The Horrors of Dutch Drop (Liquorice)

There is something slightly sadistic about Dutch drop (otherwise known as liquorice or licorice depending on where you are from). If you’ve never experienced its unique salty taste it can look quite innocent. After all, what reason would you have to suspect that it would taste any different from the liquorice you are familiar with in your own country. But this is why Dutch drop is evil. It subtlety lulls you into a false sense of security that it might taste quite nice.

And maybe, just maybe, you get lucky. Maybe you get one of the nice flavours of Dutch Drop… But probably not, because when you encounter it for the first time it’s probably because you’ve just been offered one of the more ‘popular’ flavours by a Dutch person.

For a brief moment, just before the flavor hits you, you might notice the slightly odd way the Dutch person seems to be ‘observing’ you, the way they seem to be studying your every expression as if they are planning to take scientific notes. By the time you realize this means something is wrong it is already too late.

Suddenly the taste takes hold…

Drop into Madness

Everything in your being tells you that this taste is wrong. That it should not be. What mad man would have created such a thing? Your taste buds cry out in objection or fear (or both) as the taste spreads father around your mouth. Suddenly you just want it to end, for the flavor to go away. But even when you spit out the Dutch drop the flavor still remains. It won’t go away. Will it ever go away? Why is this happening? Why? Oh god why?

Suddenly you realize with horror that this was done to you on purpose. You were offered this god forsaken ‘treat’ for the amusement of the Dutch person sitting across from you. They wanted to see your reaction to it. They knew you would not be able to handle it. No foreigner can. Perhaps the fact that they started filming you with their phone should have been a warning. The Dutch can be sadistic sometimes too.

How many different types of Dutch drop are there?

Types of Dutch Drop
Small selection of Dutch drop

Since drop is so popular in the Netherlands there are many different types and flavors of the stuff. It’s impossible to count them all but there are easily more than fifty distinct types of drop. It comes in a wide variety of soft, hard, chewy, powdered, sweet, sour, salty and more. Some of those varieties include:

  • Engles Drop – A very mild liquorice that gets its name from its country of origin (England). Not all Dutch people consider it to be drop.
  • Dubbel Zout – An extremely salty liquorice. It is as if the makers of Dutch drop had a bet to see how much salt they could add to the recipe before someone died (and then reduced it only slightly when someone finally did).
  • TV Pastilles – A small, pill formed drop. It looks like the kind of thing you should refuse if you are ever offered it in a night club. The extreme salty tastes suggests you should refuse it in any setting.
  • Menthol Kruisdrop – A small hard liquorice with an extreme menthol taste. It’s sometimes used for sore throats which is appropriate because it tastes very medical.
  • Salmiak – Salmiak is used in many different types of Dutch drop. It has a very extreme taste which most non-Dutch people find disgusting. Having grown up with the flavor since childhood Dutch people love it (which seems like a taste bud based version of Stockholms syndrome to me).

Taste – The Good, the bad and the Ugly

Not all Dutch drop is bad (for us non-Dutch people). There are some nice tasting versions out there. I know this because I once tried over forty different types of the stuff and rated them (from safest to most insanity inducing taste) as part of a challenge. You can read the results here: 42 Types of Dutch Liquorice Rated – Which is the Worst?

However, the fact that there is nice Dutch drop only makes things worse. If there was only the extreme tasting drop like Dubbel Zout (double salt) expats would only be caught out the once and know to stay away forever. However, since there is nice tasting drop out there it creates false hope that the little black sweet you are about to put in your mouth might be okay. It might be one of the nice ones. Then before you know it you’ve let your guard down and… *BAM* You’ve been caught out again!

Dutch Drop in Disguise

Perhaps this is also why the Dutch have attempted to make drop look more friendly by disguising it in a variety of shapes from simple squares, circles and diamonds to coins, windmills, cats, little cars, bee hives and beyond. Anything to make them look more ‘fun’ and less like committing taste bud suicide.

And as if to disguise them even further the makers of Dutch Drop will often mix their product in with a bag of other sweets. Many expats and tourists have been caught out by this when they were buying what they thought was an innocent bag of wine gums. Usually they solve this problem by only eating the wine gums and then ‘giving’ the remaining bag of drop to their partner (as I often do with my wife).

Maybe this is why the Dutch took it one step farther. Wine gum and liquorice combined!! Half drop! Half wine gum! The Frankenstein’s monster of the confectionery world.

Fruit Duo's Drop
Fruit Duo’s Drop

This has not deterred those desperate for wine gums from only eating half of each sweet. However, this is very risky as it brings with it a high risk of ‘contamination’. Plus, your partner will appreciate it even less when you try to give them the bag of leftovers.

It does not stop there either. The you can often find other food and drink items that have had the flavor liquorice drop in-inhumanely added. For example, I’ve even tried Dutch drop ice-cream.

A Final Warning about Dutch Licorice

So, in closing, always approach Dutch drop with caution. Always identify the type of drop before putting it in your mouth. Always avoid anything with the word ‘zout’ in the title. Only accept drop from trusted family and friends (after you have done a full background check on them).

And finally, never, ever accept drop from a grinning Dutch person. It’s a trap.

Just The Facts

  1. The Dutch consume more licorice per year (2000 grams each) than any other country in the world.
  2. The Netherlands produces more licorice than any other European country.
  3. Although it is sometimes thought to have medical benefits eating large quantities of liquorice has been known to have negative side effects such as raising blood pressure.

Do you love or hate Dutch drop? Maybe you have a favorite or lest favorite type. Let me know in the comments below.

Stuart

Stuart is an accident prone Englishman who has been living in the Netherlands since 2001. Even his move to the country was an unintentional accident, the result of replying to a cryptic job advertisement he found one day in a local British magazine. Since then he has learned to love the Dutch (so much so that he married one of them) and now calls the country home. He started the blog Invading Holland in 2006 as a place to share his strange stories of language misunderstandings, cultural confusions and his own accident prone nature.

67 Responses

  1. Joke (yes, I know) says:

    Did you know that sweet drop containes more salt than salt drop?

    And eating drop is not without healthrisks: http://www.kennislink.nl/publicaties/voorzichtig-met-drop

    • Invader_Stu says:

      I did not know that. And the health risk thing makes it even stranger that they sell the stuff in the chemist.

      • Pete says:

        I was born in Holland and immigrated to the states when I was 7. Drop was a staple so I love it especially the DZ type. It actually has healing properties, sore throats, coughs, congestion in your lungs. It will help heal of those symptoms as well as prevent them with just a few of them a day. I learned this the hard way when I was 12. for XMAS we got a care package from my uncle & aunt. I received a large cone of drop just for me. Yummy, so yummy in fact I ate the whole thing in two days. 6 weeks of hospital stay later the Doctor said I had crystalization of the kidnyes (sp) they could figure out what had caused it or how to fix it. I had 8 Barium Xrays of my guts, Think drinking nuclear pink chalk milkshakes and then getting spun upside down. Yeah it sucked. So I asked my mom doesn’t Drop have a lot of salt crystals in it? The doc said what is he talking about? So she explained it, Then I told her I ate the whole bag in 2 days. Face Palm! I was back home in two days. They took me off the saline drip finaly which made it worse. Duh. LOL So now I am very conservative and moderate about how much I eat. Funny article though. I feel the same way about Grits and Okra, god awful stuff.

        • James B. Ippel says:

          I also was born in Holland and came to Canada 66 years ago. To this day I
          still eat from 2 to 4 pieces of DZ droppe daily. Absolutely love it.

  2. Sarah Turley says:

    Not to mention salmiak. Especially the lollipops. You think you’re getting cola and – bam! Evil.

  3. Cris Winegar says:

    My mother is from the Netherlands and she always gave us little salt dropjes so I grew up with it. My friends on the other hand thought I was crazy to eat such a thing. Now I live in The Netherlands and have limited access.. my current favorite is zwart wit pastilles.

    Love reading your blog :)

  4. Matthew the Cook says:

    Thanks mate,

    had a good laugh reading this.

    Maybe because I do the same thing when i meet someone who isn’t a Dutch person that never had drop. Mhuhaha.

  5. iooryz says:

    you’d better learn to appreciate it, if you want to stay as our king…

    • Invader_Stu says:

      Is that a threat? :s

      • iooryz says:

        How about the truth ;)
        But all joking aside, If you don’t like drop, you haven’t tried enough different types of drop. It’s available in almost all flavours and kinds. (you know there are drop shops, where you can buy about 50 kinds of drop?)

  6. Nico Veenman says:

    Don’t believe this silly story above. Everyday I eat a handful of the famous boerderijdrop made by mister Venco. It’s great and everybody thinks that I’m still quite normal. I’m the only one who knows that I never was normal. In fact I was abnormal by birth. Now you can see what this boerderijdrop has done with me: People now think that I’m normal.

    Sincerely Yours,

    Ocin Namneev

  7. I was curious enough to try drop during my last trip to the Netherlands and walked into a shop to try them. The salesclerk seemed only happy to oblige when I asked for the sweet and salty variety.

    Lucky, she didn’t try to trick me by only giving me salty drop and let me try both.

    I made the error/right choice of trying the salty one first because its powerful lingering aftertaste masked that of the sweet one, but that meant that I got over it fairly quickly. In all honesty, I found the salty drop to be okay.

    I am happy to report that the sweet licorice was much nicer than one I consume in France called Cachou Lajaunie. It is solely licorice-flavored and has no sweetness to it. According to my mother, its taste is reminiscent of dirt.

    I walked out of the shop with some of sweet drop.

  8. MissNeriss says:

    This is awesome. Switch Dutch for Australian and Drop for Vegemite and you have exactly the same thing! I love pulling the ol’ vegemite swindle on unsuspecting foreigners..!

    • Invader_Stu says:

      I must admit that I spent years thinking I would hate Vegemite until an Australian friend convinced/forced me to try it. Then I discovered I quite liked it.

  9. VallyP says:

    It’s dreadful stuff isn’t it, Stu? Thanks for the ‘guide’!

  10. suus says:

    I kinda like most drops, except.. Engelse drop. They just taste like candy. It’s not supposed to taste like candy you know.

  11. Andrew S.x.y.z. says:

    Haha, too funny about the facial reaction. I hate liquorice, but now you have my curiousity Stu, I must try when I am back in The Netherlands, hmm wonder if I can find them for sale in the U.S.A.

  12. dragonlady says:

    I’ve just realized I have tried drop. When we visited that island a few summers ago a Dutch man offered our group a sweet and I took it to be polite. I thought it tasted odd but it wasn’t to bad. I sucked for quite a while before I couldn’t take any more. No one in our group said anything except (when asked) oh its liquorice.

  13. raoel says:

    I’ve been following this blog for quite a while, it’s cuite amusing to see such “normal” things through the perspective of an englishman. Keep up the good work!

    Btw: muntdrop doesn’t translate to mint-drop, but munt means coin and mundrop is shaped like an coin. So it actually stranslates to coin-liquorice

  14. dragonlady says:

    raoel we have those in England, they are called pontifrat cakes, because they are made in pontifrat. They are really strong liquorice

  15. Twan says:

    I’m afraid it’s true. Dutch love “drop”. After having emigrated to Switzerland, it is one of the few things (together with “vla”) that I keep exporting every time I’m back “down” there.