Every country has some sort of “out there” food that others are repulsed by.
I’ve had natto (fermented soybeans) from Japan which weren’t terrible but had a texture I couldn’t get behind, and I’ve had surstromming (fermented fish) from Sweden that is probably the most horrific substance known to mankind.
I thought that surströmming was okay, it just depends on how you use it. The way it was explained to me is that you’re actually supposed to use it more like a spice. So, rather than eating it alone, you add a little bit to a sandwich.
It smells terrible, so much that it’s best if you submerge the can in water before opening it (plus it sprays everywhere if you don’). But adding it as a spice to something like a sandwich and it’s actually not that bad.
Every country has some sort of “out there” food that others are repulsed by.
I’ve had natto (fermented soybeans) from Japan which weren’t terrible but had a texture I couldn’t get behind, and I’ve had surstromming (fermented fish) from Sweden that is probably the most horrific substance known to mankind.
Is surstromming really that bad? I thought it was just shit tier YouTubers making click bait by eating it wrong.
Like marmite, it is going to taste bad if you eat it from a table spoon on it’s own. But that is a skill issue.
I thought that surströmming was okay, it just depends on how you use it. The way it was explained to me is that you’re actually supposed to use it more like a spice. So, rather than eating it alone, you add a little bit to a sandwich.
It smells terrible, so much that it’s best if you submerge the can in water before opening it (plus it sprays everywhere if you don’). But adding it as a spice to something like a sandwich and it’s actually not that bad.
Yeah that was the impression I had, you add small amounts to something else and don’t open it in a confined area.