I love this as a tribute to Dorcas and I love the honoring of the tradition. I teared up when her daughter said that her father has no peers left. Seriously, great job on this video.
This was actually really beautiful and I love how Eric started us off at the root of the story and then making the original Campbell's. You can really see how intentional and thoughtful you were about honoring Dorca and her family! So special.
Eric you always provide such a wholesome and calming experience through your love of food. This episode was even more special with the connections and stories from Dorcas' family. Love your work and will be attempting to make your final version!
Unreal! My (new) fiancée’s grandmother just asked me to make green bean casserole for the first Thanksgiving I am having with their family! I’ve never made it before and was never a huge fan of it. This looks amazing. THANK YOU FOR THIS.
Haha well, you may be right. However, with new additions to families comes new recipes, so I’m going to make this one and hope they love it. If they don’t, well it was a risk worth taking.
As a child in the 1970's I literally started reading cookbooks to find a recipe that would make frozen green beans taste palatable. They were just one inch pieces of spongey drab green. However, the search started me on a life long journey as a cook and baker for which I am grateful. I think perhaps, just now, I have finally found the recipe I have been seeking for decades. Thanks Eric Kim! I admit to still being a little skeptical, but am I am very much looking forward to trying this.
This time of year is like a series of games leading up to a culinary superbowl. I love it! I love Eric too. Not a huge fan of any green bean casserole admittedly, but i'll watch an Eric Kim cooking video for the wholesome, calming mood he sets.
I'm the only person I know who is obsessed with green bean casserole! I make it every year just for me lol loved seeing the variety of recipes-- Absolutely starving now!
Excited to try Millie's version, high praise! I've seen a lot of green bean recipe videos, but I've never seen anyone dive into the history this way, really interesting. One thing we've started doing that has elevated our casserole is to mix French's onions with fried jalapeno (we put the mix on half, and just onions on the other for the guests to choose), and that crunchy bit of heat is AMAZING!
I make personal sized green bean casseroles all the time. This was a great video idea!!! Can’t wait for more Thanksgiving and Christmas content coming!
So TLDW: Use frozen green beans and boil half of them in chicken stock, add half right before baking, and add celery salt to the bean broth and the roux. Using the green bean boiling broth in the roux adds more green bean flavor while the celery salt helps the soup taste more like the canned version. A lot of the techniques that made for a better casserole went against the perceived spirit of the original by taking more time, but if you have the time, consider roasting the beans and mushrooms on a sheetpan rather than boiling. Personal tip: if you want another type to try, toss some of the French's onions in a food processor along with some fresh-grated Parmesan and unflavored bread crumbs and blend it into a crumby texture, add melted butter, press the mixture into your casserole pan to make a crust and blind-bake it. Add whatever version of the casserole to the crust and bake as normal. (I wouldn't recommend using any Campbell's soup in this version though, since the salt content will be through the roof.) You can even make this in a round pan and treat it like a green bean casserole pie.
Really really enjoyed this video. I'm doing my annual Thanksgiving homework and I feel quite blessed to have discovered this. Thank you so much for doing all that work. What stood out the most for me was your assertion that a longer cooked green bean gives "that flavor, that original green bean casserole flavor". So, I'll be keeping that in mind for sure. Very excited to start cooking now. Top notch content.
Always has been and it always will be a family favorite in our household. When I was growing up we had it, when my mother was growing up she had it, it is a staple in our house around the holidays. And then sometimes, just because, it's so dang good! Thanks to Dorcas we still eat good lol
You were so respectful to the older iterations. My family never did green bean casserole so it isn't part of my repertoire. For some reason I decided to make it so, this Thanksgiving, and I appreciate your diligence. 🦃
It's interesting that Eric felt like Millie's recipe was transcendent and then in his own version subsequently deleted all the ingredients he took from her recipe 😂
German here who has never seen, or eaten, a green bean casserole, and was, for the first time in her life, invited to a friendsgiving this year... with the daunting task of making the green bean casserole - in a country where there is no Campbells...This is a literal life saver. I think it's given me a good amount of pointers on where I want to go with this dish, and how to marry my cooking experience into it in a fun way. I'm putting my ideas here, so people can tell me which ones of them are horrible, bad, no-good ideas before Thursday comes around: 1. I'm definitely going to be using savory and thyme in my cream of mushroom. Savory is a herb that, in German, is literally called "bean-herb" so not putting it when using beans would make it instantly less bean-flavored for me. 2. Growing up, my family made something called Zwiebelsahneschnitzel - which is a slowroasted dish where we're marinating onions in a heavy cream and bouillon mixture for a whole day before using the mix to cover pork cutlets, marinating that some more, and then putting it in the oven on 160°C for like 3 hours. I feel like marinating half my onions that exact way and then straining them, using the strained liquid for my roux, and adding those onions back in afterwards would make for a nice depth of flavor. 2.2 I also think giving the casserole a longer time in the oven on low and only adding additional, crispy onions on top only at the halfway point should help infusing things. I'm thinking 2 hours total? (I think it should be mentioned I'm not roasting a turkey and will have ample oven space, so time is not a restricting factor) 2.3. I'll be french frying my own onions from one half of those marinated ones - the other half going on there unfried. I do hope this'll turn out delicious. I'm really getting excited now :)
I would also include marjoram and a bit of sage in your soup mixture if you have them on hand. Also, if you can get whole nutmeg, I grate like an eighth of one into the cream soup. It feels like a lot, but nutmeg is amazing. Honestly, I wouldn't fry my own onions (again; I've done it and it sucks). I would just use your onions marinated, slice them and include them because that sounds awesome. Then use some toasted breadcrumbs to crunch up the top. Or you could buy Röstzwiebeln. I've seen it sold as a hot dog and burger topping.
Thank you for your thoughts. I've never used savory, didn't know what it looked like (looked it up), have no clue how it smells, but I'm fascinated that it's called bean herb. How cool! Soaking the onions in cream for a day before sounds like a process for breaking down the onions without heat and sure, the cream would then be nicely infused. I change a little something every year in my Green Bean Casserole. One year, I made my own onion rings to go on top, but my onions were normal sized. Last year, I saw really small onions (abt. 3cm. diameter) at a specialty store. They're not the 1cm. cocktail onions. They're just the right size to fry in rings. So, I'll fry some again this year. And now you have to tell us - how did your green bean casserole turn out? ☺
IN the past I've used the Roasted Garlic Mushroom Soup instead of regular, the roasted garlic adds another good flavor to the mix, that I think would be a good addition to this.
If you can believe it, I just had a discussion with a family member about Green Bean Casserole, and how, if we were going to have it for TG, I wanted an updated version. And here comes Eric Kim with a response to my wish! Thanks. Gonna try yours for a meal for 25. Happy Thanksgiving.
I have both of those recipes from "The Joy of Cooking" in my mother's 1946 copy, which was compiled by Irma Rombauer. The recipes have been moved and shortened for the 1964 edition that she did with her daughter, Marion. My second version of the book, published later, still contains the two recipes. I haven't unpacked the most recent version, but my bet is that the New York editor who refashioned the original book in many ways I think of as being "New York," and not in a particularly flattering way, I haven't unpacked from my recent move. I'll check it, but my bet is that it has béchamel made from scratch, because that's what she did to the tuna casserole recipe I've used most of my life, which calls for canned cream of mushroom soup too. I can only remember what it was like when I was married, working full time, and had a young son, it was outside my wheelhouse to come home from work and make béchamel for tuna casserole. Cream of mushroom soup was just fine in those days, and faster. Actually, Whole Foods carries haricots vertes frozen that are pretty good on their own. I prefer them frozen to the regular frozen green beans, I think. The squeaky thing you mention, to me, makes them seem more like fresh beans, which is preferable to mushy frozen or canned beans.
My favorite green beans are canned French cut/style. I fold cooked bacon, caramelized onions, extra sautéed mushrooms and a little Monterey Jack cheese into my casserole. It's so flavorful and creamy. The family loves it!
I highly recommend you use Campbell's Golden Mushroom soup instead of the regular Cream of Mushroom. Also just use heavy whipping cream instead of milk. Super easy changes for a big improvement.
I just love the idea of "Make it your own" . Since I've reconstructed the SweetPotato & reinvented the Creamed spinach/broccoli side-dishes, I'm now the official got-to Holiday Guy.
A year late, but green bean casserole is a favorite of mine. The recipe my family uses is a bit different: French-style cut green beans, mushroom soup, green onions, sour cream, bacon and small chunks of cheddar cheese. Bread crumb topping.
My feeling about green bean casserole is if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it! I like the familiar taste from my childhood and don’t want garlic, red pepper flakes, soy sauce, bread or cracker crumbs or cheese!
I think removing the mushrooms worked in the final recipe because liteally, it did not use the canned cream of mushroom. I guess the other recipes added the mushroom simply to amp up the mushroom flavor and additional "meaty" nonmeat component (plus the umami)
I don't like green beans. I never have. I watched this entire video because I find this series (and Eric) interesting and entertaining. I hope we get to see more.
This might be an unpopular opinion, its probably nostalgia based, but frozen/fresh green beans just dont have the right texture for me. They're not mushy enough? I do a variation of allrecipes but would like to incorporate elements of Millie's and Eric's recipes! Still can't beat all cans for last minute holiday parties/potlucks though.
I’m really surprised that soy sauce is in the original recipe from 1955, and that it was common in people’s pantries. (My 1/2 Japanese mom was born two years after it was created - but in the South)
Made it and it is no better than the green been casserole sludge we all grew up with. The flavor is bland, the bean texture is bad and I don't think it is an improvement. I don't like the original much but this isn't an improvement, oddly. And what the hell is up with Bell's fried onions???? The only onions are by French's. Everyone knows it is French's fried onions. Jesus. This kid knows nothing.
Couldn't help but feel underwhelmed that the final result had no mushrooms, barely any spices, and no cheesiness. Obviously to each is own and Eric's palate is what called the shots on his version, but I wasn't tempted by it. Also, making 13 (!!!) recipes seemed really redundant and wasteful at some point - food waste is a huge issue anyway and cutting 5 of those recipes wouldn't have really affected the final product.
People deserved to be paid for their work. There's a saying that if you're not paying for a product, *you* are the product. "Free" just means your viewership is being sold to advertisers. 😅
@@spikednautilus it seems to escape you that there are ads on the web pages. Whenever an ad appears on your screen, the NYT gets paid. Also, NYT gets paid for every view this video gets. So what you wrote is just not valid.
There aren't nearly enough ads in their site or on their UA-cam channel to support the number of staff required to run the publication. Even solo content creators and small teams on UA-cam must take on sponsorships because UA-cam's payout alone cannot help them make their bills. If it upsets you that these recipes require a subscription for access, just watch another channel.
I love this as a tribute to Dorcas and I love the honoring of the tradition. I teared up when her daughter said that her father has no peers left. Seriously, great job on this video.
Dorcas was a wonderful cook and an exceptional lover.
Exactly this! Me too!
Agreed
Wtf be respectful @@clairevancleave1508
This was actually really beautiful and I love how Eric started us off at the root of the story and then making the original Campbell's. You can really see how intentional and thoughtful you were about honoring Dorca and her family! So special.
I liked that the final casserole was done in a real kitchen and not the NYT kitchen. It felt more authentic and like I was in the kitchen with Eric.
I did not expect a video on green bean casserole to make me cry, but here we are. Eric, this video was so lovely!
Eric you always provide such a wholesome and calming experience through your love of food. This episode was even more special with the connections and stories from Dorcas' family.
Love your work and will be attempting to make your final version!
Unreal! My (new) fiancée’s grandmother just asked me to make green bean casserole for the first Thanksgiving I am having with their family! I’ve never made it before and was never a huge fan of it. This looks amazing. THANK YOU FOR THIS.
It’s a trap. Get her recipe. Make it exactly. Her family wants the traditional dish! For some it is the thing they wait all year to eat.
Haha well, you may be right. However, with new additions to families comes new recipes, so I’m going to make this one and hope they love it. If they don’t, well it was a risk worth taking.
@@toastmybagel Let me know how it turns out! I am rooting for you!
I will! @@DuckyB
good luck!! 🤗🤗
Discovering this video one year later was such a treat !! Eric is awesome - been really enjoying all his content lately. Great vid.
I'm glad 2 C young ppl. Keeping some old classic recipes. Yet updating them.
Really cool video idea. Love seeing you talk to the husband/kid of the creator. Really neat.
Who is here in 2024 getting ready for Thanksgiving! 😂
Honestly I really enjoy these series! 🤗 It teaches me a lot about how 1 change or tweak to a recipe affects the outcome of the dish
Love the green highlighting every time there was a new ingredient introduced!
Love how kind you were about each recipe even when it clearly wasn’t very good 😂 no thank you on the joy of cooking tomato soup version.
Didnt seem to like Alton Brown’s either!
As a child in the 1970's I literally started reading cookbooks to find a recipe that would make frozen green beans taste palatable. They were just one inch pieces of spongey drab green. However, the search started me on a life long journey as a cook and baker for which I am grateful. I think perhaps, just now, I have finally found the recipe I have been seeking for decades. Thanks Eric Kim! I admit to still being a little skeptical, but am I am very much looking forward to trying this.
This time of year is like a series of games leading up to a culinary superbowl. I love it! I love Eric too. Not a huge fan of any green bean casserole admittedly, but i'll watch an Eric Kim cooking video for the wholesome, calming mood he sets.
French cut frozen beans are a fantastic way to go.
I'm the only person I know who is obsessed with green bean casserole! I make it every year just for me lol loved seeing the variety of recipes-- Absolutely starving now!
Excited to try Millie's version, high praise! I've seen a lot of green bean recipe videos, but I've never seen anyone dive into the history this way, really interesting.
One thing we've started doing that has elevated our casserole is to mix French's onions with fried jalapeno (we put the mix on half, and just onions on the other for the guests to choose), and that crunchy bit of heat is AMAZING!
tracking recipe edits like this is genius!
I make personal sized green bean casseroles all the time. This was a great video idea!!! Can’t wait for more Thanksgiving and Christmas content coming!
So TLDW: Use frozen green beans and boil half of them in chicken stock, add half right before baking, and add celery salt to the bean broth and the roux. Using the green bean boiling broth in the roux adds more green bean flavor while the celery salt helps the soup taste more like the canned version.
A lot of the techniques that made for a better casserole went against the perceived spirit of the original by taking more time, but if you have the time, consider roasting the beans and mushrooms on a sheetpan rather than boiling.
Personal tip: if you want another type to try, toss some of the French's onions in a food processor along with some fresh-grated Parmesan and unflavored bread crumbs and blend it into a crumby texture, add melted butter, press the mixture into your casserole pan to make a crust and blind-bake it. Add whatever version of the casserole to the crust and bake as normal. (I wouldn't recommend using any Campbell's soup in this version though, since the salt content will be through the roof.) You can even make this in a round pan and treat it like a green bean casserole pie.
I felt that desire to eat the flat French's onion. I felt it in my bones.
Brilliant deconstruction and rebuild. Well done!
Really really enjoyed this video. I'm doing my annual Thanksgiving homework and I feel quite blessed to have discovered this. Thank you so much for doing all that work. What stood out the most for me was your assertion that a longer cooked green bean gives "that flavor, that original green bean casserole flavor". So, I'll be keeping that in mind for sure. Very excited to start cooking now. Top notch content.
Always has been and it always will be a family favorite in our household. When I was growing up we had it, when my mother was growing up she had it, it is a staple in our house around the holidays. And then sometimes, just because, it's so dang good! Thanks to Dorcas we still eat good lol
I am so craving this now. I really like Millie's recipes too.
You were so respectful to the older iterations. My family never did green bean casserole so it isn't part of my repertoire. For some reason I decided to make it so, this Thanksgiving, and I appreciate your diligence. 🦃
Every time I hear someone say “fold in” I think of the iconic Schitts Creek scene of folding in the cheese.
It's interesting that Eric felt like Millie's recipe was transcendent and then in his own version subsequently deleted all the ingredients he took from her recipe 😂
A story told through a casserole. Lovely!
Awesome story with the family’s input!
German here who has never seen, or eaten, a green bean casserole, and was, for the first time in her life, invited to a friendsgiving this year... with the daunting task of making the green bean casserole - in a country where there is no Campbells...This is a literal life saver. I think it's given me a good amount of pointers on where I want to go with this dish, and how to marry my cooking experience into it in a fun way.
I'm putting my ideas here, so people can tell me which ones of them are horrible, bad, no-good ideas before Thursday comes around:
1. I'm definitely going to be using savory and thyme in my cream of mushroom. Savory is a herb that, in German, is literally called "bean-herb" so not putting it when using beans would make it instantly less bean-flavored for me.
2. Growing up, my family made something called Zwiebelsahneschnitzel - which is a slowroasted dish where we're marinating onions in a heavy cream and bouillon mixture for a whole day before using the mix to cover pork cutlets, marinating that some more, and then putting it in the oven on 160°C for like 3 hours. I feel like marinating half my onions that exact way and then straining them, using the strained liquid for my roux, and adding those onions back in afterwards would make for a nice depth of flavor.
2.2 I also think giving the casserole a longer time in the oven on low and only adding additional, crispy onions on top only at the halfway point should help infusing things. I'm thinking 2 hours total? (I think it should be mentioned I'm not roasting a turkey and will have ample oven space, so time is not a restricting factor)
2.3. I'll be french frying my own onions from one half of those marinated ones - the other half going on there unfried.
I do hope this'll turn out delicious. I'm really getting excited now :)
I would also include marjoram and a bit of sage in your soup mixture if you have them on hand. Also, if you can get whole nutmeg, I grate like an eighth of one into the cream soup. It feels like a lot, but nutmeg is amazing.
Honestly, I wouldn't fry my own onions (again; I've done it and it sucks). I would just use your onions marinated, slice them and include them because that sounds awesome. Then use some toasted breadcrumbs to crunch up the top. Or you could buy Röstzwiebeln. I've seen it sold as a hot dog and burger topping.
Thank you for your thoughts. I've never used savory, didn't know what it looked like (looked it up), have no clue how it smells, but I'm fascinated that it's called bean herb. How cool! Soaking the onions in cream for a day before sounds like a process for breaking down the onions without heat and sure, the cream would then be nicely infused.
I change a little something every year in my Green Bean Casserole. One year, I made my own onion rings to go on top, but my onions were normal sized. Last year, I saw really small onions (abt. 3cm. diameter) at a specialty store. They're not the 1cm. cocktail onions. They're just the right size to fry in rings. So, I'll fry some again this year.
And now you have to tell us - how did your green bean casserole turn out? ☺
IN the past I've used the Roasted Garlic Mushroom Soup instead of regular, the roasted garlic adds another good flavor to the mix, that I think would be a good addition to this.
I am of firm belief that making your own onions for this recipe is a fool's errand.
Alton Brown disagrees
@@Notturnoir He's a fool.
If you can believe it, I just had a discussion with a family member about Green Bean Casserole, and how, if we were going to have it for TG, I wanted an updated version. And here comes Eric Kim with a response to my wish! Thanks. Gonna try yours for a meal for 25. Happy Thanksgiving.
wow this was so charming ! wonderful hommage
This was so sweet 🥹 I did not know the history of this dish!!
Thank you! My dish for thanksgiving and Always made Cambells soup version. Going to change it up this year.
Love everything about this video! Eric is the best and I hope to see more from him! Can't wait to try his new recipe.
I have both of those recipes from "The Joy of Cooking" in my mother's 1946 copy, which was compiled by Irma Rombauer. The recipes have been moved and shortened for the 1964 edition that she did with her daughter, Marion. My second version of the book, published later, still contains the two recipes. I haven't unpacked the most recent version, but my bet is that the New York editor who refashioned the original book in many ways I think of as being "New York," and not in a particularly flattering way, I haven't unpacked from my recent move. I'll check it, but my bet is that it has béchamel made from scratch, because that's what she did to the tuna casserole recipe I've used most of my life, which calls for canned cream of mushroom soup too. I can only remember what it was like when I was married, working full time, and had a young son, it was outside my wheelhouse to come home from work and make béchamel for tuna casserole. Cream of mushroom soup was just fine in those days, and faster. Actually, Whole Foods carries haricots vertes frozen that are pretty good on their own. I prefer them frozen to the regular frozen green beans, I think. The squeaky thing you mention, to me, makes them seem more like fresh beans, which is preferable to mushy frozen or canned beans.
I loved the variety of Mmmmms after each test. They were so different from each other. I waited for each delightful rendition
My favorite green beans are canned French cut/style. I fold cooked bacon, caramelized onions, extra sautéed mushrooms and a little Monterey Jack cheese into my casserole. It's so flavorful and creamy. The family loves it!
String beans are my favorite food, can't wait to watch this :)
I saw you in Brooklyn once, but I was too awkward to say hi 😕 Love your work!
I highly recommend you use Campbell's Golden Mushroom soup instead of the regular Cream of Mushroom. Also just use heavy whipping cream instead of milk. Super easy changes for a big improvement.
The canned cranberry sauce in the back 😂 Love it.
I love this site! I'm going to be a new subscriber!!! 👏👍Thanks.🙂
I just love the idea of "Make it your own" . Since I've reconstructed the SweetPotato & reinvented the Creamed spinach/broccoli side-dishes, I'm now the official got-to Holiday Guy.
Green bean casserole is great! The original. Great video!❤
Loved watching this, dang it I'm hungry now!
They are all amazing casseroles
A year late, but green bean casserole is a favorite of mine.
The recipe my family uses is a bit different: French-style cut green beans, mushroom soup, green onions, sour cream, bacon and small chunks of cheddar cheese. Bread crumb topping.
We had a Campbell’s traditional vs Williams Sonoma scratch “Green Bean Casserole Throw Down” back in 2012. The scratch won, but only by one vote.
Yeah! I'll make this!
Eric you are such a gem
the fake typing KILLED ME, always love your videos
😂
My feeling about green bean casserole is if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it! I like the familiar taste from my childhood and don’t want garlic, red pepper flakes, soy sauce, bread or cracker crumbs or cheese!
Agreed 100%
OMG THAT PUPPY!!!!!!!!!
This dish is my favorite. I base it off of Smitten Kitchen but add truffle powder
I love that they left Eric’s joke in this time.
Fan of Eric and Millie Peartree.
What a lovely video!! Yummmm 😋
Wow!! What a great video.
You guys are the cutest!!!! ❤❤❤
OMG…could a person be any cuter or more adorable than Eric Kim?
Thise chairs though 🐓🧡
How are we not talking about “Eric’s taste tester”?!!
my favorite GBC is Babish’s! But might have to try the roasted green beans style
Hum no mushrooms in the end dish. 😢
Shout out to the real heroes of this video: The forks and his and his tooth enamel.
I think removing the mushrooms worked in the final recipe because liteally, it did not use the canned cream of mushroom. I guess the other recipes added the mushroom simply to amp up the mushroom flavor and additional "meaty" nonmeat component (plus the umami)
Main takeaway: never doubt the almighty power of the beloved Millie Peartree
I LOVE GREEN BEAN CASSEROLE
I don't like green beans. I never have. I watched this entire video because I find this series (and Eric) interesting and entertaining. I hope we get to see more.
We just discussed the creation of the recipe during our thanksgiving dinner, in Canada. What a coincidence.
the secret, late-night green bean whisperer
Cool have you ever consider the dish with sausage or chicken? Maybe use the sausage to thicken the dish
This is sick!😮 i love it
Is his shirt from the Uniqlo brand?
Casserole means something quite different in europe.
You can no longer buy Campbell's soup in the uk.
This might be an unpopular opinion, its probably nostalgia based, but frozen/fresh green beans just dont have the right texture for me. They're not mushy enough? I do a variation of allrecipes but would like to incorporate elements of Millie's and Eric's recipes! Still can't beat all cans for last minute holiday parties/potlucks though.
I completely agree. There has to be a way of making fresh or frozen beans not be as crunchy or green tasting. Maybe blanching them for a while?
i don't know about whispering but they say that singing to your crops in the morning helps them grow lol
loved this video
I HAVE THAT CAT CUP
Wait..Did he not use mushrooms in the end...
I was like where are the mushrooms too but then saw he omitted them and replaced it with celery salt which mimics the mushroom soup flavor
This is so slay 🙂
Let's face it, the only reason people keep on making green bean casserole is because of those crispy French's onions on top.
I’m really surprised that soy sauce is in the original recipe from 1955, and that it was common in people’s pantries. (My 1/2 Japanese mom was born two years after it was created - but in the South)
Jeez, they either pay really well at NYT cooking or Mr. Kim is wealthy. That is one nice house!
he’s so cute
French green beans is so much better
Not eating anything made by one of them 😅
smellavision hasnt been invented yet so i really dunno Eric! :/
Asian fish sauce better than soy sauce
End product SUPER too loose (too much bean broth)...should be creamery...just saying.
Hard pass on the GayBean Casserole 😅
dont bite your fork, bad for the teeth
Thank you for the link, I was afraid I was going to have to spend time patronizing the garbage company new york times for the recipe.
Made it and it is no better than the green been casserole sludge we all grew up with. The flavor is bland, the bean texture is bad and I don't think it is an improvement. I don't like the original much but this isn't an improvement, oddly. And what the hell is up with Bell's fried onions???? The only onions are by French's. Everyone knows it is French's fried onions. Jesus. This kid knows nothing.
Couldn't help but feel underwhelmed that the final result had no mushrooms, barely any spices, and no cheesiness. Obviously to each is own and Eric's palate is what called the shots on his version, but I wasn't tempted by it. Also, making 13 (!!!) recipes seemed really redundant and wasteful at some point - food waste is a huge issue anyway and cutting 5 of those recipes wouldn't have really affected the final product.
You need a new ‘do.
Ok look. It's unnecessary to hide the recipe behind a paywall. Please stop doing this!!!!!!!
People deserved to be paid for their work.
There's a saying that if you're not paying for a product, *you* are the product. "Free" just means your viewership is being sold to advertisers. 😅
@@spikednautilus it seems to escape you that there are ads on the web pages. Whenever an ad appears on your screen, the NYT gets paid. Also, NYT gets paid for every view this video gets. So what you wrote is just not valid.
There aren't nearly enough ads in their site or on their UA-cam channel to support the number of staff required to run the publication. Even solo content creators and small teams on UA-cam must take on sponsorships because UA-cam's payout alone cannot help them make their bills. If it upsets you that these recipes require a subscription for access, just watch another channel.
BA used to give their recipes if it was on UA-cam.