老澳门六合彩开奖记录

Belgium is petite. Fall asleep on a Paris to Amsterdam train and you could miss it all together 鈥 well, maybe, if you鈥檙e a heavy sleeper.

But crammed into this fascinating little land are some of Europe鈥檚 great medieval cities (including Bruges, Ghent and Antwerp), the EU capital Brussels and no less than three national languages.

Fabulous chocolate, brilliant beers and baffling bureaucracy are all part of the mix in a place with a surprising range of cultural and practical quirks that are well worth knowing about before you arrive.

1. Local menus probably won't include Brussels sprouts

Given the name, you might imagine Brussels sprouts heavily featured on many Belgian menus. Although sprouts were first cultivated in 13th-century Flanders, Belgians themselves more likely see endives as their most archetypal national vegetable.

Known as witloof in Dutch and chicons in Belgian French, the classic recipe wraps them in ham and slathers them in white sauce. However, over the last 30 years, a lack of interest in this labor-intensive farming practice has seen Belgian endive production nose dive.

Some fear that the vegetable might become virtually extinct within a generation, but scientists are working hard to save the popular vegetable.

A cobbled square full of tables and chairs outside restaurants
Tipping waiting staff isn't required, but paying for tap water is 漏 Flavio Vallenari / Getty Images

2. You'll pay for water but you don't need to tip

Belgium has super standards of public health, a socialized medical system that's the envy of neighboring countries and yes 鈥 despite occasional scares 鈥 most tap water is completely fine to drink.

But that鈥檚 not what you鈥檙e likely to hear if you have the bare-faced temerity to ask for eau du robinet in a restaurant. Eateries happily supply free bread, and there鈥檚 never a requirement to tip Belgian serving staff, but for H2O you鈥檙e expected to stump up for a bottle of mineral water. A beer is often cheaper.

3. Carry coins: you may need to pay to use the bathroom

Cash usage is plummeting in Belgium, and most places now expect plastic or phone money. But not everywhere. It鈥檚 especially worth keeping a few euro coins in your pocket in case you need to use older public toilets.

Yes, unfortunately, some motorway services still have a pay table guarding the facilities. Even some bigger restaurants charge you to go. Whether you classify McDonald's as a 鈥渞estaurant鈥 or not, its central Ghent branch requires payment.

Old street with flower shop in historic city center
When paying in cash, the cost will be rounded up 漏 Catarina Belova / Shutterstock

4. Cash payments are rounded up to the nearest 鈧0.05

Unlike in the neighboring Netherlands, 鈧0.01 and 鈧0.02 copper coins are technically still legal tender in Belgium. However, in reality, you鈥檙e unlikely to find any because from 2019 Belgian merchants must round up or down for all in-person cash transactions to the nearest multiple of 鈧0.05.

5. ATMs are hard to find

As cash usage wanes, so does the number of ATMs you鈥檙e likely to find. A spate of heavy-handed robberies has further reduced the attractiveness for banks to site ATMs in their exterior walls. So, in many Belgian urban centers, if you want cash, you鈥檒l need to locate a branch of , essentially a shop containing 鈥渂ank-neutral鈥 cash machines.

6. Eat frites not French fries

You may have learned about people in Holland putting mayonnaise on their fries from the 1994-movie Pulp Fiction, but it's a custom that extends beyond those borders.

The idea is alive and well in Belgium where there鈥檚 a whole range of flavored mayo-based sauces to choose from when you order a portion of friets/frites from a frituur (fry shop). If in doubt, go for mildly spicy Andalouse and have it on the side rather than drenching your marvelously triple-fried beauties.

Most importantly, don鈥檛 even think of calling them 鈥淔rench Fries鈥 鈥 one thing that unites Flemish and Francophone Belgians is that it鈥檚 Belgium, not France, that really knows how to fry potatoes.

Two glasses of Belgian beer La Chouffe in a bar in Brussels, Belgium
Belgian beer comes in a staggering variety of flavors 漏 Alexandros Michailidis / Shutterstock

7. Cafes are more for beer than coffee

Belgium shares the third-wave caffeine passions that have swept the globe: many a maestro barista plies their trade here and there are some great urban roasteries. However, while a traditional Belgian cafe will serve you a decent coffee (typically with a square of chocolate or speculaas biscuit), don鈥檛 expect a flat white or a cold-drip brew.

Belgium鈥檚 classic cafes are, in reality, far more like pubs than coffee houses, with hardwood chairs, wooden wall paneling, brasswork and mirrors, though in a downbeat less showy fashion than a French brasserie. And the main point of a cafe is to pour beers. If you just order a 产颈猫谤别 (French) or pintje (Flemish) you鈥檒l get a well-poured 25cl lager.

But any cafe worth its salt will also offer a range of alternative brews 鈥 typically in bottles 鈥 many with alcohol levels approaching those of wine.

Some beer-bars have a book-thick menu of options and each should be served in its own specific glass. For powerful, well-balanced brews it鈥檚 hard to beat the various Trappist beers, still brewed by monks. Some connoisseurs purport to love the sour, spontaneously-fermenting lambics.

If you don鈥檛 mind looking like a tourist, try ordering a Kwak, which usually comes in an Instagram-worthy round-bottomed glass held on a wooden stand like it鈥檚 part of a chemistry experiment.

8. Drink driving is not acceptable

While in a Belgian cafe, if someone asks you 鈥淎re you Bob?鈥 that鈥檚 not because they think they know you. Bob, in Belgium, is a shorthand for the designated driver 鈥 the person in a group who has to stay sober and spurn that fabulous selection of beers.

Well into the noughties drink driving was seen as a minor misdemeanor 鈥 police sometimes urged the inebriated to hurry home rather than locking them up. However, things have changed radically in the last decade and the once-repeated Belgian maxim 鈥渋f I wasn鈥檛 drunk I鈥檇 be too scared to drive鈥 is no longer considered amusing.

Along with much of Europe, the blood alcohol limit is 50 milligrams per 100 millilitres of blood (0.05%), which could be reached just drinking one strong beer.

9. When in doubt, speak English

Traveling anywhere it鈥檚 polite to speak the local language, right? Well yes if you know what 鈥渓ocal鈥 means. In central Belgium, that can be tricky.

Bureaucratic borders between Dutch-speaking Flanders, French speaking Wallonia and officially bilingual Brussels are essentially invisible. Then there鈥檚 also a German-speaking area of Wallonia too.

In general, speaking the wrong local language 鈥 maybe speaking French in parts of Flanders 鈥 can be seen as more insensitive than simply using English, or you just won鈥檛 be understood at all. Either way, especially in bigger cities, it鈥檚 best to just go with English.

Tourists on the open square of the Grand Place in Brussels, Belgium
Within Brussels some people speak a street patois known as Bruxellois 漏 sashk0 / Shutterstock

10. Good with languages? French, Belgian French and Walloon are all different

Wallonia is the French-speaking half of Belgium, but the French spoken there has some peculiarities. So, if you speak the language of Voltaire, be prepared to say 鈥渟eptante鈥 for 70 and 鈥渘onante鈥 for 90鈥 though not 鈥渙ctante鈥 for 80 鈥 that鈥檚 just too Swiss.

Don鈥檛 assume that this means you鈥檙e speaking Walloon 鈥 that is essentially a different language (with several highly variant dialects). These days Walloon is mostly heard only at folkloric festivals (like night of witches at Vielsalm) or at puppet shows (most famously featuring , the mascot of 尝颈猫驳别).

For comic effect you might also spice your Belgian French with words of Bruxellois, the street patois of the capital which traditionally spices French with some fabulous hybrid words of Dutch origin to special effect. For example, un zieverer is a wind-up merchant prone to telling deliberately exaggerated tall tales.

And en stoemelings means doing something furtively, particularly a cash transaction in pursuance of the age-old Belgian passion for tax avoidance. Both terms have a humorous rather than negative connotation.

11. Place names on road signs are confusing

Where the language divide is likely to prove most baffling is when you鈥檙e driving. Many Flemish towns have entirely different Francophone names and vice versa, and it's common to find that they'll use their own version on regional road signs. Particularly baffling for tourists are Bergen (for Mons), Louvain (for Leuven) and Luik (for 尝颈猫驳别).

Should you approach Jodoigne from the north it鈥檒l be signed Geldenaken. Even foreign cities aren鈥檛 spared: in Flanders signs for Lille (France) might say Rijsel while in Wallonia, Aachen might be written Aix-la-Chapelle.

This article was first published May 21, 2022 and updated Jun 15, 2024.

Explore related stories

Utrecht, The Netherlands, September 30, 2017: houses, trees and outdoor cafes reflecting in the Oude Gracht (Old Canal) on a beautiful evening in autumn, License Type: media, Download Time: 2024-10-15T22:07:10.000Z, User: sashabrady26, Editorial: true, purchase_order: 65050, job: 老澳门六合彩开奖记录, client: 24 hours in Utrecht, other: Sasha Brady

Destination Practicalities

How to spend a perfect day in Utrecht

Oct 16, 2024 鈥 6 min read