Sacks of Dutch potatoes are peeled, cut, and double-fried daily at this high-volume counter on the city’s busiest thoroughfare. Since 1991, Manneken Pis has turned out Flemish-style fries – thick, golden, and soft in the middle – to a near-constant stream of pedestrians moving along Damrak. The operation is strictly walk-up, often involving a queue that spills onto the sidewalk, though the staff work with a practiced efficiency that keeps the line moving.
The system here is specific: you join one line to pay and another to collect your order, so it helps to have your choice ready before you reach the register. Portions are aggressive, with sizes ranging from the "small" Schanulleke – often enough for two people to share – to the massive 1kg Obelix. While the potatoes are the foundation, the stall is defined by its wall of over 20 sauces. Options run from classic Flemish mayonnaise and satay sauce to truffle mayo, vegan varieties, and Amsterdam onion sauce.
Unless you request otherwise, sauce is ladled heavily directly onto the fries. This ensures the top layer is well-coated, though the fries at the bottom of the signature blue-and-white paper cone tend to get salty and steam-softened by the time you reach them. There is no place to sit, so eating is a standing affair, usually done right on the pavement amidst the foot traffic.