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Monday, January 12, 2009

You know you're Dutch when...

You Know You're Dutch When..

  • The temperature is so low in your house that 2 sweaters is a bare minimum if you want to be remotely warm.
  • During the winter it's warmer outside than it is inside.
  • You open the freezer and are excited to find a container of ice- cream, only to open it and discover it's full of homemade soup or stamppot.
  • When looking in the fridge, you never trust that the yogurt or margarine containers contain what the label says.
  • You were green before it was popular. Why recycle when you can just reuse!
  • You have a pair a wooden shoes in your house.
  • Your china cabinet is filled with Delft.
  • You like pickled herring.
  • You've eaten oliebollen at New Years.
  • You enjoy chocolate sprinkle (hagelslag) sandwiches.
  • You have cousins who wear size 14 shoes and are over 6'4"
  • You wash and reuse plastic cups and plastic cutlery.
  • You have soup and open-faced sandwiches for Sunday lunch.
  • The most frequent phrase uttered growing up was "Turn off the lights!"
  • You get a chocolate letter every year for Christmas.
  • All the tables in your house are covered in tablecloths.
  • You like croquettes.
  • You know that Vla is better than regular old pudding.
  • You drink tea with breakfast, coffee at 10 am, tea at 3 pm, and coffee again at 8 pm (with cookies or biscuits of course!)
  • You have an afghan knitted by your Oma.
  • You collect coupons like they're going out of style.
  • Your Oma had a calendar with everyone's birthdays & anniversaries spelled out in capital letters (bonus points if it hung in the bathroom!)
  • You've been known to recycle aluminum foil. And ziploc bags.
  • You own a special utensil that is only used for cutting cheese.
  • You know that Gouda is the best cheese ever.
  • You have at least 5 relatives with the same name (and somehow you always know which one is being talked about).
  • You reuse teabags
  • When you hear all the "new ways to save energy" you yawn and say "I've been doing that all my life!"
  • You eat your sandwiches open-faced. "What? You want another slice of bread? I'll make you another sandwich."
  • You rarely have both meat and cheese on the same sandwich.
  • You have never met half the relatives at your family reunion
  • You have 100 roles of toilet paper in your house because they were on sale.
  • You put a little water into the jar of tomato sauce and shake it to make sure you got it all out.
  • You have trouble shopping for hats. There should be at least two sizes: 'one size fits all' and 'dutch'.
  • You wipe the last of the butter out of the container with your bun.
  • All your cookies taste like almonds.
  • You make the bed in your hotel room.
  • You have lace on your windows but not on your underwear.
  • You like dubbel zout drops, and have occasionally tricked a friend into trying one.
  • You've put mayonnaise on your french fries.
  • Your kitchen is filled with milk bags drying, waiting to be reused in the freezer.
  • You drink Heineken out of pride.
  • You have a front room but nobody sits in it (or it's only used for special occasions).
  • You have a spoon collection.
  • Your favourite mustard comes in jars that can be reused as drinking glasses.
  • You leave a window open year round to get fresh air.
  • You eat stroop waffles.
  • You love the colour orange.
  • You have a vegetable garden because there's no way you're paying that much for veggies at the grocery store.
  • Your fridge is always stocked with leftovers. Throw out food? Never!
  • You go to the "Dutch Store" because the smell brings back so many childhood memories.
  • You have pictures of windmills around your house.
  • Everything is Do-It-Yourself - it's cheaper than hiring someone.
  • You use "washandjes" (facecloths that you can put your hand into).
  • You have to explain what 'om' and 'tante' means when you're discussing your relatives with non-Dutch people.
  • You own tea towels and oven mitts patterned with windmills and dancing women in clogs.
  • You call it "MELK" not "milk".
  • All your cousins have the same names as your brothers and sisters, because everyone is named after Oma and Opa.
  • And finally, you know you're Dutch when..
  • You're laughing along with this list because you can relate to most of it!

13 comments:

Unknown said...

Totally!!

Pierre said...

totally true :D

I found some more funny ones also on :
this site

maybe u want to take a look there also :)

Anonymous said...

This is amazing, just so you know...

Anonymous said...

Just so you know, this is amazing! Sounds like an ordinary dutch-life but when written it takes the cake!--so I guess the dutch take the cake, then! LOL

Anonymous said...

Wow, this is so true. I also get offended when people make negative comments about stroop. That stuff is legend.

Bill said...

Funny.
BTW: an uncle is not an 'om' but an 'oom'

yeah we have a special utensil just for shaving cheese but we are not the only ones. The Norwegians have that same utensil
Actually we have different utensils for the type of cheese as well. 'young cheese' should be cut/shaved with an adapted 'kaasschaaf' whereas older cheese should be cut with the traditional 'kaasschaaf'

Funny!

Jonathan said...

Nonsense, the Dutch are the best.

Anonymous said...

Mostly true.
I'm dutch and still living in The Netherlands. The kaasschaaf is my favorite item at home, followed by the droppot (a big container filled with drop out of wich you eat untill you feel sick...) and Grolsch beer (beats Heineken)!
Nice Blog, and remember: If it ain't Dutch, it ain't much!

doei!

Anonymous said...

Haha, the toilet paper one is so true!

Old First said...

Och, I thought the tomato-juice shaking thing was my little secret. Pot-verdigge.

Unknown said...

Ain't dutch you ain't much. The melk thing was hilarious. My friends always make fun of me for how I say it.

Unknown said...

Ain't dutch you ain't much. The melk thing was hilarious. My friends always make fun of me for how I say it.

Tonnie. said...

We moved from Netherland to Australia over 60 years ago, and although I was only 8yrs old, all those things are still true to me.