We’ve all been there – enjoying too much of the local tipple after a long day of travel and irregular meals, then paying the price in the morning. But when in foreign lands, why not embrace foreign solutions? Here’s our roundup of some of the world’s most popular hangover cures.
For a quick hangover fix in England, locals pick up a sausage roll (sausage meat encased in flaky, buttery pastry) but the true fix is the full English breakfast, also known as the fry-up. Think serious heart-attack food: eggs, bacon, sausage, baked beans, fried or grilled tomatoes, mushrooms, and fried bread or toast slathered in butter, plus essential condiments like HP Sauce (a thick brown sauce with a malt vinegar base) and tomato sauce (ketchup). Greasy and salty, the full English hits the spot even if you can’t move afterwards.
Scotland favours the fry-up too, but haggis or black pudding, and tattie scones (potato scones) stumble onto the same plate. It’s all washed down with caffeine-rich Irn-Bru, a neon-orange-coloured fruity soft drink known as Scotland’s ‘other’ national drink. We see a logic here: overindulge in national drink number one (whisky), fix with national drink number two…
Italians keep it simple: kick back an espresso or three, snooze with your shades on and just deal with it. But Sicily does things its own way with an old-school remedy: munching on dried bull penis. While it’s a bit like beef jerky or biltong (dried meat, originally from South Africa), bull genitalia is known to be… chewier. You have to wonder if it’s the post-chew gagging reflex that actually does the trick.
Throughout the Balkans and Turkey, it’s all about tripe soup. Variations include a mix of vinegar, paprika, onion, garlic, milk, bacon, egg or lemon. But if innards make you queasy, Germany’s Katerfrühstück – pickled herring, gherkin and onion, otherwise known as rollmops – might be a better bet. At least they all boast heaps of protein, which is always a good sign in a hangover cure.
In Thailand the appropriately named ‘drunken noodles’ (pad kee mao) – a spicy dish with stir-fried rice noodles, meat or tofu, soy sauce, garlic, vegetables and potent chillies – packs a fiery punch to jolt you out of that daze.
Korea goes for Haejangguk soup, which literally means ‘soup to chase a hangover’. It’s generally packed with pork, cabbage, eggs, bean sprouts, radish and… congealed ox blood. Just pretend you don’t know about the blood.
In New Zealand foggy-brained souls reach for a mince-and-cheese pie, plus chocolate milk with a pinch of salt. We’re not sure how or why this works, but the mix of protein, sugar and salt seems like a well-rounded solution.
In Mexico the hangover antidote is a spicy ceviche called Vuelva de la vida (return to life), perhaps because too much tequila often feels like death? This path back to the living world mixes prawns, squid, seafood, clams and oysters marinated in citrus and tomato juices, topped with pico de gallo (chopped tomato, onion and chillies). Depending on the region, avocado is thrown in.
When you’re travelling in Brazil, drinking is all about the caipirinha, a cocktail of cachaça (spirit made from sugarcane), lime, sugar and heaps of ice. It gives you the pep you need to improve your samba sway but too much of this potent drink won’t groove well with your brain. The morning after, reach for moqueca for sustenance, a Bahian fish stew with coconut milk, onions, garlic, coriander (cilantro) and palm oil.
In Bolivia go for fricasé, also known as levanta muertos (raising of the dead), a thick stew with spicy yellow chillies, tons of garlic and cumin, hominy, bread, potato and pork. It’s a popular lunchtime dish, but markets start cooking it in the early morning, so you can grab a bowl after a night out right before collapsing on the hangover’s global best friend, the pillow.
After a long night, Namibians knock back buffalo milk, which has nothing to do with the animals. It’s a mix of ice cream, spiced rum, dark rum, cream liqueur and clotted cream. But if the thought of cream makes your stomach curdle, Senegal’s remedy might be for you. The classic yassa, a chicken stew with lemon, onion and spicy chillies served over rice, hits the spot. Bonus tip: true yassa recipes marinate the chicken in its sauce before cooking, yielding tender bits of meat chock-full of flavour.
Canadians chomp down on poutine – chips drowned in heaps of cheese curds and brown gravy. The Montreal speciality features across the country and is often served from fast-food stalls, so you’ll get your fix pronto. South of the border, the traditional American cure is to slug back a Prairie Oyster, a drink with Worcestershire sauce, salt, pepper, raw egg, hot sauce and tomato juice. Unappetising as it might sound, it will wake up your entire system in no time.
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