Saturday, 4 July 2026

Abomination!

A few years ago, my family and I went on holiday to Denmark. In between Legoland and the airport, we stopped at roadside services for lunch. As we ate our chicken and chips, I spotted a man eating what appeared to be an enormous burger covered in gravyusing a knife and fork, as to do otherwise would have been logistically challenging.

I find a lot of the so-called 'gourmet' burgers to require a knife and fork or careful dismantling to eat, especially if they come with a little stake through the middle to hold them together. Covering them in gravy is a new form of diner inconvenience though... 

I had always thought that gravy was a uniquely British invention and holidays to France, Spain and Italy had done nothing to change that view. However, after some quick Googling, I discovered that the man was eating a bøfsandwich, colloquially known as a “gravy burger”.

I didn't have to google, there's a picture of this gatronomic disaster in the article, and as someone who loathes gravy, I cannot understand it's popularity at all. 

This creation is local to Jutland, although is now spreading around Denmark and probably dates back to the 1950s.

It's a firm 'no' from me. 

4 comments:

DAD said...

'NO' from me, too. I can't abide the brown greasy stuff.

Macheath said...

Gravy aside, did you follow the first link in the article? It’s hard to think of anything more ‘guardian’ than a food writer using the geographical ubiquity of a chickpea-based recipe to justify open borders:

‘Migration has been the historical norm across the Mediterranean, in all directions, before Europe decided to turn the sea into a heavily policed border.’

Anonymous said...

Our taste buds crave salt and fat. Gravy is both, hence its popularity in the fast food arena.

Andy said...

Sorry to disagree Julia and others but I rather like the idea. I'm off to look for a danish fast food joint.