Hapå is a spread made from sweetened condensed milk. Most countries in the world have their version of this. Some would know this from Dulce de Leche. This Norwegian version even have a little bit of salt in it. So they would be offended comparing Hapå with their version
HaPå has a double meaning. It's actually an abbreviation for Hamar Pålegg because the factory producing HaPå was located in the town of Hamar. Ha på is also a way of saying put on in Norwegian indicating you can put it on a slice of bread. Pålegg is a Norwegian word for topping or breadspread.
I didn’t get any weird snacks growing up in the USA because my Cherokee grandma was my babysitter. Her idea of a treat was (1) fig newtons or (2) ginger snaps. I can’t stand either as an adult. She even considered mac and cheese to be junk food, so I wasn’t allowed to have that, either. My mom’s idea of a treat was the mini raisin boxes but her sister put them in **everything**-incl apple pies, so yeah. I can’t recommend any “treats” I had as a kid.
" I don't like bananas", "I don't like strawberry". "If you go to Norway, don't buy this". Yeah. just go to McDonalds, the real american gourmet! :P Amerikanere... *shakes head*
I find it very weird to use terningkast (dice throws) in English. Messes with my head so bad! Whenever people rate something in English, I usually default to "out of ten". That said, it *IS* the common way of rating things here in Norway, and you'd find a lot of dice throws on celebrity tabloids etc.
The trick with Hockey Pulver is to pour all of it in your mouth. People treat salty nordic candy as rat poison outside our borders 😂 They don't know the bliss of overeating to the point where your mouth gets sore to the point of almost bleeding 😎
There is a new trend going around now where you mix hockey powder and those gummy crocodiles. I have not tried it but everyone says its amazing. I rate the powder a clear six though. So friggin good.
Sour cream and onion flavor I call the discount flavor. Because it's always in the near-expiry discount bin because they can't sell it. Still they keep trying to push it.
Not much of a licorice flavor to it. Sweet mild licorice, not like most and certainly nothing like salty ones or the salmiak kind. I only like the sweet kind myself.
3:33 What!! Are you kidding with us now? Did i hear right now, tastes like medicine? 😳😳 Not agree at all. By the way, it's also my favorite Litago. 😋😋 9:44 I like Hockey Pulver. They come in many different flavors too. Not just salty licorice.
Every country has a few tastes that were used in medicine and thus people have really bad associations to. It's pretty unfortunate. Synthetic cherry and synthetic banana are common to have an aversion to for this reason. But there are also more exotic tastes like wintergreen and meadowsweet which unfortunately some people associate with medicine.
It's a pity he picked only some of the boring stuff we can offer of Norwegian food products. There are so many better variants of potato chips than the potato sticks. If she wants sour cream taste she can try the Sørlandschips creme fraiche chips. Those are delicious. There are so many potato chips variants to choose from with interesting flavors so picking just salted sticks is strange. Probably her husband prefers traditional tastes. The original Maarud potetgull was just salted potato chips. Nice if you want a simple potato taste, but rather boring. For chocolate he could let her try Smash and she will get hooked immediately. Stratos chocolate with air bubbles from Nidar and Freia milk chocolate are also sure winners. For cheese he could let her try Jarlsberg or vellagret Norvegia. Brown cheese is the most typical Norwegian cheese, but foreigners need time to adapt to that. Another thing is that you shouldn't try pålegg straight from the jar. You should put it on a slice of bread with real butter on. Then the taste will be completely different. E. g. if you eat a slice of brown cheese directly the taste is probably too dominant. However, if you toast some white bread, add real butter and slices on brown cheese you get something really tasty. Brown cheese is also very good with Norwegian waffles. Liquorice is very popular in Norway because grew up with many kinds of snacks with that taste. However, few foreigners can stand that taste so it's not a good thing to offer them such snacks.
My mother married a Norwegian (she is also American) and I was born there. I really want to move back to Norway!! You are so fortunate - stay there.
U would love the strawberry version of hockey powder
I actually probably would! I should try that next time. :)
Har aldri sett den
Someone mentions norway in anyway or form
Norwegains: oh ho ho nå blir det kult
Yup
I am Norwegian
@@eswgamebox4058 det er ikke jeg
Instablaster
@@ccccamilla8603 Ikke jeg heller
Lik visst du er norsk❤🇧🇻🇧🇻❤
Hei hei
Jeg liker ikke deg
@@Kappenn aaaaw jeg trodde vi kunne bli bestevenner :,(
Hei
HeiHeiHeiHeiHeiHeiHeiHeiHeiHeiHei
Hapå is a spread made from sweetened condensed milk. Most countries in the world have their version of this. Some would know this from Dulce de Leche.
This Norwegian version even have a little bit of salt in it. So they would be offended comparing Hapå with their version
HaPå has a double meaning. It's actually an abbreviation for Hamar Pålegg because the factory producing HaPå was located in the town of Hamar. Ha på is also a way of saying put on in Norwegian indicating you can put it on a slice of bread. Pålegg is a Norwegian word for topping or breadspread.
I didn’t get any weird snacks growing up in the USA because my Cherokee grandma was my babysitter. Her idea of a treat was (1) fig newtons or (2) ginger snaps. I can’t stand either as an adult. She even considered mac and cheese to be junk food, so I wasn’t allowed to have that, either. My mom’s idea of a treat was the mini raisin boxes but her sister put them in **everything**-incl apple pies, so yeah. I can’t recommend any “treats” I had as a kid.
" I don't like bananas", "I don't like strawberry". "If you go to Norway, don't buy this". Yeah. just go to McDonalds, the real american gourmet! :P
Amerikanere... *shakes head*
Hapå can be used in cinnamon rolls instead of cinnamon and sugar-butter ... If it helps 😊really recommended
This is why Bergen needs to declare independence.
Wow--that sounds delicious! I'll have to try that sometime. :)
@@HrHaakon Can I seek asylum?
I miss pineapple HaPå :(
Wow, never thought of that! Thank you 🙂
I find it very weird to use terningkast (dice throws) in English. Messes with my head so bad! Whenever people rate something in English, I usually default to "out of ten". That said, it *IS* the common way of rating things here in Norway, and you'd find a lot of dice throws on celebrity tabloids etc.
Me: don’t say anything bad about the potato sticks it’s my favorite snack lol I live in Norway and am Norwegian lol
hi i am from norway and we like all the food you have there
lik hvis du er norsk
"we like all the food", No not we.. You 😅
Hapå is short for Hamar pålegg.
Together with Sunda ,one of the oldest sweet spreads in Norway.
The trick with Hockey Pulver is to pour all of it in your mouth. People treat salty nordic candy as rat poison outside our borders 😂 They don't know the bliss of overeating to the point where your mouth gets sore to the point of almost bleeding 😎
There is a new trend going around now where you mix hockey powder and those gummy crocodiles. I have not tried it but everyone says its amazing. I rate the powder a clear six though. So friggin good.
Not as good as just eating it straight up. I didn't really like it 🙈
I didn't know Hockey Pulver was Norwegian! I ate it all the time in the 90's here in Sweden 😁 I've always thought it was swedish.
Sour cream and onion flavor I call the discount flavor. Because it's always in the near-expiry discount bin because they can't sell it. Still they keep trying to push it.
Potato sticks are available in the US..
Give her a kick bar with lemon center
takk :)
Okay, next time. Yum, I love kick
I'm not sure that would go over so well. This American is not a big fan of licorice. ;)
Not much of a licorice flavor to it. Sweet mild licorice, not like most and certainly nothing like salty ones or the salmiak kind. I only like the sweet kind myself.
What's wrong with Y'all Americans? Salty - Licorice is the best candy / snacks. Ever.
ha - my wife hates my sardines too...
I like
Kims is danish
Det var Norge også engang 😋
I'm from Norway
Iam Norwegian
3:33 What!! Are you kidding with us now? Did i hear right now, tastes like medicine? 😳😳 Not agree at all. By the way, it's also my favorite Litago. 😋😋
9:44 I like Hockey Pulver. They come in many different flavors too. Not just salty licorice.
Americans have some weird tasting medicine.
Every country has a few tastes that were used in medicine and thus people have really bad associations to. It's pretty unfortunate. Synthetic cherry and synthetic banana are common to have an aversion to for this reason. But there are also more exotic tastes like wintergreen and meadowsweet which unfortunately some people associate with medicine.
4:22 that weird. I can’t recall ever seeing that in a store, or tasted it, and I’m a 34 year old guy from Oslo.
I guess he doesn’t like any of the weird ‘food in tube” here. 😂
Haha! He likes the jalepeno cheese spread in the tube, but I had already tried that before. :)
*someone not from norway says something about norway/mentions norwegian stuff* norwegians: AHHH THEY KNOW ABOUT NORWAY NO WAYYY
Hockey pulver er best!
hockey pulver er drit digg
DERE ER FRA NORGE. WE know you are from norway
carAmel - not carmel
It's a pity he picked only some of the boring stuff we can offer of Norwegian food products. There are so many better variants of potato chips than the potato sticks. If she wants sour cream taste she can try the Sørlandschips creme fraiche chips. Those are delicious. There are so many potato chips variants to choose from with interesting flavors so picking just salted sticks is strange. Probably her husband prefers traditional tastes. The original Maarud potetgull was just salted potato chips. Nice if you want a simple potato taste, but rather boring.
For chocolate he could let her try Smash and she will get hooked immediately. Stratos chocolate with air bubbles from Nidar and Freia milk chocolate are also sure winners. For cheese he could let her try Jarlsberg or vellagret Norvegia. Brown cheese is the most typical Norwegian cheese, but foreigners need time to adapt to that.
Another thing is that you shouldn't try pålegg straight from the jar. You should put it on a slice of bread with real butter on. Then the taste will be completely different. E. g. if you eat a slice of brown cheese directly the taste is probably too dominant. However, if you toast some white bread, add real butter and slices on brown cheese you get something really tasty. Brown cheese is also very good with Norwegian waffles.
Liquorice is very popular in Norway because grew up with many kinds of snacks with that taste. However, few foreigners can stand that taste so it's not a good thing to offer them such snacks.
jeg heter også Simen!
Niiiice, bra navn
@@simentrolsrud3459 du og
Hockey pulver 👍
I fear you guys will break up soon 😅
hockeypulver is the best, it is also sedish not norwegian
Swedish
I WANT YOUR MEDS IF LITAGO TASTES LIKE YOUR MEDS
HI I`m Norigan
You are beautiful, then you get more real, love that. I think he prob sounds like me, a Porn "soundtexture" i love it, not him, but the try.
Va med brunost da😢
dette er ikke greit
Du er Norsk ikke lyv at du ikke er norsk
Haha, okay okay, technically I am probably like 10% Norwegian... but other than that, nope. :)
Lol hvorfor snaker du engelsk du kjønte du
Litago jordbær :/