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Danish vs South African food & cuisine

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Denmark

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South Africa

In Denmark, people consume about 2607 g of food per day, with eggs and dairy taking the biggest share at 38%, and fish and seafood coming in last at 3%. In South Africa, the daily total is around 1278 g, with grains leading at 35% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 1%.

Denmark

South Africa

The average Danish daily plate size is

The average South African daily plate size is

2607 g.
1278 g.
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Grains

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Fish and seafood

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Produce

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Eggs and dairy

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Meats

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Sugar, fats and nuts

South African cuisine combines indigenous traditions with diverse immigrant influences. What “local food” is depends much on the region.

In the Western Cape, European and Cape Malay roots shape meals: baked goods, savoury-sweet stews, pickles, and fragrant spices with little chili heat. KwaZulu-Natal and Durban show strong Indian influence with spicy curries, curry-filled loaves, and plenty of hot chilies. Rural diets often centre on maize pap, grains, beans, leafy greens, squash, and stews. Across the country, people share a love for meat cooked over fire, relishes add punch, and pap or bread anchors the meal.

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Grains 302 G

WHEAT

223 G

RICE

14 G

CORN

14 G

BARLEY

0 G

RYE

35 G

OATS

16 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

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Grains 444 G

WHEAT

156 G

RICE

57 G

CORN

222 G

BARLEY

0 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

4 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

3 G

OTHER CEREALS

2 G

A discussion of South African food starts with maize. Unlike Latin America, where corn is used fresh, ground, and nixtamalized to highlight its flavor, South African maize is mostly a neutral, affordable staple. Sauces, stews, and relishes bring the taste.

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Produce 818 G

PULSES

3 G

VEGETABLES

369 G

STARCHY ROOTS

184 G

FRUITS

262 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 290 G

PULSES

4 G

VEGETABLES

106 G

STARCHY ROOTS

97 G

FRUITS

57 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

South Africans often use indigenous leafy greens and garden vegetables stewed with pap. Traditional leafy greens, known as morogo, are popular in rural and under-resourced communities. Butternut squash,  pumpkin, potatoes, onions, beans, carrots, and tomatoes also feature frequently. Many national dishes (for example chakalaka relish, umngqusho, vegetarian bredie) rely on these vegetables, often combined with beans for added nutrition.

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Meats 191 G

POULTRY

63 G

PORK

57 G

BEEF

66 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

2 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

1 G

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Meats 199 G

POULTRY

107 G

PORK

13 G

BEEF

48 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

8 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

21 G

Meat matters a lot in South African cooking – people enjoy it whenever possible. The country’s livestock sector is strong, which means South Africans eat more meat on average than elsewhere in Africa. Beef, lamb, mutton, poultry, and also the exotic ostrich, springbok, impala, and sometimes crocodile appear on menus.

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Fish and seafood 80 G

FISH

57 G

SEAFOOD

23 G

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Fish and seafood 17 G

FISH

16 G

SEAFOOD

1 G

Meat often gets the spotlight in South African food, yet coastal regions rely heavily on seafood. With access to two oceans, the country has a wide range of fish and shellfish, including kingklip, snoek, hake, kabeljou, sole, mussels, oysters, prawns, rock lobster, and calamari.

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Eggs and dairy 992 G

EGGS

41 G

MILK AND DAIRY

891 G

ANIMAL FATS

60 G

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Eggs and dairy 164 G

EGGS

20 G

MILK AND DAIRY

143 G

ANIMAL FATS

1 G

Milk and dairy have a long history, though they were never central to the cuisine. Pastoral Bantu communities kept cattle for status, rituals, and milk. A key product is amasi, a thick sour fermented milk similar to yogurt, once essential before refrigeration and often served with pap. European settlement expanded the use of cream, cheese, and butter, but dairy remains less prominent than meat or maize.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 224 G

NUTS

41 G

SWEETENERS

153 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

16 G

OILCROPS

14 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 164 G

NUTS

2 G

SWEETENERS

109 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

48 G

OILCROPS

5 G

South Africans enjoy sweets mostly as occasional treats after a meal or with coffee or rooibos tea. Popular options include malva pudding with custard, milk tart, and sweet buns.

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Herbs

CHIVES

DILL

LOVAGE

PARSLEY

BAY LEAVES

AFRICAN BASIL

CILANTRO

CURRY LEAVES

Denmark
Common
South Africa

CHIVES

DILL

LOVAGE

PARSLEY

BAY LEAVES

AFRICAN BASIL

CILANTRO

CURRY LEAVES

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Spices

CARAWAY

JUNIPER BERRIES

LICORICE

WHITE PEPPER

ALLSPICE

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

GREEN CARDAMOM

NUTMEG

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

FENNEL SEED

ONION POWDER

PAPRIKA

TURMERIC DRY

Denmark
Common
South Africa

CARAWAY

JUNIPER BERRIES

LICORICE

WHITE PEPPER

ALLSPICE

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

GREEN CARDAMOM

NUTMEG

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

FENNEL SEED

ONION POWDER

PAPRIKA

TURMERIC DRY

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Aromatics

ONION

BELL PEPPERS

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

GINGER

LEMON

TOMATO

Denmark
Common
South Africa

ONION

BELL PEPPERS

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

GINGER

LEMON

TOMATO

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Condiments

BLEAK ROE

BUTTER

CREAM

CRÈME FRAÎCHE 

FRUIT VINEGAR

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

PORK FAT

SUGAR

MUSTARD

DRIED APRICOTS

FRUIT PRESERVES

TOMATO PASTE

WINE VINEGAR

WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE

Denmark
Common
South Africa

BLEAK ROE

BUTTER

CREAM

CRÈME FRAÎCHE 

FRUIT VINEGAR

HORSERADISH

MAYONNAISE

PORK FAT

SUGAR

MUSTARD

DRIED APRICOTS

FRUIT PRESERVES

TOMATO PASTE

WINE VINEGAR

WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE

Denmark

SEASONINGS

Danish cooking is fat-forward. Butter and cream are the base ingredients. The other major flavor source is preservation: smoked fish, cured meats, pickled vegetables — these carry most of the interesting flavor in traditional Danish food.

Danish cooking threads sweetness through savory contexts constantly: red cabbage rødkål is braised with sugar and vinegar, pickled herring is sweet-sour; brown sauce gets a small amount of sugar to round it. Remoulade — the yellow condiment you get with fish — is noticeably sweeter than its French cousin.

Dill is the signature herb. If one plant marks Danish food as distinctively itself, this is it. It goes with fish, with potatoes, with cream sauces, and in pickles. Allspice marks Danish savory cooking, it goes into frikadeller, sausages and braises. Nutmeg appears in white sauces, in creamed spinach, and occasionally in meatballs alongside the allspice. Caraway goes in rye bread and certain cheeses. White pepper gets used in traditional recipes more than black, which is a specific northern European tendency.

No garlic in traditional cooking. Onion does the allium work — fried onions, caramelized onions, raw rings on smørrebrød. Garlic is now normal in contemporary Danish kitchens, but it has no deep traditional roots. No heat whatsoever. No chili tradition, no peppercorn dishes, nothing that builds warmth through capsaicin. The only heat in traditional Danish cooking is the vague warmth of allspice and white pepper. No complex layering of spices. Danish cooking uses one or two spices per dish, added simply, without the idea that spice complexity is a virtue.

Danish mustard is strong and grainy; it functions as both a condiment and a flavoring. It goes with herring, with pork, as a base note in dressings and sauces. It provides the closest thing to real sharpness.

The Christmas spices — cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, ginger — constitute almost a separate parallel pantry that activates in December and disappears again. Brunkager, pebernødder, æbleskiver batter, gløgg — this is when Denmark actually uses a complex palette. Cardamom in a weekday Danish dish would read as wrong, but in Christmas pastry, it’s essential.

SAUCES

Danish sauces moisturize dishes and enrich them mildly. Almost all of them are dairy-based, thickened with starch.

BRUN SOVS – brown sauce made from pan drippings, thickened with flour, sometimes with a pinch of sugar to round it out. Goes on meatballs, roast pork, almost any hot dish that needs something on it.

PERSILLESOVSbéchamel with parsley chopped in. Butter, flour, milk, parsley, the sauce for stegt flæsk — the dish Danes voted their national dish.

FLØDESOVS – is a cream sauce, used with chicken, game, mushrooms. Sometimes just reduced cream.

SENNEPSSOVS — mustard sauce — pairs specifically with poached cod. Cream or butter base with mustard stirred in. The mustard adds the closest thing to sharpness that Danish sauces typically get.

REMOULADE – is the most distinctively Danish sauce. It’s yellow from turmeric, sweeter, milder, mayonnaise-based, with finely chopped pickled vegetables mixed through: capers, pickled cucumber. The result is tangy-sweet-mild, nothing aggressive. It goes with fish, with hot dogs, with fried fish cakes. Sold in tubes and jars everywhere, consumed in large quantities.

KARRYSOVS – a fascinating example of domesticated foreign flavors. The curry used is very mild, often just turmeric with faint cumin notes,  sold as “Danish curry powder”. The sauce ends up sweet, yellow, creamy, and so mild it barely registers as curry to anyone who knows the original. It appears in curry herring karrysild, in chicken salad, in egg dishes.

South Africa

SEASONINGS

Though the diversity is huge, South African food leans toward a few directions: bold spice, sweet-savory combinations, tangy sauces, smoke from the braai, and some gentle sourness from fermentation.  Many recipes focus on spices; herbs are very subtle.

The constant use of sweet-savory is one of the strongest flavour combinations. Raisins, apricot jam, and dried fruits are added to savory dishes for contrast, like in, for example, bobotie. Cape Malay foods also uses this sweet-savory principle, but also add aromatic complexity and warmth on top. The cuisine prioritizes fragrance and layered spice notes over aggressive spiciness.  The essential spice palette includes coriander, curry powder, cumin, turmeric, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, cloves and paprika.

If you look at braai marinades and Cape recipes, vinegar and other acids show up over and over. That gives a typical South African plate a sweet-tangy edge.

Compared with many Western European cuisines, there is more sweet + spicy + tangy in the same dish. Compared with very minimalist seafood or vegetable traditions, there is more emphasis on layering and transforming flavours through spice blends, chutneys, smoking, and long cooking.

Many parts of South African cuisine do lean toward spiciness, but not uniformly. For many urban dishes, township foods, or Indian-influenced meals, “spicy” is definitely part of the flavour profile.

CAPE MALAY CURRY POWDER —  a traditional blend of cinnamon, cardamom, cumin, coriander, turmeric, and sometimes fennel and fenugreek is used in stews and curries.

RAJAH CURRY POWDER –  South Africa’s crown jewel spice blend. Launched by Robertsons in 1938, it has become a household name and market leader in authentic South African curry flavours.

SIX GUN – a bold South African spice blend of salt, paprika, onion, celery, cumin, and cayenne. It is designed to enhance grilled meats, stews and mince. It is a trusted braai companion, bringing smoky, robust flavour with the punch of a six-shooter revolver.

SAUCES

PERI PERI sauce originated from the African Bird’s Eye chili, which is native to Africa, and was then popularized by Portuguese settlers who brought it from Africa to Portugal. Portuguese explorers encountered the spicy chili in Africa, brought it back to Portugal, and blended it with other ingredients to create the sauce now popular worldwide. It’s common in grilled chicken, seafood, livers, and meats at braais.

CHAKALAKA RELISH – a spicy, vegetable-and-bean relish which works as a condiment or a side dish. It features onions, garlic, ginger, bell peppers, carrots, sometimes cabbage, tomatoes, and often baked beans, all simmered with curry powder, paprika, and chili.

MONKEY GLAND SAUCE – a thick, dark sauce balancing sweet, sour, and savoury flavours. Base of chopped onion, garlic, fruit chutney and tomato sauce, with added vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, sugar, black pepper, chili. Used with steaks, burgers, as a dip for onion rings, fries, roast potatoes. Despite its name, the sauce contains no monkey meat or glands!

MRS BALLS CHUTNEY (BLATJANG) – made from dried fruit, often apricots and chillies, cooked with vinegar, sugar, cinnamon, cloves, ginger, and coriander. This Malay-inspired condiment is a staple at braais and pairs with bobotie.

 

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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