Agreed on the ship, but we do need good access to water and we need some decent sized land... I think the only spots are either before Canada, or next to Germany. Which is probably not a good idea ;-)OK but how about a pannenkoekenschip on the lake in Epcot?
Definitely salted. I don't like pickled nearly as much.As a Dutch person, I find this thread very entertaining.
Who is brave enough to try raw herring ? Salted or pickled?
Oh good one! They have designed so many Disney coasters. Would be great to have an exhibition of some sort in Epcot. It ties into Sum of All Thrills they once had.How about a ride made by Vekoma? Maybe no room for a roller coaster, but they have smaller installations like a Madhouse?
https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Vekoma
As a Dutch person, I find this thread very entertaining.
Who is brave enough to try raw herring ? Salted or pickled?
Us Polish people eat pickled herring, usually at Christmas. I love the stuff.
How does Greece and the Netherlands relate to each other?Greek Food
I love pickled herring- my grandmother made it, but she called them 'rollmops.' I just looked the name up, and it seems that the name is very widespread, and is from Germany, not the Netherlands. Hm. I'd probably love the Dutch herring, too. And I love eel, as well. My grandmother also made a type of pancake called a 'Dutch Baby.' It came out of the oven very puffy, but then would sink in the middle, and would get sweetened cream poured into the indentation. I wonder if that had real Dutch origins.
if clogs and windmills are cheap souvenirs, you can be sure that any Dutch pavilion at Epcot would have them- but they wouldn't be cheap.
Put this up yesterdayView attachment 583643
My Dutch ancestors are from Haarlem.Going to the Netherlands next year.
My ancestors are from the Groningen area, I think. Hoping to go to a World Cup game in 2026.
Eh, Disney would put a kid friendly twist on it.Red Light District
(my twisted sense of humor had to do it)