These 9 Types of Mayonnaise Are Better on Fries Than Ketchup

Belgians take mayo seriously, and it’s worthy of our respect

John W. Miller
Heated

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Photo: Rick Gayle/The Image Bank/Getty Images

Mayonnaise on North Sea fries has been a cliché in popular culture ever since “Pulp Fiction.”

“You know what they put on french fries in Holland instead of ketchup? Mayonnaise,” John Travolta’s character tells Samuel L. Jackson’s. “I’ve seen ’em do it, man, they fuckin’ drown ’em in that shit.” People (accurately, in this case) conflated Holland and Belgium, and ever since the movie’s release in 1994, my life as a Belgian American has been punctuated by questions on the matter from relatives, colleagues, drunk tourists roaming my hometown of Brussels, and even a radio talk show host in West Virginia.

I eagerly confirm the rumor. If you grew up in Brussels, well, you fuckin’ drowned ’em in mayonnaise. The sauce is omnipresent: like rain, cobblestones, and Tintin.

Every home, restaurant, and summer barbecue table has to be stocked with the standard mayo, along with at least a half-dozen varieties, to plop onto plates of potatoes, peppers, onions, shrimp, chicken, lamb, pork, and beef. It’s mixed into all kinds of other dishes, notably steak americain, raw ground beef mixed with mayonnaise, capers, and onions. (In the good restaurants, they make the mayonnaise in front…

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