This video is what it looks like when all your servants have a day off and you have to fend for yourself and not knowing what a kitchen is and how it works.
I remember my grandmother told me how she struggled to make the meager rations during ww2 in Denmark more palatable. She told me that fortunately she had the two most important spices available. When I asked what those spices were she said "Salt and hunger.. makes everything taste great."
Salt is literally the best taste when u are hungry. Thats why i like to snack on a few garlic stuffed olives while i drink my beer. After that, im pretty sure i could win any eating contest.
Exactly! I was a picky eater when I was a kid, but when I was at Boy Scout camp and doing hard physical stuff every day, hiking 20 miles, that sort of thing, I ate anything put in front of me.
My mom was a depression baby and so went thru wwii rationing also. I grew up eating a lot of cold spam pasta salads in the summers. Spam fresh outta the can. 😂 These salads are still a favorite of mine.
They say that Britain was never healthier than during the war. Also, I have the suspicion that Dan might have enjoyed the food more had he heated it up.
Lord Woolton is rightly recognised by historians as a genius who not only kept Britain fed during the war, but somehow managed to IMPROVE our diets. Total over-achiever. What a lad. 😂
I believe the Woolton diet was so important to the war effort and heavily pressed on the population because in WWI the people were underfed and were weak. They didn't want that to happen again. Especially when the threat of the war coming to them was possible/probable.
Don't think Dan has ever been properly hungry/starving. Something we found on expeditions & eating mainly dehydrated food for extended periods is that you really start to crave fat & oily foods. believe me, that dripping would look like heaven after a while. Perhaps a more palatable way for him to try it would have been to melt it in a pan & make a good old British "fried slice". Just a slice of bread shallow fried in the fat. While its hot its good stuff.
I'm bloody certain he hasnt considering he's basically aristocracy. If WW3 happened tomorrow he'd be packing up and retreating to one of his wife's brother's country estates. Im certain his brother in law, Hugh Grosvenor, 7th Duke of Westminster could slip them into Abbeystead House. The rest of us would be begging the Chinese to give us a good recipe for the same trotters hes making fun of here.
We went tramping and lived off dehydrated food for three days, on the last day I took out a can of corned beef I smuggled in my rucksack We ate that like it was a lamb roast 😂
He says you’d have to be desperate…yes! These were desperate times! However, there were people (often mothers) who spent a good deal of time making these foods palatable, tolerable, and sometimes…even good!
I'm a Civil War reenactor and you're EXACTLY right. Troops in the Civil War preferred salt pork over any other kind of meat because of the fat content and that pork fat could be used for things beef, mutton, horse, or fish fat/oils simply could not do. For example, troops were issued green coffee beans. You DO NOT want to roast your coffee beans in mutton fat or fish oil. Trust me on that one. Another thing your body will miss is sugar. When you're subsisting on salted meat, hardtack cracker, and 'foraged' vegetables for a week or so, you start to look at beets and potatoes like candy bars 😆
Of course it is disgusting when you're using the ingredients in this fashion! A lot of these foods are fantastic. You just need to prepare them better!
Yes I thought that, the way he crudely cut the bread and slapped the dried egg on it and then eat it. Then eating the span straight out of the can with a look of distain already on his face. He looked like he was already prepared to dislike it, but I believe the average family at the time would have made something delightful out of the same ingredients. They had too !
On the note of that, instead of boiled pig's trotters, which is truly disgusting when you eat like that, why not try some offal? (Gun Jesus Ian on Forgotten Weapon tried the rationing menu, and his dish looks way better.)
Pig’s trotters require long, slow cooking, typically as the meat in a casserole. If done correctly they are genuinely very nice and I’ve enjoyed them on several occasions. Pig’s Trotter Stew is a staple of French Canadian cuisine.
Preparation is key! Of course a lot of this stuff tasted nasty the way he tried it. 🙄 My Mom, a really good cook for most things, tried to feed me boiled Brussels Sprouts 🤢 Much later in life, I tried them again oven roasted and caramelized with onions with a vinaigrette or with bacon makes them delicious.😋
The description clearly says Home Front i.e. Civilians. Soldiers would have different rations. Especially, those going into combat will have quick energy food like biscuits and toffees. Or the American supplied K-rations. Otherwise you will have field kitchens who will cook porridge, Bacon & Eggs, cheese, jam, tea, etc. Or they will pool their kits and cook together.
Nobody eats Spam directly from the tin. It needs to be sliced, heated, mixed with other ingredients, etc. Eating it as he did makes as much sense as swallowing a spoon of flour, lard, or salt and declaring them nasty.
American here but raised by Brits and loved Spam as a kid, but never saw my Gran(and she was a young woman in the war) just open the Spam and serve it, always fried it and it was delicious, I still have fond memories of Spam, Dan is just eating it wrong!
My brother and father were both super big fans of spam and any other canned meat they could find. They both liked it fried too. Personally I am not a fan but, have eaten it without complaint. There are a lot of worse things that people have eaten and still eat. When I think about people complaining about eating spam or other canned meats , I wonder how many hot dogs they have eaten at the ball game or picnic.
I'll eat spam either out of the tin or fried. It's quite nice with a good dash of salt and black pepper. If it wasn't nearly 11 at night and I wasn't watching this in bed I would have been tempted to open a tin and make a sandwich.
Could You Survive on food from 2000? **Squirts mustard directly into mouth, eats a raw chip, takes a spoonful of cold chopped tomatoes** - Dan - ''Disgusting!''
The people eating this also survived the depression. I'm sure the cooks got around to improving the taste. If nothing else, they had all those spices lying around unused.
Yep. This is a "let's find the most uninspiring, unseasoned, unappetising way of eating these raw ingredients just for performative disgust and views."
Pigs trotters were eaten by the average person of the generation. It wasn't just because of the war, that generation and those before did not eat as much meat as we do now, nor the better cuts that we do. Now in first world countries we have so much fresh foods year around that the ugly looking ones are thrown out. It's hard to even find things like liver or other organ meats which were still commonly sold in the 70's. It's really show more how relatively well we live now in comparison.
I am Norwegian, I used to eat pig trotters when I grew up. I was born several years after the war. You can still buy it here, but I haven't eaten it for many years. Haven't thought about it really. But maybe I'll try it again soon! It is by no means so bad as Dan Snow says!
You're absolutely right about drippings and bread! My grandmother grew up in the Great Depression on the US Great Plains. She was frugal in a way that only starvation teaches you to be. She kept two cans of fat on the stove, one 'clean' [red meat fat that had been rendered down and all the impurities filtered out] and 'frying fat', which was fats with the impurities still in it because it added flavor. Around the time I was born [early 60s] my grandfather had finally convinced my grandmother to start throwing both fat cans out every month and start fresh with 'new fat' [Crisco] and a fresh can of used fats.
“They’d have to be desperate to eat this” THEY WERE BLOODY DESPERATE.. and that kind of comment coming from someone of this era shows how bloody SPOILT we are …😡🇬🇧
I have collected British magazines and Ministry of Food brochures from 1939-1945. Many of the recipes in these were for using home-grown potatoes, carrots and cabbages plus rationed flour or breadcrumbs and tiny amounts of rationed butter and meat. Many people raised rabbits or kept a few hens for eggs. Some neighbors pooled their scraps to feed a piglet (the "pig club" was registered with the government) which they were later allowed to slaughter and share the meat among the club members but NEVER allowed to sell. Others picked berries from hedgerows in late summer and went to canning centers, obtained a ration of sugar specifically given to make jams and jellies and used only government approved recipes to make small jars of berry jams and jellies. Jams and jellies were very important when there was not enough butter to spread on toast and when breakfast was often just oatmeal porridge and toasted slices of bread plus a cup of unsweetened tea. A can of Spam from a friendly GI was a treasure to be thinly sliced or diced and used in a variety of creative ways along with breadcrumbs or grated potatoes or oatmeal to make mock cutlets or mock roasts or other illusions of large portions of real meat or poultry.
As an American, who has eaten lots of gravy with our biscuits, I have to say the Brit who prepared that bread and drippings gave me the most disgusting thing I have ever eaten. I like British people just not their idea of food.
Why did you eat everything cold?!! Spam is sliced and fried, my mother (who lived through WWII as a teenager) said whole meal bread was often home baked and stretched with dried ground peas or beans (and sliced VERY thin!), dripping is a classic Northern treat (and makes roast potatoes marvelous), dried eggs… well, you got me there, dried eggs aren’t great, but they’re better if they’re hot, carrot pie had the carrots grated finely, not sliced (like carrot cake), and pig’s trotters should be roasted, the fat saved, the meat carved off the bone, and the bones cracked and used to make marrow broth. Honestly, I wouldn’t have eaten anything presented cold like that. My mother also says they made “spinach” from cooked young nettles. She was amazed when she went to the US on assignment just after the war, and saw restaurants throw out half-eaten steaks!
In Hawaii, you can get fried Spam on a sticky rice slice, wrapped in nori. It’s in deli counter with other hot items. It’s pretty good and portable, eaten out of hand.
C'mon Dan. You DO realize that a number of these things can be made more palatable by preparation, e.g., Spam, powdered eggs, trotters. Any port in a storm.
Winston Churchill asking to see an example of typical rations, and being shown a life-size wooden mock-up of the rations. He said with satisfaction: ‘All in all, a fine meal. A fine meal’. When told those rations had to last for a week, not for a single meal, as he had thought, Churchill thundered out: ‘Then the British people are starving. Something must be done.’
Funnily enough the health of the british people increased quite a bit thanks to rationing as they ate less bread, fats and meat and far more vegetables.
@@Nerathul1I think the point is Old Winnie and his Tory Cronies were so out of touch and protected from any privations caused by the war that they were probably ingesting a week's worth of calories at every meal.
My mum loved dripping on bread, and although I was sceptical before trying it myself, it’s actually really nice with a sprinkle of salt on the top. That stuff Dan Snow was eating looked more like lard, hence the disgusting taste( I wouldn’t eat lard like that either!). Proper bread and dripping incorporates the fat and meat juices from the bottom of the roasting tin, scraped up when cold and spread on a slice of bread ( making sure to include the brown meat juices as well). Great taste, but probably not good for your cholesterol levels I’m afraid!
When I was a little kid Mum would make a boatload of toast every morning at breakfast time, big chunky doorstep wedges of bread. Rather than waste the slices that didn't get eaten for breakfast she would slather it with something and give it to us with a big old mug of tea as an after school belly filler until dinner time. Monday afternoons it would always be cold toast and dripping.
I love bread and dripping with a dash of pepper and I'm fifty-five, thanks Mum! I remember her telling me that British children were the healthiest children in the world for quite a number of years, as a result of rationing. It makes sense really when you see kids today!
@@arisnotheles Wow get away! Ha they probably charged an arm and a leg for it too, ha! I remember lamb shanks being $2.50 (AUD) now they're so blummin dear. Typical of hoity toity joints, pricing up working class grub. Mind you I usually have the lamb shanks at a pub when my pals are playing a gig there and it's worth it, as they're so delicious and the meat falls off the bone just by looking at it! Again, it's still just bloody lamb shanks for crying out loud! Bread and dripping though.... just so good!
Pig's trotters are still eaten in Sweden, they are traditional Christmas food, I used to love it when I was little (the jelly around them was the best!). They were my grandmother's favourite food, it really was a treat for her when she was able to get one, and all the way to the end, her family made sure that she could have her trotter every once in a while.
German here, we eat them too and it‘s always a big discussion around it because my mums ancestors were from west Germany where you eat them boiled in sauerkraut but my dad is from Bavaria and we eat them grilled. But either way they are seen as a delicacy.
Toast and dripping was one of my WWII-era teenaged father's dream foods. He got his wish for some more in his final year because, at 93, why the hell not. "This is repulsive," he said, "I'd rather have mayonnaise (a substance he wouldn't allow in the house because it caused him great spiritual pain even to see in the fridge)." What a difference 80 years makes.
I'm only slightly older than Dan, and I have very fond memories from my childhood of visiting my grandmother in Yorkshire and being delighted when she gave us bread and dripping, a treat that we never got at home. To this day, I take every opportunity to retain the dripping from roast beef and try to make it as palatable as I remember, but I can never achieve the beautiful creamy product that my grandmother provided. Maybe you had to be there, but I adore bread and dripping.
Growing up in the early 70s in Australia, a lot of these foods were common in our house because my mum grew up eating this sort of stuff during the war (she grew up south of Perth in Western Australia) and could make a meal of what people would normally throw away these days. I still remember the taste of chips cooked in lamb dripping, spam jaffles, dripping on toast (especially the nasty black jelly from underneath the crust) with some Worcestershire sauce and pepper and home made pies and pasties made from mystery meats. Lots of homegrown vegetables and fruits and milk direct from the cow or goat, too. I kind of miss those days. Now everything is processed, homogenised, pasteurised and buggarised until there is no food value and as soon as we have a small interruption to normal life (like a pandemic for example) everyone freaks out and you can't get any toilet paper.
I can so relate to this, my childhood was in ireland, and we grew our veg, had chickens and pigs. Thanks to being the eldest of 7, and my mother's kitchen help, I am proud to say that I rarely ever eat out, cause I get better bank for my buck eating at home. Plus I cook better than most restaurants. Ahhhhh what a glorious childhood in a kitchen, cutting lettuces and collecting strawberries, strawberries, potatoes, eggs, making jams.... You dont miss it, till it's gone.
My dad loved his bread and dripping too and would tell me (as a child ) that I didn't know what I was missing. Growing up there was a dripping bowl in the fridge - no olive oil in our house 😂 People went crazy didn't they? Then the pendulum swung the other way when they rediscovered home cooking/baking . I agree , non processed foods are so much better.
Perhaps if this presenter bothered to cook the SPAM, trotters and dried eggs as they are meant to be he would not find them so disgusting. My first and last view of his presentations.
I brought a tin of spam three days ago. Brilliant fried (with or without batter) and served with baked beans. Real comfort food. Dripping is brilliant in sandwiches. Very tasty. Pigs trotters are totally suitable to eat (roasted) and popular. Yet again you appear spoilt and a fussy eater wanting heavily processed supermarket food. The WW2 diet was very healthy indeed.
@@Tsumami__ There were issues, certain vitamins and nutrients were hard to get on rationing, but compared to processed food with waaaay too much salt, sugar and fat as well as various other dodgy ingredients it's healthier by a significant margin.
I can't believe he just bit into that cold pig trotter, I had some about a month ago, of course, it was smoked and cooked with a pot of nave beans. I have eaten them all my 65 years, and as fatherwi11iam71 pointed out you don't eat spam cold. I did really enjoy the videos none the less, please keep them coming.
We used to have a special container in the fridge. It had a removable strainer on top. All the fat from cooking meat was poured into it. This is the dripping they probably had on bread. It had the flavours from the cooked meat. Pure rendered dripping doesn’t have that extra flavor.
Yes, the fat from cooking meat is really good to use in cooking. Back in Uni, some friends and I would club money together and get stuff for a proper roast dinner most weeks, often the one who's flat we met up in would cook bacon for his breakfast so we could use the bacon fat for roast potatoes.
Spam was considered one of the best ration meats you could get in WW2 Britain. Both because it was a fairly substantial amount and it had enough fat that the cans would basically be caked in lard, providing a good bit of cooking oil.
My grandfather served in the Pacific. His parents having a small farm in eastern Kentucky saved up ration stamps and sent a whole case of spam. It had been a less then delightful gift as he'd been eating it for two months.
Yes, my mother remembers the family of 3 getting only one egg per week ! Her mother used it to make a small cake. Usually, most meats were too expensive to buy. Most people had backyard vegetable gardens, and kept hens. If you had the money, though, you could get more of anything on the black market.
bread and dripping was something we still had when I was a kid in the 60s and 70s. Mum and Dad loved it. Safe to say it's not very healthy, BUT it's a way to have no waste. We never threw out food (and I don't either). When you have a roast sunday dinner you save ALL the juices and you have either made gravy or kept the 'drippings' in a bowl and use it as gravy stock or base stock for pies you may make.
My Mom (born 1930) has vivid memories of rationing. It was a matter of eating what was available or go hungry. Fortunately her Dad was a butcher so managed to get a little extra meat every now and then. One dish my Mom has particular memories of was vegetables boiled in stock with cubed corned beef added at the end. Not particularly appetising but nutritious.
I admire all the (I imagine) mothers during the rationing years who managed to ensure that their families were well nourished in spite of all the difficulties. And I think those families, even the children, would have been aware of how limited supplies were and were just grateful for a decent and filling meal.
Essentially. We ate nothing but fried spam and eggs on tortillas growing up and that's still one of my favorite little slap together meals. Reminds me of grandmas house.
The dripping you recall is homemade from bacon, pork or even steak or roast. It has all the seasoning from the meat and the flavor. It’s not terrible at all.
Oh that’s made me chuckle, can tell as a posh lad he’s never had to eat food like that. I’m only a couple of years older than Dan, but for me growing up in the 70’s in the Black Country that was still normal food. Pigs trotters best put into a stew to get the goodness out, they doh taste nice how he ate it lol. I still use dripping now and my kids love the taste when I baste roasties and chips in it, having it on toast is nice and my favourite treat at Xmas is leftovers on a blinker load but spread with dripping. As a kid our meal was ribs roasted in the oven, then the whole pan put in the middle of the table so could mop up the hot fat with pieces of bread. Just goes to show it’s how you’re raised, we thought we ate well back then
My parents were kids during the war and they got a taste for offal, so variations of dishes featuring kidneys, liver or tripe were often served up to us - despite rationing ending long before we were born! Also, porridge with salt was often a breakfast staple and there were other meals like Spam fritters or pork luncheon meat with chips. To be honest, none of it was inedible but, equally, none of my childhood 'wartime' meals are something I would choose to cook today.
I tasted toast and dripping with my future father-in-law for tea one night. The dripping had dripped from the Sunday roast and had been carefully saved by my future mother-in-law, complete with the bits of beef that fell off the joint while it cooked. It was delicious! I suppose I must have experienced Spam as a youngster in the 1950s and 60s but was overloaded with it as a serviceman from the mid 70s and I still love it sliced thinly and fried (like bacon) or dipped in batter and fried ( fritter) or raw, from the tin for breakfast - a staple in "compo' (field rations). I've never had powdered egg or trotters and yours must have been raw if there was still mud on them. I am assuming you had a privileged upbringing if you turn your nose up at foods that country folk ate then, and eat still. You won't endear yourself to the working class, particularly Northerners by your food reviews.
My grandma told me about rationing in the United States during world war II. She worked as a tool supplier at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. She told me about all those blackouts in the city of Norfolk, Virginia at the time. She told me this was because of the U-Boats lurking off the coast. The government also authorized the air raid alarms to be used for drills so the public could prepare for anything. As for food, Beef, pork, and eggs were not available to civilians. You were required to have rationing cards as well. Heck, even gasoline was rationed. You needed a gas card for that. Some people got around it she said. She went on a date with a guy once who ran his car on kerosene. The engine was making all sorts of terrible noises going the restaurant they ate at and coming back to the workers dorm where she lived. She also told me she prayed the whole time going there and coming back. Sadly, she died at the age of 100.
I love spam, but I've never tried to eat it cold. Slice it and stick it under the grill to caramelise the edges and heat the core, or do the same in a frying pan with a little oil or fat, though, and it's delicious. Fry a few halved tomatoes and stick them on top of the spam and a slice of fried bread, or put the hot and slightly crunchy grilled spam between two thick slices of buttered bread with a dab of HP sauce. Now you know what my preferred Saturday morning breakfast treat looks like.
There’s a series of great videos by Ian (Gun Jesus) on WW2 British civilian cuisine, where he tries out some of the recipes and foods, using what they would’ve had at the time. He def describes it better but he calls it monotonous.
i've eaten (and liked) pig's trotters since i was a kid, the problem with the ones in the video is that they were clearly not cleaned and seasoned properly. they're a great source of vitamin E, dietary fat, collagen (good for your hair and skin)!
Absolutely agree with you. Clean those trotters. Also, pull off the skin after it's been braised for hours. Pull off the meat and use it in noodle or rice dishes or meat pies and put in those turnips, carrots, rutabaga .
My fav part of watching this video is seeing food aid/rationed goods the British had resemble what South Koreans had access to during and after the Korean War - and seeing how ultimately it’s about the food culture and not the rationed ingredients that decide if something is appealing.
@@robanderson473 Yep. Lots of Tongans here in Alaska, too. Polynesians do like Spam. And lots of people in the US South liked it when I was growing up there many years ago -- fried crispy in an iron skillet.
Not the greatest piece you've done Dan. You didn't do anything other than eat these foods cold. No wonder they were horrible. In the '60s we still had dripping on toast, plus the delights of deep-fried Spam fritters at school. Rather greasy but we still eat them. Plus, my mother grew up during the war in a council house in Dartford and never ever mentioned pigs trotters to me. In fact, any stories she did tell about rationing were very seldom about food, more about clothes. She did say that butter was scarce but that's about it. And that my Nan went out and used up the ration on a packet of biscuits and gave them to a young German POW who looked sad.
Concerning the ready availability of whale meat, my mother told me the popular Vera Llynn song was parodied to suit wartime humour: "Whale meat again...."
I think rationing was the point when British food finally bit the dust. My grandparents, who grew up on rationing, still insist on everything being boiled and bland. I cook anything else for them and I'll get a comment like "too foreign" or "I'd be happy with bread and jam".
My mother loved pickled pigs feet, but she was born in 1919, in the U.S. to Portuguese immigrants. I was born in January of 1942, and luckily we lived next door to the owners of a small grocery store(my father was in the merchant Marines in the Pacific). They took a shine to me, and I probably got more candy than most kids during the war. Also, although meat was rationed, we had meat more often than not. Later, mom told me, sometimes it was darker than usual(she thought it was horse, but she never asked. I was to young to notice, and don't remember how it tasted). As to the video, I like Spam, but it's much better fried.
We had "victory gardens" in the US too. There's a community garden in Minneapolis with a sign saying it started in 1942. People in that neighborhood have kept it going ever since. I don't think they're expecting food shortages, but I guess they're set just in case. That "national loaf" sounds like it would actually be good, though I suppose not if you lived in a time when white bread was a bit of a luxury and suddenly you can't have it.
I remember hearing that my great grandmother used to work in a factory that made powdered eggs that were shipped to the UK. I know they aren't the greatest but I like to think he was helping keep people feed to a degree.
Not sure who decided on the preparation and/or presentation of these foods - but Dan, you definitely didn't get the best experience. I've had several of your examples and they were delicious.
Not to defend spam but...... i wouldnt call it disgusting. Plenty of people still eat spam. Its very popular in the pacific islands. You just gotta find a way to eat it. Ive only had it a handfull of times but usually fried and with some rice its not bad. Or with some eggs. Im kinda noticing that a lot with these types of videos..... Maybe look up some rationing recipes. Even during the depression when they didnt have much they still found creative ways to make decent meals with things you wouldnt think of using
Somewhere in the Pacific, you give Spam as wedding present and it even comes as a nice presentation pack. This is rich young man without a clue, thinking he knows everything. A degree and no idea how to cope in a kitchen or with new, raw ingredients. One step away from eating dried split peas out of the bag, with a spoon.
If people had this attitude during the war we would have lost. Yes some of this stuff wasn't great but it was part of the war effort, everyone 'doing their bit' and making sacrifices.
I've heard that rationing made the average Brit significantly healthier. At least the poor stopped dying of scurvy. And you should have mentioned carrot cake, which was invented before but popularized by the war and was (and is) pretty good.. Turnips and carrots can be grown in window boxes even if you don't have room for a garden plot.
I lived off WW2 civilian rations for a couple of months, as an experiment. I actually ate quite well. People who lived through rationing did say that they were never hungry, but the food was so boring. I had the advantage of having spices to add some flavour. Also there were shortages, which I didn't have to suffer.
Hey @gonzo_the_great1675 me too! I actually did it for a whole month using recipes from Feeding the Nation by Marguerite Patten, who worked for the Ministry of Food. Of course it was easy because I didn't *have* to do it for nigh on 7 years, and my rations were always there. It was fun and made me realise just how much we take for granted. :)
@@kerryrowles5217 Related material, look up 'Wartime farm' which was a BBC series. Also 'wartime kitchen and garden' with Ruth Mott. Think that was 90's series. Mostly on YT if the BBC have not taken them down.
My grandfather talks about the Wartime Diet very affectionately. Its unpleasant to us, as we’re used to processed and multi ethnic world foods. But back then every meal was a treat, and the diet was fairly healthy
We had storys of my grandma about what foods the americans brought with them and what cooking was done. She served in the women axillary in Edinburgh. Had her 100 birthday in February this year. Sadly on end of life care now 😢
Another reason the British touted the eye benefits of carrots was to create a plausible excuse as to why they were shooting down so many planes at night without revealing it was cause of radar
Catseyes Cunningham was used for PR. He supposedly shot down many Germans because he ate lots of carrots, which gave great night vision. Handy, because that year, there was a glut of carrots and a shortage of almost everything else. Lol If you ate almost nothing but carrots, as some heroworshipping little boys did, you actually started to look orange. Not so healthy...
My family didn’t have the money to buy their full ration allowance. I ate most of this stuff growing up in the seventies when they finally had the money to buy it. They still ate pigs trotters, spam, bread and dripping and sugared buttered bread as a treat. They were so set in their ways from the war and psychology stuck in WW2 that they lived the same way for the rest of their lives. My parents family weren’t wealthy enough to evacuate the children to the countryside so my mother was in-listed into the Red Cross at 14 and my father was a reserve fire boy at 14. 🤷♂️
But wouldn’t they have done something else to the pig trotter to somewhat disguise what you’re eating? Not just plop it on a plate cold and plain. 😂 Also that Spam would most definitely have been cooked my friend.
I'm pretty sure they would boil them, getting all the marrow and fat out of the meat, like in a pork roast. Probably wasn't bad with potatoes and carrots.
I am going to be completely honest here. I find this most disrespectful to those men who had no choice but to eat this food. Sitting up there in your clean room and dressed in a tie complaining about the food that men who were putting their lives on the line were eating through no choice of their own. Its easy to sit there and be judgemental as you have a choice . They didnt.
I don't think he was being disrespectful about the food...just judging on today's standards. I wud say if we all had to live in those times, we wud be grateful for any food at all❤
@ninanightnurse I disagree. Doing a video on this is bad. Like i said, sitting there with his tie on some 70 years plus later critiquing what soldiers ate on the battlefield and comparing it to modern tastes and times is the epitome of lackluster idea
@ManfromJapan12 he's not being judgemental or racist...just honest tbf. I wud honestly boke at that stuff, being Autistic and freaky about food textures. No one can say anything until they are put in that situation and its either eat or starve.
1:49 SPAM is way better if you pull it out of the tin slice it and fry it in a frying pan like they do in Hawaii where it's still super popular for weird reasons beyond me.
When I lived in Yorkshire about 20 years ago, bread and dripping was put out as a bar snack every Sunday lunchtime in the pub. Very tasty it was, too. Pinch of salt, and Bob's your uncle... Spam is best fried as is, or in batter. I seem to remember liver appearing often on my 1960s childhood menu. Suet puddings, too. Spotted dick, bread pudding, bread and butter pudding. Still favourites in my house.
Pig's trotters are delicious. The trick is to skin the trotters when they are hot. Then remove the meat and make a sandwich. My mother boiled them to get rid of the subcutaneous fat. It was like eating pulled pork now.
We're not cut from the same kind of cloth as the Greatest Generation who won WW2... we're all a bunch of sissies. That said Dan, Old Boy, don't eat the Spam straight from the can like a savage, fry it up! Take that fine, nutritious bread and toast it. Put fried Spam on it and top it with powdered eggs. Yum. P.S. Tabasco sauce helps, or HP... whatever. God save the King!
This video is what it looks like when all your servants have a day off and you have to fend for yourself and not knowing what a kitchen is and how it works.
😂😅
@@railroading5726I’ve never eaten a pig trotter in my life, so I can’t vouch for that.
@@railroading5726 and how is that?
@@railroading5726its true, we don't actually need food to survive but that makes other countries feel awkward
@@pugsterjosh7925on mexico we have tostadas with pig feet, if you actually know how to prepare food all of these can taste fine.
I remember my grandmother told me how she struggled to make the meager rations during ww2 in Denmark more palatable. She told me that fortunately she had the two most important spices available. When I asked what those spices were she said "Salt and hunger.. makes everything taste great."
Salt is still the 'Danish spice'.
My Dutch grandma always used an excessive amount of salt on her foods. I wonder if it was a habit she picked up during the war years
Both your Omas are awesome!
Salt is literally the best taste when u are hungry. Thats why i like to snack on a few garlic stuffed olives while i drink my beer. After that, im pretty sure i could win any eating contest.
Exactly! I was a picky eater when I was a kid, but when I was at Boy Scout camp and doing hard physical stuff every day, hiking 20 miles, that sort of thing, I ate anything put in front of me.
The way he ate the spam without frying it first brought me pain to watch.
What a mad lad!!!!
I was going to say the same thing
Even a cold sausage is disgusting.
My mom was a depression baby and so went thru wwii rationing also. I grew up eating a lot of cold spam pasta salads in the summers. Spam fresh outta the can. 😂 These salads are still a favorite of mine.
Yep, always cook it first... if you can
This video only shows that the British had no idea how to properly cook food
no no, the RICH ones don't know.
@@bruhman2089Lol they have maids and butlers for that.
They say that Britain was never healthier than during the war. Also, I have the suspicion that Dan might have enjoyed the food more had he heated it up.
Lord Woolton is rightly recognised by historians as a genius who not only kept Britain fed during the war, but somehow managed to IMPROVE our diets.
Total over-achiever. What a lad. 😂
I suspect we would all be healthier and weigh less if this was all we had to eat
Agreed
And yes, the disgust Dan was showing seemed performative.
I believe the Woolton diet was so important to the war effort and heavily pressed on the population because in WWI the people were underfed and were weak.
They didn't want that to happen again. Especially when the threat of the war coming to them was possible/probable.
Don't think Dan has ever been properly hungry/starving. Something we found on expeditions & eating mainly dehydrated food for extended periods is that you really start to crave fat & oily foods. believe me, that dripping would look like heaven after a while. Perhaps a more palatable way for him to try it would have been to melt it in a pan & make a good old British "fried slice". Just a slice of bread shallow fried in the fat. While its hot its good stuff.
I'm bloody certain he hasnt considering he's basically aristocracy. If WW3 happened tomorrow he'd be packing up and retreating to one of his wife's brother's country estates. Im certain his brother in law, Hugh Grosvenor, 7th Duke of Westminster could slip them into Abbeystead House.
The rest of us would be begging the Chinese to give us a good recipe for the same trotters hes making fun of here.
We went tramping and lived off dehydrated food for three days, on the last day
I took out a can of corned beef I smuggled in my rucksack
We ate that like it was a lamb roast 😂
He says you’d have to be desperate…yes! These were desperate times! However, there were people (often mothers) who spent a good deal of time making these foods palatable, tolerable, and sometimes…even good!
I'm a Civil War reenactor and you're EXACTLY right. Troops in the Civil War preferred salt pork over any other kind of meat because of the fat content and that pork fat could be used for things beef, mutton, horse, or fish fat/oils simply could not do. For example, troops were issued green coffee beans. You DO NOT want to roast your coffee beans in mutton fat or fish oil. Trust me on that one.
Another thing your body will miss is sugar. When you're subsisting on salted meat, hardtack cracker, and 'foraged' vegetables for a week or so, you start to look at beets and potatoes like candy bars 😆
I think pigeons were not as common to see flying about........
Of course it is disgusting when you're using the ingredients in this fashion! A lot of these foods are fantastic. You just need to prepare them better!
Yes I thought that, the way he crudely cut the bread and slapped the dried egg on it and then eat it. Then eating the span straight out of the can with a look of distain already on his face. He looked like he was already prepared to dislike it, but I believe the average family at the time would have made something delightful out of the same ingredients. They had too !
On the note of that, instead of boiled pig's trotters, which is truly disgusting when you eat like that, why not try some offal? (Gun Jesus Ian on Forgotten Weapon tried the rationing menu, and his dish looks way better.)
Pig’s trotters require long, slow cooking, typically as the meat in a casserole. If done correctly they are genuinely very nice and I’ve enjoyed them on several occasions. Pig’s Trotter Stew is a staple of French Canadian cuisine.
Preparation is key! Of course a lot of this stuff tasted nasty the way he tried it. 🙄 My Mom, a really good cook for most things, tried to feed me boiled Brussels Sprouts 🤢 Much later in life, I tried them again oven roasted and caramelized with onions with a vinaigrette or with bacon makes them delicious.😋
@@stevecagle2317 They still taste like Brussels Spouts, though.
You know there's a process called "cooking" that tends to improve food's flavour that's been around for thousands of years, Mr. Dan the Historian?
These are soldiers' rations. They can't always cook.
The description clearly says Home Front i.e. Civilians. Soldiers would have different rations. Especially, those going into combat will have quick energy food like biscuits and toffees. Or the American supplied K-rations. Otherwise you will have field kitchens who will cook porridge, Bacon & Eggs, cheese, jam, tea, etc. Or they will pool their kits and cook together.
What if the luftwaffe leveled the block you lived on? Might not be able to cook for a minute.
Genius comment!
Nobody eats Spam directly from the tin. It needs to be sliced, heated, mixed with other ingredients, etc. Eating it as he did makes as much sense as swallowing a spoon of flour, lard, or salt and declaring them nasty.
American here but raised by Brits and loved Spam as a kid, but never saw my Gran(and she was a young woman in the war) just open the Spam and serve it, always fried it and it was delicious, I still have fond memories of Spam, Dan is just eating it wrong!
My brother and father were both super big fans of spam and any other canned meat they could find. They both liked it fried too. Personally I am not a fan but, have eaten it without complaint. There are a lot of worse things that people have eaten and still eat. When I think about people complaining about eating spam or other canned meats , I wonder how many hot dogs they have eaten at the ball game or picnic.
Yes! Spam fritters can be great. But even raw spam, sliced thin and in sandwiches are great
Spam should be sliced and fried.
I'll eat spam either out of the tin or fried. It's quite nice with a good dash of salt and black pepper. If it wasn't nearly 11 at night and I wasn't watching this in bed I would have been tempted to open a tin and make a sandwich.
Fried spam is delicious
Could You Survive on food from 2000?
**Squirts mustard directly into mouth, eats a raw chip, takes a spoonful of cold chopped tomatoes** - Dan - ''Disgusting!''
Isn't that just regular british cuisine?
@@valeriuvelicu3799no, we boil it first.
This feels more like a hit piece on ration food rather than an actual taste of how people ate back then.
The people eating this also survived the depression. I'm sure the cooks got around to improving the taste. If nothing else, they had all those spices lying around unused.
It's the british, what can you expect?
Yep. This is a "let's find the most uninspiring, unseasoned, unappetising way of eating these raw ingredients just for performative disgust and views."
Pigs trotters were eaten by the average person of the generation. It wasn't just because of the war, that generation and those before did not eat as much meat as we do now, nor the better cuts that we do.
Now in first world countries we have so much fresh foods year around that the ugly looking ones are thrown out. It's hard to even find things like liver or other organ meats which were still commonly sold in the 70's.
It's really show more how relatively well we live now in comparison.
Ask anyone who grew up in the 70's/80's up North whose gran cooked with the rationing mentality. They could make banquets out of nothing.
Unfortunately this didn't feel like it even tried to provide legitimate insight into rationing
Pig trotters are delicious when cooked and spiced correctly. Our elders made do during lean times and I admire them for it.
I am Norwegian, I used to eat pig trotters when I grew up. I was born several years after the war. You can still buy it here, but I haven't eaten it for many years. Haven't thought about it really. But maybe I'll try it again soon! It is by no means so bad as Dan Snow says!
try to make jelly out of it with some carrot and other vegetables you have available. thats a winner trust me
If you think things were bad back then, wait until you see what the future has in store.
Imagine spices being hard to acquire because the enemy is blockading your supply routes… no proper seasoning on your pig‘s trotters.
@@OttoStrawanzinger I would be more focused on surviving the war than worrying about my food not being tasty 😉
Some Toff who has never been skint going on about Rationing 😂
Bread and dripping is not what hes eating, Dan is eating bread and lard, any northerner will tell you that real beef dripping on bread is delicious
We are loads I'm 86 no clogged arteries
Seriously I’m only 32 and my grandma used to feed us bread and dripping and it was lovely.
I like carrots and swede,but im still as fat as a seal.
You're absolutely right about drippings and bread!
My grandmother grew up in the Great Depression on the US Great Plains. She was frugal in a way that only starvation teaches you to be.
She kept two cans of fat on the stove, one 'clean' [red meat fat that had been rendered down and all the impurities filtered out] and 'frying fat', which was fats with the impurities still in it because it added flavor. Around the time I was born [early 60s] my grandfather had finally convinced my grandmother to start throwing both fat cans out every month and start fresh with 'new fat' [Crisco] and a fresh can of used fats.
piece in mucky fat
“They’d have to be desperate to eat this” THEY WERE BLOODY DESPERATE.. and that kind of comment coming from someone of this era shows how bloody SPOILT we are …😡🇬🇧
He's a toff married into the aristocracy, he's a special kind of spoiled.
As a kosher eater i have never had spam but even i know you're supposed to cook it first
We make pasta salads with it it’s so good
You can eat it straight out of the can since it's fully cooked, but it's definitely better fried.
You don't have too. Soldiers can't always cook.
I have collected British magazines and Ministry of Food brochures from 1939-1945. Many of the recipes in these were for using home-grown potatoes, carrots and cabbages plus rationed flour or breadcrumbs and tiny amounts of rationed butter and meat. Many people raised rabbits or kept a few hens for eggs. Some neighbors pooled their scraps to feed a piglet (the "pig club" was registered with the government) which they were later allowed to slaughter and share the meat among the club members but NEVER allowed to sell. Others picked berries from hedgerows in late summer and went to canning centers, obtained a ration of sugar specifically given to make jams and jellies and used only government approved recipes to make small jars of berry jams and jellies. Jams and jellies were very important when there was not enough butter to spread on toast and when breakfast was often just oatmeal porridge and toasted slices of bread plus a cup of unsweetened tea. A can of Spam from a friendly GI was a treasure to be thinly sliced or diced and used in a variety of creative ways along with breadcrumbs or grated potatoes or oatmeal to make mock cutlets or mock roasts or other illusions of large portions of real meat or poultry.
This is the real story. My grandparents in inner city Birmingham had a pig and rabbits in their tiny back yard. People also had allotments
As an American, who has eaten lots of gravy with our biscuits, I have to say the Brit who prepared that bread and drippings gave me the most disgusting thing I have ever eaten. I like British people just not their idea of food.
Why did you eat everything cold?!! Spam is sliced and fried, my mother (who lived through WWII as a teenager) said whole meal bread was often home baked and stretched with dried ground peas or beans (and sliced VERY thin!), dripping is a classic Northern treat (and makes roast potatoes marvelous), dried eggs… well, you got me there, dried eggs aren’t great, but they’re better if they’re hot, carrot pie had the carrots grated finely, not sliced (like carrot cake), and pig’s trotters should be roasted, the fat saved, the meat carved off the bone, and the bones cracked and used to make marrow broth. Honestly, I wouldn’t have eaten anything presented cold like that. My mother also says they made “spinach” from cooked young nettles. She was amazed when she went to the US on assignment just after the war, and saw restaurants throw out half-eaten steaks!
Nope, we always had it sliced cold in sandwiches.
There's more than one way to cook pigs trotters.
My old mum in law used to use young nettles in a risotto…. Yummy!
In Hawaii, you can get fried Spam on a sticky rice slice, wrapped in nori. It’s in deli counter with other hot items. It’s pretty good and portable, eaten out of hand.
@@nicolad8822 with ketchup!
C'mon Dan. You DO realize that a number of these things can be made more palatable by preparation, e.g., Spam, powdered eggs, trotters. Any port in a storm.
Winston Churchill asking to see an example of typical rations, and being shown a life-size wooden mock-up of the rations. He said with satisfaction: ‘All in all, a fine meal. A fine meal’. When told those rations had to last for a week, not for a single meal, as he had thought, Churchill thundered out: ‘Then the British people are starving. Something must be done.’
Funnily enough the health of the british people increased quite a bit thanks to rationing as they ate less bread, fats and meat and far more vegetables.
@@Nerathul1I think the point is Old Winnie and his Tory Cronies were so out of touch and protected from any privations caused by the war that they were probably ingesting a week's worth of calories at every meal.
As much as I like the sound of this, it does sound overly romanticised
That is an urban mouth it never happened.
Myth
My mum loved dripping on bread, and although I was sceptical before trying it myself, it’s actually really nice with a sprinkle of salt on the top. That stuff Dan Snow was eating looked more like lard, hence the disgusting taste( I wouldn’t eat lard like that either!). Proper bread and dripping incorporates the fat and meat juices from the bottom of the roasting tin, scraped up when cold and spread on a slice of bread ( making sure to include the brown meat juices as well). Great taste, but probably not good for your cholesterol levels I’m afraid!
When I was a little kid Mum would make a boatload of toast every morning at breakfast time, big chunky doorstep wedges of bread.
Rather than waste the slices that didn't get eaten for breakfast she would slather it with something and give it to us with a big old mug of tea as an after school belly filler until dinner time.
Monday afternoons it would always be cold toast and dripping.
I survived rationing, dripping on toast is still a favourite.
I love bread and dripping with a dash of pepper and I'm fifty-five, thanks Mum! I remember her telling me that British children were the healthiest children in the world for quite a number of years, as a result of rationing. It makes sense really when you see kids today!
@@robanderson473 Overweight children were rare when I was at school in the 50s and 60s.
@@arisnotheles Wow get away! Ha they probably charged an arm and a leg for it too, ha! I remember lamb shanks being $2.50 (AUD) now they're so blummin dear. Typical of hoity toity joints, pricing up working class grub. Mind you I usually have the lamb shanks at a pub when my pals are playing a gig there and it's worth it, as they're so delicious and the meat falls off the bone just by looking at it! Again, it's still just bloody lamb shanks for crying out loud! Bread and dripping though.... just so good!
Pig's trotters are still eaten in Sweden, they are traditional Christmas food, I used to love it when I was little (the jelly around them was the best!). They were my grandmother's favourite food, it really was a treat for her when she was able to get one, and all the way to the end, her family made sure that she could have her trotter every once in a while.
German here, we eat them too and it‘s always a big discussion around it because my mums ancestors were from west Germany where you eat them boiled in sauerkraut but my dad is from Bavaria and we eat them grilled. But either way they are seen as a delicacy.
China too. They’re usually boiled in spices until soft. Very delicious. One of my favorites as a kid.
Toast and dripping was one of my WWII-era teenaged father's dream foods. He got his wish for some more in his final year because, at 93, why the hell not. "This is repulsive," he said, "I'd rather have mayonnaise (a substance he wouldn't allow in the house because it caused him great spiritual pain even to see in the fridge)." What a difference 80 years makes.
I was a bit surprised that he didn't mention the national loaf.
Modern meats so are so gross compared to fresh unprocessed ones
@@hillppari a joint of meat hasn't changed much
Proper dripping toast has the meat juices as well as the fat, and needs salt and pepper, and then it IS delicious.
@@maggiesmith856what he had there was lard. dripping had brown tasty bits in
I'm only slightly older than Dan, and I have very fond memories from my childhood of visiting my grandmother in Yorkshire and being delighted when she gave us bread and dripping, a treat that we never got at home. To this day, I take every opportunity to retain the dripping from roast beef and try to make it as palatable as I remember, but I can never achieve the beautiful creamy product that my grandmother provided. Maybe you had to be there, but I adore bread and dripping.
In Mexico they cook the trotters until soft then grind up with meat and spices making it very tasty.
Fry that SPAM.
Specially prepared American Meats.
The production team were having this guy on 😂
Your supposed to fry the spam then its quite good
Yeah, Spam is technically edible straight out of the tin, but that's by far the worst way to eat it.
Growing up in the early 70s in Australia, a lot of these foods were common in our house because my mum grew up eating this sort of stuff during the war (she grew up south of Perth in Western Australia) and could make a meal of what people would normally throw away these days. I still remember the taste of chips cooked in lamb dripping, spam jaffles, dripping on toast (especially the nasty black jelly from underneath the crust) with some Worcestershire sauce and pepper and home made pies and pasties made from mystery meats. Lots of homegrown vegetables and fruits and milk direct from the cow or goat, too. I kind of miss those days. Now everything is processed, homogenised, pasteurised and buggarised until there is no food value and as soon as we have a small interruption to normal life (like a pandemic for example) everyone freaks out and you can't get any toilet paper.
And the black jelly i under the drippings were my favorite!! A bit like marmite but not as yeasty
I can so relate to this, my childhood was in ireland, and we grew our veg, had chickens and pigs. Thanks to being the eldest of 7, and my mother's kitchen help, I am proud to say that I rarely ever eat out, cause I get better bank for my buck eating at home. Plus I cook better than most restaurants. Ahhhhh what a glorious childhood in a kitchen, cutting lettuces and collecting strawberries, strawberries, potatoes, eggs, making jams.... You dont miss it, till it's gone.
Too right!@@CarniFitMe
My dad loved his bread and dripping too and would tell me (as a child ) that I didn't know what I was missing. Growing up there was a dripping bowl in the fridge - no olive oil in our house 😂
People went crazy didn't they? Then the pendulum swung the other way when they rediscovered home cooking/baking . I agree , non processed foods are so much better.
Wombats make a good replacement for toilet paper.
Perhaps if this presenter bothered to cook the SPAM, trotters and dried eggs as they are meant to be he would not find them so disgusting. My first and last view of his presentations.
I brought a tin of spam three days ago. Brilliant fried (with or without batter) and served with baked beans. Real comfort food. Dripping is brilliant in sandwiches. Very tasty. Pigs trotters are totally suitable to eat (roasted) and popular. Yet again you appear spoilt and a fussy eater wanting heavily processed supermarket food. The WW2 diet was very healthy indeed.
That’s starvation food. It’s eaten out of necessity and isn’t healthy. And spam is about as processed as you can get, lol what are you talking about
@@Tsumami__ There were issues, certain vitamins and nutrients were hard to get on rationing, but compared to processed food with waaaay too much salt, sugar and fat as well as various other dodgy ingredients it's healthier by a significant margin.
I can't believe he just bit into that cold pig trotter, I had some about a month ago, of course, it was smoked and cooked with a pot of nave beans. I have eaten them all my 65 years, and as fatherwi11iam71 pointed out you don't eat spam cold. I did really enjoy the videos none the less, please keep them coming.
We used to have a special container in the fridge. It had a removable strainer on top. All the fat from cooking meat was poured into it. This is the dripping they probably had on bread. It had the flavours from the cooked meat. Pure rendered dripping doesn’t have that extra flavor.
Yes, the fat from cooking meat is really good to use in cooking. Back in Uni, some friends and I would club money together and get stuff for a proper roast dinner most weeks, often the one who's flat we met up in would cook bacon for his breakfast so we could use the bacon fat for roast potatoes.
Elvis loved the stuff
Spam was considered one of the best ration meats you could get in WW2 Britain. Both because it was a fairly substantial amount and it had enough fat that the cans would basically be caked in lard, providing a good bit of cooking oil.
My grandfather served in the Pacific. His parents having a small farm in eastern Kentucky saved up ration stamps and sent a whole case of spam. It had been a less then delightful gift as he'd been eating it for two months.
😆
Lol. I guess it was the thought that counted.
I am so sad for him!
Yes, my mother remembers the family of 3 getting only one egg per week !
Her mother used it to make a small cake.
Usually, most meats were too expensive to buy. Most people had backyard vegetable gardens, and kept hens.
If you had the money, though, you could get more of anything on the black market.
bread and dripping was something we still had when I was a kid in the 60s and 70s. Mum and Dad loved it. Safe to say it's not very healthy, BUT it's a way to have no waste. We never threw out food (and I don't either). When you have a roast sunday dinner you save ALL the juices and you have either made gravy or kept the 'drippings' in a bowl and use it as gravy stock or base stock for pies you may make.
Yes, dripping always had some of the mucky black in it - delicious, especially on toast.
My mam used to get dripping from butchers and it had delicious jelly on top. Gorgeous on bread with salt Oh happy days.
Agree totally
Dan......you are a very brave man. I will never complain about my wife's cooking again.
My Mom (born 1930) has vivid memories of rationing. It was a matter of eating what was available or go hungry. Fortunately her Dad was a butcher so managed to get a little extra meat every now and then. One dish my Mom has particular memories of was vegetables boiled in stock with cubed corned beef added at the end. Not particularly appetising but nutritious.
I admire all the (I imagine) mothers during the rationing years who managed to ensure that their families were well nourished in spite of all the difficulties. And I think those families, even the children, would have been aware of how limited supplies were and were just grateful for a decent and filling meal.
And parents now moan if they can't get their favourite brands.@@catgladwell5684
WARM dripping on bread, not cold. Chips fried in dripping are bloody awesome.
How many men burned and drowned delivering that food😢😢😢 The British and allies were so brave.
Lest we forget eh🇬🇧🙏😢
Down here in the American South, people eat pig's feet all the time. Heck, we even pickle them down here.
This is basically what it would have been like to eat WWII ration food if you had no idea how to cook or prepare anything.
Essentially. We ate nothing but fried spam and eggs on tortillas growing up and that's still one of my favorite little slap together meals. Reminds me of grandmas house.
The dripping I recall had jelly and crunchy bits. It was quite the delicacy.
The dripping you recall is homemade from bacon, pork or even steak or roast. It has all the seasoning from the meat and the flavor. It’s not terrible at all.
Oh that’s made me chuckle, can tell as a posh lad he’s never had to eat food like that. I’m only a couple of years older than Dan, but for me growing up in the 70’s in the Black Country that was still normal food. Pigs trotters best put into a stew to get the goodness out, they doh taste nice how he ate it lol. I still use dripping now and my kids love the taste when I baste roasties and chips in it, having it on toast is nice and my favourite treat at Xmas is leftovers on a blinker load but spread with dripping. As a kid our meal was ribs roasted in the oven, then the whole pan put in the middle of the table so could mop up the hot fat with pieces of bread.
Just goes to show it’s how you’re raised, we thought we ate well back then
People soon got sick of eating canned whale. Hence the WWII Vera Lynn song, Whale Meat Again.
My parents were kids during the war and they got a taste for offal, so variations of dishes featuring kidneys, liver or tripe were often served up to us - despite rationing ending long before we were born! Also, porridge with salt was often a breakfast staple and there were other meals like Spam fritters or pork luncheon meat with chips. To be honest, none of it was inedible but, equally, none of my childhood 'wartime' meals are something I would choose to cook today.
IIRC offal wasn’t rationed in WW2, hence its popularity. Porridge with salt is the traditional Scottish way…
Dude just raw dogged Spam out of the can.
I tasted toast and dripping with my future father-in-law for tea one night. The dripping had dripped from the Sunday roast and had been carefully saved by my future mother-in-law, complete with the bits of beef that fell off the joint while it cooked. It was delicious! I suppose I must have experienced Spam as a youngster in the 1950s and 60s but was overloaded with it as a serviceman from the mid 70s and I still love it sliced thinly and fried (like bacon) or dipped in batter and fried ( fritter) or raw, from the tin for breakfast - a staple in "compo' (field rations). I've never had powdered egg or trotters and yours must have been raw if there was still mud on them. I am assuming you had a privileged upbringing if you turn your nose up at foods that country folk ate then, and eat still. You won't endear yourself to the working class, particularly Northerners by your food reviews.
My grandma told me about rationing in the United States during world war II. She worked as a tool supplier at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. She told me about all those blackouts in the city of Norfolk, Virginia at the time. She told me this was because of the U-Boats lurking off the coast. The government also authorized the air raid alarms to be used for drills so the public could prepare for anything. As for food, Beef, pork, and eggs were not available to civilians. You were required to have rationing cards as well. Heck, even gasoline was rationed. You needed a gas card for that. Some people got around it she said. She went on a date with a guy once who ran his car on kerosene. The engine was making all sorts of terrible noises going the restaurant they ate at and coming back to the workers dorm where she lived. She also told me she prayed the whole time going there and coming back. Sadly, she died at the age of 100.
Dan coming across a bit of a ponce here!
Spam is delicious and dripping is like liquid gold when you're actually hungry.
Millions of tins of spam are sold yearly in America at around 4.5 dollars a piece, people love it
I love spam, but I've never tried to eat it cold. Slice it and stick it under the grill to caramelise the edges and heat the core, or do the same in a frying pan with a little oil or fat, though, and it's delicious. Fry a few halved tomatoes and stick them on top of the spam and a slice of fried bread, or put the hot and slightly crunchy grilled spam between two thick slices of buttered bread with a dab of HP sauce. Now you know what my preferred Saturday morning breakfast treat looks like.
Try it cold, I eat it in sandwiches as an alternative to ham or corned beef.
I remember my late Paternal Grandmother (Rose: died 24/07/1986) kept her ration book for the rest of her life. Miss you Nanna Rose
It is all how you cook it.(by the way, drippings are best eaten hot).
Pork dripping was the best scrape. Especially when it had the jelly with it
There’s a series of great videos by Ian (Gun Jesus) on WW2 British civilian cuisine, where he tries out some of the recipes and foods, using what they would’ve had at the time. He def describes it better but he calls it monotonous.
Cheers for that. I want Gun Jesus and Tank Grandad to do a video together. The internet would probably break but it would be worth it😊
The irony is. During the war the British diet (on average) was healthier than the current British diet.
My grandfather and father used to tell me, "When you're hungry, you'll eat onion skins and eggshells".
Dan Snow eating is the reason I subbed to this channel.
Exactly! But you shouldn't talk with yer mouth full.
You don't eat spam straight from the can like that!
i've eaten (and liked) pig's trotters since i was a kid, the problem with the ones in the video is that they were clearly not cleaned and seasoned properly. they're a great source of vitamin E, dietary fat, collagen (good for your hair and skin)!
Absolutely agree with you. Clean those trotters. Also, pull off the skin after it's been braised for hours. Pull off the meat and use it in noodle or rice dishes or meat pies and put in those turnips, carrots, rutabaga
.
I suspect that "muck from the farmyard" was a prop placed there by the producers.
Food rationing in the UK did not end until October 3rd 1952 !
My fav part of watching this video is seeing food aid/rationed goods the British had resemble what South Koreans had access to during and after the Korean War - and seeing how ultimately it’s about the food culture and not the rationed ingredients that decide if something is appealing.
Army stew. I've never had it but it looks at the very least interesting!
I watch the Korean Englishman, quite a few of the popular street favourites in South Korea have spam in.
🎯 Spam is revered in Hawaii. I'm in Alaska and know several Hawaiians who love them some Spam.
@@keithjones9546 It's a delicacy in Tonga too, so I'm told.
@@robanderson473 Yep. Lots of Tongans here in Alaska, too. Polynesians do like Spam. And lots of people in the US South liked it when I was growing up there many years ago -- fried crispy in an iron skillet.
Not the greatest piece you've done Dan. You didn't do anything other than eat these foods cold. No wonder they were horrible. In the '60s we still had dripping on toast, plus the delights of deep-fried Spam fritters at school. Rather greasy but we still eat them. Plus, my mother grew up during the war in a council house in Dartford and never ever mentioned pigs trotters to me. In fact, any stories she did tell about rationing were very seldom about food, more about clothes. She did say that butter was scarce but that's about it. And that my Nan went out and used up the ration on a packet of biscuits and gave them to a young German POW who looked sad.
Now make him try those horrid British Boer War - WWI pemmican on one side, coffee on the other cylinder rations 😂
Concerning the ready availability of whale meat, my mother told me the popular Vera Llynn song was parodied to suit wartime humour: "Whale meat again...."
This is great! Enjoy this kind of content
Pigs feet rules. You slow-cook that shit with some beer and sauerkraut and it falls off the bone. An Eastern European treat 👌
Fry that spam. Juice it with different configurations to get different taste combinations
Not frying your spam in a pan with butter and maybe some onion and/or garlic and pepper made my tongue weep.
My dad was a child in the war. He loved pig's trotters and continued to eat them after.
I think rationing was the point when British food finally bit the dust. My grandparents, who grew up on rationing, still insist on everything being boiled and bland. I cook anything else for them and I'll get a comment like "too foreign" or "I'd be happy with bread and jam".
Pickled pigs feet are still popular in some areas of the US! 😅
My mother loved pickled pigs feet, but she was born in 1919, in the U.S. to Portuguese immigrants. I was born in January of 1942, and luckily we lived next door to the owners of a small grocery store(my father was in the merchant Marines in the Pacific). They took a shine to me, and I probably got more candy than most kids during the war. Also, although meat was rationed, we had meat more often than not. Later, mom told me, sometimes it was darker than usual(she thought it was horse, but she never asked. I was to young to notice, and don't remember how it tasted). As to the video, I like Spam, but it's much better fried.
Pampered second generation TV celeb proving when it comes to making the best of basic foods "You know nothing Dan Snow".
We had "victory gardens" in the US too. There's a community garden in Minneapolis with a sign saying it started in 1942. People in that neighborhood have kept it going ever since. I don't think they're expecting food shortages, but I guess they're set just in case. That "national loaf" sounds like it would actually be good, though I suppose not if you lived in a time when white bread was a bit of a luxury and suddenly you can't have it.
I remember hearing that my great grandmother used to work in a factory that made powdered eggs that were shipped to the UK. I know they aren't the greatest but I like to think he was helping keep people feed to a degree.
Not sure who decided on the preparation and/or presentation of these foods - but Dan, you definitely didn't get the best experience. I've had several of your examples and they were delicious.
"Hunger makes the best sauce."
--Anyone Hungry
Not to defend spam but...... i wouldnt call it disgusting. Plenty of people still eat spam. Its very popular in the pacific islands. You just gotta find a way to eat it. Ive only had it a handfull of times but usually fried and with some rice its not bad. Or with some eggs.
Im kinda noticing that a lot with these types of videos..... Maybe look up some rationing recipes. Even during the depression when they didnt have much they still found creative ways to make decent meals with things you wouldnt think of using
Somewhere in the Pacific, you give Spam as wedding present and it even comes as a nice presentation pack.
This is rich young man without a clue, thinking he knows everything. A degree and no idea how to cope in a kitchen or with new, raw ingredients.
One step away from eating dried split peas out of the bag, with a spoon.
If people had this attitude during the war we would have lost. Yes some of this stuff wasn't great but it was part of the war effort, everyone 'doing their bit' and making sacrifices.
I've heard that rationing made the average Brit significantly healthier. At least the poor stopped dying of scurvy. And you should have mentioned carrot cake, which was invented before but popularized by the war and was (and is) pretty good.. Turnips and carrots can be grown in window boxes even if you don't have room for a garden plot.
Fried Spam isn't that bad, especiallly served on toast and covered with hot baked beans.
I lived off WW2 civilian rations for a couple of months, as an experiment.
I actually ate quite well.
People who lived through rationing did say that they were never hungry, but the food was so boring.
I had the advantage of having spices to add some flavour. Also there were shortages, which I didn't have to suffer.
Just wait until the fatlogic types find this video, and start shrieking that they would starve to death without their 10 lb of daily KFC.
Hey @gonzo_the_great1675 me too! I actually did it for a whole month using recipes from Feeding the Nation by Marguerite Patten, who worked for the Ministry of Food. Of course it was easy because I didn't *have* to do it for nigh on 7 years, and my rations were always there. It was fun and made me realise just how much we take for granted. :)
@@kerryrowles5217 Related material, look up 'Wartime farm' which was a BBC series. Also 'wartime kitchen and garden' with Ruth Mott. Think that was 90's series. Mostly on YT if the BBC have not taken them down.
My grandfather talks about the Wartime Diet very affectionately. Its unpleasant to us, as we’re used to processed and multi ethnic world foods. But back then every meal was a treat, and the diet was fairly healthy
Frankly we should all be eating more veggies. Also, I feel like salt, pepper, drippings, on toast can't be all that bad.
'All' is a bit of broad statement.
Great to see you in this format Sir. Nice.
We had storys of my grandma about what foods the americans brought with them and what cooking was done. She served in the women axillary in Edinburgh. Had her 100 birthday in February this year. Sadly on end of life care now 😢
Bless her, she's had a good innings. My sincere condolences to you and your family.
I’m so sorry she is reaching the end; but what a interesting and lovely life she must have had!
A fascinating insight 🌸💚🧐
Another reason the British touted the eye benefits of carrots was to create a plausible excuse as to why they were shooting down so many planes at night without revealing it was cause of radar
Catseyes Cunningham was used for PR. He supposedly shot down many Germans because he ate lots of carrots, which gave great night vision.
Handy, because that year, there was a glut of carrots and a shortage of almost everything else. Lol
If you ate almost nothing but carrots, as some heroworshipping little boys did, you actually started to look orange. Not so healthy...
My family didn’t have the money to buy their full ration allowance. I ate most of this stuff growing up in the seventies when they finally had the money to buy it. They still ate pigs trotters, spam, bread and dripping and sugared buttered bread as a treat.
They were so set in their ways from the war and psychology stuck in WW2 that they lived the same way for the rest of their lives. My parents family weren’t wealthy enough to evacuate the children to the countryside so my mother was in-listed into the Red Cross at 14 and my father was a reserve fire boy at 14.
🤷♂️
But wouldn’t they have done something else to the pig trotter to somewhat disguise what you’re eating? Not just plop it on a plate cold and plain. 😂 Also that Spam would most definitely have been cooked my friend.
I'm pretty sure they would boil them, getting all the marrow and fat out of the meat, like in a pork roast. Probably wasn't bad with potatoes and carrots.
You can stuff them with black pudding, or they were turned into a stew.
Thinking of the Monty Python song…’Spam, spam, spam, spam…’ Enjoyed this, cheers.
I am going to be completely honest here. I find this most disrespectful to those men who had no choice but to eat this food. Sitting up there in your clean room and dressed in a tie complaining about the food that men who were putting their lives on the line were eating through no choice of their own. Its easy to sit there and be judgemental as you have a choice . They didnt.
I don't think he was being disrespectful about the food...just judging on today's standards. I wud say if we all had to live in those times, we wud be grateful for any food at all❤
@ninanightnurse I disagree. Doing a video on this is bad. Like i said, sitting there with his tie on some 70 years plus later critiquing what soldiers ate on the battlefield and comparing it to modern tastes and times is the epitome of lackluster idea
@ManfromJapan12 he's not being judgemental or racist...just honest tbf. I wud honestly boke at that stuff, being Autistic and freaky about food textures. No one can say anything until they are put in that situation and its either eat or starve.
1:49 SPAM is way better if you pull it out of the tin slice it and fry it in a frying pan like they do in Hawaii where it's still super popular for weird reasons beyond me.
When I lived in Yorkshire about 20 years ago, bread and dripping was put out as a bar snack every Sunday lunchtime in the pub. Very tasty it was, too. Pinch of salt, and Bob's your uncle...
Spam is best fried as is, or in batter.
I seem to remember liver appearing often on my 1960s childhood menu. Suet puddings, too. Spotted dick, bread pudding, bread and butter pudding. Still favourites in my house.
Pig's trotters are delicious. The trick is to skin the trotters when they are hot. Then remove the meat and make a sandwich. My mother boiled them to get rid of the subcutaneous fat. It was like eating pulled pork now.
We're not cut from the same kind of cloth as the Greatest Generation who won WW2... we're all a bunch of sissies. That said Dan, Old Boy, don't eat the Spam straight from the can like a savage, fry it up! Take that fine, nutritious bread and toast it. Put fried Spam on it and top it with powdered eggs. Yum. P.S. Tabasco sauce helps, or HP... whatever. God save the King!
Who the hell eats spam like that? Get it sliced up and put it under the grill and put it on your toast. Brilliant!