Foreigner tries Bovril for the first time (+ other crazy UK drinks)

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  • Опубліковано 8 чер 2024
  • Who drinks HOT BOVRIL?? Use code AAN6020 to get 60% off your 1st HelloFresh box + 20% off the next 2 months + free gifts: bit.ly/AAN6020 #ad
    As a Canadian living in the UK, I've tried a lot of British drinks. But hot Bovril...??? I thought I was being pranked. But let's give it a go and see what the fuss is all about!
    Have a British food or drink I should try? Let me know!
    0:00 ya'll are crazy
    1:11 beefy
    5:30 squash but make it hot
    7:50 let's eat
    9:16 I have no idea what this is
    14:04 this one is scary lol
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    Hey! I'm Alanna - a thirty-something documenting my life as a Canadian living in England.
    I share the ups and downs of an expat living abroad and what it's really like living in the UK. It's not always easy, but there's been so many wonderful experiences, too. I post a UA-cam video every Tuesday plus an additional video every Saturday on my Patreon account. I also livestream every Wednesday and Sunday at 5:30pm GMT/BST on Twitch.
    Alanna x

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @AdventuresAndNaps
    @AdventuresAndNaps  5 місяців тому +15

    Cheers to HelloFresh! 💚 Use code AAN6020 to get 60% off your 1st box + 20% off the next 2 months + free gifts: bit.ly/AAN6020

    • @SteveGouldinSpain
      @SteveGouldinSpain 5 місяців тому +4

      Please try Camp Coffee if it's still on sale over there. God that haunted my childhood - don't know what my parents were thinking of!

    • @KenFullman
      @KenFullman 5 місяців тому +2

      When I was a kid (back in the 1960s) there was an olympic sized swimming pool (complete with a full set of high diving boards) that had just been built in my neighbourhood. For one shilling I could pay to get in, spend the day swimming and using the diving boards, then had just enough left over to visit the cafe for a cup of Bovril and a bag of cheesy puffs. I suppose it's what you get used to but, I'm really craving a bovril and pack of cheesy puffs now. (haven't had Bovril in over 50 years).

    • @JohnSmith-ki2eq
      @JohnSmith-ki2eq 5 місяців тому

      I don't drink any kind of caffeine for the first 90 minutes after waking up, so hot squash is my go to.

    • @whattiler5102
      @whattiler5102 5 місяців тому +1

      My oldest friend drinks loads of hot squash, and he always has done.

    • @whattiler5102
      @whattiler5102 5 місяців тому +1

      It's normal to mix the horlicks with a little liquid and stir well to make a smooth paste before adding the hot milk.

  • @nigelgreen1811
    @nigelgreen1811 5 місяців тому +66

    I'll blow your mind with the Oxo cube packets, the silver wrapping that each cube comes in is actually heat sealed so that you can crush the cube up while it's still in the silver wrapper and the wrapper unfolds to form a sachet, so you don't have to drop it everywhere. Thank me later

    • @martinjackman2943
      @martinjackman2943 5 місяців тому +6

      I didn't know that.. !
      Oxo is a design classic as well as a beverage.. feeling for the groove in the cube to press and split the foil is a joy (I don't get out much😆)

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 5 місяців тому +1

      I'm 65 and have been using OXO Cubes all my life and I only learnt the secret of then cube in the last few years... As you say, if you open them out, it turns into a flat packed so you can then crumble the cube inside. Once that's done, you simply rip it open and pour the powder done. Easy! The 'hack' went viral for short time and I do pass it on, as SO MANY people don't know and struggle to open the 'cubes' which I did for years! LOL 😋

    • @stephenjeffrey3815
      @stephenjeffrey3815 4 місяці тому +6

      I have been using OxO all my life, and I didn't know that

    • @georgerobartes2008
      @georgerobartes2008 4 місяці тому +4

      A couple of cubes formed part of a squaddies survival tin for decades .

    • @Helliconia54
      @Helliconia54 4 місяці тому

      i STILL mix it with hot water

  • @KathyBarnett-mv5vg
    @KathyBarnett-mv5vg 5 місяців тому +47

    My family had to call a Doctor out to me once as I could not stop being sick. He told them that once I could keep sips of water down to give me beef tea, believe me after two days of not eating that beef tea was like nectar.

    • @paulgeorge6353
      @paulgeorge6353 4 місяці тому +6

      Anyone else here old enough to remember The Railway Children? Beef Tea was recommended by the Doctor when their Mother was ill.

  • @janiceturton7756
    @janiceturton7756 5 місяців тому +130

    As a retired nurse Horlicks and Ovaltine was the standard bedtime drink for our patients in NHS. We mixed the horlicks in to a paste with a little milk then add the hot milk from the jug off the trolley and Bob s your Uncle

    • @peterfhere9461
      @peterfhere9461 5 місяців тому +7

      With the modern Horlicks there's no longer any need to mix it to a paste - it disolves readily in hot milk. And it is delicious....

    • @laratheplanespotter
      @laratheplanespotter 5 місяців тому +2

      Those help me sleep!

    • @janiceturton7756
      @janiceturton7756 5 місяців тому +4

      @@peterfhere9461 yes i guess its a few years since i did ward work x

    • @hughtube5154
      @hughtube5154 5 місяців тому +3

      I used to be a ward host and some of the elderly patients would ask for a Horlicks or Ovaltine, which was annoying as most wards didn't have any in stock, and the kitchens stopped ordering it even though, technically, it's supposed to be on the menu.

    • @adrianmcgrath1984
      @adrianmcgrath1984 5 місяців тому +3

      I used to do the same, working in a Cheshire home. I always quite liked Horlicks. I suspect that such drinks became popular as it was an easy way to have some calories to burn in an unheated house at night, although Horlicks, sold as a 'sleep aid' in the UK was simultaneously marketed in Africa as an energy drink.

  • @hydywirralterrier
    @hydywirralterrier 5 місяців тому +73

    I put Bovril on toast (with butter) instead of Marmite. It's delicious. Last time I bought a jar of Bovril I dropped it in the supermarket, it went off like a bomb 💣, glass everywhere. They weren't impressed with me. 👍

    • @CurrentAffairs341
      @CurrentAffairs341 5 місяців тому +18

      Bovil on toast with butter - the king of foods.

    • @derekclear3913
      @derekclear3913 5 місяців тому +5

      Grew up with Bovril sarnies

    • @rebekahtaylor6142
      @rebekahtaylor6142 5 місяців тому +6

      Bovril on toast in the winter - yum

    • @andybaker2456
      @andybaker2456 5 місяців тому +8

      Not sure I've ever even had a mug of hot Bovril, but Bovril on toast...YUM!! 😊

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 5 місяців тому +10

      Bovril is the one for those of us who can't stand Marmite.

  • @grahamtravers4522
    @grahamtravers4522 5 місяців тому +40

    A mug of hot OXO used to be the obligatory drink after a swim in the baths, when I was young. 😋 (Since you mentioned it, coffee or tea would not be served to children.) As for hot squash, try lemon with honey for a cold or sore throat, blackcurrant and sherry (or rum) for a winter warmer. P.S. You confused Napoleon I (an inveterate enemy of Britain) with Napoleon III. In 1871, Napoleon III was fighting the Franco-Prussian War. When he lost, he actually came to live in Britain as a "refugee" from his own French compatriots, who weren't too pleased with him. His son died with the British army in the Zulu War of 1879.

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 5 місяців тому +3

      Nice bit of info that, thanks.

    • @daviniarobbins9298
      @daviniarobbins9298 5 місяців тому +1

      Thanks for clearing that up. I was confused thinking wikipedia is wrong.

  • @robg3545
    @robg3545 4 місяці тому +5

    Ribena blackcurrant with hot water...lovely.

  • @raybrown2197
    @raybrown2197 5 місяців тому +16

    All 4 of the drinks are meant to be drunk when it's cold outside, gives you a warm feeling inside

  • @marieperkins752
    @marieperkins752 5 місяців тому +28

    As a Canadian, my mother would make me either beef or chicken bouillon, with toast, when I was sick. Still comfort foods for me!

    • @keithgrant7950
      @keithgrant7950 2 місяці тому

      You may have French ancestors as my scots Canadian family don't use the word Bouillon but stock💛

    • @marieperkins752
      @marieperkins752 2 місяці тому

      I do! My mother was French Canadian! My father was English, but my mother ruled the kitchen, hence bouillon.@@keithgrant7950

  • @Nikki7B
    @Nikki7B 5 місяців тому +39

    I'm Canadian, and we grew up drinking OXO bouillion and other cubes as well. It's always comforting when you're sick with a cold.

    • @jonathanfinan722
      @jonathanfinan722 4 місяці тому +1

      You’re

    • @Nikki7B
      @Nikki7B 4 місяці тому

      @jonathanfinan722 thank you. It has been corrected.

    • @deja-view1017
      @deja-view1017 4 місяці тому +1

      Aleays thought of it as the poor man's Bovril

  • @coradesune7537
    @coradesune7537 5 місяців тому +19

    You touched on it briefly and I don't think it's necessarily British but in our house we very often would have cereal with hot milk in the winter. Works best with Weetabix, and not putting much on so the cereal soaks it all up.

  • @atnorthabc
    @atnorthabc 4 місяці тому +6

    A lot of people forget we are a island nation and most of our older drinks are designed to give warmth and nutrition bovril would normally be served with a tot of port or sherry if you were in the navy or if you was a miner it would have been added to warm milk or horlics. Warm fruit drinks would be used with pain relief just like the modern day lemsip. This land we call home can be a bleak cold damp place in winter and a lot of our favourite food and drinks are made with that in mind. 😅

    • @stopthink7202
      @stopthink7202 2 місяці тому

      Have you considered mixing the Bovril and the black current squash together?

  • @sailingby
    @sailingby 5 місяців тому +31

    Horlicks - don’t use instant; too sugary - also you need to use a full mug of milk 😀

    • @ftumschk
      @ftumschk 5 місяців тому +3

      Agreed. Original powdered Horlicks - or Ovaltine - made with hot milk is fabulous.

    • @tiggerwood8899
      @tiggerwood8899 5 місяців тому +2

      Ovaltine is my favourite

    • @shaggybaggums
      @shaggybaggums 4 місяці тому +1

      I always thought the instant stuff is nasty, and trying to make Horlicks without milk is verging on criminal.
      Not the easiest drink in the world to make though, sometimes it's too much of a pain in the arse to bother with.
      My mum used to give me and my siblings the proper stuff before bed as a treat on particularly cold nights, it would knock us all out in minutes.
      Anything for a few minutes peace and quiet I guess. 😄

    • @richardhobson5995
      @richardhobson5995 4 місяці тому

      The instant just doesn't have the same flavour!

  • @philroberts7238
    @philroberts7238 5 місяців тому +7

    The Napoleon referred to was not Napoleon Bonaparte, but his nephew, who became Napoleon III in what was known as the Second Empire in the middle of the 19thC. He came to power in the second French Revolution, then proclaimed himself Emperor, and was eventually overthrown in yet another revolution ("Can you hear the people sing?" - they were doing a lot of singing during those times!) and took refuge in the UK. I think Queen Vic, or her government at least, gave him quite a nice, though modest, house to live in.

    • @philroberts7238
      @philroberts7238 5 місяців тому +1

      .... in which residence, no doubt, his domestic staff would have drunk Bovril. (Well, probably not the French born ones, I don't suppose!)

  • @obeawoman
    @obeawoman 5 місяців тому +8

    As a kid Bovril was served in the swimming bath cafeteria after a swim. To be honest, it is very warming after a swim in winter. I drink it now when I'm dieting and I fancy something savoury. Its lovely!

  • @mccpcorn2000
    @mccpcorn2000 5 місяців тому +21

    There is something very wholesome about an OXO drink that really warms your bones. I'd never drink it every day, but it makes a change from coffee, especially if you're sick of decaff lol. It's very much a comfort beverage.

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 5 місяців тому +1

      I often do long drives around the UK and always carry a large flask of boiling water. Along with the flask I have various tea bags, coffee, OXO cubes and ramen noodle packs - plus milk/creamers, sugar/sweeteners etc. And if parked up _(especially in the colder weather),_ nothing is more comforting than a mug of OXO to make you feel warm inside...

  • @TheDMFW62
    @TheDMFW62 5 місяців тому +8

    Has to be Ribena for hot squash. I think it's because it is so inherently sweet and the heat somehow works better with it than drinking it cold (in my opinion). A comfort drink when you're not feeling well and particularly good for soothing a sore throat.

  • @spreston1996
    @spreston1996 5 місяців тому +36

    As a nurse in Florida, Oxo has been served to patients who couldn't tolerate solid food.

    • @dimrill7489
      @dimrill7489 5 місяців тому +4

      I learned something today! :D

    • @LoremIpsum1970
      @LoremIpsum1970 5 місяців тому +6

      I'm not sure if we still do, but Guinness used to be given to patients in English hospitals... Apparently it's good for you.

    • @blutey
      @blutey 5 місяців тому

      Yes, they also used to give a pint of Guinness afterwards to blood donors. I had an Irish friend once who went to donate blood but only Guinness came out so they gave him a pint of blood to drink afterwards instead.@@LoremIpsum1970

    • @paulhollis8879
      @paulhollis8879 5 місяців тому +4

      @@LoremIpsum1970Guinness has a lot of iron in it.

    • @spreston1996
      @spreston1996 5 місяців тому

      It would be good for me in or out of the hospital. Patients with alcohol dependence were given tiny bottles of whiskey dispenced by pharmacy.@@LoremIpsum1970

  • @gordon861
    @gordon861 5 місяців тому +5

    The difference between hot Ribena and generic squash is massive, similar to Roses Lime vs a generic brand lime, the named versions actually contain juice as part of their ingredients and taste much better.

  • @nrbudgen
    @nrbudgen 5 місяців тому +20

    The two missing drinks are Ovaltine, either original or chocolate, and Camp coffee which comes in a bottle.

    • @Motherhubbard170
      @Motherhubbard170 5 місяців тому

      milo as well

    • @mickbacon8542
      @mickbacon8542 5 місяців тому +3

      No, not camp coffee! I can take most things as a true Englishman, but camp coffee is beyond the pale.😢😢😢

    • @LoremIpsum1970
      @LoremIpsum1970 5 місяців тому

      Ovaltine's not British, if that makes any difference.

    • @benwalmisley5755
      @benwalmisley5755 4 місяці тому +1

      Don’t forget Chicory coffee!

    • @colinstock325
      @colinstock325 4 місяці тому

      @@benwalmisley5755that’s Camp Coffee I believe.

  • @williebauld1007
    @williebauld1007 5 місяців тому +12

    I hated Bovril as a kid, I love it now! It warms the cockles of your heart

  • @white_clover767
    @white_clover767 5 місяців тому +13

    As a South African I LOVE Horlicks!!! We only had it in Winter. And at night around bed time.

  • @wobaguk
    @wobaguk 5 місяців тому +9

    Never known anyone drink OXO in my life, but Bovril definitely, to the extent they would be an offering in the office drinks machine, where it is reconstituted from a powder, so you dont have to think of marmite probably.

  • @elliotgeorge999
    @elliotgeorge999 5 місяців тому +3

    bovril with a few twists of black pepper, lovely on a snowy day.

  • @bsastarfire250
    @bsastarfire250 5 місяців тому +14

    Bovril is nice on buttered toast . The drink is nice and warming , especially if you are sitting in a trench in WW1 .

  • @cruachan1191
    @cruachan1191 5 місяців тому +15

    Pie and bovril was the staple food of Scottish football, to the point that there's a football website named after it. Prior to Hillsborough and the Taylor report catering was very basic at grounds, and tea or coffee was a rarity as an option, bovril didn't require milk or sugar to be provided for example.
    OXO cubes are very often included in survival rations or recommended to carry for hikers, hill climbers etc as it's a quick way to not only warm up and give a morale boost but also contains lots of salts that help with losses from sweat.
    Hot squash was only for when we'd run out of Lemsip when I was a kid and had a cold!

    • @obijon7441
      @obijon7441 5 місяців тому

      To this day I can't drink lemsip on it's own, I have to add some honey and lemon juice(even Jif will do) or a glug of squash to improve the taste.

  • @patrickholt2270
    @patrickholt2270 5 місяців тому +27

    We've all done a mug of Oxo once, I think. It is a last resort though, when you're completely out of all other hot beverage alternatives. I grew up on Bovril, and it has positive associations for me, from scout hikes in the cold, and after playing football. It's surprisingly filling, and it's something I only get a yen for it every few weeks, so a pot of Bovril lasts me longer than a pot of Marmite.
    Different Napoleon. France had two. That was Emperor Louis Napoleon, the first Napoleon's nephew, who won the elctions in 1848 after the 1848 revolution and then siezed power in a coup in 1851, and lasted until he lost the Franco-Prussian War in 1870-71. Which also resulted in the first communist revolution in Europe, the Paris Commune, which the French army officers (aka the losers) crushed by murdering tens of thousands of Parisians in the streets with help from Prussian artillery. They couldn't beat the Prussians, but they sure could kill the hell out of their own countrymen, because that's what patriots do, isn't it? He heavily redeveloped Paris, partly just to get a construction boom going by supporting developers, and partly to widen the streets and set up more open spaces and public squares to make it harder for revolutions to happen, rather than having narrow streets that were easy for the people to barricade with cobble stones and furniture. He didn't build enough railways or industry though, which is why he got trounced by Prussia, which had done that.

    • @MrPJParker1
      @MrPJParker1 5 місяців тому +1

      I've never done a mug of Oxo and never will!

    • @whattiler5102
      @whattiler5102 4 місяці тому

      The Napoleon you mentioned in detail was designated as Napoleon III. The first Napoleon's son was Napoleon II of France, for a few weeks in 1815, aged 4. He lived in Vienna for the rest of his life before dying aged 21.

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 4 місяці тому

      @@MrPJParker1 Often when camping - or in the field, as a soldier. Light, easy to make, warmimg and tasty.

    • @MrPJParker1
      @MrPJParker1 4 місяці тому

      @@wessexdruid7598 but why beef broth to drink? Why not an actual hot drink?

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 4 місяці тому

      @@MrPJParker1 It IS a hot drink. It's nutritious, warming and extremely easy to carry and prepare.

  • @strayling1
    @strayling1 5 місяців тому +12

    Rose Hip syrup is good in a hot drink too. A more delicate flavour than Vimto or Ribena, but great if you have a cold.

    • @hazelanderson1479
      @hazelanderson1479 4 місяці тому +1

      Can you still get Delrosa in the UK? I haven’t seen it for years.

    • @strayling1
      @strayling1 4 місяці тому +1

      @@hazelanderson1479 I remember it too, but it looks like they don't sell it in the UK any more. A quick search told me something I didn't know - it was provided at baby clinics for years as a supplement, which explains why so many remember it.

    • @hazelanderson1479
      @hazelanderson1479 4 місяці тому +1

      @@strayling1 It was served on semolina or tapioca pudding at school, probably to make the gooey dessert a bit more palatable. Strangely, after some fifty-odd years, I can still remember the taste!

    • @clivebonehill3348
      @clivebonehill3348 3 місяці тому +1

      I remember as a child my mom used to help out at the village baby clinic ( in the days after the 3 day week ..those of you old enough to remember the power cuts will also remember what happens when people haven't got anything to do but go to bed!) When eventually the local birth rate fell back to normal, they had loads of Rose Hip Syrup to get rid of . So I made wine out of !! Great improvement!!

    • @paulnewman2000
      @paulnewman2000 Місяць тому +1

      Rose hips are very high in vitamin C, which is why it's good for colds.

  • @4svennie
    @4svennie 4 місяці тому +2

    Horlicks and sister product, Ovaltine, are malt drinks for the evening to chillout before bed.
    Oxo, Bovril, etc... are nutritional drinks for when you're outside in the cold, etc... it's warm, contains protein, vitamins and minerals. They are essentially old energy drinks.

  • @saxon-mt5by
    @saxon-mt5by 5 місяців тому +3

    Drinks from my 1950s childhood! A flask of hot water and Oxo cubes were an essential accompaniment on a winter hike; hot Ribena when you were poorly in bed (don't forget we had no central heating and heating in a bedroom was virtually unknown); Horlicks was the go-to bedtime drink (no caffeine to keep you awake!). I don't recall Bovril as a drink, but it was certainly a staple in the kitchen for cooking.

  • @terrystewart1973
    @terrystewart1973 5 місяців тому +3

    You might be interested where the name Bovril comes from. The first part Bo-, comes from bovine, which makes sense as it's a beef extract. The second part, -vril, comes from a Victorian Occult Sci-Fi novel by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 'The Coming Race', which featured a subterranean race of superhumans called the Vril-ya, who got their power from an electromagnetic substance named 'Vril'. The book was very popular at one point, though I haven't read it myself. So Bovril the name is implying drinking it gives you the strength and power of an ox.

  • @robinevans1293
    @robinevans1293 5 місяців тому +2

    Oxo is great on a cold match day on the terrraces loads of pepper

  • @Buzzkill-wn7tf
    @Buzzkill-wn7tf 5 місяців тому +2

    Bovril drink--even Oxo or Knorr cubes--is my go to when I have a bad cold or the flu. Got me through Covid. Add some dried minced onion and some back pepper. Ginger if you are congested. Dill if you have it. Maybe some crumbled saltines. Surprisingly comforting and, actually, kind of filling. Especially when you can't eat or drink much. Happy you enjoyed it.

  • @jeffgraham6387
    @jeffgraham6387 5 місяців тому +7

    Can we assume that our girls lack of enthusiasm for weird hot drinks is directly related to the lack of alcohol in said drinks...I'm sure I've seen her being far less reticent when testing mulled wine and hot cider! 😆

    • @NukedStar
      @NukedStar 5 місяців тому +2

      Horlicks with a shot of brandy or rum is always a winner

  • @laratheplanespotter
    @laratheplanespotter 5 місяців тому +4

    I drink hot Ribena when I have a cold. It’s so soothing to the throat. Bovril is a great choice if you’re sick and can’t keep food down. It’s nutritious so it’ll keep you and fed. Horlicks is a great bedtime drink. I find it helps me sleep. All these drinks have roots in the more heavily land worked people who maybe didn’t have a lot of nutritious foods to eat. A honk of bread and bovril is lush. I like to add a tiny bit of mint sauce in it. I can’t eat food now (tube fed) but I can enjoy one of these on occasion

    • @Jinty92
      @Jinty92 5 місяців тому

      I drink not Ribena too. Ribena brought out a version called Winter Spice which tasted like a non-alcoholic mulled wine flavour. I've struggled to get it recently but think Sainsbury's is stocking it now. I had just drank a mug of hot Ribena 10 minutes before watching the video.

  • @Davidh02
    @Davidh02 5 місяців тому +2

    We used to have OXO in the army, it's a nice warming drink when you're out in the field on a cold, snowy winters night.

  • @randomcomputer7248
    @randomcomputer7248 4 місяці тому +1

    Used to take a hot flask of Bovril to go fishing with loads of white pepper in it during the winter, keeps you going. Also, we usually put it on toast.

  • @jrd33
    @jrd33 5 місяців тому +5

    Hot Ribena tastes wonderful if you have a cold and sore throat. Oxo cubes are sometimes part of survival rations because they are light, waterproof, heat and cold resistant, easy to use and keep forever. They can be used as a straight hot drink or to add flavour to other food you have scavenged.

    • @rebekahtaylor6142
      @rebekahtaylor6142 5 місяців тому

      Warm Ribena was standard for a cold when I was a kid. It was so comforting and I have lovely memories of being off school sick, a blanket over me on the settee, watching cartoons with my mug of ribena

  • @cubeaceuk9034
    @cubeaceuk9034 5 місяців тому +11

    I was wondering when someone would cover Bovril. Originally I found it used to warm people up after a swim at an outside council run swimming pool. I love it. I used to eat OXO cubes as a kid. Just nibbled them. Other children would dip a finger into a bag of Horlicks. That tasted a bit like Maltesers. Ribena hot. Haven't had that in years. I used to think it was a posh child's drink. I have been subscribed for some time now 👍🤣🤣🤣 Are you into unusual fruit? For me my favourite are Lychee. Gooseberries? Not unusual here but in Canada?

    • @chixma7011
      @chixma7011 4 місяці тому

      Lychees certainly. But even better are rambutans. Drooling……

  • @keithgrant7950
    @keithgrant7950 2 місяці тому +1

    1) OXO: when we came home from school (1965 until 1977) we would get a thick slice of bread and soak it in hot OXO and then sit and eat with a fork, watching kids tv. We also had this in the Compo Rations we lived on during the 1974 invasion of Cyprus( I was 13). 2) Any squash other than Pineapple squash works. 3) In 1980 when I nearly lost my leg in a Motorbike Accident I was ORDERED by the surgeon, who had put my leg roughly back together (1st of 8 operations) to drink 1 Pint a night to help with the regeneration of calcium at the break site. 4) Growing up on military bases for the first 17 years we were always served Bovril or Chicken soup in a cup at Bonfire night displays (sometimes both in the same cup), Still do number ! some evenings but not after school anymore ( Wolv's Uni 2000 - 2004, (aged 39) 2020-2021 (aged 59), Never to old to learn something new or update your credentials. 😊🧡

    • @mr.kinkade2049
      @mr.kinkade2049 8 днів тому

      I always have bread to dunk in a cup of oxo lol It's as tastey as dunking biscuits in tea.

  • @fuzzlewit9
    @fuzzlewit9 5 місяців тому +2

    When you have a sore throat and a horrible cold and it's midwinter and you feel miserable, have a hot juice/squash with a little honey in it, and it'll perk you right up!

  • @primalengland
    @primalengland 5 місяців тому +4

    When I was a kid we ate Horlicks off a spoon. Tastes just like Maltesers.

  • @ElliotDooleysmith
    @ElliotDooleysmith 4 місяці тому +1

    I would often get some super fine noodles and add to an OXO or Bovril drink.
    Basically making your own cuppa soup

  • @richardhargrave6082
    @richardhargrave6082 5 місяців тому +2

    Bovril is good, on a cold day, I knew you'd be freaked by the jar shape..
    Stir it in to a gravy or stock and its great as well
    I drank a lot of it when I had COVID, easy to drink and easy on the throat

  • @vtbn53
    @vtbn53 5 місяців тому +4

    Fun fact: I sent your Christmas pudding video to my Canadian neighbour and she was horrified with your response as she grew up with Christmas pudding and loves it.

  • @zathrusii6456
    @zathrusii6456 5 місяців тому +7

    My family always had Bovril but never as a drink. We put it on toast the same way you would Marmite! I was well into adulthood before anyone told me this was not normal, I really thought everyone did it! Anyway I think it's delicious and won't be stopping no matter how much sideye the world gives me. Yum!

    • @undeadtotheend6420
      @undeadtotheend6420 5 місяців тому

      Same, i thought it was used like Marmite as well.. lol

  • @bobblebardsley
    @bobblebardsley 5 місяців тому +2

    2:24 I don't think anyone ever does it but if you fold out the triangular flaps on the sides of an Oxo cube and flatten it, you can crush it into a flat sachet of powder _before_ you tear the foil, and then it doesn't explode all over the kitchen. (This is one of those 'you've been doing it wrong and didn't know it' hacks you see on every internet list and I have no idea if it's the intended way to do it, or just a convenient hack.)

  • @jrswinhoe58
    @jrswinhoe58 5 місяців тому +1

    Gravy by the way is a flavoured stock with Corn Flour for thickness.

  • @MagentaOtterTravels
    @MagentaOtterTravels 5 місяців тому +11

    This is so great! I can't believe you haven't had Bovril before! I tried it in 2020 (during a travel quarantine) and loads of the Britons commenting on that video mentioned drinking hot Bovil after swimming or football practice on a cold winter's day. I thought that was very specific! My husband actually loved Bovril and we took a jar back home to Texas. But OXO is not something I'd want to drink. Lovely for soups, but not a nice beverage IMHO.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 5 місяців тому +2

      Is US OXO the same though? US food producers add so many unhealthy/unsafe, additives to their foods, it could be that you'd like UK OXO.

    • @Jinty92
      @Jinty92 5 місяців тому +1

      You can now get Chicken flavour Bovril too. I love both flavours.

    • @MagentaOtterTravels
      @MagentaOtterTravels 5 місяців тому

      @@Thurgosh_OG I tried British Bovril and British OXO. We don't have either of them in the US😉

    • @MagentaOtterTravels
      @MagentaOtterTravels 5 місяців тому

      @@Jinty92 oh that sounds good 👍

    • @paulguise698
      @paulguise698 5 місяців тому +1

      @@MagentaOtterTravels Hiya Dara, sorry for pestering you like this, if your going to have OXO in a mug with boiling water, have a teaspoon at the ready, as it sinks to the bottom of the mug fairly fast

  • @tonys1636
    @tonys1636 5 місяців тому +3

    Had to pause this at the start and dig out the Oxo cubes from the back of the cupboard and make one, after drinking it whilst putting the box back noticed the Best Before date, APR 20, tasted fine may have lost a bit of flavour though. Try Ovaltine, the original add milk, not the instant add water as too sweet as it contains dried Condensed Milk. I've been an Ovaltinee since a kid, a mug just before bed aids sleep.

  • @andycapp3499
    @andycapp3499 5 місяців тому +2

    Oxo and bovril having in a mug is known as a beef tea. You'll hear about it old black and white films.

  • @MrPagan777
    @MrPagan777 3 місяці тому +1

    HORLICKS: make it into a paste first, with a drop of milk, then add the hot milk a bit at a time, while stirring continuously

  • @timwoodger7896
    @timwoodger7896 5 місяців тому +3

    I proper love you Alana ❤ you always cheer me up 😊🌹🥰

  • @johnbayton9200
    @johnbayton9200 5 місяців тому +6

    I went to make a cup of tea earlier forgetting that I was out of milk, so I ended up doing an Oxo and white pepper drink instead.
    I always have Oxo cubes in the house for moments like these.
    Warming and on a cold night preferable to a cold drink.

    • @alantyler8842
      @alantyler8842 4 місяці тому

      WHITE pepper? That's going to fight back, not so much warming as incendiary. Respect!

  • @gerrymccartney3561
    @gerrymccartney3561 5 місяців тому

    Great video and so nostalgic as it reminded me of getting home from school on a dark, cold winter's afternoon to a warming cup of Oxo.

  • @robertlonsdale5326
    @robertlonsdale5326 5 місяців тому +1

    Hot Vimto, invented in Blackburn, Lancashire was great after the swimming baths on a cold winter evening. x

  • @richardalfredpalmer9660
    @richardalfredpalmer9660 5 місяців тому +6

    OXO cube added to boiling water is known as beef tea but it’s not drunk very much these days mostly in the 1940s when people couldn’t afford real tea .
    😮

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 5 місяців тому +2

      It is drunk quite a bit to this day. Students, of course like a hot cheap drink and those of us who are older like it for an occasional bit of variety. Bovril is used very similarly; you can buy 10 packs of Bovril in a plastic cup, ready for the hot water in many shops like B&Ms, the Range etc. So the idea that hot beef stock drinks are a think of 80 years ago is very wrong.

  • @TedsonJones
    @TedsonJones 5 місяців тому +3

    The Napoleon referred to on the Bovril label must have been Napoleon III, nephew of THE Napoleon. 1870 was the year of the Franco-Prussian war.
    Napoleon actually lived in England after he was deposed and he's still buried in Farnborough.

  • @johnturner4400
    @johnturner4400 5 місяців тому +2

    Love the mug with the little birds on!

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you! A community member sent it to my Patreon PO Box ☺️🦆

    • @MCallsen
      @MCallsen 5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you - I feel less weird now :)

  • @davidpowell8249
    @davidpowell8249 5 місяців тому +1

    I only really darnk hot squash as a kid when I was unwell, and I still drink it when I have a winter cold. It was usually orange squash, but when it was blackcurrant, it had to be Ribena, C-VIT, or other 'high juice' blackcurrant squash, cheaper ones tasted minging hot.
    These days my go to is Ribena Winter Spice, which tastes a like alcohol free mulled wine 🍷 😋

  • @SkepticalSteve01
    @SkepticalSteve01 3 місяці тому

    When I was a little boy, and sailed with my Mum to Britain on the Union Steamship Company liner Ragitoto, via Pitcairn, Panama and Venezuela, once we got into the Atlantic, Beef Tea was served every morning on the promenade deck. Basically it was a shoulder of beef boiled overnight with a few herbs and spices. And it was outstandingly delicious, better than any OXO or Bovril could ever be! I remember the meaty richness of it to this day. Unforgettable..

  • @Judgles
    @Judgles 5 місяців тому +2

    Hi Alanna, thanks for making me laugh once again. I used to drink Bovril before I gave up meat many years ago but this made me feel nostalgic for it. I loved this expression "a mug of brown" - going to be using that for any hot drink now!

  • @stephenbates7955
    @stephenbates7955 2 місяці тому +1

    I toast 3 crumpets, when hot spread butter then bovril, oh so nice, lovely.

  • @silveribis55
    @silveribis55 5 місяців тому

    ...smelling the newly opened Bovril ...'oh, God...'😂 made me chuckle. Another quality video that was fun and enjoyable 😊.
    I'd love to introduce you to South African foods and how to have them! Of course people can do taste tests but folks end up preparing some wrong or having things in the wrong way and that can make it a rather odd experience, whereas if enjoyed in the right manner can be a really great time!
    All the best for the New year 🎉.

  • @davestainer8576
    @davestainer8576 4 місяці тому +1

    Ive had beef, chicken and vegetable oxo cubes as drinks before now, also, although it can be used as a drink i use Bovril as a spread for toast.

  • @paulbrain9804
    @paulbrain9804 5 місяців тому +2

    Horlicks invented in my tiny village of Ruardean in Gloucestershire. One tiny Plaque in the village (takes some finding) celebrates this.

    • @paulbrain9804
      @paulbrain9804 5 місяців тому +2

      BTW "Horlick" is a family name. Lesson over.

  • @michaellawrence9559
    @michaellawrence9559 5 місяців тому

    You saying Horlicks is so funny all these years it never ever sounded like that , great upload happy new year

  • @user-nd5zu3qg5h
    @user-nd5zu3qg5h 3 місяці тому

    "Anyway, I'm rambling" - but you do it so delightfully. Please keep up the good work

  • @Dan-zb7vn
    @Dan-zb7vn 5 місяців тому +2

    OXO and hot buttered toast is superb, cheers Alana great video.

  • @iainmalcolm9583
    @iainmalcolm9583 5 місяців тому

    Happy New Year.

  • @nickybumps5164
    @nickybumps5164 5 місяців тому +2

    Many cafes I've visited in Belgium have had OXO on their drinks menu, so it seems to be quite popular there.

  • @paulgeorge6353
    @paulgeorge6353 4 місяці тому

    Cold weather hiking Bovril is the thing for your mid morning brew.

  • @standauphin1592
    @standauphin1592 5 місяців тому

    I love your channel, never change

  • @simontravers2715
    @simontravers2715 28 днів тому

    Best suggestion to get smoother Horlicks is to stir with the spoon’s handle, breaks it up easier.

  • @brianchalkley1093
    @brianchalkley1093 5 місяців тому

    During the winter as a kid Oxo was a go to with toast warms the cockles of your heart

  • @jcasillas78
    @jcasillas78 5 місяців тому

    Great video!

  • @TheRattyBiker
    @TheRattyBiker 4 місяці тому +1

    Hot squash NEEDS to be hot Vimto!! Brit guide: Hot Vimto for general day time when relaxing. Hot Bovril daytime when expending energy - hiking or screaming at a football match. Hot Horlicks / Ovaltine (made with milk not water) for bedtime... All winter warmers without the Nutmeg, Cinnamon and Ginger.... Though a nice mulled wine in winter is good for anytime of the day!

  • @tonyspencer692
    @tonyspencer692 5 місяців тому +1

    Horlick is mixed as a paste in warm milk to get it going, then topped up with milk brought to the boil, so that you have a full mug. An alternative is Ovaltine, which is like Horlick but with added cocoa. Try it.

  • @tomw2131
    @tomw2131 5 місяців тому

    Remember in "Oliver!" the musical or "Oliver Twist" book & film, Oliver got his bowl of gruel, finished it and asked for "More"?
    Gruel is a watery porridge made from finely ground cereal and lots of salt, thus making it taste better than water and crushed oats alone. It was used a lot in Workhouses (basically slave-labor factories for the poor) as it kept the workers alive (barely). Gruel became the basis for Horlicks and Ovaltine and many similar drinks.
    Beef stock drinks were often sold in Victorian times (and recipes written) to be served to infirm individuals who couldn't eat solid foods, but could get protein and nourishment from beefy drinks.

  • @sh4dowchas3r
    @sh4dowchas3r 5 місяців тому +2

    For Horlicks think middle of a malteser. Edit: The 1870s Napoleon isn't the same one that we fought against. This one was Napoleon 3rd. France, UK, Turkey and Kingdom of Sardinia(?) were allies during the Crimean War.

  • @shanemjn
    @shanemjn 5 місяців тому +2

    I prefer the Bovril cubes, easier to make up a thermos compared to the paste

  • @Clyde__Frog
    @Clyde__Frog 3 місяці тому

    Bovril reminds me of my Grandad, used to have it as a warmer on his boat in the Solant on a cold rainy day. The wind, the spray, the chugging of the engine. Wonderful memories.

  • @joshbrailsford
    @joshbrailsford 5 місяців тому

    Yes! Hot Ribena was my childhood on winter days. I remember playing in the snow in the garden and warming up afterwards with a hot Ribena. Bliss.

  • @robinholland1136
    @robinholland1136 5 місяців тому

    Re Napoleon and Bovril. It wasn't actually Napoleon Bonaparte, but Napoleon III, who was the last Emperor of France. He was captured by the German's at the battle of Sedan during the Franco Prussian war and lived out the rest of his life in England, where he died following an operation in Chiselhurst, formerly in Kent (before the creation of Greater London). He is buried in St Michael's Abbey in Farnborough in Hampshire.
    Hot Oxo was what we would have after spending the whole day at the Municipal Swimming Baths (yes, 'baths', not pool) when I was growing up in the 50s and 60s. The best way of getting warm, as the water was fairly cold. In those days, there were actual baths and a communal laundry, serving those people who lived in the many houses in the city (Leeds) which had neither a bath with hot running water nor washing facilities. The Good Old Days!! Not really . . .

  • @spacechannelfiver
    @spacechannelfiver 5 місяців тому +2

    For Squash of your choice you of course mean Vimto

  • @heskeyisgod8039
    @heskeyisgod8039 5 місяців тому

    Great video Alanna! Very funny. I enjoy your taste test vids :-)

  • @stevenbalekic5683
    @stevenbalekic5683 4 місяці тому +1

    Australia has a history of these types of hot savoury drinks too...even though Bovril can be purchased here we have our own called Bonox (which is actually beef extract...not yeast based like Bovril).
    Chicken, beef and vegetable stock cubes were used to make hot drinks usually consumed with toast. Usually consumed on a cold day to warm you up, when not feeling well or as a light snack to tide you over till mealtime...these days though it is less common simply because there is more appetising choices available nowadays like cup-a-soups instead of chicken or beef water.

  • @jimcounter4945
    @jimcounter4945 5 місяців тому +1

    Bovril is great on those cold damp days of winter bit like right now

  • @lottie2525
    @lottie2525 5 місяців тому +2

    I'd forgotten about Horlicks. I love it. Off to the shops to get some. We used to be given hot orange squash at Guides in the winter, revolting.

  • @djrichylaurence8991
    @djrichylaurence8991 4 місяці тому +1

    Bovril is the best drink when you get off a motorcycle after a long winter ride.

  • @Clayton-S.
    @Clayton-S. 5 місяців тому

    Great post as always, Alanna. You've certainly got the hang of the Oxo prep. If you don't get half of it on the counter or the floor, you're not doing it right😁.
    Hot squash! I had totally forgotten that was a thing..
    My late dad used to put hot milk on his cornflakes during the winter with lashings of sugar on top....
    You're right about the Horlicks. The chocolate one is imho way better.
    And finally, as for Bovril, not alone a warming, nourishing drink on a cold day but yummy on buttered toast.

  • @hairyairey
    @hairyairey 4 місяці тому +1

    Incidentally Ovaltine used to include eggs. The old Ovaltine building in Kings Langley (now flats) was next to an egg farm (now the home of the wind turbine you can see from the M25)

    • @alantyler8842
      @alantyler8842 4 місяці тому

      I never new that...Thanks! I live in Barnet and sometimes have to do that wasteful northbound leg of Motorway, (Not so wasteful whhen I'm going fishing near St Albans), and that turbine is my Windmill of Hope that tell me I'm finally about to go South. Good to know it's history!

    • @hairyairey
      @hairyairey 4 місяці тому

      @@alantyler8842 When I was working there they had a monthly open day which included climbing to the top of the turbine (if you were fit enough, obviously). Unfortunately I never got round to going up it.

  • @johnleake5657
    @johnleake5657 3 місяці тому

    Bovril and Oxo can be classified as what the Victorians called 'beef tea'. In the nineteenth century it was given to patients, and was made by people at home before Bovril and Oxo came onto the market. Yes, I did know Bovril was nineteenth century, but thought it was from about 1890. It got its new name in 1886 from a futuristic energy called _vril_ in a sci-fi novel by the best-selling novelist Edward Bulwar-Lytton (title _'The Coming Race,'_ 1871).
    Napoleon was Napoleon III, Napoleon Bonaparte's nephew, who was at war with the Germans in 1870.

  • @krisdoorga6558
    @krisdoorga6558 4 місяці тому

    Yes! Hot squash for the win 💯
    Especially in the winter

  • @samc2
    @samc2 5 місяців тому

    I love this video, you did so good trying them + your responses surprised me! Love that you might be developing a taste for Bovril 😁

    • @samc2
      @samc2 5 місяців тому

      Next try a small light smear of Bovril on very buttery toast, especially good if you're feeling a little under the weather :)

  • @mothmagic1
    @mothmagic1 4 місяці тому

    Happy New Year Alanna. Love this video. The Beef Oxo is the original before they went crazy and added chicken to the range. I love Oxo as a drink. Lemon squash is nice hot if you like lemon drinks. Your initial reaction to Horllicks is exactly like mine. Don't like Horlicks or Ovaltine. Bovril is basically a paste variant of Oxo. Love your adventurous spirit, you seem game to try anything once.

  • @mikedignum1868
    @mikedignum1868 4 місяці тому +1

    We used this (Bovril/Oxo) when on military exercise if we didn't want tea and were short on time.

  • @thetrailhunter4469
    @thetrailhunter4469 5 місяців тому

    Haha never thought about Horlicks being a funny name, but now I'll never unsee it.

  • @barrieking5939
    @barrieking5939 3 місяці тому +1

    Just a point. You can get Bovril in cube form and crush it into a mug, add hot water. Lovey with a slice of dry bread. Cheers from an oldie.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 5 місяців тому +1

    Bovril is sold across Canada at branches of Supervalu, now renamed The Real Canadian Superstore. My daughter buys it regularly at her closest branch on Grandview Hwy in Vancouver. OXO Knorr beef satchets are even more easily obtainable at those stores, plus Safeway and other major Canadian chains. My grandsons love OXO beef drinks after a day skiing.