The woman sitting opposite me was trying to divide a pineapple cake into eight equalish chunks, but paused mid-slice when I told her I was in Copenhagen on my own. "Travelling by yourself?" She looked at me as if I were doing something brave and strange indeed. "Wow. Many people
Is this the world's best city for solo travellers?
Mine was a delight. Rather than a poky afterthought hidden by the bins, it was a large, bright space on the top floor, filled with city views and sunshine, thanks to a whole series of skylights. If Copenhagen hadn't been waiting on the doorstep, I would have just stayed up there, writing a novel or two. But the city beckoned, and I had a dinner date I didn't want to miss.
Anyone who has travelled solo knows that one of the most awkward times is dinner. Ideally, food should be shared and savoured; when you are eating alone, feeling sore-thumbish in a sea of couples, the temptation is to eat fast and leave. Fortunately, the Danes have an on-trend solution for this very scenario, with its own unpronounceable name, of course.
Faellesspisning means "communal eating", an old-school concept now enjoying a resurgence.
Which is how I found myself crammed on to a table for eight at Folkehuset Absalon in Vesterbro, awaiting my share of pineapple cake. The 1930s red-brick building was originally a church; threatened with closure 10 years ago, it was saved by the founder of the Tiger chain, who has turned it into a community hub where anyone can come for a range of activities and big old dinners.
It is not only sociable, but also good value. A one-course meal costs just $11. You have to collect your own cutlery and serve yourself, but that is part of the ice-breaking fun. You are soon ladling moussaka on to each other's plates and apportioning the sponge.
It is potluck who you sit with, but I saw people of all ages. And, this being Denmark, everyone spoke excellent English. I was soon deep in conversation with Lisabell and Hanne, two middle-aged friends enjoying a night out. My other tablemates – a couple and a threesome – hadn't known each other before this evening, but you wouldn't have known it from the way they nattered. "That's what happens here," said the woman next to me, "you just start chatting, sharing ideas".
It was lovely to have company on my first night in a new city, and I collected plenty of tips; by the end of dinner, my map was scrawled with recommendations. But, despite being the tourist, I had given the locals some tips, too. For instance, none of them had heard of the Human Library, where I was heading the following day.
The Human Library
This literary concept is a movement for social change and prejudice-smashing, founded in Copenhagen in 2000 by the author and activist Ronni Abergel. The Human Library hosts pop-up events around the world now, but its only permanent hub is in the city's Norrebro district. On selected days, you can go along and borrow a "book" – that is, a person – for a truly enlightening 30 minutes.
When I arrived, a list of the day's available "titles" was chalked on a board in the reading garden. Light holiday fare this was not: every topic on offer – Transgender, Recovered Drug Addict, Incest – was a toughie. But that is the point. "It's about un-judging someone and testing our subconscious biases," Ronni explained as I fretted about which to pick. "We want to really challenge people."
Why, I wondered, do the "books" sign up to be borrowed? "Imagine if you have been held back your whole life by something you can't change," Ronni answered. "It's empowering to be able to turn that stigma into something else; to be understood; even to help others learn from your journey."
I chose Depression and Sexual Abuse, and sat under a tree, waiting a little nervously for my book to appear. Usually, striking up a conversation with a stranger while you are travelling alone will start with the weather, perhaps moving on to home towns and pets. But there was no small talk with Meike. As soon as she joined me – "Can you take off your sunglasses?" she asked. "I like to see people's eyes" – we were deep in her traumatic childhood. She told me about being abused, about feeling worthless, about the decades of depression. But it wasn't a lecture, it was a conversation – you are allowed to ask any questions, as long as they are asked respectfully.
"I wanted to be a book as I had always been told I was nothing, that I wasn't interesting, that no one would want to listen." An inner fire, fuelled by years of therapy and hard self-work, blazed in Meike's eyes: "Now I know that's not true." It was an astonishing way to spend a morning, but I was ready for some actual solo time after that. So I made my way across Copenhagen's lakes and into the old town, via the terraced yellow houses of Nyboder, to the Designmuseum.
Housed in an 18th-century pile that was once the country's first public hospital, the museum reopened in June following a two-year refurbishment. The current exhibition (running until June 2023) is a thinker, looking at how designers are working radically and creatively on solving global challenges: what if you could order your own death by app? Or if a gel could make you less lonely? Fortunately, I didn't feel a gel was required at that moment, and happily lingered alone in the museum's permanent collection, a trove of lustworthy classics by Danish designers – Poul Henningsen lamps, Arne Jacobsen chairs – before grabbing a coffee in the leafy courtyard cafe.
'Social Sailings'; a new, intimate boat trip
From the museum, it wasn't far to the heaving cobbled streets of Nyhavn, the gaily-painted 18th-century harbourfront that graces every Copenhagen fridge magnet. I was glad I wasn't navigating the place as part of an umbrella-following horde. I was also happy not to be boarding one of the big boat tours leaving from the wharf here. Instead, I headed to the dock at nearby Ofelia Plads for a more intimate option.
Hey Captain's fleet of small vessels offers Social Sailings, where the idea is to see the sights while chatting with your boatmates. With skipper Sindre at the wheel and only a couple of other passengers, it felt more like a conversation than a cruise. As we floated down the Inner Harbour and historic canals, we chatted about Copenhagen's town planning, its enviable cycling infrastructure and the pros of solo travel.
Peter, a middle-aged Brit, was also travelling alone and we swapped city tips, mainly about good places to eat smorrebrod – Denmark's ubiquitous open sandwiches. However, I already knew where I was going for my final dinner: I was faellesspisning again, this time at the more upmarket Kanalhuset, a super-cool hotel in Christianshavn that serves a set meal to diners gathered together at long tables every evening.
The menu that night was to be platters of veal cuvette, couscous and baked aubergine, which I shared with three Americans, also all travelling solo. Elliott was food blogging; Aurin was on a workcation; Alicia was researching a relative who had been a refugee here during the Second World War. We all had different agendas, but we had come together, albeit briefly, with a mutual desire for good food and interesting company.
As my trip came to an end, I realised maybe I hadn't done all the typical Copenhagen things. I hadn't ridden a bicycle or visited a single castle; I had completely ignored the statue of the Little Mermaid. But I had joined locals for free yoga on the harbourside, taken a free dip in the Islands Brygge baths (people-watching at its most refreshing), spent an evening watching a movie in the park (also free), and had some fascinating conversations. I had done my trip my way.
CHECKLIST: COPENHAGEN
GETTING THERESingapore Airlines flies from Auckland to Copenhagen, via Singapore. singaporeair.com
DETAILS
For more things to see and do, go to visitcopenhagen.com
© Sarah Baxter / Telegraph Media Group Limited 2022;