. Have a nice day.
Her voice is so relaxing!
I love your videos and you just seem so sweet and nice and these videos are hilarious to watch since I'm from Denmark
I really like all the candies from this video, im from denmark and i really love Toms and the Tivoli one :)
Better than the last one :3 These are more like the snacks we have now. The last one was things I had when I was a kid, and you can barely find those. And I love how you pronounced the æ-ø-å things :3
Wow you have such a good memory remembering all the candies from past vídeos lol
You are so sweet and I love your hair and glasses and personality and your home (from what I can see) is sooo clean cut and modern and beautiful!! Wish you the best of luck!! Subscribed!!
you are pregnant again !!!Sooo happy about youu
Aaaaah! This is so cool, Emmy! Thank you!
Btw. thank you for the sweets you sent in return! They were delicious. Except for the dried fish or whatever that was. They were kinda weird..
hahaha Glad you guys got it and at least you tried the fishes. Thanks again. :)
emmymadeinjapan am from denmark so there are very funy se you se dad and eat becuse dad is normal from me
The "shoelaces" can also be used as straws😀
It's quite a tradition, to make a competition of the "snørebånd" at child birthdays. Kids would line up and be put one of the lines in their mouth with their hands on the back, and start to eat it. The one who would complete it first, wins!
Hello all Danish people
Hej alle danske mennesker! Syntes i os det sjovt at se hun smager på den vi er vokset op med😂❤️
🇩🇰
Nej den har hun ikke smagt på 😅
Ja jeg elsker reaktioner fra andre som smager dansk og jeg er ved at dø af sult at se Emmy spise slik
Totalt :'D Hehe. Og hun er bare så søøød
9:23 - Those are called ''Bolshes'' (Sounds better in danish) And you're supposed to have them in your mouth for like 2 minutes until theyr melting a bit, then you can chew them a little easier. :)
Colds outside winter suck so much! I hope you and your family get well soon :)
We have those strawberry spagetthi things in Sweden to!
Norway too ;)
The Netherlands too, but we also have them in green, yellow and blue. :)
when I was a kid in church, our teacher taught us to the square knots with pull and peel twizzlers so we could eat them when we were done lol
Love this Emmy I hope ur baby and you are ok, tell your brother congratulations x
Salty licorice is good if you have a cold. Once I bought a bottle of cough medicine at a pharmacy. When I came home I read the list of ingrediences. Active substances: licorice and ammonium chloride. I might as well have bought a bag of Piratos.
I love your videos! I know I'm a little late to comment on this one, but I just watched it for the first time... As a German, I just have to say that Haribo is definitely a German company. The name comes from an abbreviation of Hans Riegel, Bonn, which is the name of the founder and the city, I.e. Bonn in Germany... 😉
OMG! Can't wait for your baby! Congrats!
A popular game played in Denmark (at childrens birthday parties especially) with the strawberry shoelace is, that you have to stick it in your mouth, and then, without using your hand, you have to get it all in your mouth, and the first to eat it all wins :P
Oh my! The little wreaths (I think they're meant to be like the pastries), are some of the sweetest liquorice there is out there. Your pain at the Turkish Pepper must have been strong.
"i wanna put this in a glass and drink out of it!" And i was like Kids do this here in denmark ALL THE TIME! :D
ya know, i don't really have much specific danish pride, but salt liquorice is the one thing that reminds me i'm home. and whenever i travel out of the country i miss sitting on a street corner in the old part of town watching people walk by while eating liquorice form a bag in my inner pocket. thats my denmark.
I just wanna say that the company who makes the Penguin candy is named Toms like the Guldkarrameller and that Haribo has never been danish but is being masspoduced in Denmark :)
about the shoelaces, I used to put them in soda and use them as a straw when I was younger, it work. Until it gets all gross and stuff from the liquid haha
I'M FROM DENMARK.. I FEEL THIS IS BIG :D
Me too
Me to:))
my first time watching and i love it! i subscribed!
Haribo was founded by Hans Riegel, Sr. (HAns RIegel, BOnn, now you know where the Haribo stands for) and he was a German entrepreneur. Later Hans Riegel Jr. took over the company. It is still located in Bonn and is now one of the biggest candy manufacturers in the world.
The more you know! ;)
In Denmark we usually use the "shoelace candy" at kid's birthday parties where we play a game where each kid has to try to eat a "shoelace" the fastest without using their hands.
those gummies look so cute and adorable QAQ
When i was a kid i used to use the "shoelaces" as a straw - drinking water!
From denmark
When are you doing your top ten list of sweets around the world?
and you know what? about the red wire thing. in Denmark at kids birthdays, it is sort of a competition. you line up, bring the end of the red thing in your mouth, hands on the back, and then you like have to eat it first
I love making braids out of those red licorice laces. :D
At least you can now eat the salmiakki without crying! You're such a pro!
Oh, those Favoritter remind me of the candies we had when I was little, late 60's. How we fought over the hearts! So delicious, all of them though. I could never find them, maybe now I can buy some online!
What a great set of yummies! Get well soonest!
Dear salmiakki and I go waaay back. :)
I love watching your videos! It's so cool seeing candy from places other than the us!
Hej Emmy, jeg elsker dine videoer :3 = Hello Emmy, i love your videoes!
A popular Danish birthday game is a competition in eating jordbærsnørrebånd without your hands. The fastest wins
When I was a kid I used to get the big strawberry laces and drink a glass of milk through them lol
Ahaha! Thank goodness you didn't have to eat more Salmiak, apart from that one instance. I was afraid you'd gotten another licorice package when I saw you uploaded another Denmark vid. Lol.
Hehehehe x33 Seeing you taste that licorice was awesome! I know your feels though x_x
A fun thing thing we used to do with shoelaces was make it a competition of who could eat a whole shoelace first without using hands; always good fun :D.
Yeah, my friends and I do that. Its so much fun...
I believe Haribo is a german company, and Malaco a swedish, but I'm not sure.
But those candies, and the ones in her first video, are still classics here in Denmark, and something we all grew up eating.
the strabarry thing is used for birthdays like a challange hwo can eat it first but you can't use your hands
Oh yeah I remember doing that😂 :D
its was fun
Famusgamer dk
vi gjorde det altid til fastelavn xD
The chocolate coated karramell which what it is called,they remind me of rolos but the shape of a mild dud
Chewbacca :) Love your videos Emmy!!
I love watching things when people tries Danish food and candy
It's so fun to see this, When you're from Denmark!:D
I love ur vids emmy! +emmymadeinjapan
Thank you!
gosh I really dislike black licorice too. I rarely ever see it here in the US. I am used to the strawberry ones that are long and people sometimes drink pop or juice from when you bite the top. I usually only eat the red licorice string or pieces.
Haha Emmy ! I got scratched my cornea yesterday !!
That's funny xD
I love "lakrids"😂❤️
awesome vid! greetings from Denmark!
Haribo actually is originally german... it stands for "Hans Riegel Bonn". Which is the name of the 'inventor' or what its called and the place where he established it...
Emmy someone needs to buy you loads of soft eating licorice to try. I'm not sure but I think it's actually Australian, but here in the UK they sell huge bags of it in a shop call lakelands. It's got a really nice texture and they sell it in all different fruit flavours as well as actual licorice flavour (you can probably skip that one :P).
Love your chanel so much fun, it is a culturel difference between us that americans call these red long snørebånd licorise. In Denmark we only Call the Black licoris by that name if it has the licoris taste and is Black
We have those shoelace things in Canada too!!! Yummy and fun! :D also I love hard candies! I wanna eat those!!! Mmmm C:
Love your videos!!!!!!
I always watch these and wish I could send you something, but I'm just from the U.S. lol.
I mean, my dad's side is Irish/white and my mom's side is Middle Eastern/Arabic. But I was born here and so were my parents. If anything, I'd send you Middle Eastern foods because that's the culture that is most engrained in me as far as food. But I wouldn't know what people from that area actually eat. I just know my Arabic/Greek/American hybrid of traditional foods lol.
For example, I love stuffed grape leaves, but the ones I grew up with have rice and ground beef in them, not the marinated ones with just rice. I've known how to make hummus for ages and when I was little and was asked to be the taste tester, I always asked for more garlic lol to the point where almost no one else could eat it because it was so garlicky haha.
But the American influence mixed in and a lot of my grandmas most famous dishes where American. But no matter what the main dish was, the appetizer was always hummus, feta, string cheese with seeds, and calamata olives! Haha hummus for an appetizer and Boston Cream Pie for dessert?
So, I would love to send you a box of things but I wouldn't know what to call it. Maybe I'll just pack a box of my favorite snacks that I feel represent my family's hybrid culture and I'll send it to you just to enjoy. Not necessarily for a video.
Hope you feel better soon! Love the video, as always :)
I love your videos by the way but I'm going to have to be a little pedantic. Technically red 'liquorice' is not liquorice as it does not contain liquorice in most of the cases. Anyways now that's over, great video. those laces are available via different brands all over Europe and what you can do is use them as a straw for fruit or fizzy drinks, its a little sickly though. what is good is if you get your hands on a Twirl chocolate bar or equivalent, bite of both ends and use as a straw for hot chocolate.
Kids here in Denmark has small competitions, where they all put one of the red "shoelaces" in their mouths, then put their hands behind their backs and then they just start eating.
I once lost a babytooth to a guld karamel. It was stuck to the caramel.
you are so sweet :) thanks for loving ourcountry denmark :)
Can someone pleas tell my why in the description it says wha are you going to be for Halloween
Haribo never was a Danish company. It was founded in 1920 by Hans Riegel in his hometown Bonn. The name Ha-Ri-Bo derives from the first two initials of his name and Germanys former capital, Bonn. Hans Riegel might be the second most famous export from Bonn, right after Beethoven.
so many of my friends and family have gotten the cold. get well soon emmy!