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Disgusting Food Museum

MalmöMuseums in Sweden

Disgusting Food Museum is a museum exhibiting disgusting food from around the world. The museum was located in Slagthuset MMX in Malmö from 29 October 2018 – 27 January 2019 and is now located in Södra Förstadsgatan 2, Malmö since the summer of 2021. The exhibition contains around 80 different food items from around the world, including roasted guinea pig from Peru, Casu martzu cheese from Sardinia and surströmming from Sweden. The museums has been featured in news media including The New York Times, Washington Post, Vox, Lonely Planet, Metro, Atlas obscura, New Yorker among others.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Disgusting Food Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Disgusting Food Museum
Drottninggatan, Malmo Lugnet (Norr)

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N 55.6012 ° E 13.0013 °
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Drottninggatan

Drottninggatan
211 41 Malmo, Lugnet (Norr)
Sweden
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Stortorget, Malmö
Stortorget, Malmö

Stortorget (transl. "The Main Square", lit. "The Big Square") is a square in Malmö. Construction began in 1538 with the demolition of The Monastery of the Holy Spirit (Heligandsklostret), which with its cemetery occupied about 70% of the area of the future square. A note in 1542 refers to the site as thet ny torg ("the new square"). The stately Malmö Town Hall (Rådhuset), the largest of its kind in the Nordic countries at the time, located on the eastern side of the square, was inaugurated in 1547. At Stortorget are The Governor's Residence, Malmö Town Hall, Jørgen Kock's House, the Kramer Hotel, and The Lion Pharmacy (Apoteket Lejonet). In the middle of the square stands an equestrian statue of King Charles X Gustav, sculpted by John Börjeson and created in connection with the Craft and Industry Exhibition in Malmö in 1896. The statue was initiated by the newspaperman and politician Carl Herslow and the history professor Martin Weibull. Stortorget has historically been Malmö's most central square, but with the electrification of the tramway, this role was increasingly taken over by Gustav Adolf's square. Stortorget was served by horsecars in 1887–1907, horse-drawn buses in 1898-1907 and electric trams in 1906–1957. Just southwest of Stortorget is Lilla torg, and about 250 m straight south (along Södergatan) is Gustav Adolfs torg. As a curiosity, the meridian 13° east passes through Stortorget, which means that its mean solar time is exactly (if you are standing in the right place) eight minutes behind Central European Time (i.e. Swedish Standard Time).