Danish butter cookies are pretty awesome
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German chocolate is like a whole other food than the wax that Hershey's pretends is the real thing.
Croissants (made here but I think of them as so French)
Good cheese (there is some great cheese being made here but in Europe they make different ones and they are so, so delicious)
Cava wine, the Raventos Blanco Blanco de Blancos Vino Cava holy crap that stuff is so good it convinced me wine can be simply delicious on its own.
Most of it... Last trip I took to Europe, I was staying in an airB&B in Iceland with a few friends, and it had a kitchen. I went to the Bonus (local grocer) and got bread, cheese, eggs, and butter and made a simple fried egg sandwich for breakfast every day. Best damn food ive ever made for myself.
We dont have good cheap bread state side, cheese product is most of whats on the shelves and Euro eggs were just better. It took about a week after coming home for random food items to stop tasting like plastic...
W SAUCE
Cheese, cured and uncured dried meats, dairy...actual food standards that protect consumers and aren't pumped full of antibiotics, they just taste so much better.
I don't think there's any food product from Europe that I regularly consume.
Now, Mexico and South America, on the other hand...
Same. But I did enjoy some of it. There was some local spring water in Bosnia that was awesome, cevapcici is cool, and I enjoyed the Georgian wine I had in Ukraine. Also the Netherlands' food surprised me. I loved everything I tried, especially bitterballen and mustard soup.
Probably just the swiss chocolate in the Holls chocolates I get for some holidays. The bonbons/truffles themselves are made in Vienna....West Virginia.
Prosecco…
…and Campari.
Barry's tea
cheese, all of them
wine and scotch
I've infiltrated the European place of purveyance to negotiate the vending of some cheesey comestibles!
Proper pickled onions and Branston pickle.
I can find alternatives with enough effort, but I love me some heavy peated Scotch. The smokier the flavor the better
As a french reading the replies in this thread: Ew
I'm Canadian, but... Fruit, I guess. Some fruit we get from places like Greece, Spain or Italy, both canned and fresh. We could live without them, but surely there'd be moments in the year when we couldn't get fresh peaches, for example, at the supermarket, without European imports.
But it's not a majority. We get quite a bit from South America, North Africa, and, astonishingly, as far as South Africa, too.
Though there isn't much else. It's rarely worth it to import food from another rich country, all the way across the ocean, in today's world.
Though interestingly, I bought "canned" soup (actually packaged in a plastic bag) that came from Lithuania, of all places.
Banoffee pie.
Can't find bakeries nearby that make it. Silly.
Off the top of my head the only European food product I consistently buy is Kerrygold butter. But I could use a domestic version. Other than that I'll on rare occasion buy a wine that'll be from Italy or France rather than a domestic.
The only international foods that really make up any significant part of my grocery list are fruits from the tropics.
McCann Oatmeal
Bob's Red Mill makes an adequate substitute. It's not as uniform as McCann, but it is good.
I'm not American ... but I carry an emergency ration of Aromat at all times when ever I leave Switzerland.
We have those in Belgium too! I always thought it was just MSG and bouillon combined.
It is
I've moved and become Canadian... but I was born American and raised in it.
I love the shit out of quality marzipan.
Mayonnaise, as explained here:
https://theonion.com/new-high-viscosity-mayonnaise-to-aid-in-american-swallo-1819564964/
Marmite. I enjoy it on toast, but I use it more often as a vegan beef bullion replacement and umami booster, of which I think it's unparalleled.
Jelly Babies.
Blackcurrant Jam.
I dunno if they count, but Swedish Fish.
The red Swedish fish are not from Sweden
Apparently they were originally, just not in my lifetime. :)
https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/23125/brief-history-swedish-fish
And now I know more about Swedish Fish than I ever, really, necessarily needed to know!
Oh, interesting! I didn't realize malaco made Swedish fish and was Swedish.
And they have a black liccorice flavor in Sweden(!)
I don't think I've ever seen Swedish fish outside of America
Malaco Pastellfiskar is the parallel product. They're made by different companies now, the recipes have diverged over the past 70ish years, and the US version does not meet EU food safety standards. I can find Pastellfiskar in almost any grocery store.
Yeah, I know they originated in Sweden, but I don't know how long that was maintained.
Quinces. I live on quince cider as my go-to non-water drink.