A vomit bag for every guest at the Disgusting Food Museum

A vomit bag for every guest at the Disgusting Food Museum

by Joseph Anthony
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A visitor looks at the Chinese mouse wine where baby mice are drowned and brewed in rice wine

The dead mouse in the Chinese wine sure looks nasty, and the maggots in the cheese tend to put people off. But nothing is more horrible to an unaccustomed palate than the Icelandic fermented shark. Itโ€™s the worst. Or so says the expert.


โ€œIt tastes like chewing on a urine-infested mattress,โ€ said Samuel West, who, as curator of the Disgusting Food Museum, knows a thing or two about unpleasant victuals.

โ€œItโ€™s a fermented sort of rotten Icelandic shark,โ€ he says. โ€œAnthony Bourdain, the late TV personality, called it the single most disgusting thing heโ€™d ever eaten, and I totally agree with him.โ€

From spicy rabbit heads to fruit bat soup, the collection, now on display in the Swedish city of Malmo, aims to challenge perceptions of taste and help visitors contemplate why one cultureโ€™s abomination is anotherโ€™s delicacy.

Some visitors have a hard time of it.

โ€œHas anyone thrown up here at the museum? Yes twice,โ€ West said. But, โ€œitโ€™s okay to vomit because our entry tickets are not really tickets โ€” theyโ€™re printed on vomit bags.โ€


Grasshoppers, cooked animalsโ€™ skulls and other body parts, including an eyeball, are on display in pots or on boards.

European fare ranges from Icelandโ€™s cured shark, Hakarl, to Sardiniaโ€™s Casu Marzu cheese, which is riddled with insect larvae. There is Scottish haggis, made from sheep innards, and Swedenโ€™s smelly Surstromming fermented herring.

A Mongolain Mary, made with picked sheep eyeballs and tomato juice

Asian foods include the strong-smelling Durian fruit and stinky tofu. The fruit bat soup comes from the sparsely populated Pacific Ocean archipelago of Palau. Latin American dishes include Mexicoโ€™s Menudo tripe soup as well as Peruโ€™s roasted guinea pigs, known as Cuy.

North America is represented by sweet treats: Jell-O salad and root beer.

Australian visitor Nichole Courtney said she was surprised to come across Vegemite, her homelandโ€™s sandwich spread of concentrated yeast extract which is known to divide opinion.

โ€œThings like Vegemite which we find really normal at home, like weโ€™d eat that every day for breakfast, are next to things like the shark that I couldnโ€™t imagine tasting and I think it is revolting so itโ€™s quite funny for us.โ€

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