Hey Buncharted! Great video again. I work at the Delft Waterboard, and we see so many tourist around our 'office'. Tip: the inside of our building is also very very beautiful. You can visit it for free on 'Monument Day' (9 and 10th of September). Many collegaes dress up as they did hundreds of years ago and they take you on a tour/play where you can experience how things went in the old days.
I work at the neighboring waterboard, Rijnland, and have been inside your office a few times. It really is beautiful, and a whole lot larger than you would expect when you see the front of the building 😄
The city where I was born (and spent some 30 years of my life). Very happy in Rotterdam now, but will always love Delft 💙 Too bad you couldn't make it to Ladera, it's such a nice place and concept :)
A lot of Dutch people don't even know this. But the OG Willem van Oranje is buried in Delft. You can find the Mausoleum in de Nieuwe kerk. I paid my respects when i visited ;)🇳🇱
The “stadhuis” (cityhall) started as one of many local recidencies of the earl of Holland in the early 13th century. The marketsquare was actually his court and there was no church there yet. At some point the earl at that time gave that court to the city and the built a cityhall probably around the 14th century, around the original towers of the earls court. That place burnt down in 1536. Leaving only the sturdy 13th century tower remained. They built a renaissance cityhall around it. The architect is the most famous of Nederland; Hendrick de Keyser.
Hi there, I am going to visit some cities in the Netherlands but Delft wasn’t in my plan. I will definitely visit the city thank you for this informative video 🙏
When I took my late wife to the Royal Delft factory/museum it was a dream come true for her. She always loved the art pieces but never thought she would actually be there.
When I am in Delft, I always visited the big church at the Market. William the Orange is burried there, our founding father of the Netherlands. Have you been there too?
@@buncharted maybe, a next time. I'm Dutch and does travelling a lot to the Dutch fortress cities. This cities are built in the eigthy years war between the Netherlands and Spain. They have a lot of hystory and are pretty nice to visit. There are big fortress cities, like Maastricht, but also more smaller cities. The smaller cities are often more authentic, surrounded by a citywall, ramparts and water to protect the city. Most of the time, you can walk on the ramparts surround the city, Naarden is beautifull. Nearby is the city Muiden. You can go also to the Muiden castle. It was in the past een prison off the government. Very famous is the fortress city Bourtange in the North of the Netherlands in the provence Groningen.
Great episode guys. Just keep with the Dutch it gets easier. Now that I live in the Netherlands I am enjoying going to the places you have highlighted. Thanks
Hi We are enjoying your videos as we are Americans who live in the UK the past 27 years and we spent lots and lots of time in Delft between 2018 and 2021... We have enjoyed biking all over Delft ,all the little bridges and especially the Belgian cafe in one of the squares. Of course, eating outside in all sorts of weather during covid times. One of the other things we've enjoyed outdoors is Delftshout, a kind of big outdoor green space with lakes and bike lanes and walking lanes and horse lanes. And it really feels like you're out of the city and there's many many flocks of herons and other birds. It would be kind of fun and interesting to see what nature things you find outside the cities. Also in Delft we enjoyed the botanical gardens. It's quite near TU DELFT campus.
Yay finally you've visited my former residential town🥳. The old city hall is btw not only a wedding venue, but also houses the local council of Delft! Groetjes van een former local Delft councillor😉
3:52 The oldest governmental body still active today is actually "Hoogheemraadschap van Rijnland" (in Leiden), which is slightly older than "Hoogheemraadschap van Delfland", the one located in Delft (1248 vs 1289 AD). A "gemeenlandshuis" used to be the office for these "waterschappen". Leiden has one as well, which is also still in use.
The oldest phamacie in the Netherlands is probably W.H. van der Meulen in Amsterdm, which is at least 325 years old. The great "fire" of Delft was in fact the explosion of the gunpowder reserve, that contained tens of thousands of pounds of gunpowder, in 1654.
Delft is a very touristic city but there are also a lot of international students in Delft that study at the Delft University of Technology (TU Delft). It's basically the MIT of the Netherlands. My son got his Masters Degree in Applied Earth Sciences at the TU Delft.
I don’t think in Eindhoven and Enschede they would agree with that MIT thing. They are all equal good, but all have there specialties, because their reason for existance is different. Delft for shipping, bridges, dams and levies infrastructure and the battle against water, Eindhoven because of Phillips and Twente because of the textiles industry and AKZO.
@@harrybruijs2614 Well I studied in Twente at the UT, but I won't deny that Delft is the #1 technical university in our country, but that is fine, the other two are also great.
You should have visited the grave of the founder of the Netherlands, William of Orange in the church and maybe the place where he was killed (including two probably fake bullit holes in the wall). Fun fact, William of Orange did not speak a word of Dutch (but did know French, English, German Spanish and Latin).
You might know 'uitsmijter' as a bouncer at the door of you local discotheque or dancehall. It has the same meaning over here but also for this egg dish.
Of you ever get to Delft again go to the restaurant named Hummus. Best falafel and baba ganoush in the netherlands. Oh and an amazing icecream shop around the corner.
Nice video again! My favourite Dutch comfort food is 'Hutspot met draadjesvlees', runner up is 'Stampot rauwe andijvie met spekjes en een Nederlandse Gehaktbal'. With a nice amount of gravy...we tend to build up the stew round, and make a deep indentation in the middle with a spoon to pour the gravy in.
You have to go to Schiedam, very old city they have the biggest windmails and 1 windmail is the Noordmolen thats a restaurant, there are also a Jenever brandery and Museum from Ketel and they have a wisperboat. (fluisterbootI also very nice
it can be discouraging sometimes knowing how long it'll take us to learn enough dutch to have a conversation with someone, even in the accelerated classes, but it's totally worth it - every time we order food or talk to a delivery driver in dutch :)
@@buncharted Schiermonnikoog is great, too. You're not allowed to take your car there, but you can bring your own bicycle on the ferry. Or rent-a-bike on the island itself (Soepboer, Schierfiets). I'd recommend a bicycle with selectable gear because some shell paths can be steep (in the dunes).
I learned something! I did not know there was a place in the Netherlands were they perform waterboarding!? And it looks like they already performed it from the old days? Wow.. Always surprising facts on this channel! Or is this about the Hoogheemraadschap ? We will probably never know?
In your exploration of Dutch and European food, it time to sample some Colmans English Mustard, all the taste of mustard with the kick wasabi. English tin-glazed pottery was also known as Delftware from the early eighteenth century, in homage to the Dutch originators. Love from northern England and keep up the explorations.
wow, that sounds so good! we love wasabi 😋 is there a certain type of cuisine that would have it at a restaurant or should we grab some at a grocery store?
The holes might have been moved a bit over time though ;) My grandfather sometimes told the story that one of his family members used to work there and sometimes had to fill up the bullet holes a bit when they were worn from visitors sneakily scraping off some material from it as a souvenir.
Ah, Delluf! Nice cosy little city. Thanks for the video, nice. Tourists, yes, but never annoying in my experience. Next? In Noord-Brabant Breda (small but nice and close to you) and Den Bosch. North? Zwolle in Overijssel and the city of Groningen in Groningen and Leeuwarden in Friesland. Not because these are the province capitals, but nice cities. Drenthe? Don't know.
In Drenthe, you have interesting sand drifts, heathlands, sand excavation lakes, and cycling routes through a stunning beautiful province. Drenthe, like Groningen and Friesland, are seen as not so developed and urbanised as The Randstad.
You missed one of the Netherlands' historically most significant places! At Prinsenhof, the king's ancestor and Father of the Nation William of Orange was assassinated by Balthazar Gerards in 1584, and the bullet holes are still visible in the wall. Another important landmark in Delft: IKEA 😂
Well, I gues it's official. You've got the best "foreigners in Holland " channel. I'm gladly city hopping along with you. Btw don't bother coming to Apeldoorn. (We have a great monkey zoo: "Apenheul", but that's it, not much else) Keep it up ❤ Visit Deventer
Although Paleis het Loo is also nice - but neither of these are *in* Apeldoorn. Have to agree unfortunately, when we were scouting to do other things in Apeldoorn aside from visiting the palace, we drew blanks 😐
Tips for cities and villages to visit: (maybe you already made video's about some of them and I missed those) - Zaandam - Fishing villages Volendam/Monnickendam/Marken - Groningen - Nijmegen - Den Bosch - Maastricht - Hoorn/Enkhuizen - A Frisian place
we've been to nijmegen, den bosch, and maastricht on the channel. a few of the others are currently on the schedule coming up... will take a look at the rest as well :)
@@buncharted When you get up north, make a visit to fortress Bourtange in the province of Groningen. We build it against troops loyal to the king of Spain and it did well against the bishop of Münster plans to conquer Groningen.
About mustard guys, we always buy the real Dijon mosterd, it is from France (the city Dijon) It is not an ij like in many words in the Netherlands, like uitsmijter. How to pronounce? You can find that in the computer….. It is real spicy. Maybe you know it already, otherwise just buy and try! (every supermarket has it) ❤️Hil
oh yes, dijon is very popular in the US as well. we were mostly familiar with american mustard though (the neon yellow stuff) which is disgusting and kept us from eating mustard for a very long time! so we were relieved the sandwich didn't have that 😂
Eng translation for uitsmijter is bouncer. Love your videos. It's only a shame that you 2 left Rotterdam. My birthplace, and best city of the Netherlands. 😜
Ok... then here's an idea: go to Gent and buy some mustard there. However, the city alone is so awesome it's beyond words, so the mustard is just a bonus. However, try it. For real. Then get beer, beer and well.. some more beer. It's in Belgium, so they know beer.
Fire and in particular the largest in Amsterdam,, is which is why Jan van der Heyden (1637-1712) invented the firehose and made some improvements on the pump. And for your first lesson in Dutch, (old Dutch): ‘een buygelijke buys, om haar gedaante een Slang genaamd, die men kan verlangen naar eysch en welgevallen‘.
About 3/4 through the video I'm slowly starting to fear you've missed just about the most important historical spot in the entire Netherlands. At least where it concerns the birth of the Dutch independent nation. Delft is where Willem van Oranje-Nassau (William the Silent), the de facto leader and catalyst of the Dutch revolt against Catholic zealot Spain oppression and tyranny (the Spanish Inquisition), was murdered in 1584. By a Spanish-paid assassin. Possibly fuelling the revolt to endure almost 80 years of on and off war for independence. (Finally officially secured in 1648). He's also buried there.
't is an shortening of het, kinda pronounced "ut" with a very silent u, rather than "te". In some cases it merges with the word after it, but here it doesn't.
Have you had any issues yet communicating with Dutch people in the English language throughout all the places you have visited so far? Or has it all been buttery smooth?
well, we've been trying to do more in dutch. we don't take english menus, as an example, so we order everything by their dutch name. sometimes they hear our bad pronunciation and find someone that speaks english to help us though 😅
Netherlands is indeed a bit touristy. Netherlands gets 20 million foreign tourists a year. USA gets about 80 million foreign tourists a year. To be relatively the same as the Netherlands on capita that should be 360 million tourists To be relatively the same as the Netherland on area that should be 4.6 billion tourists But to be fair the 80 million tourists in the US do stay a bit longer.
7 oudste drogisterijen van Nederland Jacob Hooy Amsterdam sinds 1743 Drogisterij Salamander Delft 1780. ( makes it the second oldest farmacie in the Netherlands) Drogisterij Van der Gaag Den Haag sinds 1796 Van der Pigge Haarlem sinds 1849 Drogisterij Woortman Utrecht sinds 1851 Drogisterij Bik&Bik In Leiden sinds 1860 Drogisterij Van Loon uit Oud-Tonge 1892
I see the two of you non-stop munching and there isn't a gram of fat to be seen on your bodies. You lucky bastards! 😄There was a time I could get away with it as well...those good old days...
Hey Buncharted! Great video again. I work at the Delft Waterboard, and we see so many tourist around our 'office'. Tip: the inside of our building is also very very beautiful. You can visit it for free on 'Monument Day' (9 and 10th of September). Many collegaes dress up as they did hundreds of years ago and they take you on a tour/play where you can experience how things went in the old days.
I work at the neighboring waterboard, Rijnland, and have been inside your office a few times. It really is beautiful, and a whole lot larger than you would expect when you see the front of the building 😄
The city where I was born (and spent some 30 years of my life). Very happy in Rotterdam now, but will always love Delft 💙
Too bad you couldn't make it to Ladera, it's such a nice place and concept :)
Your pronunciation of ‘uitsmijter’ was really good. You will find this dish on many lunch menus in The Netherlands😊
I'd like to add that 'uitsmijter' literally means bouncer.
A lot of Dutch people don't even know this. But the OG Willem van Oranje is buried in Delft. You can find the Mausoleum in de Nieuwe kerk. I paid my respects when i visited ;)🇳🇱
Every royal family member is buried there.
The “stadhuis” (cityhall) started as one of many local recidencies of the earl of Holland in the early 13th century. The marketsquare was actually his court and there was no church there yet. At some point the earl at that time gave that court to the city and the built a cityhall probably around the 14th century, around the original towers of the earls court. That place burnt down in 1536. Leaving only the sturdy 13th century tower remained. They built a renaissance cityhall around it. The architect is the most famous of Nederland; Hendrick de Keyser.
Hi there, I am going to visit some cities in the Netherlands but Delft wasn’t in my plan. I will definitely visit the city thank you for this informative video 🙏
When I took my late wife to the Royal Delft factory/museum it was a dream come true for her. She always loved the art pieces but never thought she would actually be there.
Standing on the spot where we took our wedding pictures, and my parents too. Oude Kerk FTW :)
When I am in Delft, I always visited the big church at the Market. William the Orange is burried there, our founding father of the Netherlands. Have you been there too?
we walked by it but unfortunately didn’t go inside
@@buncharted maybe, a next time. I'm Dutch and does travelling a lot to the Dutch fortress cities. This cities are built in the eigthy years war between the Netherlands and Spain. They have a lot of hystory and are pretty nice to visit. There are big fortress cities, like Maastricht, but also more smaller cities. The smaller cities are often more authentic, surrounded by a citywall, ramparts and water to protect the city. Most of the time, you can walk on the ramparts surround the city, Naarden is beautifull. Nearby is the city Muiden. You can go also to the Muiden castle. It was in the past een prison off the government. Very famous is the fortress city Bourtange in the North of the Netherlands in the provence Groningen.
Great episode guys. Just keep with the Dutch it gets easier. Now that I live in the Netherlands I am enjoying going to the places you have highlighted. Thanks
Hi We are enjoying your videos as we are Americans who live in the UK the past 27 years and we spent lots and lots of time in Delft between 2018 and 2021... We have enjoyed biking all over Delft ,all the little bridges and especially the Belgian cafe in one of the squares. Of course, eating outside in all sorts of weather during covid times. One of the other things we've enjoyed outdoors is Delftshout, a kind of big outdoor green space with lakes and bike lanes and walking lanes and horse lanes. And it really feels like you're out of the city and there's many many flocks of herons and other birds. It would be kind of fun and interesting to see what nature things you find outside the cities. Also in Delft we enjoyed the botanical gardens. It's quite near TU DELFT campus.
The nice thing about all that history in the Netherlands is that you while looking for musea, you're standing right in front of it !🌹💕
Nice video and your pronunciation of Dutch words gets better and better every time.
Yay finally you've visited my former residential town🥳. The old city hall is btw not only a wedding venue, but also houses the local council of Delft! Groetjes van een former local Delft councillor😉
Another amazing video!
Love your channel. Thnx for the content
3:52 The oldest governmental body still active today is actually "Hoogheemraadschap van Rijnland" (in Leiden), which is slightly older than "Hoogheemraadschap van Delfland", the one located in Delft (1248 vs 1289 AD). A "gemeenlandshuis" used to be the office for these "waterschappen". Leiden has one as well, which is also still in use.
The oldest phamacie in the Netherlands is probably W.H. van der Meulen in Amsterdm, which is at least 325 years old.
The great "fire" of Delft was in fact the explosion of the gunpowder reserve, that contained tens of thousands of pounds of gunpowder, in 1654.
The Delft explosion tragically killed a bright painter with lots of potential, who was a student/prodigy of Rembrandt.
Delft is a very touristic city but there are also a lot of international students in Delft that study at the Delft University of Technology (TU Delft). It's basically the MIT of the Netherlands. My son got his Masters Degree in Applied Earth Sciences at the TU Delft.
I don’t think in Eindhoven and Enschede they would agree with that MIT thing. They are all equal good, but all have there specialties, because their reason for existance is different. Delft for shipping, bridges, dams and levies infrastructure and the battle against water, Eindhoven because of Phillips and Twente because of the textiles industry and AKZO.
Not many people know that Delft even has a small nuclear reactor at the nuclear research institute Delft University of Technology.
@@NecramoniumVideo yes, it's at the Meekelweg.
@@harrybruijs2614 Well I studied in Twente at the UT, but I won't deny that Delft is the #1 technical university in our country, but that is fine, the other two are also great.
Not sure how I missed this episode… but glad I’ve seen it! 😊
Hi guys,
Great video again. The lady at the Delft blue museum is called “ proud Mary” .
Leuk om te zien. Betere inburgering kan ik me niet voorstellen :) Ga zo door!
One herring a day keeps the Immigration Office away.
Fondue and welsh rarebit.... but not today because Summers 90° Even in our Montana mountains so today it would be a blood orange popsicle or sorbet
The shorts looked absolutely perfect on you for sure ❤, great video as always 🫶
Michelle got a killer body anyway.
You should have visited the grave of the founder of the Netherlands, William of Orange in the church and maybe the place where he was killed (including two probably fake bullit holes in the wall). Fun fact, William of Orange did not speak a word of Dutch (but did know French, English, German Spanish and Latin).
I bet he at least knew 'gotverdegotver' (or the 16th century equivalent)
Don't forget to visit Leiden, it is bit like Delft and Gouda, only larger. Lots of canals and bridges.
Great video again. Uitsmijter is allways the right choice!!
You might know 'uitsmijter' as a bouncer at the door of you local discotheque or dancehall. It has the same meaning over here but also for this egg dish.
Of you ever get to Delft again go to the restaurant named Hummus.
Best falafel and baba ganoush in the netherlands.
Oh and an amazing icecream shop around the corner.
Delft was our favorite
Nice video again! My favourite Dutch comfort food is 'Hutspot met draadjesvlees', runner up is 'Stampot rauwe andijvie met spekjes en een Nederlandse Gehaktbal'. With a nice amount of gravy...we tend to build up the stew round, and make a deep indentation in the middle with a spoon to pour the gravy in.
yum!!
yum!!
The tower, going up? Too much lunch! 😊 food looks great! Of course video! 👍👍👍
Good work..nice video!!
You have to go to Schiedam, very old city they have the biggest windmails and 1 windmail is the Noordmolen thats a restaurant, there are also a Jenever brandery and Museum from Ketel and they have a wisperboat. (fluisterbootI also very nice
Your pronunciation has improved so much! So glad you guys are making the effort to learn Dutch unlike a lot of other Americans moving here haha.
it can be discouraging sometimes knowing how long it'll take us to learn enough dutch to have a conversation with someone, even in the accelerated classes, but it's totally worth it - every time we order food or talk to a delivery driver in dutch :)
That sandwich looks amazing
Great you two visiting so many places in The Netherlands. I am curious when you two go two the Northern Islands Terschelling or Ameland.
soooooon 😉
@@buncharted Schiermonnikoog is great, too. You're not allowed to take your car there, but you can bring your own bicycle on the ferry. Or rent-a-bike on the island itself (Soepboer, Schierfiets). I'd recommend a bicycle with selectable gear because some shell paths can be steep (in the dunes).
I learned something! I did not know there was a place in the Netherlands were they perform waterboarding!? And it looks like they already performed it from the old days? Wow.. Always surprising facts on this channel! Or is this about the Hoogheemraadschap ? We will probably never know?
i thought the same thing in our cost of living video - you’re telling me i pay how much every year to get waterboarded by the government?!
@@buncharted😂😂😂
Hi Michelle en Alex, Again a nice video! My favorites : Broodje “ros” and Broodje Tartaar (raw) with union pepper and salt!!!!
What is 'union pepper'? Oh wait, you meant 'onion, pepper & salt' I guess. 🧅🤪 Yeah I like that too, on tartaar or Filet Americain.
Delft is nice 😊 when are you going to the north of The Netherlands, to Drenthe? I recommand to visit Veenhuizen
north soon, but drenthe might not be until the fall - we've got a packed (and exciting!) schedule already planned over the next couple of months!
Have you visited Groningen? The city so great they named it twice, like New York ;).You should make a video of Groningen city on a saturday night.
not yet but we have to visit it soon - we’re visiting every province by the end of 2023 :)
In your exploration of Dutch and European food, it time to sample some Colmans English Mustard, all the taste of mustard with the kick wasabi.
English tin-glazed pottery was also known as Delftware from the early eighteenth century, in homage to the Dutch originators.
Love from northern England and keep up the explorations.
wow, that sounds so good! we love wasabi 😋 is there a certain type of cuisine that would have it at a restaurant or should we grab some at a grocery store?
@buncharted.....you can find Colemans at Albert Hein. Most likely in the ally with all the spices.
@@valeryklumper Indeed! I found it in mustard powder form.
Did you guys visit the Prinsenhof? This is where Willem van Oranje was shot and killed, the bullet holes are still in the wall of the staircase.
The holes might have been moved a bit over time though ;) My grandfather sometimes told the story that one of his family members used to work there and sometimes had to fill up the bullet holes a bit when they were worn from visitors sneakily scraping off some material from it as a souvenir.
Good job you two, i recommend Hoorn or Medemblik to visit next. But wait your going back to the US? I realy enjoyed your vlogs.
we’re going back to the US??? don’t make us leave 😢
@@buncharted No off course not 😁, you still have a lot of area to cover.
Ah, Delluf!
Nice cosy little city. Thanks for the video, nice. Tourists, yes, but never annoying in my experience.
Next? In Noord-Brabant Breda (small but nice and close to you) and Den Bosch. North? Zwolle in Overijssel and the city of Groningen in Groningen and Leeuwarden in Friesland. Not because these are the province capitals, but nice cities. Drenthe? Don't know.
we have a den bosch vlog but we need to go back - it was very rainy and cold that day!
In Drenthe, you have interesting sand drifts, heathlands, sand excavation lakes, and cycling routes through a stunning beautiful province. Drenthe, like Groningen and Friesland, are seen as not so developed and urbanised as The Randstad.
You missed one of the Netherlands' historically most significant places!
At Prinsenhof, the king's ancestor and Father of the Nation William of Orange was assassinated by Balthazar Gerards in 1584, and the bullet holes are still visible in the wall.
Another important landmark in Delft: IKEA 😂
You should visit Flevoland and then off course Urk in particular. Beautiful former! island. Do a “Steegjestocht”.
Welcome to Delft! Lifehack for your Surinamese broodjes: ask for the yellow peppers (Ajuma) for some real heat
Whoah! Those are like Madame Jeanettes!
Nice little Spirited Away Delfts Blauw tile
we love studio ghibli ❤
Well, I gues it's official.
You've got the best "foreigners in Holland " channel. I'm gladly city hopping along with you.
Btw don't bother coming to Apeldoorn. (We have a great monkey zoo: "Apenheul", but that's it, not much else)
Keep it up ❤
Visit Deventer
we posted a video from deventer a few months ago - it’s an amazing city!
Although Paleis het Loo is also nice - but neither of these are *in* Apeldoorn.
Have to agree unfortunately, when we were scouting to do other things in Apeldoorn aside from visiting the palace, we drew blanks 😐
Oeeee….uitsmijter my favorit 🤤
Funny to see a few buildings pass by in this video that I once gave a maintenance paint job.. haha. Nice video again guys.
The Netherlands has got 22 "Hanzesteden". The top 5 to visit are:
Deventer, Zutphen, Hattem, Elburg and Harderwijk.
Tips for cities and villages to visit:
(maybe you already made video's about some of them and I missed those)
- Zaandam
- Fishing villages Volendam/Monnickendam/Marken
- Groningen
- Nijmegen
- Den Bosch
- Maastricht
- Hoorn/Enkhuizen
- A Frisian place
we've been to nijmegen, den bosch, and maastricht on the channel. a few of the others are currently on the schedule coming up... will take a look at the rest as well :)
@@buncharted When you get up north, make a visit to fortress Bourtange in the province of Groningen. We build it against troops loyal to the king of Spain and it did well against the bishop of Münster plans to conquer Groningen.
@@bbl2100 Bourtange is almost like an open-air museum 🤪
Delft is famous for its Industry,NKF cable factorie
Next time in Delft you should definitely visit Il Tartufo, its Italian and im pretty sure it wont dissapoint .
Een uitsmijter (a bouncer)... Nice!
About mustard guys, we always buy the real Dijon mosterd, it is from France (the city Dijon) It is not an ij like in many words in the Netherlands, like uitsmijter. How to pronounce? You can find that in the computer….. It is real spicy. Maybe you know it already, otherwise just buy and try! (every supermarket has it) ❤️Hil
oh yes, dijon is very popular in the US as well. we were mostly familiar with american mustard though (the neon yellow stuff) which is disgusting and kept us from eating mustard for a very long time! so we were relieved the sandwich didn't have that 😂
My comfort food is kapsalon with chicken🤤
that's a good one 😋
Ik moet wel heel erg veel trek hebben wil ik aan een kapsalon beginnen.
Sounds record Store ❤
Eng translation for uitsmijter is bouncer. Love your videos. It's only a shame that you 2 left Rotterdam. My birthplace, and best city of the Netherlands. 😜
we didn't go far - we're basically there once a week 😅
Ok... then here's an idea: go to Gent and buy some mustard there. However, the city alone is so awesome it's beyond words, so the mustard is just a bonus. However, try it. For real. Then get beer, beer and well.. some more beer. It's in Belgium, so they know beer.
challenge accepted 😄
Actually there's a million reasons to go there. It's SO good.
Fire and in particular the largest in Amsterdam,, is which is why Jan van der Heyden (1637-1712) invented the firehose and made some improvements on the pump. And for your first lesson in Dutch, (old Dutch):
‘een buygelijke buys, om haar gedaante een Slang genaamd, die men kan verlangen naar eysch en welgevallen‘.
what does it mean? 😅
@@buncharted word for word 'A flexible pipe, called snake for reason of her shape (slang) which can be lengthened as pleased'
I attempted to take your advice and have lunch at the Thuis by Ladera in Delft. Unfortunately, they don't open until 1700. :(
yes it is unfortunately dinner only :(
About 3/4 through the video I'm slowly starting to fear you've missed just about the most important historical spot in the entire Netherlands. At least where it concerns the birth of the Dutch independent nation. Delft is where Willem van Oranje-Nassau (William the Silent), the de facto leader and catalyst of the Dutch revolt against Catholic zealot Spain oppression and tyranny (the Spanish Inquisition), was murdered in 1584. By a Spanish-paid assassin. Possibly fuelling the revolt to endure almost 80 years of on and off war for independence. (Finally officially secured in 1648). He's also buried there.
"Uitsmijter" is slang for "bouncer". It was originally meant as a quick to make late night snack for bouncers working in cafés and bars.
Nice story, but not true… the dish is from somewhere around the 1900 (time before bouncers) and comes probably from Germany…
'Uitsmijter' also means the last song, to get everybody out after. It used to be the late night snack in bars, before Febo existed.
@@janjanssen9629 The dish, yeah. But not the name. Look it up. And there were no bouncers around 1900? That's new to me.
I know something. You can go to the biggest PLUS Supermarket in The Netherlands in Wezep.
"Uitsmijter" is correct.
I am English and don't understand the very vague expression 'one of the only'. Does it mean the only one or one of the few?
would love too see the reverse culture shock video when you go back to the US. even though there will a be open doors.
Off-topic: I have a question about your UA-cam channel avatar: does 'buncharted' derive from 'be uncharted'?
kind of! we also call each other "bun" - so it's sort of both of those things combined :)
Hahaha - okay. Thanks
Heel fijn 🙂
Comfort food in Groningen is eierbal.
so excited to try this!
Recently tried it in a bar where people from Goningen made it, best deep fried snack ever 👍 Can't wait to go to Groningen some time.
why does the tower have 3 colors? Maybe they ran out of money and started again decades later in a new kind of stone
Neef Rob is the best!
Didn't you folks climb the church tower?
not this time :) we were worn out from the walk to and from the museum!
😉😊😊
't is an shortening of het, kinda pronounced "ut" with a very silent u, rather than "te". In some cases it merges with the word after it, but here it doesn't.
ah, thank you! that's news to us 😅
Have you had any issues yet communicating with Dutch people in the English language throughout all the places you have visited so far? Or has it all been buttery smooth?
well, we've been trying to do more in dutch. we don't take english menus, as an example, so we order everything by their dutch name. sometimes they hear our bad pronunciation and find someone that speaks english to help us though 😅
Netherlands is indeed a bit touristy.
Netherlands gets 20 million foreign tourists a year.
USA gets about 80 million foreign tourists a year.
To be relatively the same as the Netherlands on capita that should be 360 million tourists
To be relatively the same as the Netherland on area that should be 4.6 billion tourists
But to be fair the 80 million tourists in the US do stay a bit longer.
i wonder how many of those 20 million tourists ever leave amsterdam 🤔
@@buncharted Tourist from Germany snd Belgium will go anywhere.
7 oudste drogisterijen van Nederland
Jacob Hooy Amsterdam sinds 1743
Drogisterij Salamander Delft 1780. ( makes it the second oldest farmacie in the Netherlands)
Drogisterij Van der Gaag Den Haag sinds 1796
Van der Pigge Haarlem sinds 1849
Drogisterij Woortman Utrecht sinds 1851
Drogisterij Bik&Bik In Leiden sinds 1860
Drogisterij Van Loon uit Oud-Tonge 1892
I see the two of you non-stop munching and there isn't a gram of fat to be seen on your bodies. You lucky bastards! 😄There was a time I could get away with it as well...those good old days...
My brother is married in that stadhuis
How on earth do you guy's keep so slim, when I smell on a brouwny I gain wight.
Delft is oke. Michelle is better.
Best city in Zuid Holland after Rotterdam
Sorry but u go in Europe and u eat American food? 🙄
sorry but u comment on a video and make a judgment about one out of like 150 videos? 🙄