*Afterthoughts & Addenda* *Root Vegetable* - the greenish-buff knobbly vegetable in the fridge is celeriac - same species of plant as celery, but developed to form a large root. Tastes a bit like parsnip, but also has its own distinct flavour. Very good for soups. *All your sockets are switched on! With nothing plugged in!* - Yes, they are. On purpose. The switches are not primarily a safety feature (some socket designs just don't have them. Safety features aren't usually optional). The various (indeed, many) other actual safety features of the sockets and plugs make this safe to do. The switches are a _convenience_ feature - allowing an appliance to be fully powered off without unplugging it; for example my kitchen mixer has a bright LED on the front which remains on even when the device is not in use; the automatic nightlight in the hallway sometimes comes on in the daytime, in dingy overcast weather; when I go away for a week, I typically shut down my NAS, but it has 'recover after power outage' features that might power it back on if there was a momentary power outage; the switches on the sockets exist primarily for this reason; to isolate the power without unplugging. So you are more likely to see them in the 'off' position when something *is* plugged in.
@@AtomicShrimp thank you for the reply. It was just more ocd rather than safety concerns. If it were my kitchen I would have to have them all in the same position. I quess we all have our quirks... Can openers and the way we cut toast🤔 looking forward to your next video 👍
That’s right! My TV got mind of its own lately, switches on itself, and scared life out of me. So I keep it plugged in but switch off socket to avoid that happening. The rest of my sockets pretty much as yours, some on, some off. Never thought about it, to be honest…
Worth noting that switched outlets are mostly only designed for isolation, not as service switches. So using them to repeatedly make/break under load will result in them arcing out. The switch on the appliance is intended and rated for routine use.
@@marinahe4907 Is it a modern TV controlled by software? I would not put it past the advertiser-driven makers of that software to remotely switch it on and play adverts at you when they feel you haven't seen enough adverts.
Only 2 minutes in and already we've got, a girthy carrot, oneion and the travelling spice kit. Mr Shrimp with these returning characters you're really spoiling us.
You may be more right than you think. Go back to the mid 19th century, and imagine a caricature of a cottage dweller in this part of the country. They would be even more self-sufficient then people today, partly living off the land in addition to whatever trade he plied.
Hey Shrimp, just wanted to say that your videos make me feel a bit better. I finished my degree in England last year but had to go back home to Poland because my mentally, I wasn't doing great. I didn't know what to do with myself. I wanted to go back because of how much I love the country and the people especially but due to these mental health issues I ended up isolating myself and overstaying at home. That meant that, due to Brexit, I essentially lost the pre settled status and won't be able to live in the UK anymore. Your videos remind me of walking around the Tesco, the nature in England and the people (like you, you're a lovely lad). So yeah, thank you! (Also, admittedly I never cared about plants, mushrooms and such but now, thanks to you I find it quite interesting.)
I don't know you, but I miss you! Trying to put politics aside, Brexit was a disaster for us all coming together and travelling freely, and the UK owes a huge debt to Poland for their bravery and help during the war, I hope you can come back one day, when all this hate is over xxx
@@Fluttermoth Well said...although you're more optimistic than I am regarding hate ever being over with in the UK. Too many higher ups actively cultivating it.
I also love walking and would like to find mushrooms, I use a cane now. Don't get discouraged, politicians come and go. You'll get to be where you need to be. Stay healthy and keep watching this down-to-earth man and his exploration of our would one can or pebble at a time.
@@FluttermothNo hate whatsoever from my side. Yes, it sucks but that's politics. Just happened at an unfortunate time for me. All the Brits that I've met were incredible people, including my ex who was from Yorkshire (best accent, but I'm biased). I'm trying to get myself together and I think Ireland is the next destination. Eventually I would love to end up in England again. Poland is doing better than ever and I would say that it's probably way cheaper than the UK and Ireland but I just love the language, architecture, nature and the people way too much to stay here. In the meantime, I'll keep watching Shrimp.
Hopefully your mental health is better now. You're probably way better off in Poland than here to be honest. I won't go into politics but the UK isn't the best place in 2024.
I've started getting a box of second grade produce every couple weeks. Thing is, I don't get to choose the produce - they just give me what they've got. I think im a pretty decent cook for a young person (which is to say, I can follow a recipe). But ive been embodying your spirit more when they give me weird combinations of produce I don't know what to do with. You are a lovely role model, mr shrimp
As a Cornish lass, born and bred, you can make a pasty out of anything! I 100% support your right to put whatever stuff in there you can/feel like! I will also confess to having made 'proper' Cornish pasties with chopped up, frozen burgers once or twice; in my defence, my kids requested pasties, and I was poor and a single mum, I had to to make and do, and the meat is the expensive bit!! They actually didn't come out too badly, all things considered :) P.S; I also get VERY annoyed with people looking for 'authentic' recipes for what is, basically, peasant food. When you're poor, you swap out ingredients for what's cheapest, available, or even just what your family prefers. There are no 'canonical' recipes for things like pasties, pizzas, hotpots etc!
Last para, 100% agree. The ability to knock together something tasty with what you have rather than being 'unable' to make this or that dish because you don't have xyz is far better than being a food snob 😂
It's funny, my parents are both from poor/working class families, and they have *strong* opinions about what does and doesn't go in specific family recipes, down to specific brands and sizes of cans. It isn't even a belief that the expensive stuff is just better or whatever; it's "we have 7-ounce cans of diced chilis but I need 4-ounce cans of whole chilis to put in the blender to make your grandma's taco sauce."
I love the quote “it’s not burning it’s just in time” it would be cool if you did a cooking change where Jenny picked your ingredients to cook with like master chef but master shrimp
One time in an old cookbook, I found a chapter called, “The Cocktail Hour .” It had a recipe for Olives in Pastry. The pastry was made from flour, butter, and hard cheese. No measures given. Once mixed, you take a small chunk of pastry and form it around a stuffed green olive. Then bake until crisp. My dough was too crumbly to hold a shape around the olive so, with great trepidation, I added a little water. I was a very young housewife new to cooking. These were one of the best recipes! So tasty! I make them for church potlucks all the time. I just don’t tell them they come from “The Cocktail Hour”! Learning to work without a recipe is one of the greatest gifts you give to your audience. Thank you!
I adore this challenge because it addresses a specific problem I think everybody faces: buying up several new cans of *something* that looks tasty or is a fantastic deal, only to have it once and decide it's really not to our liking. And then the rest of the cans sit forlornly on the shelf for months, even years, until we finally work up the gumption to finally do something with them.
Hey shrimp I just wanted to say that I’ve been going through the hardest time in my life recently and your videos are really what’s kept me going seeing a new upload pop up from you is the most exciting thing in the world you are funny and entertaining and I love the educational nature of your videos I cannot thank you enough for the endless joy your videos have brought me 💜
Last month i had an unexpected medical bill, plus a not small vet bill, plus a hefty mechanic bills. So my budget challenge for me for this month is to not go shopping until i have used up everything i have in the pantry and in my fridge/freezer. I have a veg garden which makes this a bit easier, but it really is a good exercise to go through every so often, just to teach yourself to not be wasteful and to use everything you buy. Im in australia, so its broad bean, beetroot and swiss chard soup for lunch today. Never had that combo before. 😁
I've been doing a small scale version of the American 'pantry challenge' (where you just live off foods in your pantry or freezer for a period, basically to clear things out). It's been really helpful in using up bits and pieces that I've forgotten about. The first time that I did it, I was shocked to discover that I didn't have to shop for 10 days straight, I had that much stuff squirrelled away without realising it.
One of my favourite quotes! And I think Jill Bearup did a critique of fight scenes in that movie, that is, the fight scenes are in the movie and Jill is not, but rather analysing it from the outside
Good grief, the genius of your little spice can for camping. I've never thought of this before. I'm stealing it. When camping with small children as I do, the simple thing really can help ❤
@@dianefields6056 He made a video of when he put together this nifty little spice kit. ua-cam.com/video/oPNozsbPzpQ/v-deo.html He also made the box out of two tins and made a video of that too! ua-cam.com/video/k_BI-tCVNO8/v-deo.html
as a person who only started living on their own a few years ago I cant express how much your videos help me with my attitude towards cooking I may not be able to re-create some things you cook because of ingredient availability but I noticed that cooking and figuring out what to cook (especially on a budget) became much, much more enjoyable even after long workdays I used to try to figure out the quickest meal to cook that would last the longest but now cooking is an exciting activity to do in my free time
Nice to see the designated kitchen areas in their fully-functioning glory. Perhaps it's the editing, or perhaps I'm reading too much into in to it, but in this video I can sense the optimised efficiency. I hope it's bringing you joy and the new kitchen was worth it!
Only thing missing is the apples from outside the doctors office ( I know it is no longer an option since you moved ) and the single mushroom which in 2020 you said never pay more than 3p a mushroom
I think that the "economy" on those economy burgers is one of those words that has a specific meaning in the context of food labelling. For example (and I'm just making the details up for the example) the terms "Beef Burger", "Burger", and "Economy burger" are separately defined categories within the relevant regulation, with different rules about what they can and/or must contain. Say, >80% beef for a "beef burger", between 50% and 80% for a "burger", and at least 40% beef for an "economy burger"
Not relevant to this cooking video, but I just wanted to say that as an American currently studying for a semester in Ireland, I always hear the music from these videos in my head when I'm at Tesco
I love you man. Mad love from a South African who's parents came here from Wales. Something about your ways of engineering basic food into something special reminds me of my long lost Daddo. You blow my mind in how you manage to follow your passion for nature and the basic joys in life. I've been with you for years and the little bit of your story I know is still inspiring me to stay on this planet. Thank you Mr. Shrimp
As somebody who hates food waste, I would love to see (literally 2-3 seconds long if that's what you find is all that's necessary) clips of you using the stuff from these challenges! I love making leftovers soup at the end of a week or when cleaning out the freezer or something. Just seeing a little snippet of "Hey, I was making dinner tonight and realized this little bit of leftover x would be perfect! *Plop*" would make me a very happy boy! (a small boy? no, surely...)
Watching your foraging videos makes me realize that is is a true miracle that I have survived to adulthood - as a city kid, when visiting grandparents in a small village, I would run wild, eating random green stuff growing near local stream, having absolutely no idea what was what o_O
I would have snaffled those apples!!!! It’s absolutely foraging in my book. I recently saw an apple tree over hanging a car park and collected loads of windfalls and made chutney, jam, apple tart and a huge apple crumble.
I’ll never go so far as foraging to eat, I just don’t trust my eyes enough. But these foraging and plant-identification videos have been a beautiful introduction to a new hobby, thank you! The hand-drawn plant-identification guides are so beautifully-drawn. If you ever find yourself in Inverness, Leaky’s Bookshop has a large collection of original, early 19th century botany drawings for sale in their collection. Some of them quite reasonably-priced for beautiful objects from a long time ago.
I do love watching your videos. They were a real help to my family in 2020/21/22/23. You’re about the only channel my husband & I both enjoy. Thank you. The occasional ‘side quest’ in the future would be most welcome.
I keep my kitchen well-stocked too. I always have some "just in case" ingredients so if i get snowed in or it gets close to payday and I'm broke, i can make a substantial, satisfying meal. Spices, legumes, and grains can make a huge difference on your worst days.
I really like the one cheat idea, long as you aren't using it to just screw the whole challenge and order a big mac or whatever it just allows you to make nicer things and be more creative
Easily my favourite channel on UA-cam! Nothing ever doesn’t interest me at all! Keep it up Mr Shrimp! Long time viewer here and you always bring joy to my day!
I remember having a similar thought while Watching Mr. Shrimp in my high school days. Since living on my own I can confirm that following this philosophy makes cooking and grocery shopping endlessly rewarding, although unfortunately the realities of life sort of necessitate prioritizing convenience over creativity a lot of the time...
I just love your videos so much, especially the cooking challenges. Your voice and demeanor calm me and I enjoy listening to your videos in the background of my day to day life ! ❤️❤️ please keep making videos for a long time 🥰
I liked this side quest! I often struggle with what to do with the random ingredients in my fridge and pantry when I really don't feel like going to the supermarket. This provided a little inspiration!
Skip the foraging? Why are you here if you'd skip the foraging?! Ofc in the Shrimp tradition do as you please, but there's no way I'll be skipping 😊. Thanks for the content.
I often skip the foraging unfortunately, the handheld camera makes me nauseous. That means I often skip nature walks and the excelent gravel survey series
While I believe that Mr Shrimp's videos are excellent, his person fills me with such unspeakable rage that I cannot be trusted not to do harm to myself or others. As such I have to skip any sections in which I am worried he may appear.
@@lunab541 i never skip the foraging, its my favourite bit, but i sometimes have to skip beach scenes as it causes anxiety, cant really explain why, im not afraid of the beach, i just have some kind of undiagnosed anxiety disorder and all sorts of odd things can trigger it.
Great to see the use of fresh veggies from the garden! Here I've been juicing apples like there is no tomorrow! 250kg apples from a single tree. What a great year! Plenty of apples for both hard cider and pasteurized juice with lots of apple pie!
When you were going through the rules I just kinda mumbled "god, I love this channel", so I thought I would say it out loud: "I love this channel". Thank you for providing great and thoughtful videos.
Yeah, I think most people who have apple trees in situations like that would be fine with people taking the fallers. It's clear nobody was collecting them up.
Loved the entire video but especially the pizza segment - this is genuinely one of the most authentic pizzas. It annoys me how hoity toity people get about pizza nowadays, when it’s a dish that predates tomatoes and other ingredients it is associated with nowadays. Original pizzas were often just flatbreads with fermented fish, or even rose sugar and such - „neapolitan pizza” was basically just an invention because tourists didn’t like other authentic pizzas. If you ever have dates, definitely try putting them on pizza with some meat - delicious. One of my favorite pizzas is also butter instead of sauce with just a bit of sharp cheese and good quality mushrooms.
In US midwest farm country the thorny plant is called jimson weed. In fertile soil it can grow several feet tall and branched like a tree even in a short growing season. The stem/trunk is hollow but the outer part is very tough. Each of the 'fruits contain a huge number of seeds distributed as the pod splits into segmented parts.
I saw a container of "Yayla Kaymaklı Yogurt" (a Turkish brand) on your counter. There was "Greek Yogurt" in your refrigerator. Turkey and Greece are two countries that are constantly at odds with each other, and even though they have had wars in their past, I think they would be good neighbors. They also argue with each other about food all the time. Since both countries have shared a common geography in their past, it is natural that they are similar in terms of food culture. I will not ask any questions. I just wanted to write a comment like this. Also, if I remember correctly, 1.5 years ago, you made "Lentil Soup" after the earthquakes in Turkey. I was also someone who lived in the epicenter of that earthquake. When you shared something like this to attract attention, my eyes filled with tears. Thank you.
I was actually thinking recently it could be fun to do a challenge where you make do with what you have on the day you'd usually go grocery shopping (kind of a making what you have stretch just a little further than it's intended to). This side quest is pretty similar to that, and it looks like a success. Glad Eva liked the toast, that's the most important of course!
Always watch, ever since the 1 pound videos were around. Its always so interesting how different you store stuff there. Sometimes wish it was possible to do foraging around here
thank you for the explanation of land sharing - it's so foreign (in both literal and figurative ways) to many anericans particularly. it's nice to imagine how minds are being opened about different ways of life, and one can only hope those minds continue to wonder how to make life better for themselves and their communities outside of their national norms
Mike, I just love your videos, and I especially love the plan for this one. I haven't even finished watching it and I already know I'll enjoy it. It's like a special Easter egg video for your regular viewers with all the recurring characters: One-ion, girthy carrots, foraging, weird stuff in a can redemption, cooking challenge, your spice kit, weird bready things... Yay!
The perfect video to watch while I make and enjoy some giant puffball cutletts! I should probably thank you Mr. Shrimp, since you are partially responsible for me now enjoying foraged delights on a regular!
I, for one, would love to see a Red Campion survey next year. You sold me by pointing out that gorgeous vivid pink color that doesn’t really show on camera. What a great color.
I like how even though this was a significantly easier challenge, in the spirit of the challenge you still made something interesting and experimented with the ingredients.
"When I kneaddddd you...." We defnitely "knead" you Atomic Shrimp - you never fail to raise flagging spirits and help even seasoned cooks and fledgling foragers find something new to try out...I'm very envious of your prolific tomato crop. Remind me to get my raised planters primed for some tom growing action next year! Bravo on the pizza - there's Definitely a place for cheddar on a pizza
It's all about creativity in the kitchen, isn't it? People who cook for pleasure generally will manage better than those of us who...well, don't find pleasure in cooking. I do envy the abundance of tomatoes!
You’ve done a vegan challenge before, perhaps an allergen free challenge or something. A suggestion for a future challenge could be only getting things from the ‘free from’ section (or equivalent) of the supermarket and nowhere else. A budget may not be suitable as the options are already limited, but it could be in the style of ‘Just buy the cheap-ish things’.
Here are some things that this video has prompted me to research: - The burgers are no longer made in Yorkshire, possibly now in Corby; - Comparing the ingredient list of the current tinned burgers with the version in the previous AS video, the main difference seems to be that pork/chicken connective tissue is not mentioned in the newer version; and, - Based on the Bank of England Inflation Calculator, the burgers should now cost £1.30 rather than £1.50.
i am sure i've said this is another comment but i'll say it again, it is so fascinating watching your forage work as an american fan of warrior cats (which takes place in what i now Know is the uk). between the completely different region and the fact that i don't live super close to much wildlife anyhow, seeing so many names of plants i recognize On Camera is almost like finding out dragons actually do exist 😂 as someone else once said in your comment section, to an american, your content is just subtly exotic in the regional differences and i Eat It Up everytime!! i had a terrible day at work today and just your voice has already calmed me down so much. i love and appreciate your content shrimp 💛💛
The randon Robin Hood Prince of Theives quote made me smile from ear to ear. It's one of my all time favourite lines from any film, and it was beautifully delivered by the great Alan Rickman, a wonderful pretend villan, who saved that film from Kevin Costner and Christian Slaters terrible 'English' acceents. Great video as always Mike, thank you
I used to love tinned burgers when I was a kid. I haven't seen them in the shops for years. When our family hit hard times, my mother had to get a job to make ends meet. I became a latch key kid, so stuff in tins was ideal for me to get a hot meal that didn't take any skills to prepare.
I appreciate always having a stocked pantry. Many years ago, after my divorce, I was also in a place where money was scarce. But being able to put a meal on the table always seemed to make me feel better about my situation. My daughter and I never went hungry. We might have eaten some "unique" meals, but we never went without. To this day, my pantry and freezer are always well-stocked, which really served me well in early 2020.
I always thought that when a dog licks their lip after being fed, thats THANK YOU! In canine. Eva said thank you after the morsel of 'pasty'. Love the long vids, and all the others, as well.
Please look into mallow leaves in the context of levantine cuisine. They are boiled and blended then served with chicken and rice, often a bit of crispy pita and onion/vinegar toppings
I'm with you on the cooking garden tomatoes bit. We've had a really good harvest year here too and we ended up making tomato sauce with the last harvest just as a way to use up the tomatoes. It actually has been turning out really useful having unseasoned tomato sauce around, we've already got plenty of use from it, made a lovely pasta sauce for some mushroom raviolis just this week.
That was fascinating, you really do have an amazing ability to make up recipes, I wouldn't have the faintest idea where to start! You mentioned the length of the video, I was shocked to see how long it is, it didn't seem to be half that length!
Love your little garden. My greenhouse went absolutely nuts with cherry tomatoes this year, and my 12 yo loves them its the highlight of his day to go and pick some and eat them.
I really enjoyed this. I love the idea of using less than perfect ingredients ("economy" burgers) and making interesting, unexpected dishes out of them. I'd love to see more of these side-quest challenges using other Weird Stuff in a Can entries - good, bad and indifferent ones.
I like your new kitchen! also very nice looking tomatoes, my tomato batch kindoff didn't happen. but the herbs bloomed this year! just made oil out of the rest fresh ones because winterfrost. Also I'm trying to grow a avocado tree with two little ones, I'm going to mutilate them a lot. trying to make a big intertwined bonsai from them.
Been watching Your videos for years now. I was always fascinated by the challenges You do. You insipred me so many times, to try new things and be "innovative". Its been a year since I purchased an air fryer and honestly I make 90% of my food in that. It would be interesting to combine a 5 pounds challenge with an air fryer.
Great video thank you Shrimpy. Fry off Mallow leaves in Olive Oil with lots of garlic and chilli if you want to. Place on toast with a fried egg on top yummy. The big leaves you can use to wrap things in and the root is what they used to make Marshmallow out of. Flowers are pretty in salads and the seeds are round, people call them cheese wheels because they are round, taste slightly mushroomy. I wasn’t overly keen but might experiment more with them 👍
*Afterthoughts & Addenda*
*Root Vegetable* - the greenish-buff knobbly vegetable in the fridge is celeriac - same species of plant as celery, but developed to form a large root. Tastes a bit like parsnip, but also has its own distinct flavour. Very good for soups.
*All your sockets are switched on! With nothing plugged in!* - Yes, they are. On purpose. The switches are not primarily a safety feature (some socket designs just don't have them. Safety features aren't usually optional). The various (indeed, many) other actual safety features of the sockets and plugs make this safe to do.
The switches are a _convenience_ feature - allowing an appliance to be fully powered off without unplugging it; for example my kitchen mixer has a bright LED on the front which remains on even when the device is not in use; the automatic nightlight in the hallway sometimes comes on in the daytime, in dingy overcast weather; when I go away for a week, I typically shut down my NAS, but it has 'recover after power outage' features that might power it back on if there was a momentary power outage; the switches on the sockets exist primarily for this reason; to isolate the power without unplugging.
So you are more likely to see them in the 'off' position when something *is* plugged in.
@@AtomicShrimp thank you for the reply. It was just more ocd rather than safety concerns. If it were my kitchen I would have to have them all in the same position. I quess we all have our quirks... Can openers and the way we cut toast🤔 looking forward to your next video 👍
That’s right! My TV got mind of its own lately, switches on itself, and scared life out of me. So I keep it plugged in but switch off socket to avoid that happening.
The rest of my sockets pretty much as yours, some on, some off. Never thought about it, to be honest…
@@dangibbons7732 Several people asked the same or similar question, so you're not alone!
Worth noting that switched outlets are mostly only designed for isolation, not as service switches. So using them to repeatedly make/break under load will result in them arcing out. The switch on the appliance is intended and rated for routine use.
@@marinahe4907 Is it a modern TV controlled by software? I would not put it past the advertiser-driven makers of that software to remotely switch it on and play adverts at you when they feel you haven't seen enough adverts.
Only 2 minutes in and already we've got, a girthy carrot, oneion and the travelling spice kit. Mr Shrimp with these returning characters you're really spoiling us.
Always nice to see girthy carrot
@@redacculous Made my day!
It's Mr Shrimp and his JRPG party
Thanks to Mike I now always have to grin when I see particularly large specimens of fruit or vegetables in the store.
girthy carrot best reoccurring side character in the shrimpiverse
When Tolkien was figuring out who and what Hobbits were about, he was thinking of guys like you chief. Respect.
You may be more right than you think. Go back to the mid 19th century, and imagine a caricature of a cottage dweller in this part of the country. They would be even more self-sufficient then people today, partly living off the land in addition to whatever trade he plied.
Hey Shrimp, just wanted to say that your videos make me feel a bit better. I finished my degree in England last year but had to go back home to Poland because my mentally, I wasn't doing great. I didn't know what to do with myself. I wanted to go back because of how much I love the country and the people especially but due to these mental health issues I ended up isolating myself and overstaying at home. That meant that, due to Brexit, I essentially lost the pre settled status and won't be able to live in the UK anymore. Your videos remind me of walking around the Tesco, the nature in England and the people (like you, you're a lovely lad). So yeah, thank you! (Also, admittedly I never cared about plants, mushrooms and such but now, thanks to you I find it quite interesting.)
I don't know you, but I miss you! Trying to put politics aside, Brexit was a disaster for us all coming together and travelling freely, and the UK owes a huge debt to Poland for their bravery and help during the war, I hope you can come back one day, when all this hate is over xxx
@@Fluttermoth Well said...although you're more optimistic than I am regarding hate ever being over with in the UK. Too many higher ups actively cultivating it.
I also love walking and would like to find mushrooms, I use a cane now. Don't get discouraged, politicians come and go. You'll get to be where you need to be. Stay healthy and keep watching this down-to-earth man and his exploration of our would one can or pebble at a time.
@@FluttermothNo hate whatsoever from my side. Yes, it sucks but that's politics. Just happened at an unfortunate time for me. All the Brits that I've met were incredible people, including my ex who was from Yorkshire (best accent, but I'm biased). I'm trying to get myself together and I think Ireland is the next destination. Eventually I would love to end up in England again. Poland is doing better than ever and I would say that it's probably way cheaper than the UK and Ireland but I just love the language, architecture, nature and the people way too much to stay here. In the meantime, I'll keep watching Shrimp.
Hopefully your mental health is better now. You're probably way better off in Poland than here to be honest.
I won't go into politics but the UK isn't the best place in 2024.
I've started getting a box of second grade produce every couple weeks. Thing is, I don't get to choose the produce - they just give me what they've got. I think im a pretty decent cook for a young person (which is to say, I can follow a recipe). But ive been embodying your spirit more when they give me weird combinations of produce I don't know what to do with. You are a lovely role model, mr shrimp
As a Cornish lass, born and bred, you can make a pasty out of anything! I 100% support your right to put whatever stuff in there you can/feel like! I will also confess to having made 'proper' Cornish pasties with chopped up, frozen burgers once or twice; in my defence, my kids requested pasties, and I was poor and a single mum, I had to to make and do, and the meat is the expensive bit!! They actually didn't come out too badly, all things considered :)
P.S; I also get VERY annoyed with people looking for 'authentic' recipes for what is, basically, peasant food. When you're poor, you swap out ingredients for what's cheapest, available, or even just what your family prefers. There are no 'canonical' recipes for things like pasties, pizzas, hotpots etc!
That was wonderfully put.
Last para, 100% agree. The ability to knock together something tasty with what you have rather than being 'unable' to make this or that dish because you don't have xyz is far better than being a food snob 😂
Very well said….though as a Cornish lad myself, the sight of carrot going into a pasty did send a shiver down my spine 😄
It's funny, my parents are both from poor/working class families, and they have *strong* opinions about what does and doesn't go in specific family recipes, down to specific brands and sizes of cans. It isn't even a belief that the expensive stuff is just better or whatever; it's "we have 7-ounce cans of diced chilis but I need 4-ounce cans of whole chilis to put in the blender to make your grandma's taco sauce."
@@roecocoa Italian?
I love the quote “it’s not burning it’s just in time” it would be cool if you did a cooking change where Jenny picked your ingredients to cook with like master chef but master shrimp
Can cook, will cook?
@@JohnR_ytbe Can cook, will travel.
MASTER SHRIMP i love it!
Ooh that would be cool
One time in an old cookbook, I found a chapter called, “The Cocktail Hour .” It had a recipe for Olives in Pastry. The pastry was made from flour, butter, and hard cheese. No measures given. Once mixed, you take a small chunk of pastry and form it around a stuffed green olive. Then bake until crisp. My dough was too crumbly to hold a shape around the olive so, with great trepidation, I added a little water. I was a very young housewife new to cooking. These were one of the best recipes! So tasty! I make them for church potlucks all the time. I just don’t tell them they come from “The Cocktail Hour”! Learning to work without a recipe is one of the greatest gifts you give to your audience. Thank you!
I adore this challenge because it addresses a specific problem I think everybody faces: buying up several new cans of *something* that looks tasty or is a fantastic deal, only to have it once and decide it's really not to our liking. And then the rest of the cans sit forlornly on the shelf for months, even years, until we finally work up the gumption to finally do something with them.
If i do that i just take the spares to a food bank
@@thekingwhostitches My usual go-to is some kind of casserole. With the right ingredients, a good casserole can hide many sins.
"This video is longer than usual' yet I would watch your videos no matter how long they are. Thank you for the wonderful content ❤❤
I'm old fashioned and I prefer long-form youtube videos, 30+ minutes. Atomic Shrimp makes particularly relaxing videos.
College life feels like this sometimes
I once went a whole week making all kinds of onion rings. Some of them weren't even made from onions
😂
how did you make them? i imagine you weren't deep frying on the regular in college
Sooo, nonion rings?
🤣🤣
Hey shrimp I just wanted to say that I’ve been going through the hardest time in my life recently and your videos are really what’s kept me going seeing a new upload pop up from you is the most exciting thing in the world you are funny and entertaining and I love the educational nature of your videos I cannot thank you enough for the endless joy your videos have brought me 💜
I hope things chill out for you and get easier soon
The hardest time so far.
Last month i had an unexpected medical bill, plus a not small vet bill, plus a hefty mechanic bills. So my budget challenge for me for this month is to not go shopping until i have used up everything i have in the pantry and in my fridge/freezer. I have a veg garden which makes this a bit easier, but it really is a good exercise to go through every so often, just to teach yourself to not be wasteful and to use everything you buy. Im in australia, so its broad bean, beetroot and swiss chard soup for lunch today. Never had that combo before. 😁
Hope you feel better soon!
How did the soup turn out. It looked like a tasty combo
I've been doing a small scale version of the American 'pantry challenge' (where you just live off foods in your pantry or freezer for a period, basically to clear things out). It's been really helpful in using up bits and pieces that I've forgotten about. The first time that I did it, I was shocked to discover that I didn't have to shop for 10 days straight, I had that much stuff squirrelled away without realising it.
Cooking sidequest, foraging, AND weird stuff in a can redemption all at once? You're spoiling us Shrimp! 🥰
“Why a spoon, cousin? Why not an axe?” “Because it's DULL, you twit. It'll hurt more” (from Robin Hood Prince of Thieves 1991) .
Alan Rickman, we miss you!
Thanks - I was wondering about that.
I did wonder!
i wondered too, and now im a bit disappointed in myself, that was my fave movie as a kid
One of my favourite quotes!
And I think Jill Bearup did a critique of fight scenes in that movie, that is, the fight scenes are in the movie and Jill is not, but rather analysing it from the outside
Good grief, the genius of your little spice can for camping. I've never thought of this before. I'm stealing it. When camping with small children as I do, the simple thing really can help ❤
It must have been very satisfying finding the container that housed those containers so snugly.
@@dianefields6056 He made a video of when he put together this nifty little spice kit. ua-cam.com/video/oPNozsbPzpQ/v-deo.html
He also made the box out of two tins and made a video of that too! ua-cam.com/video/k_BI-tCVNO8/v-deo.html
as a person who only started living on their own a few years ago I cant express how much your videos help me with my attitude towards cooking
I may not be able to re-create some things you cook because of ingredient availability but I noticed that cooking and figuring out what to cook (especially on a budget) became much, much more enjoyable even after long workdays
I used to try to figure out the quickest meal to cook that would last the longest but now cooking is an exciting activity to do in my free time
I am feeling quite down (chronic illness) and I was rewatching your old cooking challenges. I am happy to see a new video, thank you.
I do the same. Also chronic illness warrior xx
At 53:33 your onion slices in the soup say literally HI :D
Your dog is absolutely gorgeous. She makes my heart melt every time
Nice to see the designated kitchen areas in their fully-functioning glory. Perhaps it's the editing, or perhaps I'm reading too much into in to it, but in this video I can sense the optimised efficiency. I hope it's bringing you joy and the new kitchen was worth it!
i can feel how excited you are about your tomatoes and i am excited for you and with you
Only thing missing is the apples from outside the doctors office ( I know it is no longer an option since you moved ) and the single mushroom which in 2020 you said never pay more than 3p a mushroom
Oh right! I'm happy that mr shrimp lives almost next door to me now, but I do still miss those apples in his videos 😩
You finally did a challenge using tinned dog food!
😅
47:07 peak editing! it was so smooth I couldn't help laughing
I loved this challenge Mike. I think its more grounded in reality with less constraints! The "girthy carrot"does give me a grin every time. Thanks!
I feel like an over hanging apple branch is fair game!
I think that the "economy" on those economy burgers is one of those words that has a specific meaning in the context of food labelling. For example (and I'm just making the details up for the example) the terms "Beef Burger", "Burger", and "Economy burger" are separately defined categories within the relevant regulation, with different rules about what they can and/or must contain. Say, >80% beef for a "beef burger", between 50% and 80% for a "burger", and at least 40% beef for an "economy burger"
Not relevant to this cooking video, but I just wanted to say that as an American currently studying for a semester in Ireland, I always hear the music from these videos in my head when I'm at Tesco
I love you man. Mad love from a South African who's parents came here from Wales. Something about your ways of engineering basic food into something special reminds me of my long lost Daddo.
You blow my mind in how you manage to follow your passion for nature and the basic joys in life.
I've been with you for years and the little bit of your story I know is still inspiring me to stay on this planet.
Thank you Mr. Shrimp
As somebody who hates food waste, I would love to see (literally 2-3 seconds long if that's what you find is all that's necessary) clips of you using the stuff from these challenges! I love making leftovers soup at the end of a week or when cleaning out the freezer or something. Just seeing a little snippet of "Hey, I was making dinner tonight and realized this little bit of leftover x would be perfect! *Plop*" would make me a very happy boy! (a small boy? no, surely...)
Watching your foraging videos makes me realize that is is a true miracle that I have survived to adulthood - as a city kid, when visiting grandparents in a small village, I would run wild, eating random green stuff growing near local stream, having absolutely no idea what was what o_O
I would have snaffled those apples!!!! It’s absolutely foraging in my book. I recently saw an apple tree over hanging a car park and collected loads of windfalls and made chutney, jam, apple tart and a huge apple crumble.
I’ll never go so far as foraging to eat, I just don’t trust my eyes enough. But these foraging and plant-identification videos have been a beautiful introduction to a new hobby, thank you! The hand-drawn plant-identification guides are so beautifully-drawn.
If you ever find yourself in Inverness, Leaky’s Bookshop has a large collection of original, early 19th century botany drawings for sale in their collection. Some of them quite reasonably-priced for beautiful objects from a long time ago.
It takes time. Good luck with your hobby, it's tonsvof fun!
That pizza crust looked better than the one I got from a gourmet pizzeria last night. Well done!
Loved the reference, R.I.P. Alan Rickman.
I do love watching your videos. They were a real help to my family in 2020/21/22/23. You’re about the only channel my husband & I both enjoy. Thank you. The occasional ‘side quest’ in the future would be most welcome.
The motto for this serries, has been, and always will be..."Well...cause, it's what we've got..."
I keep my kitchen well-stocked too. I always have some "just in case" ingredients so if i get snowed in or it gets close to payday and I'm broke, i can make a substantial, satisfying meal. Spices, legumes, and grains can make a huge difference on your worst days.
Its good to see the cast of characters back in action. I was wondering if spice kit had retired but am glad she hasn't.
I really like the one cheat idea, long as you aren't using it to just screw the whole challenge and order a big mac or whatever it just allows you to make nicer things and be more creative
Actually the big Mac thing might be fun, just to see what he makes out of it!
did i miss it somehow, or did he not use the cheat?
@@philrobbie1670It was yeast at about 33 mins
That pizza looks great!
Shrimpception! A weird stuff in a can, foraging budget recipe video, excellent.
3:40 if watching Shrimp forage bores you, why are you still here?
Easily my favourite channel on UA-cam! Nothing ever doesn’t interest me at all! Keep it up Mr Shrimp! Long time viewer here and you always bring joy to my day!
A perfect Friday evening viewing! 🇬🇧🇮🇹🫶🏻
As a highschooler, this videos make me excited for what Ill be able to cook when (or If I manage) to move out, since Ill eat practically anything
I remember having a similar thought while Watching Mr. Shrimp in my high school days. Since living on my own I can confirm that following this philosophy makes cooking and grocery shopping endlessly rewarding, although unfortunately the realities of life sort of necessitate prioritizing convenience over creativity a lot of the time...
I just love your videos so much, especially the cooking challenges. Your voice and demeanor calm me and I enjoy listening to your videos in the background of my day to day life ! ❤️❤️ please keep making videos for a long time 🥰
The "pasty" and "pizza" were both very imaginative solutions (and looked tasty, to boot). If nothing else, you're a resourceful man!
I liked this side quest! I often struggle with what to do with the random ingredients in my fridge and pantry when I really don't feel like going to the supermarket. This provided a little inspiration!
i love the "cheating is allowed" rule😂
Skip the foraging? Why are you here if you'd skip the foraging?! Ofc in the Shrimp tradition do as you please, but there's no way I'll be skipping 😊. Thanks for the content.
I was just about to say this!
I often skip the foraging unfortunately, the handheld camera makes me nauseous. That means I often skip nature walks and the excelent gravel survey series
@@lunab541 This had never occurred to me, thanks for sharing 😉.
While I believe that Mr Shrimp's videos are excellent, his person fills me with such unspeakable rage that I cannot be trusted not to do harm to myself or others. As such I have to skip any sections in which I am worried he may appear.
@@lunab541 i never skip the foraging, its my favourite bit, but i sometimes have to skip beach scenes as it causes anxiety, cant really explain why, im not afraid of the beach, i just have some kind of undiagnosed anxiety disorder and all sorts of odd things can trigger it.
I love both foraging and cooking videos, so this was absolutely spot on. More please!
Great to see the use of fresh veggies from the garden!
Here I've been juicing apples like there is no tomorrow! 250kg apples from a single tree. What a great year!
Plenty of apples for both hard cider and pasteurized juice with lots of apple pie!
When you were going through the rules I just kinda mumbled "god, I love this channel", so I thought I would say it out loud: "I love this channel". Thank you for providing great and thoughtful videos.
The apples hanging over the fence were absolutely fair game. It's not as if you climbed over into someone's back yard and stole them.....C. H.
Yeah, I think most people who have apple trees in situations like that would be fine with people taking the fallers. It's clear nobody was collecting them up.
Loved the entire video but especially the pizza segment - this is genuinely one of the most authentic pizzas. It annoys me how hoity toity people get about pizza nowadays, when it’s a dish that predates tomatoes and other ingredients it is associated with nowadays. Original pizzas were often just flatbreads with fermented fish, or even rose sugar and such - „neapolitan pizza” was basically just an invention because tourists didn’t like other authentic pizzas. If you ever have dates, definitely try putting them on pizza with some meat - delicious. One of my favorite pizzas is also butter instead of sauce with just a bit of sharp cheese and good quality mushrooms.
Ghee butter, mushrooms and mascarpone cheese. 🤤
In US midwest farm country the thorny plant is called jimson weed. In fertile soil it can grow several feet tall and branched like a tree even in a short growing season. The stem/trunk is hollow but the outer part is very tough. Each of the 'fruits contain a huge number of seeds distributed as the pod splits into segmented parts.
I'm super intrigued to see what meals you can come up with just using things out of your garden/foraging with your travel pack of seasonings.
i really wanna pet Eva. she is a good doggo and deserves the world.
something im not sure shrimp agrees with but still.
I saw a container of "Yayla Kaymaklı Yogurt" (a Turkish brand) on your counter. There was "Greek Yogurt" in your refrigerator. Turkey and Greece are two countries that are constantly at odds with each other, and even though they have had wars in their past, I think they would be good neighbors. They also argue with each other about food all the time. Since both countries have shared a common geography in their past, it is natural that they are similar in terms of food culture.
I will not ask any questions. I just wanted to write a comment like this.
Also, if I remember correctly, 1.5 years ago, you made "Lentil Soup" after the earthquakes in Turkey. I was also someone who lived in the epicenter of that earthquake. When you shared something like this to attract attention, my eyes filled with tears. Thank you.
I was actually thinking recently it could be fun to do a challenge where you make do with what you have on the day you'd usually go grocery shopping (kind of a making what you have stretch just a little further than it's intended to). This side quest is pretty similar to that, and it looks like a success. Glad Eva liked the toast, that's the most important of course!
Always watch, ever since the 1 pound videos were around. Its always so interesting how different you store stuff there. Sometimes wish it was possible to do foraging around here
thank you for the explanation of land sharing - it's so foreign (in both literal and figurative ways) to many anericans particularly. it's nice to imagine how minds are being opened about different ways of life, and one can only hope those minds continue to wonder how to make life better for themselves and their communities outside of their national norms
Mike, I just love your videos, and I especially love the plan for this one. I haven't even finished watching it and I already know I'll enjoy it. It's like a special Easter egg video for your regular viewers with all the recurring characters: One-ion, girthy carrots, foraging, weird stuff in a can redemption, cooking challenge, your spice kit, weird bready things... Yay!
The perfect video to watch while I make and enjoy some giant puffball cutletts! I should probably thank you Mr. Shrimp, since you are partially responsible for me now enjoying foraged delights on a regular!
Oh, yum, they're like the angel cake of the fungi kingdom. I slice and fry them and freeze the excess. Lovely stuff.
I, for one, would love to see a Red Campion survey next year. You sold me by pointing out that gorgeous vivid pink color that doesn’t really show on camera. What a great color.
I like how even though this was a significantly easier challenge, in the spirit of the challenge you still made something interesting and experimented with the ingredients.
Wow! Such a useful video! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge,wisdom and humour. You nailed it! 🔨
So impressed you were able to find so many uses for all the little things you had. The dinner pizza and soup looked very good tbh.
"When I kneaddddd you...." We defnitely "knead" you Atomic Shrimp - you never fail to raise flagging spirits and help even seasoned cooks and fledgling foragers find something new to try out...I'm very envious of your prolific tomato crop. Remind me to get my raised planters primed for some tom growing action next year! Bravo on the pizza - there's Definitely a place for cheddar on a pizza
cheese stirred into beans is about the limit of my cooking abilities. appreciate the videos all the same
You taught me about the joy of improvized cooking, using what you've got, and gambling on ingredients. Thank you!
It's all about creativity in the kitchen, isn't it? People who cook for pleasure generally will manage better than those of us who...well, don't find pleasure in cooking.
I do envy the abundance of tomatoes!
Certified classic. Love this series so much, dont know what I would do if you stopped!
You’ve done a vegan challenge before, perhaps an allergen free challenge or something. A suggestion for a future challenge could be only getting things from the ‘free from’ section (or equivalent) of the supermarket and nowhere else. A budget may not be suitable as the options are already limited, but it could be in the style of ‘Just buy the cheap-ish things’.
Just Buy the Free From Things! I'll add this to the potential ideas list. Thank you!
Yes, that would be interesting. I have several food allergies and intolerances - most inconveniently dairy and soya.
really missed the cooking challenges! thank you for blessing us mr. shrimp 😋
Interesting as always. Here in Denmark i would class it as "hyggelig".😊
Here are some things that this video has prompted me to research:
- The burgers are no longer made in Yorkshire, possibly now in Corby;
- Comparing the ingredient list of the current tinned burgers with the version in the previous AS video, the main difference seems to be that pork/chicken connective tissue is not mentioned in the newer version; and,
- Based on the Bank of England Inflation Calculator, the burgers should now cost £1.30 rather than £1.50.
i am sure i've said this is another comment but i'll say it again, it is so fascinating watching your forage work as an american fan of warrior cats (which takes place in what i now Know is the uk). between the completely different region and the fact that i don't live super close to much wildlife anyhow, seeing so many names of plants i recognize On Camera is almost like finding out dragons actually do exist 😂 as someone else once said in your comment section, to an american, your content is just subtly exotic in the regional differences and i Eat It Up everytime!! i had a terrible day at work today and just your voice has already calmed me down so much. i love and appreciate your content shrimp 💛💛
I often wonder if Jenny is away when you do these videos haha
Yeah, she was visiting relatives the day I made this
The wholesomeness is great. I love these videos❤❤❤
I smile.on all of these videos. Thank you and have a great day.
I'm a big fan of making "What have I got in the house today" soups, so this is a great video, right up my alley!!
Love your videos! Love your dog! I'm pleased she had a little taste of your creative cooking.🐕
The randon Robin Hood Prince of Theives quote made me smile from ear to ear. It's one of my all time favourite lines from any film, and it was beautifully delivered by the great Alan Rickman, a wonderful pretend villan, who saved that film from Kevin Costner and Christian Slaters terrible 'English' acceents. Great video as always Mike, thank you
I used to love tinned burgers when I was a kid. I haven't seen them in the shops for years. When our family hit hard times, my mother had to get a job to make ends meet. I became a latch key kid, so stuff in tins was ideal for me to get a hot meal that didn't take any skills to prepare.
Not even a minute in, and I am already laughing like a hyena. The first two items having such an...uh...infamy already. This is brilliant!
Bonus Alan Rickman quote!
I appreciate always having a stocked pantry. Many years ago, after my divorce, I was also in a place where money was scarce. But being able to put a meal on the table always seemed to make me feel better about my situation. My daughter and I never went hungry. We might have eaten some "unique" meals, but we never went without. To this day, my pantry and freezer are always well-stocked, which really served me well in early 2020.
Your videos helped me get trough some seriusly troublesome times
I always thought that when a dog licks their lip after being fed, thats THANK YOU! In canine. Eva said thank you after the morsel of 'pasty'. Love the long vids, and all the others, as well.
Another terrific watch. Been on a rewatching spree of all the budget videos the last few weeks.
Please look into mallow leaves in the context of levantine cuisine. They are boiled and blended then served with chicken and rice, often a bit of crispy pita and onion/vinegar toppings
I'm with you on the cooking garden tomatoes bit. We've had a really good harvest year here too and we ended up making tomato sauce with the last harvest just as a way to use up the tomatoes. It actually has been turning out really useful having unseasoned tomato sauce around, we've already got plenty of use from it, made a lovely pasta sauce for some mushroom raviolis just this week.
That was fascinating, you really do have an amazing ability to make up recipes, I wouldn't have the faintest idea where to start! You mentioned the length of the video, I was shocked to see how long it is, it didn't seem to be half that length!
Love your little garden. My greenhouse went absolutely nuts with cherry tomatoes this year, and my 12 yo loves them its the highlight of his day to go and pick some and eat them.
I really enjoyed this. I love the idea of using less than perfect ingredients ("economy" burgers) and making interesting, unexpected dishes out of them. I'd love to see more of these side-quest challenges using other Weird Stuff in a Can entries - good, bad and indifferent ones.
I like your new kitchen! also very nice looking tomatoes, my tomato batch kindoff didn't happen. but the herbs bloomed this year! just made oil out of the rest fresh ones because winterfrost. Also I'm trying to grow a avocado tree with two little ones, I'm going to mutilate them a lot. trying to make a big intertwined bonsai from them.
Awesome video. I need to do something like this and clean my cupboards and fridge out.
Been watching Your videos for years now. I was always fascinated by the challenges You do. You insipred me so many times, to try new things and be "innovative". Its been a year since I purchased an air fryer and honestly I make 90% of my food in that. It would be interesting to combine a 5 pounds challenge with an air fryer.
Great video thank you Shrimpy. Fry off Mallow leaves in Olive Oil with lots of garlic and chilli if you want to. Place on toast with a fried egg on top yummy. The big leaves you can use to wrap things in and the root is what they used to make Marshmallow out of. Flowers are pretty in salads and the seeds are round, people call them cheese wheels because they are round, taste slightly mushroomy. I wasn’t overly keen but might experiment more with them 👍