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There is a Swedish saying, which I don't know if it exists outside of Sweden or has an English version, which literally goes like:

Att gå som katten kring het gröt.

This means:

To walk like the cat around hot porridge.

It's not clear to me what this is supposed to mean even in Swedish. I assume that it means that somebody (a cat) wants something (porridge) and tries to eat it, but it's difficult (hot) and thus the cat just keeps walking in circles around it instead of munching down that good oatmeal porridge...

... which I cannot imagine that any cat would ever do. My cat barely eats the expensive cat food I give him, let alone porridge. I don't even think that he would understand that it's food and that it's edible. He'd just sniff on it and look at me confused with a tilted head, then walk away from it and rub his body and tail against my leg to make me give him "actual food".

Maybe if it was a hot fish, then it'd make sense. My cat has tried to eat a hot fish and really wanted to, but it was too hot, so he would repeatedly walk around it and try again and again, each time jumping away from it due to it still being hot. But the saying is about porridge. Typical human food. Nothing for little lion descendants.

Is this an old saying from a time when cats actually did eat porridge due to lack of special cat food and nothing else to eat? So humans would give their cats porridge and they'd eat it? Was that ever a thing? Is it even possible for a cat to eat porridge and not get sick, and get nutrition and strength from it? Or is a cat made too differently from a human for that to work?

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    the answer from meg is the correct one,we have the same saying in norway and it is about avoiding the real problem so it is not about food at all. Commented Aug 19, 2020 at 8:50
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    @trondhansen: we also have such a saying in German, and I do think it is related to (old-fashioned) food.
    – cbeleites
    Commented Aug 19, 2020 at 16:21
  • I have known cats who have liked bread, broccoli, graham crackers... Being an obligate carnivore doesn't mean not being able to occasionally eat other things if they aren't toxic for you; being a hunter doesn't mean only meat will ever taste good or have good mouth feel. There are certainly human foods that cats would have trouble with, but porridge isn't necessarily one of them. I'd classify it as rare, and leave it at that.
    – keshlam
    Commented Nov 30, 2023 at 16:16
  • Also "of any kind" -- I have eaten meat or fish flavored porridge.
    – keshlam
    Commented Nov 30, 2023 at 16:30

3 Answers 3

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In English we have the saying "To beat around the bush" which I think has a very close meaning. More or less, to circle around the topic without addressing it directly. I believe it comes from the idea that people would use sticks to hit a bush in order to chase out any birds hiding there (for hunting). Either way, I don't think this saying has much to do with actually feeding porridge to cats. I think it is more related to the way that a cat moves when it is uncertain, hesitant but quick and graceful, and the qualities of the porridge- something that is appetizing but can hurt you quite a bit because not only is it very hot, but sticky, so it may cause a bad burn.

For the more 'actual cat related' aspect of the question, most cats don't seem to like to eat porridge, but some are indeed interested in typical human foods and will try to sneak a taste of anything. I know someone who has that cat that has stolen and consumed entire loaves of bread, drank from a cup of coffee when it was left unattended, and other things that most cats wouldn't touch. Many cats find butter very enticing, so porridge with butter might be tempting to any cat.

I can't find any information that suggests that people used to intentionally feed porridge to cats on a regular basis. In the time before processed cat food, it was common for people to put the cat outside at night to hunt, and so feed itself. This was usually supplemented with table scraps, inexpensive meats or meat trimmings and bits/organs that people wouldn't eat, and sometimes broth, vegetables, milk or bread.

Cats are obligate carnivores, so they need meat (or potentially a complex set of supplements to replace it) to remain healthy. They have some limited ability to digest and gain nutrients from grains, so porridge would be something a cat could eat to avoid starving, but it would not be healthy or survive long-term on such a diet.

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    In Japanese, there's the word nekojita, which is literally "cat tongue" -- a word used for people who can't eat hot (as in temperature) foods, which came from the idea that cats can't eat hot food. The Swedish proverb might come from a similar idea -- it's not that cats particularly want to eat porridge, but if they did, and the porridge was really hot, they'd dither around because cats can't eat hot food.
    – Kai
    Commented Aug 19, 2020 at 3:35
  • @Kai it is simmilar to what you say,the saying is about not confronting the real problem or subject :) (cats will avoid food hotter than 40-45C in the same way that some people try to avoid problems or disagereements) so the hot porridge is a metaphor for the core of the problem or disagreement/HOT subject). Commented Aug 19, 2020 at 10:15
  • I assumed myself, any time I hear this phrase, that the cat see how humand eat it and asks itself, if it would be tasty for cats too Commented Aug 21, 2020 at 6:47
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I'll try to tackle the German version of the saying: "Wie die Katze um den heißen Brei schleichen" = sneak arount the hot porridge/mash like a cat. Meaning is also circling around the point of interest without reaching (or: being able to reach) it.

The hot porridge term here is far more generic than the contemporary breakfast type of oatmeal porridge. It includes all kinds of semi-liquid based foods. The "solid" basis can be whole grains, groats, rolled/crushed grains, semolina or even flour. (In German, also mashed potatoes = Kartoffelbrei or mashed carrots = Möhrenbrei would be included.) For a Brei/porridge, the starchy stuff is soaked and typically boiled. The liquid can be water (or broth) based or milk based. These porridges or mashes belong to a continuum porridge/mash - potage - stew - soup.

I don't see any cat beeing interested in a water, salt and rolled oats porridge. But those old-fashioned porridges/mashes include lots of savory varieties based on meat or bone broth (think e.g. kasza or risotto), and some of them could also be served with molten butter. Those warm = strong smells would be extremely interesting for a cat, in particular for one that has to hunt for a living.

(Anecdotally, my mother tells of a farm cat that tried to steal chicken meat from a pot where the chicken was boiling for a soup. I grew up with the art of cat feeding being "sufficient so that it will put its territory here, but not too much so it doesn't stop hunting mice".)


I have a sneaking suspicion that the Swedish gröts shares roots with German Grütze (or English groats). Grütze means either crushed pieces of grains that are larger than the pieces called Grieß (semolina) or Schrot (grist). Or it means the particular thick variety of Brei/porridge that used to be made by cooking these crushed grains. Like Brei, Grütze can be sweet (e.g. rote Grütze, with fruit juice - nowadays finer starch ranging from semolina over flour to starch powder is used) or savory (compare bulgur [though Grütze is not usually parboiled]), with buckwheat it is also used for a preparation with the whole grains (Buchweizengrütze). Gerstengrütze (barley groats) is probably still quite close to the original meaning.

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I understand that "porridge" is a somewhat general term, but where I'm from, porridge is a mixture of rolled oats and water, brought to boil for several minutes, then served with something sweet (such as raisins or honey) and a significant quantity of milk.

Whenever I make myself some porridge and sit down to eat it, the cat must be able to smell the delicious warm milk (sometimes it's even awoken from a snooze), because it gets very friendly and tries to help itself to my bowl.

The cat's not really interested in the gluggy oats; it's the milk it's after.

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    I've had cats, one especially, that loved sweet dairy. Fruit yoghurt was a particular favourite, and it's surprising how far into a small pot a cat's head will fit (obviously we tried to prevent that once we realised)
    – Chris H
    Commented Dec 15, 2023 at 11:37

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