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Brit Reacts To AMERICAN TEENS TRY BRITISH SNACKS FOR THE FIRST TIME!
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- Опубліковано 29 тра 2024
- Brit Reacts To AMERICAN TEENS TRY BRITISH SNACKS FOR THE FIRST TIME!
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Hi everyone, I’m Kabir and welcome to another episode of Kabir Considers! In this video I’m going React To AMERICAN TEENS TRY BRITISH SNACKS FOR THE FIRST TIME!v
American Teens Try British Snacks For The First Time!
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Every year for more than 30 years, I've bought my kids chocolate oranges in America. They sell them everywhere at Christmas.
I've never seen them. Where do you find them?
@@ReAllyT1978, Walmart and Dollar tree at christmas time.
@@ReAllyT1978. I just looked and Walmart and Amazon both have them atm.
That makes sense. I've never been to the UK but I feel like I've had them but couldn't remember how i got them🤷🏾♀️
@@feralon9570I am have found them at Dollar General at different times of the year, not just Check hristmas.
The one girl isn't mimicking a British accent. That's the way she actially talks.
We get Terry's Oranges here. Usually around Christmas time.
I would LOVE to see a "How It's Made" episode on how they make Terry's Chocolate Orange. They have them in the US, especially around Christmas. But how do they make each "slice" look like an orange slice, but then connect them together somehow without melting all of it? The curiosity is killing me! Impressive presentation.
Lucas and the other kids from kids react have grown up so much! I could only recognize a few of them. But Lucas was always one of my favorites!
I was just about to comment this. I haven’t watched the channel in a few years and I was just shocked how much they’ve grown up.
We have the Terry Orange Chocolates out here. I think the UK has been importing them to us since before the 80s. They even had commercials for them out here.
You should react to British people try girl scout cookies on jolly.
Terry's chocolate oranges are found all over the United States, especially around Christmas time. The dark chocolate ones are best.
I’m an American. Visited Toronto once and saw the Phantom of the Opera. During intermission they had a concession stand with wine gums shaped like the phantom’s mask. I *loved* those things!
All of the traditional British foods are fantastical!!!... Your bisquits... The Sainsbury brand ones most especially... I lived in England (Suffolk) for over three years. I came from nothing and was limited in my exposure to the real world. Things that I am thankful for
.... Sausage Rolls, malt vinegar, Yorkshire Pudding, mushy peas, Full English, Pimms Cup and a plethora of items that I have not mentioned... I do love your culture and history... Jellied Eel... Keep that trash.
I am from Kentucky. And I love British things in general. I am an Anglophile. I am 28 percent English, Irish, Welsh and Scottish. I got a Snackcrate box from the UK during the pandemic. It had Jaffa Cakes, Wine Gums, Irn Bru, and a bunch of different Cadbury chocolates. The sweet snacks were my absolute favorite in that box. I have a huge sweet tooth. So sweet snacks from any country make me happy.
If your close to Cincinnati the grocery store Jungle Jim's has a giant international section so you can get authentic food and it isn't very expensive.
The React channel is fun they have so many channels
Their accents are way better than mine! I’m so bad at accents to the point that it just sounds offensive! So, I just avoid doing it 😂
Thanks Kabir! This was a fun reaction to watch probably for the same reason you enjoyed watching the original video. Their reactions were unexpected. It is a pleasant surprise to enjoy genuine reactions to something unfamiliar without a whole lot of "what I am familiar with is the best way" sentiment that is often expected.
I love the licorice all sorts. I was introduced to these by my grandfather 50 years ago and I have searched long and hard to find them at times.
AZ is blessed to have an English shop here when the owner immigrant to usa and gets it ship in
The only thing we have comparable to "squash" is our frozen concentrated juice but you have to mix it all with water at once in a pitcher or container and all it is, is concentrated frozen fruit juice in a can you remove the top, plop the frozen juice in a container and fill the can with water and pour it in the pitcher with the frozen juice 3 times and then refrigerate.
I would thing that Tang might be similar to squash. Just from looking at it.
Terry's chocolate oranges have been available here in the US for years, especially at Christmas. I've tried Digestives and loved them. I've also tried Marmite and about gagged! 🤣 Great reaction video.
As a kid, my mom would get a chocolate orange, at Christmas. They are sold in the US, I just don't think people realize it.
Jaffa Cakes are the best. When I was responsible for morning teas for my team at work (in Australia) I would usually get them. Almost nobody had tried them before and EVERYbody loved them.
I'm from Kentucky and used to live in England and I love my Marmite and Yorkshire tea! Well a lot of English foods. A Sunday roast, a full English, Branston pickle on my plowman's lunch, bangers and mash, mushy peas...
But American baked beans are way better. Cheers 🥂
I LOVE Jaffa Cakes! I had some of these British snacks on my visits to the UK. Also, for a time, I lived near an old British shop (called, "You Call It Tomato. . . " owned by a Brit that sold sweets, teas, baked beans, vinegar malts, meat pies, etc. Sadly, the shop closed when the owner retired. ☹ I'm not keen on Jammie Dodgers. There's a US version of the "Dodger" from Knotts Berry Farm and I'm not crazy about those either. I love Digestives! The plain and the ones covered in chocolate are so good! I can also find Digestives in a few of the markets here in San Francisco. The US already has Chocolate Oranges. I'm not crazy about them, I like chocolate and I like oranges, but for some reason the combination doesn't taste good to me. As for Cadbury, ANYTHING Cadbury is amazing! Cheers, Kabir!
I've been binge watching a bunch of reactors from Europe talking about some of these and if it wasn't for them, I would have never read the comments talking about Terry's chocolate orange being in the US. So after that I was inspired and picked up a Terry's Chocolate orange. I must say I really like it. I was kind of worried it would leave a bitter aftertaste after trying them but surprisingly not.
If you eat a lot of chocolate in the US it leaves some bitterness in the back of your throat which usually is a firm indicator for me to stop eating so I kept expecting it and I don't know. The orange in it tastes fresher not like an artificial kind of joint because artificial orange kind of gets bitter like chocolate does here if you eat alot. So I like that. Unfortunately however the chocolate is really addicting but also good on Terry for making good chocolate.
I have tried the licorish candy. My fav is the ones covered in sugar and the plain onse.
We definitely don't do that with squash 😆
I would love to order British snacks. I need to look into it.
I use to do good impression of the farmer from Hot Fuzz
I loved the licorice things..
In regards to the licorice I grew up on it because my grandparents had them along with gum drops in little dishes on the coffee table. My dad also likes black licorice and my mom likes Twizzlers so licorice would turn up at our house as well. Seeing them I felt nostalgic.
I hate black licorice. My grandmother loves it. Although black licorice messes with her blood thinner. So she had to stop eating it.
Jammie Dodgers would probably be my favorite. There is a grocery store near me that specializes in different foods from all over the world and they have a respectable sized British section. I'm going to try if they have them.😋
We have another thing here like your squash called "Kool-Aid", in sweetened or unsweetened, also MiO, which has zero sugar and you put in your water to drink. Hey Kabir, you should react to another JOLLY video, "British Highschoolers Try Girl Scouts Cookies For The Time", as well as watching videos by Dhar (DAR) Mann, I know you'll love his videos
Squash in the US is a fruit technically although most refer to it as a vegetable.
Now I will have to go later and try my Terry's Orange that is in my refrigerator
Those chocolate oranges that break up into sections. We've had those in the U.S. for decades. Nothing new there.
Until Amazon became a big deal, you couldn't get things like Terry's Chocolate Orange or Nutella in parts of the US unless you knew a person who could get them for you, and you paid a fortune.
@@jwb52z9 I always found them at Target, and have for many years (at Christmas time). I don't remember them being pricey. But like you said, maybe in parts they couldn't be found.
Your fruit Winders become Uncle Toby’s Fruit Roll Ups. You can compare our ingredients to yours.
Ingredients
Maltodextrin (Corn), Concentrated Fruit Puree (22%) Apple (15%), Pear (5.5%), Peach (0.5%), Mango (0.5%), Banana (0.5%), Sugar, Soluble Corn Fibre, Modified Starch (1442), Apple Juice Concentrates (2%), Vegetable Oil ( Soy ), Invert Sugar, Plant Origin Emulsifier (471), Food Acid (Malic, Citric, Ascorbic), Natural Flavour, Colours (Anthocyanin, Turmeric), Vegetable Gums (410, 415), Vegetable Concentrate (Spirulina, Safflower) Contains Soy
I LOVE Allsorts! Yum.
I'd love to try the orange/chocolate.
I love the licorice one
Have actually seen Toblerone about the late 70's/early 80's when I had it sent to me by a pen-pal from Finland ( just never tried it though) 😁
I didn't try a uniquely British candy/snack, but I did fall in love the Lilt soda in London. Coke produces it, but not in the US. The only place to get it in the US is in the Atlanta Coca-Cola Museum, and you only get a taste. I ordered some from England once, drank all but one, for posterity.
I've tried a number of these before and I have to agree that pretty much all but the licorice allsorts are dang good lol. I haven't tried those alien snack though....and if they taste like pickles I think I'll leave them on the shelf....or have a trash can handy lol Here in Canada we get Peak Freen's cookies and they have an assorted mix pack that has the Bourbon cookies and the custard creams as well.....I don't buy them often only because I'd be too tempted to eat the entire box in one afternoon! lol One tip....if you dip the Bourbon cookies in coffee instead of tea...they take on more of a mocha flavor, delicious!!
Toblerone is swiss, man.
Yes please I want all of them. I miss English chocolate because the taste is so much better. Hersheys has nothing on English chocolate. Cadbury flakes are amazing too.
I’m with you on the pronunciation of bourbon because of the liquor.
LOVE TERRYS! The problem is they used to have raspberry as well as the orange. I have to send to Amazon to get the regular orange. I love Terry's! Why aren't they more available? Trader Joe's used to carry them always.....what happened to their brain cells, sheesh.
There's a mint one also.
Am just seeing the intro for this clip (am getting ready to watch entire video), and have already seen 3 items I recognize that have seen in USA, those being: Cadbury, Haribo, and Toblerone (actually seen them in store)
Would have like to see walker short bread cookies the best,
Beans on toast to the English is like peanut butter and jelly to U.S. Americans. You either grew up with or didn’t. It’s nostalgic and comforting and easy because you grew up with it. Are either AMAZING? No.
I love some bangers and mash. I like some English food.
In Australia, we used to have those choc fingers made by Arnott’s, our biggest Aussie biscuit company, but they were dropped long ago and we also have the Cadbury’s ones, but I don’t buy anything with Cadbury’s Dairy Milk because it clogs my throat, I hate to say it, but exactly like phlegm and it takes minutes to go down. I prefer Lindt or Milka or any local chocolatiers.
I've had 1) Allsorts: Fine, but I don't like the all licorice bits, 2) Jaffa Cakes: I like the raspberry ones, and 3) The Orange: great!
i love licorice period. i would occasionally get allsorts as a kid, i would eat it. some of em i didnt care for, others i liked. but i mean i also have bags of licorice root in the car. i usually buy plenty of licorice products, like legit locorice. have even puchased tins of licorice concentrated pellets.
I love licorice all sorts. I liked licorice before I tried them but after I tried them I liked it even more. I was disappointed that they didn't try Jelly Babies.
I've had chocolate orange when I was a teenager. It was very good. But it was American.
We do have squash, but it's the fruit. Not the drink. We typically eat that fruit around Thanksgiving here in the East Coast.
I’m sad for that girl that said she doesn’t like fruit in desserts.
I’ve had all sorts and love them. Born and raised south Floridian here.
Liquorice is actually not good for you. It increases your blood pressure as I learned the hard way when I was in my late 20s. I bought four show bags of liquorice because I love it, however a few months later, I visited my GP because I was feeling weird. He discovered my BP was much higher than usual. He started asking me questions to find out the cause. Eventually I remembered the show bags and he reacted immediately, “That’s what did it!” I asked if it would go down again and he said only with medication. How long do I need to take the meds? For the rest of my life! 😱. I had been munching on liquorice for a month with no idea it could do that to me!
I love Terry Oranges. I didn't know they are British. I need to find the Jaffa cakes
Aldi has Jaffa Cakes right now - I can't remember the flavor, though. Possibly raspberry? I just saw them today.
I eat everything that was there but monster chips wasn't around when I was a kid in England. People in usa think I weird cause I do eat beans on toast once a week,egg on toast and wheatabix when I can get it,bangers and mash once a week and birds custard on all most everything dessert
My MIL introduced me to beans on toast in 1964. I have spread the love of that British delight ever since. When my husband and I lived in Oslo for three years we flew to London to get good food at least every three to four months.
I can't do beans on toast. I hate baked beans in general.
Marmite is uhhhhhhh, no, They do have an episode of American Teens try British Comfort foods, you should watch it and yest Beans on toast and Marmite are on the menu.
When I was a kid, they had some shortbread cookies with chocolate and orange icing. They were called Hawaiian Holiday. I really liked them, but it's been a long time since I've seen them.
Hi Kabir! The only good thing I can say about Marmite is that it's better than Vegamite! Still really close though. Sorry, my Aussie friends!
They didn’t even ask about blackcurrants!
Hi Kabir! As an American, I do not Bollocks you in saying that I do genuinely appreciate some liquorice flavors...I did not know, for many years, that it was hated so much. Then again, I have a pretty forgiving palette.
Still...we need less sugar, carbohydrates and fats in our foods; I do believe we have it in ourselves to become less gluttonous a people. Correct me if I am wrong.
I wonder if a Jamie Dodger is like a thumbprint cookie?
I'm a bit thrown by the one guy with the Coco Peru hair flip.
England, conquers the entire world in search of flavor only to not use any of it.
I absolutely despise licorice. I only like the subtle flavor in root beer and that’s it. I don’t really like anise either.
Kabir, you literally can’t question because someone else’s taste is different than yours lol
We used to get those chocolate oranges in our stockings at Christmas. I hate them. To this day I hate any orange/chocolate combo.
Licorice sucks the big one 🤮
"Penguins are delicious, but when their not covered in chocolate" - weird girl, 2024
Haribo is from Germany, not the UK. I saw another video where someone did the opposite and thought it was American.
Fruit winders are the same as fruit by the foot here. This guy really didn't research things that would be unique.
Well yes the company is, most of the original recipes are from Denmark.
Born in Germany. 100% true.🤟
You must be newer to the internet. Content creators crossover ideas so much I've seen some of them react to each other.
We absolutely do not have the drink squash. We have the yellow vegetable squash. Why would you just assume we do?
It's definitely 'Bourbon' as in Booorbon, like the French Royal Family, not Berbon like the US drink.
How have you never heard of Twiglets? They are definitely not to everyone's taste, but are very commonly available! Basically Marmite flavoured straight pretzels!
Of all of these, I was really surprised by the girl who really didn't like the Chocolate Finger. What's not to like if you like chocolate and biscuit? There's no side to them, no funny aftertaste...... I guess maybe British chocolate has a richer taste than US chocolate.
90% of the British snacks sold in international supermarket aisles aren't the same and made in USA somewhere. For example Cadbury, Hershey's owns all rights to the name and their chocolate so they make their own versions using Hershey's chocolate and it's not even close.
We combine bread and beans, what we find weird is the barely seasoned beans with tomatoes being a breakfast food.
You can still get UK Cadbury in some stores.
@@jwb52z9 keep those stores quiet, hersey legally went after the last one I found.
I think a lot of Americans like bangers and mash
This is a flip on what I usually see. I'm curious
We have alot of these snacks in canada...can you guess why?
I think England has fantastic sweets and rubbish savory food in general.
First, I want to say you look like my son's twin really. Second, licorice is the only candy I have ever bought that. none of my 3 sons will touch lol.
We have snacks similar to these in the US.
Angel has said she's not a huge sweets person
We have chocolate covered orange pieces we had them for years they stopped making them, but I thought they were good. Gene z has no idea about any of this. I’m 49 and when I was a kid we had these long time ago. Probably wait before the UK. Haribo is from Germany not the UK.
Chocolate covered orange segments are still around as far as I know, I bought one last Christmas
Fruit Winders are somewhat like the fruit rolls my mother makes. Froot rollups are trash.
Jammie dodgers are linzer cookies
I've had Aero and Violet Crumble. Not sure if either are British.
Aero is definitely British. One of my favourite chocolate bars.
Oreos are terrifying to me, I don’t eat them. I tried one years ago but I’m on a low sodium diet now and I have to avoid most biscuits. Thankfully Jaffa Cakes are allowed! Why do Oreos contain so much sodium and why are they as black as liquorice? Cocoa powder is dark brown, even at 74% cocoa in a block of chocolate. What is America adding into Oreos to make them black chocolate? More yoga mat stuff?
hello. twiglets haven't been rebranded. they are still the same as they have always been.
I miss fish and chip shops, piling on loads of malt vinegar and salt. Kabir you are going to make me move back to England and all my grandchildren live here, all 6 of them. Marmite sucks. I never liked it as a kid in England. Too salty and the flavor is disgusting. English Cadbury chocolate is different from American Cadbury, the English Cadbury is the winner for me.
Whoppers = Malteesers
It's interesting, but here in California, out of state can't mail liquorice into the state. We can buy it here (ew) but the law says mailing it into the state is a no-no. That's just one of the reasons this state has lost its mind. Think of it: people can poop on the sidewalk but liquorice is baaaaaad.
California requires a warning lable on black licorice because it has linked to reproduction problems if the manufacturer places a lable on it it can shipped from out of state
I'm from Italy so yeah, we have the best snacks *wink *wink... Jokes aside I've had other snacks from other European countries and generically they are really good and way better than the American version or different type. Even Canada, where I live now, has better snacks than US but I guess it's not that hard lol.
Jaffa cakes are horrid. Reminds me of Turkish Treat🤐. Also Twiglets taste like burned wheat!
There's nothing British about Haribo Starmix or Toblerone. I guess they figured that out because they never made it past the intro.
There really isn't a true American equivalent of Orange Squash.
You can get Jaffa Cakes at Lidl in the US.
I can't believe you've never had Twiglets, Kabir. We had them when I was a kid in England 55 years ago. They're kind of like a pretzel coated with Marmite.
British Cabury is wonderful. Hersey changed the formula for Cabury sold in USA.😢
*'British biscuits/buns rock's and rulles around..
Burnt pizza crust? How about Hershey’s chocolate tasting like vomit to the rest of the world! They messed with the milk content and Americans just adapted. They don’t know what real chocolate tastes like!
You can rig the list of foods to get likes or dislikes as you want. Every culture and cuisine tradition has better and worse foods. If you're having people try American foods, you can give them baked mac and cheese, jambalaya, buffalo wings, and brownies; or you can give them a hot dog, scrapple, spray cheese, chitlins, and lime Jell-O with canned pears in it. Similarly, with British food, you can stack the deck one way or the other. Chicken tikka masala, bread pudding, and Cadbury Flake versus haggis, beans on toast, and mushy peas.
We have winter squash (acorn, butternut, etc.) and summer squash (zucchini, etc.), but the closest thing we have to the beverage is either the concentrated fruit juice that's sold frozen and you reconstitute it all at once in a pitcher, or else powdered drink mixes like Kool-Aid and Country Time and Tang.
I am absolutely rubbish at British accents.
I like licorice so much, that I can actually eat the Finnish stuff (Salmiakki or whatever it's called), with the ammonium chloride in it. But yeah, I think the majority of Americans are not fans of licorice in general. Which is why Twizzlers were invented, as an alternative.
The chocolate oranges show up in American stores sometimes around the holidays. I've had them a couple of times. They're alright.
Holy cow, ginger nuts are a real thing? I always assumed they were made up for the short story, to make Bartleby seem odd, by having him eat something nobody's ever heard of.