I wonder how many drinks in, if any at that party, made you think, "I can totally flip this absolutely massive cutting board in one fluid motion without dropping any food"
@@K-MHamm Or even just with a smaller cutting board so you can actually grip the edges of the pan correctly & not hit yourself while flipping the board.
Similar to snack foods which are extremely difficult to replicate in a kitchen puff pastry is just fine buying from the store not just because of the over all taste not being that different but because it's nearly impossible to get the layers to the same thinness as the manufactured kind.
@@jgodwin717 It's also significantly easier, & doesn't make much difference quality-wise. Especially if you buy the slightly more expensive stuff with butter instead of oil.
Speaking from experience, home-made filo dough is also usually not worth the effort. I say "usually" because I'm sure there's some conceivable reason wherein it's more convenient to make it yourself.
wow, quite different from UK pigs in blankets. ours are normal mini sausages instead of mini hotdogs, and they're wrapped in bacon. im sure both variants are equally addictive. edit after watching the rest: im definitely gonna be trying out some fancy sausage roll idea now!
Yes, but we generally remove the sausage meat (actual sausage, not wieners) from the uhhh... skin? Coat? Whatever it's called. Makes it a bit softer and easy to eat.
@@biboofers6390 not really There are many recipes for sausage rolls that just say to use sausages with the case The case isn’t really that much of an issue, it doesn’t taste of anything I don’t think
@@RocketMannn__m I have never seen, nor would I eat or make a sausage roll with the casing on the meat. It's morally wrong. The recipes you've seen must be the equivalent to the American 'Cup of English tea'
If you don't slice them, you've essentially made a British sausage roll. Also in England, a pig in blanket is sausage wrapped in bacon, which is the absolute highlight of Christmas
@@ShaneWalta oh yeah! I remember now. The recipe adapted from the Persian one is the devil. The local estuary oysters full of cholera are the angel. My statement that England is weird remains standing.
Pillsbury makes these things called Cornbread twists, and they work *phenomenally* as pig blanket wraps. Almost like making tiny corndogs without the mess
Hi Andrew! I hate to admit how much I love piggies in a blanket. It broke my heart to see what happened to the tray of piggies; I would have eaten them anyway. I’m not supposed to watch food bloggers any more because it triggers my own food experiments but I get vicarious delight through watching yours. Thank you for your efforts I really appreciate you.
This is the first time I have seen pigs in a blanket with puff pastry. We always used biscuit dough and either hot dogs or cocktail weenies. Can't wait to try this version
I can’t believe more people haven’t tried full size pigs in blankets!! My family has always preferred using canned biscuit dough and crescent rolls. The crescent rolls in particular are absolutely perfect for rolling up, no trimming required!
wait, in the uk (or atleast in my family) pigs in blankets are wrapped in bacon, not pastry- Edit: What have I started xD And yes, we have these in the UK too but they’re called sausage rolls here
See, I know there are different kinds of “Pigs in a Blanket” such as those seen here, but I grew up knowing pork and rice wrapped in cabbage as Pigs in a blanket. Just goes to show how creative and open ended food is.❤
Reminds me of when I would have rice, cucumbers, and meat (any kind of meat like steak slices, sausage, chicken, spam, etc.) and I would make little sandwiches out of them kinda like a lunchable by taking the meat and wrapping rice around it, rolling it into a ball, then slap two cucumber slices on the top and bottom and boom, you had a little nice cucumber-rice ball sandwich me and my sister would call “krabby patties” lol
What got me was Andrew using the fanciest grape jelly container I've ever seen when we all know our moms were making the super bowl sauce with Welch's out of the plastic tub.
4:47 Only a man like you, that has so many times reached for greatness only to fall at the last hurdle, could react so calmly to that. I think I would have sat down and cried. Perhaps this is a sign I don't take enough risks in life and therefore do not suffer enough failures to learn resilience
the variation i make is - use crescent roll dough, fill each one with 2 little smokies, a little cheese, fully encasing them, then mix honey and sriracha together for dipping it's like a klobasnek and pig in a blanket combined themselves
biscuit dough also works for quick and easy pigs in a blanket! either the pop-tube version or bisquick, whatever. my dad’s always made them that way with full hotdogs, u just spiral the dough around like a little mummy (cheese-stuffed brats are a recent favorite hotdog substitute for us)
@@karactr8361 Those were my parents' version. It takes one or two to remember the right angle to get the sausage fully wrapped, but then works out just fine
What perfectly proportioned pastries to pork palettables! Could you please do your own take on the Fiesta Burrito with Chili and Eggs that Dan Aykroyd makes for Robert Stack in the food truck scene from Caddyshack 2?
The issue with the tray flip was the fact that you tried it with such a heavy board. You couldn't get the momentum or the control that you needed. Next time try putting a flexible cutting board directly on top of the tray that you're trying to flip, bind it down with some plastic wrap, and make the flip onto a second cutting board, so that the plastic wrap is sandwiched between cutting boards. Then rest the whole thing on the presentation tray, cut away the excess plastic wrap and use the baking tray to hold the food in place as you slide the plastic sandwich out from underneath the food, leaving the food directly on the presentation tray.
His problem was gripping the sides where he could not completely hold the baking sheet since the cutting board was so much longer than it. If he had held the front and back sides at opposing ends instead (or, you know, got a helper), he would have been able to rotate over just fine.
Interestingly, in Britain "pigs in blankets" refers to tiny sauages wrapped in bacon, not pastry. The latter (sausage rolls) are so ubiquitous here- at least in Scotland- that they would hardly need such a fancy name, and are a year-round staple food.
not to mention this size are usually called mini or party sausage rolls the full size sausage roll is roughly the same length as a regular sausage, made in the same way
Our version of a sausage roll has been a thing since the 1800's too. I'm all for variations, but you gotta call out the Brits when you take one of their signature snacks.
Full size hot dogs for pigs in a blanket, so chaparritas basically :) although those are hotdog, wrapped in cheese, then wrapped in dough, then baked. A great treat indeed
Danish sounds like a dying man with sore throat Swedish sounds like a baby invented it Norwegian sounds like someone liked a sound and decided to make a whole language with it
Something to make after reaching 10 mil subscribers: The Simpsons- Ethiopian Dish (The Food Wife episode) The Owl House- Fried Orb Cruella- Baroness' Lunch The Looney Tunes Show- Daffy's Complicated Banana Split (Peel of Fortune episode) Steven Universe- Literally All Toppings Pizza
So a pig in a blanket in America is just a sausage roll with the skin still on the sausage or a frankfurter twist like my mum makes (hot dog wrapped in cheese pastry). In the uk a pig in a blanket is a chipolata sausage wrapped in bacon.
I always thought that "Pigs in a blanket" were made by wrapping a sausage in biscuit dough and baking, or rolling up the sausage with a pancake. Never heard of doing it with puff pastry, but I'm excited to give it a try!
Cool. In the UK, our pigs in blankets are cocktail sausages wrapped in bacon. These American pigs in blankets are exactly like UK "sausage rolls" - sausages wrapped in pastry. Edit: Googled it. UK version is "pigs in blankets". USA version is "pigs in a blanket". Both are delicious.
I'm from England and we would call what you made a sausage roll and a pig in blanket for us is sausage wrapped in bacon, which we have with our Christmas dinner.
My Father used to make those for us for dinner, but we rolled them loose and into the blanket roll we added cheese, fried onions, ketchup etc Loved it so much
Happy New Year to Andrew and the Babish Universe The piggies in a blanket look like sausage rolls to me haha. I know it's the US version but you have to try the UK version of pigs in blankets which is a small sausage wrapped in bacon. It is Christmas wrapped in bacon and it is delicious. Seeing Andrew eating pigs in blanket in a blanket made my day and year!
Several comments have pointed out that here in the UK what we call Pigs In Blankets are traditional breakfast sausages (usually mini ones) wrapped in streaky bacon - though I'd argue pastry is a better analogue for a 'blanket' than bacon. Maybe a more accurate name for the UK version is Pigs In Strips Of Another Pig...
Pigs in a blanket are a super nostalgic food for me, though instead of party appetizers, they’re supper items. My dad would use full-size hot dogs, wrap them in crescent rolls and cheese slices (pepper jack is my favorite), then pop them in the toaster oven, and it was a hit every time. Also awesome presentation for the piggy board at the end.
I am loving the international responses to this video. Calm, collected, no one losing they're **** - simply "yeah, in my country we do it slightly differently - here's how we do it'. This kind of comment section is my jam 😍 I've recently moved to Spain. Not sure what the local equivalent is but I look forward to finding out (oh, and specifically Catalan equivalent as I'm in Barcelona).
My take on pigs in a blanket is this. You cover the inside of the dough with curry, roll the sausage in the dough, then light wet the outside of the dough with water, roll the whole thing in breadcrumbs and bake. Once done and fresh out of the oven draw a line of ketchup on top so that it caramelizes a bit and enjoy.
For full size dogs I've always used canned croissants. Lay each triangle of dough out, stretch and spread it a bit using my fingers, and then wrap up a hot dog in it. And bake. I don't even bother chopping it up.
My grandmother used to make pigs in a blanket a lot when I was a kid, but she did it with whole hotdogs. She would just wrap them in premade crescent roll dough and bake them in the oven. She would also cut a long slit down the hot dog and put slices of cheese and pickles.
Please make Clam-entine Crystal from Scooby-Doo Mystery Incorporated episode, "Where Walks Aphrodite" Perfect video to make after reaching 10 mil subscribers
Hi There, British person here! :) Just wanted to comment as I wanted to ask an American: Are those your versions of Pigs In Blackets? I'm very curious to know, as in the U.K these would be snack sized 'Sausage Rolls' (as the correct size rolls are the length of the sausage itself); with the U.K's version of Pigs In Blankets being full length sausages (usually chipolata, but other types can be used) wrapped in 1-2 slices of bacon (usually unsmoked, but smoked gives an extra flavour) and roasted until cooked through and golden. Now i'm not giving any opinions here (this is the youtube comment section after all..) but I just want to say that both are great foods, and i would happily have one if offered. (Late) Merry Christmas, and A Happy New Year! :)
Yes, this version of pigs in a blanket is a very common American party food. Using puff pastry is a little lush-more common is premade biscuit (what the UK would call a savory/unsweetened scone) or crescent roll dough, but that may be my middle-class Midwesterner experience talking. Cocktail sausages are the norm, using full-sized dogs is also Babish being extra. Don’t think we have chipolatas in the States (looks like the closest equivalent would be what we call “Italian sausage”) but I doubt anyone would turn their nose up at them at a party, even if they use back bacon instead of our streaky bacon. Thank you for being like the only Brit here not faux-outraged about American PiaB-we’re two different cultures with different names for things, it’s not that big a deal. Hope you and yours have a happy New Year!
@@DrFranklynAnderson Okay, so you're saying that it's more common to use that of similar to what you would find at an american KFC...? (that's my only U.S Biscuits experience sorry). Though that seems 'weird' to a Brit, I would also be interested to try some. Could be something similar to the British 'Toad in the Hole'...? Any thin sausage works. Too thick and the bacon burns before the sausage cooks through (unless pre halfed-cooked). Streaky bacon does actually works quite well imo, as you get the rich flavours of the bacon rind :) Also no problem. UA-cam comment sections are always toxic, so I try to talk to people as you would in person :P Thank you too for enlightening me!
@Harry Lee Oh don’t feel bad, KFC biscuits are definitely the right idea! Maybe not exactly the same-it’s been a while since I’ve been to KFC, but I’m guessing they make their biscuits with buttermilk in keeping with their Southern US-inspired (‘cus _no one_ thinks fast food is authentic 😂) cuisine. In grocery stores here, they sell pre-made, pre-portioned biscuit dough and crescent roll dough in these kind of cardboard cans. Basically a buttery dough with chemical leaveners instead of yeast. That’s generally what’s wrapped around the cocktail sausages. I’m a little more knowledgeable on British food than most Americans-I have a pack of hobnobs in my tea drawer and made a steamed Christmas pudding last year-but I haven’t tried Toad in the Hole to know if the taste is similar. But the basic idea of bread wrapped around meat is the same!
Ah here we go. As a Brit, yeah that's a sausage roll for my cultural experience and yes I'm always gonna think of Ricky Gervais if you say "The Office". It doesn't matter. It's not the biggest deal. Those look scrumptious. I'm not kicking Andrew out of kitchen if he calls makes them like that and calls it what he knows it as. However, he does need to try our version for the yum
In Denmark we have "Pølsehorn" we either use normal long thin sausage and cut it in half, or if you are lucky you can find medium size made for "pølsehorn"
This is interesting because I don't think I've ever seen pigs in a blanket done any other way but using whole dogs (not cutting them at ANY point) and wrapping Pillsbury Crescent rolls around them.
I recently made Clair’s version of pigs in a blanket but I pregrilled my hotdogs and it made such a big difference in flavor. Highly highly recommend that step!!
Do people not understand the concepts of regional variants? Also, not all pigs in a blanket in America are made with sausage, so it isn't that strange for us to not call them sausage rolls. Wonder how many of these same people would have their minds blown from the differences between Thai, Japanese, Indian, and Jamaican curry. It's not that serious. Also, neither sausage nor hot dogs wrapped in bacon are foreign concepts to us. Don't really care all that much for it personally. EDIT: And what's with all the spam comments about the "real" pig on a blanket? And I don't mean the same sentiment being shared. I've seen at least three of the exact same comment
I remember when I was younger and my family made pigs in a blanket, we used full sized hotdogs rolled with crescent rolls with sliced cheese wrapped around the hotdog
I wonder how many drinks in, if any at that party, made you think, "I can totally flip this absolutely massive cutting board in one fluid motion without dropping any food"
I think the flip would have been successful with an extra person one on each end to hold it more firmly to the cutting board.
@@kuhrd Or holding the baking sheet from underneath and cutting board from the top as to "sandwich" them between your hands, then flipping.
@@K-MHamm Or even just with a smaller cutting board so you can actually grip the edges of the pan correctly & not hit yourself while flipping the board.
@@CaptHayfever or just flip the sauce containers instead of the pigs in a blanket
@@K-MHamm I suspect the issue there is that the thing was straight out of the oven.
When you go for kevin’s pigs in blankets but then you get a Kevin’s secret chili ending
...i think you caught the easter egg, dang it
The key to Kevins secret chili is carpet hairs.
@@dylanelfert3943 you forgot the important part of air frying the hairs for roughly 15 minutes
I’m HOWLING
Underrated post
I'm now realizing the potential of a full hot dog in a blanket.
sausage roll mate
Just now? I’ve been having them for dinner since I was a kid.
Corn dogs
Slice down the middle and add cheese. You can also just wrap them in the big and flaky Pillsbury crescent rolls
They are called hogs in duvets in my house
When babish tells you not to really bother to make it from scratch, you know home made puff pastry does not make much of a difference
Similar to snack foods which are extremely difficult to replicate in a kitchen puff pastry is just fine buying from the store not just because of the over all taste not being that different but because it's nearly impossible to get the layers to the same thinness as the manufactured kind.
True
Its cheaper that is all.
@@jgodwin717 It's also significantly easier, & doesn't make much difference quality-wise. Especially if you buy the slightly more expensive stuff with butter instead of oil.
Speaking from experience, home-made filo dough is also usually not worth the effort. I say "usually" because I'm sure there's some conceivable reason wherein it's more convenient to make it yourself.
wow, quite different from UK pigs in blankets. ours are normal mini sausages instead of mini hotdogs, and they're wrapped in bacon.
im sure both variants are equally addictive.
edit after watching the rest: im definitely gonna be trying out some fancy sausage roll idea now!
Ours (uk) are by far superior. These are an absolute travesty.
How did the UK out-America America
Now what we need to do, is wrap our pigs in blankets, inside an American blanket…
Sausage, wrapped in bacon, wrapped in pastry 🤤
Bacon wrapped Smokies are definitely a thing in America too, so in the end it's just a name difference which is understandable.
UK's are better :) they just made bad sausage rolls
In the uk pigs in blankets are bacon wrapped sausages, we’d call these sausage rolls
Much preferred and arguably healthier.
Yes, but we generally remove the sausage meat (actual sausage, not wieners) from the uhhh... skin? Coat? Whatever it's called. Makes it a bit softer and easy to eat.
@@biboofers6390 not really
There are many recipes for sausage rolls that just say to use sausages with the case
The case isn’t really that much of an issue, it doesn’t taste of anything I don’t think
@@RocketMannn__m I have never seen, nor would I eat or make a sausage roll with the casing on the meat. It's morally wrong. The recipes you've seen must be the equivalent to the American 'Cup of English tea'
If you don't slice them, you've essentially made a British sausage roll. Also in England, a pig in blanket is sausage wrapped in bacon, which is the absolute highlight of Christmas
I have seen brawls break out for pigs in blankets
@@Themanwiththeplan1899 I mean, if it meant more pigs in blankets, I'd commit several bad things
Also, a prune wrapped in bacon is angels on horseback. But if you wrap an oyster in bacon, it's devils on horseback. England is weird.
@@FaultAndDakranon other way around. The oyster is the angel
@@ShaneWalta oh yeah! I remember now. The recipe adapted from the Persian one is the devil. The local estuary oysters full of cholera are the angel. My statement that England is weird remains standing.
A poetic end to the pig platter, falling to the floor just like Kevin's chili incident 😂
This episode, Andrew remembers all those bagel toppings he bought for the Everything Bagel.
Pillsbury makes these things called Cornbread twists, and they work *phenomenally* as pig blanket wraps. Almost like making tiny corndogs without the mess
Hi Andrew! I hate to admit how much I love piggies in a blanket. It broke my heart to see what happened to the tray of piggies; I would have eaten them anyway. I’m not supposed to watch food bloggers any more because it triggers my own food experiments but I get vicarious delight through watching yours. Thank you for your efforts I really appreciate you.
Now I need to know about your most adventurous food experiments!
This is the first time I have seen pigs in a blanket with puff pastry. We always used biscuit dough and either hot dogs or cocktail weenies. Can't wait to try this version
Although puff pastry is traditional- Real office fans know that Gabe used leftover pizza dough to make his pigs in a blanket.
Was scrolling through to find this exact comment
I can’t believe more people haven’t tried full size pigs in blankets!! My family has always preferred using canned biscuit dough and crescent rolls. The crescent rolls in particular are absolutely perfect for rolling up, no trimming required!
What I find most impressive is Andrew’s restraint after the failed tray flip
As a great internet chef once said, "making your own puff pastry is like making your own kitkat. Sure you could, but why would you do that?"
Because I’ve never used the store bought stuff in all my life and I don’t plan to start
wait, in the uk (or atleast in my family) pigs in blankets are wrapped in bacon, not pastry-
Edit: What have I started xD
And yes, we have these in the UK too but they’re called sausage rolls here
This is the usa version
@@michaelliggett1622 no i know, i meant that i've never seen the us version before lol
@@NightRaiderTea correct. I guess this how our neighbors do it which is pretty cool
Welcome to my confusion when finding a recipe labeled “flapjacks” in a British cookbook. 😂😉
@@DrFranklynAnderson yeah, you guys call pancakes flapjacks, right?
Do you have actual flapjacks under a different name?
I’m not even going to wait till new years, going to go get some ingredients and make this tonight.
How was it?
BABY I HEAR THE BLUES A CALLIN
Chop salad and scrambled eggs
Tossed salads and scrambled eggs
See, I know there are different kinds of “Pigs in a Blanket” such as those seen here, but I grew up knowing pork and rice wrapped in cabbage as Pigs in a blanket. Just goes to show how creative and open ended food is.❤
That sounds like cabbage rolls.
Reminds me of when I would have rice, cucumbers, and meat (any kind of meat like steak slices, sausage, chicken, spam, etc.) and I would make little sandwiches out of them kinda like a lunchable by taking the meat and wrapping rice around it, rolling it into a ball, then slap two cucumber slices on the top and bottom and boom, you had a little nice cucumber-rice ball sandwich me and my sister would call “krabby patties” lol
What got me was Andrew using the fanciest grape jelly container I've ever seen when we all know our moms were making the super bowl sauce with Welch's out of the plastic tub.
4:47 Only a man like you, that has so many times reached for greatness only to fall at the last hurdle, could react so calmly to that. I think I would have sat down and cried. Perhaps this is a sign I don't take enough risks in life and therefore do not suffer enough failures to learn resilience
That's a Sausage roll........ pigs in blankets are bacon wrapped. ;-)
the variation i make is - use crescent roll dough, fill each one with 2 little smokies, a little cheese, fully encasing them, then mix honey and sriracha together for dipping
it's like a klobasnek and pig in a blanket combined themselves
biscuit dough also works for quick and easy pigs in a blanket! either the pop-tube version or bisquick, whatever. my dad’s always made them that way with full hotdogs, u just spiral the dough around like a little mummy (cheese-stuffed brats are a recent favorite hotdog substitute for us)
Pancakes wrapped around breakfast sausage works too.
Crescent roll dough works well with no rolling.
@@karactr8361 Those were my parents' version. It takes one or two to remember the right angle to get the sausage fully wrapped, but then works out just fine
What perfectly proportioned pastries to pork palettables!
Could you please do your own take on the Fiesta Burrito with Chili and Eggs that Dan Aykroyd makes for Robert Stack in the food truck scene from Caddyshack 2?
Those are mini sausage rolls! A pig in blanket (in the UK at least) is a sausage wrapped in bacon
This is what they are in the US
@@apatternedhorizon yep
The issue with the tray flip was the fact that you tried it with such a heavy board. You couldn't get the momentum or the control that you needed. Next time try putting a flexible cutting board directly on top of the tray that you're trying to flip, bind it down with some plastic wrap, and make the flip onto a second cutting board, so that the plastic wrap is sandwiched between cutting boards. Then rest the whole thing on the presentation tray, cut away the excess plastic wrap and use the baking tray to hold the food in place as you slide the plastic sandwich out from underneath the food, leaving the food directly on the presentation tray.
His problem was gripping the sides where he could not completely hold the baking sheet since the cutting board was so much longer than it. If he had held the front and back sides at opposing ends instead (or, you know, got a helper), he would have been able to rotate over just fine.
Interestingly, in Britain "pigs in blankets" refers to tiny sauages wrapped in bacon, not pastry. The latter (sausage rolls) are so ubiquitous here- at least in Scotland- that they would hardly need such a fancy name, and are a year-round staple food.
not to mention this size are usually called mini or party sausage rolls
the full size sausage roll is roughly the same length as a regular sausage, made in the same way
Our version of a sausage roll has been a thing since the 1800's too. I'm all for variations, but you gotta call out the Brits when you take one of their signature snacks.
Point of order, when you use sausage as filling , it’s no longer and pig in blanket, but a sausage roll
Full size hot dogs for pigs in a blanket, so chaparritas basically :) although those are hotdog, wrapped in cheese, then wrapped in dough, then baked. A great treat indeed
Sausage rolls not pigs in blankets
Babish saying Medisterpølse just made my day. Might just make my whole year
Seriously, I had to rewind and check that that was real. Finally, a victory for the Scandinavians! (Especially Norwegians and Danes.)
Danish sounds like a dying man with sore throat
Swedish sounds like a baby invented it
Norwegian sounds like someone liked a sound and decided to make a whole language with it
Ultimate Scandinavian language slander
I had to go back a few times before I realized that he was talking about medisterpølse.
Something to make after reaching 10 mil subscribers:
The Simpsons- Ethiopian Dish (The Food Wife episode)
The Owl House- Fried Orb
Cruella- Baroness' Lunch
The Looney Tunes Show- Daffy's Complicated Banana Split (Peel of Fortune episode)
Steven Universe- Literally All Toppings Pizza
I haven’t that much pain since Kevin dropped his crock of chillis.
So a pig in a blanket in America is just a sausage roll with the skin still on the sausage or a frankfurter twist like my mum makes (hot dog wrapped in cheese pastry). In the uk a pig in a blanket is a chipolata sausage wrapped in bacon.
I always thought that "Pigs in a blanket" were made by wrapping a sausage in biscuit dough and baking, or rolling up the sausage with a pancake. Never heard of doing it with puff pastry, but I'm excited to give it a try!
Pigs in a Blanket while in a Blanket? That's comfort on top of comfort!
That missed flip was devastating. I love that you showed it anyway.
Cool. In the UK, our pigs in blankets are cocktail sausages wrapped in bacon.
These American pigs in blankets are exactly like UK "sausage rolls" - sausages wrapped in pastry.
Edit: Googled it. UK version is "pigs in blankets". USA version is "pigs in a blanket". Both are delicious.
Interesting. I was a expecting bacon for this reason. Though the cocktail sausages wrapped in bacon and pastry does sound very tasty.
I'm from England and we would call what you made a sausage roll and a pig in blanket for us is sausage wrapped in bacon, which we have with our Christmas dinner.
pigs in blankets are sausages wrapped in bacon, sausage/sausage meat in puff pastry is a sausage roll!
My Father used to make those for us for dinner, but we rolled them loose and into the blanket roll we added cheese, fried onions, ketchup etc
Loved it so much
Happy New Year to Andrew and the Babish Universe
The piggies in a blanket look like sausage rolls to me haha. I know it's the US version but you have to try the UK version of pigs in blankets which is a small sausage wrapped in bacon. It is Christmas wrapped in bacon and it is delicious. Seeing Andrew eating pigs in blanket in a blanket made my day and year!
My experience with pigs in a blanket is my dad making them out of Pillsbury crescents, definitely how I still make them
Here in the UK pigs in blankets are sausages wrapped in bacon, whereas sausage meat wrapped in puff pastry is called a sausage roll
Several comments have pointed out that here in the UK what we call Pigs In Blankets are traditional breakfast sausages (usually mini ones) wrapped in streaky bacon - though I'd argue pastry is a better analogue for a 'blanket' than bacon. Maybe a more accurate name for the UK version is Pigs In Strips Of Another Pig...
Try making all the foods that T-Bo was selling on a stick from iCarly running gag?
Truly I have never seen pigs in a blanket using puff pastry. Everyone I know has always used Pillsbury crescent rolls
Try making Riddler's Latte and slice of Pumpkin Pie from 2022 Batman movie
You didn't squeeze the water out of that cucumber. That tzatziki's gonna be watery!
Would be interesting to see how Andrew handles the British version of pigs in blankets, i.e. small chipolatas wrapped in bacon
Pigs in a blanket are a super nostalgic food for me, though instead of party appetizers, they’re supper items. My dad would use full-size hot dogs, wrap them in crescent rolls and cheese slices (pepper jack is my favorite), then pop them in the toaster oven, and it was a hit every time. Also awesome presentation for the piggy board at the end.
Sausage gravy would've also been killer on the breakfast sausage piggies
I am loving the international responses to this video. Calm, collected, no one losing they're **** - simply "yeah, in my country we do it slightly differently - here's how we do it'. This kind of comment section is my jam 😍
I've recently moved to Spain. Not sure what the local equivalent is but I look forward to finding out (oh, and specifically Catalan equivalent as I'm in Barcelona).
These are more sausage rolls, pigs in blankets are usually sausages wrapped in bacon.
In the UK this is the USA version
Not in America; we don't have sausage rolls and this is what we serve as pigs in blankets 100% of the time.
This makes me want a breakfast version with sausage and pancakes drizzled with honey.
The Pigs in a Blanket I usually have don't use puff pastry but Bacon instead.
My take on pigs in a blanket is this. You cover the inside of the dough with curry, roll the sausage in the dough, then light wet the outside of the dough with water, roll the whole thing in breadcrumbs and bake. Once done and fresh out of the oven draw a line of ketchup on top so that it caramelizes a bit and enjoy.
Isn't this just what a Saucage Roll is? I've been watching a lot of Australian UA-camrs recently, so all I hear is them talk about Saucage Rolls.
Sausage rolls are generally made with sausage meat inside pastry, not a sausage (or hot dog, in this case) in its casing placed inside pastry.
For full size dogs I've always used canned croissants. Lay each triangle of dough out, stretch and spread it a bit using my fingers, and then wrap up a hot dog in it. And bake. I don't even bother chopping it up.
I kinda want to see you make Pizza Taco, Wiener Taco, & Taco Taco from Rocko's Modern Life Static Cling
My grandmother used to make pigs in a blanket a lot when I was a kid, but she did it with whole hotdogs. She would just wrap them in premade crescent roll dough and bake them in the oven. She would also cut a long slit down the hot dog and put slices of cheese and pickles.
Arnt they suppose to be pizza dogs? Since Gabe was using the leftover pizza dough and it offended Michael
Time for a new episode of Botched by Babish!!
Andrew clearly did that on purpose to mimic Kevin Malone to the fullest. Bravo
That's the wrong kind of pigs in blankets Andrew 😁
He’s American. Stop it 😅
As a Brit, actual pigs in blankets are can’t be beaten. This is a sausage roll 🤌
Needed this today!
In the UK we call then pigs in duvets. A pig in a blanket is a sausage wrapped in bacon 😁
Who knew I'd have a trauma response from "Cutting the tips"
In the UK, this is essentially a Sausage Roll. For us, a Pigs in Blankets are sausages (usually ‘cocktail’ chipolata’s) wrapped in bacon.
congratulations. You made a sausage roll.
Mate he’s AMERICAN 😂
"Wet sausage makes for slippy piggies." Emperor Bingian Babbishius 69 B.C.
that perfect bit has meme potential
Happy New Year with pigs in the blankets!
British pigs in blankets will always be superior in my opinion, but these are more like sausage rolls so they get a pass 🙏
I was desperately trying to figure out what "ECOC" was supposed to be
Please make Clam-entine Crystal from Scooby-Doo Mystery Incorporated episode, "Where Walks Aphrodite"
Perfect video to make after reaching 10 mil subscribers
The full sized pigs in a blanket are basically sausage rolls!
Hi There, British person here! :) Just wanted to comment as I wanted to ask an American: Are those your versions of Pigs In Blackets? I'm very curious to know, as in the U.K these would be snack sized 'Sausage Rolls' (as the correct size rolls are the length of the sausage itself); with the U.K's version of Pigs In Blankets being full length sausages (usually chipolata, but other types can be used) wrapped in 1-2 slices of bacon (usually unsmoked, but smoked gives an extra flavour) and roasted until cooked through and golden.
Now i'm not giving any opinions here (this is the youtube comment section after all..) but I just want to say that both are great foods, and i would happily have one if offered.
(Late) Merry Christmas, and A Happy New Year! :)
Yes this the us version
Yes, this version of pigs in a blanket is a very common American party food. Using puff pastry is a little lush-more common is premade biscuit (what the UK would call a savory/unsweetened scone) or crescent roll dough, but that may be my middle-class Midwesterner experience talking. Cocktail sausages are the norm, using full-sized dogs is also Babish being extra. Don’t think we have chipolatas in the States (looks like the closest equivalent would be what we call “Italian sausage”) but I doubt anyone would turn their nose up at them at a party, even if they use back bacon instead of our streaky bacon. Thank you for being like the only Brit here not faux-outraged about American PiaB-we’re two different cultures with different names for things, it’s not that big a deal. Hope you and yours have a happy New Year!
@@DrFranklynAnderson Okay, so you're saying that it's more common to use that of similar to what you would find at an american KFC...? (that's my only U.S Biscuits experience sorry). Though that seems 'weird' to a Brit, I would also be interested to try some. Could be something similar to the British 'Toad in the Hole'...?
Any thin sausage works. Too thick and the bacon burns before the sausage cooks through (unless pre halfed-cooked). Streaky bacon does actually works quite well imo, as you get the rich flavours of the bacon rind :)
Also no problem. UA-cam comment sections are always toxic, so I try to talk to people as you would in person :P
Thank you too for enlightening me!
@Harry Lee Oh don’t feel bad, KFC biscuits are definitely the right idea! Maybe not exactly the same-it’s been a while since I’ve been to KFC, but I’m guessing they make their biscuits with buttermilk in keeping with their Southern US-inspired (‘cus _no one_ thinks fast food is authentic 😂) cuisine.
In grocery stores here, they sell pre-made, pre-portioned biscuit dough and crescent roll dough in these kind of cardboard cans. Basically a buttery dough with chemical leaveners instead of yeast. That’s generally what’s wrapped around the cocktail sausages. I’m a little more knowledgeable on British food than most Americans-I have a pack of hobnobs in my tea drawer and made a steamed Christmas pudding last year-but I haven’t tried Toad in the Hole to know if the taste is similar. But the basic idea of bread wrapped around meat is the same!
Andrew was too proud to ask for help with the flip, but his vanity was his undoing.
Ah here we go.
As a Brit, yeah that's a sausage roll for my cultural experience and yes I'm always gonna think of Ricky Gervais if you say "The Office".
It doesn't matter. It's not the biggest deal. Those look scrumptious. I'm not kicking Andrew out of kitchen if he calls makes them like that and calls it what he knows it as.
However, he does need to try our version for the yum
These aren't pigs in blankets these are just fancy sausage rolls
Oh man, I wonder what dish Alvin made that took a week or more to make?
These are not pigs in blankets, these are sausage rolls. Pigs in blankets are sausages wrapped in bacon.
Babish needs the Supernatural cookbook, Food From The Road,’ because I want his take on Winchester Surprise! Someone make it happen please!
Ah, pig in a poke!
Rise and shine, Sammy!
My friend. You are a GENIUS
@@OddsandEndsandOtters Thank you!
In Denmark we have "Pølsehorn" we either use normal long thin sausage and cut it in half, or if you are lucky you can find medium size made for "pølsehorn"
As a brit I'm highly triggered by this! Pigs in blankets are sausages wrapped in bacon! What you're making here is a sausage roll!
This is interesting because I don't think I've ever seen pigs in a blanket done any other way but using whole dogs (not cutting them at ANY point) and wrapping Pillsbury Crescent rolls around them.
Translation for the rest of the world: 'Sausage roll but with hotdog instead of sausage'.
I have always had them as whole hotdogs slices down the middle, slice off a block of cheddar inserted into it, then wrapped in crescent roll dough.
It's only now that I know what they're called today. Here we just call them sausage rolls.
If you want to bake it with the ramekins inside to have areas for socks, just remove the ramekin and put new ramekins in that are cold for the sauce
As someone from the UK, this is very confusing. We know pigs in blankets to be wrapped in bacon, not pastry. XP
I recently made Clair’s version of pigs in a blanket but I pregrilled my hotdogs and it made such a big difference in flavor. Highly highly recommend that step!!
Do people not understand the concepts of regional variants? Also, not all pigs in a blanket in America are made with sausage, so it isn't that strange for us to not call them sausage rolls.
Wonder how many of these same people would have their minds blown from the differences between Thai, Japanese, Indian, and Jamaican curry. It's not that serious.
Also, neither sausage nor hot dogs wrapped in bacon are foreign concepts to us. Don't really care all that much for it personally.
EDIT: And what's with all the spam comments about the "real" pig on a blanket? And I don't mean the same sentiment being shared. I've seen at least three of the exact same comment
I do. Not sure why everyone else from here doesn’t comprehend it 😂 it’s fascinating
I remember when I was younger and my family made pigs in a blanket, we used full sized hotdogs rolled with crescent rolls with sliced cheese wrapped around the hotdog
I love how mad we as a nation get when Americans call these pigs in blankets.
Dumb thing to get mad about but I guess that means your life must be great and I’m here for it.
So I guess pigs in blankets are different in the US. In the UK they're sausages wrapped in bacon.
In the UK we call them sausage rolls! Pigs in blankets in the uk are sausages wrapped in bacon, its a traditional side dish in Christmas Dinners