THINGS I MISSED ABOUT GERMANY While in USA

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  • Опубліковано 27 сер 2024

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  • @Karuuhnia
    @Karuuhnia 8 років тому +254

    The two things that I missed when I was in the US:
    Proper bread and tap water that doesn't taste like it was taken from a swimming pool.

  • @stevepa999
    @stevepa999 8 років тому +50

    True story form a German friend of mine that visited Florida in the 80's. He asked the hotel staff if there was any record store nearby. She was a big music lover. He told him yes there was and it was not that far away, only fifteen minutes. He then told him it was also easy to find. From the hotel go up two blocks until you come to this street and then keep going straight, you cannot miss it.
    So my friend starts walking. Finds the street and keeps walking straight like he was told. Keeps walking straight for over half an hour and sees nothing but fields. He then decides to head back to the hotel. He then told the hotel staff that he had difficulty finding the record store and that he walked for for over half an hour. The man turned to him and said "you walked?"

    • @OutofExil
      @OutofExil 7 років тому +1

      she was a music lover?

  • @murksdoc
    @murksdoc 7 років тому +17

    When I was working in France for some years I started dreaming of Leberkäs'.

  • @Dosenwerfer
    @Dosenwerfer 8 років тому +8

    I'm from Germany and I also talk Denglisch for the same reason. You can simply say what's on your mind regardless which language it's from instead of waiting for your brain to translate it :D

  • @buciallstar
    @buciallstar 8 років тому +229

    northern germany here: I don't know what obatsa is. I know what a Bretzel is, but I don't know why you would freeze it.
    Edit: I misunderstood, of course I know Brezel. Even in their frozen state. When I first watched the video, I thought about Brezel with an ice cream filling or something.

    • @stellarstarvibe
      @stellarstarvibe 8 років тому +14

      Ist ein mega leckerer Brotaufstrich :D

    • @buciallstar
      @buciallstar 8 років тому +9

      +buciallstar and with northern, I mean northern from hamburg

    • @junkfoodvegan6198
      @junkfoodvegan6198 8 років тому +16

      +buciallstar naja gefroren zum selbseraufbacken denk ich mal^^ aber bis Köln gibts die bei Penny und Norma^^

    • @junkfoodvegan6198
      @junkfoodvegan6198 8 років тому

      *****
      naja wenn sie zum auftauen (oder zum aufbacken) sind, was sind sie denn dann wenn du sie kaufst^^

    • @kerstine.3103
      @kerstine.3103 8 років тому +13

      +buciallstar Obatzda gibts es auch in den Supermärkten, auch in Norddeutschland aber meistens nur zur Zeit des Oktoberfestes.

  • @akawhut
    @akawhut 8 років тому +26

    Bretzeln you can get everywhere, an, at least in Hessen and here in Rhein-Hessen a lot of Supermarkets also offer Obatzter.

    • @DaxRaider
      @DaxRaider 8 років тому +1

      +akawhut not in nrw xD

    • @nooneinparticular8996
      @nooneinparticular8996 8 років тому +2

      +Holly I´m from NRW and we are eating it reguarly ;)

    • @jasminkuhn2778
      @jasminkuhn2778 8 років тому

      I'm from Rheinland-pfalz and i'm pretty sure most of the supermarkets here sell obatzter too but i've never tried it in my entire life :D

    • @vanderzarth
      @vanderzarth 8 років тому

      +akawhut In Northrihnewestfalia you can get the Obatzter in any supermarket.

    • @Finda5
      @Finda5 8 років тому +2

      @sevenhearty klar, Brezel werden in ganz Deutschland verkauft, da gibt es keine Diskussion :D so wie wenn man sich fragen würde, ob man auch überall Brot bekommt...

  • @w.lf404
    @w.lf404 8 років тому +43

    I live in Germany and when I come home, after spending a weekend in Holland, I really miss smoking weed on a legal basis.

    • @RobsiXXL
      @RobsiXXL 8 років тому +3

      Made my day.

    • @Redeemer216
      @Redeemer216 7 років тому

      Legal in most of the western states now

  • @SaschaAtrops
    @SaschaAtrops 8 років тому +34

    Wherever I was, I missed german bread. I don't drink a lot of alcohol, but beer is a point. In greece they have Mythos which is brewed like a german beer. I love Mythos in Greece (even in Germany). Other beer is often an "experience". I missed that things just work. If you need something you can order it and it's there tomorrow or after a few days. In Greece you have to wait for weeks.
    When I come back to Germany from Greece in 2006 I missed the living. Maybe we live better but in Greece the living was better. The people have less but I think they often make more of it than we do. I think we often sorrow about thinks like "Is everything tidy" or "What would the neighbor/boss/mother think?" or "Am I good enough?"
    In Greece living was easier. Less useless sorrows.
    After you have learned that you sometimes have to wait for weeks you learned to understand that you don't die if you have to wait. You just calculate with it. You order earlier or improvise. Everybody does. It's cheaper. And it's a kind of living quality to improvise successfully: It's fun. You learn to solve problems by yourself instead of buying a solution with money you have worked for. Why to work for money to pay someone to do a job you could do by yourself? And you solve problems with people you wouldn't learn about if you would go to shop and buy the solution. Everybody knows someone who knows someone. And so you find yourself in a BBQ at the end of the day, watching the stars after you had a good day where someones problem was solved.
    I think I always was like this. But in Greece I noticed that this is more common there than in Germany.

    • @inka87871
      @inka87871 8 років тому

      +Sascha Atrops ..your english sucks !

    • @SaschaAtrops
      @SaschaAtrops 8 років тому +10

      Izzy Kat: At least it is good enough to identify it as english. Thanks for that. :)

    • @ntioui
      @ntioui 8 років тому +2

      Oh ! It's so good that a German appreciates and understands the way we live in Greece

    • @irondasgr
      @irondasgr 8 років тому +1

      Well, I wonder how it is possible for a German person to like the "Mythos" beer which is at least bad! I was so surpised at reading such thing. The whole "solving problem" thing as a Greek I didn't quite understand it the way you wrote about it. I believe that you mean probably "Why find a second job so that you can afford a baby-sitter when you can stay at home wathcing the child yourself and save the trouble... Or why buying frozen food from the supermarket when you can learn to cook at no time yourself...?
      Anyway, what did you actually mean when you wrote "we maybe life bettter". You must have missed a word there which was crucial to make the sentence understood.
      In Greece living is quite nice indeed, but the bad thing is that there is a certain mentality grown and followed that whoever can do whatever he/she wants, ending this way the living of one person to cause trouble on the living of another, which is something I totally hate here. It's a bit difficult for the Greeks to obey to some certain rules but those younger generations happily enough seem more flexible and of course the internet has helped a lot. For example, it has been a tremendous achievement even to present to Greeks that they should not smoke indoors. Of course, smoking indoors is still happening, but I have been travelling around with buses and trains for over 35 years and not once have I ever seen one person smoking inside. A few steps are being made but it's a slow procedure.

    • @SaschaAtrops
      @SaschaAtrops 8 років тому +1

      > Mythos beer
      Often you drink something in a foreign country and you like it there. And at home you're wondering how bad it tastes.
      I sometimes buy Mythos in Germany. I still like it.
      > Anyway, what did you actually mean when you wrote "we maybe life
      > bettter". You must have missed a word there which was crucial to
      > make the sentence understood.
      In Germany I have more money and the possibility to spend it. You can go to holiday parcs, we have huge electronic stores, you have bigger variety of products.
      In Greece the shops are smaller, the products sometimes are cheaper produced but much more expensive. I gave my television as a present when leaving germany. It was already old, but it was better than the most I saw in Greece. Same with my car. In Germany I drove a small, cheap car, which was getting older, in Greece it was quite young, in great condition, it was not archivable for most of the people. There I drove a big car just for me where up to 5 persons were on a motor bike on a highway.
      That's absolutely impossible in germany. The "Standard" in Germany is higher.
      I didn't had a television in Greece. I enjoyed reading a book on the balcony watching towards the see. Or sitting in front of the house, talking or bbqing with the neighbors. Maybe we didn't had the same variety of food there, but the food was gorgeous. You can smell the salad - if salad smells in germany you should better litter it.
      The allday living was at a lower money standard but in my oppinion the social standard was higher. It was more important to be together than to be successful in work. In Germany you are successful if you build a house, plant a tree (on your ground), conceive a child. Today you need your own ground for the kids to play. Kids don't play on the street. So you need a garden, a slide and some monkey bars and of course a sand box. You see this also if there is a play yard next door.
      And of course you have to be able to pay for all of this. So you go to work and when you come home you go to bed in your nice house and on the weekend like all other germans you have to make the weekly purchases on saturday, so you're on the edge in the supermarket because of the crowd there and the traffic jam before and after. So you're additionlly stressend because you have to cut down the lawn and the car needs to be washed and the child is crying and there is no leisure on the saturday and on sunday you just want to do nothing. And so you do nothing just to calm down. You're watching television, a soccer game or formula one racing and you don't want to see anyone. And sometimes you go with your child to the holiday parc, which is extremly expensive, but you don't see your child so often, because it's already sleeping when you arive from work and so you pay for redemption to the parc. But you would prefer to watch tv... because you're stressed from the week and as soon the child makes something wrong you flipped out and everybody is in a bad mood.
      That living in Germany in an exaggerated way. Everybody is waiting for pension because THEN! Then they have no clue what to do with so much leisure time. Childs are working on their own house and their own tree to have the mindeststandard to have a baby. They only have time to see you on sundays and then they prefer to watch tv to calm down. ;)
      In Greece that's not that important. It's more important to have a good time. If you can life in your house it is done, who the fuck needs a tree, there are enough trees outside my own ground and childs are coming anyway - if they need a tree they can play outside. Let's have some fun instead of some additional working hours to pay for all the useless stuff. There is more living instead of working. Maybe a living on a lower standard, but they actually do it.

  • @Speireata4
    @Speireata4 8 років тому +36

    When I came back home to Germany from the USA, I missed three things: Having carpets in the sleeping room and on the stairs, the really great beds they have and the big containers of milk and orange juice you can buy there. Now, 12 years later I have a carpet in my bedroom and I don't use that much milk anymore, but I still miss the kind of bed I slept in. They are too expensive to buy.

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +5

      +Speireata4 Interesting! Cool to hear the things you missed about the U.S. Yeah, I always thought it was "normal" for bedrooms to be carpeted! xD

    • @onedirectionforever405
      @onedirectionforever405 8 років тому

      +Wanted Adventure where do you live in germany?

    • @singsangmary172
      @singsangmary172 8 років тому

      +One Direction Forever Munich I guess and nice name btw

    • @18Krieger
      @18Krieger 8 років тому

      +One Direction Forever She said it in the video. Bavaria.

    • @TheYasmineFlower
      @TheYasmineFlower 8 років тому +8

      +Wanted Adventure I grew up here in Germany with carpeted bedrooms, but I used to wish for a wooden floor, because that's A. easier to clean, and B. you can put a small carpet on that without having it look weird.

  • @AllesPat
    @AllesPat 8 років тому +87

    Dinge, die ich in Florida vermisst habe:
    Historische Sehenswürdigkeiten (auch z.B. Kirchen mit Türmen aus Stein etc.), Große Auswahl an Gemüse und Früchte in jedem Supermarkt, schöne (Rad)Wege, richtige Häuser außerhalb der Großstädte; alle haben nur ihre Pappschachteln.

    • @SgtAggression
      @SgtAggression 8 років тому +3

      +Alles Pat Also Früchte und Gemüse gibt es zu Hauf in den richtigen Läden zumindest finde ich die Auswahl bei Publix ENORM. Historische Sehenswürdigkeiten gibt es auch in Florida jedoch gibt es diese nicht so lange wie hier in Deutschland was einfach daran liegt, dass die USA ein weit jüngeres Land ist als Deutschland. In Florida speziell gibt es kleine Städte wie zum Beispiel Mount Dora oder St. Augustine. Florida im speziellen hat nur eine völlig andere Historie wie Deutschland. Die Everglades sind zum Beispiel auch eine historische Sehenswürdigkeit.

    • @AllesPat
      @AllesPat 8 років тому +9

      SgtAggression Publix habe ich keinen gesehen; war alles voller Wallmart und SafeAlot - und da war eher schlecht als recht.
      Das mit der jüngeren Geschichte ist schon klar, aber irgendwie herrscht in Amerika viel weniger "Baukultur" als bei uns; da halt eben nur bei den Skyscrapern und bei uns sind viel mehr Häuser einzigartig :D

    • @SgtAggression
      @SgtAggression 8 років тому +3

      In welchem Part von Florida warst du denn? Also Publix ist der größte Lebensmittel verkäufer in Florida. Bei Wallmart habe ich ehrlich gesagt nie mehr als günstige Klamotten und Bier eingekauft. Bei Wallmart im speziellen hast du Recht. Die Auswahl ist meist nicht riesig und wenn man etwas außergewöhnliches findet ist die Qualität meist beschissen. Für Baukultur und co muss man mehr ins Landesinnere von Florida reisen und sich von Touristenmetropolen abwenden. Bestes Beispiel Mount Dora. Kleines, etwas verschlafenes Dorf in der Nähe eines Hügels und eines Sees. Aber unglaublich schöne, alte Gebäude aus der Kolonialzeit teilweise.

    • @avissilber
      @avissilber 8 років тому

      +Alles Pat Ich weiß was du meinst. In Amerika sind irgendwie mindestens die Hälfte der Häuser nur aus diesen hässlichen langen Holzlettern, während man in Deutschland/Europa viel mehr Stein, Beton, Putz, Lehm,... benutzt. Und wenn man in Europa mal Holzhäuser baut, dann fast immer aus ganzen Stämmen.
      PS: Ich finde diese amerikanischen Holz-Latten-Veranda-sieht-nicht-sehr-stabil-aus-Häuser megahässlich! (Aber nur meine Meinung :P) :3

    • @AllesPat
      @AllesPat 8 років тому +1

      An Awesome Potato Also ich finde Holzhäuser im alten Kolonialstil sehr schön - gerade auf den Keys gibt es einige Häuser, die den alten nachempfunden sind. Aber die meisten sind halt einfach echt Pappe :D
      SgtAggression Ich war zwischen Miami und Orlando :)

  • @RudeBoyReal1
    @RudeBoyReal1 8 років тому +30

    You can get frozen pretzels everythere here in Germany, it is not a Bavarian-only thing ;-) Greetings from the Ruhrpott!

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +2

      okay, good to know :D Thanks!

    • @mobilebitter
      @mobilebitter 8 років тому +3

      BTW Obatzda will be hard to find outside of the south ;)

    • @pascl95
      @pascl95 8 років тому +1

      +Chris Christian obatzter gibts so gut wie in jedem supermarkt. zb. Aldi, Rewe, Edeka, Netto

    • @mobilebitter
      @mobilebitter 8 років тому +1

      +pascl95 das wird im Norden Deutschlands sehr schwierig ;-)

    • @pascl95
      @pascl95 8 років тому +1

      ***** hab ich im urlaub an der ostsee aber auch im aldi gefunden :)

  • @alenae8725
    @alenae8725 8 років тому +1

    I lived in England for half a year and I really miss being able to go buy stuff on sundays. Wether its just groceries shopping or meeting friends, I really did enjoy that.

  • @haram-hunter5630
    @haram-hunter5630 8 років тому +92

    In the US is no bubbled water :0??!?!?! Oh. My. God.

    • @Batner112
      @Batner112 8 років тому +4

      +Regerem
      Yeah for sure the water with gas tastes 100 times better than just water without it and it think it's not that refreshing as with the extra power :D

    • @NK-ph4ot
      @NK-ph4ot 8 років тому +6

      even in france most water isn't "gesprudelt"
      were really hard two weeks last summer holidays :D

    • @NuntiusLegis
      @NuntiusLegis 8 років тому +17

      I'm a German and never liked bubbled water, I think it has an unpleasant taste.

    • @DerIchBinDa
      @DerIchBinDa 8 років тому +11

      +Regerem In all countries I ever was it is really uncommon to drink bubbled water. We Germans are the "weird ones" not the others ;-)

    • @lulus8122
      @lulus8122 8 років тому +3

      +NuntiusLegis Me, too!! Nobody gets it, though. Everyone says it just tastes like water but with bubbles, but it's not true!!

  • @Zinnsoldat1991
    @Zinnsoldat1991 8 років тому +16

    i like how you pronounce obazda :D
    regarding your question: i went to japan a few years ago and i really enjoyed free water to your meal in the restaurant. thats amazing.

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +5

      +Patrick Zinner Ah okay, so they do that in Japan too? I didn't realize that. Good to know, thanks! Yeah, I miss that from the U.S. too. Here in Germany there are times when I've spent the same amount on my drinks (non-alcoholic) as the meal itself because you often have to pay 3 euros per bottle of water! lol

    • @zoolkhan
      @zoolkhan 8 років тому +5

      +Patrick Zinner and you dont need to travel to japan for that.
      Come here to finland, water on every table.. you dont have to ask for it. its a human right
      But europeans often dont know much about their neigbour countries.

    • @robertheilmeier2671
      @robertheilmeier2671 8 років тому +2

      +zoolkhan Sadly so :-(

    • @Tigerhood11
      @Tigerhood11 8 років тому +1

      +Wanted Adventure but here the tip is also lower than in the US... (10-15%, 15 if you are reallly satisfied) as in the US 20% is totally normal

    • @patriciamillin1977
      @patriciamillin1977 8 років тому

      That's something I do like in Cyprus, too

  • @manesgibtnix
    @manesgibtnix 8 років тому +1

    I am from Germany but I live in Canada, and when I go home I do miss the winters. I know, it's crazy to say, but I actually prefer the dry and cold winters with a decent amount of snow (enough to snowmobile or snowboard) to the wet, grey and snowless winters of Germany. I also miss having bunnies, deer, and squirrels running around everywhere, even in the city.
    I also lived in Spain and South Africa for a while and I missed their relaxed nature, that is definitely something we could improve in Germany.
    But when I am in Canada, I miss a lot of things about Germany, like the food and what you said about internationality and walking distances, and the unique culture of every city or place you visit. Also, Canadians are stereotypically described as being very polite and I get that, although I have to say that I think it's mostly because of the small talk that we just don't do in Germany. Like when I meet someone on the street and I say 'hey, how are you doing?' (and sometimes people don't even wait to hear the answer, it's just a form of saying hello). We don't do that, as you said, we are very straightforward, getting to the point. I thought about that and when I went back home I checked to see if we are really that impolite but I have to say that I disagree. If you encounter someone in a friendly manner, usually, they will be friendly to you too.
    All in all, in a perfect world, I would love to combine every positive attribute of a culture into one perfect culture. But, sadly that is not possible ;-)

  • @zoechristill2459
    @zoechristill2459 8 років тому +1

    When I came back from my exchange year in the US last summer I missed first of all the AC in our school. It was just nice over there to not have to sweat during class in summer and not freeze (as much) in winter.
    I also missed ( actually I am still missing) the school life. That school spirit is so amazing and it makes you happy being in that school. Or all of the clubs you can choose from and the classes you can take! You have so much freedom to do things that please your interest while here in Germany everyone has to know everything. So yeah :D

  • @djvnsdjkvnsfjsrhbgdh
    @djvnsdjkvnsfjsrhbgdh 8 років тому +90

    Could you make a video about your Denglisch? I´m really interested in it cuz I have the same with my friends. Most of them speak English 100% fluent.

    • @HannasLife123
      @HannasLife123 8 років тому +1

      yeah that would be really interesting!
      I'm studying in English in Austria right now and we are not mixing bit switching al the time. So i would love to hear how your Danglish sounds and when you use which words.

    • @RustyDust101
      @RustyDust101 8 років тому +6

      +djvnsdjkvnsfjsrhbgdh I totally understand that. I went to an International School in Germany (shout out to all alumni from F.I.S./Oberursel). As a German naturally I speak German, but after a few years in E.S.L. classes and normal English lessons commenced we started to use the shorter versions of verbs of either language but used the conjugations which were shorter.
      A few of those terms drove my German teacher nuts. For example, the English languages knows the collowquial 'to hand in a homework', which in German is 'Hausarbeit abzugeben'. Well we used to 'einhänden my homework' because 'I ran zu spät' and 'I will kein detention kriegen'. For anyone who was not of that type of madness born this simply caused massive frowns.

    • @djvnsdjkvnsfjsrhbgdh
      @djvnsdjkvnsfjsrhbgdh 8 років тому +1

      +RustyDust101 Ich mache das ganze jetzt mal auf Deutsch, mein Englisch ist dann doch zu schlecht.:/
      Ich habe da vorallem das Problem, dass ich Englische Verben nehme, weil ich sie besser finde oder mir die deutschen Worte gerade nicbz einfallen, und dann diese Verben dann "Deutsch konjugiere". Meistens sind bei mir die Normen und Personalpromomen Deutsch sind und der Rest Englisch. Beispiele "Ist es Really nessesary, dass wir dieses Game jetzt playen" "Ich have dieses Topic already" "Ich gette das gerade not"
      So in dem Schema geht es weiter. Mein größtes Problem ist dann auch noch, dass ich MUN hatte und dadurch ein vom Level sehr hohes Englisch gelernt habe. das hat dann auch schon dazu geleaded, dass ich "to accept" nachgucken musstr, weil ich um Zustimmung auszudrücken "Second" sagen würde.

    • @blacksoul121
      @blacksoul121 8 років тому +1

      +djvnsdjkvnsfjsrhbgdh ich kenne das von meiner us verwandtschaft. die kids sind alle zweisprachig aufgewachsen. und untereinander sprechen wir weder richtig englisch noch deutsch. in den usa hauptsächlich englisch aber dann fliegt eben mal ein deutsches wort oder ein ausdruck dazwischen. hier in deutschland umgekehrt. hauptsächlich deutsch mit englischen "sprenkeln"

    • @jules9824
      @jules9824 8 років тому

      +djvnsdjkvnsfjsrhbgdh genau das passiert mir eigtl immer :D
      In unserer Schule lernen wir kaum vernünftiges Englisch, weil unsere Lehrer das meistens gar nicht können (hab deswegen seit 2 Jahren keinen Englischunterricht mehr,hab mich für Latein entschieden - Fehler 🙈) :/
      Ich habs größten Teils im Internet, durch Filme etc. gelernt :D
      Meine Freunde sprechen aber teilweise sehr gut Englisch und es kann vorkommen, dass Konversationen vom Deutschen ins Englische rutschen 😂 der Übergang muss Leute dann echt verwirren :D
      Was sogar einer Lehrerin (sie kann sehr gut Englisch ) aber uns immer passiert ist, dass wir schneller sprechen als wir denken und das deutsche Wort einfach nicht schnell genug abrufbar war, sodass das englische seinen Platz eingenommen hat😁

  • @der7tezwerg921
    @der7tezwerg921 8 років тому +16

    Obatzda from a store !?? Bäh ! Only homemade is the real deal. It tastes much better. Deep frozen Bretzeln are available everywhere.

    • @ChiaraOhneLink
      @ChiaraOhneLink 8 років тому

      In Berlin, we have to buy Obatzda from a store, because nobody knows how to make it! ^^

    • @der7tezwerg921
      @der7tezwerg921 8 років тому

      Chiara Neko
      Kumpel/line, ich bin aus Rudow, und ich weiß trotzdem wie es geht. Dein Argument ist daher nicht ganz treffend. ;D

    • @ChiaraOhneLink
      @ChiaraOhneLink 8 років тому

      Okay: Ich kenne keinen, der weiß, wie man es macht... ^^

  • @clairebinder166
    @clairebinder166 8 років тому +3

    As a Bavarian living in the french part of Switzerland I miss : Brezen, Spezi, Kaiserschmarn, Schweinshaxen and Kartoffelknödel. Also the local dialect and easy going people.
    What I don't miss is the German habit to not heat their bathroom and leave the window open in the winter. Seriously ? who ever though a 5C bathroom was a great place to take a shower ?.
    Love your videos keep them coming

  • @ManaanS17
    @ManaanS17 8 років тому +72

    Oh god your breakfeast is so bavarian. Yeah you maybe get Bretzel somewhere else in germany but no obadzda

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +1

      I don't think other Bavarians even eat it for breakfast! lol xD I think that's just me. I think people here eat it more in the afternoon. I'd be curious to know! Anyone else reading this eat pretzels with Obatzda for breakfast?? :D

    • @sebastianmuhlbach3690
      @sebastianmuhlbach3690 8 років тому

      I think it is up to you. Obatzda and Bretzel is for me just a small dish and I would take it for Breakfast, Brotzeit or Dinner :)
      But I am also not Bavarian ;)

    • @psibiza
      @psibiza 8 років тому +4

      it's Brotzeit. Brotzeit is the bavarian version of a snack. A chill non-fast-food version and never "to go" / take away. It happens In between breakfast and lunch or between lunch and dinner. Typically goes with beer. Not so much a breakfast thing for most people. But we love you for making it your breakfast of choice. Totally not a faux pas! ;)

    • @xThrillPhilx
      @xThrillPhilx 8 років тому +13

      You find Bretzel and Obatzda in the most Supermarkets in Germany. To think that you find it only in bavarian cause its sooo special its just bavarian arrogance and ignorance

    • @sebastianmuhlbach3690
      @sebastianmuhlbach3690 8 років тому +1

      You can also just make it youreself. Selfmade is always best :)

  • @DerClaudius
    @DerClaudius 8 років тому +4

    You get Obatzda everywhere. I had it in Hamburg even.... Just need to look for it a bit.

  • @MrsAlways394
    @MrsAlways394 8 років тому +6

    You can get obazda and pretzels everywhere in Germany, however outside of Bavaria, or at least outside of the south of Germany not everyone actually knows Obazda. I myself didn't use to know it until I came to the US. There my host family went to the Chicago Hofbräuhaus with me and they told me beforehand, that there you could eat pretzels and Obazda and I was like "Sorry, what was the second thing? I've no idea what that's supposed to be!"
    Now that I'm back in Germany some things that I miss about the US are: water fountains in schools or my university, the huge fridges, frozen yogurt (because you can't get any decent frozen yogurt here) and whipped cream cheese.

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +1

      +MrsAlways394 hhahaa!! I love that you learned about Obazda in the U.S. :D And, did you like it? Whipped cream cheese!! I totally forgot about that. Yes, tasty stuff :)

    • @MrsAlways394
      @MrsAlways394 8 років тому +2

      +Wanted Adventure haha, actually I've no idea, how I was ever able to live without Obazda ;)

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +2

      MrsAlways394 hahaha that's the spirit! :D

    • @hellkitty1442
      @hellkitty1442 8 років тому +1

      +MrsAlways394 I actually did come to enjoy those water fountains as well when I was in the US. I just thought, that the water was just the wrong side of cold. It could have used a tad more warmth. What I did miss most when returning to Germany from the US, well, it was my host family and speaking English. I really came to love the English language while being in the US, and up to today, I'm still thinking in English, even if speaking German. And I returned 10 years ago this July! But in some way, English became a bit like a second native language to me. Yes, I do have an accent and all, but even Americans and British do have one. Well, is it weird to miss speaking the language? It didn't take me long upon returning to Germany, that I organized a trip to Great Britain to visit a friend living there. And while I was looking forward to speak English, we mostly spoke German, as she is a native German. But New Years eve there was fun with 4 nationalities mixed (British, German, Chinese and Indian). I still try to include as much English in my live as possible. Hm, thinking about that makes me feel weird :/

    • @auriocus
      @auriocus 8 років тому

      Well you can get "pretzels" outside of Bavaria, but they are of inferior quality. I'm Bavarian, living in Berlin now, and the pretzels here are not crispy and soft inside, they are more like chewing gum. Obazda is not generally available, but you can make it yourself easily.

  • @hannahella6563
    @hannahella6563 8 років тому

    I went to New Zealand on a working holiday, when I came back home to Germany, I really missed how friendly everyone is in New Zealand and how you'll just smile at strangers and chat to anyone in the streets.

  • @LadyCatAnne
    @LadyCatAnne 8 років тому +1

    I went to live in Italy for a few months, the thing that I miss most about living there was the planned beauty. I live in a fairly rural part of New York and there are few public features like fountains or statues. It seemed like everywhere in Italy there was a piece of deliberate beauty waiting to be seen outside, and we seem to tuck ours away inside here.

  • @artificus7316
    @artificus7316 8 років тому +5

    I think you should always clarify, that you live in bavaria, because it's quite different from the rest of germany... people shouldn't think brezel breakfeast is something common ...

  • @intarc0giotto
    @intarc0giotto 8 років тому +12

    obazda is bavarian, but you can get it at least in rheinland pfalz in every supermarket, aldi , lidl etc.

    • @TheTalies
      @TheTalies 8 років тому +1

      +Gianmarco Cantore In Baden-Württemberg too :)

    • @Lenimeni12345
      @Lenimeni12345 8 років тому

      Rheinland-Pfalz, woop woop 😍😂

    • @coffeelushandsorcery
      @coffeelushandsorcery 8 років тому

      +Gianmarco Cantore Also as a freezed version in Hamburgs bigger supermarkets ;-)

    • @DerSommyPvP
      @DerSommyPvP 8 років тому

      +RegenbogenFresse Mainz 👌🏼

    • @Erdbeere368
      @Erdbeere368 8 років тому

      Ich hab in RLP noch nie Obazda im Supermarkt gesehen.

  • @DieIngwer
    @DieIngwer 8 років тому +1

    I'm still living in Belgium most of the time, but I'm often back at home in Germany.
    In Belgium you greet people and especially your friends in a different way than in Germany. In Germany you start hugging people very fast as a way to say "hello" or "goodbye".
    In Belgium they give each other cheek-kisses as they alsodo in France and this habbit sticks with me even when I'm in Germany. So I did have some weird moments back in Germany because no one expects you to give a cheek-kiss!
    But most of my german friends did adapt to this new "weirdness" of mine haha

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +DieIngwer It's so interesting to hear you say that because I've noticed people in Germany giving me cheek kisses! One on each cheek, and I'm also always caught off guard because I don't know what cheek they are going to go for first. Maybe it's different depending on what part of Germany you're in and from.

  • @juergenrossmann2139
    @juergenrossmann2139 8 років тому +1

    Obatzter and Brezel is a typical Bavarian thing. Today you also get it packed in supermarkets in other parts of Germany. But open in a restaurant you only get it in Bavaria. But when you want a real Bavarian breakfast you have to drink a Weissbier with it. My cousin is from Berlin and lived now 3 years in Ulm, where her son was born. Last week they were for a week in Berlin to visit the grandma. They could no get real Brezel there with butter or Obatzer and the little one refused to eat any thing else for breakfast.

  • @krollpeter
    @krollpeter 8 років тому +8

    I know the Germans may protest but it seems not many areas in the world have so many pretty citites and towns that are really build for people to live and love, and not only for business and shopping. I can walk, ride a bike, I can find a bench to relax. Here in Asia cities do look impressive but their living quaility is rather low.

    • @Lisa-ny5ke
      @Lisa-ny5ke 8 років тому +5

      +Peter Kroll europe has that everywhere becuase cities were “founded” in medieval times where you had to get from city to city by horse so they’re old and back then people didn’t need much space and again had no car so the whole city was smaller and streets were smaler and built for horses or walking. Cities are now way closer together so travelling from city to city in europe is really easy and not time consuming :)

    • @verom8657
      @verom8657 7 років тому +1

      Peter Kroll this is what I thought of when I learned about Germanys public transportation. I live in GA (USA) about 30 mins from the downtown area where public transportation is a huge thing. They also used it in areas about 20 mins from the downtown but here where I live there's only one bus stop. It sucks because, plus everything is spread far apart so not that many people walk from place to place and if they do, they're looked at as less than. Downtown Atlanta is nice for public transportation and walking to places but it's not like that throughout the whole state or even country. Germans are lucky

    • @lukasmihara
      @lukasmihara 7 років тому

      Not sure about other countries in Asia, but most Japanese towns and cities are super convenient and the living quality is really high. I believe cities like Hong Kong, Shanghai, or Singapore also have a good living quality.

  • @Zendrig
    @Zendrig 8 років тому +7

    Good luck ordering a pretzel breakfast with Obatzter in Berlin.

  • @judithbrandl5110
    @judithbrandl5110 6 років тому

    I’m from Germany but last year I went to work in South Carolina for a couple of months. Being there I mostly missed the food (good bread especially) and also the beautiful cities and buildings, but now that I’m back I actually miss a couple of things from the US. For one, cheap clothes, it’s so much more expensive to buy the same stuff here. I also really miss the ice that you get in your drinks at a restaurant and even at home from the fridge. My German friends used to ask for drinks without ice but I loved it! And also free refills, how great is that!
    What I miss from the workplace is the first name basis. It’s rare that you can call your boss by his or her first name in Germany but I like it a lot. It doesn’t mean you respect him or her less, but it kind of lightens the mood for me and i was a lot more relaxed when presenting or asking questions etc. (not only you boss also older coworkers). That has actually changed how I evaluate if I want to take a job that I get offered, besides the actual job I now also put emphasis on the way people communicate with each other.

  • @charly6777
    @charly6777 8 років тому +1

    I'm German And I really miss the Italian culture in general. We used to go there every year but we didn't go this year. The food is just so amazing and the people are passionate about everything and the language is like music in my ears

  • @TheGregor80
    @TheGregor80 8 років тому +28

    Did you say 'you americans are' instead of 'we americans...' so we successfully adopted you! You are no longer a Girl, you are now a Mädel! Welcome to the family!

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +2

      +TheGregor80 lol where did you hear this in the video? Now I need to go check it out for myself! :D

    • @TheGregor80
      @TheGregor80 8 років тому

      +Wanted Adventure Yep, Du hast es gesagt :'D (at 5:15)

    • @boogie153
      @boogie153 7 років тому

      Yes, he's quite wright !! :-) So you had to learn a little bavarian, but Munich is not the right place for it. ;-)

    • @Nimmy82MD
      @Nimmy82MD 7 років тому

      Sorry mate, she said "You know, Americans are..." ;O)

  • @Lenimeni12345
    @Lenimeni12345 8 років тому +5

    Frozen bretzels and Obatzter are also available here in Rheinland-Pfalz, but as I am no bavarian, I hate Obatzter... :D I love eating the salty bretzels with Nutella...

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +RegenbogenFresse Ooooh never thought of that! Love mixing salt and sweet, though. Great combination :)

    • @TE-oq1ze
      @TE-oq1ze 8 років тому +1

      +RegenbogenFresse ugh how can you eat this with Nutella?! You have to eat it with butter but I totally agree with you about the Obatzter...

    • @Lilithly
      @Lilithly 8 років тому

      +TE9994 I don't understand how people can like pretzels in general (and have no idea what Obatzers are) so eating it with nutella doesn't really sound weird to me^^; The taste can only be improved anyway.

    • @TE-oq1ze
      @TE-oq1ze 8 років тому

      Nabiya Ri but pretzels are salty. Nutella doesn't match to it..

    • @Lilithly
      @Lilithly 8 років тому

      ***** you'd be surpised how a certain taste can change if you put something sweet on it. It can end up tasting really great or really horrible - and apparently pretzels and nutella go well together. Never tried it though. Oh and there are also pretzels that aren't salty - just wanted to mention that, even though the first commentor *was* talking about the salty ones^^

  • @bubbles3121
    @bubbles3121 8 років тому +2

    i went to Germany, I miss the food! and I miss how people kept to themselves, when I go shopping in the USA people come up to you and be friendly and talk.. which is fine but I miss when people didn't do that.

  • @TotalRookie_LV
    @TotalRookie_LV 6 років тому

    When I was a teenager, I was in Kopenhagen for one week. They had bicycle lanes pretty much everywhere. And their taxis had sort of a attachable frame for a bike, so even if you are on a bicycle, you can still call taxi, driver will then get that contraption out of the boot and lick bike to it, and carry both - you and your bike wherever you need.

  • @xNujeL
    @xNujeL 8 років тому +5

    In the north, we don't have Obazda. Whatever that even is? Isn't it some kind of sweet mustard or something? I don't even know lol. Maybe I just don't know we have it. But you can get frozen prezels here, too. Though they're definitely way smaller than the Bavarian pretzels.
    There's this thing in France.. I don't even know even know what it's called. It's some kind of chicken/duck you can put on bread. Damn, did I love that during my exchange! I still miss it and think of it every now and then. :D And those pains au chocolat and paninis and omg, now I'm craving French food. Thanks, Dana.
    Oh and what I also miss is Berliner (!) Fassbrause - real Berliner Fassbrause. They only sell it in Berlin and its region, unfortunately. It's too good. I wish they'd sell it nationwide.

    • @feelinggrape
      @feelinggrape 8 років тому +2

      Camembert+Quark+Butter+Zwiebeln+paprikapulver = obazda. Gibt es vermutlich nicht nördlich von Frankfurt. In bawü etc gibt es das doch immer wieder.

    • @Michael-nj7jh
      @Michael-nj7jh 8 років тому +3

      Doch gibts ihn jedem großen Supermarkt. Edeka hat Obazda bei den Salaten (Eiersalat und Co.) stehen. Weiß ich da meine Freundin das Zeug gerne ißt. Wohne in Lübeck also sehr weit nördlich.

    • @xNujeL
      @xNujeL 8 років тому

      Dennis Augustin Oooh, ich glaub hab an den Senf, der zur Weißwurst gegessen wird, gedacht. Danke für die Aufklärung! :D

    • @linny3012
      @linny3012 8 років тому +1

      I'm sorry.... but..... ONE PUUUUUUUUNCH

    • @christabauer4
      @christabauer4 8 років тому

      Obazda is soft cheese with onions and paprika. It means "Angemachter", because you break down the soft cheese with a fork and then mix it with small chunks of onions, paprika, salt pepper and Schnittlauch.

  • @cryban7011
    @cryban7011 8 років тому +7

    obazda is probably available anywhere here in germany, but not as easy as in Bavaria (in Bavaria its in every store, i dont think that its in every store in the rest of Germany.)

    • @dinchen7757
      @dinchen7757 8 років тому

      also bei uns in Sachsen gibt es das in jedem einigermaßen gut sortiertem Laden 👍

    • @magimare
      @magimare 8 років тому

      +Christian Benischke You can get it everywhere ;) At least i have seen it at REWE, Edeka and Wasgau in Hessen, Niedersachen and RLP :)

    • @cryban7011
      @cryban7011 8 років тому

      Din Chen Magimare​ ok

    • @GER308
      @GER308 8 років тому +1

      You can get it everywhere but you cannot get it fresh made at a resturaunt very often outside of Bavaria

  • @rainbow_blu
    @rainbow_blu 8 років тому

    Well, I was raised by a very old lady from Bavaria and lived in Munich for a long time and I have to say the Obatzde you'd buy in a supermarket has little to do with what I know and love. The best thing to do is to make it yourself and you can get most of the ingredients everywhere and it is so easy. Just chop some onions, mash smellly camembert with a fork and butter and mix with a bit of (bavarian) beer and paprika, season if necessary. As far as I remember without checking that's it.

  • @Ashoerchen
    @Ashoerchen 8 років тому

    +Wanted Adventure: Keep up the spirit - and stay! We need people like you in Germany.

  • @generalarctrooper
    @generalarctrooper 8 років тому +3

    You can get frozen brezels in north germany too :)

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +SSB4 by Finn Drewes :D good to know! Thanks for the info

    • @janinaa.x7846
      @janinaa.x7846 8 років тому

      I think they don't taste very good. Fresh brezels are awesome

  • @MissLionRose
    @MissLionRose 8 років тому +4

    now I NEED to visit Germany!!! :)

  • @vairiadracule
    @vairiadracule 8 років тому +1

    I miss everything about Germany, mostly my boyfriend and his family. I had grown accustomed to walking everyday and going to the store everyday to buy food and I miss cooking breakfast for Jonas.
    I also miss the soundless nights, along with being a short walk away from the beach.

  • @zzarkoo
    @zzarkoo 8 років тому

    I live in Austria and I visited France a couple of times. The thing I miss the most is how lively the places in France are. In Austria everybody is somehow antisocial and wants to keep distance, but in France everybody is so close and I just love that.

  • @avissilber
    @avissilber 8 років тому +5

    I was born in Austria and when we moved to Germany I missed the 'Extrawurst' and 'Geheimratskäse'. I know, in Germany there is delicious 'Fleischwurst' too, but... It's not the same! :c

    • @FuruyaHaKokoniImasu
      @FuruyaHaKokoniImasu 8 років тому

      +An Awesome Potato Oh man XD

    • @BassaSelim
      @BassaSelim 8 років тому

      +An Awesome Potato Well, that can even depend on the butcher making the Fleischwurst - or Extrawurst. Since "my" butcher closed his store I have not found an equally tasty replacement for the Leberwurst. :(

    • @magdalenamustermann8434
      @magdalenamustermann8434 8 років тому

      Ich hab Extrawurst total geliebt, bevor ich Vegetarierin gworden bin. Und mein Däta isst die ganze Zeit Geheimratskäse zum Abendessen :D

    • @avissilber
      @avissilber 8 років тому +1

      +Ash No thanks 😂! I'm actually a bird. A little chick (maybe you can see this on my profile picture XD). Oh, and by the way: I'm an eagle :3

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +1

      +An Awesome Potato hahaa I had to google "Extrawurst" to find out what it is...I was thinking it was like some extra wurst that you got for free when you buy one. Like buy one wurst, get an extra one for free :D That would be nice too!

  • @junkfoodvegan6198
    @junkfoodvegan6198 8 років тому +3

    You can get Pretzels in Cologne too^^ Penny Market has frozen pretzels to back yourself if this is what you meant.

    • @DaxRaider
      @DaxRaider 8 років тому

      +Idrial Neldoloth but colonge is ab ig city ^^ in most smaller cities in nrw they never heard of it
      even the 200.000-400.000 ruhrgebiet cities u cant find it

    • @GymKarla
      @GymKarla 8 років тому +1

      +Holly yes you can!

    • @junkfoodvegan6198
      @junkfoodvegan6198 8 років тому +1

      Holly
      I come from a small town north of colonge (ca. 10.000 inhabitants) and we have them in our local market

    • @lutti7238
      @lutti7238 8 років тому

      +Holly yes you can. In the fridge of every Aldi. Even in small town adliges ;-)

    • @CologneCarter
      @CologneCarter 8 років тому

      +Idrial Neldoloth Your Denglish is progressing fine. ;) Or did you mean to say bake?

  • @WurLiix3
    @WurLiix3 8 років тому

    When I came back from Austria, I missed the fresh air they have their. I remember coming back home, stepping outside, taking a deep breath and starting to cough because of all the gases it contains. Felt completely different from the place where I have been on vacations.
    When I came back from Norway I really missed the landscapes. We were on a trip through the whole country with our school class and we visited a lot of beautiful places there. And even though we often had to travel long distances from one point to another, there was always something to see there. Beautiful mountains with snow on top and lakes with crystal clear water right in front of them. So stunning!
    The difference was extrem, here back in Germany. Fields everywhere. No mountains, sometimes even no trees and almost nothing worth to look out of the window (at least not, when you are using the Autobahn).

  • @Narwaro
    @Narwaro 8 років тому +2

    Yes you can buy Brezels and obazter in the rest of Germany. And if you order a water in a German restaurant you will always get sparkling water. If not, you have to order "still water".

  • @naziajahan1657
    @naziajahan1657 8 років тому +7

    Ah if i leave germany, i am gonna miss the bier for sure.

    • @tolleseinhorn5853
      @tolleseinhorn5853 8 років тому

      Which German beer do you like best? If you ever come near Würzburg you should try Kesselring.

    • @Melle-ex5en
      @Melle-ex5en 8 років тому

      +tolles Einhorn I thought that the Hofbräu is the most popular beer in Würzburg

    • @Jonathan-kraai
      @Jonathan-kraai 8 років тому +1

      +Nazia Jahan if you go to Belgium or even Netherland you wont miss the german beers.
      I was thinking so too, but now i know the best beers comming from belgium.

  • @HungrigerHugo89
    @HungrigerHugo89 8 років тому +4

    Bread, german bread! If germans settle anywhere someone will found a brewery and a bakery :D

  • @sarasteffes831
    @sarasteffes831 8 років тому +1

    Well, I've never been away from home that long (although I wish I had), but I spent a week in Sweden with my English class. There me and a friend of mine lived at the teacher's place, which was pretty fun as she was very nice. When I was back in Germany, I really missed just relaxing at school. In Sweden (or at least at our partner school) you're (more or less) allowed to bring your cellphone to class, you get a laptop for homework and always have free wifi at school. There are receptacles everywhere and people would just listen to music in class. I know, that might not be a very effective way of learnig, but still. What I also missed was the bus system. We stayed in Uppsala (near Stockholm) and it's not much bigger of a town than my home town, but they had so much more public transport! It was crazy. And although Sweden is a lot colder than Bavaria, and even though we went there in fall, you could go outside in a t shirt in the evening (the rest of the day was very cold though). I also miss the people. They tend to be way friendlier than most people around here and as I live in a city with mostly old people, it was refreshing being in a town with a younger community. Gosh, I wish I could go back there... But there are still so many places to go :)

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +SarasWorld Sounds like you had a really great experience there!! That's awesome :) Now I'm curious if American high schools have wifi and stuff like that now. I'll have to ask one of my friends with a younger sibling. Everything is advancing so quickly, I bet the schools have changed a lot too.

  • @Original_Lurke_fromthe_Unknown
    @Original_Lurke_fromthe_Unknown 7 років тому +1

    This is my first post for one of your Videos. I grew up in Germany. I have a German mother and had a American father. I miss Germany because I grew up there in different parts north of Munich. So I have had the best of two worlds. When I was in Germany my other language was English (side note: I actually had to convince one of my English teachers that "their" was not spelled "thier) and when I came back to the US my 2nd language was German so I never had to take another foreign language. But I miss my friends and a few friends are no longer with us. I miss the cultural look of Germany. I moved back to the US in 1990 I was 17. So my growing up years were in Germany. I still have relatives living in Germany. That's what I miss about Germany.

  • @SarahMNewman
    @SarahMNewman 8 років тому +4

    My favorite Denglisch phrase: I can schaff it. XD

  • @SidMaron
    @SidMaron 8 років тому +13

    I'm from eastern Germany and I never even heard of Obatzter. xD

    • @boogie153
      @boogie153 7 років тому +2

      Dann wird's Zeit, dass du nach Bayern kommst. ;-)

  • @MaunzesKarton
    @MaunzesKarton 8 років тому +1

    I went to Vancouver a few times and I really miss the super friendly people there. As to the zone out...its the same with me...if someone around me speaks english my mind just makes me listening to it even if I have a conversation going on in german at the same time...I love the english language.

  • @plinkbottle
    @plinkbottle 8 років тому

    I agree with that about the air conditioning, in Australia too. The temperature is set for the staff, the background music is set for the staff. The design of the air conditioning ducts is set for the staff, so they can have the cold air blowing into their face when they operate the cash register. That means the customer has the cold air blowing down the back of their neck and they cant move away from that location until they are served.

  • @Levus97
    @Levus97 8 років тому +5

    i#m living in northern germany, and i´ve never had a brezel-breakfast :D

    • @ulik.
      @ulik. 6 років тому

      i#m living in northern germany, and i´ve never had a brezel-breakfast :D
      5
      Preißn, S..preißn

  • @Marvelis_6
    @Marvelis_6 8 років тому +8

    Ich wohne in der Nähe von Köln und wir haben zwar Brezel, aber hier isst keiner (??) Obatzen (??) 😂😂😂😂

    • @LordRaidenDrake
      @LordRaidenDrake 8 років тому

      +Mona Bla Obazda ist Mostert. Also Senf.
      Stimm, be us es ma Brütscher! ;)

    • @artfreakthea
      @artfreakthea 8 років тому +3

      +LordRaiden Achtung :) Obazda ist kein Senf, sondern Käse (meist Camembert) mit Zwiebeln/Schnittlauch, sehr empfehlenswert zu probieren! Gibt's tatsächlich in den meisten Supermärkten wie Edeka oder Rewe in ganz Deutschland.

    • @LordRaidenDrake
      @LordRaidenDrake 8 років тому

      Erare Humanum est!
      Dennoch:
      Wurde mir Obazda in Bayern IMMER als Sanf verkauft/erklärt! ka Wieso!

    • @corabluff
      @corabluff 8 років тому

      +artfreakthea... und es gibt eine Menge Rezepte für Obatzn zum Selbermachen!

    • @drunken_sailor9131
      @drunken_sailor9131 8 років тому +1

      +LordRaiden Senf??? ernsthaft? die norddeutschen sind echt zum verzweifeln

  • @MoonfaceMartin88
    @MoonfaceMartin88 8 років тому +1

    In central Germany, you can get Obatzter without much problems. In Berlin I remember it being a bit more difficult. Being from the Rhine, I once tried to get some Spundekääs up there and could neither find it nor Obatzter.

  • @Chaarliii18
    @Chaarliii18 8 років тому +1

    I was in the states in 2014 for a couple months and when I came back home to Germany I really missed going to the mall and target.

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +Charlotte Hug hahhaa yes, true!! I go to Target every time I'm back in the U.S. :D

  • @catlover181
    @catlover181 7 років тому +4

    Bubbly water?😂
    it's sparkling water

    • @SalandFindles
      @SalandFindles 7 років тому

      +Cat Lover Or carbonated water.

    • @SternLX
      @SternLX 7 років тому

      A.K.A. Seltzer Water

  • @sweetkazu
    @sweetkazu 8 років тому +1

    I lived in England for three months and what I missed about Germany was:
    - getting money back for my Pfandflaschen :D
    - Apfelschorle
    - listening to German radio (interestingly because I never really actively listen to the radio when in Germany; I guess it was mainly that I missed hearing German around me)
    - right-hand traffic!!
    - just rules in general; I feel that Germany is much more orderly if that makes sense
    - German bread :D Like, actually having a choice in different types of breads; all we ever had was white bread!
    And what I miss about England when I'm back in Germany:
    - the politeness!
    - Cadbury chocolate, Strongbow, Chicken Tikka Masala
    - taking the train and exploring new places
    - the architecture
    - the pubs
    - sea side piers
    - hearing people say "cheers" (as in thank you), I don't know why, but I just love it!
    - NANDO'S - oh my God, I cannot describe how much I miss Nando's!
    Thankfully I'll be going back in May for a week :)))))

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +sweetkazu CHICKEN TIKKA MASALA!!! YESSSS :D:D:D:D When we were in the UK for three weeks we at Indian food just about every third day and got chicken korma and chicken tikka masala. So delicious. In between we ate at those pubs you mentioned and also fish and chips :)

  • @shawolsenpai797
    @shawolsenpai797 8 років тому

    When I came back home to Germany from Tunisia , I really missed to sit at the beach watch the sunset and that the people there are just so warm and kind . And clearly my Family .

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +Heart Of Fire Yeah, watching the sunset on the beach is a very special moment :)

  • @GoGlennR
    @GoGlennR 7 років тому

    Hi Dana, I love your videos! I can relate to a lot you have covered since I have lived here in Germany over half my life!
    Just like you commented, I miss drinking the carbonated "bubbly" water back in the States.
    However, what I really miss is the huge variety of Brötchen (bread rolls/bisquits) that one can get here in Germany, especially those really crunchy ones filled with roasted pumpkin seeds and many other seeds. I remember visiting back in Houston, Texas, in the 1990's and looking for a similar bakery. There was one called the Three Brothers Bakery, but their bread dough was still different and they did not have the variety of bread loaves and rolls as they have here in Germany. I ended up ordering via Fed Ex some bread I found on the internet from Toronto, Canada, for my relatives in Houston to try! But, it was STILL NOT AS GOOD as the bread baked here in Germany.

  • @TheStoryteller01
    @TheStoryteller01 8 років тому

    What I missed in most countries I traveled to was the constant greeting and politeness I'm used to. In Austria if you shop in the supermarket, it's normal to greet the cashier, get greeted in return and after paying you exchange goodbyes. Even if you go to the cheapest restaurant, not only will the waiter welcome you, you are expected to greet him in return and when you pay (we still pay our food & drinks cash most of the time) the waiter will thank you for the tip, give you the change with a "here you are (Sir)" and you are expected to say "thanks". You don't buy a cup of take-away coffee or a single apple without a "here you are" and "thanks". One thing I liked in foreign countries though was when a waiter/waitress said something like "Good Evening. I'm Peter and I am your waiter". That's more personal and actually felt good.

  • @kelalumeria6022
    @kelalumeria6022 7 років тому

    I'm from Munich and moved to Dresden 2 years ago! For your awesome breakfast you have to stay in Bavaria because Brenzeln and Obazda are not the same thing when buying them in a grocery store. So keep eating ❤️

  • @lydiariedel384
    @lydiariedel384 8 років тому +1

    I'm from Germany and stayed in the US (in Chicago) for three weeks, last year. This might sound not very long to you, but there were things I really missed when I got home to Germany. (Sorry for some bad english by the way) One of them were the fans. We really don't have them in germany... maybe some people, but not everyone. We just have some which stay one the ground and look really ugly.
    Another thing were the fridge. In America they have the ones with the icemachines and cold water... of course you can get them in germany... but they are sooooo expensive!!!
    And one thing is that Americans have so good icetea and lemonade! The mixture of them is even the nicest thing ever!
    In germany culture is a really big thing, like in the US, but in the US youre even much more friendly. I was new there and came to a part of my family. I didnt knew them before, they didnt knew them... but they were so friendly. The girlfriend of my cousin was even so nice and sweet, sure she really wants to know things about germany and that stuff...
    I miss the alcohol-free places the US has, because in germany we dont have them and often see some people without an home, sitting around everywere and are drunk... (even not homeless people do it)
    I do miss skyscrapers, like the Willis-Tower, because in germany we dont have such big houses. We often dont have this kind of skyline... not even in Berlin, which is the capital.
    I miss some of the american candy, like "Sour Patch", "Wonka" (even its english...we dont have it and you can get it), "Taffy", "Poprocks" and so on...
    Germany is nice, but Chicago was the best time in my life... so...
    Bye,
    Lydia

  • @celestegranillo7239
    @celestegranillo7239 8 років тому

    When I was in Germany, I, too also fell in love with Gerolsteiner! It's hard to find in Southern California but when I find it, I stock up on it.

  • @stephaniel205
    @stephaniel205 8 років тому

    I'm new to Germany and haven't been back to the states yet (so no time to miss anything) but I have spent time in Brazil twice. Like you, I missed being able to walk places. Also the food! Authentic Brazilian food is amazing! And church. There church starts in the morning and people stay until like 10:00 at night. You have service, people bring food and music and you just stay all day and hang out. I really miss that!

  • @inaellen2944
    @inaellen2944 8 років тому

    I was in Ireland for 2 month and when I came back to Germany I missed nearly everything. I still miss a lot of things. There these food things like rice krispies you just can't buy in germany, clib orange, good old irish cheddar... (the list is very long). I miss the public transportation like the dart (kind of a train) and the luas in dublin. I miss going to this wonderful school, my lovely teachers, experencing things in ty I will never have the chance to experience in Germany and all the amazing students in my year who were kind, and talked normal English to me. But the thing I definitly miss the most is my hostfamily. They are an incredible family and I just love them. I miss the daily life in their house, the farm, the conversations with my hostmum (one of the most amazing persons I've ever met), messing with my hostbrothers, talking german with my hostdad, hostgranny and hostgrandad. German as our secret language. I really miss our dinners we had everyday auround 10 pm and our music evenings where we each piked a song and plyed the playlist on the sound system, etc. There are so many things I miss about being and living there that I can talk hourse and hourse about it. And I can't wait to see my hostfamily again and go back to Ireland.

  • @Leamie19
    @Leamie19 8 років тому +1

    After my year in Spain, back in Germany I missed:
    Speaking Spanish,
    Speaking Spanish/English/German with my friends as you explained it,
    Croquetas,
    Tinto de Verano
    and Granada.
    Now I am in Istanbul and I miss:
    Bretzeln,
    Obatzta although I am not from Bavaria, but we ate it always when we went there for holidays. And we do it by ourselves, because you usually cannot buy it.
    Easy acces to vegetarian food
    Kölsch and Club Mate

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +Leamie19 CROQUETAS!!!! Yes :D love those as well. I studied abroad in Granada during college :)

  • @heinrichwonders8861
    @heinrichwonders8861 8 років тому +2

    This mixing of languages is what linguists call "code switching".
    This can be observerd in any multilingual environment and is quite intresting because this code switching has its own rules and guide lines.

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому +1

      +Heinrich Wonders Interesting! Thanks for the info, I'll have to read up on that some more. Really love that kind of stuff :)

  • @blaubeerfee8966
    @blaubeerfee8966 8 років тому

    As child I always visited England, because my dad is from England! When I was 17 I moved over to England and lived there for about 6/7 month... Then I moved back to Germany and I'm still missing England so much, the certain smell of the coast, the food and my English family ☺️👍🏻

  • @Boosaidthewind
    @Boosaidthewind 8 років тому

    I lived in Germany for 10 months as an exchange student. I miss so many things :D The people in Germany were so lovely. Here in Finland strangers don't really talk to each other, but in Germany I just had casual chats with people I met when walking my dog. The food was also so amazing, I miss especially the food typically served in eastern Germany, specifically in Saxony.

  • @PatiiTube
    @PatiiTube 8 років тому

    Last year I lived in South Korea as an exchange student and I miss all the advanced technology and comfort I had there, I mean heated toilet seats on a public toilet in winter? Amazing! In general everything was just so clean and the public transport system is incredible. But the thing I miss the most is the korean street life, just the feeling you get while wandering around in the streets with all the cute ads, street performers and so on - korean food is something I don't like to miss as well.

  • @consciouscommunity3897
    @consciouscommunity3897 8 років тому

    Thank you for helping me pronounce my favorite water ;) I had two bottles today and live in the US

  • @joenight9693
    @joenight9693 8 років тому +2

    After coming back to Germany from Ireland i really misse three things.
    First of the high quality food they have over there. It's really awesome to have a burger over there. Cause while you eat it, you can literally taste the happy cow out of it. Never had food that tasty... Same applies to vegetables as well.
    Second would be these open hearted irish people. Literally everybode in Ireland was open hearted and kind to my wife and myself. Got lost on the island no problem, half the village you're in will work it out for you, while apologizing more times then you can count, that you got lost on their island. Went to the beach for a walk, well a random guy will approach you and tell you where to go if you want to go swimming with the seals, and where to find the best places while as well apologizing a thousand times for talking to you and showing you the best spots on his island. First time this happened to us, i was like "What the heck? Back at home nobody would even think about showing an outsider special places if they didn't like them or at least know them somehow."
    And third, the luck of the irish. It may sound silly, but while we where over there everything that would have ended up catastrophic in Germany somehow turned out to be a lucky coincidence. e. G. our Bank didn't manage to transfer the money we needed as a guarantee deposit for the car to our credit card. So we where at the airport in Dublin and explained that to the woman at the desk of the car rental and she was all like: "Oh you're lucky because that would have been not to your advantage, if you just pay 10 Euro more per day, you don't have to leave a guarantee deposit, get a full cover insurance and if you have a crash you won't get charged for it." boom an event that would've been total catastropic in Germany just turned out to be a lucky coincidence.
    Can't wait to get back to Ireland though...

  • @robfriedrich2822
    @robfriedrich2822 8 років тому

    Obatzder is a mix of Camembert and cream cheese, spiced with paprika.
    The Brezel is white bread dough, soaked in brine then baked.

  • @marisakirei684
    @marisakirei684 8 років тому +1

    When I go back home one of the things I miss about Germany are definitely the spacious, comfortable apartments. In Poland, unless you live in a house, you will most likely be owning or renting a cramped apartment. And even if you get a bigger apartment, it will most likely be divided into, let's say,3 tiny bedrooms with a tiny kitchen and an even tinier bathroom, so you won't get that feeling of space I enjoy in Germany. Forget being able to work out at home, forget having the space for big, decorative furniture. In Poland you have to be practical and really creative to find the space for all your stuff!
    Another great thing I would miss is being able to have a beer outside, sitting in a park or by the river. In Poland you get fined for drinking in public places, even if it's just beer.

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +marisa kirei Interesting!! Definitely didn't know that about not being allowed to drink on the streets in Poland or the smaller apartments. Thanks for the info! :)

  • @michellerosenfeld1651
    @michellerosenfeld1651 8 років тому

    I'm from germany and two years ago I went to ecuador for two months. And I really miss the people there and how relaxed and friendly they are, but on the other hand when I was there I missed the german winter.

  • @ThomasSchoen
    @ThomasSchoen 8 років тому

    Same here... missing Bretzen, Obatzda and Karg Weissbier here in BC's Interior. 26+ years in Canada, but some of the treats from my old country are still on my mind. Oh well, that's what holidays are for.

  • @eleventhclara
    @eleventhclara 8 років тому +1

    I'm studying abroad in France this year and I can already tell that I'm going to miss the USABLE public transport SO MUCH. Also the franglish.

    • @WantedAdventure
      @WantedAdventure  8 років тому

      +eleventhclara interesting how the "english" part always seems to some second -- Denglish, Spanglish, Franglish :D

  • @stefanb6539
    @stefanb6539 8 років тому

    Frozen Pretzels are now ubiquitious in supermarkets all over Germany. It was purely regional until about a decade or two ago, then it spread national.

  • @rainyday4970
    @rainyday4970 8 років тому +1

    There is a certain kind of Australian sparkling (carbonated) water that I miss, 18 years after coming back home to the US! I used to drink it almost every day. Don't recall the name of the brand but I DO recall that it had lemon, lime, and orange juices flavoring it, and it tasted like pure healthiness! Still wish I could have some. And MEAT PIES! I miss meat pies!

  • @isabelhuppmann4871
    @isabelhuppmann4871 8 років тому

    I live in Franconia, here Obazda is called Gerupfder and you can also get it everywhere. When I did an internship in Bremen you could also get it at the supermarket though I was probably the only one that bought it. When I lived in Sweden I just made some: Sqush some Camembert with Butter (half half ) add some paprika spice and for Obazda a sip of beer.

  • @theponsway
    @theponsway 8 років тому +1

    When I came back to Germany from the USA, I really missed pancakes and the large amount of food you get when you go into a restaurant. I also missed the people - in the US everyone is so open and talks to you, where as in Germany you hardly ever get to know people in the supermarket or on the streets.

  • @skydragon3294
    @skydragon3294 8 років тому

    When I returned from LA after 3 years, the first thing I missed, was talking to "strangers" about sports. Dodgers or Angels. This was always a great start to a conversation, and it felt kind of akward, when I tried to smalltalk with my sisters boyfriend who picked me up from the airport, and I had no topic to talk about.

  • @marc203
    @marc203 8 років тому

    You can get Obazda all over Germany at supermarkets and discounters. You can even make your own. It's pretty easy though. Just look for a recipe and adapt it to your own preferences. I do that too as I don't like the caraway which is a ingredient of most of them.
    Basically it's just a mix of soft cheese along with butter, onions and spice like sweet pepper, caraway, salt. If desired you can also add beer or wine.
    Pro tip: If you derive from making your Obazda with onions you can preserve it longer. Just add the onions seperately. Or braise them lightly before, but this will result in a totally different taste (suits best if you want to have mild Obazda based on curd cheese instead of limburger cheese or camenbert)
    Deep frozen Brezeln are available everywhere as well but I recommend to buy them at the bakery.

  • @eljanrimsa5843
    @eljanrimsa5843 7 років тому

    As a Bavarian living in Switzerland I miss the Brezen. They have Brezen here, but they are never really rösch. Swiss bakers prefer to make them wet so they will last through the day, while a Bavarian Brezen must be sold fresh or it will pick up moisture from the air. And with a lätschat Swiss Brezen, Obatzta and Radi are just not the same.

  • @Jeshoel
    @Jeshoel 8 років тому

    I lived in Nottingham, UK for two semesters and I had an amazing time. Back home in Germany I miss English pubs, the larger variety of vegetables, spices and nuts available, scones and most of all the British people. They're lovely. ♥

  • @Patazilla
    @Patazilla 8 років тому

    Don't worry. I've lived near Frankfurt and in Freiburg and you get Obazda in normal supermarkets all over Germany. Alpenhain is a brand that sells it everywhere.
    Brezeln, whether frozen or fresh from a bakery, are also common.

  • @KaneCowboyCo
    @KaneCowboyCo 8 років тому

    america is so big you don't have to leave the country to miss many things about a particular region. i spent october through mid-february in south florida. i missed an entire winter! christmas lights wrapped in palm trees took some getting used to.

  • @IzzetArtificer
    @IzzetArtificer 8 років тому

    Obazda and pretzels is something you can get everywhere, don't worry. We're in Rhineland Palatinate/Hessia and we have pretzels both frozen and fresh everywhere and Obazda you can usually get pre-packaged as well.

  • @EricB256
    @EricB256 8 років тому +1

    After I had taken a round trip through the UK some years ago and went back to Germany, I missed the traditional English breakfast a lot. Mind you, that was back in the day when I still ate meat. But ever since then, breakfast has sort of become the most important meal of the day for me, too. When I grew up here in Germany, it was common that we would have a so-called "2nd breakfast" at some time during the morning, and I still have that whenever possible. In fact, I would need it on the job to get enough nutrients to make it to the lunch break. In contrast, in the UK, breakfast is happening a little later in the day but you get in much more food so you almost don't need a lunch break at all.

  • @ta_nya5240
    @ta_nya5240 8 років тому

    I keep travelling to Japan regularly. I have friends living there and I just enjoy the country and culture. Whenever I get back home from one of those trips, there are several things that I miss. One of those things are the vending machines. They are placed at about every second street corner and hold warm and cold beverages from lemonade to corn soup. I also miss how clean everything is. Seriously, I always feel reluctant to go to a public restroom at metro stations, in every country that I've visited, but really, in Japan they are at least as clean as you will see them at a restaurant or a mall. And one thing that's totally awesome is that Japanese people basically only speak Japanese, so you can talk to your friends very casually about anything and it's fine, because nobody will understand what you're saying. There are other things too, like how in every restaurant the cook will greet you screaming from the kitchen as you get seated, or how you can get groceries 24/7. Of course there are also things that I'm looking forward to as I get back home. I just wish I could take some things with me. (๑•∀•๑)

  • @annkatrinskierka1599
    @annkatrinskierka1599 8 років тому

    here in Hessen we have something similar as *Obatzter*. it's called *Spundekäs* and it's made with cream cheese, quark & various spices & usually eaten with pretzels, too. You can get also in every store frozen pretzels to bake in your own oven.
    Things I miss every time when I come back home from Belgium or the Netherlands, are mostly the albert heijn supermarkets & the ready-cut salad ingredients in the fresh counter. There are so much stuff I can't buy here.

  • @roguefireangel
    @roguefireangel 7 років тому

    Restaurant/store temperature is very regional from my experience. I've lived in AZ where things are always freezing, GA and NC, things are always warmer, and CO where people shop with their coats on in the winter. On the Western Slope of CO the indoor temps are kept warmer in the Summer than i would like and cooler in the winter than the Denver stores. Our District Manager was whining about the store being cold but it was too warm for me to wear long sleeves.

  • @akeeperofoddknowledge4956
    @akeeperofoddknowledge4956 7 років тому

    Bubbly water was all the rage here in the US in the late 70s. Perrier from France was the hoity toity beverage of choice with the culture vultures. Spritzel from Germany showed up sometime later and then the bottled tap water craze hit. But you can still by the bubbly stuff in most supermarkets.

  • @marshmallow3542
    @marshmallow3542 8 років тому

    When I'm back in Germany, after holidays I miss everything from Britain. I love Scotland and England so much. But this year I miss summer school the most. I've been there for three weeks in summer and it was great. We also went to the Outer Hebrides and I loved the landscape. Everything was so chilly.:)

  • @cheesydanny1984
    @cheesydanny1984 8 років тому

    I'm a german, and grew up in Baden-Württemberg very near to the border of Bavaria and it was normal to get Obazda in the supermarket. even in the Aldi or Lidl. Than I moved to my husband to Niedersachsen and there you really can't get Obazda anywhere. I love this stuff and i really miss it. Sometimes there is a bavarian week at Aldi and they have Obazda there but it tastes very horrible. I'm so happy when my parents bring it if they are visiting us.