Brit Reacting to American Highschoolers try British Snacks for the first time!
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- Опубліковано 11 лип 2024
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Lays is about a decade older than Walkers. In 1989 Lays bought out Walkers, but they kept the name and just switched to all Lays products to keep a connection to the UK
Lay’s was founded in 1940, Walkers was founded in 1948. Walkers was acquired by Frito-Lay, the owner of Lays, in 1989.
And now they are owned by PepsiCo.
Lays was founded in 1932
We have chocolate oranges though lol they are literally terrys imported from the uk 😂 the rest never heard of them but your chocolate oranges are imported and I think pretty common I see them at Walgreens 😂
When you said "this is such a weird option to have" about flying saucers, thats how I feel about most of the American food they pick. It's extreme, special occasion, or ill prepared.
That is how I feel when every "Brits try American Snacks" video features Goldfish.
Such a weird choice since the biggest group, by far, that eats Goldfish are toddlers!
I know there will be some smartazz who'll chime in with "um act-ually, I like Goldfish and eat them all the time" but, let's face it, That Guy is not the norm!
I don't know of any adult, who isn't the parent of small children and thus already has them conveniently on hand, who eats Goldfish. Certainly none who'd think to themself "Man, I could really go for a snack! I'm going to stop into that convience store and get some Goldfish!"
We do have dill pickle flavored chips on this side of the pond. Those chocolate oranges are nothing new either.😊
I LOVE Lays dill pickle chips! 😋
There not popular though
It seems like most foods Brits think originated in the UK, actually originated in the US and are US based companies. 🧐
Case in point: Heinz.
Yeah I laughed my ass off when I learned our C tier products are their most prized possessions lol.
Such as?
Lay's was formed in 1940, and Walker's was formed in 1946. Frito-Lay bought out Walker's in 1989. They also changed the branding to have that yellow dot & ribbon for Walker's.
In fact, Frito-Lay bought out other snack brands all over the world, and used that yellow dot & ribbon for those brands.
We have the orange chocholate here also. But its a different name. It also comes in other flavors like raspberry.
I'm in my mid thirties and had chocolate oranges since I was a kid, they're easier to find around Christmas time but candy shops usually have them year round
Lays was founded in 1932 and Walkers was founded in 1948 so Lays is older.
We have chocolate oranges. I personally love them because they don’t taste like chocolate. Usually they are on CVS store shelves around Christmas time
We absolutely have Terry's Oranges in the USA.
Most brands of potato chips (crisps) and even Pringles makes a "salt and vinegar" version and I love them. So these kids have uneducated palates.
It's fair to have "theme park" food because the Brits always talk about corn dogs and those are American "theme park food".
It's clear there's a transAtlantic difference in taste over chocolate which is probably learned. Europeans generally consider Hershey's inferior and these kids prefer it. I think European "milk chocolate" actually has more milk in it. But of course there are darker chocolates--so labeled--in both countries.
Prawn Chips are available in the US and even some Chinese Carry-Out Restaurants carry them as well! But personally I prefer Pork Rinds, which have a similar texture…
Actually, we have Terry's chocolate oranges in the U.S. also. Their delicious. I would disagree with the kid that said Hershey's is the best. It's good, but it is sometimes too grainy with sugar.
Actually Dill Pickle flavor chips (crisps) are a very popular flavor in the US, because they taste like the sour dill pickles we’re used to
There really isn’t any other “pickled” flavor that we put in crisps, though
We also have Salt & Vinegar flavor, which took direct inspiration from the UK I believe
Shrimp chips are actually pretty good if it’s done right. Classic Asian snack. It’s a little disc but when fried it puffs up into a shape. Sprinkled with shrimp flavoring it’s a perfect little snack. White rabbit is good but kinda old school. It’s just really a type of candy made from rice, sweet and melts in your mouth plus you can eat the little clear wrapper as it’s actually made of rice too. Haw flakes are always fun to snack on especially after taking some very bitter medicine. Basically little disks made from the haw fruit which is a rare fruit found in China but isn’t grown in the states. It’s a little sweet and slightly astringent to wash bad tastes from a mouth. They aren’t for everyone as they can cause some allergic reactions if you take too much. But dry fruit of various types were a mainstay as my grandparents lived with us for some time and they loved them for some odd reason. I never really understood why because often they would be sour by the time we eat them. Also candied seeds, nuts, and other things were around during holidays as it was part of a offering for the new year (ceremonial really)
I’m in Lafayette Louisiana. Every Christmas and Easter my wife has me buy Terry’s Chocolate Orange. She gets the milk chocolate and I get the dark chocolate.
*Brits Try Everything at the Texas Rodeo* !!!
We have salt and vinegar chips as well as dill pickle chips but the latter are pretty hit and miss.
In the states, flying saucers have candy balls in them. You don't see them much anymore.
we have dill pickle chips. and the chocolate orange usually only comes around near christmas for some reason
Folks in Hawai'i grow up with prawn-flavored chips. I love them!
3:11
"Is Pickle Not A Flavoring In The United States?"
Lay's actually did produce a Dill Pickle flavored potato chips, or crisps, as you'd call them in England.
They'd made some mixed reviews from American consumers:
Some, such as myself, actually like them, and others aren't that keen on them
We have the orange chocolate here. I love it! It’s the same brand and everything. I usually see it around Christmas
We have prawn and shrimp chips, especially if you have an Asian market in your town... I'm 44, live in southern CA, and grew up on them...
17MAR24: Lays bought Walkers in 2005, that is why they look so similar.
1989
we also have flying saucers but like you said they are like carnival treats
These kids would probably know Flying Saucers as either Necco wafers or Wacky Wafers here in the US. They're usually only given out Halloween. Only ours doesn't have anything in the middle.
We have chocolate oranges
Lays has been arpund a decade longer than Walkers.
I bet I would've loved those first chips because I love vinegar and salty chips.
We have Dill Pickle and Salt&Vinegar chips. I like them.
Lays was definitely first. They also own Walkers.
Lays was first it was established in 1932 and walkers was established in 1948.
terry's chocolate oranges are also in canada tbh so i have had them
We have
Chocolate oranges here can find in walgreens
Chocolate oranges are everywhere in the u.s. surprised they don’t seem to know them
Terrys chocolate Oranges are available in the states.
Damn I’d love to try all that stuff! Looks cool! I’m from Texas and I love your videos man you’re so handsome and your accident is so cool! I could listen to you talk all day! Lmao 🫠🥴
From the U.S., I believe we also had one time referred to certain types of what we generically call 'cookies' as 'biscuits'. How many of our most famous cookies are or were produced by Nabisco?...Nabisco is short for the 'NAtional BIScuit COmpany'.
Brits think american chocolate tastes like vomit because we put butyric acid in it. Butyric acid is what makes vomit taste like vomit. So basically Brits think it tastes like vomit because they’re tasting actual vomit. Americans don’t taste it because we’re used to having American chocolate from such a young age.
Lay’s chips were first. Potato chips or crisps what y’all call were invented in the u.s
Originated in the UK according to Wikipedia
@@NosyFellayou’re using fucking Wikipedia of all places. A ten second google search will tell you that potato chips were invented in Saratoga Lake, NY. It invented by a black and native man
I saw a vidoo of an American doing a whight gain challenge you may won't to take a look
I love
Salt n vinegar and also dill and I’m American 🤷♂️
American here: I actually like pickle and onion flavored things. I love the dill pickle flavored lays potato chips, especially with deli sandwiches. But shrimp flavored things make me want to gag because of the smell.
We have those chocolate oranges. I prefer raspberry with chocolate but the orange is good
walkers created in 1948, lays created 1932 lays bought out walkers years ago
We dont have flying saucers hersheys is cheap chocolate i ptefer Ghirardelli
Cadbury is so different in the states as Hershey’s beat them but made a deal that only American chocolate can go into Cadbury in the states. While European chocolate is exclusive to Europe. The only difference really is the milk powder and the dairy products that are in there. Hershey’s itself doesn’t use dairy products instead it’s mostly straight cocoa just with some preservatives and just what level of cocoa solids to oil is the end product.
Dairy products must by law be pasteurized which uses the heat to temperature fast method killing every microbe good, bad, and indifferent which doesn’t leave much room for flavor. Europe prefers the slow heat to temperature method leaving the good and indifferent microbes left also it does taste better. A company called fair life has been experimenting with the European pasteurization method on organic milk and has been doing well with the product as technically it’s still pasteurized. I do get a slight stomach churning from it but it’s fine as it goes away after a couple of hours. It’s likely I’m just not used to it yet.
But European branded chocolates in the US certainly aren't limited to Cadbury. There are all sorts of Dutch, Swiss and other brands available here and they are imported, not made in US and just using the European brand name. I suppose they could be specially made for the US market but I don't think so.
7:35
They're describing the Flying Saucers as tasting like Communion Wafers???
WTH
I wish Jolly would show the American high schooler's candy bars, and by candy bars I mean Crunchies specifically lol. There is nothing like them in the US. Trying one was a complete revelation to me and I occasionally will like, order a fuckton online and spread them out over the span of a month or something. Game changing chocolate right there.
Cruchies US equivalent is Butterfinger. only difference is butterfinger is peanut butter flavor and crunchies is honey flavored
@@mycocorleone4771 Naw man, not remotely equivalent. For one, taste is a pretty huge part of eating lol. Peanut butter isn't exactly a subtle flavor and is dramatically different from honey. For two, crunchies have a hard snap to them while butterfingers are less stiff, more crumbly. And as a person who enjoys peanut butter and chocolate as a combo, I've only recently switched from disliking butterfingers to finding them alright. Never had a question with crunchies.
Ironically Australia got similar to crunchies with violet crumbles. I stand by what I said for the US.
@@janedoe885 we also have "sponge candy" in the us althou its more of northeast and midwest candy and not all over the us. it is litterally the same as crunchies
@@mycocorleone4771 I have never seen these before in my life but after googling them will accept them as a US equivalent lmao. Not widely available throughout the country/I could not go into a random grocery or drug store and find them, but they have the spirit.
You are right on the head with the money with the Twiglets. The smell and taste repulsed people.
Side note: I miss salt and vinegar flavored crisps. Chocolate oranges are also my top fave to eat.
Walkers came out 1948 while Lays came out in 1940😊
Lays was founded in 1932
I love salt and vinegar chips, and my wife will not touch them.
Yes, pickles are a flavor here, but as a kid, I hated it too. I gagged badly trying vinegar chips as a teen. Now I love them as an adult, lol. it's a mature taste tbh, especially for Americans.
Not me, I always loved em😋
Lays 1940
Walkers 1948
Lays 1932
Where is this high school?
Lay's was first.
Hersheys is the WORST chocolate in the entire world (and I found out why)
Yup. It literally has butyric acid in it which is what vomit is mostly made up of.
American food is so full of chemicals that in California almost all fast food has a cancer warning at the drive through.
Everything in California has a cancer warning. It's become a joke. Nobody takes it seriously. When it comes to food, not much is more cancer-causing than the charred surface of "grilled" foods and that may be the reason for the "drive-through" warning. You want safer food: Steam or boil it. If you know anything about chemistry, when you read the list of "chemicals" in food, you are a lot less disturbed by the scary sounding names. Do the terms "heterocyclic aromatic amines (HCAs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)" scare you? Those are what grilling produces on foods and yes, they do cause cancer when given to rats in high doses (hence the CA labeling).
@@BTinSF We do take the cancer warning seriously and buy from people we know and buy from people who's kids name the animals even though they aren't supposed to. Cancer comes from the torture of animals passed through meat in many cases. The real ones know.
@@taylorcronin955 If you’re going to take those warnings seriously, then you ought to learn why they are there and it’s not because of how the living animals were treated (with the exception of what they were fed or medicated with). And in the case of fast food it’s not because of exotic additives. I’m all for ethical treatment of animals because I like animals, not because putting them in small cages is going fo give me cancer. But you’re entitled to eat what and how you want. Just don’t expect the majority of people to adopt your rather extreme view.
@@BTinSF you eat stressed out cancer cows long enough you get cancer. It's just science.
@@BTinSF we gave you actual signs. It's Natural selection now.