Im danish(35 years old). My grandparents when they lived often made us kids fried porkbelly slices with boiled potatoes and a parsley sauce, or frikadeller/red cabage/brown gravy. As dessert we would get something like danish pancakes(which are flat/without baking powder) with homemade vanilla icecream. At christmas we would get something like cookies made with porkfat(not butter) it tasted really good. But we ate like they did in the country side or what some consider poor mans food. Enjoy your stay. Take care.
@@kristianmuus5672 I'm an old Swedish man. As a child, I was allowed to wish for whatever gift I could think of as Christmas was nearing, but I always received the same thing; a good old sound thrashing, as it was believed to teach children to refrain from complaining. In Denmark you were trifle more liberal at that time and therefore got Christiania. In Sweden, we begun feeling inferior to how liberal and open minded Denmark had become, so we decided to let hundreds of thousands of Mid East and African immigrants in. Now, our schools are full, our hospitals are full and our prisons are full. I hope you understand this is because Sweden has been importing 'continental' ideas from Denmark for 150 years or so. 😀
[ 9:35 ] - The open face sandwiches you get at restaurants are fancy versions of the normal open face sandwiches Danes eat at home or bring to work or school for lunch. The normal ones are not stacked that high. Often the normal ones are not eaten with a knife and fork, so the bread is there to get eaten, but also to transport whatever is on top of it into your mouth using your hands 😁
@@Jacob-Simonsen I don't like it either. It's an oxymoron. By definition a sandwich is not open and using the same standards a pizza is an open face sandwich. It's probably a translation challenge. "Smørrebrød" would loosely translate into "buttered bread", which is the foundation of this food, but for an outsider this would probably seem a strange name. I wonder who is behind naming it an open face sandwich. Are there other open face sandwiches?
I don't care if it's shrimp, hotdog or just grapes - that snap/pop is just happiness in a bite. With pork, the expensive cuts and back bacon used to be sold to the British, so we learnt what to do well with the rest. Danish roast pork deserves the love though, the tenderloin isn't bad either.
Isn't is just shredded apples being used (as they are a locally produced and a traditionally lot cheaper to get here than more "exotic" tomatoes?) Same thing by the way goes with Tuborg Squash - Tuborg's take on an orange soft drink - which actually owes more of it's orange color to carrots than oranges 🙂
Somewhat you are right regarding the Smørebrød. Normally we don’t get this amount on the ryebread. There is different versions of smørebrød which tells how much there is on. So the ones you got is what we call “høj belagt” smørebrød which usually are served in restaurants.. :) just as a info
Theres a Danish sausage brand that actually advertising their sausages by "know them by the way it breaks/cracks/snaps" in danish "kend den på knækket" 😊
It’s a statue tied to the Danish people’s cultural heritage through H.C. Andersen. This is the equivalent of people taking pictures of themselves next to the brick wall where Harry Potter and the rest entered the wizard world’s train station platform. Andersen is their Rowling pretty much. It’s not ”just” a statue of The little mermaid/Den lille havefrue. In Sweden we have statues tied to Astrid Lindgren (Pippi Långstrump/Pippi Longstocking), it’s the same type of cultural heritage tied to an author and their book world. In Scandinavia we hold academia/authors and litterature in genral very high (higher than celebrities). People always take pictures of themselves next to something cultural when they travel❤
stuff for me to check out at one point :)...a point about bakeries, i find they all have one or 2 things they're especially good at, ie I go for a specific baker for ryebread another if i want a croissant and so on
While traditionally being considered amongst the junior of the Nordic countries when it comes to liquorice (the big 3 being Finland, Sweden and Iceland, with noone agreeing on who's top dog, and Norway enjoying liquorice from their neighbors but not really having a major domestic brand), Denmark has really upped the game and are challengers to the throne through Lakrids by Bülow. They have the full range, from the very sweet to gutwrenchingly salty and strong. I especially like the slow-crafted infused liquorice sticks (particularly enjoyed the whisky one), and their salted liquorice where you get a huge box of powdered ammonia salt to add ro taste is.. well, I enjoy it, but be careful. It will mess with your heart rate and blood pressure 😂
I love how you guys did all the Tourist traps, and still ended up not having egg on your faces ;-) If you ever visit Denmark again, try the peninsula, Jylland. Avoid the larger cities.
La Neta is Danish, but has spread to Stockholm due to being both succesful and having the same founder as Mikkeller, which is why they also serve beers from Mikkeller. Ramen To Biiru is another place from Mikkel Borg Bjergsø.
"Det lille Apotek" is NOT the oldest restaurant in Copenhangen as the the house was build in 1835. "PUK" on Vandkunsten dates from 1750, and Hvids Vinstue is even older.
The two red sausages you got (with ketchup and mustard) are not hot dogs but plane red sausages called pølser (pølse is danish for sausage). A hot dog is what you got later on. In danish it's sometimes called "en indianer i kano med fjer" meaning an indian in canoe with feathers where the indian is the sausage, the sliced bread is the canoe and the feathers are the toppings ..
@@torbenpetersen8983They themselves call them selves indians even, indian reservate police, indian police, indian community, indian casino and on and on it goes. Yep, i agree a woke fool (probably a swede) nothing more. To you how ever i wish a great evening.
@@taxamand1They themselves call them selves indiams even, indian reservate police, indian police, indian community, indian casino and 8n and on it goes. Yep, i agree a woke fool nothing more. To you how ever i wish a great evening.
The world's biggest 7-Eleven is in Copenhagen Central Station. I've heard some Americans who are VERY impressed by the standards of Danish 7-Eleven. I think they run them in a different way in the US. They are quite expensive though if you ask me.
Good video, all about eating🤤 where did you get the porksandwich? Must try. Btw I live close to Copenhagen ,so I always have a treat, when I visit the kings Copenhagen , as we danes say
In North America and many Asian countries not only children but also adults often have soft drinks with their meals. Beer is primarily a drink enjoyed on its own and being aware of what wines go well with what sorts of food is considered snobbish.
The roast pork for the roast pork sandwich (part 1) looks the way I prefer it. Just the meat, a bit of fat that is well done, and then the crispy skin. I don't like "marbled meat" (that is apparently the english translation). The roast pork and pickled red cabbage are traditional around Christmas in Denmark. With white and often brown (small potatoes fried in sugar) and brown gravy. Also often roast duck. Christmas lunches also often feature frikadeller and medisterpølse. Frikadeller is a traditional Danish "meatball" (not ball shaped usually) and medisterpølse is a thick fried pork sausage with extra fat. Directly translated with-fat-sausage. At least I've been told that "ister" is fat in latin.
The 2 red sausages and bread, is NOT a hotdog, it's just sausages and bread. You got a (ristet hotdog) a roasted hotdog, because the brown sausage is fried/grilled. You can also get a (rød hotdog) red hotdog, with the red sausages, they a cooked in water
13:00 That's not a hotdog. That's a "pølse med brød" - sausage with bread. It's for people who don't like hotdogs or just want a lighter meal than a hotdog.
That is literally what it is called in English. Blame the language, not the user of it. Is it weird? Yes. It seems quite odd for a language to have a term for two slices of bread with stuff, but no term for one slice of bread with stuff, but that is how it is.
The red color of hot dogs is actually aphids from a plant in South America that has been dried and crushed (this is done after the red color that was used earlier was made illegal in Denmark, because it was unhealthy) (I know this from when i woes working at GØL Pølser, btw GØL Pølser is the best Hotdog sausages because of the tast/spice mix, tulip is not that good because its to watery and lak of taste compaire to GØL. GØL is now ouned by tulip but they still use the old resepies in Gøl Pølser )
that "knæk" sound when you bite into the brown sausage from the PROPER hotdog (the red one on a tray is blasphemy to most grownups and taste less awesome) that sound is part of a slogan even : "Kend den på knækket" translated "Know it for the *breaking* sound. or soso translated. We danes love sausages to have that bite to the skin.
The problem with people’s perception of liquorice is that they mix aniseed with liquorice. Confectionary makers do mix them, but…most people have tasted aniseed, but never liquorice. This problem is that the confectionary makers all over the world call their aniseed ‘sweets’ liquorice. Which is like calling pepper, ‘salt’. They simply are not the same thing. I live in Australia, and people here think they like or dislike liquorice based on the fact they have tasted aniseed! I drives me nuts…..they are simply not the same thing….or even similar!
the red colour stems from the south jutland/sønderjylland reunification in 1921 after world war 1. everything sønderjysk came in fashion. and i germany, sausages that weren't sold the same day they were made, was to be dyed red and sold at a lower price the next day. and the allways bargainhunting danes would buy these red sausages in germany, today, the red colour remains. but the sausages are grade 1 anyway.
so many people is afraid of liquorice and i dont get it it like chewing gum there are so many way it can be made resulting in many flavors people think if they tried on they tried them, all
These "typical" danish open sandwhiches we see these days in many restaurants or here on YT.. Theyre not that typical. Well, guess theyre typical at this point. But theyre not original. The true original open sandwhich is limited in scope, both in terms of size and in what you can put on it The open sandwhich became common during the urbanisation where people from all over the country moved to the big cities. Each region had their signature dish, and the open sandwhich became a small presentation of that dish, with everything it included then slapped on a piece of bread. People would eat several slices of bread, with several different dishes on them. These giant-sized versions we see today is NOT true original. They are common, and they are good. VERY good. But you kinda want to downsize them by a lot, so you can taste a lot of different versions. The idea is NOT to eat one huge, the idea is to sit around a table and eat a lot of different versions, starting with heering.. - and it doesnt hurt to wash it down with a cpl of snaps.. just to stay authentic. 1 snaps pr sandwhich isnt to far off, - dont forget to leave the carkeys at home
All the places you eat, is for turists. That are not the food the Danish people eat. You got right into the turist trap. Next time visit Copenhagen og Denmark. Find a lokal guide whit the feet at the ground. And not a hokus pokus shit guide. But a guide who like real Danish food. Then you will have a experiende. By the way. the red collor on the sourceges are from cochenillus withc is a aphid
That don't sound right! I think MSG comes in many different types and names. MSG is natural in many everyday products. So if it was truly banned, it would only be specific kinds of refinements.
My goodness…..you need to learn cultural food. Sure you can eat the ingredients of a danish open sandwich on it’s own…..but then it is not Danish. I am a Danish Australian, and it makes me sad that you have the chance to enjoy food I can’t even get….but you don’t know how to appreciate it! I guess it is a bit like when I travel to the US….all they have is burgers….so I end up going hungry…..I hate hamburgers….they are children’s food….I am an adult, and I hate fries too….again….they are junk food for kids!
The Danes don't go wrong with pork!
ooooh no we don't. 😉😋
Im danish(35 years old). My grandparents when they lived often made us kids fried porkbelly slices with boiled potatoes and a parsley sauce, or frikadeller/red cabage/brown gravy. As dessert we would get something like danish pancakes(which are flat/without baking powder) with homemade vanilla icecream.
At christmas we would get something like cookies made with porkfat(not butter) it tasted really good. But we ate like they did in the country side or what some consider poor mans food. Enjoy your stay.
Take care.
@@kristianmuus5672 I'm an old Swedish man. As a child, I was allowed to wish for whatever gift I could think of as Christmas was nearing, but I always received the same thing; a good old sound thrashing, as it was believed to teach children to refrain from complaining. In Denmark you were trifle more liberal at that time and therefore got Christiania. In Sweden, we begun feeling inferior to how liberal and open minded Denmark had become, so we decided to let hundreds of thousands of Mid East and African immigrants in. Now, our schools are full, our hospitals are full and our prisons are full. I hope you understand this is because Sweden has been importing 'continental' ideas from Denmark for 150 years or so. 😀
You did good; ate and drank your way through the city ! Well done ! Flæskestegssandwich and røde pølser are part of all Danes DNA.
[ 9:35 ] - The open face sandwiches you get at restaurants are fancy versions of the normal open face sandwiches Danes eat at home or bring to work or school for lunch. The normal ones are not stacked that high. Often the normal ones are not eaten with a knife and fork, so the bread is there to get eaten, but also to transport whatever is on top of it into your mouth using your hands 😁
It hurts when people call smørrebrød for an open faced sandwich.
@@Jacob-Simonsen I don't like it either. It's an oxymoron. By definition a sandwich is not open and using the same standards a pizza is an open face sandwich. It's probably a translation challenge. "Smørrebrød" would loosely translate into "buttered bread", which is the foundation of this food, but for an outsider this would probably seem a strange name. I wonder who is behind naming it an open face sandwich. Are there other open face sandwiches?
I don't care if it's shrimp, hotdog or just grapes - that snap/pop is just happiness in a bite. With pork, the expensive cuts and back bacon used to be sold to the British, so we learnt what to do well with the rest. Danish roast pork deserves the love though, the tenderloin isn't bad either.
The ketchup is a ketchup where there are mashed apple jam in it. In Denmark it’s called The sausage man's ketchup, you get at the hotdog stand.
Isn't is just shredded apples being used (as they are a locally produced and a traditionally lot cheaper to get here than more "exotic" tomatoes?)
Same thing by the way goes with Tuborg Squash - Tuborg's take on an orange soft drink - which actually owes more of it's orange color to carrots than oranges 🙂
The Shrimps are big because they are normally from Greenland. The best shrimps in the World.
Except small shrimps are the best, and yes they live in colder water, like in Greenland or Denmark..
Yes more tast in the small ones @@JesperSandgreen
Smørrebrød is litterally ryebread with butter and different stuff on it. It wouldn’t be smørrebrød without the ryebread 🤷♀️
It doesn´t have to be rye bread, it is just typically ryebread. A "Stjerneskud" is also a form of "Smørrebrød" and you use white bread for that.
@@Lil_Harvard stjeneskud aint smørrebrød
@@angstskrig7255 It is though: da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stjerneskud_(sm%C3%B8rrebr%C3%B8d)
@@Lil_Harvard Also Wikipedia
da.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stjernekaster_(sm%C3%B8rrebr%C3%B8d)&wprov=rarw1
@@Lil_Harvard are you danish?
Somewhat you are right regarding the Smørebrød. Normally we don’t get this amount on the ryebread. There is different versions of smørebrød which tells how much there is on. So the ones you got is what we call “høj belagt” smørebrød which usually are served in restaurants.. :) just as a info
Theres a Danish sausage brand that actually advertising their sausages by "know them by the way it breaks/cracks/snaps" in danish "kend den på knækket" 😊
Funny enough no sausage band has ever used the "en tand bedre" ( One tooth better ) slogan. 😁
It’s a statue tied to the Danish people’s cultural heritage through H.C. Andersen. This is the equivalent of people taking pictures of themselves next to the brick wall where Harry Potter and the rest entered the wizard world’s train station platform. Andersen is their Rowling pretty much. It’s not ”just” a statue of The little mermaid/Den lille havefrue.
In Sweden we have statues tied to Astrid Lindgren (Pippi Långstrump/Pippi Longstocking), it’s the same type of cultural heritage tied to an author and their book world. In Scandinavia we hold academia/authors and litterature in genral very high (higher than celebrities).
People always take pictures of themselves next to something cultural when they travel❤
The bread are the main thing!
Looks like you stayed in Wakeup Copenhagen hotel. There are three in Copenhagen. Was wondering which one you stayed in and if it was quiet?
Typically for our sausages, the bright red ones are cooked in water, where the brown ones are cooked on a griddle (or frying pan). :)
Frankfurter, wiener disagree..
@@martinwinther6013 You dont know the meaning of "typically"? 😏😏
@@martinwinther60135th generation butcher and i disagree with you on the extreme.
I agree roast pork is amazing, Hi from Denmark
stuff for me to check out at one point :)...a point about bakeries, i find they all have one or 2 things they're especially good at, ie I go for a specific baker for ryebread another if i want a croissant and so on
Really great editing and cinematography!
Where did you buy that pork sandwich?
While traditionally being considered amongst the junior of the Nordic countries when it comes to liquorice (the big 3 being Finland, Sweden and Iceland, with noone agreeing on who's top dog, and Norway enjoying liquorice from their neighbors but not really having a major domestic brand), Denmark has really upped the game and are challengers to the throne through Lakrids by Bülow. They have the full range, from the very sweet to gutwrenchingly salty and strong.
I especially like the slow-crafted infused liquorice sticks (particularly enjoyed the whisky one), and their salted liquorice where you get a huge box of powdered ammonia salt to add ro taste is.. well, I enjoy it, but be careful. It will mess with your heart rate and blood pressure 😂
I love how you guys did all the Tourist traps, and still ended up not having egg on your faces ;-)
If you ever visit Denmark again, try the peninsula, Jylland. Avoid the larger cities.
La Neta is Danish, but has spread to Stockholm due to being both succesful and having the same founder as Mikkeller, which is why they also serve beers from Mikkeller. Ramen To Biiru is another place from Mikkel Borg Bjergsø.
"Det lille Apotek" is NOT the oldest restaurant in Copenhangen as the the house was build in 1835. "PUK" on Vandkunsten dates from 1750, and Hvids Vinstue is even older.
The two red sausages you got (with ketchup and mustard) are not hot dogs but plane red sausages called pølser (pølse is danish for sausage). A hot dog is what you got later on. In danish it's sometimes called "en indianer i kano med fjer" meaning an indian in canoe with feathers where the indian is the sausage, the sliced bread is the canoe and the feathers are the toppings ..
Ok, you might want to not say that still about native americans, even though some still haven’t updated their language in Denmark.
@@soilgrasswaterair When they were alive they was called indians. ..
@@soilgrasswaterair WHAT are you on about?!?!? 🙄🙄 Woke shit.....
@@torbenpetersen8983They themselves call them selves indians even, indian reservate police, indian police, indian community, indian casino and on and on it goes. Yep, i agree a woke fool (probably a swede) nothing more. To you how ever i wish a great evening.
@@taxamand1They themselves call them selves indiams even, indian reservate police, indian police, indian community, indian casino and 8n and on it goes. Yep, i agree a woke fool nothing more. To you how ever i wish a great evening.
I love our food🇩🇰❤️🔥
The world's biggest 7-Eleven is in Copenhagen Central Station. I've heard some Americans who are VERY impressed by the standards of Danish 7-Eleven. I think they run them in a different way in the US. They are quite expensive though if you ask me.
Good video, all about eating🤤 where did you get the porksandwich? Must try. Btw I live close to Copenhagen ,so I always have a treat, when I visit the kings Copenhagen , as we danes say
Isted Grill - all the restaurants are in the description ❤️
you know you're a dane if you thought your doorbell rang at 3:06 xD great vid
Hi there, great vid the inside of the flødebolle is Italian meringue.
You made one mistanke! Drank Pepsi. Should have been beer and Ålborg schnaps
In North America and many Asian countries not only children but also adults often have soft drinks with their meals. Beer is primarily a drink enjoyed on its own and being aware of what wines go well with what sorts of food is considered snobbish.
@@HerrBrutal-bl2fksnobbish? It is called traditons you foooo
You seem to forget this is not Asia, North America or Swedistan. Shame on you.
The roast pork for the roast pork sandwich (part 1) looks the way I prefer it.
Just the meat, a bit of fat that is well done, and then the crispy skin.
I don't like "marbled meat" (that is apparently the english translation).
The roast pork and pickled red cabbage are traditional around Christmas in Denmark.
With white and often brown (small potatoes fried in sugar) and brown gravy.
Also often roast duck.
Christmas lunches also often feature frikadeller and medisterpølse.
Frikadeller is a traditional Danish "meatball" (not ball shaped usually) and medisterpølse is a thick fried pork sausage with extra fat.
Directly translated with-fat-sausage. At least I've been told that "ister" is fat in latin.
Welcome to copenhagen ❤
The chew to the shrimp is possibly due to the icy cold waters, which make the shrimp grow slowly.
Was the last place you visited in Nansensgade ?
The bakery is called Hart - the location is in the description.
@@hamletinparis Thank you for answering 😊😊
Like if you love kapers! ☺️🥰
Great vlog 😊
And I’m so hungry now 😋
The 2 red sausages and bread, is NOT a hotdog, it's just sausages and bread. You got a (ristet hotdog) a roasted hotdog, because the brown sausage is fried/grilled. You can also get a (rød hotdog) red hotdog, with the red sausages, they a cooked in water
13:00 the red color is Camine, its from a beetle, if you see red in food its most likely from that bug
Really great food choices!! :)))
Ohh Lakrids fra Bulow are the best you can pick
I like you got a Hotdog outside of Tivoli. Dinning in Tivoli is a tourist trap. Great video
13:00 That's not a hotdog. That's a "pølse med brød" - sausage with bread.
It's for people who don't like hotdogs or just want a lighter meal than a hotdog.
Stop calling it an openfaced sandwich...!
It's a nice piece of bread with toppings.
We eat it all the time, and we never called it a sandwich... 🤘
That is literally what it is called in English. Blame the language, not the user of it. Is it weird? Yes. It seems quite odd for a language to have a term for two slices of bread with stuff, but no term for one slice of bread with stuff, but that is how it is.
@@Wishbone1977 but then call it smørrebrød? other cultures get that respect. guess we nordics are not diverse enough
@@FrederikEngelmand ah so she's not allowed to use her own language? Got it.... 🙄🙄
@@taxamand1 lol, kan du ikke lide vores eget sprog eller kultur? Simp
Leave out the bread.....NO, the bread is part of the taste experience
And should be used to mop up the remaining sauce!
this^ the specific taste of ryebread is needed to balance out the decadence of the topping!
The red color of hot dogs is actually aphids from a plant in South America that has been dried and crushed (this is done after the red color that was used earlier was made illegal in Denmark, because it was unhealthy) (I know this from when i woes working at GØL Pølser, btw GØL Pølser is the best Hotdog sausages because of the tast/spice mix, tulip is not that good because its to watery and lak of taste compaire to GØL. GØL is now ouned by tulip but they still use the old resepies in Gøl Pølser )
Vi ska bare ha' noget flæskesteg mand!
På klingende jysk.
Whar was the name of the indian restaurant in Malmö?
Art of Spices - Bergsgatan 10, 211 54 Malmö, Sweden
2:20 time runs very fast and backwards in Copenhagen it would seem 🤔😁
By that, the Statue in the middle of Amalienborg is one of the finest mounted statues in the World! I was made by French Artist, Saly.
13:28 it is a red dye from cochenillelus/carmin (lice) it is labeled E120.
the foodcolouring is the classic e120 female lice.... roasted. and the colour extracted i guess :D
The danishes you tried are not the ones the locals go for. If you want to get real local pastry it is another story
13:28 "I wonder what the red stuff outside is" hehehe.. You don't want to know what it is xD
13:49 it is a vegan product, so no bacon in them :)
The red sausage the color comes from a cochenillus a special kind of aphids you find on Cactus the grind them up and used the Blood to color them
From Mexico.
Flæskestegs sanwich FTW
great video
that "knæk" sound when you bite into the brown sausage from the PROPER hotdog (the red one on a tray is blasphemy to most grownups and taste less awesome) that sound is part of a slogan even : "Kend den på knækket" translated "Know it for the *breaking* sound. or soso translated. We danes love sausages to have that bite to the skin.
Don't watch these videos on an empty stomach! :oD
The problem with people’s perception of liquorice is that they mix aniseed with liquorice. Confectionary makers do mix them, but…most people have tasted aniseed, but never liquorice. This problem is that the confectionary makers all over the world call their aniseed ‘sweets’ liquorice. Which is like calling pepper, ‘salt’. They simply are not the same thing.
I live in Australia, and people here think they like or dislike liquorice based on the fact they have tasted aniseed! I drives me nuts…..they are simply not the same thing….or even similar!
What is amiracans don't understand...? 7-11 is the opening hours. 7am to 11pm...!!!!! Only in the United Bluff it's 24 hour
Who's gonna tell her what the red color is from on the sausages xD
Cochineal.
@@Uriel-Septim. Indeed, who doesn't like a few ground up bugs in their sausage :D
The red colouring was originally to designate inferior quality. They are still perfectly fine, as what meat there is, was scrupiosly checked.
the red colour stems from the south jutland/sønderjylland reunification in 1921 after world war 1. everything sønderjysk came in fashion. and i germany, sausages that weren't sold the same day they were made, was to be dyed red and sold at a lower price the next day. and the allways bargainhunting danes would buy these red sausages in germany, today, the red colour remains. but the sausages are grade 1 anyway.
maaam, you eat like a proper adult.. :oD way more than 2.000 calories a day! me like! :oD
so many people is afraid of liquorice and i dont get it it like chewing gum there are so many way it can be made resulting in many flavors people think if they tried on they tried them, all
The red colour of the sausage
comes from a bug 😂🫣
11:16 the laughter afterwards xD
These "typical" danish open sandwhiches we see these days in many restaurants or here on YT.. Theyre not that typical. Well, guess theyre typical at this point. But theyre not original.
The true original open sandwhich is limited in scope, both in terms of size and in what you can put on it
The open sandwhich became common during the urbanisation where people from all over the country moved to the big cities. Each region had their signature dish, and the open sandwhich became a small presentation of that dish, with everything it included then slapped on a piece of bread. People would eat several slices of bread, with several different dishes on them.
These giant-sized versions we see today is NOT true original. They are common, and they are good. VERY good. But you kinda want to downsize them by a lot, so you can taste a lot of different versions.
The idea is NOT to eat one huge, the idea is to sit around a table and eat a lot of different versions, starting with heering..
- and it doesnt hurt to wash it down with a cpl of snaps.. just to stay authentic. 1 snaps pr sandwhich isnt to far off, - dont forget to leave the carkeys at home
All the places you eat, is for turists. That are not the food the Danish people eat. You got right into the turist trap. Next time visit Copenhagen og Denmark. Find a lokal guide whit the feet at the ground. And not a hokus pokus shit guide. But a guide who like real Danish food. Then you will have a experiende. By the way. the red collor on the sourceges are from cochenillus withc is a aphid
MSG are illegal in restaurants and in super market foods in Denmark 🙂
That don't sound right!
I think MSG comes in many different types and names.
MSG is natural in many everyday products. So if it was truly banned, it would only be specific kinds of refinements.
If you want to review CPH you got it, Denmark nope. go west. no Odense no Aarhus go west
My goodness…..you need to learn cultural food. Sure you can eat the ingredients of a danish open sandwich on it’s own…..but then it is not Danish.
I am a Danish Australian, and it makes me sad that you have the chance to enjoy food I can’t even get….but you don’t know how to appreciate it!
I guess it is a bit like when I travel to the US….all they have is burgers….so I end up going hungry…..I hate hamburgers….they are children’s food….I am an adult, and I hate fries too….again….they are junk food for kids!