Every supermarket I've ever been in, and go to on a daily basis, here in Holland sells canned veggies. They even come in tiny tins, perfect for one person. I think these people weren't looking in the right aisle.
@@mariadamen7886 Dat is een totaal ander onderwerp. Hier wordt beweerd dat Nederlanders alleen maar vers eten en nooit iets uit blik eten en dat is dus gewoon niet zo.
You can even ordered it with the groceries to be delivered at your home; and yes, I watched the staff preparing 1 or more liters, with no customer in sight.
3:35 in all grocery stores, there is also at least one traditional, manned cash register with a belt and everything. When I don't buy anything I just exit through there, optionally skipping through a line that may have formed in front of the cashier. It's only at the self service registers where you scan the items yourself, that you need a receipt to open the exit gate.
What I like about the store I go to ( jumbo) is they have this cooler were they offer food that is on the date that it has to be consumed. It selles for only 50% or less than it origanaly costs. A lot of those things you can just put in the freezer and eat at a later date. It helps against waisting food.
When I am in other countries in Europe, I am always surprised how little variety of fresh veggies they offer. I love that we have lots of different veggies to choose from
4:00 this is so stupid. With a few exceptions, every supermarket still has the standard cashiers where you don’t have the gates. The gates are usually only for the self scan registers.
Here in the Netherlands there are always traditional cash registers in every supermarket, you have the choice to opt for a self-scan cash register if you want to.
Fresh squeezed orange juice tastes much sweeter, richer and less acidic than bottled orange juice which is usually made out of concentrated orange pulp that is diluted with water. When you squeeze fresh oranges and save it for half a day it already has become more acidic in taste. Not sure if it really becomes more acidic, but it sure tastes more sour. I can drink lots of freshly made orange juice without problems, but only a small glass of processed orange juice before I get heartburn.
It's not (just) egg salad. Although a large amount of them has mayonnaise as an ingredient so I guess there are eggs involved, but it's just cold salads with vegetables and/or meat with some spices and a sauce like mayo.
- Those 15 cents are also included in the price. - Yes the fresh orange juice is way better then the pre squeezed! The fresh orange juice my mom bringts from our store is gone in half a day. - The salads are not all egg salads. they all have the same structure like egg salad and sure, there's egg salad, surnamese egg salad, filled egg salad.. etc. All that... but you also got tuna, chicken with mango, chicken with curry, variations on cheese salads, farmers salad, hot-wing salad, crab salad, and many more. The most popular salad brand is johma, if you search it in google I'm sure you'll get to see more salads :)
Not only herring is sold and eaten raw from the super market in the Netherlands. A lot of the bigger super markets here also have fresh prepared sushi, sashimi and pokebowls to go, including raw fish options to choose from (mostly raw tuna and salmon).
And I have never ever seen someone eating hering in the train.. I don’t see a lot people eating smelly food in the train actually . Matter of decency I guess .
Perhaps the channel Soul to Soul Travels is something for you to look at as well? Eric and Tammy also migrated from the US to The Netherlands make their own quirky video's about their experiences. Defo worth a watch :)
they are a 1000x better source. even though they live in the retarded province (holland region) they seem way more in touch with the nation and its rules. and if they dont know for sure they say so honestly. Unlike buncharted which just straight up lies, makes up bullshi... and then sells it as informative content. but if you leave a comment with issues on their video claims. they will ensure to remove your comment as it doesnt fit their idea of how the comment section should be. and enjoy a 24h comment ban each time for hate or such whatever they file you under. And gone is your comment right for the day. but if you leave a possitive message they are sure to not remove such. Filtering their comment section to look only as endorsing people while people who show up with complaints about their claims and such they get instantly shut down by youtube. And no there is no system on youtube preventing content creators from straight up lying, as long as they claim "this is our experience". But as soon as you say anything they deem not in line with their views. they sure know how to utilize the report function for censorship. Absolute dogshi.. scum these buncharted. But Soul to soul channel does not have any of these issues. they dont delete comments like buncharted does. they openly reply and argue about positives and negatives. A good example for a solid source. But these scumbag buncharted should be taken down.
15 cents statiegeld is NOT a tax. The thing I see in The Netherlands more than in other countries is that packaging for fresh food is smaller. Not by much, but still. I think that it is because the Dutch will go way more often to buy their food. They will just buy for today and perhaps the next day. Not even for a whole week. This is because they have way more smaller stores that are easily accessible when they go from work to home on a bike. Most likely they will pass one on their bike. So 5 minutes and you have your fresh food. Many stores will not even have parking for cars.
Sorry to have to explain it again. Fresh Fish Doesn't Stink!!! Also fresh Herring. I can also clean herring myself. (from 12 years old) My brother-in-law has a fish specialty shop in the center of Spakenburg. Where I live 700 yards away. I already do 25 jobs in Prefab concrete. But if I have to, I can still clean a herring. Greetings from Spakenburg, Netherlands. Gerben T and Gabrielle.
- You can buy the haring because we eat them at home too, just like other normal food. Pleaaaase don't eat them in the train 😅 - The salads are not all egg based. We have salmon, shrimp, chicken etc. They are great and really not that weird haha. - As long as you can see, it'll be very easy to see with veggie is the normal or organic one. It's not like they're trying to be sneaky. 😊
About the bread in the supermarket. Can I tell you something? I think? From the age of 13 to the age of 20. My parents had it every Saturday. A separate order of 14 loaves. fine whole wheat. I come from a family of Mom, Dad and my twin brother. A sister 11 years younger and then a brother, 3 years younger. I went at 1:30/2:00. Down to make another batch of bread. 6 or 8. And then up again at 6:30. And again 6. And to school 10 or 12 cuts.
nice, i actually can make my own homemade bread now and can even do so without a recipe and just by winging it...never made bread before making my channel
3:56 you're using way too much words to get out. Dutch are direct. I make eye contact with an employee, hold my basket upside down and they will open the gate for me. Way faster than the receipt check at Wallmart
You can't eat hearing in a train. Strong smelling foods and drinks aren't allowed in public transport. I even got refused in a bus for drinking a Starbucks coffee. That WHILE the driver actually was drinking his own coffee inside the bus. 😂😂😂
thats because you dont drink human consumable products. Then again you are a gabber so its not surprising given the audience who listens to hardcore has single digit iq numbers.
We aren't harassing the employees in supermarket when we ask to open a gate when we didn't buy anything.. It's called service.. Most dutch people has the ability to think and not eat raw haring in a full train😂😂.. if so you got a full train of angry people, i tell you, you don't want that😅😂😂.. Love the videos tho❤🎉🎉
In Belgium "Haring" is a big thing too. I prefer the Haring with onion in a jar that is in vinegar. In Belgium those spreads are very popular too, and it's not just eggsalad as they said... it's tuna salad, chicken salad, ham salad with all kinds of different flavours. It suprises me that they are so weird about those salads without even really trying it. Canned veggies, or even veggies in jars, are not big selections in Belgium. Most people still buy their veggies fresh, precut fresh veggies are gaining in popularity in the last years. Seriously, I would never grab Bio on accident because I check the prices and not just grab the first thing I see.
About delicacies: I recommend Herring in Tomato sauce in a tin: on a slice of bread, as part of a salad, on toast as appetizers and known as "first aid at disasters' fried until a dry lumpy but tasty dish (like sambal goreng ebbie) for a hasty rice meal. Off coures there is also Tuna and Sardines in a can. Conserved vegetables in glass jars and in tins: carrots, peas, red cabbage, green beans, red beets, various beans: black, white, brown, chili.
Vegetables in tins seem to be very popular in the USA - more popular than in most European countries, anyway. Lots of US recipes (if you can call them that!) ask for a 'can' of this or that to add to a packet of something else.
i used to sell goods in the US, i live in the northern part of Belgium, Basically south of the Netherlands because we speak the same language, sales tax sucks man it changes even in districts its crazy, also we may be paying more for food but af least its not loaded with 1000 grams of sugar… Only the US products have this.. Also the orange juice thing we also have it in every store in Belgium but its not gonna last i think, not a lot of people buy it, its also expensive.. We also eat herring with onions in Antwerp :p we buy it in the grocery store together with “karakollen” yes these are snails. Antwerp is famous for it. So basically what they eat in the Netherlands they eat in Flanders (Northern part of Belgium)
Strange things in a grocery store in the NL are foreigners, just joking LOL Statiegeld( return your bottles money) is common, even some cans have this statiegeld method. Canned foods are plentiful from fruits to beans to veggies to Soup to Ramen to Pasta's etc. they must look around better LOL Fresh orange juice makers are very common, but free cups of coffee are almost to be found everywhere in NL grocery stores. I love coffee, especially the free kind during my grocery shopping. There are quite often free sampling stands in NL grocery stores too. BTW its called Supermarkt, not a grocery store LOL BTW Supermarkten don't really bake their own bread, it is baked of bread LOL Don't fall for the obvious ruse, they come half-baked or ready-made prepackaged from big factories LOL One can also buy half-baked breads (of all sorts) to bake of at home, still they come from a big factory ;)
I watched the Buncharted video yesterday and I was surprised they did not find any canned vegatables, only the ones in glas jars. Well, we have canned vegatables in Jumbo and Albert Heijn and all other supermarkets. But the pouint is: who buys it? An answer is: when ypu need in a recipe some corn, yoy can find some canned, fresh isn't an option than. Or elderly people sometimes buy canned or in jars vegatables. And very occasionally some peas. Kidney beans.. oke, that's alway canned, not even in glass jars. BTW, I think I eat canned vegatables only once a year at the most.... Buncharted did not look any further.... About the herring... never ever buy that in a supermarket... I've been sick for days eating that once (a few years ago) and I wasn't told where it came from. ughhh... (and yep, don't eat it in a train or other public transport... people will hope you'll get out asap!!) About the bread: yeah, when I see my favourite bread I'll a few and put it in the freezer. Why? Experience of not having the bread at the end of the day (or at 2:00 PM ...).
it isnt so difficult since these fools live in the tourist cities. Nothing dutch there to find anyway. Stores do have them there too, But americans are known to be ignorant and making shit up on the spot is nothing new to them. Buncharted is the most out of touch channel from USA representing dutch culture anyway. And they dont care because fools like the one i comment on subscribe to these clowns.
The Netherlands is the largest food producing country in the world. That's why fresh is cheaper here. And what is left per season. Goes in glass jars or cans. For the rest. Those are our cherries on the cake. Greetings from Spakenburg, Netherlands.
@@ohhi5237 We are. It's not just what is grown here. But also all seeds that are grown and improved here. Wageningen and Zeewolde. We work very closely together to make the best seeds.
They used 1 "brand" of supermarkets to make this video. Yes mostly what is sold is the same but there are multiple different kind of supermarkets. Not just this AH "brand" And not all of them have a orange jucer in it. Those cheese spreads have nothing to do with egg saled. There just molten cheese spreads with something added to it. Exept the vegan that is. No cheese in there logicaly. Canned food I was taught, is less healty then fresh foods, that's why they did not sell a lot. Add to that, we outport the most foods after the usa. So why eat canned feggies if we can eat them fresh.
Hahahaha, We do prefer fresh vegetables, but you can buy canned bean and other vegetables. 90% will cook fresh vegetables for sure. I think we have less variaty in canned food. Flesh vegetables are way cheaper in Holland than in the USA. We are a farmer country. And hey...more vitamines and better taste. The glass is very thick and better for the enviroment. If you do not buy anything there is just an open cassiere path where you can go out. This is honestly ridiculous :D Taxes are always included. Statiegeld is great! Everyone stored plastic bottles (you pay 15 ct) and when you have a lot, you bring them back and get your 30x (or whatever) 15 cts back. We also recycle plastic, paper, green (garden and food) etc in seperate big containers who are empties every week. Yeah, you can make your own Orange jus with fresh oranges and it's not that much more expensive. I love it. Fresh orange jus is bought aa lot, also for our cildren. Vitamine C!! Yes we do have oranges in Europe duh. How do you think they arived in the American continents? :P Haring is extremely healthy hahaha. I don't like it either. Our bread is sold fresh and does not contain the conservation mess the USA has (sorry) Our bread will turn green after 3 or 4 days for sure. But their are always packed sandwiches. Not great, but it's something. Most people in Holland do their WEEKEND groceries. That's when we buy everything that's not fresh, for the whole week. Toiletpaper, soda's, Cheese (can keep that long) jam, pet food, patatoes, rice, pasta, flower herbs, biscuits, tea, coffee etc. But also often bread for the whole week, which we put in the freezer. It's really nice and fresh when it's defrozen again (again, can't leave it for several days) After work we just pick up some veggies, meat for our diner. Veggies you can't put in the freezer UGH. Okay meat you can.
Statiegeld IS included in the pricing, in most stores IIRC. What I do hope is that they'll follow Sweden (I think) in how to handle this: chuck all the cans in a big drawer at once and let the machine count, just like a counter for moneybills.
You are wrong, ‘statiegeld’ is NOT included in the pricing, statiegeld fees will be added at the register. And only the small bottles are 15 ct, the large (1 l. and up) are 25 ct
4:33 while our prices are including VAT tax, we actually pay 21% VAT for most goods. *some* goods are put on a special "low rate" list which means that those have a 9% VAT rate. Btw the "Statiegeld" is €0,15 for bottles smaller than 1L and €0,25 for bottles 1L or bigger. We also have €0,10 for beer bottles and €1,50 for beer crates, making for €3,90 in statiegeld on a crate of 24 beers.
Most Dutch brands (both A and OEM) chose to use jars. But most of the 'foreign' (but perhaps locally produced) brands use cans. I prefer the more neutral effect of glass. But during a blind test I probably can't tell the difference.
Here in Croatia there is not a big selection of tinned food and it is quite expensive. In UK I used to buy things like tinned chicken in white sauce, meatballs, burgers in gravy or stewed steak but there is nothing like that here. Tinned peaches or pineapple were much cheaper in UK.
Feels like they don't really go to many different supermarkets or only in some of the biggest shopping districts in the biggest cities. Already the first point they make is only true when a supermarket has no normal checkout counters and only uses selfscan. About the canned veg point. Isn't this because fresh veggies are relatively cheap over here? And I believe in America everything has to be good for a long time. I believe the bread over there is also 'good' for a very long time. The organic point is a bit weird to me too. They are packaged differently. It's like you get the wrong kind of canned veg because they are both in cans. Might just be me being used to it, but some of the points just seemed weird to me haha. Do think there are extreme amounts of egg salad types.
You can go into a store without buying things. If you leave, you make eyecontact with the store-person who stands next to the self-checkout and they will push a button and the little fence opens. You do not actually have to ask or search for an employee. They stand there anyway to oversee and help when someone does not understand the checkout-machine.
This one was funny in a good way 😊 But, not to worrie, some things are a bit blown out of proportion... When you're at the supermarket and you want to exit empty-handed, then there's always someone there to open the gate without making you feel uncomfortable 😉 Selling orange juice in a supermarket has been a common thing for more than a decade, and yes, oranges do grow in Europe, I'm currently living in Spain and the number of oranges that grow here is immensely high. Funny thing is though, the oranges here taste so much better than I've ever tasted in the Netherlands. Very few canned vegetables, sort of true, Bonduelle is the brand that has a reasonable range of canned food, most brands however sell what's possible in glass jars. However, canned and jarred vegetables are actually kinda gross in a way they are kinda mushy and tasteless. Frozen is an okay possiblity when fresh is too expensive. I've had an American friend for dinner once and we made fresh green beans, she actually was flabbergasted how good and crispy they tasted. Regarding to the #1, bread in The Netherlands has actual nutritional value, it feels different and most certainly tastes different than what is sold as bread in the US. They fact that there is not much left at that time, is based on average sales that are normal for that day. That way the store doesn't have to discount that bread for the next day. A good estimation on the product sales can save a store a lot of money. The same van be said about the stock in the bakery.
About the egg salads .. I know when they where introduced (I guess in the 80s ?) they were more intended for on toast when you snack in the evening. Nowadays I see more and more people use it on their bread as lunch or dinner with soup for instance as a sidedish.
Is the Netherlands really that bad i don't think so the Netherlands our country is a great place to live in why move? Is the the Netherlands perfect no it isn't but it's still a great place/country to live in period there's nothing wrong with our country the Netherlands i'm a proud Dutchman and i love my country even with it flaws. God bless the Netherlands🇳🇱 En nog een prettige dag toegewenst😊 Kom alstublieft terug.
@@DidierWierdsma6335 I'm way too curious. I love exploring and in The Netherlands I didn't get surprised anymore. Don't get me wrong, The Netherlands is an astonishing country, but I needed something different. Also, I am 37 now and I have a small business. When I was 35 and still in The Netherlands I lived in a small studio. Here I live on a mountain near the city. It's 15m walk and I'm in the city center. 15m bus ride and I can snowboard. And I pay the same for a very nice apartment. And I can discover new things, new cultures.. I didn't leave because I didn't like The Netherlands, but because my soul needs new environments and exploring. Btw, I come back often because I'm still quite close in Romania.
So... there's some things that don't sound completely right. 10: Unless you go to a store that has absolutely no manned cash registers you should still be able to get out of the store without having to bug anyone because you didn't buy something. You can just skip the line of a manned cash register and get out that way. I don't know if they go to unmanned stores or if those are even a thing. 9: The added cost for bottles is 15 cents for small bottles and 25 cents for 1,5 liter bottles. These days there's also statiegeld on tin cans so that they get returned more often as well. I admit to being one of those empty bottle hoarders so that I can turn them in all at once if I'm short on money when needing food. 5: Okay, while not technically wrong... you can buy prepackaged herring with onions at supermarkets yes, and technically you could eat them wherever you want... but I don't see people eating them out and about right from the container, and most definitely not on public transport. Usually we'd take them home, but I can imagine taking them to a park or something, sit down on a bench, and enjoy them as lunch or whatever. Also, they're not as good as the ones from specialized stores, so... only buy them if you really can't help yourself. 3: I don't really know how many vegetables come in cans in the US, but they definitely do also exist in the Netherlands. A lot of veggies that you see in jars will have a canned version as well. Although honestly... if there is a jarred version I'd go for that over the tinned version simply because you can see inside, and you don't need a can opener to get to the goods. 1: Not incorrect, not gonna try and dispute it either... just wanted to say: Yeah! What the heck, stores?! If I want bread after 6pm, let me get friggin' bread after 6pm!
we have fresh orange juice here in South Australia and it always is used here and freshly squeezed in the bottle too ready to go from the machine. we dont have many veg in jars but im learning about this item. we have an organic section in our stores too. when i went to the netherlands and went to the store. it was very similar to those at home.
The fresh orange juice can be really nice, when the oranges are nice and sweet. i buy it a lot of times. The hearring: do not buy that in a grocery store, rather on a market where there will be fresh hearring. Same for cheese, go to the market or a special cheese shop.
it is not a tax that is added to the price of drinks but a deposit. As they said, once you return the bottle so it can be recycled, you get your deposit back…
Yucky is how they taste, everything is cooked through and through and the veggies are so mushy you could basically suck it in through your front teeth. I think that pretty much answers your question.
OJ machine gets used, on Sunday morning. You'll also buy a croissantje, baked there or the ones you make yourself at home. With or without cheese inside
I know where they are shopping but most grocery stores have cash registers and self scan registers. So you don't have to wait for personnel to open the gate.
About The orange juice machine. They use the good part of a blemished or soft orange that wouldn't sell in the fresh fruit section. So instead of throwing it away they make even more money off of it
Fresh orange juice is always better then the ones already bottled because there is something in there to keep it "fresh" longer The same goes for juice in pakking. Fresh pressed orange juice you can bottle that in 3 or 4 different sizes of bottles 300ml , 500ml , 1L and 1.5 L
Orange juice from the refrigerator section has al lot of sugar added to it and freshly made orange juice has not. That is mostly the reason we like to make it fresh instead of getting it from the other section
3:30 In France, you just walk out the same "gates" you walked through on your way in. Edit: Those are RFID "Anti Theft" "gates". There's no physical barriers.
@@blexible4894Thanks for saying that, because I was wondering 😅 Being Dutch myself, I have never been "locked in" a supermarket, only to get out with a receipt 🤗
There are just very few shops that are self checkout only, mainly in bigger cities near public transport hubs. In 90% of stores, if you don't buy anything you just pass through the normal checkout lane. "That fresh fish smell"... Sir, there is no such thing as a fresh fish smell. Fresh fish doesn't smell. If you walk past a fishmonger and you can smell you are passing a fishmonger... don't buy there. There is enough canned food. Canned or potted. Mostly all sorts of beans of course but you also find things like Red Cabage, Brussels Sprouts, beetroot etc..
I just came back from a roadtrip through the South-West in the U.S. I had a realy good time and loved the nature but....the food was awful. I letteraly had nothing what i liked. Also what i experienced was that everything was very expensive. But doesn t matter because next summer i ll be back and this time in the east part of the U.S.
there are about 25 different types of bread, most glass here in the Netherlands is melted into new glass, plastic is recycled, or handed in at the supermarket pet bottle 0.15 cents, liter bottles 0.25 cents, drink cans 0.15, and only the Albert Hein supermarket has there is an orange press machine in the store, and there are a number of supermarkets that have a coffee corner where you can drink coffee for free
I think the reason glass jars with vegetables are used here has everything to do with weck jars (glass jars with glass lits with a rubber ring between jar and lit) where the vegetables were stored in before the fridge and greenhouse existed. My mother always bought fresh vegetables in the summer and autumn to cook them in weck jars and store them in the cellar for use in the winter, when there weren’t fresh vegetables. So a manufacturer selling cooked vegetables and be successful should stay close to the original.
I *love* the orange juice machines, which are indeed also available in many Belgian supermarkets, but the POMEGRANATE ones (that are unfortunately less widespread) are even nicer: nothing beats filling up a large bottle with freshly squeezed healthy and tasty pomegranate juice. ❤
You're right about the fact that the VAT is included. Which is nice cause you know exactly what you pay. Our VAT is 21%.Which isn't the highest in Europe. It's average.
In the Netherlands, we are transitioning away from plastic. But glass for vegetables is a staple for decades already. I"m not sure exactly why they transitioned from canned to glass, but I do believe it's easier for recycling.
The fresh orange juice is so much better "if" they get good oranges, and while jars are wors in keeping things fresh its sells better(uv light destroys vitamins) the cheap stores still have loads of cans tho
Actually a lot of supermarkets now have a rule to preserve some bread for the evening sales because a lot of people can not shop in the daytime. I was wondering if conserved vegetables in can are better or worse than fresh.. I know a lot of Dutch people prefer fresh and that is why we don't have a lot canned vegetables. If you go to Germany you see a lot more of canned vegetables than in the NL.
AH isn't very expensive at all. COOP, Plus and SPAR are very expensive. AH&Jumbo are in the middle, Lidl (not Liddel) and Aldi are German stores that have stores internationally, so they don't represent the Dutch grocery stores
Ah is very expensive compared to vomar or deen. Our deen turned into albertheijn, our vomar is currently under construction. So I have to shop at ah at the moment.. and I'm paying half 1,5 times the price, eventhough I'm not buying brand names. I just want my gwoon brand!
i,m from NZ now living in the Philippines , i love sardines in oil which is very hard to find here, but now if u like yr sardines in tomato juice then here is the place for u as u can find nearly a whole row top to bottom of these not all the same brands, and if u like peanut butter then here to also even in biscuits
In the city where I live there are no good bakeries. Luckily for work I have to drive once or twice a week to Utrecht where there are (very) good bakeries. So I just get my bread there.That being said, many bakeries have very to little bread to chose from after 14:00... 😕
What I hear foreigners comment as strange in Sweden is that we have different foods in tubes. Most commonly spreadable cheeses with different flavors, but also cod roe (which we put on eggs or sandwiches) and mayonnaise etc. It's practical, more hygienic than digging in a jar with the same knife you use on the sandwich, easier to handle and the shelf life is longer.
I never used the orange juice machine in supermarket store, becouse I'm allergic for citrus fruits. I buy salt haring, but eat them at home. You can also buy pickled haring and rolmops in glass jars. ❣️
We put it mistly in jars because of the taste from canned food you get somekind of irontaste and yess we of then reuse the jara for other stuff or for crafting with youre children
funny to me how you find it embarrassing if you not buy anything and have to ask an employee for some assistance (which is her/his job) Groeten uit Nederland!
As a caucasian (from the Netherlands) with semi freeform locs may I take a moment to dab you up. Locs looking nice my dude! now lets see what y'all find strange about our supermarkets :P
Fresh fish doesn't smell. You may detect a mild ocean-like smell, but that's it, when a fish is older then it will smell, and when it is going or has gone bad it will definitely smell 'fishy', but not before, not when it's fresh.
I often buy haring at the Albert Heijn, but I've never eaten it on the train 😬 I thought the canned thing wasn't true, but then I realized I never eat canned or jarred vegetables, only something canned chickpeas and corn
Actually kinda weird how our grocery stores make this effort to supply daily baked fresh bread and then we just go and throw it in the freezer anyway lol
You can just walk out via the cash registers. Never drink your fruit. If you can smell the fish (herring) don't eat it. They have any kind of beans (green, peas, black, chili etc) tomatoes, peppers, fruit etc. all in cans of several sizes. and of course all kinds of meat, sardines tuna, milk etc.
What’s weird? The fact that there are more different kinds of peanut butter than types of vegetables in most stores. And statiegeld on cans and bottles is no fun. Especially cokecans, you need to rinse them out or you’ll have an army of wasps, flies and ants in your shed.
@@KeesBoons you’re right, i make my own drinks. Tea, coffee, lemonade, ginger beer, etc. But once in a while i like to get a moersleutel beer or something like that and now, when i throw it in the pmd bin, i’m throwing away €0,15. Not a fan of statiegeld. So now i’m brewing my own beer, putting it in reusable ‘beugelflessen’.
15 cent doesnt seem much, but if you are buying a 12 pack of mini bottles. You nearly pay 2 euro extra. Adding this up a couple weeks gives a generous amout of money back. Uselly parents let the children bring them away so they can buy someting they like there.
4:00 you can always leave through a regular cassier gate where actually a person sits. I naver use self scan, I will not do their job, and as a thanks for that you get red light and they cheack you if you did their work... I refuse.
OK, it's an aquired taste... So soft and tasty texture, but still very fishy... But with raw onions, and pickles, it's just heaven! For at least the Dutchies...
10:00 Apparently not a lot of people here know much about Haring. What the dutch eat is Not fresh Haring. Its in tones semi fermented fish. We do love our other fresh fish also though, like sole and mackerel