The bad teeth, warm beer and indeed lousy food all stem from the US troops over here during the second world war. We have far better dentistry now than we did then including the NHS which looks after children's dentistry to the age of sixteen, beer then was not refrigerated it was at cellar temperature and is not the larger like blonde beer you are used to, it is not supposed to be ice cold! The lousy food was a result of rationing, making a meal from what could be sourced. I almost never drink tea,for me it's coffee, sodas or alcohol. I live 300 miles from London, had to go there once to catch a bus, I was there for one hour, didn't want to go there then, never want to go again. As for the Royal Family, her Mag was a real gas on our nights out, even funnier than my mother after half a bottle of sherry! As for hospitality, we have welcomed peoples from across the world not just the old Empire, we are truly the most cosmopolitan country in the world, even more so than the USA that once embraced the huddle masses (what happened there?). As a result, we have the mos divine queasiness from across the world available in every town, I can go to Indian, Bangladeshi, Polish, Italian, Jamaican, French et al restaurants in any British town. Ice, she is correct as far as soft drinks go, however if I order a whiskey, I have to state no ice. She mentioned our National pride, be it for England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, Britain or the UK. S has failed to recognise our pride to be part of the Commonwealth, an institution that stemmed from the old Empire, an institution that every member state has elected to join, Jamaica is a member and any other country can become so for no more than the want of asking. good vid offering and good revue.
Warm beer, no we have chilled lagers, but ales are usually served at "cellar temperature" (a few degrees below room temp but not close to freezing). Ales have a mix of aromatics and flavours, it's what gives different brews their characters, cooled to near freezing you lose that richness, the characters of the different type, breweries selection of malts, hops and brewing process. It may take those used to lagers and Pilsners a bit to get used to.We seldom have the extreme heat that some places have, and when we do, well, the lager or, better yet, we have ciders that can be chilled, we can switch to for the 3 or 4 days of extreme summer days 😂
All the stereotypes about British life and people started after the American troops returned home after ww2 coming from a land of plenty to a rationed country was a shock to the Americans. So when ever asked by fellow Americans what was Britain like they all remembered the negatives. it's been 79 years since these stereotypes began fortunately over the intervening years things have changed and the stereotypes are finally eroding
Bought a Islay single malt whisky in a bar when in the States back in the eighties. The Bartender found it strange when I refused it, due to him putting ice in it and ruining it.
I suspect the 'have you met the Queen' thing is because some people outside of the US conflate England with their conception of a fairytale kingdom - which are generally tiny and seemingly everybody knows everybody else The idea that British are standoffish is connected to the notion that London is England. Basically, people travel to the UK, remain entirely in and around London and then think they have seen England. London is a metropolis - it is huge, and crowded and busy and anonymous. Thinking everybody in England is like Londoners, is like going to the US and expecting people in South Carolina to be fast talking, New York taxi drivers Food being tasteless - there are a lot of historical reasons for this as others have pointed out, in particular the impression US troops got when they were over here during rationing. But the other reason for it is that people equate flavour with spice. Traditional British food is not heavy on spice - but it is heavy on herbs. We live in a colder climate so very few spices grow here, but herbs we have - so traditional British cuisine tends to be very hearty and savoury, with subtle herb flavours
The warm beer thing is mistaken statement, beer is lager and is definitely served cold, English ale such as mild a dark ale or bitter which is more of an amber colour and usually served at just below room temperature
Beer is never Lager. Beer was the collective name of pub made beers that were sold to their customers, mainly Bitter bear and Mild beer. You also had Indian Pale Ale or IPA this was a light Ale made for the East India Company and their Army but this was bought home to the UK where it became popular but it was still a beer! The big breweries then got involved and bought out the family owned original pubs and made the usual beers in quantity and stocked the pubs with wooden barrels using horses pulling flat bed wagons with the brewery name in big letters advertising the beers. The wooden barrels of beer were very hands on where the handling and pulling the pints was concerned, it was more of an art than a skill. I’m old enough to remember the original beers in the pubs, my favourite was Mild, nice flavour. Bitter is a more brewed beer where most of the sugar is used up in the process and the Mild is less so. Bitter tends to be a lighter colour beer in colour than Mild and IPA is even lighter. Lagers came in from Scandinavia in the 70s I think mostly in bottles and sold from fridges hence ice cold beer lacking in flavour but cold. When they got popular the breweries got the licence to produce the Lager themselves and a refrigerated pumping system was introduced to keep the drink now colder than the cellar temperature (note: not warm). Slowly the real British beers went out of favour and the lagers took over. Nowadays the old beers are coming back into favour if only modestly but sold in mostly what are called micro breweries pubs and made popular by an association called CAMRA or Campaign for Real Ale. You’re now up to date but as I said Lagers were never British Beer!! Cheers Aah Kid
@@angelawalker8615 Hmm, I think ales (I include porters and stouts) and lagers both as beers, but different types. Go into a British pub and simply ask for "a beer" you may get a stare back or an interrogation about "which one". Lagers I believe use a different type of bottom fermenting yeast (and I think are brewed at lower temperature so possibly slower?), ales use yeasts that are top fermenting and work better at more moderate temps. I suspect the type of hops used might be different, I know different ale breweries select different hops or mixtures of hops, hence the wide variety of ales we can enjoy.
Island Girl... Great comparison with regards to 'not everybody drinks tea...' I love tea and drink lots of cups a day, but I have friends that prefer coffee! So yes, not every Brit drinks tea, just as you said not every Jamaican may eat Akee & Saltfish OR Curry Goat, Rice & Peas! But the majority DO overall - each to their own taste! 😋 👍👍👍
My sister used to volunteer for st John's ambulance, she has met the queen. I myself have never seen her real life, only on the telly. One thing she failed to mention is that the food is not full of salt, sugar and additives, so it tastes natural which is a shock to people from the USA. Britian had an empire we have food from all over the globe. You have to ask for ice in Europe also.
Hi Xee, tea is so important to the British Army that every tank and armoured fighting vehicle since WW2 is fitted with a kettle, otherwise known as a boiling vessel, that can also be used to boil up ready made ration packed meals. In the 1980s when the new Challenger tank was introduced and it was being shown to the German Army, the crew showing it off trolled the Germans by fitting lots more equipment inside, like a microwave, tv, radio, dvd player and convincing the Germans it all came as standard. As for meeting the Queen? One US couple did without even realising it, look up the story told to Sky News, by Richard Griffin, her Royal Protection Officer at her Platinum Jubilee celebration.
I have actually met the present King when he was carrying out an awards ceremony on behalf of the Queen as Prince of Wales. We were all assembled for a briefing and warned that "he does like to chat," and indeed had someone standing next to him explaining why we were being honoured. He had a few friendly words with us all before giving us our medals. Sadly I have never been to a formal event since at which it would appropriate to wear my OBE, so I tend to wear it for parties.
The unwelcoming is quiet simple to answer, many people from the US visiting just go to London, a city as big as New York with many more people, people working and so busy, they aren't there to be talking with everyone "unless they are a taxi driver 😂", you might be surprised that you can talk with the police, including the armed police, I have asked for directions from armed police in London and they are perfectly friendly too.
Scotland, northern Ireland. The Isle of man and the channel Isles all have their own currency its all tied to the english pound . Northern Ireland and Scotland have some of the most beautiful Bank notes. I've not seen any from the channel Isles or the Isle of man
An interesting one, and I don't know if it's just my fella, but he has metal fillings, and can feel when thunder's coming. I can smell a storm brewing too. There's a kind of dry, almost unpleasant smell in the air. The air just smells and feels 'different'
hey girl sean here hope you and the family are well, the beer right hope you read this, we have many beers, we have the cold beers like you would have in the US, and around the world. they are nice and cold around 3.c but we also have ales, beers and stouts, that are brewed local with some funny, names, like the bishops finger and so on. these are cask ales, and have a short shelve life, but these are the beers you see, crank the big handle pumping them into a beer glass, back in the day there was fridges, or coolers, beer was store in te cellar, to keep it cold, but it was around 5 to 10c when the barrels were opened, de gassed, the ales were at their best, over a week or two or 3 the beer would loose its flavour, still good to drink, but not at its best now cooling them down to the modern day temp of the extra cold beer, kills the flavour of the beer or ale, hence, the slightly warmer
Unfriendly Brits? Well, in London, people are busy daily, and rushing - a bit like in New York - go north, and people tend to have a bit more time and you'll find them chatty and helpful.
Yes that’s true about London , I am from London and I’m a very friendly person but it’s so true that in London we are just rushing and it’s so busy. You can’t be saying hi to everyone 😅. People are quite stressed out
That American lady is also wrong. Cask beer (unpressurised taditional ales) in pubs, is drunk at "cellar temperature" not room temperature, which is around the low fifties in fahrenheit. Room temperature is for red wine usually and would you want a room heated to 53°F in winter?
The teeth thing. We all go to the dentist. Keep out teeth in good order. But we not obsessed with the perfect smile like Americans. Spending money Getting teeth whitened. Or lined up perfectly. We look natural 😉
Yip steak pies are amazing a full roast of either beef lamb or chicken or pork with roast potatoes, yorkshire pudding is amazing! Shepherds pie done correctly, sausages and mash casseroles hot pots etc!
The bad teeth comment is due to people in the US having their teeth whitened and straightened, we prefer the natural look, braces are used to straighten a problem tooth or teeth, but not everyone is bothered by this, so because we tend not to bleach our teeth many people in the US think that we don't brush/clean our teeth, utter nonsense.
We have COUNTIES rather than states in each COUNTRY. There are 48 counties in England alone and 92 in the whole of the UK. The bad teeth thing comes from before we had the NHS dentists and stereotypes like AUSTIN POWERS !! Warm beer comes from during the 2nd world war when American soldiers said this, as our beer was sold in barrels and not refrigerated. Now it all comes through cold pipes from the cellar. Funny enough I DO know a member of nobility as I work for a DUKE who has close associations with members of the royal family.
LAGER comes through cold pipes! Real ale is best served straight from the cask to the glass...at around 13°C. Anything colder than that is foreign. Sadly, lager has become the favoured beer in the UK...we have lost much of our heritage.
Yeah you have hit it spot on with the ice! Cola etc is served from a chiller anyways so no need for ice! During the summer for spirit drinks etc (Liquor) i would think most would ask or just expect ice BUT as you say some places in the past were throwing ice in and it just diluted the drink and made it less tasteful and people quite rightly didnt like that because as you say its a cost cutting measure
Most American misconception about the UK are a result of the stem from WWII when for the first time thousands of American service men were staioned over here. A time with many shortages in the UK. The UK is very different to how it was 80 years ago.
hey girl, you reacted to the wrong one here, im sorry to say, while she lives in the UK, her husband is US milatry, they living in a famr house, in the UK, having days out and posting, some good content about there day trips. but they are not exposed to to real life of the UK, they do some wonderful days out, great videos, of the country side, the bad teeth and the food you hear about comes from the war years, no food, rations, rations were from1939 to 1954, but the american service men took that as the norm yet, if you think about it in real terms, america, has never been invaded, or you have had to fight people trying to take your country your freedom you have not ever had invaders come onto US soil or try to take US soil,
It actually rains more in NY than London, in fact double what London gets. A new study from the world dentistry have found the UK have better teeth, due to regular check ups and better social care, and prevention, also the added fluoride to our tap water. Both myths.
New York has a higher average rainfall than London. Also it rains on more day per year on Average in New York than it does in London. Apart from Alaska the whole of the USA is closer to the equator than the most southerly point of the UK. The gulf stream an underwater current that start in the warm water of the gulf of Mexico and allows to Europe stops the UK from experiencing prolonged freezing winters
Not sure what bars she's gone to but ice is the automatic standard in drinks, as a barman of over 25 years I would always as ask if they wanted it because most do but some don't, if they don't answer they get it....
"You live in England - what's London like?" "No, I live in Scotland, the northern part of the United Kingdom, but I do know that London is expensive and overcrowded."
On the whole British dental health is actually better than the US. Its just not important to have diamond white teeth which are less healthy, and due to bleaching and caps etc
The biggest problem is American education, before 17th century when Europeans colonised America, our history was also your history but you don't get taught it, why not?
Yes as you know this Scottish fan of yours would not appreciate being called English all to do with identity and NO that Does NOT mean that I dont like my English Welsh or Northern Irish friends or love visiting English cities
The bad teeth, warm beer and indeed lousy food all stem from the US troops over here during the second world war. We have far better dentistry now than we did then including the NHS which looks after children's dentistry to the age of sixteen, beer then was not refrigerated it was at cellar temperature and is not the larger like blonde beer you are used to, it is not supposed to be ice cold! The lousy food was a result of rationing, making a meal from what could be sourced. I almost never drink tea,for me it's coffee, sodas or alcohol. I live 300 miles from London, had to go there once to catch a bus, I was there for one hour, didn't want to go there then, never want to go again. As for the Royal Family, her Mag was a real gas on our nights out, even funnier than my mother after half a bottle of sherry! As for hospitality, we have welcomed peoples from across the world not just the old Empire, we are truly the most cosmopolitan country in the world, even more so than the USA that once embraced the huddle masses (what happened there?). As a result, we have the mos divine queasiness from across the world available in every town, I can go to Indian, Bangladeshi, Polish, Italian, Jamaican, French et al restaurants in any British town. Ice, she is correct as far as soft drinks go, however if I order a whiskey, I have to state no ice. She mentioned our National pride, be it for England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, Britain or the UK. S has failed to recognise our pride to be part of the Commonwealth, an institution that stemmed from the old Empire, an institution that every member state has elected to join, Jamaica is a member and any other country can become so for no more than the want of asking. good vid offering and good revue.
Warm beer, no we have chilled lagers, but ales are usually served at "cellar temperature" (a few degrees below room temp but not close to freezing). Ales have a mix of aromatics and flavours, it's what gives different brews their characters, cooled to near freezing you lose that richness, the characters of the different type, breweries selection of malts, hops and brewing process. It may take those used to lagers and Pilsners a bit to get used to.We seldom have the extreme heat that some places have, and when we do, well, the lager or, better yet, we have ciders that can be chilled, we can switch to for the 3 or 4 days of extreme summer days 😂
Americans don't know what beer is.
We have healthy teeth - but the NHS does not do cosmetic dentistry!
I'm sure if we took some of these Americans to a disco there would be a lot of glowing teeth under the uv lights
All the stereotypes about British life and people started after the American troops returned home after ww2 coming from a land of plenty to a rationed country was a shock to the Americans. So when ever asked by fellow Americans what was Britain like they all remembered the negatives. it's been 79 years since these stereotypes began fortunately over the intervening years things have changed and the stereotypes are finally eroding
We also have ice cube trays to make our own in our freezers at home, you know, the old fashioned way
Bought a Islay single malt whisky in a bar when in the States back in the eighties. The Bartender found it strange when I refused it, due to him putting ice in it and ruining it.
I suspect the 'have you met the Queen' thing is because some people outside of the US conflate England with their conception of a fairytale kingdom - which are generally tiny and seemingly everybody knows everybody else
The idea that British are standoffish is connected to the notion that London is England. Basically, people travel to the UK, remain entirely in and around London and then think they have seen England. London is a metropolis - it is huge, and crowded and busy and anonymous. Thinking everybody in England is like Londoners, is like going to the US and expecting people in South Carolina to be fast talking, New York taxi drivers
Food being tasteless - there are a lot of historical reasons for this as others have pointed out, in particular the impression US troops got when they were over here during rationing.
But the other reason for it is that people equate flavour with spice. Traditional British food is not heavy on spice - but it is heavy on herbs. We live in a colder climate so very few spices grow here, but herbs we have - so traditional British cuisine tends to be very hearty and savoury, with subtle herb flavours
The warm beer thing is mistaken statement, beer is lager and is definitely served cold, English ale such as mild a dark ale or bitter which is more of an amber colour and usually served at just below room temperature
Beer is never Lager. Beer was the collective name of pub made beers that were sold to their customers, mainly Bitter bear and Mild beer. You also had Indian Pale Ale or IPA this was a light Ale made for the East India Company and their Army but this was bought home to the UK where it became popular but it was still a beer!
The big breweries then got involved and bought out the family owned original pubs and made the usual beers in quantity and stocked the pubs with wooden barrels using horses pulling flat bed wagons with the brewery name in big letters advertising the beers. The wooden barrels of beer were very hands on where the handling and pulling the pints was concerned, it was more of an art than a skill. I’m old enough to remember the original beers in the pubs, my favourite was Mild, nice flavour. Bitter is a more brewed beer where most of the sugar is used up in the process and the Mild is less so. Bitter tends to be a lighter colour beer in colour than Mild and IPA is even lighter.
Lagers came in from Scandinavia in the 70s I think mostly in bottles and sold from fridges hence ice cold beer lacking in flavour but cold. When they got popular the breweries got the licence to produce the Lager themselves and a refrigerated pumping system was introduced to keep the drink now colder than the cellar temperature (note: not warm). Slowly the real British beers went out of favour and the lagers took over.
Nowadays the old beers are coming back into favour if only modestly but sold in mostly what are called micro breweries pubs and made popular by an association called CAMRA or Campaign for Real Ale. You’re now up to date but as I said Lagers were never British Beer!!
Cheers Aah Kid
Beer and lager are two different drinks.
@@angelawalker8615 Hmm, I think ales (I include porters and stouts) and lagers both as beers, but different types. Go into a British pub and simply ask for "a beer" you may get a stare back or an interrogation about "which one".
Lagers I believe use a different type of bottom fermenting yeast (and I think are brewed at lower temperature so possibly slower?), ales use yeasts that are top fermenting and work better at more moderate temps.
I suspect the type of hops used might be different, I know different ale breweries select different hops or mixtures of hops, hence the wide variety of ales we can enjoy.
Island Girl... Great comparison with regards to 'not everybody drinks tea...' I love tea and drink lots of cups a day, but I have friends that prefer coffee! So yes, not every Brit drinks tea, just as you said not every Jamaican may eat Akee & Saltfish OR Curry Goat, Rice & Peas! But the majority DO overall - each to their own taste! 😋 👍👍👍
My sister used to volunteer for st John's ambulance, she has met the queen. I myself have never seen her real life, only on the telly. One thing she failed to mention is that the food is not full of salt, sugar and additives, so it tastes natural which is a shock to people from the USA. Britian had an empire we have food from all over the globe. You have to ask for ice in Europe also.
Our food is not full additives some American foods are banned in uk Hersheys bars are sold as chocolate flavoured not chocolate
Hi Xee, tea is so important to the British Army that every tank and armoured fighting vehicle since WW2 is fitted with a kettle, otherwise known as a boiling vessel, that can also be used to boil up ready made ration packed meals. In the 1980s when the new Challenger tank was introduced and it was being shown to the German Army, the crew showing it off trolled the Germans by fitting lots more equipment inside, like a microwave, tv, radio, dvd player and convincing the Germans it all came as standard. As for meeting the Queen? One US couple did without even realising it, look up the story told to Sky News, by Richard Griffin, her Royal Protection Officer at her Platinum Jubilee celebration.
I have actually met the present King when he was carrying out an awards ceremony on behalf of the Queen as Prince of Wales. We were all assembled for a briefing and warned that "he does like to chat," and indeed had someone standing next to him explaining why we were being honoured. He had a few friendly words with us all before giving us our medals. Sadly I have never been to a formal event since at which it would appropriate to wear my OBE, so I tend to wear it for parties.
The unwelcoming is quiet simple to answer, many people from the US visiting just go to London, a city as big as New York with many more people, people working and so busy, they aren't there to be talking with everyone "unless they are a taxi driver 😂", you might be surprised that you can talk with the police, including the armed police, I have asked for directions from armed police in London and they are perfectly friendly too.
Scotland, northern Ireland. The Isle of man and the channel Isles all have their own currency its all tied to the english pound . Northern Ireland and Scotland have some of the most beautiful Bank notes. I've not seen any from the channel Isles or the Isle of man
An interesting one, and I don't know if it's just my fella, but he has metal fillings, and can feel when thunder's coming. I can smell a storm brewing too. There's a kind of dry, almost unpleasant smell in the air. The air just smells and feels 'different'
Just Come to Britain and See for your self. We have Back Americans who have moved to Britain as well.
Blessings Island Girl ❤
I think the bad food comments came from American soldiers during the war where everyone had to rashen
Ration... 👍😘
hey girl sean here hope you and the family are well, the beer
right hope you read this, we have many beers, we have the cold beers like you would have in the US, and around the world. they are nice and cold around 3.c
but we also have ales, beers and stouts, that are brewed local with some funny, names, like the bishops finger and so on.
these are cask ales, and have a short shelve life, but these are the beers you see, crank the big handle pumping them into a beer glass,
back in the day there was fridges, or coolers, beer was store in te cellar, to keep it cold, but it was around 5 to 10c
when the barrels were opened, de gassed, the ales were at their best, over a week or two or 3 the beer would loose its flavour, still good to drink, but not at its best
now cooling them down to the modern day temp of the extra cold beer, kills the flavour of the beer or ale, hence, the slightly warmer
Unfriendly Brits? Well, in London, people are busy daily, and rushing - a bit like in New York - go north, and people tend to have a bit more time and you'll find them chatty and helpful.
Yes that’s true about London , I am from London and I’m a very friendly person but it’s so true that in London we are just rushing and it’s so busy. You can’t be saying hi to everyone 😅. People are quite stressed out
That American lady is also wrong. Cask beer (unpressurised taditional ales) in pubs, is drunk at "cellar temperature" not room temperature, which is around the low fifties in fahrenheit. Room temperature is for red wine usually and would you want a room heated to 53°F in winter?
The teeth thing. We all go to the dentist. Keep out teeth in good order.
But we not obsessed with the perfect smile like Americans. Spending money Getting teeth whitened. Or lined up perfectly.
We look natural 😉
Yip steak pies are amazing a full roast of either beef lamb or chicken or pork with roast potatoes, yorkshire pudding is amazing! Shepherds pie done correctly, sausages and mash casseroles hot pots etc!
I can just see it the way you said it yum!🥰
@@IslandGirlzHaveFlow05XBS remember too that Gordon Ramsay is Scottish
The bad teeth comment is due to people in the US having their teeth whitened and straightened, we prefer the natural look, braces are used to straighten a problem tooth or teeth, but not everyone is bothered by this, so because we tend not to bleach our teeth many people in the US think that we don't brush/clean our teeth, utter nonsense.
You can get amazing Jamaican food in the UK. I am.told it authentic too
We have COUNTIES rather than states in each COUNTRY. There are 48 counties in England alone and 92 in the whole of the UK.
The bad teeth thing comes from before we had the NHS dentists and stereotypes like AUSTIN POWERS !!
Warm beer comes from during the 2nd world war when American soldiers said this, as our beer was sold in barrels and not refrigerated. Now it all comes through cold pipes from the cellar.
Funny enough I DO know a member of nobility as I work for a DUKE who has close associations with members of the royal family.
LAGER comes through cold pipes! Real ale is best served straight from the cask to the glass...at around 13°C. Anything colder than that is foreign. Sadly, lager has become the favoured beer in the UK...we have lost much of our heritage.
Ice is available sometimes you ask but usually they will ask if you want ice.
Yeah you have hit it spot on with the ice! Cola etc is served from a chiller anyways so no need for ice! During the summer for spirit drinks etc (Liquor) i would think most would ask or just expect ice BUT as you say some places in the past were throwing ice in and it just diluted the drink and made it less tasteful and people quite rightly didnt like that because as you say its a cost cutting measure
Most American misconception about the UK are a result of the stem from WWII when for the first time thousands of American service men were staioned over here.
A time with many shortages in the UK.
The UK is very different to how it was 80 years ago.
hey girl, you reacted to the wrong one here, im sorry to say, while she lives in the UK, her husband is US milatry, they living in a famr house, in the UK,
having days out and posting, some good content about there day trips.
but they are not exposed to to real life of the UK, they do some wonderful days out, great videos, of the country side,
the bad teeth and the food you hear about comes from the war years, no food, rations, rations were from1939 to 1954, but the american service men took that as the norm
yet, if you think about it in real terms, america, has never been invaded, or you have had to fight people trying to take your country your freedom
you have not ever had invaders come onto US soil or try to take US soil,
Cheers young lady.Have a look at What's wrong with Britain Union flag ?Is censorship beginning in the UK?
It actually rains more in NY than London, in fact double what London gets. A new study from the world dentistry have found the UK have better teeth, due to regular check ups and better social care, and prevention, also the added fluoride to our tap water. Both myths.
I just found that out since learning about the Uk. 🥰🥰
New York has a higher average rainfall than London.
Also it rains on more day per year on Average in New York than it does in London.
Apart from Alaska the whole of the USA is closer to the equator than the most southerly point of the UK.
The gulf stream an underwater current that start in the warm water of the gulf of Mexico and allows to Europe stops the UK from experiencing prolonged freezing winters
Not sure what bars she's gone to but ice is the automatic standard in drinks, as a barman of over 25 years I would always as ask if they wanted it because most do but some don't, if they don't answer they get it....
Larger / cider is cold. Beer is room temp!
@Island Girl from mi a pitney u hear them say people from England are mean and not nice 😂
Here as usual for another reaction vedio.
I am from the uk ( england to be precise) i smell the rain before it starts
"You live in England - what's London like?" "No, I live in Scotland, the northern part of the United Kingdom, but I do know that London is expensive and overcrowded."
Different beer are drank at different temperatures.
On the whole British dental health is actually better than the US. Its just not important to have diamond white teeth which are less healthy, and due to bleaching and caps etc
To say everyone lived in London would be like saying everyone lives in Washington DC in the USA
Yuck I certainly wouldnt drink warm beer
The biggest problem is American education, before 17th century when Europeans colonised America, our history was also your history but you don't get taught it, why not?
Yes as you know this Scottish fan of yours would not appreciate being called English all to do with identity and NO that Does NOT mean that I dont like my English Welsh or Northern Irish friends or love visiting English cities