American's First Time in Denmark (People, Food, Aesthetic, Bakken, Copenhagen) Pt 1

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ม.ค. 2025

ความคิดเห็น • 741

  • @birchleaf
    @birchleaf ปีที่แล้ว +159

    The traffic signs you see outside of the USA are basically international, so it is pretty much the same everywhere. But much like the metric system, the US refuses to use it.

    • @aphextwin5712
      @aphextwin5712 ปีที่แล้ว +37

      There is a nice short video about this: Why US Signs Look Different Than The Rest Of The World’s
      In short, the 1968 Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals created a standardised and systematic system of signs used in most of the world. It is overwhelmingly based on image based signs which can be identical everywhere, can be understood by foreigners not knowing the local language, and generally are faster to “read” than text based ones.
      Some general principles are that upward white triangles with a red border are used for all kind of warnings and circular signs with a red border indicate things that are forbidden. Combine the latter with the fact that blue is associated with with parking and you get close to the actual no parking/no stopping sign.

    • @HailHeidi
      @HailHeidi  ปีที่แล้ว +35

      We are so silly. Lol

    • @jandamskier6510
      @jandamskier6510 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@HailHeidi to say the least

    • @Dan340000
      @Dan340000 ปีที่แล้ว

      The reason why the US dont use the metric system is that they all have a foot fetish 😀

    • @gabrielgomescunha
      @gabrielgomescunha ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@HailHeidi there's someone pretending to be you

  • @papaquonis
    @papaquonis ปีที่แล้ว +159

    Bakken opened in 1583, not 1853. The third oldest amusement park in the World - Tivoli - is also in Copenhagen. That opened in 1843 and Walt Disney used it as one of the main inspirations for Disneyland. Bakken has always had a more raw and unpolished feel to it compared to Tivoli and most other theme parks.

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK ปีที่แล้ว +20

      Well, yes and no, Dyrehavsbakken opened to the public in 1756. Before that it was strictly a royal hunting grounds. No permanent structures were allowed before 1844, one year after Tivoli opened.
      At the beginning there were no rides and most entertainment was shows and cabarets.
      EDIT: likewise Wurstelprater in Austria which by some is regarded as the second oldest amusement park was strictly a recreational park with seasonal carvinals. The first permanent ride there was the Ferris Wheel built in 1897.

    • @HailHeidi
      @HailHeidi  ปีที่แล้ว +40

      Oh my god, you're right, I said the wrong date!! Whoops! Oh no, not the dyslexic moment. Lol thank you so much for the correction! 💜

    • @mikeyb2932
      @mikeyb2932 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@SaturnusDK Well, yes, because it (Dyrehavsbakken) was open to the public from opening in 1583 until some time in 1669-1671. It was then made open to the public *Again,* in 1756.
      The animal park was set up by King Frederik III, in 1669 and his successor Christian V, apparently expanded that animal park to several times its original size and in 1671 named it 'Jægersborg Dyrehave'. Whether 'Bakken' was closed to the public from the beginning of that animal park being created, or if it was during the expansion that it got closed off, I do not know, but before then, it was open to the public.

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@mikeyb2932 Again yes and no, the area around what is now called Dyrehavsbakken were in briefer or longer periods of time open to the public. Starting in 1583. It was not an amusement park by any sense of the word more than any other public park were before the early 19th century were travelling carvinals and circusses would make stops there. However, they'd do that in most large public parks in Copenhagen proper as well, so hardly an amusement park by any stretch of the imagination.
      That's the thing with both Bakken and Wurstelprater. They both existed and were open to the public before Tivoli opened but neither of them were amusement parks by any modern definition before Tivoli opened. So counting them as older amusement parks than Tivoli is just silly.

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@HailHeidi Not a big deal. Only 270 years wrong.
      It's just the difference between if it was pre-civil war, or pre-pilgrim settlers.

  • @andersthomsen3409
    @andersthomsen3409 ปีที่แล้ว +127

    Glad you liked it, Heidi. The bathrooms used to be closets... that's why they're so small. When the buildings were built, everyone went to the outhouse down in the back yard of the building. Buildings that are built later, tend to have a larger bathroom. The place where I live, has a strange extension of the hallway that has been converted into a bathroom.

    • @markoitmard
      @markoitmard ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I lived a week in Helsinki where one closet was a toilet and the other one was shower. To be able to sit on the toilet I had to back into it:)

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Apartments from back then often have the back-stairs staircase repurposed as bathrooms... as that was often the path down to the outhouse anyway.
      But yeah, those old buildings were not built with a bathroom in mind.

    • @Cloudberry84
      @Cloudberry84 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yeah, there's a reason that it's called WC (water closet )😊

    • @snudder.s.m.l.5026
      @snudder.s.m.l.5026 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Fun to hear how people from other countries do see our country and way of living.
      Big hugs from Denmark ( Sjælland) 💝🌹🥰

    • @ernalise
      @ernalise 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Actually in the old Copenhagen apartments, the toilets were put into the old chimneys, that were large because people were cooking on wood or coal stoves. You know the old black things with the rings. The toilets used to be in the backyard. It was like a row of sheds and you sat on a board with a hole in it and under you were a deep hole full of you know what. I have tried one of these - they were still in use in the seventies. Scary places. Bathrooms were not common way into the eighties. In Copenhagen we used to have these large communal bathhouses. They were really nice, with steam bath, saunas, big showerheads, ice pool and access to swimmingpool. It was very cheap, so twice a week you would make a trip to the bathhouse and enjoy lots of warm water etc. I would often spend three hours just enjoying getting a good wash. Now people have their own bathrooms and the wonderful excursion to take a baths is history.

  • @lbernau
    @lbernau ปีที่แล้ว +66

    The old buildings and the bank you saw at Bakken, was probably the "Korsbæk At Bakken". There's an old danish tv-series called Matador about the life in a small danish town called Korsbæk. This Tv-series is a stable in Danish culture and sort of iconic. Bakken built some years ago replica's of some of the more famous buldings from the series, and that is what you saw.

  • @Lorentari
    @Lorentari ปีที่แล้ว +49

    interesting thing about "Old Copenhagen" bathrooms is that they are often retrofit broom closets (literally), from back when plumbing and running water in the homes was a novelty. So instead of going to the backyard to go to the outhouse or get water for washing. toilets were literally shoved into the broomcloset, sometimes so tight that you'd barely have space to close the door - and sometimes a shower was placed over the toilet

    • @charisma-hornum-fries
      @charisma-hornum-fries ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Exactly. I showeted in the basement before my broom closet was converted 😂

  • @thorstenzahn6394
    @thorstenzahn6394 ปีที่แล้ว +57

    Denmark is awesome! I love the People! I`m german and go for vacation to Denmark every Year!

    • @TainDK
      @TainDK 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Wir hat euch auch lieb, mindestens als wir was anderen Sprache lehrnen als/auser English =)

  • @Edgecrusherdk
    @Edgecrusherdk ปีที่แล้ว +57

    Stegt flæsk med persillesovs "iam gonna butcher it" pronounces it nearly perfectly....

    • @TonnyBredsgaard
      @TonnyBredsgaard หลายเดือนก่อน

      Heidi got the word 'hygge' very, very well?! Nice!
      Salt is not good for you, remember? You die a lot sooner in USA.

  • @finnwolffkaysfeld7000
    @finnwolffkaysfeld7000 ปีที่แล้ว +111

    I am impressed by your Danish pronunciation. Better than many Americans even after living years in Denmark.

    • @Prokrastina
      @Prokrastina ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I noticed that too - well done!

    • @molly9518
      @molly9518 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Especially the "Stegt flæsk med persillesovs", it was perfect with a hint of accent - very well done!!

    • @Christian-el2bz
      @Christian-el2bz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The smerberd though 😂😂😂

  • @PhilipZeplinDK
    @PhilipZeplinDK ปีที่แล้ว +289

    Great. I had plans today. But as a Dane, I'm now legally obligated to watch this video. Thank you very much, Heidi!
    edit: why did the replies have to make this weird >:[

    • @HailHeidi
      @HailHeidi  ปีที่แล้ว +23

      LOL

    • @Galantus1964
      @Galantus1964 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      same lol

    • @TheKIMANO
      @TheKIMANO ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Legally obligated to see it? 🙃Who told you that? Trump? 😬But - we have been waiting for Hail Heidi's experience of Denmark.

    • @spyro257
      @spyro257 ปีที่แล้ว +82

      @@TheKIMANO did u just ask a Dane, if Trump told him something? a man we make fun of, all the time... 🤣

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne ปีที่แล้ว +9

      You have talked about Denmark so little in your previous videos, that I though you hated our beautiful country, or just maybe spend very little time here.

  • @4455thor
    @4455thor ปีที่แล้ว +39

    Heidi we love to have nice guests visit our country. FYI we also have quite a few Anerican expats LIVING here. 2 families are very active here on TH-cam: Travelling Youngs and Robe Trotting, they explain both politics, taxes, prices, places to visit and how "to fit in".

  • @kaspernielsen9149
    @kaspernielsen9149 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    wholegrain is normally a sign of quality in bread everywhere outside of the US. :)

  • @DoctorrMetal
    @DoctorrMetal ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Fun fact: the pictures of stegt flæsk you showed was in fact what is called flæskesteg (and is not the same thing, it's actually what we have for xmas) You got a very classic diner type version and you can also get it as a flæskestegssandwich (flæskesteg sandwich / burger). And yes salt is often added after even if the food contains a little salt.

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      flæskesteg is so much better

    • @shades2.183
      @shades2.183 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It is the national dish.

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@shades2.183 yeah, "stægt flæsk", not "flæskesteg", even if the other one taste so much better. I have never had good "stægt flæsk".

    • @shades2.183
      @shades2.183 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Summer_and_Rain ""he edited his post, he said that stegt flæsk is "almost" national dish. However, it is not "almost", it is ThE national dish. Been for many many years, sinch i was a child and before that probably. National by sales and public surveys.
      I don't agree. Stegt is superior, but flæske is not to be underestimated for sure. For most people though flæske is more a seasonal dish where stegt can and is being eaten all year round. Yes, you can get ribbene sandwish, sure, but it is not the same. When people speak about flæske it is with potatos and sauce. Flæske is heavy food, sure, stegt is kinda heavy too but not as much, we as in Danes usually eat the heavy stuff in fall and winter. However, for some reason stegt does not suffer the same faith.
      I am a licened butcher and worked in the food industry for 17 years, been in the armed forces 6 years after i finished my apprenticship and now days a mason, in my experience stegt is always sold out. Restaurants, company kanteens, the messe hall on the base, well, everywhere it is served it is usually sold out year round.
      It is the national dish after all.
      My mother though, 80yrs old, kinda have same opinion as you, that flæske is better, however, sales speak another tale.
      I love it myself but i prefere "ribbenesteg" over "kamsteg", i want fat as it more tastefull and less dry or harder to make "dry". I will not eat one bite of it if it's dry, i will literally throw it out. My cat wont touch it if it's dry either.
      Have a good night.

  • @antoniskalakonas1876
    @antoniskalakonas1876 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    In Greece we have a saying (translated here): Undersalted food - you add salt. Oversalted food - you throw to the garbage can. So it is not uncommon, especially with recipes we are not sure about the amound of salt that will make people happy, to slightly undersalt food.
    Also - we use a lot of cheese, and our cheese is usually salty, so we do take that into account.

    • @CrazyhorseDK
      @CrazyhorseDK 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      can sometimes be saved by adding sugar if too salty regarding sauce etc

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@CrazyhorseDK true, brown sauce made from duck fat, often get a bit better with a small amount of sugar

    • @CrazyhorseDK
      @CrazyhorseDK 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      yea :)@@Summer_and_Rain

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Putting salt of food, will make it taste of food plus salt.
      The right seasoning from the get go, is a far better choice, than not to season properly, or pouring it over the food.

  • @vrenak
    @vrenak ปีที่แล้ว +18

    The "old buildings" at Bakken you saw, like the bank, are a recreation of the fictional town of Korsbæk from the TV-series Matador. It's popular on a scale where no US station would ever dream of drawing in that many viewers for a premiere, much less a 10th rerun. It has been sold and shown to almost every country in Europe and as far away as to Australia. It's a period piece set between 1929 and 1947 detailing the life and times of the people in the town focusing on 2 main families.

    • @tribalbear84
      @tribalbear84 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I came here to say this!
      It's not meant to show the original Bakken, and it's still relatively new (they opened the area in 2015), and is considered just another part of the entertainment. 🙂

  • @charlescorbee9498
    @charlescorbee9498 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    As a teener in the Netherlands (12 - 16 years) we had the possibility to take the train through the hole country for a week and go anywhere. With friends, we left in the morning, go to criss cross. To Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Texel, Maastricht, or any place we want to see! Going home in the evening and out again the next day. It is called: TeenerTour

  • @casperdanielsen1568
    @casperdanielsen1568 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The reason the Old Copenhagen toilets are so small is that the apartments where not build with toilets or showers. This was shared at ground level. So they tried to fit them after the fact hence very little space

  • @Drescher1984
    @Drescher1984 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Old Copenhagen, depending on what class it was build for, use to have toilets in the courtyard and you took baths/showers at bathhouses. So some of the tiny bathrooms, use to be closets.

  • @oliverlanz781
    @oliverlanz781 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    Godt nytår, Heidi! Thank you for sharing your experiences 👍
    I have been living in DK for like 20 years now. I also noticed the absence of salt compared to my country. When you get used to it you start discovering the natural flavors of the other ingredients instead. Quite lovely. I think too much salt hides the other flavors.

    • @Garbox80
      @Garbox80 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yeah, salt is something you can easily get used to and then food tastes like "nothing" with less salt. Luckily it's quite easy to switch back too.
      And while our bodies need salt, I don't think anyone living in the western countries (at least) is going to have problems with having too LOW salt intake.

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Also far too much sugar in US foods, a US loaf has twice the added sugar and salt than a European one. it is surprising how much salt and sugars occur naturally in foods.

  • @Ixefar88
    @Ixefar88 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    As a Dane i can safely say that we were glad to have you guys here 😊 i am looking forward to the next part

    • @risputte
      @risputte 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I'm also looking forward to the next part,
      as a Dane living in the forbidden country in the east. (Sweden)

  • @_-martin-_
    @_-martin-_ ปีที่แล้ว +15

    You love Denmark. I got news for you little lady. Denmark loves you! :D

  • @sebastiangrif
    @sebastiangrif ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Hi there! I'm really glad you liked it here.

  • @allanjensen31
    @allanjensen31 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The Little Shop and the bank and that part is old TV series Call Matador It's about a little town called Korsbæk and it Story is about the life in a little Danish Town between 1929 and 1947

  • @emilrogengellschwaner3555
    @emilrogengellschwaner3555 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Fun fact about Copenhagen, most apartment buildings where build before bathrooms in individual apartments was a thing. People took baths in the kitchen and went to the bathroom in the courtyards. Thsts why bathrooms are so small

  • @saxoragnhildssn5443
    @saxoragnhildssn5443 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I have been waiting for this one. Thanks Heidi : )

  • @kristianmidjord
    @kristianmidjord ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The salt thing, is on purpose. A few years ago, restaurants, kanteens etc. started to use less salt in the food, for health reasons, and instead let people add more if they want to.

    • @kimmogensen4888
      @kimmogensen4888 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      and I got used to not using extra salt it was just a bad habit

  • @tomashorne
    @tomashorne ปีที่แล้ว +5

    There are over 30 languages and 3 alphabets in Europe, which is why we do not use road signs with text. And "Old Copenhagen" is the medieval city. The part of the city which 150 years ago was within the city walls. Happy New Year and thanks for sharing your travel experiences.

  • @MissSkjoth
    @MissSkjoth ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The paté you had om the open sandwiches could be what we in Denmark call “Leverpostej”. It is a simple but delicious spread made of pork liver, not duck liver. The pâté you get here in Denmark is also pork liver, but a finer version with pork and or veal meat.

  • @lassej5653
    @lassej5653 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Old Copenhagen apartments were build before indoor water flushed toilets was a thing. People back then went to an outhouse usually shared between a group of apartments. And would take showers in either public bathing facilities. So the bathrooms there are all retrofitted and therefore they are squeezed in a small rooms (or even closets) to not take away too much space from the living area.

  • @eddiec1961
    @eddiec1961 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Thanks for sharing your experience it sounds like you had fun, take care.

  • @tompettersson3814
    @tompettersson3814 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    As a swede i have travelled on buses and trains alone since i was 7 years old. It is just the way it is :)

    • @kimmogensen4888
      @kimmogensen4888 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I teach my children to cycle to school from the age of 10, but Bornholm is also a safe place to cycle max 40 km in the city and only moderate traffic, many cycle to school and to work.
      but I also know several people who lived far from the school who drove the bus from the age of 7, as long as you drive with them a few times, they can do it themselves.
      luckily it's a safe community, if you lose your wallet, it's taken to the police or the trains, the times I've tried it, they read the address that was in the wallet and nothing was missing 🤗

  • @traver1965
    @traver1965 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Your best video ever. Yes I am Danish haha. I like you are so openminded and always positive. The open sandwiches you bought are the cheapest and "normal" ones. They can be eaten with one hand. They are often used in lunchbags or just a quick meal. The one tourists gets are "Highly plated open sandwiches". They are huge and expensive and you need a fork and knife to eat them. Stegt flæsk med persillesovs. You pronounced that very well. Fun thing is that the "e" in the first word and the "æ" in the second word are pronounced in the same way. It is like the sound you make pronouncing the first letter in "eggs". I am looking forward seing the next videos from you (also the none Danish ones) :)

  • @MichaelHedegaardJensen
    @MichaelHedegaardJensen ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Fun fact about the wooden rollercoaster.. Its just standing on the groud...
    Its not secured by bolts or anything to the ground.
    The size and weight keeps it in place and have done that since it was build..
    So if you wanted, you could actually get some helicopters and fly away with it.... even though I think there would be some problems with them size.

  • @Joliie
    @Joliie ปีที่แล้ว +8

    The Pate (Leverposteg) are made from Pig levers. Just fyi, most of don't like or prefer all the Smørrebrød options, the bread is as different as white breads, but the more kernels if often seen as a better bread, the key is they help fill you up :)

    • @moladiver6817
      @moladiver6817 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I've had leverposteg from a can once and it's basically the same stuff that we have in Holland. It has practically the same name too. We call it leverpastei. I ate it a lot as a kid. Our version is slightly more pink but from what I remember the taste is pretty much the same. The French version of this is actually called mouse the canard which has a very similar flavor and texture exxcept it's usually not in a can. Actual pate has a courser structure as in there are chunks in it so it's not smooth which makes it a bit harder to spread and it tastes a little meatier too.

  • @KimBenzonKnudsen
    @KimBenzonKnudsen ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Thank you so much for this video. Wonderful that you had a good time in Denmark. I see that other commentators have already adjusted or explained the few inaccuracies. So just: thanks a lot. Looking forward to part II (and III). Come again another time. Maybe if you find an appartement just a little bigger 😅. Greetings from DK.

  • @brithanii
    @brithanii 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hi, Heidi! Just another Dane here (32 y.o.), one who grew up on Vesterbro in 1990's - 2000's Copenhagen. I too have followed the unspoken law of the Danes, and I HAD to watch your video 😉
    I just wanted to let you know what I think your host meant by "Old Copenhagen", when talking about any kind of housing in Copenhagen:
    Copenhagen used to be a worker's city, so most people had a very low income there, and it just began to slowly change when I grew up there. That meant very small apartments and community toilets on street level at first. Later on, when living standards rose in Denmark, people wanted toilets inside their apartments and had to find any space they could to fit one in. In the 90's I lived in a 1100 sqft. apartment in a housing cooperative, so it was a lot nicer than some of my friens' apartments and a lot less nice than others', but what almost all of us still had in common was a very small bathroom. Such a funny thing.
    And actually, many older buildings in Copenhagen have had a conservatorship put on it, so sometimes people are forced to get creative with their construction solutions in order to follow the rules. My best friend of 25 years still have parents who live in her childhood apartment. It HAD to get renovated as it was not in good condition in the 90's, and it was in straight up tragic conditions years later, but the city had put a conservatorship on some of the parts of the building and they had to find ways to abide by it when renovating the entire building.
    And i am very proud of your pronunciation of Stegt Flæsk med Persillesovs - good job, Heidi! 🤩

  • @GeneralSaltykov
    @GeneralSaltykov 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    For an eastern / north-eastern European, for me it was, at the beginning, unusual to have another loaf of bread ON the sandwich. We always had (and still have, unless you go to chain-places) open-top sandwiches. Yum!

  • @Gazer75
    @Gazer75 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    @7:50 America, north and south, and Australia is mostly based on the US MUTCD standard, but most other countries uses the Vienna convention road signs.
    South American countries do use a mix of MUTCD and Vienna signs though.
    Having a lot of text based signs wouldn't work well if they were in native languages in Europe. Symbols can be more universal.

  • @danieldaugaard403
    @danieldaugaard403 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Yay finally the Denmark episode I’ve been looking and waiting for it as a Dane also you pronounced the words quite well. Especially stegt flæsk med persillesovs. And hygge. Bravo i loved it

  • @TereseHelenaBergqvist
    @TereseHelenaBergqvist 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    I am from Danmark, it was much fun listening to your view on Denmark 😁🤗
    Oh and the mirror in the shower situation, that is for sure not normal here 😂 And yes, OMG, those old bathrooms😅

  • @DeadlockDK
    @DeadlockDK ปีที่แล้ว +5

    As a Dane ive been looking forward to hearing what you think about Denmark, guess ill have some more episodes to look forward to ;)
    Glad to hear you enjoyed your time in Denmark and i can say that some Copenhagen toilets can be really small, ive been places where you more or less had to back up into as they arent big enough to turn around in :D

  • @MrKimJoJo
    @MrKimJoJo 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Bakken opened in 1583.. not the 1800, that’s Tivoli Gardens 😊 And the hotel you stayed at, must have been one of the cheapest in Copenhagen.. Cabinn..? The bread we are very proud of.. much more healthy than most bread you have in the US.. You should try out our yoghurt next time.. It’s World class.. 🙂

  • @terroristen
    @terroristen 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The old shops in bakken, they're not from the original amusement park. They are part of a sort of special area in bakken, devoted to an old Danish tv series called matador. It takes place between years of 1929 - 1946 ish. The buildings are made to look like the main street in the tv series.

  • @tim10243
    @tim10243 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Danish homes seems to have a little bit different division of the space. We realized this in all the danish holliday homes we visited over the years: very very small sleeping rooms and spacious living room. If you think about it it makes sense if you want to stay all together and don't want to seperate. A similar idea could stand behind the tiny bath room. How long do you stay there? Is it worth to spend (or waste) more space for it? We liked that idea so much that the house we built came from danmark and it follows the same idea: small bedrooms - big living room and kitchen.

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne ปีที่แล้ว +1

      If you're talking about the tenth of thousands of summer homes along the Danish coasts, then yeah, the children's bedrooms are tiny. But they are not meant as a place to play. Summer guests want to be outside.
      If we're talking about homes pre 1980, then children's bedrooms were not big, like 8-9 m².
      In modern Danish homes, they are 12-16 m², which, because of the space the bed is taking up, means almost twice the playground, in the room.
      Danes live in the biggest apartments and houses, in all of Europe, when you look at the average square meter per family.
      Where are you from?

    • @tim10243
      @tim10243 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@akyhne we are from tyskland. Since we found the same concept of rooms in the danish house we built, I thought that this was in common in danmark and I must confess we liked the idea. Sorry if i was wrong about it - but even so we like it ;-)

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tim10243 As long as you like it 😊

    • @Krydolph
      @Krydolph ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The small bathroom is because she was in a building from before you had toilets inside. So at some point they had to fit that in, and then later, add a shower too.
      But you are right, how much space do you really need in your bedroom? Enough for your bed, and so you can get dressed next to it. Better to have a big living room so you can spend time there and have company over, or so the children have floorspace to play on.
      But also, the "holiday homes", that I assume is what we call "sommerhuse" is often a thing of its own, with its own culture and norms. Though they are also getting more and more luxurious and spacious.

  • @melanp4698
    @melanp4698 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    14:47 The picture shown in the video is Flæskesteg, not Stegt Flæsk med Persillesovs, in case anyone got confused :) I'm happy to hear you liked Denmark! Also 6:05 i dont know if this was meant ironically, but Denmark is the 3rd tallest country in the world lol.

  • @lbergen001
    @lbergen001 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    You really have a big talent for story telling👍👍 I am always fascinated by the way you tell your experiences. I am happy for you having a great time in Denmark. 😄

    • @HailHeidi
      @HailHeidi  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Oh wow, thank you very much! 💜

  • @24jh42
    @24jh42 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Properties in Denmark are by default permanent. It takes more paperwork and time to get a permission to demolish something, than a permission to build. Building code is also different than in the USA. It is perfectly legal with one staircase, which allows for narrow buildings on smaller lots. The place you describe may have had two steep staircases in the past. The one from the street still existing, but the back one sacrificed in order to install indoor plumbing sometime in the 1970's. On the plus side you did not have to scramble down 7 floors to find an outhouse in the back yard.

    • @PSimonsen
      @PSimonsen 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If it's and old apartment in Cph, 7 floors are pretty rare.

  • @chrdysted
    @chrdysted 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The reason why the bathroom is so small, is because it wasn't installed when they built the apartment a 150 years ago. You had to go to the yard to get to the privy and to the a public bath to get washed. Toilets were, later on, retrofitted into a closet or a spare room

  • @ArthurOfThePond
    @ArthurOfThePond ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In the olden days in Copenhagen toilets were in the courtyard and baths were communal. They have struggled to find rooms in old Copenhagen apartments for toilets and I'm sure there are still some that doesn't have it.

  • @DominusRexDK
    @DominusRexDK ปีที่แล้ว +2

    im both impressed and baffled that you managed to say stegt flæsk better than persillesovs

  • @birterasmussen8133
    @birterasmussen8133 ปีที่แล้ว

    Old houses in Copenhagen originally didn’t have toilets or baths inside the apartment. So the small bathroom that you experienced was build in. That’s why bathrooms in oldhouses can be very small.

  • @KHValby
    @KHValby ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Hi Heidi! Greatings from CPH DK🇩🇰 ! The blue and red sign with one line across means NO parking (anything more than 3 minutes is considered as parking). The other one with two lines (an X) means NO stopping (at any time). Bakken is from 1583 (not 1853 😊 ). Tivoli is from 1843, just a reference. Bakken: You apparently went to the copy of "Korsbeak". A movie set from a very popular tv show back in the 80´s. Not part of the original park.

    • @HailHeidi
      @HailHeidi  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      OH yes, beautiful. Thank you so much for the correction!

  • @bonnie_rabbit749
    @bonnie_rabbit749 ปีที่แล้ว

    06:00 funfact: The danish people had a growth spurt within the last about 200-300 years or so. If you look at really old buildings like old castles or some museums or even some very old farm houses you'll notice that everything used to be much smaller. Our ceilings were lower, doors and windows lower, counters lower and so on. So some very old copenhagen appartments still have some of that "charm" from when we were all much smaller.

  • @VogterViking
    @VogterViking ปีที่แล้ว

    The apartments old Copenhagen, like Vesterbro, were buit without runig water, toilets and baths. Toilets were in the back on the ground. Water had to be hauled up in buckets from a pump in the yard and there ws bathing dfaciities in comunal bathing houses.

  • @madsmatras5691
    @madsmatras5691 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    the reason for the bathroom being super small, is because at the time the building was build they didn't put bathroom in the apartments (you would have to go down to the buildings shared toilet in the yard). the tiny bathroom was put in afterwards to make the apartment more attractive.

  • @torbenpetersen8983
    @torbenpetersen8983 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "Old Copenhagen" refers to that the building is from before 1900 (witch is not that old when you take into account that Copenhagen is founded in 1167). Flats from from around then was often small (50 sq. meters) and did only have a toilet. No shower or sink in the room. So when people wanted to have shower and a sink there wasn't room for it. That's why they are so small and the floor is raised so it can drain ..

  • @thomasjensby608
    @thomasjensby608 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The bit with how salty our food is boils down to the simple rule of "it's easier to let people add salt for themself, than it is to take salt out of the dish."

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Putting salt of food, will make it taste of food plus salt.
      The right seasoning from the get go, is a far better choice, than not to season properly, or pouring it over the food.

  • @TimoJeppesen
    @TimoJeppesen ปีที่แล้ว

    Many apartments in Copenhagen, were built before it was common to have a bathroom in your house. There were outhouses in the courtyard.
    So when plumbing became a common thing, then you had to squish in a toilet/bathroom. Converting a small store room or cutting off a bit of another room, building a wall, so you can have a small toilet.
    That is why many bathrooms in Copenhagen is so small.

  • @martinhemmingsen8813
    @martinhemmingsen8813 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm from Denmark, and I just watched your video. I just wanna say, that the way you said "stegt flæsk med persillesovs" was actually quite close to how we say it. Loved the video.

  • @Duconi
    @Duconi 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What is for you the difference between a metro and a subway? This local trains have many names: Rapit transit, metro, subway, tube, underground, mass rapid transit, havy rail, etc. but it's always the same thing. A train system that moves people within a city on dedicated tracks, often under ground in tunnels.

  • @morteng.lauridsen8068
    @morteng.lauridsen8068 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Some of the bathrooms are so small that you almost have to sit on the toilet to take a shower.
    Can't remember the cutout of the lady on the rollercoaster, and don't know how many times I have take that ride, granted the last time, is quite a few years ago. But even as a kid she haven't made enough of an impression to be remembered.

  • @lainightwalker5495
    @lainightwalker5495 ปีที่แล้ว

    old copenhagen is used for housing thats from 1900s or earlier. mostly toilets and baths where added later. its not unusual to have the shower accually be over the toilet

  • @TricksyDK
    @TricksyDK ปีที่แล้ว

    The small city in Bakken is Korsbæk from an old TV serie, made in 1978 Matador starts from 1929 -1947 under the 2nd worldwar

  • @Christian_Bagger
    @Christian_Bagger 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Oh… just outside of Copenhagen in the Nordsjælland region, there’s a lot of sightseeing. There’s a lot of little passages that leads to beautiful sceneries. It’s like you’re walking into a fairytale, when everything is blossoming.

  • @freyjasvansdottir9904
    @freyjasvansdottir9904 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    @hailheidi Bakken didn’t open in 1853, it opened in 1583, so it’s a couple of centuries older than the USA

  • @scipioafricanus5871
    @scipioafricanus5871 ปีที่แล้ว

    2024 is gonna be a fantastic year! Only a couple of hours in and I see HailHeidi finally decided to drop her episode on my country. I am sure it was worth the wait!

  • @pannumon
    @pannumon ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hah! In Finland the parking zone is often marked with no parking sign, with several additional signs telling when you can (not) park. It's as complex and entertaining as the number system in Denmark.

  • @MrDrake333
    @MrDrake333 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The toilet in small "rooms" is also sometimes called "closed toilet" because the old buildings only had toilet in the back yard. So later on they had to add a bathroom and they ofte choose an old closed.

  • @stoissdk
    @stoissdk ปีที่แล้ว

    8:20 Ahhh... "smørrebrød" - we all have our favorites and it always turns into a bit of a standoff (and stare down) when we make our picks =)

  • @L1da77
    @L1da77 ปีที่แล้ว

    The blue sign with 2 red lines, or a red cross over it is a no stopping sign. Meaning you arent even allowed to stop your car there. One line is no parking as you said.

  • @SusseBo
    @SusseBo ปีที่แล้ว

    In the flats of the old Copenhagen there was no bathrooms at all and no toilets. The toilets were in the backyard and shared. Toilet buckets were emptied during the night. Then things evolved and toilets were installed on each floor on the back stairs and shared with the neighbours. There are still flats where this is in used, but flushing toilets. Then people wanted inside bathrooms became the modern thing. First as a shower and then later included a toilet.
    I the old center the houses only have max 6 floors. It is code.
    Salt in food is reduced because of high BP.
    When you fry your pork belly then leave the skin on. Before you fry it score the skin in thin slices in the size of the slices you want to cut the slices. Then rub the skin with sea salt and into the cuts. Lots of it. Then you can cook it on a grill. When you are almost done the take the dripping out and grill the skin til it is crunchy. Yum.
    I am a Dane and have been taught the old fashioned way.

  • @virtual-viking
    @virtual-viking 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Some of the old Copenhagen apartments were built for workers during the industrial revolution in the mid 1800's, where there were no bathrooms and toilets were in the back yards. So bathrooms were eventually added wherever they could find space.

  • @Joliie
    @Joliie ปีที่แล้ว +2

    4:03 (Yes Copenhagen is not Denmark, just a part of it ;), had to say it, it's in the constitution). The reason that they are often so tiny, is that in the olden days, it wasn't there, the "toilet/bucket" would be in the inner yard shared by all in the building. You would wash in the kitchen or private/public bathing establishments. So the meaning of old bathroom in Copenhagen city, is that there wasn't one and only in the last 60ish years they were build, so basically they are closets converted to bathrooms ;)

    • @ulrikbro-jrgensen1542
      @ulrikbro-jrgensen1542 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It is kind of New York is not New York which is a true statement.

  • @jeffafa3096
    @jeffafa3096 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I didn't really see a comment about the parking signs, so this is what I know about them. Throughout Europe there was a need to understand the traffic signs everywhere, so they kind of came up with a system that doesn't use language in the signs. The one with one stripe means that you can stop your car there, but you need to stay near it. So things like loading or unloading are allowed. The one with the cross means that you aren't allowed to even stop your car there, unless it's broken down...

  • @bryantwhitis6446
    @bryantwhitis6446 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yes, growing up in Germany I recalled me and my friend ventured out and explored its that safe this was about the funniest part of my life. Riding our bikes down into the country side. 😯😊

  • @dennisoestermann1880
    @dennisoestermann1880 ปีที่แล้ว

    Just remember that the type of apartment you lived in, there was no toilet and bathroom in it, when it was built. There you had to go down and out in the backyard to use a common toilet. And the toilet/bathroom you have in those apartmens now, is the old back stairs.

  • @annetteku1
    @annetteku1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Those tiny bathrooms are usually as tall as the other rooms in the apartment. But the arrangement and floor size is very common in old buildings in Copenhagen. But as you get into later periods of construction, the bathrooms get bigger and nicer. The same With kitchens. (I am Danish and lived in many types of places)

  • @PSimonsen
    @PSimonsen 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The liverpate, you were talking about is called Leverpostej. And is a baked pate of pig liver and fat + herbs and usually onions.

  • @sifrasmussen2315
    @sifrasmussen2315 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    From Denmark here. I think the Salt thing is, that in Denmark there is always salt and pepper on the table at restaurants, and then you can add more your self. Loved the video and looking forward to see the rest.

  • @henriklykkejensen8225
    @henriklykkejensen8225 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The old buildings in Copenhagen are very old. They are from that time. Where you had a shared toilet in the backyard and where you took a shower in the kitchen. Later, the small room (the food storage room) was converted into a bathroom and toilet. Therefore, they are very small. I love Copenhagen.

  • @Guillaumelapomme
    @Guillaumelapomme 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Your shower segment, yeah that's what travelling's amazing for, you'll be in those situations that are mundane on the great scheme of things but memorable to you!

  • @Flodhesten
    @Flodhesten ปีที่แล้ว

    Its called copenhagen shower, installed decades, sometimes a century after the building was originally constructed. Most ppl try to avoid Them.

  • @akyhne
    @akyhne ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The no stop and no stop and parking are universal signs, in most countries. In fact most road signs are very similar, around the globe.
    And yeah, there can also be a small sigh under those signs you saw, with a time limited period.

  • @donkfail1
    @donkfail1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Did go to Sweden during your travels?
    The summers here are even worse if you can't sleep when the sun is shining. Even though the sun sets for a couple of hours, it's never low behind the horizon, so it never gets really dark out. The night sky is always some shade of blue during clear summer nights. Now it's only bright outside for a few hours per day, and the constant cloudiness and snowfall lately makes even those few hours gloomy. We just have to eat a lot of vitamin D and prepare for the annual winter depression that is normal to suffer from every early spring here. (It's easier to cope with when everyone else has it too.)
    Or you can do it hard core and go north of the arctic circle, where you'll have constant sun for weeks in the summer or darkness for weeks in the winter. "Daytime" is when you can see some brightness over the horizon in the south for a couple of hours, that is if it wasn't so cloudy all the time...
    If you had visited Gothenburg 40 years ago you could have tried a really old wooden rollercoaster that wasn't smooth. They tore it down in 1987 (at age 65, I think), but it was great. It creaked and rattled, making you sure it would fall apart any minute. It also had a tunnel, but no naked lady... :(
    Now they have a wooden one from 2003 (recently renovated, since it was rotting).

  • @danniseliger5172
    @danniseliger5172 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It was usual for old inner city apartments to have shared toilets in the court yard, and people would wash at the sink with a wash cloth. Showers and toilets were fitted later whereever there was space, which is why they are so tiny .... still it beats going down the star stairs and waiting in line for the toilet 😅

  • @Dalmen
    @Dalmen ปีที่แล้ว

    the blue sign with the red cross means no stoping. So you are also not allowed to stop for picking someone up, or let someone out.

  • @PeDr0.UY131
    @PeDr0.UY131 ปีที่แล้ว

    7:50
    in Uruguay, it is a black letter E inside a white circle with a red outline and red diagonal line.

  • @Kenny7100
    @Kenny7100 ปีที่แล้ว

    old copenhagen, is why the bathroom was so small. they toilet down in the yard between the toilets and washed with water in a bowl. then they built it in later, thats why they are so small.

  • @Andreas-pt8le
    @Andreas-pt8le ปีที่แล้ว

    That type of apartment is called a Copenhagen Apartment. The older versions of them a likely more than a 100 years old, and didn't originally have bathrooms. The are installed after the fact.

  • @thomasthyrrestrup7526
    @thomasthyrrestrup7526 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    About food - in Denmeark it's VERY common to not put too much salt (and peppar) in the food when cooking it.
    Of course you use salt and peppar but usually one is adding salt to ones own dish after it's served to get the individual flavour one prefers.

  • @hejmuesli
    @hejmuesli ปีที่แล้ว

    About the small bathroom: Many of the buildings are so old they never had a shower in the apartment. Some even didn't have a toilet. You'd use a shared toilet somewhere else in the building, and same for the shower. So for these tiny bathrooms it's often a room that was meant to only have a toilet (so a very small room), and then at one point someone got tired of having to shower outside of the apartment, so a shower was added inside the toilet room. So, yeah, it does tend to get quite tiny.

  • @nielsen145
    @nielsen145 ปีที่แล้ว

    Bakken is older than that, but the theme park yes, another thing, Bakken and Tivoli, both has one of the oldest wooden rollercoasters in the world

  • @biankakoettlitz6979
    @biankakoettlitz6979 ปีที่แล้ว

    😄 light outside 4a.m., don't go north of the artic circle in summer, you have times where you have sun 24/7, it called midnight sub, timetable on the internet.

  • @BrinkyBrunk
    @BrinkyBrunk ปีที่แล้ว +3

    i loved my time in denmark so much, especially roskilde festival where i spent most of my time, that my friends actually made a bet one year when we went to one of or yearly music festivals (in ireland) about how long it would take me before i brought up denmark. i lasted about 36 hours, and was not in on the bet until i made yet another offhand reference to "this one time, in denmark...."
    i loved it there, and do plan on heading back :)
    and like you said about the blonde hair and blue eyes, although maybe i have a type, but my main thing i noticed was "omg everyone here is beautiful!" i have yet to visit norway sweden or iceland to compare, but from my trips around the world, denmark just seems to have more beautiful people per capita :P (like i said, i might have a type)

    • @anneegeskov3362
      @anneegeskov3362 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      En del supermodeller er fra danmark

  • @larsrathsach3477
    @larsrathsach3477 หลายเดือนก่อน

    haha, the small shops at Bakken is not actually part of Bakken. It is more an exhibition for a Danish show called "Matador" which takes part from 1920s-1940s. But glad you had fun.

  • @maishaisabellaoverby3349
    @maishaisabellaoverby3349 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    just some quick info about Bakken, in the start it was a zoo(where they'd put african, indian,chinese and other cultural people on display) and a merchant street, not as a amusementpark

  • @Joliie
    @Joliie ปีที่แล้ว +1

    7:05 you just told us "my" signs, X out is no parking or stopping, the \ is you are allowed to stop, pickup stuff from the baker, maximum of 3 minutes. If it's in a white box, mean it's a no parking zone outside the marked areas. Then there are blue signs with a P on it, that may have times on them, the times indicate the period which there often is a time limit in effect and should be on the sign as well in ( ) these are for Sunday/Saturday, if in doubt ask a local.

  • @DanMarksman
    @DanMarksman ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I think that "old Copenhagen" means more than a hundred years,
    and before there were toilets in the appartments, and sertently not a bath.
    Those things were fittet in later, and that is why it was so small.❤

  • @carstenf279
    @carstenf279 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Bakken is fun. I was there as a kid around 50 years ago and saw my first bar brawl with grown men throwing punches. I loved that - even more than the roller coaster.

  • @jesperjuhl6494
    @jesperjuhl6494 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Sounds like you had a fairly OK sized shower. My previous apartment had a bathroom/shower that was 1.3 square meters - when you were taking a shower you were literally sharing the space with the toilet and the sink. Two people could fit in the room, but *not* 3. And that's actually not *too* uncommon - we prefer to spend the space on other areas :)

  • @vladimirmihnev9702
    @vladimirmihnev9702 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Well there's Salt on the table and it is easy to add salt if you want more but there's no way to take away salt if it is too much for your taste! Also I think that historically lots of stuff had tons of salt in it before fridges were a thing, so that the recipe doesn't ask for more salt and again you almost always can ad more. And as far as my local Bulgarian food is concerned probably 80% of the traditional things we used to eat in winter are pickled or something similar that includes a lot of sodium.