Sin Eaters & Funeral Biscuits

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  • Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
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    22647 Ventura Blvd, Suite 323
    Los Angeles, CA 91364
    Ingredients:
    1 cup (340g) Treacle or Molasses
    2 sticks (225g) Butter
    3 ½ cups (450g) Flour
    1 heaping cup (225g) White Sugar
    2 heaping Tablespoons (21g) Ginger
    Optional Mace and Cloves
    LINKS TO SOURCES**
    Modern Cookery for Private Families by Eliza Acton: amzn.to/3Cfhkcr
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    Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
    PHOTO CREDITS
    Tong Kin’s Ancestral Sacrifice: By Three huntings - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikime...
    #tastinghistory #halloween #sineaters

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @Vexelius
    @Vexelius Рік тому +2198

    In Mexico, when you're preparing food and suddenly a portion of it falls to the ground, some old people say "también las ánimas quieren" (the souls also want their share), which is a good way to comfort you over the food that has just fallen, as it won't go to waste... and also a compliment, because your food is so good that even the dead want to taste it!

    • @NeilCWCampbell
      @NeilCWCampbell Рік тому +38

      I like that 😁

    • @TV-jn4dh
      @TV-jn4dh Рік тому +24

      Does Mexico also have a stereotype of good cooks being clumsy?

    • @Sleepindragon2
      @Sleepindragon2 Рік тому +87

      If it's that good there's 30 min rule and the dead can fight me for it.

    • @grilledleeks6514
      @grilledleeks6514 Рік тому +9

      @@TV-jn4dh I have never heard that lol.

    • @SariEverna
      @SariEverna Рік тому +88

      I'm afraid the dead will be going hungry. In this household, the dog has already called dibs.

  • @hemmingwayfan
    @hemmingwayfan Рік тому +912

    So would you say these biscuits are to die for?
    I'll show myself out

    • @richiejohnson
      @richiejohnson Рік тому +10

      adorable 🥰

    • @Nellis202
      @Nellis202 Рік тому +11

      No, stay .

    • @arcadenoah993
      @arcadenoah993 Рік тому +7

      You better be
      (Lies! That was a good one!)

    • @arlenedavis5770
      @arlenedavis5770 Рік тому +5

      No, no, have a seat right over here... Don't mind the shape of the seat, it only looks like a coffin, I promise. ;)

    • @tamlynn786
      @tamlynn786 11 місяців тому +3

      🥁

  • @zsoltsandor3814
    @zsoltsandor3814 Рік тому +2227

    Victorian funeral biscuits. Nothing gets more Victorian than those three words together.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +325

      😂 seriously

    • @zsoltsandor3814
      @zsoltsandor3814 Рік тому +262

      @@TastingHistory rapid industrialization and weird spiritual shenanigans.
      ✨️ Welcome to Victorian England ✨️

    • @donitaforrest9064
      @donitaforrest9064 Рік тому +12

      🎃👍

    • @djonfonsteen6331
      @djonfonsteen6331 Рік тому +30

      Try Rag Puddings. My Gran used to make amazing beef steak and veg "puddins, wi loads 'o' peppor"

    • @lisahoshowsky4251
      @lisahoshowsky4251 Рік тому +50

      @@zsoltsandor3814 weird spiritual shenanigans is the best descriptor I’ve seen of it😂😂🙌🙌

  • @wobbyenna
    @wobbyenna Рік тому +324

    When my uncle died we rented out an entire pub , to this day it’s the saddest yet greatest party I’ve ever attended.

    • @cherylmaden5989
      @cherylmaden5989 Рік тому +14

      That's the Way to do it man Irish wake all the wayI want ppl to forget details they were so "happy"

    • @arlenedavis5770
      @arlenedavis5770 Рік тому +3

      Found the Irish lass!

    • @meme-rv6fp
      @meme-rv6fp 7 місяців тому +2

      That's called a Wake. They had one when my great uncle passed decades ago.

  • @CaptainRiterraSmith
    @CaptainRiterraSmith Рік тому +1191

    If it means eating cookies, I'd offer my condolences at every memorial on the Eastern Seaboard.

    • @djonfonsteen6331
      @djonfonsteen6331 Рік тому +49

      🤣😂🤣 I'm more of a savoury man and demand necromince patties for a burger or meatballs. No other cheese than dairy too thank you.

    • @roberthunter5059
      @roberthunter5059 Рік тому +12

      That works out to a lot of cookies.

    • @timmccarthy872
      @timmccarthy872 Рік тому +28

      Go to every wedding in Pittsburgh, they do a potlucked "cookie table"

    • @eburel506
      @eburel506 Рік тому +13

      Especially if they offer milk with the cookies.

    • @MasterShake9000
      @MasterShake9000 Рік тому +19

      *Cookie Monster enters the chat*

  • @lumare
    @lumare Рік тому +90

    God, that story of Munslow is so sad...the absolute strength it must take to lose your children, then go on to spend the rest of your life surrounded by death for what you believe is a noble cause...I'm so glad that his community took care of him in death, poor man.

  • @yunjinfetters6139
    @yunjinfetters6139 Рік тому +479

    Hearing Max say "pour one out for the homies" is my new favorite thing.

  • @RebeccaEWebber
    @RebeccaEWebber Рік тому +68

    We had my Great Aunt's burial on her birthday, sang happy birthday and ate cake. I didn't realize we were being quite Victorian.

  • @Just_Pele
    @Just_Pele Рік тому +577

    When I was young we went to the funeral of a centenarian, a family friend, and at graveside the family handed out ginger and molasses funeral cookies. They were strange, both sweet and bitter, to serve as a representation for the experience of living. It might be the last time this tradition was practiced in America, the elderly folks there said they hadn't seen it since they were children.

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Рік тому +100

      I did it for my grandmother, not even a decade ago. In my case it was more of a sin drinker, as I did make a special drink from irish whisky and caramellized milk where you simmer the milk down until the sugar in it turns caramellized. Because milk is the first food, and in that case, the last food to go, as death is also the way to something new, like a birth. Alcohol is also symbolic. It preserves, it leeches aromatics of its properties, it is the death of grain, fruits or whatever is fermented, but also new life because yeast, and then it is cleansed by fire and aged in barrels, made from wood..like something else. She was deserving, not many are. And I still miss her

    • @ellymae00
      @ellymae00 Рік тому +7

      Please tell us where this was and what year?

    • @francesleones4973
      @francesleones4973 Рік тому +8

      ​@Gabriel Bernard pretty cool symbolism for the ingredients used in your funeral drink.

  • @OrNaurItsKat
    @OrNaurItsKat Рік тому +561

    Max you've cultivated such a wholesome community. Your comment section is so positive it's truly an anomaly on this site.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +106

      Honestly true :')

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob Рік тому +11

      @@TastingHistory remember: if you ever cut your finger while you're cooking, you should soak it in cider.

    • @b-beale1931
      @b-beale1931 Рік тому +2

      @@MrTaxiRob apple juice or cider cider?

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob Рік тому +3

      @@b-beale1931 who said anything about apples?

    • @b-beale1931
      @b-beale1931 Рік тому +13

      @@MrTaxiRob cider is either how Americans refer to Apple juice, or it's fermented apple juice at around 6-8% alcohol

  • @incompetentloser4941
    @incompetentloser4941 Рік тому +560

    My Appalachian studies teacher was so old he saw a recording of the 'last' sin eater explaining his story. He was old old

    • @sarahwatts7152
      @sarahwatts7152 Рік тому +52

      Along the lines of "my history professor was so old, he'd celebrated dust's every birthday"?

    • @celestinemorningstar4851
      @celestinemorningstar4851 Рік тому +22

      Do you have any idea of where that recording may be found?

    • @sarah_noodle
      @sarah_noodle Рік тому +29

      There is a movie called The Last Sin Eater. It was on Prime Video. Idk if still is, but it was pretty good!

    • @incompetentloser4941
      @incompetentloser4941 Рік тому +2

      @@sarah_noodle I had no clue, I'll check it out when I can!

    • @incompetentloser4941
      @incompetentloser4941 Рік тому +19

      @@celestinemorningstar4851 unfortunately no, and I have no clue if it's been archived in the internet. He just dropped the coolest bomb and them continued on with the lecture

  • @TairoruXRyuu
    @TairoruXRyuu Рік тому +141

    This honestly sounds like an amazing premise for a fantasy show or anime. "Sin Eater", a dark fantasy set in the Victorian Era where the main character, a sin eater, helps the dead settle their regrets by absorbing their sins (and maybe using the power from those sins to fight demons or otherwise villainous figures? There seemed to be a lot of demon tales from Victorian England). The main character is the dark silent type since he's shunned but appreciated for being a sin eater. Almost like being a witcher.
    Anyways, great content, I always look forward to it!!

    • @MrYourtoaster
      @MrYourtoaster Рік тому

      You should check out the Tabletop Roleplaying game Geist: The Sin-Eaters. There you play as a person who has died but an incredibly powerful ghost called a Geist stops you from fully padding on. The ghosts strikes a bargain with you. It will use its powers to resurrect you giving you another chance at life under the condition you share your body with it as it too wants another shot at life.
      If you say no the Geist moves on looking for a new death and you fully pass on. If you say yes however you are resurrected as a Sin-Eater. Biologically you are alive like before, you still need food, you still breathe and age like normal but spiritually you’re deader than a door knob. Because of this you can see ghosts where normal humans see nothing. Your Geist explains to you the horrors of the underworld being a hellish oppressive realm ruled by Death Gods and where ghosts are doomed to go to if they do not complete any unfinished business. As a Sin-Eater you take up a new duty helping the ghosts of the land and fighting back the forces of the underworld.
      Your Geist provides you with an assortment of ghostly powers called Haunts and a rituals you can use for in your quests. You’re not alone though, even with the help of your Geist Sin-Eaters naturally form groups of like minded individuals called Krewes. A Krewe can be composed of Sin-Eaters, regular humans, Ghosts and even other strange supernatural creatures such as Vampires, werewolves or Mages. You, your Geist and your Krewe are the closest things to heroes to the undead you can find.

    • @trustytrest
      @trustytrest 8 місяців тому +9

      Just look at FF14's Shadowbringers. The main enemies there were called Sin Eaters, monsters made from too much divine light basically. And they're all biblically accurate angels.

    • @justanawkwardnerd
      @justanawkwardnerd 8 місяців тому +1

      I'm surprised I haven't heard of more fantasy that covers the topic. It'd be so fascinating!

    • @corrinsheart
      @corrinsheart 6 місяців тому +2

      Sounds like a spin off of Black Butler(an anime about a young boy in Victorian England who made a deal with a demon that became his butler, if you or anyone hasn’t heard of it. It’s good and funny)

    • @priss4
      @priss4 6 місяців тому +1

      Omg yes! I would absolutely watch a Sin Eater anime

  • @RazorO2Productions
    @RazorO2Productions Рік тому +492

    Man, the more I hear about the Victorian Age the more wild I believe it to be. Suddenly a Christmas Carol doesn't seem so outlandish.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +176

      They were all into death and ghosts

    • @SewardWriter
      @SewardWriter Рік тому +38

      @@TastingHistory Big time. Ironic, since so much of the trend was based in Christian beliefs, and the Tanakh/Bible says to avoid that sort of thing. (I could go into detail, but let's just leave it at, 'that time was WILD'.)

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Рік тому +16

      @@TastingHistory So it's like Halloween all year round? Sign me up!

    • @telebubba5527
      @telebubba5527 Рік тому

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Your funeral ⚰is on monday 31 okt. at 11.00 am. 🧛‍♂

    • @NeilCWCampbell
      @NeilCWCampbell Рік тому +20

      I imagine the fact that laudanum and coke lozenges were basic medicine is a contributing factor

  • @bigred9428
    @bigred9428 Рік тому +288

    This is so weird. I was dozing about 4am, when I suddenly thought, "They should hand out goody bags after funerals, (I'm always planning my funeral, though I don't intend on having one) and it should be good stuff, like nice edibles and little toys, not stupid stuff like the homemade soap I received at a bridal shower." So, thanks Max. I really loved the episode.

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Рік тому +28

      I would add all of it, the soap is for washing sins away.

    • @silverhills5684
      @silverhills5684 Рік тому +3

      Only the Risen from the Dead Son of God, Jesus Christ's Holy Blood can wash sins away, but only after you admit you are a sinner, ask humbly that Jesus Christ forgive you of your sins with His Holy Blood that was shed for you and ask Him to come into your heart and soul and be your LORD and SAVIOR and GOD and MASTER.
      Jesus Christ will do as you ask and then give you Eternal Life, the Holy Spirit to indwell you to guide, teach, and protect you. But you must heed the Holy Spirit's words that come to your knowing and obey them immediately.
      The Only way to Eternal Life is through believing that Jesus Christ is who He says He is and has done all there is that needs to be done for you to enter Heaven.
      Anything you do, do out of your love for Jesus Christ and all that He has done for you and all that He promises to do for you in the future, whether you are still alive on this Earth, or are alive in Heaven with Him and all humans who have put their faith in Jesus Christ Alone.
      We are in the Last Days.
      Jesus Christ is coming soon in the air as the Holy Bible records to call everyone that has put their faith in His righteousness Alone up into the air to Him and then to Heaven forever, to be with Jesus Christ forever.
      Jesus Christ died in your place to pay off your sin debt.
      There is no forgiveness of sins without the shedding of blood.
      Jesus Christ died so that if you believe in Him Alone, you can escape eternal damnation in Hell.
      Read I Corinthians chapter 15 verses 1-4.
      Christ Jesus died to take away the sins of those who believe only in Him and His Words just as the Holy Bible predicted thousands of years before His immaculate conception by the Holy Spirit and a virgin young woman.

    • @deboralee1623
      @deboralee1623 Рік тому +9

      while not the same things as post-funeral goodie-bags, repasts are good ways to thank folks for attending the services. some attendees even take flowers -- with permission, of course -- from the funeral arrangement(s).
      [sigh] and yes, my fam, i haven't forgotten i "owe" you repasts for my parents' services.

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 Рік тому +29

      In one of my high school classes, a weeklong assignment was to plan our funeral, design our gravestone, plan what we’d take with us to the grave and afterlife, and write our obituaries.
      A classmate died that year, and at a total loss, his parents asked our teacher if he’d saved those plans (he had). So… my classmate got his ideal funeral. Everyone wore green, as black was not allowed (weird for a goth to not wear black) and it was literally standing room only. This guy had been majorly popular!

    • @Gioachina0279
      @Gioachina0279 Рік тому +1

      @@deboralee1623 never heard of repastas. I should give it a try. A little sugo to the repastas and all participants will go home in joy

  • @Lauren.E.O
    @Lauren.E.O Рік тому +303

    Sin eating seems like the food equivalent of buying indulgences, since you are paying for someone’s sins to be removed (eaten, in this case), but more last moment and with the money going to the poor instead of the wealthy. It’s too bad that the sin eaters were treated like monsters for just trying to avoid starvation.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +80

      Very much in the same vein

    • @HolyKhaaaaan
      @HolyKhaaaaan Рік тому +54

      It also seems like a substitute for the sacrament of confession, after it was discarded in the wake of Protestantism.
      And while the poor man was indeed being fed by his richer Protestant neighbors, remember they considered him to be taking on an eternal loss on their behalf.
      It's sort of like how coal miners lost limbs and got the black lung for maybe a schilling a day. Except much worse, at least culturally.

    • @joycebarricella3050
      @joycebarricella3050 Рік тому +13

      I learned about them on The Night Gallery. It was dark and gloomy story starring Richard Thomas. Scary but good.

    • @Zephyr2309
      @Zephyr2309 Рік тому

      Same here!

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 Рік тому +6

      Sin eating was just folk religion/superstition, whereas indulgences were an actual Church doctrine.

  • @TomRyanMKE
    @TomRyanMKE Рік тому +117

    “Thrift, thrift, Horatio! The funeral baked meats did coldly furnish forth the marriage tables.” - Hamlet, Act 1, scene 2

    • @Pururut
      @Pururut 7 місяців тому +2

      Tbf pretty sure this was made to show just how small the amount of time between his father's death and his mother's marriage was

    • @TomRyanMKE
      @TomRyanMKE 7 місяців тому +1

      @@Pururut Yes, exactly.

  • @farpointgamingdirect
    @farpointgamingdirect Рік тому +367

    At my funeral, the organist is going play "Pop! Goes the Weasel" over and over until everyone is staring at my casket in horrified anticipation...😈

    • @violetopal6264
      @violetopal6264 Рік тому +14

      🤣

    • @ShellyS2060
      @ShellyS2060 Рік тому +40

      I will be brought in 15 minutes late after everyone has been sat. I am never on time, except for work.

    • @thairinkhudr4259
      @thairinkhudr4259 Рік тому +27

      @@ShellyS2060 "Here comes the corpse, here comes the corpse!"

    • @mahenonz
      @mahenonz Рік тому +32

      @@ShellyS2060 I actually heard of a funeral where this happened. An elderly lady was renowned for her tardiness, so it was arranged for her casket not to arrive until partway through the first hymn. Apparently the mourners were in stitches. 😂

    • @brega6286
      @brega6286 Рік тому +19

      My dear father was an amateur actor and loved Broadway. A great guy with a fun sense of humor. I had his service organist play "Let me entertain you" to begin, various show tunes the ended with "Give my regards to Broadway". The giggles began and my mother was mortified. He had a Masonic service as well. When I read about your "Pop goes the Weasel" I broke up because at gravesite..one front pallbearer dropped the coffin.And my first thought was he's gonna pop up !🤣

  • @joey_cola
    @joey_cola Рік тому +95

    Very thoughtful of you, Max, to drop a biscuit on the floor for the homies.

  • @christineh14
    @christineh14 Рік тому +143

    Here in the South the custom of bringing food to the bereaved is still very common. The rational is that the family doesn’t have the time or inclination to cook for themselves and also so they have something to offer all the guests who will come to offer condolences. If someone in your family dies you’d better go clean out your fridge and get ready for the flood of ham, casseroles, and cakes that are coming your way. Many churches will host a meal after the funeral for the family and any one who attended the funeral.

    • @deborahdanhauer8525
      @deborahdanhauer8525 Рік тому +13

      I made a similar comment to this before I saw yours. I love this tradition and I’m glad we still have it.❤️🤗🐝

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice Рік тому +15

      This is why you bring a casserole to the bereaved family. I baked a cake for my mother's funeral - she was known as a wonderful baker among her friends and family. (And I hate casseroles.)

    • @antipatsy
      @antipatsy Рік тому +11

      Some friends and I did this, but with a twist, for one of our number whose mom had just passed. We got the family restaurant gift cards, so they could decide where, when, and what they ate.

    • @ireneferris9061
      @ireneferris9061 Рік тому +11

      We have a saying in my southern family: Ham is death. Someone dies, make a ham.

    • @mrsmorris265
      @mrsmorris265 Рік тому +2

      My least favorite casserole: funeral potatoes.

  • @EmilyJelassi
    @EmilyJelassi Рік тому +34

    I worked one summer break at a funeral home (reception only!). I remember one where I had to make sure that everyone who came received a small white box.. the family was very insistent that I gave one to everyone! When the service was over and the family was leaving, they thanked us and gave each of us (staff) a box. It had 3 small ginger cookies, a card with a bible verse on it and a dried flower.. mine was a dried pansy. I wondered why, but now I understand; the family was Welsh.
    Excellent video as always Max! Very interesting 😊

  • @koreydevine7766
    @koreydevine7766 Рік тому +218

    In the fothills of the Cadcades were I grew up. Sin Eating is very much still a part of the culture. Though not advertised. At small funerals often in strange old drafty grange halls. There are still those that consume the sins of the community.
    At my own father's funeral. 2 men shared a meal of bread and beer in hopes to lessen the load my father would bare in the afterlife. It's etched into my mind. I'll never forget. It's been over 30 years. But I see it in my mind like it was yesterday.

    • @deborahdanhauer8525
      @deborahdanhauer8525 Рік тому +9

      Wow! What a sacrifice they made.❤️

    • @chezmoi42
      @chezmoi42 Рік тому +14

      Interesting, which side/end of the Cascades were you on? And could it have been part of an ethnic heritage? It would be interesting to know where it originated. I grew up in 'Twin Peaks' in the fifties, and never heard of it.

    • @koreydevine7766
      @koreydevine7766 Рік тому +23

      @@chezmoi42 between the Cascades and the coastal range. There is dozens of tiny towns with populations of Welsh, Irish and Scandinavian decent. This particular town is called Mist.

    • @BushCrafts
      @BushCrafts Рік тому +7

      Do you know any more about the history of this practice? I have wondered if it related to the part of the Christian Mass called the Agnus Dei ("Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the World, have mercy on me.") and/or the story about the Scape Goat in Leviticus. Thanks!

    • @TruthSword7
      @TruthSword7 Рік тому +5

      Jesus already lessened our load to zero. Just believe. You don't need to atone for your own sins, or have anybody try to eat them for you.

  • @theleaningelm
    @theleaningelm Рік тому +59

    I really appreciate the tip about recutting cookies when they're still hot. Never occurred to me that you could save cookies that have spread like that!

  • @n.a.4292
    @n.a.4292 Рік тому +104

    In Italy, the traditional All Hallows' Day sweets are called "Pane dei Morti" and "Ossa dei Morti" (Dead men's Bread and Dead men's Bones).

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 Рік тому +1

      Mexico, and maybe Spain, has a bread called Pan dd Muerte. I usually bake a loaf for Halloween 10-31.

    • @incompetentloser4941
      @incompetentloser4941 Рік тому +1

      My grandma used to make dead man's bones, you've reminded me I haven't had them in years

    • @hopsiepike
      @hopsiepike 20 днів тому

      Filled with marzipan to look like marrow. Love it.

  • @Polyeurythane
    @Polyeurythane Рік тому +71

    Man I’m surprised that this was never mentioned in the funeral history type courses I took back in mortuary college, and that I as a mortician of weird fact tastes didn’t know about funeral biscuits.

  • @Ephesians5-14
    @Ephesians5-14 Рік тому +488

    "Pouring one out for the homies" is actually a deeply rooted tribal tradition. I mean we joke about it but it has its own long history too, not just something gangsters do 🙏🏻🙂 I love this episode. Can we get some more spiritual/religious food videos?

    • @legoqueen2445
      @legoqueen2445 Рік тому +47

      Can you share the history? I know when I was in Peru the Chechian (Indegenious) guide taught us to always pour one out for Pacha Mama, their Earth goddess.

    • @borderlinebear5509
      @borderlinebear5509 Рік тому +35

      We do it in Central Madagascar too, on the North East corner of the house or the tomb.

    • @MsFitz134
      @MsFitz134 Рік тому +51

      Sounds like an opportunity for another episode of Drinking History!

    • @revinaque1342
      @revinaque1342 Рік тому +63

      In the Philippines, we have the tradition of pouring out the first shot every time a bottle of hard liquor is opened during a drinking session (particularly when it's done outdoors). It's meant to be an offering to any spirits in the area, to keep them happy and prevent misfortune. There's also the folk belief that it throws out any methanol that may have gathered at the top of the bottle.

    • @adamolupin
      @adamolupin Рік тому +29

      In a lot of neo pagan traditions, an offering is poured out to the gods and ancestors before the humans take a drink.

  • @Zorqueozwald
    @Zorqueozwald Рік тому +39

    As a Utahn, I wonder if the local tradition of "funeral potatoes" (a kind of cheesy potato casserole often served alongside other foods after funerals) comes from the Avril custom. A lot of the Mormon settlers were originally from England so it's possible that they brought the idea with them. Interesting!

    • @Young_Lady_Novelist
      @Young_Lady_Novelist Рік тому +4

      The potatoes would make sense but we probably can’t blame for the weird jello salads though 😂

    • @arlenedavis5770
      @arlenedavis5770 Рік тому +1

      I've always wondered if it was Utahan or Utahn.

    • @russward2612
      @russward2612 11 місяців тому +3

      ​​​@@arlenedavis5770Utahn, only one a.
      Everyone has their own recipe for this too, each better than the next.
      The average Utah funereal feast is almost always: Ham, funeral potatoes, green salad, green beans, rolls, cakes, cookies, brownies. All served in a chapel's cultural hall, a large multipurpose room in Mormon meeting houses.

  • @Nikki-tx6kh
    @Nikki-tx6kh Рік тому +159

    Skull cakepops and coffin gingerbread sounds like lit snacks for a goth themed party. And also, as a Victoriana fan, I'm always amused by their mourning traditions.

    • @chezmoi42
      @chezmoi42 Рік тому +14

      Yes, and don't forget the mourning jewelry, artistically fashioned from the hair of the departed.

    • @Nikki-tx6kh
      @Nikki-tx6kh Рік тому +4

      @@chezmoi42 I know, right?

    • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine
      @0neDoomedSpaceMarine Рік тому +10

      I must try this to attract goths.

    • @MarthaDwyer
      @MarthaDwyer Рік тому +4

      And the photos of the family with the dearly departed.

    • @zathtanks
      @zathtanks Рік тому +1

      There’s a far better version of this episode done but ask a mortician

  • @R.c.475
    @R.c.475 Рік тому +46

    As a funeral director, I can't wait to try my hand at making these.

  • @Yanrogue
    @Yanrogue Рік тому +45

    Just eat some angel food cake with your funeral biscuits and they cancel each other out.

  • @Ammeeeeeeer
    @Ammeeeeeeer Рік тому +72

    Imagine having "sin eater" on your CV....now there's a possible alternate career for me 🤪

    • @karaamundson3964
      @karaamundson3964 Рік тому +1

      I'll eat 'um

    • @cherylmaden5989
      @cherylmaden5989 Рік тому +2

      Dude i need a job so bad rt now...sin eater sounds perfect! When can I start?😁

  • @dogalrorn
    @dogalrorn Рік тому +55

    If they don't serve this at my funeral, I wont bother with being dead.

  • @chefthom72
    @chefthom72 Рік тому +21

    Love the channel. Years ago I found a cookbook entitled "Death Warmed Over". It was recipes for funeral meals around the world.

  • @somon90
    @somon90 Рік тому +63

    We had a related tradition in Sweden around the turn of the 19th century. Instead of biscuits we had confections, little richly decorated funeral candies in fancy wrappers called begravningskonfekt.

  • @hawkatsea
    @hawkatsea Рік тому +49

    For later autum episode: ACORNS! I'm not a huge, huge fan of the flavor, but I experienced peak fascination when a former roommate from the Mohawk Nation once processed and cooked acorns straight from the back woods. I'd really love to see aTasting History story on acorns. Maybe Thanksgiving or next Indigenous Peoples Day :)

    • @cierajock501
      @cierajock501 Рік тому +12

      Just make sure you get the tannins out!

    • @cmcmillan7987
      @cmcmillan7987 Рік тому +11

      Acorn flour is having a resurgence in popularity, as it is gluten free. As mentioned need to soak to remove tannins or its inedible.

    • @truth4004
      @truth4004 Рік тому

      It sounds tasty lol and i like to feed squirrels.

  • @Firegen1
    @Firegen1 Рік тому +79

    Richer your gingerbread
    The tastier your sin
    Don't adhere to the board
    With flour spread aplenty
    Outcast or hero eater of sin
    Our last great sin eater
    Lost so much for soul
    Respect of his resting place
    For taking so much in
    One cake and one flaggon of ale
    A succession of ceremony
    Connecting the future to the past
    The lasting crumbs of this funeral rite
    That stays herein with us

  • @shotgunbettygaming
    @shotgunbettygaming Рік тому +5

    When I was a LITTLE kid (like 5 or 6) I saw the episode of Night Gallery on re-runs that had Sin Eaters in it. It scared the heck out of me and made me cry, the thought of people eating sin terrified me. The body on the table round which they ate didn't phase me one iota but the actual sin eating hit me with the 'flight' response.
    THEN my father, realizing I was not playing around and was truly upset, explained to me what/who they were and how their sacrifice and willingness to do the job saved so many souls in the afterlife.
    I was able to finish the episode with renewed curiosity and wonder at the people who gave so much to strangers. They didn't frighten me anymore...but all these decades later I remember that episode like I saw it yesterday.

    • @quiltguy1906
      @quiltguy1906 3 місяці тому +1

      I remember seeing that episode, it really was horrific at the end. ***SPOILER*** The local sin eater was dead, and there was no one to "eat" on his behalf except his own son who had never done it. Because the elder sineater had absorbed so many sins gradually over his lifetime his body could handle it. When his inexperienced son absorbed a lifetime of sins from his dead father, it overwhelmed his body. I'll leave the denouement to your imagination, until you can view the actual episode. You have been warned.😵😈😫

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja Рік тому +137

    Funeral biscuits might simply have similar origins as the Norse grave-ale, being something to serve to the gathered mourners. We also have “barsel”, which comes from “barns-øl” meaning “bairn-ale” and is a celebration of the birth of a child.

    • @bigred9428
      @bigred9428 Рік тому +7

      I think they probably just knew that a sweet treat after something like a funeral (where you did not eat beforehand) helps you feel better.

    • @sydneyfairbairn3773
      @sydneyfairbairn3773 Рік тому

      As a "bairn" I love this idea!

  • @tracybartels7535
    @tracybartels7535 Рік тому +51

    The "overactive Victorian imagination" artwork is on point. All the artwork is unusually enjoyable this week, and the subject matter excellent as always, plus delightfully ghoulish. Happy Halloween!

  • @zenkakuji3776
    @zenkakuji3776 Рік тому +85

    Those crispier ginger breads made me think that these could be prepared well in advance as "funeral hard tack". Always ready for when they are needed on life's journey and beyond....

    • @airenmoonwolf2520
      @airenmoonwolf2520 Рік тому +30

      ...and now I am picturing Max clinking together gingerbread cookies as funeral hard tack...

    • @MargaretUK
      @MargaretUK Рік тому +10

      I was waiting for him to do that, but was disappointed 😔

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Рік тому +10

      @@airenmoonwolf2520 Now I'm surprised the Victorians didn't think of that. It would make for cruelty against the poor but with a classic distorted narrative of actually being kind.

    • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine
      @0neDoomedSpaceMarine Рік тому +6

      CLACK CLACK

    • @MargaretUK
      @MargaretUK Рік тому +2

      @@0neDoomedSpaceMarine 😂😂😂

  • @klovesbooks
    @klovesbooks Рік тому +13

    I read a book called The Last Sin Eater (by Francine Rivers) in the 6th grade and was briefly obsessed with the idea of sin eaters. I haven’t thought about the concept in over a 15 years but it was a weird blast from the past to have it be so central to today’s video. Never knew it was a real historical practice, either!

    • @LaLayla99
      @LaLayla99 Рік тому

      I thought of that book too! I was wondering if Max would talk about any history of that tradition in the U.S.

    • @loriwilson4933
      @loriwilson4933 Рік тому

      I read it too. There’s also a movie based on it, which I’ve only found on UA-cam.

    • @janettearaya284
      @janettearaya284 3 місяці тому

      A wonderful book. Francine Rivers is an excellent author who does her research well! A must-read!

  • @DISCUSSTING
    @DISCUSSTING Рік тому +173

    Sin Eaters are one of my favorite morbid religious concepts I ever learned about. Max, once again, is knocking it out of the park!

    • @Ephesians5-14
      @Ephesians5-14 Рік тому +9

      Same!!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +31

      They’re so intriguing

    • @djonfonsteen6331
      @djonfonsteen6331 Рік тому +13

      Now we know why all those folk were allowed to attend the Queens funeral. We all witnessed those free biscuits.

    • @thesexybatman263
      @thesexybatman263 Рік тому +8

      Mi stupid memelord brain mixed "morbid religious" into morbius and now I cannot unread it.

    • @DISCUSSTING
      @DISCUSSTING Рік тому +3

      @@thesexybatman263 IT'S MORBIN' TIME

  • @chloecarrera2136
    @chloecarrera2136 Рік тому +12

    I love my gingerbread very spiced and even like that little hint of bitterness from the molasses or treacle. So these sound AWESOME.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Рік тому +190

    Not to sound morbid but at Max’s funeral, we get a Funeral Biscuit Cake Pop along with a Complementary Pokémon Plushy.

  • @EastWind123
    @EastWind123 Рік тому +9

    I had never heard of the Sin Eater before in my life, and now it's come up twice in one week. The Sin Eater was JUST mentioned on one of my favorite shows, Shetland. Wild.

  • @toadsprout
    @toadsprout Рік тому +67

    we learned about sin eaters in west virginia history. there were, for a while, still people doing this in isolated communities in the appalachian mountains.
    idk if this gets mentioned later in the video lol im just too excited to mention it

    • @The_Cherokee_Gypsy
      @The_Cherokee_Gypsy Рік тому +9

      I love ANYTHING Appalachia!!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +19

      I believe I give it a brief mention that it came this way, but don’t go into it.

    • @e.urbach7780
      @e.urbach7780 Рік тому +2

      I wonder if the Foxfire books mention it? That's the kind of thing I would expect to be recorded in them ...

  • @LiveFreeOrDieDH
    @LiveFreeOrDieDH Рік тому +10

    Max regaling the younger generations with tales of Slap Bracelets:
    "Time for... HISTORY!"

  • @gunz-ahimbo
    @gunz-ahimbo Рік тому +145

    I learned about this topic as a “fun” fact for Final Fantasy XIV: Shadowbringers! In the game, “Sin eaters” are the names of angelic beasts corrupted by light with the sole purpose of excising sin of anyone who crosses their path. Meol is also featured, as a perfectly innocent food that the citizens of Eulmore are served, and that the impoverished surrounding Eulmore beg for :)
    Thank you for giving me a great video that I can show my friends coming to a horrifying realization!

    • @katarh
      @katarh Рік тому +29

      Haha I was hoping I'd find someone else who played XIV and immediately went "Oh no." Meol was *horrifying.*

    • @lucarubinstein3907
      @lucarubinstein3907 Рік тому +17

      looking for this in the comments! I learned about real sin eaters a few months ago and was delighted/horrified.

    • @Naixatloz
      @Naixatloz Рік тому +10

      No less than three people sent me this video because I RP a sin eater.

    • @jshirato
      @jshirato Рік тому +17

      I'm glad I wasn't the only one who thought of Final Fantasy 14 when I saw the title/I was hoping someone to find someone else mentioning it in the comments 😅Was interesting to learn about the original concept/what they were presumably named after!
      Even though it isn't quite the same concept (and it definitely feels like it's meant to be ironic/negative in their case), the FF14 ones apparently got their name from being 'seen as agents of divine punishment, sent to devour sin and sinner both' (thanks Urianger), so I guess there is still the general idea of having your sins eaten and therefore being 'forgiven'. (And given what meol is, I guess you could also say that the sins ended up in the bread in a way...)

    • @DeNihility
      @DeNihility Рік тому +3

      This was definitely a TIL.

  • @peterhospodar7876
    @peterhospodar7876 Рік тому +15

    A tradition worth bringing back.. everyone can use a cookie at a funeral.

  • @BobBob-wi6ct
    @BobBob-wi6ct Рік тому +52

    But where can I find a debt eater? I’d provide an amazing meal to that person

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +24

      😂 wouldn’t that be nice. A three course meal of a mortgage, student loans and a Target credit card bill.

    • @maudline
      @maudline Рік тому +4

      Did you come by it in sinful ways then maybe this could still work lol

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Рік тому

      Surely, it'd be possible to invite someone to dinner and have them sign a contract that says, in small print, "by eating this meal you agree to take on all of the outstanding debts owed by the host."

    • @gabrielbernard5440
      @gabrielbernard5440 Рік тому +1

      Dark web, find a cannibal and let them find the person you owe and eat them, therefor eating your debt

  • @vowgallant4049
    @vowgallant4049 Рік тому +5

    "Sin eating" sounds like something out of Dark Souls.

  • @BananaPeelEuroTrash
    @BananaPeelEuroTrash Рік тому +23

    Perfect! Just updated my will so people invited to my funeral will get cookies wrapped in morbid texts reminding them of their own impending doom.

  • @samwoods8333
    @samwoods8333 11 місяців тому +3

    Hey Max, I'm from the area of the southern Appalachian mountains and I remember hearing about a sin eater tradition around here. I think an episode of "The Heartland Series" covers it. As far as if it was private or public, the only account of it that I heard about had the family put the body and the food in a room with an open window and close the door. The sin eater would crawl in through the window, eat the food, and then crawl back out. It's been a long time since I saw it, so watch the episode if you want to know more.

  • @Furry-iousNews
    @Furry-iousNews Рік тому +31

    "We eat not for the dead, but to gird the living for life without them." -Umbrage

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Рік тому

      Pretty much what we did after my great grandma's funeral. It worked, too. Fried chicken has that effect.

    • @violetskies14
      @violetskies14 4 місяці тому

      After my grandmas funeral I had a big meal at the pub we held the wake at, got tipsy, and went home to have a nap. It was weird because I lost my appetite and barely ate for months except that day. It definitely helped.

  • @ragdollrose2687
    @ragdollrose2687 Рік тому +19

    With my current diet, having my soul transfer to a loaf of bread would be very on brand for me 😂

  • @Ephesians5-14
    @Ephesians5-14 Рік тому +79

    When I was a history student, I researched everything I could find about sin eaters!!! The concept would make a truly righteous and gnarly middle ages supernatural thriller ☠️

    • @azureus3644
      @azureus3644 Рік тому +13

      Heath Ledger starred in a movie about sin eating, called The Order. It was set in modern Italy though.
      I’d love to see a period horror piece on the subject done by the people who made The Witch.

    • @HolyKhaaaaan
      @HolyKhaaaaan Рік тому +1

      There was a black and white TV series episode made. I believe the series was called Thriller.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Рік тому +8

      @@azureus3644 Nice idea. Someone who literally absorbed the sins turning into a monster. Perhaps attacking the innocent in some attempt to absorb virtue escaping their curse.

    • @KyrenaH
      @KyrenaH Рік тому +2

      @@patrickmccurry1563 There's already a story on r/nosleep like this. It's really good.

    • @e.urbach7780
      @e.urbach7780 Рік тому +2

      @@patrickmccurry1563 Ooo, maybe like a riff on the Portrait of Dorian Gray, where the person grows more and more monstrous in appearance, except for when they look in a mirror or something ...

  • @nightsong81
    @nightsong81 Рік тому +6

    Gotta love that "Remember to Die" reminder on the Victorian funeral invite. Goodness, I would have forgotten! And then where would I be, immortal and nothing to wear!

  • @fourutubez7294
    @fourutubez7294 Рік тому +28

    In my family we have a funeral tradition of 'Walk Slow" Bread, a fruited bread sliced with butter.

  • @ciprianurea2752
    @ciprianurea2752 Рік тому +4

    My country has a lot of weird traditions for the dead. If food falls on the ground you need to give food to your neighbours because the dead are hungry and they need to say "bogdaproste" so the food reaches the dead. Also after 40 days since someone died you need to make a feast for the family and/or neighbours. We also have a tradition kinda like the day of the dead but its called saturday of the dead and its twice a year(once in summer and once in winter) where you need to make a feast for your dead relatives where you invite your live relatives and/or neighbours and you MUST make a dish called "coliva" which is a sweet firm porridge made out of the inside of the wheat grains and its decorated with candy and wallnuts. It would be amazing if you would make coliva on your channel, its maybe the oldest dessert in my country(Romania)

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Рік тому +79

    Corpse Cake sounds like the centrepiece of an Addams Family Birthday. Most probably Uncle Nick-Nack.

  • @bluevioletandlilac
    @bluevioletandlilac Рік тому +18

    I laughed way more than I should have at you cutting them into casket shapes. It seems appropriately Victorian, really.

  • @frenchfriar
    @frenchfriar Рік тому +51

    I remember when I was young reading a chilling tale about the village sin-eater, which asked the question "if the sin-eater takes on the sins of the village, who will eat the sins of the sin-eater?".
    I still think it's a disturbing idea.
    But those funeral cakes look and sound delicious.
    Fascinating episode again, Max! And Happy Halloween to everyone!

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Рік тому +8

      Presumably the next sin eater.

    • @ShadowsFallOnWings
      @ShadowsFallOnWings Рік тому +18

      ​@@ragnkja yes, but does sin bioaccumulate

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Рік тому +9

      @@ShadowsFallOnWings Eventually, the sins will accumulate to such a quantity that it'll cause an overflow error and reset to 0, so it'll be fine.

    • @elizabethclaiborne6461
      @elizabethclaiborne6461 Рік тому +3

      That was an episode of Night Galkery on TV, a Rod Serling show. I think it was all HP Lovecraft stories. I remember that episode well.

    • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine
      @0neDoomedSpaceMarine Рік тому +5

      Seems fair to me that there would probably have to be some sort of atonement involved for a man who sacrifices himself for the sanctity of his peers.

  • @wingsofhope2
    @wingsofhope2 Рік тому +16

    I remember Ask A Mortician talking about these in her funeral food mukbang. Thanks for giving us the full shebang!

  • @amberamazine
    @amberamazine Рік тому +18

    If you cut and bake the entire slab of gingerbread, or with at least 1in around the cut, it usually doesn't spread as much.
    I use this when I'm making gingerbread for houses. I cut out the window/doors but bake it as one piece. Then it's just a matter of doing some slight re-cutting and you have decent edges.

  • @gammyeme
    @gammyeme Рік тому +14

    Thank you, Max! I've been collecting ideas for my own funeral. Skull shaped cake pops have made the list!

    • @bigred9428
      @bigred9428 Рік тому +2

      I'm going to have the hearse play on loudspeakers "When you see a hearse go by..." Here's to all of us who believe in keeping the FUN in funeral.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Рік тому +44

    At a Savarna Hindu Funeral, you get a buffet before the body is cremated. No biscuits and cookies sealed in white paper. The food is very clearly toned down.

  • @Miarth3000
    @Miarth3000 Рік тому +6

    You can check 'melomakarona' a greek traditional sweet, eaten today during fasting before Christmas. But the history of it comes from ancient times and it was eaten for the souls of dead during funerals. Nowadays people eat 'koliva' in funerals and 'Saturdays of souls', which recipe's history may also have an intersting backstory through many civilisations around the Old World. 🍪🍯

  • @qjames0077
    @qjames0077 Рік тому +319

    If I ever catch my partner going through the fridge at night, now I know what to call her

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +63

      😂

    • @DJDarling
      @DJDarling Рік тому +39

      Be careful with that friend 😳

    • @qjames0077
      @qjames0077 Рік тому +58

      @@DJDarling you're not wrong. She'll probably go from sin eating to visiting sin upon me

    • @MarcusGW1028
      @MarcusGW1028 Рік тому +3

      @@qjames0077 brave man 😅😂😂

    • @madmanmortonyt4890
      @madmanmortonyt4890 Рік тому +45

      "Hey babe, are you on death's door? Cause you're looking like a funeral biscuit to me."

  • @ilovemydog879
    @ilovemydog879 Рік тому +11

    You should do an episode on pan de muerto. The traditional bread eating in Mexico for day of the Dead.

  • @Amanda-zn7ox
    @Amanda-zn7ox Рік тому +69

    I love the channel "Ask A Mortician", and just came from rewatching one of the videos. Then, I find this video uploaded that probably would be the topic of one of Caitlyn Doughty's videos, if not already in her "death mukbang" or some other video that she's covered. I don't remember, but the subject is familiar. Would ha been fun if this were a collab. Any other deathlings in the group?

    • @fugithegreat
      @fugithegreat Рік тому +1

      Me! 🙋‍♀

    • @daveandgena3166
      @daveandgena3166 Рік тому +1

      Hello!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +47

      I’d love to do something with her. I think she’s moving back east right now, but maybe I can take a trip to her in the future.

    • @selkouni7614
      @selkouni7614 Рік тому +1

      Hell yeah! ✌️

    • @heatherinparis
      @heatherinparis Рік тому +6

      @@TastingHistory I adore both you and Caitlyn. Would definitely be onboard for a collab!

  • @Sam..123
    @Sam..123 Рік тому +2

    In some parts of Sweden there is a similar tradition still performed at weddings. After the wedding ceremony everyone in town is invited to wiev the newly wedded who hand out salty biscuits which represents previous "transgressions" and must all be consumed or its bad luck for the marriage and sweat home-brew mead representing future joys to be shared or something like that.

  • @TheGreyProphet
    @TheGreyProphet Рік тому +15

    Funerary practices are fascinating and people offering sustenance to those passed on leads to some awesome things like these delicious biscuts/cookies. Thanks Max you're amazing

  • @keving9111
    @keving9111 Рік тому +2

    In the early 70’s there was a Rod Sterling show called, Night Gallery. One episode, featuring, Richard Thomas, was called, The Sins of the Fathers. It was about the sun eating custom of the Welsh.

  • @lhfirex
    @lhfirex Рік тому +13

    The weirdest thing for me as a big FF14 dork is Sin Eaters are the name of an entire class of enemies in that videogame. Since they're enemies, they're not helping people, but they're a kind of vampire/werewolf-inspired transformation someone takes when they're touched by another Sin Eater, and they generally get named to "Forgiven (Sin)" like "Forgiven Wrath."
    Just funny to think that a pretty popular videogame would take inspiration from an old English tradition for a whole group of monsters.

    • @rifleman2c997
      @rifleman2c997 Рік тому +1

      Warrior of Darkness took care of the last Sin Eater.

    • @tryingtobebetter7235
      @tryingtobebetter7235 Рік тому +2

      One brings biscuits, one brings cakes.

    • @rifleman2c997
      @rifleman2c997 Рік тому +2

      @@tryingtobebetter7235 Two layered confections tumbling through time

  • @kathleengomez3207
    @kathleengomez3207 Рік тому +2

    Prior to COVID, the funeral home I intern at served cookies. It was before I started there so I'm not sure if they served them during the service, visitation or just during the arrangement conference (though I think the latter). They have not done so since I've been there but the cookie maker is still in the break room and occasionally we get into the frozen dough and snack on them.

  • @blackvial
    @blackvial Рік тому +13

    If you want those skull-shaped cake pops at your funeral you better put that in your will

    • @madgevanness4011
      @madgevanness4011 Рік тому +5

      Wills are often read after the funeral. Prepay the funeral and leave the instructions with the funeral home, or if you have a church, leave the instructions (along with lesson and music choices) , with the minister or church office. Or written directions to a trusted friend or family member.

  • @markmartin2292
    @markmartin2292 Рік тому +7

    Wow, man you go places no one else goes. Another great episode. Time with you is never wasted.

  • @fugithegreat
    @fugithegreat Рік тому +16

    I always double the spices in a modern gingerbread recipe, because I really want that spice-forward flavor you've described. Great episode for late October!

    • @chezmoi42
      @chezmoi42 Рік тому

      You might enjoy some finely chopped candied ginger in them, too, for a twist.

  • @CptManboobs
    @CptManboobs Рік тому +4

    I read "Sin Eaters" and then Insatiable starts playing in my head.
    Did you know that the award winning MMORPG final Fantasy XIV has a free trial that goes all the way to Level 60, includes the entire first expansion and has no restrictions on playtime?

  •  Рік тому +8

    ... This is the same recipe my grandmother used for her homemade ginger biscuits (hers were thin and snappy). They were wonderful with a cup of tea. She never made them for any special occasion, though.

  • @jennychavez1278
    @jennychavez1278 Рік тому +3

    Ok just got done making the recipe and not bad! Baked at 350F for 17-20 min. They come out slightly soft and bendy but as they cool they stiffen up and have a great crunch like ginger snaps. Just the right amount of sweet balanced with ginger. Recipe called for 2 heaping spoonfuls of ginger. I used dried ground ginger, did a full tablespoon and a hair less than a second tablespoon since your comments said very pungent taste. Also messed up a bit in that I mixed the dry ingredients first, then added the molasses to incorporate and then 2 sticks of butter from the fridge. It was too late to do the heating with the saucepan part. Mixed everything up and kneaded it to a ball, then set it in the fridge for a few hours to firm up. Maybe it was because of this that the dough held its shape well when baking. The cookies don’t rise much and there was minimal spreading in the oven. Would have loved to have used a round biscuit cutter or skeleton cookie cutter but had to work with the fall leaf cutter I had on hand. Great recipe! Thanks for sharing :)

  • @teacheraprilrogers
    @teacheraprilrogers Рік тому +14

    Absolutely love these videos I learn so much. As a historian the amount of research that is put into the video is so appreciated. As for the sponsor Wondrium. I have had a subscription for years. I use the classes as continuing education and of course fun. I have even shared classes in my own classroom when I have needed more to get a point across. Thank you for great food videos.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Рік тому +4

      Thank you! And from a proper historian, that is praise indeed 😁

    • @nat3007
      @nat3007 Рік тому

      I would have loved to have been a historian sometimes I wish I stayed on after my History degree.

  • @mandalorfortytwo4557
    @mandalorfortytwo4557 Рік тому +7

    You weren't dropping it on the floor; you were giving a bit to Jaime as he always likes to get involved in your work, Papa! 🤗 Another awesome installment! Much anticipation from Maine for the next session! 💜

    • @bigred9428
      @bigred9428 Рік тому +5

      I was thinking, "That's gonna stick to the cat's teeth."

  • @francescomauro6051
    @francescomauro6051 Рік тому +8

    In Sicily there are cookies eaten during the day of the dead called dead's bones. They are really nice and soft the first day you make them the next day they'll turn rock hard...you know like real bones. The taste is simple non too sweet and cloves are used in the mix so it's quite aromatic

  • @acmcbride-olson9320
    @acmcbride-olson9320 Рік тому +1

    Sin Eater also seems like a good gig for an extreme introvert who wanted free food. Everyone stays away and sometimes you get cookies.

  • @chefmdecamp
    @chefmdecamp Рік тому +7

    In addition to the sentiment that ginger bread needs to be much stronger in flavor in the US, may I suggest that "ginger ale" be forced to be as potent as Jamaican ginger beer, or be required to change its name to "fizzy syrup that's wistfully reminiscent of ginger"?

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Рік тому +1

      Norwegian (commercial) ginger ale is properly gingery, but unfortunately also _really_ carbonated, like soft drinks from that brewery (Dahls, which is also the brewery behind the real Julebrus) tend to be.

  • @kaimerry1587
    @kaimerry1587 Рік тому +1

    The tradition of a funeral feast lives on in the southern USA. We celebrate their lives, and make merry to the ones no longer here to do so themselves.

  • @EdBurke37
    @EdBurke37 Рік тому +5

    "The village Sin Eater"
    Well now every Final Fantasy 14 player has a twitch.

  • @SpanishEclectic
    @SpanishEclectic Рік тому +4

    Victorian Funereal Warehouse. Wow. In the U.S., seances were all the rage after the Civil War, with people wanting to contact their lost loved ones. I love ginger, and can rarely find anything with enough to suit me. I put both chopped candied ginger, and powdered ginger in my gingerbread loaves. I like a chewy ginger cookie. I'll have to try this recipe, which seems blissfully simple. Thanks for all of the background on the subject.

  • @loganl3746
    @loganl3746 Рік тому +5

    You stamping your biscuits with that skull pattern seems to have solve a bit of a mystery I'd had! A while ago, I saw a post about a set of wooden stamps for gingerbread made for the festival of Purim. I bet their gingerbread must have been like this in order to utilized these stamps! Wonderful :D

  • @summer2112
    @summer2112 Рік тому +2

    The book ‘precious bane’ by Mary Webb centres around sin eating and the remnants of that act in the 18th century. Though written much later Mary collated local folklore in Shropshire.
    I’ve a very old book called the new art of confectionary ( no cover no date) with funeral bunns ( spelled that way) and funeral biscuits. Given the quantities and the size they were meant for families to share. The cakes were made with barm so it links nicely. I’ve also been given funeral buns which were rectangular, covered in black edged grease proof paper and topped with a sprig of Rosemary.

  • @TenositSergeich
    @TenositSergeich Рік тому +5

    Funerary feasts are a perfectly normal thing here in Eastern Europe. Different cultures have different approaches to it, and tradition continues to this day in one form or the other. On territory of former Soviet Union, grave lots are larger and much more ornate than is the norm in England or US (perhaps that's something that should be taken), and often include small table and benches for people to rest and imbibe food on the wakes. Some food is left behind, usually small non-perishables like candy.

  • @acboesefrau7729
    @acboesefrau7729 Рік тому +1

    We should never forget one purpose of funeral food, which was important in the age before public transport or cars were common:
    People often had to walk quite a distance to attend an funeral. That is the reason why in my home region ( Upper Frankonia = North of Bavaria) it is still today common to serve some dry cake at a funeral and never a cake with cream. It has to be transportable so you can take it with you on your way home. Either as a meal for yourself on your walk back or as a "souvenir" to those at home, who could not attend. As a savoury dish you usually get rolls cut in half with either sausage, bacon or cheese on it. Also easily transportable.
    So a typical cake offered at a funeral would be a sweet yeast dough baked with crumbles on a baking sheet. It isn't much work to produce if you have to bake it yourself while organising a funeral and it is easily obtained from a baker with one days notice in advance. And you cn wrap it in paper and take it with you.

  • @dilvish9317
    @dilvish9317 Рік тому +7

    Great video and definitely earned a subscription. One interesting side note re. Sin Eating. Manley Wade Wellman (the late author of the "Silver John" stories that centered on dirt poor life in Appalachia and the Carolinas) had a couple of stories mentioning sin eating still being practiced in some of those extremely rural part in the mountains. His story "Trill Coster's Burden" and "Sin's Doorway" used this as a central device to the plot of the stories. They are collected in the anthology "Who Fears The Devil" that was published originally in 1963. The stories deep dive into the religious implications of someone "eating" another's sins. In these stories though, it was more of a meal than biscuits or cookies. Great stories and was really interesting to hear your food angle on this practice!

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 Рік тому

      A high proportion of the colonists that settled in Appalachia are Scots-Irish and some Welsh-that is, from places where sin eating was practiced. However, looking at the book, it is generally categorized as fantasy and horror-fiction, not history, anthropology, or any other category suggestive of accurate representations?

  • @Arcane_Archer
    @Arcane_Archer Рік тому +3

    My dad passed away unexpectedly over the weekend, and this was... oddly soothing.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Рік тому +1

      Sorry for your loss.

    • @kwells179
      @kwells179 Рік тому +1

      So sorry for your loss.

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Рік тому

      Sending virtual hugs ❤

  • @ohariana3150
    @ohariana3150 Рік тому +48

    Sin eaters? 👻Corpse Cakes?🎃 The decor?💀 The spooky vibes are ✨ giving ✨

  • @catbeara
    @catbeara Рік тому

    In Ireland at Wakes there will always be a lot of food served. A Wake is where the dead person is left at their house, or sometimes at the house of a relative or in a funeral home, and people come and visit the body and the loved ones. It's a chance for people to spend time with and check in on those who are grieving, to drop off food for them, and to reminisce about the person who has passed away. Of course a lot of the food will also be eaten by the guests and visitors, because people spend hours upon hours at Wakes sometimes.

    • @catbeara
      @catbeara Рік тому

      If you look at the "wake (ceremony)" page on Wikipedia you'll see what I mean.

  • @carolynallisee2463
    @carolynallisee2463 Рік тому +12

    Listening to this, it does shine a light on modern funeral customs, at least here in the UK. I don't suppose many people wonder about going back the the deceased's residence and eating a few sandwiches, sausage rolls, and a slice of cake or two with a cup of tea or coffee. Yet, perhaps this is what is left of a custom of eating a final meal with the departed, as well as the rite of Avril. Death seems to be the one life stage almost no-one wants to talk about, so perhaps the degeneration of funeral customs is part and parcel of that!

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Рік тому +1

      It’s basically the modern version of a gravøl, or grave-ale.

    • @georgeoldsterd8994
      @georgeoldsterd8994 Рік тому +1

      What's the rite of Avril?

    • @joyful_tanya
      @joyful_tanya Рік тому +2

      @@georgeoldsterd8994 it's in the video at 13:37

    • @isabelled4871
      @isabelled4871 Рік тому +5

      Same thing in rural France and it's also practical, I mean people sometimes came/ come from quite a long distance away and you just can't send them away hungry, it would be considered very bad form. Also the close relatives do need a bit of strength in the form of food after a funeral so... A little snack or meal is just what everybody needs.

    • @madgevanness4011
      @madgevanness4011 Рік тому +1

      There is a story that food is a way to affirm life just as making love before the funeral.

  • @mohiothman8170
    @mohiothman8170 Рік тому +4

    I first came across a description of a "sin eater" in Master and Commander, the first book in the Aubrey-Maturin series (which the movie of the same name is based on). One of the sailors was being ostracized by the others because they discovered that he worked as a sin eater ashore.

  • @MrMegaManFan
    @MrMegaManFan Рік тому +15

    You had me at "funeral biscuits." Actually you have me pretty much like clockwork every Tuesday morning. Thanks for the consistently wonderful content!

  • @misskate3815
    @misskate3815 Рік тому +29

    I left cherry fun dip candy on my brother’s grave last week, but first I yelled at him for being so rude as to go ahead and leave me behind. Ten years this New Years since he was murdered.

    • @maddieb.4282
      @maddieb.4282 Рік тому +6

      If he was murdered it wasn’t really his fault right? Don’t yell at the poor guy lol