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Rick Steves: Sightseeing via quirky taste treats

As we鈥檝e had to postpone our travels because of the pandemic, I believe a weekly dose of travel dreaming can be good medicine. Here鈥檚 a reminder of the fun that awaits us in Europe at the other end of this crisis.
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Eating haggis in Edinburgh, Scotland Haggis in Scotland. (photo credit: Dominic Arizona Bonuccelli, Rick Steves聮 Europe)

As we鈥檝e had to postpone our travels because of the pandemic, I believe a weekly dose of travel dreaming can be good medicine. Here鈥檚 a reminder of the fun that awaits us in Europe at the other end of this crisis.

My palate has come a long way from my early 鈥淓urope through the gutter鈥 days, back when my travel diet consisted of cheap baguettes spread with peanut butter and strawberry jam packed from home. Now one of my favorite parts of travel is sampling local specialties. And I do it with abandon. From pigs鈥 ears in Spain to horsemeat in France and spicy sheep intestines in Turkey, I make it a point to try dishes that make a menu unique 鈥 no matter how unappetizing they sound. Think of it as sightseeing for your palate.

How much you enjoy the experience depends on your attitude. 鈥淲eird鈥 is subjective. Countries with a seafaring heritage, like the Dutch, embrace herring as a vitamin-rich food. Pickled herring is considered a classic. Having tasted this delicacy, I can say it鈥檚 something you won鈥檛 soon forget (no matter how hard you try).

I still remember the first time I tried pickled herring in the town of Haarlem. It was on market day at a herring stand 鈥 the Dutch version of a hot颅-dog stand 鈥 with a big sign that advertised 鈥渓ecker en gezond鈥 (delicious and healthy). The fish looked more like bait than lunch. Sensing my hesitation, Jos, the friendly herring vendor, demonstrated how to eat it. 鈥淚 give you the herring Rotterdam-style. You eat it like this,鈥 he said, miming swallowing a sword. 鈥淚f I chop it up and give you these,鈥 he said, pointing to the toothpicks 鈥渢his is Amsterdam-style.鈥 After my first bite, the only polite comment I could muster was, 鈥淚t鈥檚 salty.鈥 But the taste grew on me. As I wandered through the market, taking Amsterdam颅-style bites of my Rotterdam-style herring, I felt a fishy kinship with the Dutch. As I passed his herring stand again a few minutes later, Jos hollered, 鈥淟ecker?鈥 I responded, 鈥淓n gezond!鈥

Most Scandinavian nations have one seafood dish that, while inedible to many people, is still cherished with a perverse but patriotic sentimentality. In Norway that鈥檚 lutefisk 鈥 dried cod marinated for days in lye and water. My theory is that it鈥檚 still served today to remind young Norwegians of their ancestors鈥 suffering.

Local specialties often come from a challenging history and then become tradition. Roman cooking didn鈥檛 originate in the kitchens of emperors or popes, but from the cucina povera 鈥 the home-cooking of the poor, common people. This may explain the Romans鈥 fondness for meats the wealthy didn鈥檛 bother eating. Known as the quinto quarto (fifth quarter), these were pieces like tripe, tails, brains, and pigs鈥 feet.

Scotland鈥檚 national dish, haggis, also began as peasant food. Unwilling to let any part of a sheep go to waste, cooks would create a hearty meal by boiling scraps of heart, liver, and lungs with herbs in stomach lining. The trick to appreciating such dishes is to think of how they taste, not what they鈥檙e made of. Just like with caviar, hot dogs鈥r foie gras.

Foie gras is one of France鈥檚 most expensive indulgences. Because it鈥檚 made from fattening the livers of geese through force-feeding, it has attracted controversy. The dish is most popular in the Dordogne region, where ages ago, locals caught geese on their migration 鈥 and found the goose livers were enlarged for the long journey (like traveling with a topped-off gas tank). And you know those French: Mix those innards into the cuisine and create a new taste treat.

Speaking of innards, Turks are serious about their kokore莽: chopped-up sheep intestines, often served on a sandwich as fast food. Several years ago, a rumor flew through the streets that stringent new European Union regulations would outlaw the beloved dish. Before the story was debunked, many Turks did some soul-searching and decided that if they had to choose, they鈥檇 gladly pass up EU membership for their kokore莽.

Wherever I go, I find the food that inspires such nationalism is worth a try. Eating these unusual dishes 鈥 from Iberia鈥檚 percebes (barnacles) to Venice鈥檚 seppia (squid served in its own ink) to Norway鈥檚 geitost (goat cheese that resembles earwax) 鈥 not only helps me feel like a temporary local, but also gets me treated like one.

Until we鈥檙e all able to travel again, I hope your time at home is both 鈥渓ecker en gezond.鈥

This article was adapted from Rick鈥檚 new book, For the Love of Europe.

Rick Steves () writes European guidebooks, hosts travel shows on public TV and radio, and organizes European tours. You can email Rick at [email protected] and follow his blog on Facebook.