American Reacts to Foods Only Found in the UK (Part 2)

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  • Опубліковано 27 січ 2025

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  • @marygiles2823
    @marygiles2823 Рік тому +114

    I know Tyler never reads the comments, but for the rest of you, mushy peas are NOT traditionally flavoured with mint. They tried a a fancy London gourmet version. Dried marrowfat peas are boiled until mushable, stirred until creamed and seasoned with salt and pepper.

    • @SimonNemeth
      @SimonNemeth Рік тому +9

      It seems to me a lot of people are thinking of fresh mint when in actual fact you'd mix a blob of mint sauce in to your mushy peas. It's quite common here in Yorkshire with your pie and peas or fish and chips.

    • @williambailey344
      @williambailey344 Рік тому +2

      Absolutely spot on 😊

    • @tinawells2082
      @tinawells2082 Рік тому +7

      Up North, we usually mix vinegar into our mushy peas 😃
      Love the idea of mixing in mint sauce, though. I'll have to try that 😊

    • @sheilagalvin9342
      @sheilagalvin9342 Рік тому +3

      Add bicarbonate of soda to the water when soaking overnight - you're right he makes the same mistakes all the time because he never reads the comments.

    • @DaveBartlett
      @DaveBartlett Рік тому +2

      Plus, I wonder if Tyler knows that they're talking about garden mint, and not peppermint or spearmint!

  • @webbzz91
    @webbzz91 Рік тому +227

    Cornwall is a county not a city.

  • @tomlynch8114
    @tomlynch8114 Рік тому +86

    Mushy Peas aren’t just regular peas that have been mashed up. They’re dried Marrowfat Peas (peas that have been left to mature and dry out, making them bigger than normal peas) that have been left to soak overnight in water with baking soda. They’re then boiled until softened and have become mushy. They’re often served as a side dish alongside Fish and Chips so appear a lot in Fish and Chip shops.

    • @TheCraftyflo
      @TheCraftyflo Рік тому +1

      Hot pork pie, with mushy peas, gravy and mint sauce! Heaven on a plate!

    • @HeveaTHeart
      @HeveaTHeart 6 місяців тому +4

      Ive never had mushy peas with mint in, ( I'm English). I have had minted garden peas but not mushy

    • @parker2k1
      @parker2k1 6 місяців тому +4

      You don’t put mint in mushy peas! That’s crushed minted peas he had

    • @Janescheekychickens
      @Janescheekychickens 4 місяці тому

      Mushy peas are disgusting and they do not have mint in them. You add a little mint to lovely fresh garden peas drained and soaked in butter to have with new potatoes which are amazing boiled and drained then soaked in a ton of butter. With a salad

    • @Janescheekychickens
      @Janescheekychickens 4 місяці тому

      I'm British and the pasties that I heard of were invented in the old days for farmers in the fields. Who would have savoury meat filling at one end and sweet filling in the other end, making a dinner and pudding in one... I have no idea if any of these two versions of history are true for the pasty... But I don't like modern pasties as I do not like minced (ground) meats of any kind. And modern pasties don't have meat filling at one end and sweet at the other end...

  • @ulyssesthirteen7031
    @ulyssesthirteen7031 Рік тому +88

    Tyler, the people you are reacting to don't seem to know much about British food given they've spent so long here. Yesterday's video was riddled with strange takes as was today's. I'm beginning to wonder whether they only ate at McDonald's whilst they were here. Cornwall isn't a city as was mentioned in the video The 'toxins' mentioned with the miners were either coal dust or residue from tin mining. In all my 55 years I've never heard of nor eaten minty mushy peas. Mushy peas generally have a different taste and consistency than other types of peas. They tend not to be mushed-up garden peas but rather bigger, older marrowfat peas. Americans tend not to have cheese shops per se as shelves full of spray cans aren't that visually appealing! Cheese culture in Britain and Europe tends to be a different than in America. Also, I find it weird that you describe both cooked pastry and cooked batter as 'bready'. Like a lot of viewers, I wish you'd open up a PO box and start experiencing British things first hand.

    • @Paul-hl8yg
      @Paul-hl8yg Рік тому +22

      Ive mentioned these two before in Tylers posts. . Every time i see that Tyler is reacting to this couple, i want to switch off. They get so many things wrong & are advertising UK things wrongly. Toad in 'A' hole? They don't research first. 🇬🇧

    • @ChrisReactor1
      @ChrisReactor1 Рік тому +15

      Yes. Cornwall is a county not a city. It looks like they’ve had limited experience with some of the dishes.

    • @Paul-hl8yg
      @Paul-hl8yg Рік тому +17

      @@ChrisReactor1 Limited knowledge on the UK in general i find. I'm not too impressed with those two tbh, they spread false info on many subjects. 🇬🇧

    • @Escapee5931
      @Escapee5931 Рік тому +8

      ​@@Paul-hl8ygI think they lived in the UK for a short while, then moved to France. They continued to do British videos though, as they get more views.

    • @thecraggrat
      @thecraggrat Рік тому +5

      A couple of things...Tin ore is associated with arsenic, so if your hands have dirt from tin mining on them there is a good chance that you are eating arsenic if it gets on your food.
      If you haven't eaten mushy peas with mint sauce then you are not from the midlands, it is THE way to eat them. If you ever visit Nottingham and go to Goose Fair (one of the oldest fairs in the UK) you will see food vans selling mushy peas and mint sauce. Batchelors who sell tinned mushy peas even sell a variety that is mushy peas with mint! So something that is generally available across the UK!
      Americans are expanding their appreciation for cheese, there are now cheese shops that will sell cheese from round the world, though Americans are making cheese at small local creameries now too, which are really quite good. Unfortunately the majority of imported cheese tends to be French and Italian, which British cheese having a more restricted selection with some questionable cheeses like Wensleydale with cranberries or white stilton with apricots...without selling the actual unadulterated cheese, which winds me up. Even supermarkets have cheese counters with good selections of cheese (better than a lot in the UK which have removed deli and cheese counters recently in the battle for low prices).
      I'm hopeful the selection of British cheese will increase, but at least I can get a decent farmhouse cheddar and blue stilton (I've even had Stichelton here at a specialist cheese shop), but Leicester, Derby, Double Gloucester, Cheshire, Wensleydale, Caerphilly, Lincoln Poacher, Lancashire, and all the rest of the popular cheeses, let alone the smaller craft cheeses, are AWOL..

  • @liamwake557
    @liamwake557 Рік тому +73

    Yorkshire pudding is the EXACT same ingredients as a pancake but just cooked in the oven instead of frying the ingredients👍🏻

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Рік тому +4

      Is it? I didn't know that! Mind you I just buy Aunt Bessie's ready made Yorkshire Puddings and Iceland ready made pancakes anyway.

    • @carlhartwell7978
      @carlhartwell7978 Рік тому +4

      @@B-A-L Absolutely the same. Also for batter, such as you would find in a chip shop. Basically equal parts plain flour (though I have seen recipes call for self raising), eggs and water/milk (sometimes it's a mixture of milk, water and cream but essentially whichever liquid it's around a third of the whole mixture).

    • @lesleyneary6382
      @lesleyneary6382 Рік тому +5

      I think the American version of Yorkshire puds are called Pop-ups

    • @rach_laze
      @rach_laze Рік тому +3

      @@carlhartwell7978batter is better with beer or soda water

    • @Drengade
      @Drengade Рік тому +3

      One difference is that yorkshires generally have water in the batter, while pancakes are pure milk.
      Perfect ratio for yorkshires is 6 6 4 2.
      6oz of flour in a mixing bowl, dip in the center of the flour
      put 6oz of milk and 4oz of water in a measuring jug
      Add two large eggs to the jug
      Whisk the jug till it's all blended
      Slowly add the mix to the middle of the flour, whisking it in to form a batter, ensuring it is smooth, slowly whisk in more of the flour in the bowl whenever the batter is liquid enough.
      Then put into a preheated yorkshire pudding tray (or relatively deep cupcake tray) with a small amount of heated oil in each well, and into the oven on a fairly high heat.

  • @PythonPlusPlus
    @PythonPlusPlus Рік тому +93

    In the rest of the world, mint is also used as a savoury ingredient.

    • @DruncanUK
      @DruncanUK Рік тому +25

      True - you can't beat lamb with mint sauce!

    • @toddlerj102
      @toddlerj102 Рік тому +6

      ​@@DruncanUK can't cook lamb without it either!

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 Рік тому +13

      He's confusing Mint with Peppermint. Don't think Mint exists as a herb (or erb) in the US.

    • @SgtSteel1
      @SgtSteel1 Рік тому +1

      @@tonys1636 It must do, surely?

    • @PythonPlusPlus
      @PythonPlusPlus Рік тому +3

      @@tonys1636 Peppermint is also a herb. The mint you normally buy from stores is spearmint though.

  • @GSD-hd1yh
    @GSD-hd1yh Рік тому +69

    There are over 1000 different cheeses produced in the UK, using cow, sheep or goat's milk, produced in hard, semi-hard, soft and semi-soft varieties, often with different herbs or fruit added to alter the flavour, and names to amuse or confuse. Like Stinking Bishop, Farleigh Wallop, Gallybagger, Goldilocks, Black Eyed Susan, Lincolnshire Poacher and Yarg.
    Many are speciality cheeses, only produced locally, and sometimes from animals from just one particular farm.

    • @eviethompson9648
      @eviethompson9648 Рік тому +5

      I sell quite a few of those where I work and they are sooo nice and quite unique

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 Рік тому +4

      Love Cornish Yarg the nettles add that bit extra to it. Crusty bread and all washed down with some Nettle Tea.

    • @JohnSmith-pd1fz
      @JohnSmith-pd1fz Рік тому +1

      Lincolnshire Poacher is made a few miles from here, at one farm only and nowhere else. It is matured for several years before it is sold.

    • @eviethompson9648
      @eviethompson9648 Рік тому +1

      @@JohnSmith-pd1fz yeah that’s more than likely why my shop doesn’t get it frequently especially the smoked Lancashire poacher

    • @JohnSmith-pd1fz
      @JohnSmith-pd1fz Рік тому +1

      ++@@eviethompson9648++ I'm not sure why you would have any difficulty getting supplies of Lincolnshire Poacher cheese. Having seen some of the maturing stocks and watched lorry loads of it being take away there is definitely no shortage even given the maturity time involved. As I understand it the producers have been making it for several years and many food outlets locally include it in their menus, notably Gibraltar Point cafe as part of their excellent Ploughman's Lunch.

  • @sampeeps3371
    @sampeeps3371 Рік тому +132

    Americans can say New Hampshire correctly but for anything else they pronounce the shire at the end as if its Lord of the rings.

    • @cutex24
      @cutex24 Рік тому +10

      yes that always puzzles me

    • @gmdhargreaves
      @gmdhargreaves Рік тому +8

      Soo true, can’t get my head round it, they watch too many movies and think there documentaries probably

    • @ldarm
      @ldarm Рік тому +4

      The correct way is the Hobbit way, we just slowly got lazy over the years as with a lot of things. And no, I say it the modern way because i'm not a Hobbit

    • @anthonycarless8572
      @anthonycarless8572 Рік тому +6

      Never noticed that until now, the worchestershirshire sauce never gets old though

    • @cuttinaboot
      @cuttinaboot Рік тому +8

      The city of Cornwall

  • @peterjf7723
    @peterjf7723 Рік тому +73

    Mushy peas are made with marrowfat peas which are mature standard green peas that have been allowed to ripen and dry in the fields. They are quite different from young garden peas as they contain a high proportion of starch, giving them their signature texture. They are soaked overnight with sodium bicarbonate, and then rinsed in fresh water. Cooking the peas causing them to disintegrate and create the desired mushy texture.

    • @marygiles2823
      @marygiles2823 Рік тому +12

      Please never add sodium bicarbonate to your peas. It was added years ago to keep the peas green but it strips any vitamin c from the peas.

    • @jonathanwetherell3609
      @jonathanwetherell3609 Рік тому +6

      Mint is optional. p.s. - you can get frozen garden peas with mint oil on them.

    • @winchy162
      @winchy162 Рік тому +7

      Mint and peas go together like tomato and basil I also throw a handful of mint in with new potatoes straight out of the garden when I boiled thm

    • @kaiatherton
      @kaiatherton Рік тому +5

      logged on to say just that. they are also a Northern dish so sounds like what the couple had in London was not quite as it should be. I have seen some places that just take a potato masher to garden peas and call them Mushy Peas. You definitely add Bicarbonate Soda to the peas as you soak them over night. In fact you get two (never figured out why two) as you only need 1, tablets. Adding sugar is controversial. some swear by it, others swear it's blasphemy. Also you don't infuse with mint. It is served with Mint Sauce (mint, sugar and vinegar) as a condiment, and you add to your liking. But mint and peas are a classic pairing.

    • @jeanplunkett5580
      @jeanplunkett5580 Рік тому +2

      @@kaiatherton I never add the bi-carb to soak the peas, it’s not good, and isn’t necessary

  • @wobaguk
    @wobaguk Рік тому +22

    Stinking Bishop is named after the pear variety of the same name, which was in turn named after the farm it was grown on. Consequently, the name has nothing to do with the smelliness of the product.

  • @davebirch1976
    @davebirch1976 Рік тому +77

    "Many American dishes that disturb people outside of America" let's start with Grits and biscuits with gravy 😆

    • @elunedlaine8661
      @elunedlaine8661 Рік тому +10

      Quite - who wants to eat small bits of gravel ?

    • @lavalamp6410
      @lavalamp6410 Рік тому +10

      Yeah, who puts gravy on their chocolate digestives or on their chocolate chip biscuits. Gravy on shortbread biscuits 🤢Yuk

    • @andybaker2456
      @andybaker2456 Рік тому +18

      And maple syrup on bacon!

    • @BofOnDope
      @BofOnDope Рік тому +11

      Cheese Wizz enough said lol

    • @susansmiles2242
      @susansmiles2242 Рік тому +2

      @@andybaker2456 that’s actually nice it’s the salty sweet combination that works

  • @tkyoth3txg3r78
    @tkyoth3txg3r78 Рік тому +89

    As someone who lives in the UK, I love watching your videos. Please, please get a PO box address so your viewers can send you some of these foods for you to try and make a video! .

  • @murraytown4
    @murraytown4 Рік тому +15

    Canadian here. I grew up on Digestives. They’re delish.
    Mint goes well with spring lamb. Mushy peas would be a good side.
    My grandmother made toad in the hole.
    A lot of these dishes would be familiar to many English Canadians with ties to the UK, like mine.
    The interesting thing about all of these is that most of the dishes are like peasant food. Very simple, hearty and efficient in the use of ingredients, like the use of sweetbreads. They speak to humble beginnings, unlike, for example, French dishes which are more sophisticated.

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Рік тому +3

      There are many french dishes made with offal - it is not all high cuisine, by any means, at least not in France. I can't speak for French Canada.

    • @murraytown4
      @murraytown4 Рік тому +2

      @@wessexdruid7598 of course there are are. Offal is very common in Italian cooking also. Italian cooking is known as la cucina povera (I won’t translate). One can always elevate offal but its essence is working class food where nothing of the animal went to waste. That was my point.

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Рік тому +1

      @@murraytown4 You may not have intended it - but the sense of your post was that French dishes were not humble.

  • @stewedfishproductions7959
    @stewedfishproductions7959 Рік тому +23

    Strangely (and sadly) in most of America (US), lamb is rarely served and a 'roast lamb dinner' is just not a 'thing'. I was told that it goes back to the days of cowboys, ranches and cattle being 'king' and anyone who attempted to introduce sheep were usually shunned... so lamb is not often an option. Which in turn, means most American's don't know that 'mint sauce' is a common accompaniment to lamb...

    • @robertwilloughby8050
      @robertwilloughby8050 Рік тому +3

      Like the 1950's light hearted Western "The Sheepman", where the titular "Sheepman" faces all sorts of harassment from other ranchers and the sheriff (who had been an old friend before) just because he wants to raise sheep. It's a Glenn Ford classic, and in parts, even very funny!

  • @richt71
    @richt71 Рік тому +32

    Toad in the hole is a comfort dish I'd get a lot as a kid for dinner. Usually served with mashed potato and lots of onion gravy. Cheap but filling meal!
    Stinking Bishop is a cheese I ate as part of a cheese plate on special occasions. I would eat it more often but it's not cheap cheese.
    Mushy peas are delicious with your fish and chips or with a meat pie, mash and gravy.

    • @JoannaHammond
      @JoannaHammond Рік тому +2

      Another nice use for mushy peas is in a chip butty. A soft white roll (bap) sliced in half and buttered, add some chips, then cover with mushy peas and a liberal addition of tomato ketchup. Put the other half of the bun on and enjoy :D

    • @toddlerj102
      @toddlerj102 Рік тому

      ​@@JoannaHammond mushy pea fritters are the best!

    • @JoannaHammond
      @JoannaHammond Рік тому

      @@toddlerj102 Never tried them, sounds intriguing.

    • @Taylor23890
      @Taylor23890 Рік тому

      Toad in the hole was Tuesday nights dinner when I was a kid . My dad often had bubble and squeak on a Monday

  • @richardfurness7556
    @richardfurness7556 Рік тому +20

    Scotch eggs - hard-boiled eggs coated in sausage meat and breadcrumbs then deep-fried
    Bubble and squeak - left-over vegetables, especially mashed potatoes and cabbage, shallow-fried until crispy
    Lancashire hotpot - lamb stewed with vegetables and topped with thin slices of potato
    Shepherd's pie (lamb) or cottage pie (beef) - similar to a hotpot but topped with mashed potato which is then shaped into ridges and grilled until they're just starting to blacken
    Balti - an authentic British curry which was invented in either Glasgow or Birmingham depending on who you talk to

    • @therobbiesmith
      @therobbiesmith Рік тому

      Stop it, you're making my mouth water!

    • @MikeGreenwood51
      @MikeGreenwood51 6 місяців тому

      Pickled fish: Welks, winkles or muscles.

  • @judithrowe8065
    @judithrowe8065 Рік тому +28

    Fresh mint is often added to fresh peas and to new potatoes. It should only leave a hint of flavour, not be overwhelming. Strong cheeses are an acquired taste, and Stinking Bishop is delicious. I think very few Americans try different types of food from delicatessens- just eat bland supermarket or fast food rubbish.

    • @chixma7011
      @chixma7011 Рік тому +5

      Proper Jersey Royal potatoes grown with seaweed compost, boiled with a sprig of mint in the water and tossed with a knob of butter before serving is the food of the gods! ❤
      Roll on Summer when they are back in season.🤤

  • @GSD-hd1yh
    @GSD-hd1yh Рік тому +44

    The pasty has been part of the British diet since the 13th Century, at first by the rich upper classes and royalty. The fillings varied; venison, beef, lamb and seafood, flavoured with rich gravies and fruits. It wasn’t until the 17th and 18th centuries that the pasty was adopted by tin miners and farm workers in Cornwall as a means for providing themselves with easy, tasty meals while they worked gruelling days down dark, damp mines, at such depths it wasn’t possible for them to surface at lunchtime. The crust served as a means of holding the pasty with dirty hands without contaminating the meal. Arsenic commonly accompanies tin within the ore that they were mining so, to avoid arsenic poisoning in particular, it was an essential part of the pasty.

    • @Obi-J
      @Obi-J Рік тому +14

      And Cornwall isn't a city, like those 2 said it was.

    • @brentwoodbay
      @brentwoodbay Рік тому +2

      @@Obi-J What! Next you'll be saying that California isn't a city!

    • @northeything8568
      @northeything8568 Рік тому +2

      @@brentwoodbay 😆

    • @charlottesmith7322
      @charlottesmith7322 Рік тому +3

      As miners went abroad to work they took the idea of the pasty with them- Mexico, for example, has their own version of a pasty because of Cornish setters.

    • @anthonycarless8572
      @anthonycarless8572 Рік тому +2

      Stephen Fry said that the crimp wasn't actually used to hold them, they were carried in paper bags so the miners used that to protect it from the dust

  • @Raising_Runelords
    @Raising_Runelords Рік тому +13

    Yorkshire Pudding is made with a pancake-like batter baked in a very hot oven in oiled muffin baking trays, for Toad in the Hole, you take some sausages, place them in a baking tray, add the Yorkshire Pudding batter, then bake in the oven and serve with Gravy and veg. Sweet Yorkshire Puddings can also be served as a dessert with fruits and syrup or honey or sugar.
    Typically, in the UK, pudding is a steamed bowl of cake. Christmas Pudding is steamed fruit cake soaked in brandy, Sticky Toffee Pudding is a sponge cake with caramelised sugar or syrup at the bottom, Spotted Dick is a steamed sponge cake with currents inside, all best served with Custard, Ice Cream or both.
    Pasties are basically single portion pies you can eat on the go, Clangers are similar to pasties but have a savory half and a sweet half - so you get your main and dessert in the same pasty.

    • @tiggerwood8899
      @tiggerwood8899 Рік тому +3

      Yorkshire pudding, pancake batter and muffin tin. That'll cause more confusion 😂😂😂

    • @annabelleshortshort1126
      @annabelleshortshort1126 18 днів тому

      I don't like Christmas Pudding/Cake. Favourite pudding Chocolate Also like Apple Crumble and Apple Pie. All hot desserts must have custard with them.

  • @lisadowsett6836
    @lisadowsett6836 Рік тому +18

    Scotland have their own version of a pastie called a ‘bridey’ which is basically the same thing but more spicy with less veg.
    Mushy peas are something you mainly find in northern UK, peoples attitude to it is a bit like marmite, you either love or hate them.
    We also use mint sauce to accompany lamb (finely chopped mint with white wine vinegar and a little bit of sugar, used in the same way you’d use cranberry sauce) Toad in the hole (and Yorkshire pudding) is best eaten covered with thick meat gravy

    • @ronaldburden
      @ronaldburden 7 місяців тому +1

      I'm surprised no-one has mentioned pork and apple.....

    • @johnstrac
      @johnstrac 6 місяців тому

      "bridie"

    • @auldfouter8661
      @auldfouter8661 3 місяці тому

      @@johnstrac Yes the Forfar Bridie

  • @Dr_KAP
    @Dr_KAP Рік тому +14

    Mint sauce is an absolute necessity with a roast lamb dinner in Australia. We smother the meat and vegetables with gravy and mint sauce. You can buy it or make your own with fresh chopped mint, brown vinegar and sugar.

    • @Rionnagan
      @Rionnagan Рік тому +2

      How I miss roast lamb dinners with mint sauce. Also, Aussie roast potatoes are superior to anything I've found in the UK.

    • @eniej
      @eniej Рік тому +1

      @@Rionnagan all roast potatoes sold in the UK are so dry but most of us at home are pretty good at making those delicious roasties

    • @Rionnagan
      @Rionnagan Рік тому +1

      @@eniej 30 years and I've yet to find decent roast potatoes in the UK.

    • @eniej
      @eniej Рік тому +1

      @@Rionnagan where abouts in the UK are we talking?

  • @SavageIntent
    @SavageIntent Рік тому +22

    I just want to say, I live in Scotland. I don't eat haggis often, but even my small local food shop always has haggis. Its extremely easy to find and some people do eat it regularly.

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Рік тому +6

      Widely available and eaten in England, too.

    • @Jamie_D
      @Jamie_D Рік тому

      I've never maned to find any in England, i've only looked a few times though in my life tbf

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Рік тому +2

      @@Jamie_D Look in Sainsbury's, Tesco, Morrisons, Waitrose.. Plenty out there.

    • @Scottishlandwarrior
      @Scottishlandwarrior Рік тому

      I tried it once that was enough also wont eat black pudding anything with blood in it gives me the boke.

    • @17Blower
      @17Blower Рік тому +4

      I live in Devon, so about as far away from Scotland as you can get without getting wet and I eat it all the time, One of the best dishes you guys ever came up with. Better than deep fried Mars bars anyway

  • @richardhunter7363
    @richardhunter7363 Рік тому +27

    Most mushy peas do NOT normally have mint in them - they are a large pea that is cooked in a solution of sodium bicarbonate - this makes the pea structure collapse into a thick paste.
    Digestives were called digestives as they were made as a biscuit that supposedly help you digest your food - a not too sweet wheat based biscuit - you can get them half coated with chocolate (dark or milk) - good to dip or can be buttered and served with cheese. Commonly crushed and mixed with melted butter to form the base of a cheesecake.
    Yorkshire pudding is a pancake batter that is cooked in the oven - traditionally cooked under roasting meat so the meat juices drip into the Yorkshire Pudding - in baking, the pudding will rise and become crisp. Great served with roast beef and lashings of gravy (preferably onion gravy) - in some places it is sweetened and might be served spread with jam.

    • @jonathanwetherell3609
      @jonathanwetherell3609 Рік тому +5

      They used to be soaked in bicarb but not cooked in them. Don't use bicarb at all, it is a wonderful vitamin destroyer.

    • @richardhunter7363
      @richardhunter7363 Рік тому +1

      @@jonathanwetherell3609 so they did. Many, many years since I cooked a box of Batcheler's peaMy mistake. TY

    • @nigellee9824
      @nigellee9824 Рік тому +1

      No, not cooked with bicarbonate of soda, but steeped overnight, it makes the peas greener as well….

    • @ajrwilde14
      @ajrwilde14 Рік тому +1

      @@jonathanwetherell3609 how can it destroy vitamins that makes no sense

    • @jonathanwetherell3609
      @jonathanwetherell3609 Рік тому

      @@ajrwilde14 Many vitamins can be so easily destroyed. They are, after all, only chemicals. Make jam in a copper [ot and destroy the vitamin C.

  • @joannemoore3976
    @joannemoore3976 Рік тому +28

    I didn't realise there were so many differences in common foods in the UK and America tbh 🤣 Yorkshire Pudding is a batter, baked in the oven until it rises. Commonly eaten with a roast dinner, particularly beef. Toad in the Hole is sausages cooked in the batter.

  • @Jeni10
    @Jeni10 Рік тому +7

    Tyler, in the UP, Michigan, they make pasties and deliver them frozen across the US. They’re filled with vegetables and can be eaten cold or hot.
    Calzone being Italian, you pronounce the final e, like fettucine.

  • @paulharvey9149
    @paulharvey9149 Рік тому +22

    Haggis is very common in Scotland, Tyler, and is an integral part of a Burns Supper, which is quite a formal dining event held on January 25th each year to commemorate the birth of Robert Burns, who is considered to be Scotland's national bard. There is also a vegetarian recipe that is increasingly popular. It is often used as a stuffing in other dishes too - Chicken Balmoral is one of the better-known ones, though it is often served sliced and fried with bacon, sausages, eggs and and black-pudding, as a Scottish version of the full English breakfast! Black pudding is also commonly served with breakfast throughout most of Northern England and Scotland, as well as deep fried with chips and perhaps some kind of savoury sauce, from most fish and chip outlets. Pork pies are absolutely synonymous with picnics and travel food throughout the UK, at one time being the most exotic thing available on the menu of British Railway's travelling buffet cars...! There is a particular type named after the Leicestershire town of Melton Mowbray that I find particularly tasty, as the meat is cooked differently with some spices, and there is rather less jelly than in the ordinary ones. Minted garden peas are common enough, but I must say it is relatively unusual for mushy peas to be minted - the traditional way of cooking them is to boil the raw peas in a solution of water and baking soda until they fall apart, and then drain off the excess liquid. As for names, forget Stinking Bishop (which is relatively rare): there is a kind of meatball dish that originates in the English Midlands called faggots. I kid you not - Google it - the company that makes them is called Mr Brains...

    • @neuralwarp
      @neuralwarp Рік тому +5

      You can find individual haggises and black puddings in most northern English fish shops.

    • @peterjf7723
      @peterjf7723 Рік тому +3

      I was told that Haggis is not legal in the US due to it containing sheep lungs.

    • @Obi-J
      @Obi-J Рік тому +6

      Proper Scottish haggis is actually banned in the US due to the organ meat, unless that's been changed recently.
      The best way to describe one to our American friends is like a big, super savoury sausage. The offal is chopped fine and mixed with oatmeal(which helps with the texture) and an extremely generous amount of seasoning, if you didn't already know what qas in it you'd never be able to tell). The sheep's stomach isn't consumed, it's just to keep it all together as it cooks, once it's cut open the filling is removed and the casing discarded.

    • @Obi-J
      @Obi-J Рік тому +2

      @neuralwarp. I live in East Yorkshire and i've never seen either of those things in any of the chippies around here.

    • @andrewgarrett7100
      @andrewgarrett7100 Рік тому +2

      Mr Brains use a recipe from a traditional butcher from Bristol. And a West Country gravy. Not the Midlands.

  • @TrailBikeMike
    @TrailBikeMike Рік тому +3

    1. Cornish Pasty. Nice but traditional ones can be bland. You can get renegade bakers filling these with more interesting fillings which can taste amazing. These are very common. Typically in a packed lunch served cold.
    2. Mushy Peas. Not something I have often, but loved by many. They taste fine and regularly had with Fish and Chips. I think they had fancy ones because they would not typical have mint in them.
    3. Digestives are a staple biscuit. They are nice even though they are a bit bland. You can get chocolate covered ones. These are very common. Dipped in tea is fine but Rich Tea biscuits are better for dipping.
    4. Stinking Bishop - it is just a cheese brand. There are lots of smelly cheeses, this is just one. This isn’t very popular, but smelly cheese are relatively popular, especially at Christmas.
    5. Toad in the Hole is not often cooked at home anymore but the sort of thing you could get in a pub. Eaten with lots of gravy. It is nice but not very common anymore in my experience. Yorkshire Pudding is not a pastry, it is essentially pancake mix baked in an oven - they taste amazing, especially with a roast beef Sunday Dinner.

    • @johnroberthines7811
      @johnroberthines7811 Місяць тому +1

      Traditional cornish pasty bland?? my dad was from bude in Cornwall and taught my mum who was from Essex how to make traditional cornish pasties. A good quality beef skirt, waxy potatoes, swede, onion, salt and pepper for seasoning, and if made and cooked correctly they definitely aren't bland. I remember as a kid on holiday in my dad's birth place the pasties were awsome, perhaps they don't make them properly anymore down there, I don't know.

  • @AliceLucindaBronte
    @AliceLucindaBronte Рік тому +18

    Digestives are the most basic of biscuits. Luckily, chocolate digestives are also a thing and Britain has lots of other great biscuits! Someone could do a whole UA-cam video on British biscuits!

  • @vickytaylor9155
    @vickytaylor9155 Рік тому +12

    When the Mexican tin miners came to the uk during the war they were introduced to Cornish Pasties and then after the war they took them back with them, and to this day they make them in the villages and call them Pasté.

    • @dib000
      @dib000 Рік тому

      😂😅😂

  • @nidh1109
    @nidh1109 Рік тому +3

    I've tried some pretty stinky and quite intense soft cheeses, usually French . I will never go near Stinking Bishop. To confirm, mushy peas should be marrowfat! The mint ,(sugar?) is optional. Vinegar to taste is sometimes added and it's yummy.

  • @Aloh-od3ef
    @Aloh-od3ef Рік тому +32

    Mint added to food is quite popular in the UK.
    People add mint (mint sauce) to lamb, kebabs, fries, mayonnaise, and of course peas 😂

    • @thomaslowdon5510
      @thomaslowdon5510 Рік тому +5

      But he's thinking peppermint like in mints polo mints.

    • @Add1ct666
      @Add1ct666 Рік тому +5

      and don't forget minted new potatoes. great with a Sunday roast.

    • @dib000
      @dib000 Рік тому +1

      As it is in most of the world just not America 😂

    • @patmcguirk5299
      @patmcguirk5299 Рік тому +2

      I often have mint sauce sandwiches.

    • @CW1971
      @CW1971 Рік тому +1

      ​@@patmcguirk5299 now I like mint sauce but mint sauce butties? That's whole next level 😂

  • @peterjf7723
    @peterjf7723 Рік тому +11

    Digestive biscuits were developed in Scotland in the 1840s by two doctors. They are frequently eaten with tea or coffee. Sometimes, the biscuit is dunked into the tea and eaten quickly due to the biscuit's tendency to disintegrate when wet. Digestive biscuits are one of the top 10 biscuits in the UK for dunking in tea. The digestive biscuit is also used as a cracker with cheeses, and is often included in "cracker selection" packets.
    In the UK, McVitie's digestive is the best selling biscuit, with 80 million packs sold annually, thought there are many other popular brands (such as Cadbury’s) as well as supermarkets' own versions.
    Digestives are also popular in food preparation for making into bases for cheesecakes and similar desserts.
    We also have chocolate digestives, these are coated on one side with either milk chocolate or dark chocolate.

    • @carokat1111
      @carokat1111 Рік тому +1

      Yum. We get these brands in Australia as well snd they’re very good.

    • @cathybowden9751
      @cathybowden9751 5 місяців тому

      Wait till Tyler or the folk on the video discover chocolate digestives!

    • @thedoobieshrew0244
      @thedoobieshrew0244 3 місяці тому

      Digestives and butter

  • @colinturner2437
    @colinturner2437 Рік тому +16

    The cornish pastie is a pastie made in Cornwall. They did not invent pasties as they have been around for a very long time and contain countless different fillings. Cornish pasties are a unique filling first made in Cornwall. Pasties and porkpies where invented for miners to take into the mines so they could have a meal wrapped up that would not leak in there pails. The important thing is the calories they got to continue their work.

    • @Burglar-King
      @Burglar-King 5 місяців тому

      Ah yes BUT, the document doesn’t state what kind of pasty it is. Perhaps they were talking about a cheese and onion pasty and Cornwall invented the one we know as a Cornish Pasty. I wonder what Devon Pasties were?

  • @Fifury161
    @Fifury161 Рік тому +1

    4:45 - tin is not that toxic - however arsenic is and it's often found along side tin. The pasty was created as a convenient way for miners to eat a lunch without cutlery. The miners hands would also be dirty and the crust was used to hold the pasty whilst it's eaten.

  • @ajones684
    @ajones684 Рік тому +9

    Everyone loves McVities Digestives! Especially the chocolate coated ones.
    The same is true about Cornish Pasties, delicious. Yorkshire pudding ingredients, once cooked, is usually served as a side, with Sunday lunch of roast beef. In mediaeval, olden days, it was relied on to make the lack of meat, feel more substantial as a filling meal.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Рік тому +2

      I'm from the US and in the international aisle of the grocery store, I found McVities Digestives , I bought a box, they are very good, they taste similar to a Biscuit dipped in chocolate,

  • @rickybell2.056
    @rickybell2.056 Рік тому +1

    If you come to Ireland
    Bread to try is :::
    Soda bread
    Potato bread
    Wheeton bread
    Veda
    Beambrak
    Meals:::::
    Ulster fry
    Irish stew
    When it comes to tea just stick to Yorkshire gold tea ,,
    Biscuits/ cookies :::
    Digestives
    Rich tea
    Jaffa cakes
    Good old custard creams
    Chocolate is so good just get anything you feel like

  • @bencubix
    @bencubix Рік тому +9

    I dont know how I stumbled onto your channel but I'm so glad i did, its soo funny, i never realised as an Englishman how little Americans knew about things we take for granted and your reactions are hillarious lol... erm I'm a chef have been for 10 years and I just want to clarify a couple of things from this video and the last first off haggis is not very common in Britain it's more of a scottish thing and it's not something everyone likes you will find alot of brits would have the same reactions as you on that one. Marmite I think I saw on your other video also another hit or miss thing some people love it some people hate it, theres even a saying "its abit like marmite" used to describe weather your gunna love something or hate it. Lastly I had to pause it on the road in the hole thing and comment, since there was a confusion about the yorkshire (pronounced York sher in yorkshire lol I'm also a yorkshireman lol). Yorkshire puddings are amazing and dont be confused into thinking it's a dessert most of the time you would have them on a roast dinner with beef, ham, turkey, pork ect with gravy ect, and they are beautiful if done right I fully recommend it, once you've had that with a roast dinner you wont go back lol, and toad in the hole is just a large Yorkshire (for short) with sausages in that's served the same a roast dinner with vegetables and mash potato :) ... but yes on rare occasions yorkshire puddings can be used as a dessert too with ice cream and sweet sauces also good but that's not as common :) ... anyway keep up these awesome videos quite educational from a British stand point too but also hillarious lol

    • @evelynwilson1566
      @evelynwilson1566 Рік тому

      Haggis IS common in Scotland though, which is (I think) what Tyler was asking. You can buy in it every supermarket and they usually have vegetarian options as well.

  • @davidporter499
    @davidporter499 8 місяців тому +2

    Roast lamb accompanied by mint sauce (chopped spearmint in vinegar with, perhaps, a tiny amount of sugar) is gorgeous. Also excellent on roast potatoes.

  • @aethellstan
    @aethellstan Рік тому +3

    cornwall is a county not a city. it s indeed the home of the pasty. the origin legend suggests they were eaten by tin miners who would discard the bit of pasty they were holding. the edge was crimped to seal it, they wouldn't hold it using it. the would hold one pointy end.
    mushy peas are nice, it's not just squashed peas though.
    digestive biscuits are delish. they were originally made as an aid to digestion, they have changed over the years to what they are now as a sweet treat. you can get them covered (one side only) in chocolate you can spread butter on them and eat them like that, or even with cheese.
    stinking bishop cheese is gorgeous, consistency similar to camembert but runnier (especially when left out of the fridge to get to room temperature ready to eat), it is strongly flavoured and lots of people who like cheese love it. we have many shops which specialise in selling cheeses. britain produces over 600 different types or cheese.
    toad in the hole is lovely, sausage and yorkshire pudding, add gravy and you can't go wrong. when i was growing up my mum would make a large yorkshire pud for each of us and we would eat it with jam spread on it.

  • @kenslater7354
    @kenslater7354 Рік тому +1

    Miners would take pasties to eat down the mine while working. Some pasties were large and had the meat/veg mixture at one end, fruit filling at the other end and 4 inches of pastry in the middle that they would hold with their dirty coal covered hands. The middle bit wass thrown away. Pasties are available in bakery shops, supermarkets and fish and chip shops EVERYWHERE

  • @hockeyfan2704
    @hockeyfan2704 Рік тому +6

    Digestives also exist in Canada, in the packaging they showed when showing a picture. We can get them in the regular cookie aisle unlike some UK things where we have to go to "novelty" shops. I am sure they exist in other places, and are not exclusive to the UK, which I am happy about because I do like them lol

  • @malsm8892
    @malsm8892 Рік тому +1

    Mint sauce is chopped mint and vinegar served with lamb or mutton (older sheep) also apple sauce with pork or gammon

  • @michw3755
    @michw3755 Рік тому +5

    Digestives were originally made as a digestive aid as it's made with wholemeal flour which was thought to aid digestion & the name stuck u can get just plain ones or covered with milk & dark chocolate & u dunk them in your tea

  • @rocketrabble6737
    @rocketrabble6737 Рік тому +1

    When making toad in the hole; you part cook the sausages in very hot oil in the oven tray. Then you pour the batter mix into the 'smoking' hot oil around the sausages and back into the oven immediately until cooked; do not keep opening the oven door to check or the batter will not rise and crisp up. It is normally served with veg and onion gravy or similar (it is not what you call gravy as in biscuits and gravy).

  • @JoannaHammond
    @JoannaHammond Рік тому +13

    There are a quite a few variants of mushy peas. One simple traditional variant is dried marrowfat peas, soaked in water and bicarbinate of soda over night. Then drained and rinsed the next day. Add to a pan and add water and sometimes a little more bicarb. The bicarb breaks down the peas making them mushy, once cooked (so not rock hard peas) season to taste. VERY VERY nice. There are so many variants though.

    • @2opler
      @2opler Рік тому +3

      The best!😋👍

    • @marksummerson3966
      @marksummerson3966 Рік тому +4

      Exactly right

    • @johnleigh9686
      @johnleigh9686 Рік тому +5

      I used to have a job during the summer holidays working at Batchelors in Sheffield. They are one of the famous makers of canned mushy peas. There was a warehouse piled high with sacks of marrowfat peas all labelled 'Produce of Washington state'.

    • @marksummerson3966
      @marksummerson3966 Рік тому +2

      @@johnleigh9686 As a Sheffield boy of a certain era I know it well.

    • @JoannaHammond
      @JoannaHammond Рік тому +1

      @@johnleigh9686 I always have to add a little bicarb to Batchelors Mushy peas, they never seem to have that taste.

  • @francisbarlow9904
    @francisbarlow9904 Рік тому

    Mushy peas are soaked dried peas, which are boiled until soft often with a pinch of bicarbonate of soda (baking soda) to keep more of their green colour. Mint sauce can be added but not usually.

  • @sandramalby7249
    @sandramalby7249 Рік тому +5

    They were correct about the pasty but omitted that originally they had meat & veg at one end of the Cornish (as in Cornwall)pastie & jam or something sweet at the other, so the miners had a 2 course lunch. Another fact is if these are made outside of Cornwall they are not allowed to call it a Cornish pastie, it would just be a pastie….. & yes Stinking Bishop is regularly eaten & enjoyed. In my opinion it doesn’t taste like it smells, just like Parmesan is strong smelling but great on pasta.

    • @margaretmetcalfe9380
      @margaretmetcalfe9380 Рік тому

      Only sort of right, pasties were being eaten from around 13th century the Cornish pastry was produced around the 17th and 18th century. Other pasties have always had different fillings which is still the case today, like cheese and onion, corned beef and potato, steak, loads of different ones. The savoury part of the Cornish pasty is usually meat and veg.

  • @jonprice3342
    @jonprice3342 Рік тому +1

    King Henry VIII of England was a big fan of surprises and not a fan of meal times where it was once said that the King was bored at seeing the same food on the table, so a lot of the chefs concealed the meat of the day within in a pastry as to make meal times exciting. This lead to an assortment of filling's coated with pastry with Deserts/pudding also got the same treatment. So a lot of these pastry dishes were invented during the Tudor period.

  • @stephenlee5929
    @stephenlee5929 Рік тому +4

    The mushy peas having mint, in the UK peas are often cooked by boiling in water with mint in it. Mint is a normal flavouring for peas, also for new (baby) potatoes.

  • @tonyperkins7644
    @tonyperkins7644 Рік тому

    Yorkshire pudding can be served with savoury or sweet dishes. Most common are cooked sunday dinners with yorkshire pudding (filled with gravy) or sometimes as a dessert filled with clotted cream and jam (jelly) or berries.

  • @enemde3025
    @enemde3025 Рік тому +3

    Never heard of a CALZONE ! A Cornish pasty is basically a hand held pie.
    Cornwall is NOT a CITY ! It's a county in England !
    MUSHY is NOT pronounced MOOSHY !
    MINT AND SUGAR in mushy peas !!?? WHERE !!?? Not in the UK !!
    Digestives are great dipped in tea. Or I have them with cheddar cheese.
    Toad in THE hole !
    Yorkshire pudding is served as part of a Sunday roast dinner in the UK. Our "puddings" can be savoury or sweet.
    Savoury= black pudding, Yorkshire pudding.
    Sweet= trifle, ice cream, apple pie, jam roly poly, spotted dick, cake. A sweet pudding is basically a DESSERT in the UK.

  • @ronaldkinerman2656
    @ronaldkinerman2656 Рік тому +1

    Mint is a green plant, it is mixed with vinegar I believe. We put it on new potato, lamb chops and any other veg that you may fancy.

  • @no-oneinparticular7264
    @no-oneinparticular7264 Рік тому +7

    It's not the foods in America that disturbs us Brits, it's the synthetic ingredients in it that does. Don't get me started on your use of growth hormones in your beef. Pasties used to have half sweet filled, and the other savoury filled. Dinner and dessert in one go. Now, it's just purely savoury.

  • @lynette.
    @lynette. Рік тому +2

    Stinking Bishop an acquired taste ,like Stilton and blue cheese. There are connoisseurs of cheese in the same way of wine.

  • @vicdeviking6356
    @vicdeviking6356 Рік тому +6

    I'm a 68 year old, and I've never been served a portion of Mushy Peas with a Mint flavour. Straight up Peas for me please. Digestive biscuits were originally made as an aid for digestive purposes, but soon came to be just a regular snack that most would indulge in, my personal favourite biscuit.

  • @killamackay
    @killamackay Рік тому +1

    In the US, pudding does seem to be a specific type of dessert. Whereas in the UK the terms pudding and dessert are mostly interchangeable, both meaning a sweet typically after dinner/tea (evening meal). However in a couple of cases it's used to mean something else. Such as Yorkshire and black puddings

  • @Ray_Vun
    @Ray_Vun Рік тому +3

    stinky cheeses are a super common thing in europe, they even tend to be classified as the better tasting ones. some of them aren't allowed in the u.s because of the way they're served. i think that "gooey" center that some of them have isn't allowed by the fda

    • @chrisroyle4813
      @chrisroyle4813 Рік тому +1

      Casu Martzu being a very good example (and justifiably imho) !

  • @chrystaljane2255
    @chrystaljane2255 7 місяців тому +1

    Yorkshire Puddings are savoury, made from an egg, flour and water batter that is poured into hot beef fat or oil in tin moulds and cooked in the oven. Traditionally eaten with roast beef and gravy.

  • @alanridout315
    @alanridout315 Рік тому +2

    City of Cornwall!!! Cornwall is an English county. The original Cornish pasty had savory food at one end and sweet at the other.

    • @tenniskinsella7768
      @tenniskinsella7768 Рік тому +1

      Alan Tyler shoulnt have made the mistake of calling Cornwall.a City
      Should have done more research I know all the states of Ameroca bet Americans don't know our counties

  • @lisaweinmeyer5782
    @lisaweinmeyer5782 Рік тому +1

    Toad in a hole? My husband said that they were railroad eggs, and I learned Buckingham eggs. The idea is not simply, to cut a hole, in a piece of toast and toss a cooked egg in. Butter both sides of a piece of bread and cut out the centre, put bread on grill or frying pan and crack egg into hole. When about half done, flip over to finish. Grill cut out pieces to be used as side toast

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Рік тому +1

      Here in the US, we call that Eggs in a basket.

  • @lucyj8204
    @lucyj8204 Рік тому +3

    When we recently shared norovirus as a family (!!!) the nurse advised us to introduce digestive biscuits as a first food once we had our appetite back. They absolutely work. Very gentle flavour, smooth crumbly flavour. They are a bit like graham crackers but not quite the same.
    Also excellent when coated in chocolate. You can fake smores by catching a toasted marshmallow between two chocolate digestive biscuits (chocolate side touching the marshmallow).

  • @geekexmachina
    @geekexmachina Рік тому +2

    so the thing to understand about Pies in the uk similar to pasties is the pastry shell was meant to be a container to hold the meat/ gravy/ veg etc. full of carbs to give energy for farming or mining etc. given that before lunch boxes food would be in a cloth bundle maybe with a piece of cheese if lucky fruit pies were a bit more of a luxury item.
    There are t of traditional food which were from left overs such as bread and butter pudding as wasting would be potential starvation

    • @peggyburnell5578
      @peggyburnell5578 Рік тому +1

      Traditionally, one was reputed to be able to drop a Cornish pasty down the shaft of a tin mine and it would not break when it hit the bottom - owing to the remarkable quality of the pastry!

  • @marieperkins752
    @marieperkins752 Рік тому +8

    Tyler... These two need to do more research. I watched Part 1 and am halfway through Part 2 and there are so many errors (e.g. crumpets are nothing like English muffins, mushy peas don't usually have mint, the layer around the meat in pork pies is not fat, it's a type of jelly called aspic made from meat broth, Cornwall is not a city, but a county in the southwest of England, etc.). Almost everything that they comment on is iffy, if not outright wrong. It's driving me crazy!

    • @michaelbush1079
      @michaelbush1079 Рік тому +1

      Me too

    • @ianwalker5842
      @ianwalker5842 Рік тому +1

      Yes, I've been gritting my teeth too!

    • @chrismackett9044
      @chrismackett9044 Рік тому +2

      Yes, you do think that, if they are trying to inform others, they need to ensure that their information is correct.

  • @victorhbagnelle4551
    @victorhbagnelle4551 Рік тому

    Marrowfat peas are mature green peas that have been deliberately left to dry out naturally in the field rather than being picked while they’re young like regular garden peas. Marrowfat peas are what are traditionally used to make English Mushy Peas and they’re also the variety of pea used to make wasabi peas. They much larger than regular peas and have a particularly high starch content. This creates a very different consistency to mushy peas than regular peas will. Cooked into Mushy Peas, marrowfat peas will give you a smoother, creamier consistency.

  • @christinebakewell3475
    @christinebakewell3475 Рік тому +7

    The county of Cornwall synonymous with pirates and pasties you have to have Cornish pasties it’s the only place that do them properly- also if these 2 had done their homework they would have taken the digestives with them when tasting the cheese they are an unbelievable compliment to any cheese ( with saint agur - YUM ) .

  • @planekrazy1795
    @planekrazy1795 Рік тому +1

    No Sugar in mushy peas.
    Mint is a herb ether Spearmint or Peppermint it is sweetened for the confectionery industry but is used unsweetened in cooking. Unsweetened it tastes totally different. Mint is great with New Potatoes, Green Vegetables and Roast Lamb.

  • @kirstygunn9149
    @kirstygunn9149 Рік тому +3

    Yorkshire pudding is basically a savoury pancake mix ,baked in a muffin tin and eaten with a roast dinner ,toad in the hole is the same but with sausages added to the mix and baked in a larger baking pan (my mum used to make it in a cake pan ) .as for cheese we have hundreds of varieties made with different milks and added ingredients . my favourite English cheeses are mature cheddar cheese and Wensleydale with cranberry ,and my favourite Welsh cheese has to be Y Fenny it's a cheese made with beer and mustard seeds and it's extremely moreish. I believe its sold in the USA by a different name Red Dragon ( because its sold with a red wax coating like minni baby bell or Edam cheese) and has to be made in Y Fenny village to be officially called y Fenny cheese.

  • @mrrajsingh
    @mrrajsingh Рік тому

    Pasties are eaten in all mining towns in America. The Cornish tin miners brought them over when they came to dig our coal and steel. Other immigrant communities took them on and put their own spin on them. You would get 2 pasties in the morning and put them in your pockets, They would keep your hands warm on the way to the mine and it was something hearty and filling you could eat down in depths of the mine.

  • @LucyLeaf
    @LucyLeaf Рік тому +16

    I think digestives were sold in the old days with the idea they were healthy and the name just stuck. And I’ve heard they’re the equivalent of Graham Crackers for American consumers. They are a biscuit and the chocolate topped version is especially popular here in the uk. Yorkshire pudding is a pancake batter baked in the oven.

    • @michaelprobert4014
      @michaelprobert4014 Рік тому +2

      Yes, they were to aid digestion.

    • @missharry5727
      @missharry5727 Рік тому +1

      If you want to try digestives I recommend McVities. Supermarket variants are too sweet for my taste. Digestives are great for dunking in your tea or coffee but be quick about it, too much and the soggy bits just fall in. They are also good as part of the alternative to a dessert course with cheese, especially blue cheese.

    • @HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey
      @HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey Рік тому +1

      The chocolate ones are the poor cousins!

    • @AdrianWright6363
      @AdrianWright6363 Рік тому +1

      Very true! It's also true that Coca Cola was orinially invented by a pharmacist! It contained cocaine and caffeine and was sold as a tonic to aid health and recuperation. Weird huh?

  • @peterrobinson3168
    @peterrobinson3168 Рік тому +1

    Proper Cornish Pasties (Cornwall is a County, not a City) had little 'handles' formed in the pastry. You held them in your dirty hands by the handles and when you had eaten the rest of it you threw the handles away. They would often have two compartments - meat and veg at one end and fruity filling at the other. A real meal. 😋

  • @EmperorSmith
    @EmperorSmith Рік тому +4

    I love very strong cheeses, Stinky Bishop included. They're not to everyones taste but just like marmite, if you have the pallette for it, it is truly delicious.

  • @Stepokedur
    @Stepokedur Рік тому +2

    Yorkshire pudding, pancake mix, and toad in the hole mix are all the same batter…add a tiny bit lemonade for extra rise ;) That egg in toast we call egg dipped in bread here (County Durham) rather than toast dipped in egg :)

  • @granfall00n
    @granfall00n Рік тому +9

    I don’t understand. Why is a pastie alright and a meat pie is scary. They are both basically meat encased in pastry.

    • @MikeGreenwood51
      @MikeGreenwood51 6 місяців тому +1

      My thoughts were the two describing it made it sound something other than diliciouse. I mean the big ones reather than the small ones. The were predudicial describing it was fat and jello which they did not like. Also the jelly sounded like it was added after with fat rather than it being the congeallled gelatinouse juices from the cooking process which set when cool. USA is more use to eatting it's jelly/Jello mixed with sugar and colarants and set to Haribo Teddy Bear or gummey texture. Ask them if they like acidulated gummeys (sour Cola Candy) and they most likely love them. But they can not relate to the source from where the gelatinouse Jelly/Gello comes from. But cooled Pork Pie with Chutney on a picnic blanket in the summer with a cooled drink watching cricket on the lawn is very nice. Maybe some chilled white light wine or other Picnic Hamper foods. Nice with a girl (I imagine) by the river or on a punt. Also brilliant in winter.

  • @billydonaldson6483
    @billydonaldson6483 Рік тому +1

    Mushy peas are dried Marrowfat peas that are soaked in water with sodium bicarbonate overnight. They are then rinsed in fresh water and placed in a saucepan and covered with water. They are then brought to the boil and simmered until the peas are softened. Mixing in mint sauce is an option.
    Mint sauce is a normal condiment used on roast lamb.

  • @owenprytherchking3124
    @owenprytherchking3124 Рік тому +3

    I've been eating mushy peas my whole life and I've never heard of mint tasting mushy peas!

    • @jamesbeeching6138
      @jamesbeeching6138 Рік тому +1

      I don't think they were proper mushy peas but mashed up garden peas with mint!!

  • @keithgrant7950
    @keithgrant7950 7 місяців тому +2

    Digestive biscuits were invented in 1839 and were thought to aid your digestive system hence the name. What he called the American toad in the Hole we used to call a Mexican Eye. You make a hole in the bread with an egg cup then put the slice in a frying pan and when one side is fried turn it over popping out the circle then crack the egg into the hole and fry that side, making sure to fry the small circle as this is used to scoop into the egg yolk once plated.😁

  • @lynette.
    @lynette. Рік тому +3

    Yorkshire pudding is usually served with dinner, I was bought up with Yorkshire pudding and jam ,my dad came from Sunderland. Toad in the hole is eaten whenever you fancy. Easy to cook.

  • @jillybrooke29
    @jillybrooke29 Рік тому +1

    Mint is a plant, we have mint sauce with lamb and vegetables. I dunk digestives in tea, you can get choccy ones too. That toast and egg, we used to call Egg in a window lol. Yorkshire Pudding is made with batter like pancakes but it goes in the oven and is cooked very quickly on high

  • @wrigjo101
    @wrigjo101 Рік тому +10

    They are not mashed up garden peas. Tradionally made from specially type of pea called marrowfat which are really big and usually come dried. You soak them over night and then boil them. They have a sorty of beany taste.

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 Рік тому +1

      But don't forget to mention the essential ingredient is bicarbonate of soda !

    • @marygiles2823
      @marygiles2823 Рік тому

      ​@@stewedfishproductions7959 No. I never use it. It strips the vitamin c and was only added to keep the peas bright green.

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 Рік тому +3

      @@marygiles2823 -Yes, to keeping the colour, but not the only reason. It actually softens the marrowfat peas skin, allowing them to absorb water more quickly and easily. This speeds the soaking process by a few hours (especially in hard water areas). But I fully understand if your main concern is the vitamin C loss (?); although I think that if you only make/serve mushy peas on an occasional basis, it's worth using 'B of C' to retain the colour and save on prep time. Also 'B of S' only strips 'certain' nutrients (both vitamins C & D, riboflavin and a few others; whilst retaining several, including vitamin A, vitamin B12, niacin and folic acid).

  • @zoeadams2635
    @zoeadams2635 Рік тому +1

    I'd say digestives are called so because they're something light and bland that you can eat when you're feeling nauseous, so you get something in your stomach that doesn't overwhelm you and cause you to throw up. Another similar thing would be eating dry toast (no butter or spread) for the same reason.

  • @marymellor7214
    @marymellor7214 Рік тому +9

    English muffins are bread from a dough and baked, crumpets are a batter poured on a hot plate, usually eaten hot, toasted with butter and or honey

    • @mothermaclean
      @mothermaclean Рік тому +2

      I have crumpets with either chocolate spread on or cheese

    • @peterjf7723
      @peterjf7723 Рік тому +1

      I like crumpets with Marmite.

  • @grimreaper-qh2zn
    @grimreaper-qh2zn Рік тому

    If you watch the film "Moonstruck" (based in New York) Cher's mother played by Olympia Dukakis, cooks that Toad in a Hole for breakfast. It is indeed a round of Toast with the centre removed and a egg fried in it.

  • @robertlisternicholls
    @robertlisternicholls Рік тому +5

    Many of our foods originated in different parts of Britain. Cornish pasties originated from the the county of Cornwall and we're eaten by ton miners. Yorkshire pudding, Bakewell tarts, Lancashire hot pot and so on.

  • @andrewcoates6641
    @andrewcoates6641 Рік тому +1

    Tyler, having read through most of the replies to both parts of this post I have got to step in and correct several of the comments posted. To begin with I will tell you about the Pork pies . These are made from ground pork shoulder meat that has a lightly spiced mixture of herbs running through the meat but there is no definitive recipe as most butchers and pie makers either create their own blend or they have a blend that has been created back down years by previous butchers. Sometimes the recipe gets handed down from master to apprentice, others are sold as part of the business when the butcher retires or dies, unfortunately the recipes sometimes die along with the butcher, as they are kept as a top secret. Anyway a ball of the meat is literally thrown into a pre shaped pastry cup made from hot water pastry which is made from a mixture of all purpose flour butter and rendered down pork fat, all blended together with boiled water and mixed into a ball of pastry which is then placed into a fridge to cool down so the fats don’t start to melt. Once cooled down the ball of pastry is split into portions and the cups are made by pushing a former into a piece of the pastry and then manually kneading the pastry up the former until it reaches the desired size. Another piece of pastry is then rolled out and cut into discs which are placed on to the pie cases and crimped together with the filling inside the sealed pastry container and one or two holes are made in the pastry lids, then the pies go into the hot oven to cook until crispy and golden. While they are cooking and cooling you can make the jelly either from prepared sheets of gelatine, or make your own by boiling down some pigs trotters-in a cup of water to make a stock and remove any pieces of meat then reduce the liquid to about a third then pour the remaining liquid into the pies and allow the hem to cool and set. The jelly will fill any gaps between the pastry and the meat and will serve as a type of gravy. The pies can be served cold and cut into small wedges with fruity and spicy brown pickles or piccalilli, or with a salad. Alternatively they are served hot with mushy peas or chips( chunky fries) or some people will just take a pie in hand and eat it on the move. Let me know if you want me to further explain British foods such as the Scotch Egg or the Cornish Pasties and the history of their distribution to all points of the compass. P.S. The toxin on the pasties was arsenic which is found in close proximity to the tin ore mined by the Cornish miners.

  • @hanifleylabi8071
    @hanifleylabi8071 Рік тому +7

    Stinking Bishop is delicious, it deffo doesn't taste how it smells. It's a less common cheese (unfortunately most artisan cheeses are only eaten regularly by foodies). About 20 tonnes is produced each year.

    • @gillianrimmer7733
      @gillianrimmer7733 Рік тому +2

      We always buy some at Christmas for a treat as it's quite expensive and I have to buy it at a specialist cheese shop.
      It is very stinky and I keep it in the shed outside until it's needed or it stinks the whole fridge out.
      Doesn't taste like it smells though - it's delicious!

  • @vjaska
    @vjaska Рік тому +1

    Toad in the Hole is usually served as a dinner and isn't related to any special event or particular day - it's very nice too

  • @johnpateman-ct2kv
    @johnpateman-ct2kv Рік тому +3

    Toad in the hole is a delicious meal served with potatoes and vegetables. A variation my mother used to make was instead of sausages she would use strips of breast of lamb, even better mmm!

  • @Tiamat951
    @Tiamat951 Рік тому +1

    Cornish Pasties were eaten by the Tin miners, and Tin is not good to eat.
    They also used to be half-filled with meat and veg, then they would have a pastry divider in them, and the other half would be filled with fruit like a fruit pie.
    That way, the Tin miners could have a savoury then dessert and throw the dirty crust away after they were finished. :)
    Digestives were initially invented in Scotland to aid digestion. The term digestive is derived from the belief that they had antacid properties due to using sodium bicarbonate when they were first developed. They are commonly used in the UK as cheesecake basses as they grind up perfectly and have the perfect texture for a cheesecake. :)

  • @christinebakewell3475
    @christinebakewell3475 Рік тому +4

    The way my mum used to make toad in the hole the sausages ( have to be good bangers like Lincolnshire or Cumberland) , were more incorporated into the pudding and you could hardly see them so they would only be peeking out of the holes, P.s. mushy peas have to be made from the marrow fat type.

  • @phillipdennick8509
    @phillipdennick8509 Рік тому +1

    In old English a pudding is any cooked mix of fat and flower, most often baked or steamed. Also tode in the hole is normally a dinner with onion gravy, peas and mashed potatoes.

  • @JMNL07
    @JMNL07 Рік тому +5

    Cheese shops are fairly common in the UK, usually combined with a butchers.

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere Рік тому

    Cornwall is a county, not a city. Traditional Cornish pasties could have a partition in the middle with meat and vegetables at one end and a fruit at the other. Fruit would be like apple pie, or whatever seasonal fruits could be found. They were a complete meal for workers. And yes, they could be held by the crimped edges with dirty hands, in situations where a miner could not wash his hands.
    Mushy peas are simply boiled dried peas in water. Mint is not usually added. There is no sugar. And they taste great with chips (fries), for example.
    Toad in the hole is called that because of the slight resemblance to hibernating toads which dig into mud or clay, and can become sealed there (sometimes for many years) before emerging safely. It's a dish which tastes best with good quality lightly spiced local sausages, which are way better than the awful high fat and other waste parts of pigs (minced skin, ears, blood vessels, tongue, eyes, fat, etc.) which is in the cheap and unhealthy sausages often sold by supermarkets and big manufacturers.
    Stinking Bishop cheese can smell wonderful and taste excellent. Maybe they asked for the smelliest and were sold some which nobody would ever buy. I've tasted it, and it was fine.
    Digestives. That's a brand name, used by McVitie's. They are digestive biscuits, and they were invented long before Trades Description laws were enabled. So the name can still be used. Other manufacturers have to call them by the generic name, digestive biscuits. Graham Crackers might be the closest American equivalent. And the only effect on the digestion which they really have is if you eat too many of them is a laxative effect. If you're not gluten-intolerant, they really are delicious, and useful if you want an easy way to raise your body fat levels! 🦍

  • @Shoomer88
    @Shoomer88 Рік тому +5

    A true Yorkshireman will have Yorkshire Pudding as a separate first course, served with gravy. before a Sunday Roast. And they're tricky to cook. It took me many, many attempts before I learned how to get them right.

    • @CaffeineKing
      @CaffeineKing Рік тому +1

      Quite right. My wife continues to resist though. 😢

    • @CW1971
      @CW1971 Рік тому +1

      My daughter has married into a North Yorkshire farming family, she's had 2 Christmas dinners with them and they had Yorkshire puddings on the Christmas dinner!!!
      Yorkshire puddings don't belong on Christmas dinner! 🤯

  • @glo0115
    @glo0115 Рік тому +2

    Mushy peas with mint sauce is very popular in Nottingham. It's a snack sold at fairs, bonfire nights etc

  • @theeccentricmilliner5350
    @theeccentricmilliner5350 Рік тому +9

    Yorkshire pudding is basically an oven baked pancake, Cornwall is actually a county (not a city) in the far South west of the UK. The area is very rich in minerals and had a lot of tin mining which has some mines that are quite deep. So coming above ground for lunch was not practical. The Pasty origin was kind of correct in that it allowed the miner to eat without touching the food as washing was difficult. Pasties, pork pies etc are available in most UK supermarkets. I'll mention scotch eggs and spotted dick (a steamed pudding with fruit) as nice, but I'm not convinced about stargazy pie (fish pie with prawns sticking out through the pastry crust). Also in the UK it is traditional to have lamb with mint sauce - apparently it was a law that lamb had to be served with "bitter herbs" and mint was the least bitter herb that qualified.

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 Рік тому +1

      The dirty contaminated crusts helped keep the rat population down!

    • @finbar59
      @finbar59 Рік тому +2

      Stargaze pie has fish heads sticking out of the crust, not prawns.

  • @Mymerlot
    @Mymerlot Місяць тому

    Digestives are super versatile!! You can eat it like a cookie, you can eat it with cheese like a cracker (sooo good with Cheddar), you can smash it up and use it as a base for cheesecake!! They also do chocolate coated varieties. Chocolate digestives are one of my fave cookies!

  • @kerrydoutch5104
    @kerrydoutch5104 Рік тому +12

    Aussie here. Mint (spearmint) is a an easy to grow herb commonly used in mint sauce (mint vinegar water sugar and salt) with peas and lamb. Roast lamb in particular. You can throw a few leaves in with the peas or potatoes while theyre cooking. Or dried as as a seasoning in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean food. Also in mint tea in the Middle East. The mint used as the flavouring for sweets (and toothpaste) icomes from a combination of Peppermint Spearmint and other types of mint (ref Google) Theres lots of different types. Cant believe mint isnt known in the US! And no thats not toad in the hole its just fried egg in bread... here anyway.. No pasties weren't invented for the miners. They were around before then. But they did use the hard edge and corners as a handle not touching the rest of it so they could eat everything and throw away the edges. Have heard that in some places they had meat and veggies on one side and apple or fruit on the other so they had dessert as well. Might not be accurate.

    • @erikadavis2264
      @erikadavis2264 Рік тому +2

      Brit here. Very good and comprehensive. 👍

    • @eddiebirdie1545
      @eddiebirdie1545 Рік тому +1

      Pommie here😂 mint sauce is served with lamb to help with digestion as lamb is very fatty but so delicious.

  • @spyroXcynder1000
    @spyroXcynder1000 Рік тому

    Digestives were made to aid in digestion as they are high in fiber.
    Toad in the Hole is cooked as part of a "Sunday Lunch" (a large meal, typically done once a week, aka: a Roast Dinner - eaten any time of the week, but traditionally on a Sunday). Usually replaces the meat and/or the Yorkshire Puddings (but some people still keep both)

  • @jenniferharrison8915
    @jenniferharrison8915 Рік тому +6

    My Mother used to cook Cornish Pastie's they can be just mixed vegetables and leave out the meat - yes one handed lunch, like meat pies in Australia! Cornwall is a separate country in South West England! 😋 Mushy peas, there is a roadside cafe in Sydney specialising in a pie with mushy peas on top, very popular! 😊 Mum cooked peas, and new potatoes, with mint leaves, and made mint sauces! 👍 Digestives, no idea, we have milk arrowroot biscuits! 🤔 Stinking Bishop?, very smelly cheese! 🤨 That should have been in Ratatouille!! 😂 Toad in a Hole is like an Australian sausage roll! 👍 The American one is like a French toast! 😏 The Pastie wins! 😁

  • @DaveBartlett
    @DaveBartlett Рік тому

    Re: the pasties pictured on the video: Pasties were originally made as a lunch meal for the tin miners in Devon & Cornwall. The tin mines in Devon had higher tunnrl roofs than those in Cornwall, so the pasties produced in Devon were designed with a flat bottom so as to sit inside a "lunch pale" whereas the pasties produce in Cornwall were designed to slip into the back pocket of the miners. Hence, the pasties pictured in your video, (from left to right,) are a Devonshire Pasty and a Cornish Pasty.