Brit Reacting to American Highschoolers try British comfort food for the first time!
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- Опубліковано 18 тра 2023
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Lol now you know how we feel when we watch people trying American foods or talking about American culture. Everyone is screaming at their screens “Nobody eats it like that!!” 😂
In my opinion, if you want to "generalize" American food then It has to be something that you could go to a random Walmart in DC and get.
@@angusstuff You know it’s funny. I’m in my 40’s and I’ve never been inside of a Walmart. Almost all American food has its roots elsewhere so it’s hard to really quantify. I’d say southern and soul food is very American since it actually incorporates some Native American dishes and has kind of evolved into something that’s proto-American. And I guess the standard Thanksgiving meal is pretty American for similar reasons.
@@jefferoni1984I was going to upvote your comment, until you said "native American", instead of American Indian. All Americans born in the United States of America are equally native to anyone else born here.
@@duckduckgoismuchbetter Oh brother. I don’t really care what you call them but if you’re going to be a political bore what’s Indian about them?
@@jefferoni1984 "What's Indian about them?"
It's a name, not a description. Etymological accuracy regarding the word does not apply.
What i kearned today: british snacks are exclusively dishes of different weird foods slapped on sad pieces of toast.
Accurate
Not really
I could see eating these food if I ever get drafted in war and have no other means of sustenance, I'll be munching on these in the trenches
Presentation, preparation and food pairing could've been much better. I'm sure lots of British people were cringing and screaming through this whole (original) video.
British Comfort Food, "Let's ferment food until it's so powerful and stinky you can only bear a tiny bit of it diluted with bread, CUISINE!"
Sheppards Pie tho... Mmmm.
@@chdreturns Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure Sheppard's pie is of Scottish or Northern Irish origin (still the UK, but not "English" per say). Even then the version commonly eaten today is usually the French version (hachis parmentier). But hey, who cares, goes down great with a draft Guinness
We call cheese on toast a grilled cheese sandwich. After conquering so many countries and taking their spices this is the best y'all can come up with.
Franks and beans are a great American cookout tradition. American Heinz beans taste different from British Heinz.
And THAT combination--franks and beans--with some buttered bread is very good.
BBQ beans and toast sounds good though. 😋
Who eats Heinz beans? B&M or bush’s lol
@@KalEL224 yeah, Heinz is very plain no matter the type of bean sauce (whether tomato or molasses based) Bush's are my fav.
Beans on toast seems completely benign to me. I can't imagine being surprised by it or having a strong reaction one way or another.
Exactly. There should be know surprise. It is beans and bread
we felt the same way to the reaction to British high schoolers trying biscuits and gravy. only biscuits and gravy is a proper meal.
The definition of comfort food is food from your childhood. So I think taste will always be subjective. I used to eat ketchup and corn chip sandwiches.
I think the definition is a little broader than that. Comfort food is usually associated with either childhood or just home cooking that you associate with a feeling of well-being. Usually unhealthy and strictly indulgent. Like fried chicken, mashed potatoes, ice cream, chips, salty fries. Btw my brother and I used to eat ketchup on potato chips lol. And potato chips on our cheeseburgers.
It's weird. I'm American but I've tried beans and toast several time because, living alone, that's all I had in the house. Certainly more convenient and faster than cooking rice. I don't like sweet beans though. First time I ever had beans Puertorican style was a life-changing event. Beans were always in the house.
I'm 58 and grew up in a US house full of nine kids, two parents and one grandmother.
Beans and toast with chopped-up hot dogs was pretty much Friday night supper.
Not only do we have many varieties and brands of baked beans in the US, but Heinz Baked Beans originated in the US. The Heinz Company sells catsup, pickles (including the gherkins variety), relish, and many other products. The first Heinz factory was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, about 20-25 miles from the suburb in which I live). There is even a museum in Pittsburgh, literally called the Heinz Museum, that is a very popular destination for families and for school field trips. The Heinz family became very wealthy and prestigious, forming the Heinz Foundation to benefit charities and venturing into politics. John Heinz was first a representative for Pennsylvania in the US House of Representatives and later a US senator in the US Senate. So, yeah, we do know well of Heinz Baked Beans.
I think they have a bean flavor that's available only in England or UK.
Theresa Heinz married Senator John Kerry, if I remember right.
@@Ojisan642 That's right. I forgot about that. She married Senator Kerry four years after Senator Heinz was killed in a plane crash.
@@scotchsour yeah it’s the sauce the beans are in that differs in the US and UK… the US tends to have more sugar , as most products do. Which is why Americans typically don’t think to put beans on toast.
For the record, as an American, Marmite and the Australian Vegemite are both good when done properly. I don’t know why every internet video gets the ratio of bread butter and spread wrong…
They have to be doing it on purpose.
Lol it is funny to see the difference. Us Americans are much less filtered especially at a young age. Teenagers are peak traumatizers with their commentary so prepare to be roasted 😂😂😂😂
did you not see the british high schoolers react to anything american?
@@PhxVanguard yes I saw… why
@@PhxVanguard if you’re asking me if I think they are honest the answer is no lol. Honesty amongst the American kids is very obvious because despite being interviewed separately they all make the same observations about the food. Whilst the British kids are very indirect with thier statements and they make things up simply to hate something American. One kid said root beer tasted like mouthwash. That is incredibly concerning considering there is just no way in earth that is possible. They are obviously not very truthful about what they like and dislike and when they are it’s not as direct as Americans. It’s more like “this is interesting” rather than just saying they don’t like it. Versus American kids are very direct and will say “ I don’t like this it’s nasty”
@sharonwilliams8552 I made a similar observation. My comment was more of a "you should check that one out".
In my experience, in America cheese on toast only really exists in the form of a grilled cheese sandwich (or just a “grilled cheese”). I don’t think I’ve ever seen someone here make it without putting the two pieces together. Also, it’s never cooked in an oven or toaster oven. We put the butter on both sides of each bread slice and then cook in a frying pan. Sooooooo yummy.
Our canned beans have a different recipe- yours are lighter and more tomato based, while ours are thicker, with molasses and smoky pork flavor. A lot of grocery stores do have a "foreign food" isle, and will have some British foods, including your Heinz beans, etc. But it's very expensive, since it's imported. I love the canned Devon custard, but just can't justify spending what it costs!
yes, they didn't have the right beans anywhere within a 45min drive so I had to order a case online, but it is really good and was worth it for me. Can't say I loved the canned Devon custard, but it isn't bad either. :)
@@weezerfan084 I think sometimes something can taste better, just because it's hard to get so you appreciate it more!
@@RogCBrand yes absolutely
I feel like they need a follow up video with bangers and mash, fish and chips, meat pies, greggs style sausage roles etc.. I wouldn't call these comfort foods, as you said they're more like essentials.
I don’t know wtf any of those are
@@turdcurd9082 banger and mash aka sausage and masked potatoes, fish and chips aka baked fish and French fries, sausage rolls aka pigs in a blanket, meat pies aka chicken or beef pot pies.
@@marydavis5234you called sausage 🌭 banger?
I'm American and I love beans on toast. Quick, easy, and tasty. Baked beans are very easy to find in the US. They are a staple at barbeques, gatherings, and parties. Most baked beans here are the bbq kind, but the plain Heinz ones can also easily be found.
Beans are not a British food. It's American. Introduced to the settlers by American Indians. I enjoy baked beans for barbecue but not before baking them in an oven with onions etc.
Americans often eat a version of beans on toast -- we call it a bean burrito: beans (often refried), seasoning, cheese, salsa, some crispy lettuce, tomato, often a bit of avocado, all wrapped inside a tortilla.
My dood , is you tube charging by the Db ? Turn the volume up. it's like half other channels
I say this on his videos too, but he doesn't turn it up
To be fair, pickles actually go pretty well with grilled cheese sandwiches. Sweet or Dill slices. I used to put the slices on top of the bread.
I'm American and my younger brother lives in Australia with his wife and kids. He sends me Vegemite and I've grown to love it. When I had Covid, it was one of the few foods I could taste lol😂
What’s ironic I believe that these kids are from Texas and pickles are very popular. We have pickle popsicles, very hot and spicy pickles. Pickle potato chips (crisps) My kids will have a pickle as a snack after school. We used to have a gallon jar of pickles in the refrigerator. We multiple types of pickling
As an American I have to spend an exorbitant amount of money to have Branston Picket shipped to me. I eat Branston Pickle like you described how your brother likes it. Marmite is delicious but Vegemite comes in a squeezey bottle so I usually get that. Beans on toast is excellent if you use American baked beans, especially with pulled pork or brisket in them like you get from barbecue joints. I’d love to visit the North because I love food wrapped in pastry.
British food just comes off to me as typical "struggle meals" food that you mix together because it's all you have in the crib and its gotta get ate regardless
Also beans and toast make so much more sense than just a pile of beans.
British cuisine: wartime rations on toast
Do we have beans? Do we ever. I would guess that we actually probably supply a large portion of them to the rest of the world because beans are grown here in what is called the "breadbasket of the world." That's the mid-west or plains states. You will find many varieties of beans in American stores. Canned or bagged, and with many kinds of flavor combinations. One of our comfort foods is cornbread and beans. One of the ways to eat it is to put butter on the warm cornbread, then put the beans of your choice on top of them. Often, we will put some vinegar on that (or even pickle relish). It's delicious. But we will eat beans in a variety of ways. "Mexican food" has a lot of beans, usually refried so they have turned soft and creamy. Then refried beans are made into many different dishes, with many different combinations, often using peppers, salsa, onions, sour cream, and other combinations. Beans are sometimes even used as "filler" and "replacement" foods, such as in vegetarian burgers.
I don't know about British style beans on toast, but I grew up on something similar in concept. My Mom would cook beans (various kinds at different times) from scratch. Which means starting with inexpensive dried beans. And they were delicious. I'm not sure what she did or did not put in them. I'm sure there was a recipe. But it was mainly, or maybe only, just the beans themselves. And we'd take just plain white bread (untoasted), and spread butter or margarine on it and pour the hot beans on it. Maybe mix in some fresh chopped onions to taste. And it was delicious. Of course, unlike in this video, it wouldn't have been all we'd be eating in the meal, just a part of the whole meal.
Heinz beans are an American staple and come in several varieties.. The Heinz family was from Pennsylvania.
We call this type baked beans I've lived in the South and the east in the Northeast and I've never seen anybody put them on White bread.
I think the most iconic way to eat them in America is as what we call beanie weenies. We cut up American hot dogs or any polish type sausage and put them in the beans and warm them.
And I prefer baked beans made from scratch but I lived on canned baked beans when was in college.
I can't even imagine what's great about beans and toast, but I'll try it. I've never heard of the other stuff, but honestly it scares me 😄
No, we are incredibly interested in seeing the reverse perspective. You watch whatever you're interested in. Chances are we will also be interested. Think the biggest thing with all these taste test videos is making sure people prepare things correctly and use the actual ingredients from the country. Beyond that, knowing how to eat it is important. You need maple syrup for pancakes. You need buttered toast for marmite. Things like that.
Swede living in the UK here. I love marmite, but since I think butter on bread tastes absolutely vile and disgusting I put a slice of cheese instead of butter when I'm having marmite on toast. Yummy. 🙂
Hopefully I get to keep my indefinite leave to remain anyway. 😄
Many years ago I played on a game site with a lot of British college kids. Someone was always making beans on toast for lunch or dinner. I decided to try it. I used ciabatta bread or roll and toasted it with a good sharp cheddar. I put the heated beans over it and crumbled American style crispy bacon on top. It makes a nice easy Sunday night dinner. I always make it when I have leftover southern style slaw. It goes well with it. I recently bought a jar of the Branston pickle relish. I'm still on the fence about it. I do think it is a nice alternative to US pickle relish. For once, the British version actually has a lot more flavor. I just haven't fallen in love with pickle relish on a cheese sandwich. It is rather weird. I gather from British mystery novels that it is or was a common pub sandwich back in the day.
I know how you feel. I’ve watched foreigners try some of my favorite American foods for the first time and do it completely wrong. And I’m thinking no wonder they don’t like it..
Same here. 😊
My boyfriend and I are HUGE Doc Martin fans so we just had to try the Heinz beans and toast and we also got the HP sauce and we eat it for either dinner or a weekend breakfast once every two months. But we also add poppable eggs to them! The yolk mixed in with the beans on the toast with a drizzle of HP sauce is where it's at!😁
I've tried a few typical British snacks and honestly they're good. Stuff like Maltesers, Tunnocks, Irn Bru. I do prefer the American A.1. sauce to HP Sauce though. And I honestly think Ribena is overrated but it still tasted alright, just less sweet than I had thought. And I don't think I'd ever like beans on toast, I just don't like beans in general.
yeah to the A1 over HP, HP sauce is too sweet for a steak imo
My favorite breakfast food is one you would enjoy. On buttered toast place a fried egg, fried slice of ham, and a slice of your favorite cheese. Add your favorite sandwich toppings such as lettuce, onions, tomatoes, etc. eat as a sandwich.
Sounds good! 😊
They should have fed the kids a full English breakfast! I bet they would have loved that!
I could definitely enjoy the beans and toast and maybe the pickles I do love pickles. I love these kind of reactions, good job.
My Grandma used to make her own pickles in a lime brine and they were a perfect garnish for grilled cheese. Bread and butter pickles is pretty good woth grilled cheese.
If my mom served me beans on toast I’d think was being lazy😂 But my mother was one of the best cooks in the south. She slaved in the kitchen. My exhusband said it is what he misses most about me. Mom’s cooking
Branston pickle is amazing in a cheese sandwich. I wish it wasn't so expensive here in the U.S.
I use to spread mayo on white bread and pour pork beans cooked with chopped hotdogs over it. It was my go to as a kid. So it surprised me no one else in America heard of the beans over bread dish. Then again different cultures across the US many probably have had or haven't had dishes you never heard of.
I did 2 weeks in a London hotel. While there, we did a full English breakfast. My issue was nothing was that warm. I am also particular with my beans. So if i had everything warmer, i would have liked it, maybe even the beans. But i liked alot of everything else. That said i didn't try cheese and toast with pickles or marmite.
You are SO right!..Yeast extract should be spread THINLY over buttered toast.
Biscuits and gravy has flavor... Just saying 😉
I love Marmite! I saw it on Atomic Shrimp and had to try it. It’s really good in mashed potatoes with butter. 😋
I would say that perhaps one of our many flavors of baked beans would be a bit better that your standard of Heinz beans. Our main brand here is Bush's Best. And they have all sorts of different flavors... Just going by the Google Image search we have:
Original - seasoned with bacon and brown sugar
Barbecue - sweet and zesty with traditional Barbecue sauce
Country Style - thick rich sauce with bacon and extra brown sugar
Brown Sugar Hickory - sweet Hickory sauce with brown sugar and spices
Honey Sweet - sweetened with honey and specially cured bacon
Maple and Cured Bacon - seasoned with Maple syrup, cured bacon and other natural flavors
Homestyle - tangy sauce with bacon and brown sugar
Boston Recipe - rich molasses, brown sugar and pork
Vegetarian - tangy sauce with brown sugar and spices
Now I don't really have a favorite as beans are not my favorite side, but I do like a good baked bean side dish from time to time. But as you can tell there, we've got quite the choice. And that's just one brand.
M'lady loves the British show The Only Way is Essex. Since she started watching that any time she sees the Heinz blue can like that here in the states she comes home with some. I've grown an affinity for beans on toast. I usually do it with a banger sausage or rasher on the side and a fried egg on top. is it worth trying to make my own beans from scratch?
Bean and toast is great. Beans, good. Toast, good.
The nearest thing to the English Heinz beans in tomato sauce that we would have here in the US is Heinz or any of the other brand named cans of Pork-N-Beans that you would find in stores.
Your cheese toasty is different from our grilled cheese. We butter yhe outside of the sandwich bread and put it on a pan to brown it.
Anything on toast is good.
These teens might have grown up on chicken nuggets and pizza.
Marmite, more thinly spread than in the video so not as salty, is good with butter.
However… IF…
IF…. a person likes mayo, spread that on the toast and add a thin coat of Marmite. 👍🏼
I put about 1/8 teaspoon in the center of the bread and smear it around with the butter or mayo. I sure don’t put a coat of it like it’s peanut butter. It is too salty.
How are you gonna know what they grew up eating? 💀
Luka have seen comments from British UA-camrs say they eat marmite with a spoon not on toast.
I love me some beans and toast. It was my favorite meal when I was a kid.
When the British kids had American food they had real food and the American kids ate British food they had something that’s supposed to be called food.
I would try it
Tried “cheese and pickles sandwich” and couldn’t believe how vile the Branston pickles were. It’s obviously not everyone’s favo(u)rite.
they should have used the sandwich pickle version much easier to spread less strong or maybe a chutney . they seemed to pick more controversial toppings. they could have included any of the various jams and marmalade which are not common in the US or spreads, also how the toast is done can vary and the type of cheese.
Personally I like toasties they should have tried them.
I have been passed the marmite factory many times, in Burton on Trent, It is of course a beer byproduct.
I've always wanted to try Marmite because I think I'd like it. However, I'm very tight when it comes to $$$ and that stuff costs like $10+ in the international aisle of grocery stores around here, if you can even find it in those, and for a teeny tiny bottle. No way I'm spending that much money for something that I have no idea if I'll even like it or not. Now if I really, really liked it, I'd treat myself to it every now and again. Beans on toast wouldn't be horrid, I don't think, but not beans with tomato sauce.
I love that Thurston thought the gay boy was a girl hahaha
I eat marmite every morning. I love it. I even love it in a hefty serving.
The cheese and Branson is so close to my favorite hot dog. We have sweet Relish . 🌭 So a cheese Dog with relish.
Can't wait until you actually get to try some southern biscuits with sausage gravy 😊
They did that already... I watched the video. It's on the Jolly channel, British teens trying American food
Beans,Toast and Hot sauce.
Hot sauce makes everything better.
It seemed like everything was "on toast". Is it like breakfast, lunch, dinner, every meal is centered around toast?
Even though Heinz is an American company, we cannot get Heinz brand beans.
lmao where do you live? I can get them here in Michigan.
I've had beans on toast more of a im high as hell, and all there was in the cabinet was beans and toast.
They should’ve thrown in some Quality Streets at the end Lol
I like the thumbnail. They like the foods? As 2 of them look like they are about to puke 😂
I'm getting the impression that Marmite is like the British version of Vegemite.
I haven't had either. I don't like the smell or taste of yeast in homemade bread, in cases where it's present. Lol
hey man good video but why is your audio always so low ?
The entire video seemed like struggle food to me lol
Your brother to me is officially the grill cheese ruiner 😂
I don’t mind beans and toast if you did something with the beans. Straight out of the can they aren’t very good
How does Marmite compare with Vegemite?
I’ve had Vegemite on toast but not Marmite
I don't at all mind the combination of beans and buttered bread. However what offends me is the idea of eating the beans right out of the can (and using Heinz beans to begin with). First of all, in the US there are much better brands of canned beans like B&M or Bush's. But I never eat those straight from the can either. I usually spice them up with minced onion, brown sugar, ketchup or BBQ sauce, Tiger Sauce and even some bacon and then I heat it to bubbling. Fixed this way and with some good bread (not that limp supermarket stuff) and butter (not with the beans poured over the bread) I'm a fan.
The specific beans they use are only available in the UK, they're slightly different than American canned beans which are either baked beans or pork and beans.
@@Zhiperser The appearance, at least, is of the same thin, rather tasteless sauce used in the vegetarian version of Heinz beans sold in the US. The flavor may be “slightly” different but I bet it’s still weak and not terribly appetizing unless you add something to it.
Sorry for our quality of bread and butter but that's how it happens on this side of the Atlantic.
nothing wrong with the bread and butter it's clear they bought some of the most off brand unhealthy bread and butter.
No offense but why would you have a condiment where you need to put a small amount of it for it to be good? Like marmite appears to have the same texture as jam and I’d spread jam across the bread fully.
Feeding americans british snacks comes off like comes off like an act of international aggression.
Genuinely, if JOLLY started off by introducing British foods to Americans and Koreans (so the other way around), the channel would not have gotten more than 10K subs lol.
Is Marmite the same thing as Vegemite?
Yeast extract burns their throat? Well, it WAS a little thick.
The guys from Jolly are British so I would think they know how to serve these foods properly so maybe you should tell your two countrymen they don't knòw what they're talking about and they're eating these things wrong.
Beans in a tin (baked beans) is basically always available in the US because it’s a staple as a side in BBQ 🍖 meals or potentially a side in some southern cuisine. It’s mostly just odd to us as a main, but in BBQ you kinda of have the same effect with baked beans and the bread rolls that are often served on the side of the main protein. We just don’t consider the two a unit because the bread isn’t smothered with the beans lol.
Usually a typical styrofoam tray/plate of BBQ can have a mix of proteins (chicken, beef, sausage), potato salad, a roll, baked beans, macaroni and cheese, collards, coleslaw.
My understanding is that the Brit’s beans are not the sweet smoky flavor of US baked beans. Maybe more like beanie weenies without the weenies.
@@JustMe-dc6ks ohhh gotcha 👍🏼
I bet the marmite burns the roof of your mouth because the toast scratches it up and then the salt gets into the scratches.... I've never eaten marmite, but toast always scratches up the roof of my mouth.
Berlin?
Ive done beans in toast it’s not bad but the food in the U.K is not that good outside of other cultural foods.
That's how us Americans felt when they said biscuits and gravy looked like vomit lol Nobody wants to hurt anyone's feelings, especially for what they've had all their lives. American food is absolutely delicious, but British food is healthier. That's like people who hate hospital food. It's healthy! 😁
Glad you did this to get the criticisms on your side 😉😊
British food is only “healthier” because it’s too gross to have more than a reasonable serving of.
Healthy doesn't mean tastes bad though. Hospital food is so tasteless is the issue. You get no satisfaction from eating it.
@@OneRandomVictory You get nutrition!
@@FourFish47 at what cost, the lack of flavor? Most people be like....hmm, 🤔 no thanks! I like seasoning.😂
Great comparison of the two, British food and hospital food have so many similarities. Bland, tasteless, seasonless, flavorless food most people try to avoid. Congratulations 👏🎉
I thought it was beans on toast? That just looked like beans on bread.
Over a thousand years of colonization and conquering and this is what they come up on all their own. I guess British food will have few more decades of keeping the stereotype.
Yes! Do remember while they were conquering and colonizing, they were also kidnapping. So they just had those people cook and season their food for them. When you don't do the job at hand, you never learn the skill. Hence good old timey British cuisine mmm 😋 mmm 😋. So tasty 😜🤣😭
@@kikibigbangfan3540 lmao all of this food was created post colonization after you know....the brits having their entire country bombed by Germans so the people had to have quick food that was decent for you and cheap but sure "kiki" lmfaoooooooo
British hate to admit marmite is simply industrial waste. And beans on toast is simply, to use the British term, sick on a plate
It seems to me that several of these foods and certain foods in other countries are a result of war time shortages. Besides the canned beans example in Britain, there's the Hawaiian infatuation with Spam. And even Marmite--yeast is a cheap, easily produced source of protein and other nutrients. In a population that's as food-deprived as the British were in, say, 1940 and early 1941 (and also in the first years after the war such as 1946/47), something like Marmite could be and probably was a valuable addition to the diet.
Why is everything on sliced bread lmao
I like beans and I like toast. But I never desired to put them together. And honestly tomato based baked beans sound gross.
I thought Marmite was more a Australian thing than British. Tried it once, didn't love it or hate it, it was just different, kind of a salty, mushroom taste.
Marmite is British, Vegemite is Australian.
@@marydavis5234 Ahh you are correct! I think it was actually Vegamite I tried (it was on a trip to Australia).
I'm American. And I love my country. But I am only 2/3rds thru this, and I have decided that we Americans are MEAN! But also, I think these guys COULD have put a bit more effort (and money) into presentation, & quality of the prep of the food presented, as well as which British comfort foods they picked & how they were prepared & paired & they'd have gotten a FAR better response. It's almost like "here's some lukewarm gravel off the road, dumped right off a shovel onto your plate, it's what we Brits LOVE, whaddaya think, spoiled fast food American teenager types?" But still, the teens could've been more classy about it, like British teens are about our foods. So disappointed in them for that.
(Before watching) I honestly think that wasn't the best representation. They just served them stuff on bread each time.
Yeah same thought after. They didn't really try "British Food."
marmite and vegemite are a huge joke in cartoons in the US. Every now and then you'll hear it mentioned and it's never in a favorable light
I do not like the Marmite or the Aussis version. The beans on toast I have sometimes, not to bad. The gherkins il like just have never had them like that
As a Brit, I genuinely don’t understand the hype around beans on toast, it’s f*ckin gross 😆
WHYyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy?
Cheese, bread, pickles...just missing the burger, ketchup, mustard, and onions. I see nothing wrong with this combo at all.
It’s the Branston’s Pickles that are vile. Regular dill pickles and cheese don’t have that strong awful taste.