Thread: Danish salami
View Single Post
  #13 (permalink)   Report Post  
alzelt
 
Posts: n/a
Default Danish salami



Rhonda Anderson wrote:
> (Leo Scanlon) wrote in news:401e235f.88373127
> @news.erols.com:
>
>
>>On 1 Feb 2004 23:40:30 -0800,
suggested these
>>sites:
>>
>>
>>>
http://www.danishdeli.co.uk/
>>
>>This site doesn't show prices and doesn't appear to offer online
>>ordering, just directions to their store in Croydon.
>>
>>
>>>http://www.3-stjernet.com/export/b2b.asp

>>
>>Again, no ordering info, no prices.
>>
>>
>>>http://www.hojer-polser.dk/
>>>the last one are propably the best - but alas the web shight are all
>>>in Danish! However if you click on "kontakt" = contact you can write
>>>them a mail.

>>
>>I may have to resort to that, but I'll keep hoping for US sources for
>>athe time being. Maybe one of the upscale markets carries it.
>>

>
>
> Or you could move to Australia <g>. It's a pretty stock standard item at
> delis and supermarkets here (at least in NSW) - and even available as
> prepackaged sliced product. Not a specialty item. I was surprised to read
> that you were having trouble sourcing it in the US. Tried searching
> myself - closest I found was a deli in Sausalito, California which has
> Danish salami on it's list of sandwich fillings! It has an online store,
> but not selling the salami :-(
>
> Found plenty of listings for places in the UK and Australia selling it,
> but the closest I got to you (other than all the sites pointing to Bevmo
> as you mentioned) was a place in Canada (without online ordering - fancy
> a trip to Alberta?<g>)
>
> In an earlier post you mentioned that a Danish site indicated its product
> could not be shipped to USA, Canada or Australia. As far as we
> (Australia) are concerned, that would be due to quarantine restrictions
> (and good on the company for informing would be purchasers - many don't).
> Might be the same reasoning for the USA, which would mean you may not be
> able to buy it online from any overseas companies.
>
> Is it possible Danish salami is known by another name in the USA?
>
>
> Rhonda Anderson
> Cranebrook, NSW, Australia
>

A little known fact on the Shrub's endeavor to keep the U.S. free and
pure, if not off balance by its brand of logic is the rule about
shipping food back to the States (not part of luggage). No commercially
produced foodstuffs may now be mailed back to the States. On the other
hand, it IS legal to have someone ship you a homemade foodstuff. How
this solution relates to terrorism does smack of logic only understood
by the Moron in chief.

--
Alan

"If you reject the food, ignore the customs, fear the religion, and
avoid the people, you might better stay home."
--James Michener