It’s called a Spice Bag. It was made in a chinese-take-away restaurant here in Dublin, Ireland to sell to people going home after drinking.
It’s bits of shredded deep fried chicken, sauteed peppers and chips/french fries/pommes in a foil-lined paper envelope style pocket bag you hold and eat with a fork.
Yes, Ireland is home to a chinese takeaway delicacy: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spice_bag
Western Germany:
mett
Basically raw ground pork with salt, pepper and onions. Obviously it needs to be super fresh and is Either served on half a bread roll or formed into a little hedgehog with the onions as the spikes.
rheinischer Sauerbraten
A marinated pot roast thats slightly sour. The traditional rheinische Sauerbraten is made out of horsemeat and has raisins in the sauce. Its super hard to find in restaurants in modern times. The dish was originally made to make older animals meat tender again.
Kesselsknall (named different in every village)
A dish made out of grated potato and onion mixed with egg and mettenden (coarsly ground and smoked pork sausages) browned and then baked in the oven. Often served with apple puree
Himmel un’ Ääd (“heaven and earth”)
Mashed Potato, apple puree and blood sausage
Muzen (not muzenmandeln) and Krapfen
Both is a form of Deep fried pastry. Krapfen are a bit like doughnuts without the hole, but much smoother and jucier inside. Most times made with raisins. Muzen are a bit harder and flat. Both are only sold around Karneval
Halve Hahn (loosly means “half of a chicken”)
One half of a rye bread roll (a “röggelchen” is often baked in doubles that are broken up for this) with a generous amout of butter a big fat slice of cheese (nearly always middleaged gouda), onions and pickles. Sometimes also mustard
Roter Heringssalat
Herringsalad with onions, apples, beetroot and cream
Yeah we like simple, hearty stuff with a twist of weird. And apple puree to town down the whole thing a bit.
Damn. Now im hungry.
Edit: formating