Every culture has something that makes it special. It could be ingredients distinctive to a specific region that create a trademark dish, a unique practice, or a household item you won’t find anywhere else, which is what this list is all about.
In a recent Reddit thread, people from different countries shared the one object they had seen in their homes their entire lives. Responses ranged from pieces of furniture to cooking utensils and bathroom implements that raised questions.
If you feel like this list is missing something from your country, feel free to add it in the comments!
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We Call It A Flessenlikker, Or Freely Translated Bottle Licker. It Is Used To Completely Scrape Bottles And Jars Empty. Netherlands
Saunas In Apartments/Flats. Finland
Frozen Dill Or Parsley In A Plastic Ice Cream Container. Poland
For Korea, Probably A Kimchi Fridge
Tortillero, Which Is Used To Keep Tortillas Warm While You Eat. Mexico
Chicken Salt For Chips. Australia
Brb, going to look up ingredients. (Oh wow sounds amazing!)
In The Yucatan Peninsula, We Use Something Called Lek’. It’s Made From Carved And Dried Out Fruit, And It Has A Crazyyy Insulating Power And It Dates Back All The Way To The Mayans
Those Tiles. Portugal
A Fondue Caquelon. Switzerland
Separate Hot And Cold Taps In The Bathroom. UK
I'd Say Probably A Chocolatera, It's Used For Hot Chocolate And Agua De Panela. Colombia
Drying Rack Above The Sink. Apparently Not That Common Outside The Nordics
Clay Water Filter. Brazil
I Guess It Would Have To Be A Central Vacuum System. It Is Built Into The House. Canada
These used to be quite common in the U.S., but because people didn't maintain them they plugged and started fires, so insurance companies started denying coverage if your house had a central vacuum system and they kind of disappeared. It's a pity, because they worked much better than a regular vacuum did.
Kitchen Bin Has To Be Underneath The Sink, It's A Law. If Your Bin Isn't Under The Sink, Consider Yourself A Foreign Spy. Poland
A Baguette Box! My Parents Used To Have One Right In Front Of The Main Door; The Baker Was Delivering A Fresh One Every Morning. France
Pickeled Flour. Poland
A Jar Of Lingonberry Jam (Preferably Rårörda Lingon, A Variant That Hasn't Been Boiled). The Staple Condiment For, Like, Half Of All Swedish Recipes
A Coconut Grater! Every Household In Southern India Where Coconut Is A Staple Has One
Copper Coffee Pot. Turkey
A Poffertjespan To Make.....poffertjes. Tiny Dutch Pancakes That Are Consumed With Butter And Powdered Sugar
I was offered these served with lingonberry jam at a Swedish restaurant
Jamonero, For Cutting Iberic Ham. Most Houses Have One. Spain
This To Cook Cuscuz. Brazil
Oh! I Actually Have Something For This! This Is An "Ulu" Or "Uluaq", Which Is Part Of Our Alaskan Eskimo Cultural Tradition. USA
One For Sweeping Outdoor Areas And The Other One For Indoors. Philippines
Egg Cutters. Not Sure If Theyre Special Anywhere Else, Have Not Seen Them Yet Outside Of My Country. Germany
“It's A Clay Pot Used To Hold Water, And It Keeps It Very Cool And Cold. I Think Most Mexicans Have One Of These. It's Called A Xīcālli Īhuān Ātl
The clay is porous allowing water to evapoate out, thereby cooling the contents.
Going Out On A Limb Here, But Bush Pie Makers In Canada
NZ. We used to call them toastie makers, or toastie irons, and we put them into the fire. It was more fun than watching the radio, in the days before tv.
Every Household Contains A Spice Box, And Each Family's Mix Is Unique, Depending On Their Preference. Germany
I’ve Only Ever Seen Dish Washer Drawers In New Zealand
Bagged Milk
In Japan, Most Houses Comes With A Grill Just For Fish
These should exist in Portuguese kitchens. We eat a lot of fish but grilling becomes difficult in winter. This should do it, along with a good exhaustion.
Royal Portraits In The Outhouse/Privy, If You Have One. Sweden
Shared With The Neighbours: Electric Kettle With Set Temperature For Mate. Argentina
We don't have one specifically for mate, but we can set the temperature on my kettle in Australia. (Breville teamaker iirc, and you can also brew tea in a basket that attaches in the kettle too.) One of my favourite appliances.
They're A Bit Fancy, But An Aga Cooker. It's Like A Range Cooker But You Don't Turn It Off. It's Always On And It Acts As Heating For Your Home. England
Same as wood stoves in US farms. My aunt had one on their dairy farm. If Aga is always on, seems dangerous and waste of fuel.
Storm Cellars - Especially In The Midwest/Tornado Alley. USA
Forgive my Antipodean ignorance, but if you're in the cellar during a tornado, what keeps the storm doors from flying open?
Passapomodoro ... For When You Make Passata. Italy
We used to have one! In Australia it would mostly be people of Italian heritage that would still be using them today, but back when bottling was more common, others would have them. Now I think about it, my mum might still have hers, she did make a lot of bottles of passata last year.
Don't Have One At Home, But In My Grandmother's Apartment It Does, These Are Антресоли (Mezzanines), Usually Used For Storing All Kinds Of Jams, Pickled Cucumbers And Tomatoes. Russia
Moka Pots Maybe. Italy
Mango Pickle Jar.. It Is Very Common In India.. Especially In Maharashtra!. India
Chushkopek, Literally “Pepper-Roaster". It’s A Uniquely Bulgarian Kitchen
Charcoal Grill On A High Rise Apartment Balcony. Brazil
Not Sure How Unique To Turkey This Is, But This Two Part Teapot
A Chocolate Spread Container Filled With Lard. Serbia
Ashtray. Australia
Not surprisingly we have these in NZ. It is the shell of the paua. Aka NZ abalone.
St Brigid's Cross. Ireland
Tajeen, Pronounced Ta-J-Een. Popular In Morocco, Algeria, Maybe Tunis And Libya I’m Not Sure. Traditionally, It’s Made Of Clay And Used For Cooking
I had food cooked in tajeen a few years ago. It was Fantastic. This reminds me (yet again) that I need to get one.
Three Legged, Falkirk Cast Iron Potjie Pot. South Africa
I Guess It’s Teak Furniture. I Know It’s Not Really Exclusive, But Here Almost Every House Has It, And Sometimes It Becomes An Heirloom Since It Can Easily Last 100 Years. Indonesia
Swedish Dish Cloth. It Can Absorb Liquids 15 Times Its Own Weight
Cheese Box. France
Not sure if it was marketed as such, but both my mum and brother have one, in Australia. My mum has a whole drawer of her fridge known as the cheese drawer.
Mantovarka (Manti Cooker)- Metal Steamer For Making Manti, Most Often A Beaten One Made Of Aluminium Passed On For Generations From Ussr
Kotatsu! I Live Up North And It’s Absolutely A Must For Winter Months. Also We Live In An Older House So We Use Kerosene Heaters To Warm A Room Up. Japan
The Daawe, It’s Used For Making Laxoox. Denmark
A Spianatoia, Used Either To Make Pasta Or Eat Polenta With The Whole Family. Italy
Pleated Christmas Hearts. We All Made A Ton Of These As Kids To Decorate The Christmas Tree. Denmark
Yes, and stars as well in Germany. Recently found a bunch of them my brother and I made in Kindergarten as I was searching for Christmas decorations.
Termo Y Mate. Argentina
Most Filipino Households Have A Water Bucket And A Dipper In The Bathroom. Even With Hand Bidets, The Timba And Tabo Are Still Commonly Used
It's Called "Molcajete" And It's Used To Prepare Salsas And, As You Can See, Guacamole. Mexico
We Have These Switches Above All Of Our Outlets To Cut The Power To Anything Plugged In. I Grew Up In The Us And Never Seen Anything Like This Until I Moved To Aus
Standard on every plug socket in the UK, and many other countries, for decades.
Danbo Cheese Is A Staple Food In All Danish Households
Garbage Disposal. USA
Little Squeegees Over Our Sinks So We Can Dry It Off After Doing Dishes. Apparently Not Something That Is Really Common Outside Of Here. Brazil
In US mostly to squeegee water off shower walls to prevent mineral buildup and water spots.
Not Sure If It Is Just German, But A Dedicated Egg Boiler Complete With A Little Water Measuring Thing Is Very Common So You Can Make Your Perfect Dippy Breakfast Egg
Because my kitchen definitely needs another appliance for a single purpose....
Was Almost Forgetting: For When You Make Pasta, And This Is Really Common. Italy
Grew Up In East Asia And We Always Had A Rice Dispenser
The Raclette Machine, That Usually Allows To Also Make Crepes On The Up Side Of It (And Plancha). France
In The South Of France (Provence More Precisely) We Have Decorative Ceramic Or Cast Iron Cicadas On The Walls
I Didn't Know How Common The Kartoffelharfe Is In Other Countries. You Use It To Cut Cooked Potatoes Into Thin Slices For Potato Salad Oder Roasted Potatoes. Germany
Rice Washers. Brazil
A Coal Scuttle / Decorative Reminder Of Coal – Even In Houses That Haven’t Seen Coal In Decades. Or At Least Something Nodding To The Mining Past. Wales
In older homes, even in the western US, you can still find these, as well as coal chutes that lead into a coal cellar. If you look at the street-side of a house, there might be a ground-level door
Raclette Grill. Germany
I Would Be Really Surprised To Find A Finnish Household Without At Least One Of Those Bad Boys. Finland
The Egg Holder (Eierbecher). Germany
Ostehøvel! It's For Slicing Cheese. Norway
In Lao Households (Even Outside Of Lao!), You Will Always Find A Thip Khao/Rice Basket. Most Families Have A Massive One To Communal Dig Your Rice Balls Out From. Canada
This Style Of Can Opener. Denmark
P-38 is the name of these type of openers in the US, though they look a little different. Issued by the Army and designed for when you were away from home and needed to open your canned food. Excellent camping equipment
A Home Deep-Fryer. Belgium
A Budare To Cook Arepas. Venezuela
More Of A German Thing, But Not Unheard Of In Austria
An egg opener (for boiled eggs). You place the bottom on top of the egg, then let the metal sphere slide down the pole. Perfectly opened eggs guaranteed.
Botijo (In The Left), To Get Some Cold Water When The Sun Is Strong And Porrón (In The Right), A Wine Decanter. Spain
Tostonera. It’s For Smashing Fried Plantains Before The Second Fry To Make Tostones. USA
Some Kind Of Biltong Maker (Not Necessarily This One, Some People Have Very Rudimentary Contraptions). South Africa
Flowery Blankets! Every Household In India (And Probably The Entire Subcontinent) Has One Of These. India
Chilean Toaster!
Bag With Bags. Russia
That Jar Of Morta Sitting Next To The White Cheese. Egypt
Probably Speaking For The Entire German Speaking Region Here. Austria
My mum had (possibly still has, unless she broke it) one, in Australia.
Basically Every Household In Taiwan Has One Of These Rice/Multicookers
Thses Bowls. Yes, I Know, They're Gorgeous. Portugal
My mother had a set of these small bowls with a big bowl. She would serve fruit salad.
Marrow Separator, Because Only Heathens Eat Bone With The Marrow. Haven’t Seen Anyone Else Has This Outside Of Canada
Any Filipino Household Has A Dipper. Maybe Other Countries Like In The Sea Has One Or A Dipper Of A Different Variation
Used for dipping water from bucket to flush the squat toilet as it had no running water.
Coconut Grater. To Scrape The White Flesh Of Coconut
This Kind Of Washing Line. Australia
Invented in Australia (Hills hoist?) but exported worldwide. Just one of many great Australian inventions, like the WiFi you're probably using right now 😁
A Bidet. But Separated From The Actual Toilet. Argentina
Washandje, A Washing Hand, I Have Only Seen These In The Benelux Countries. It Is A Washcloth You Can Stick Your Hand In Like A Mitten But Without The Thumb. Netherlands
The Icelandic Pancake Pan. It May Look Like Any Other Pan But Its Only Ever Supposed To Be Used For Pancakes And Nothing Else
These Specific Corningware Dishes Are In Every House In The Us
Have the ones pasted down from my paternal grandma and ones from my mom.
Pebble Dash Everywhere! Ireland
In Argentina
This is a weird list. Some of these things may well be unique to the country listed, but soooo many of them we have or have had in Australia, and I would consider us a bit of a backwater, geographically speaking. We definitely don't have household saunas or kimchi fridges, though (at least not common usage).
Do countries other than Australia have this sort of macadamia nut cracker? A hand welded miniature vice. Picture in attachment.
This is a weird list. Some of these things may well be unique to the country listed, but soooo many of them we have or have had in Australia, and I would consider us a bit of a backwater, geographically speaking. We definitely don't have household saunas or kimchi fridges, though (at least not common usage).
Do countries other than Australia have this sort of macadamia nut cracker? A hand welded miniature vice. Picture in attachment.
