It's a Danish condiment commonly used on open top sandwich (smørrebrød) to be eaten with either roast beef or Danish fish stuff (tons of fish dishes in Denmark). It's mayo + other spices commonly found in Danish households/supermarket put in a blender, e.g., onions, curry power, garlic, sugar, tumeric, mint, sour cream, and a hint of lemon squeeze, within reason. It is basically a funkier, zestier, mayo. The blended fresh stuff, especially mint and lemon saved the mayo to be somewhat edible. Bottled processed remoulade is as gross as it sounds.
Heinz' 57 flavors include such diverse entries as Norwegian, Finnish, Scandanavian, Swedish, and Danish! Flavors from around the world!
Heinz wishes they could make Danish remoulade
What is remoulade?
idk but i keep finding it everywhere in rural 1993 Kentucky
...rural 1983 kentucky was all about ketchup on five-way...
It's a Danish condiment commonly used on open top sandwich (smørrebrød) to be eaten with either roast beef or Danish fish stuff (tons of fish dishes in Denmark). It's mayo + other spices commonly found in Danish households/supermarket put in a blender, e.g., onions, curry power, garlic, sugar, tumeric, mint, sour cream, and a hint of lemon squeeze, within reason. It is basically a funkier, zestier, mayo. The blended fresh stuff, especially mint and lemon saved the mayo to be somewhat edible. Bottled processed remoulade is as gross as it sounds.