Highschoolers try British Snacks for the first time! | BRITISH COUPLE REACTS
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- Опубліковано 26 сер 2023
- Highschoolers try British Snacks for the first time! | BRITISH COUPLE REACTS
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Original Video - • American Highschoolers...
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He meant we just call “flying saucers” UFO’s in america. We don’t have any candy called UFO LOL
Lay's chips were invented and sold before Walker's. Frito Lay, who makes Lay's chips, bought Walker's many years ago. That's why Walker's packaging resembles Lay's.
Ah I was looking to see if anyone commented about this before posted - so thank you lol
The Mexico brand is Sabritas.
Also, most Americans won’t know candy powder by the name “sherbet”
In America the word “sherbet” is a frozen dessert similar to sorbet
True! Lol.
I was confused at first when they said it's sherbet in the middle. I was wondering how they keep it frozen.
I would have said sherbet is like a non-dairy version of ice cream. In principle it can be any flavor, but in practice it's usually fruit flavored and brightly colored. The most popular type is "rainbow sherbet" which consists of swirls of lemon, orange, lime, and sometimes raspberry. But you can also buy other flavors, e.g., pineapple, peach, mango, etc.
Ollie really should know that American English is closer to the English spoken in the 17th century than British English is today. A lot of the words that Americans get ridiculed for (such as using 'Soccer' when most of the world uses 'football') actually originated in England. In the case of biscuits, well, England got that name from the French, whereas the US 'cookie' came from the Dutch around 1674.
We have had the chocolate oranges for at least 35 years. They seem to only be available in the run up to Christmas. It is 27-August-2023 today, so I expect to see them shortly; certainly by Halloween, which is the day after the Christmas merch goes up.
Some Dollar General's have them year round
True
Mom used to buy them when I was a kid. I'm 53 now. I mean, I've bought them at Walmart.
Yeah, I get them all the time.
Am I the only American who has literally never seen chocolate oranges in my entire life? I live in Los Angeles for reference, so surely I would've come across some by now??
The British/English didn't develop the English language. The English language were developed from the dialects of Germanic tribes who migrated to Britain in the 5th and 6th centuries AD... just sayin.😁😜
And the Vikings.... and the Normans....
We have Terry's chocolate orange candy
We do, but it’s not super common
It explains why many Americans haven’t tried it
Usually only specialty grocery stores will carry them
Yeah, I haven't had one in a long time. They're always in our local grocery store. IMO, they're ok, it just throws me off tasting orange when I bite into piece of chocolate.
Never seen it either. It's too rare.
@@JenniferBarrier1 only thing Orange I've tried is Orange Tootsie roll an oof is that a trip.
I love those so much that... I will marry it if i could....
Biscuit comes from the Italian “biscotto” which means twice cooked, so at the end of the day we’re both wrong
😂😂
🤣😂🤣👍
The term "Flying Saucers" was what they started describing ufos in the 1950s, the term/acronym "UFO" didn't come till later
The high school kid who said we don't call UFOs flying saucers is probably right if he's talking about people his age but adults always called them flying saucers when I was a kid in the 70s. The term probably faded as Sci-Fi TV and movies got more creative with their space ship shapes. The ones in the 50s were mostly saucer shaped as were most of the UFO sighting descriptions in the 70s. We have those chocolate oranges here BTW. You usually see them more often around Christmas but I remember having them many years ago. They aren't as common as other candy but they've definitely been available here for a long time. You can get them at Walmart so they are all over the place.
My mom bought these chocolate covered oranges sticks for her parties 🤨we weren't supposed to eat them eventually she figured out she had buy an extra half pound if she wanted any for her party. She'd set out the half pound & hide the rest until we "went to bed" ( code for sit at the end of the hall until we fell asleep 😂😂)
UFO is a military term. Flying saucer is a scify term. When they say UFO, they dont mean aliens. They mean experimental aircraft or spy aircrafts from rival nations.
We do indeed have the chocolate oranges. I get them every Christmas.
We have Terrys Chocolate Oranges in the US. I get one every Christmas since I was a kid. We also have galaxy. It’s called Dove over here though.
We have those orange chocolate ball things here also. But they also come in lots of flavors like raspberry, which I love!
We've had the chocolate orange in Florida for decades. I used to put them in my children's Christmas stockings every year and they are now in their 50's
Walkers was founded in 1948 in Leicester, England, by Henry Walker. The Walkers family sold the business in 1970 to American food producer, Standard Brands. In 1989, Walkers was acquired by Lay's owner, Frito-Lay, a division of PepsiCo.
I love Terry’s! The dark chocolate raspberry one is really good, too. Honestly, I think Terry’s and Cadbury chocolate are better quality than Hershey’s, but since Hershey’s is American made, that’s what we were all raised on. We totally have Cadbury bars and stuff here, but the only advertising they get is for Cadbury eggs at Easter (which are the greatest thing ever). Terry’s oranges are most popular at Christmas.
*On a side note: You will probably never convince me that there is a greater shortbread than Walkers. It’s available year-round here and is always in my entire family’s Christmas stockings. I’ve had some shortbread made by other companies (mainly US), but they don’t compare. I was raised on Walkers and I will die on Walkers, lol. *(As a perfectionist, it is killing me that half of Walker’s stuff, like sites and articles, have an apostrophe and half doesn’t. My brain actually hurts from not knowing which is the better to use)
My Grandparents loved the orange chocolates! Us kids would fight over who got to smash it! But Grandpa then explained that you want to separate them without breaking any so then we got competitive that way! Lol the memories!
We have or at least used to have those orange chocolate things. I remember them from when I was a kid. I remember seeing commercials all the time for them
We have Galaxy; it’s usually called “Dove”.
and Milky Way chocolate.
My entire family gets one of the chocolate oranges in their stocking every year. We love them
We definitely have Terry's chocolate oranges here in the US. I quite enjoy them. Also, I don't recall ever having as animated a reaction to food as these kids do even if I really didn't like something.
My grandparents like chocolate oranges but I dont think citrus and chocolate belong together at all.
Actually we have more than Hershey chocolate. For example, Cadbury, Lindt, Dove (same as Galaxy-marketed by the same company), Milky Way(same as your Mars).
You forgot the best chocolate, Reese peanut butter cups
Cadbury is British, Lindt I think is Swiss or something.
@@LukaDonesnitchyes but they are available in USA. Most Americans have tried more chocolate than just Hersheys
@@caseyyordy6188 I know that, the point wasn't that the US only has Hersheys. It was that Cadbury isn't a US company.
@@LukaDonesnitch Oh, I thought everyone knew that. The girl in the video seemed to think we don’t have it in the US so maybe we haven’t tried it over here before. Same with Lindt, pretty sure everyone knows it’s Swiss or at least not American
Walkers was bought out by Lays back in the 80s
Had a terrys orange every Christmas my dad was stationed in England. Loved them so much I look for chocolate oranges 50 years later.
Whenever i see Twiglets, i think of the New Year episode of Mr Bean . Haven't tried them yet though.
I love Terry's chocolate oranges. They are available in the US during the winter holidays (maybe not country wide?). We used to get them every year for Christmas when our kids were still at home.
Same. My daughters love to smash them.
Twiglets. LoL
I always see them around Easter.
Lays was founded in 1940, Walkers in 1948, but the Walker family sold the company to Standard Brands (founded by J.P. Morgan in 1929) in 1970 then merged with Nabisco in 1981. Meanwhile, Lays merged with the Frito Company in 1961 to form Frito-Lay, which itself merged with Pepsi-Cola Company to form PepsiCo in 1965. In 1989, the Frito-Lay division of PepsiCo acquired the Walkers brand, their logo was changed to look like the Lays logo in 1990. (Thank you Wikipedia)
The UFO candies are called Satellite Wafers in the United States and have small candy balls in the center.
Literally never heard of those
@@dustinpeasley2778they taste like nothing. No good lol
Must be a local thing to have never seen them
@@80sGamerLady They are an old school penny candy we have in MA, and they are still around. I don't know if the rest of the country has them. These students dont't seem to have been exposed to them at all.
@@dustinpeasley2778they are from the 1950s and the package actually says flying saucers
Santa brings us chocolate oranges in our stockings every year! When the kids were little, they used to get milk chocolate, but now that they’re adults, we’ve switched to dark chocolate. I agree Millie, they are great!
We do have Terry's chocolate orange in the U.S.. Both milk and dark chocolate. I have also seen Terry's raspberry chocolate "oranges" here too.
We have the orange chocolate orange things... I LOVE the dark chocolate ones. But they are usually seasonal so...
I live in SC and we always get the chocolate oranges in our grocery stores around Christmas time so i always associate it with Christmas. I love them!
I order Terry's chocolate oranges from Wal-Mart & Amazon UK , love them.
We have chocolate oranges here
In the U.S., we do refer to baked dog treats as "dog biscuits." As you already know from your biscuits and gravy taste test, we pretty much consider biscuits to be "a small quick bread made from dough that has been rolled out and cut or dropped from a spoon." ... Warm, flaky Pillsbury Grands biscuits are delicious! 🙂
I actually really liked those chocolate oranges as a kid, I keep looking for them but I can't find them. Someone said they were only available around the holidays so this holiday season I'm gonna be looking. Also when I buy chocolate I usually buy Dove (Galaxy) or Lindt and I do enjoy Cadbury as well. Once in a while I might buy Hershey's but I prefer other brands
The chocolate orange you can get here in the U.S. and Cadbury chocolate.
Moved to Canada from Scotland when I was 12. I am now starting my retirement. On Friday I got my treats from Amazon. Frys Cream bars. I feel like I have precious treasure lol. In the middle of the month I get some Turkish Delight bars and at the end of September I have some Jelly babies coming. I had never really thought of getting these treats shipped to me and I had my first Frys Cream Bar yesterday and it was even better than I remembered. Mmmmmm
We actually do have those chocolate orange here. We usually have them out during the holidays. I mean, we have them all year around, of course, but holidays are when we mostly have them everywhere
Lay’s (USA), Walkers (UK/Ireland) and Smith’s (Australia) are owned by the same parent company. The logo design is the same but the name changes depending where they’re produced.
For some reason I found the chocolate oranges a very long time ago, and love them to pieces.
We have chocolate oranges.I absolutely love them.
My American kids are addicted to British snacks and biscuits since I started buying them a couple months ago.
(They often devour them before I get a taste)
You should watch the video where they try tea and biscuits. 😁👍🏻
I think with a lot of foods, it's all about what you grew up with and are used to. Those are the things you tend to like.
Stores, including Walmart, sell Terry's Chocolate Oranges in the U.S. during Easter.
One English treat I LOVE that I had to stop purchasing (way too much sugar and couldn’t keep myself from devouring the entire bag in a day) is Jelly Babies. I was introduced to them by Doctor Who, then saw them in the shop one day in the British section and I was curious. They’re an absolute curse on my digestive system though.
Chocolate oranges were my favorite Christmas treat growing up! It would nearly always be at the bottom of my stocking and I will always have fond memories of that I don't think we get them year-round, though. I only see them during Christmas time here in the US.
I seen a UA-cam video once on the differences between American chocolate and European chocolate and they have different ingredients and that’s why they taste different.
And we’re used to the taste so we don’t notice it. I’ve tried Cadbury and Milka and neither impressed me much.
Most British don’t like root beer because they think it tastes like medicine. Evidently dentists over there use something that resembles the taste so that’s what they think of. But even some Americans don’t like root beer.
The terms UFO and Flying Saucer are pretty much interchangeable in the US. It must be regional or generational that the kids only use UFO.
Yes, I had Terry's Orange Chocolate growing up, around the holiday season. They are delicious.
But I prefer our chocolate by *_Ghirardelli_** or **_Ferrero Rocher_* over Hershey and Terry✅✅
Ghirardelli is the best. Then again, I grew up in the SF bay area, so I may be a bit biased.
I can honestly say that I've only checked out a few of Jolly's videos BECAUSE of you guys. They're an awesome duo though. I love videos like this.
E seen the Terry's chocolates sold around Christmas, they also sell a raspberry version.
Our Flying Saucers have tiny colored sugar beads that rattle. We used to say it was Martian poop.
The pickled onion probably tastes like Funyons
I've never eaten twiglets, but they will always make me think of the Mr Bean Christmas special.🤣
We have had flying saucers since I was a kid. We didn't like them, but played church with them 😂
In the USA we have flying saucer candy but they don't have the sugar in the middle they are different colors and each color is a different flavor
We have the chocolate oranges here and I used to love them!
I think the reason we don't have a lot of fish flavored "crisps" is that on the whole we aren't as fish meat based as the UK and Asia. We have and consume more land based meat so fish isn't as popular on the whole. Though some areas fish is popular, just not that dominate
@MIllie - We do have Galaxy in the U.S. but they are called Dove here. BTW Galaxy is owned by Mars, an American company so you're welcome. 😁
Terry's Chocolate Orange isn't hard to find in the US especially around Christmas.
I bought the chocolate orange and really enjoyed it. Hersheys tastes like chocolate soap. I haven’t had any of the other snacks. My husband and I went to London and Paris for our honeymoon. I tried some Marmite on toast and it was pretty good.
Also, I’m wondering if the “sherbet” powder is just the same thing as a Pixie Stick or Fun Dip. 🤔
I wonder if the powder sherbet is sour like pixie stix are. That would account for the looks on their faces.
When I was a kid, we called those wafer candies "flying saucers". Instead of a sweet, powdery substance, though, they contained little bead-like candies. I haven't seen them around in years, but I'm sure they still sell them somewhere.
I hate to say it... but if I ever got to visit the UK... i'd starve to death. Blood pudding and beans for breakfast! Gag! :)
It's true. You will. It happened to me. I flew back to the States skinny as a stick. My taste buds were on life support because they were numb to all the bland, boiled, salty, vinegary, and fish taste.
Millie sniffed that bag of chips/crisps like," I can't believe you like those James"!🤣
7:27 that's known as the Oreo method lol
Thanx. Now i have a hankerin for hershey chocolate and cookies and i dont need to have a hankerin for hershey chocolate and cookies. 😂
Now there is a word for James and Millie, hankerin, lol.
Prawn flavors would be called shrimp flavor in America and would only be found in Asian supermarkets.
We have a couple of British stores in our area in Canada; so, we can get Walkers chips. They have lots of different flavours. I really like the Worcestershire sauce flavour. We also have the sherbert powder but it comes in a paper straw and we have the chocolate oranges too.
Weird. In the US I have NEVER seen a british stores. Even the international sections of our largest grocery stores dont carry any british things. German, italian, isreali, mexican, japanese, thai, indian, korean, chinese, even a couple of Ikeas if you want sweedish, but nothing for british.
I had that chocolate orange thing at a bar once
as you said depends what you are use to
I LOVE dark chocolate oranges.
we have terrys chocolate oranges here in the USA. I LOVE them!
We have the orange. We also have Cadbury which is good.
We have Terry's chocolate oranges. But they are hard to find and I have only ever seen them around Christmas.
Walkers crisps are the same as our Lays chips. You might have different flavors tho. And yes we have the chocolate oranges.
Remember Britian IA an island. You ate hinna have more seafood flavored stuff. Alot of U.S is landlocked.
I looked it up.. Lays is the original and it finally went "over the pond" to England with the name Walkers.
I've never seen "flying saucers" here and I honestly can't think of anything that would compare.
Chocolate oranges are rare here but I've seen them.
And last but not least, you've watched enough Lost in the pond Videos to know that Americans speak English that is closer to the original. :D
Those Kipling things looked good 😋
We have the choc orange at Christmas. We have a great deal of Cadbury.
England has Marmite, Australia has Vegemite,
The USA has Peanut butter...
That's are the infection thing 😂😂
We have the chocolate orange here in us, atleast where i live its fairly common
We have the Chocolate Oranges in the States.
lol Fair Play! Definitely took an antique and shined it up for ya tho!
Flying saucers to me was always carvel ice cream flying saucers. (ice cream sandwich) , and sherbet is way different in US. We would probably called that powdered candy. Like fun dip.
I love Marmite. I can see why most Americans dont, but I'm a fan of strong bitter, bready things... like a dark beer.
Guys, I completely get it! We in the US can be kind of triggered too when people don't like
some of our snacks or food. I think it has something to do with what you grew up on. BTW, For
what it's worth I went to Amazon and added those Mr. Kipling snack cakes and the Chocolate
Orange (Milk chocolate) to my list.
The orange chocolate whacking balls on my God I love them things and I've only been in America
Cadbury for milk chocolate especially toffee
Great video nice to se some things are different in other places
We have the choc orange in America at Christmas
Brits invented the language, but we fixed it for you.
we have Cadbury
Yes, but its made here in the US with US chocolate.
I love chocolate and orange. Pepperidge Farm Orange Milanos are good. But getting really hard to find
They were responding to the term "UFO" to "Flying Saucers" not the candy. To my knowledge we have no such candy here.
I'd pick Cadbury over Hersey any day!!!
We have Terry’s chocolate orange in the U.S., I like them
We have chocolate oranges just not everywhere. Only some stores have them. I like chocolate and I like oranges but I hate HATE chocolate oranges.
I do like Hershey's Dark Chocolate and cookies and cream😊
😊