this post was submitted on 14 Nov 2024
225 points (87.6% liked)
ImGoingToHellForThis
194 readers
314 users here now
While some content on this page may be offensive, it is intended as satire.
ImGoingToHellForThis is not a hate community. Any content violations should be reported, reviewed and removed.
Do not make posts that includes but is not limited to: Illegal content, rape jokes, pedo jokes or pictures of minors in sexual situations, use of racial slurs or hate speech. Excessive violence, gore, or death, and animal abuse.
founded 1 month ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Does "Europe" include "UK" (I mean not geographically but in terms of candy sweetness)?
I had coworker bringing some sweets from visit in UK and those felt extremely sweet to me. I grew up in Europe but live in US, and it felt sweeter than US candies.
Yes. It's only the EU political union we're no longer in. From what I've tasted of other European sweets they're about the same.
Hmmm, so I'm starting to have theory that with local confectionary one already knows what they like and what they don't, and when someone brings candies from another country you're trying candies that normally wouldn't eat at home so they might seem too sweet, too sour, etc...
I don’t know about the UK, but when I notice other candy from other countries is less sweet than the US, it’s not a direct comparison. They’re usually different types of treats, and my reaction is : wow you can make a candy out of something other than sugar or corn syrup. Maybe it’s dairy based with actual dairy, or nut based with actual nuts, but it can make an excellent candy even without the buckets of sugar