Express & Star

A German mint has made a currywurst coin and online reaction has been… mixed

The coin has been created to commemorate 70 years of the savoury snack hitting the streets of Berlin.

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A German coin manufacturer has commemorated the country’s love of currywurst with a speciality coin to mark 70 years since the savoury snack was first sold in Berlin.

The silver alloy coin, made by Staatliche Munze Berlin, or the Berlin State Mint, features an image of the delicacy’s inventor alongside two giant sausages drowning in curry sauce and pierced with a wooden fork, as is tradition.

Herta Heuwer first came up with the combination in 1949 and the saucy sausage snack has been a staple street food of the German capital ever since.

Germans now eat around 800 million currywurst a year, according to the Berliner Currywurst-Museum, but it has yet to catch on with the rest of the world in the same way.

Journalist Oliver Moody posted a picture of the coin on Monday calling it “the most horrible thing in the history of numismatics” and the responses have been… mixed.

The Royal Society led the jokes among those who hated the idea, referring to the coin as “a cursed wurst image”.

Currywurst clearly has a lot of fans online, however, with one Twitter user praising the creation as the “currybest”.

However, a number of people questioned the coin’s design and artistic parallels.

Some people demanded a commemorative culinary coin for their own country’s cuisine, such as a Scottish coin featuring square sausage and a Canadian coin picturing poutine.

Others hailed the advent of an entirely new currency to rival BitCoin and the short-lived but meme-alicious dogecoin.

Although visitors to Berlin are often only a short distance from a currywurst stall, it is impossible to eat an original currywurst as Frau Heuwer took her recipe to the grave in 1999.

However, tourists can find a commemorative plaque in the Charlottenburg district of the city at the spot where she used to sell her prized snacks.

The SMB is selling the coins on its website for 13 euro each.

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