The Roman Colosseum: What It Was Like to Attend the Games
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- Опубліковано 12 лют 2024
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Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
IMAGES
Flavian Dynasty Emperors: By Classical Numismatic Group, Inc. www.cngcoins.com, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Trajan’s Column: Steven Zucker via Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Trajan: By Hartmann Linge - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Elephant on Sarcophagus: By Carole Raddato Via Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
#tastinghistory #colosseum #ancientrome
This recipe is up on the new Tasting History website! www.tastinghistory.com/recipes
Love your content max😊😊😊😊❤❤❤
a question :wouldnt sea salt have been most authentic since it was rome and they harvested sea salt?
@@Archphoenix1 yep. That’s what I use. Just make sure it’s finely ground.
I don’t even cook and I love your channel
TY Max 4 this link 4 all unusual products to make recipes!!! I got ur ebook n thought it would have links but didnt. So glad i have them now even if not in ebook! ;)
I could imagine an ancient roman dad telling his son there is no way he is paying 5 brass pieces for snacks or whatever
I could imagine the son remembering it a generation later after hyperinflation had jacked the prices up because the silver coins are now almost worthless
@@williamboisdenghien2849 i remember hearing my dad talk about how outrageous it was for pine knob music theater to charge 2.50 for a 36 oz beer
Won't haggle?!?
My Dad asked me once, incredulously, "You paid HOW MUCH for that?". 🤓
We have MacusDonaldus at home!
I can hear a Roman child saying "I want a date," and being told "We have dates at home."
"You should have had a date before we left. We told you but you wouldn't listen. You do this every time, Lucius! Your brother doesn't. He's a good boy. I'm not going to throw him into the Tiber if the grain ships don't arrive on time this winter. Now sit still and shut up, else we'll miss the Christian cremationes."
„Stop it. No dates until you‘e 15 and ready to get married“
@@RichWoods23 Threads like this are why I love this channel.
and it's their cousin
I think roman boys were quite acquainted with the type of dates you're referencing unfortunately, mostly with older men@@MrAranton
Made it! So amazing! The honey is chewy, the date and nuts give the bite some body. The flavor hits on so many levels. It's sweet, but salty, but savory at the same time! I used long pepper and almonds...we have allergies to black pepper and walnuts at my house. I wish UA-cam let me post pictures. While the prep work was a bit hectic...all my teenage kids decided it was time to make their lunches when I started this, so there were five cooks bobbing and weaving around each other. I am making this again. Definitely going to add this to a chartuery board. Also pairs well with honeydew.
They may have been crazy and backwards in many ways, but boy did they ever eat healthier than us
@@rustysalmonella7681to be fair, I don’t think they had any other option
I even sprinkled the pine nut and walnut mixture on top of them after taking them out of the honey. They really are good.
I'm mildly allergic to black pepper, does long pepper really not set off the reaction? That's great to know as I want to start making these for my friends but I'd be able to enjoy them too if so :)
congrats, you became a roman scambag.
This channel really has that public broadcasting comfort to it. So glad it exists.
Without the bias and lies that is..
@@ohger1such as?
@@marcomoreno6748 🤣🤣
@ohger1 You didn’t give @marcomoreno6748 an example yet, so unless the lies are laughing emojis, you have zero evidence
@@Blumpkinthehobbit No, to Marxist leftards, nothing is leftist.
Tickets to the Colosseum may've been hard to come by, but at least Ancient Romans didn't have to deal with Ticketmaster.
Back then you went to a guy named "Dominus Tessera" to conveniently get the best seats....
The numbers aren't even that dramatically out of proportion with the population, especially if you're running games for a couple weeks, I figure everyone who wasn't super busy or completely without a social circle could attend at least one day in 14 days of games or so.
And then we eventually learn that there was some high-paying and preferential position called the Master of Tickets during the imperial period
@@Levacque - Or a group got together to buy one ticket from a scalper. Then the ticket-holder held the back exit door open for the others to sneak in.
@@MossyMozart hey let's be honest, that's been happening for as long as people have been charging admission to things 😂
"i love going to the games but their prices are highway robbery!"
"that's why i buy snacks outside and hide them in my toga..you can fit an entire feast in these things"
bro, what spot at the secundom you hustlin. hook a fellow roman peasant bro up!
Anyone rich enough to wear a toga could afford it!
@@golddragonette7795and those who want to stay rich hide snacks in their togas!
@@Inko_Inko Pigs in blankets?
@@Matt..S - Pigs in togas.
It's so gratifying to hear someone pronounce Classical Latin correctly, with the rolled "Rs and Cs taking the "K" sound. Pax!
11:15 I love this, this people who have brought their own grills to make some ancient barbeque in the stands, it's like Classical World Nascar spectators
Well, it's quite possible that during some chariot races the cry "left turn! left turn!" would ring out... so, it's the exact same thing.
Augustus was indeed an emperor you could give some lip too, there is a famous story where he bought a bird trained to say (translated) "Hail emperor Augustus" only for the seller's business partner to show up the next day claiming he was scammed and proved it by showing his own bird, trained to say "Hail emperor Mark Anthony", Augustus's rival in the civil war
Apparently he found this so funny he decided to also buy the second bird lol
Depends on his time in life and hold on power
When you're ruling on the back of several purges, a successful Civil War, and a deified adoptive father you can tolerate a lot more cheek than you'd otherwise feel comfortable with. There's the absolute power over life and death and then there's the power to be spoken back to and not have it diminish your authority, one is infinitely rarer.
There are numerous accounts where Augustus punished a noble for gratuitous cruelty or unfairness. Augustus is one of the better Imperators in my book.
@@danielbeck9191The OG
Honestly this is just a good story.
The fact its still called Colosseum is proof we will always call them Facebook and Twitter
That X shit will never catch
While I agree with the premise, the "Colosseum" is a "rebranding". It's original name was the Flavian Amphitheater.
@@ItRemindMeOfHome it’s more of a popular or slang for it. I don’t think anybody pushed for it, Flavian Amphitheater is mouth full.
Similarly, no one in Chicago calls the Willis Tower the Willis Tower. It is and always will be the Sears Tower.
@@robjones3818 in Cincinnati we had a Paul Brown stadium, named after one of the great names in Ohio football history. Then some wack ass corporation whose product nobody can name paid to name it for themselves. Paycore stadium really sticks in my craw.
My grandparents took me to see Gladiator at the theater. My grandfather was a huge history buff and he loved the movie. It became a bonding experience for us. Once New Vegas came out, our discussions became a lot more nuanced.
Regardless, he and I bonded over a love of history in this period. And I personally loved the scene of people throwing bread at the crowd in Gladiator.
RIP, grandpa. Hopefully, you're in Elysium.
Hope so too, brother.
My dad took me to see it and he fell asleep like 30 min in. I lost all respect for him after that for falling asleep during one of the best films ever made.
@@dash4800 He was probably tired from working his ass off to buy you both tickets. At least he went with you and spent time with you.
Damn they are coming out with gladiator 2 in November. I wish you 2 could go see it together. Rip ❤
17:41 sometimes audiences got gifts...horses, pack animals..
So, Rome's version of "You get a car, and you get a car, and everyone gets a car."
I knew about the retractable roof, but not about the ticket procedures. It's amazing how many "modern" things are actually that old.
Wait until you find out why gladiators had such wide brimmed helmets with facial grilles that made it quite easy to speak to each other.
Going theory is that professional gladiators were the original spectacle fighters. Roman WWE. There were obviously many categories of competition and participants, but there was an organizational element to these celebrity combatants.
@@Taolan8472 It makes sense really. It's almost certain the cost of training, housing, and care of gladiators meant that fights to the death between gladiators weren't as common as we think they were and were designed primarily for entertainment so they'd want to draw out the fight to a degree with posturing, banter, and likely even casual conversation among gladiators that knew each other. Any kind of team or pairing event would also greatly benefit from participants being able to clearly communicate to each other.
The Romans were nothing if not highly organized. It was their mastery of logistics that made the empire so potent and long-lasting. Yes, the legions were ferocious, but that very capability was based on... Being organized.
Most of the western worlds government and law is based on what the Romans did.
@@lairdcummings9092the reason why their empire fell was because of debauchery and corruption. As a result they were unprepared for attacks from barbarians. By showing weakness, they were swiftly destroyed and their once great empire crumbled into dust.
And yes, it's happening again right now in the world.
Fun fact: in Italian we still say "in pompa magna" for doing something with the greatest pomp
Italy is the closest to Rome, after all!
In Poland we also say that. Pompa I mean, the rest is in Polish 😊
@@agnieszkamalicka7232 😊 and how do you spell it? I've tried to learn Polish with Duo 😁
We spell it the same way Italians do, we just say it with polish pronunciation 😂 We tent to do that with a lot of words borrowed from other languages.
so basically everything Italians do?
Between your excellent pronunciation of Latin and other languages, the interesting facts you present, and your genuine delight upon trying your historical recipes, your videos are a pleasure to watch. This one was no exception. Now I know where the expression "pomp and circumstance" came from. Keep 'em coming, frater!
I lived in Italy near Rome from 2009 to 2011. I've taken many tours of Il Colosseo, and the entertainments were wild. I used to jog around the Circo Massimo. Damn, that was a really cool part of my life.
Circus Maximus in my day learning Latin at school. But the best one was: The Cloaca Maxima!
I firmly believe that stories about Ancient Rome are always at their most fascinating when they show how shockingly close their lives were to ours today. I once had a professor who managed that and I thought he was brilliant for it. But you somehow manage to do this even better, finding analogies and describing how their world still makes sense today.
It's interesting to read the graffiti they left behind.
They made a lot of the same jokes that we do today. Mocked politicians they didn't like and praised the ones they did. Made lewd jokes all the time.
If you translated them today and stuck them on the walls of a public restroom or the walls of a back alley or bar, they'd fit right in besides some of the names that is.
Civilization evolves, but human nature never changes... XD
I read a book called “A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum” awhile ago, it was about crime, murder in particular, in ancient Rome. It was fabulous, the writing so clever & witty, I’ve reread it a couple times since. It really hit home just how similar humans all are, even a couple thousand years apart. My favorite person in the book was Clodius Pulcher, who sounds like he went around pretty much trolling absolutely everyone lol
@@beowulfsrevenge4369But there’s always a disclaimer saying they can’t show us 2/3 of the graffiti, because it’s blatantly pornographic. We are complete Victorian prudes by comparison.
@@missdenisebee
Clodius Pulcher (pretty wild, even in the historical record) was a supporter of Caesar- & I think his death & the chaos that came in the aftermath, was why Caesar didn't actually die in the Senate House (because it was one of the buildings that had been trashed, & money-issues & other civil conflict prevented anyone from making the choice to just re-build the damn thing, without politics getting in the way) - but the Theatre of Pompey, one of the public buildings they were using to hold Senate meetings...
Sparsio Missilium: It's fantastic to see people cooking in the stands, knowing that tailgating has basically been a tradition since ancient times.
Tailgating, BBQ, even just kicking it around a campfire, are such an innate human tradition that everyone everywhere has done em since Grog discovered fire.
Like The Simpsons, the Romans did it first.
Whatever "It" was.
At least the modern artist thinks they did
You introduced me to Long Pepper, and it has become part of my routine palette of spices.
Thank you.
I’m so glad!
I have a coworker who takes the dates, splits them, then stuffs them with slightly crushed walnuts and a small amount of goat cheese.
What do you eat at the Colosseum?
That is easy!
Larks' tongues, Otters' noses and Ocelot spleens.
Life of Brian!
Hey, psst!
Do you know where I can find Judean People's Front?
@@beowulfsrevenge4369 SPLITTERS!
@@beowulfsrevenge4369 Judean People's Front?
Were the People's Front of Judea!
Wolf Nipple Chips!
The Guild of Millers…ah, Max’s ancestors. That, or Max is a time traveler after all.
Our illustrious Maximos! Millers for 54 generations.
True Roman bread... for true Romans.
Edit: Less than 10 seconds after I posted this, the clip came up.
When I was little in the 1970's we would make stuffed dates at Christmas. The dates came in a box and the recipe was on the box. This is what we kids would give as gifts to our grandparents--little sandwich bags filled with stuffed dates!
Loved this episode. I thought I had already heard everything about the Colosseum. Usually I just hear about the events in arena and only hear a brief side mention that there are vendors, but to hear about the vendors and what all they sold was enlightening.
"Take a date, open it up and stuff in as much of that filling as you can."
Word.
I love stuffing my dates
That’s what he said 😂
I love being the stuffed date 😊😊😊
wsg...😏 @@ExtraThiccc
What if the Date isn't willing, eh?😮😅
I cannot describe how much joy it brings me to see that the "random pokemon kinda connected to the topic at hand hiding in the background" tradition is still alive >:D
I never thought about them being connected in any way to the topic of the video. I always thought they were just random plushes that Max decided to put that day 😂But now you gave me the idea to see future (and past) videos to try to guess or understand the connection to the topics (if I know something about that particular pokemon, of course).
What Pokemon is it sitting there? I can't identify it.
@@Alfonso162008 iirc, it's actually his husband that does that part!
@@Alfonso162008 They usually have at least a surface level connection. Like the Hot Wings vid having Torchic. My favorite part of that running joke is that as far as im aware there was never a repeat yet? :D
Jose going this far for that joke, makes me imagine them having just a full room of Pokemon plushes
@@csecskristof I mean, at this point in time there are over thousand pokemon (1025 according to the google search I just did), so I don't think it's hard to not have a repeat if they have a plush of each of them lol.
This might be my favorite video yet - and the bar is set pretty high! I'm a college student who loves geeking out about ancient Rome, and I've been sending your videos to all my professors so they can nerd out too 😊When I went to the Colosseum (oops, Amphitheatrum Flavium) last year, my favorite part was the peach pits and seeds they found in the stands. It's crazy to me to think that Saturday football with my friends really isn't all that different from life 2,000 years ago! Thank you for all the fun you've brought me and my friends - I've been recommending your videos right and left!
The food item itself was quite unique, but I learned so much about the theater and culture that I'd never read, or been taught. Thank you for sharing!
>Used to play Prince Charming at Disneyland
>Makes his daily bread (heh) by cooking historical recipes
>Builds big Lego sets in his spare time
This man just can’t stop winning.
What, he was Prince Charming lol?!!
@@sintay8002 Yeah, I can't remember exactly which video, but he shows a photo of him as Prince Charming at one of the park's stage shows and he's mentioned that he used to work at/for Disney a few times over the years.
And lucky his husband 🙂
A loss for women sadly. :(
Shame hes a chomo
Romans did love to mix weird flavours. Honey, salt and pepper in one (sticky) dish. Also, I'd hazard a guess that snacks sold inside the Colosseum proper were heavily salted, and there always was a smiling wine seller in arm's reach.
People like honey-garlic and sweet Chili flavours so I think this is in line with it.
Honestly sounds like Korean food made with peppercorns instead of chillis
Just like the "free" chili and chips and nuts in many bars---it keeps you thirsty!
How is that weird? Honey and pepper?
@@Levacque Would make an interesting potato chip flavour
Mr. Miller, Thank you!!! I am slowly going through many of your past episodes, and you made me seriously laugh today. I watched your episode on black fish dish from the Roman Empire, and was seriously laughing out loud at the TV with your facial expressions due to the texture of the dish. One of the hardest things for me as a Chef, is making dishes that I dislike or know I will dislike, but need to make them for my customers. I also have texture issues with some foods. I needed the laugh today, and I am so grateful to you. God bless!
This was - as always - absolutely wonderful! You are a pleasure to watch, listen to, and learn from. I love how you do such in-depth research, and I love how you often sound surprised when you are tasting something you just made :D. Thank you, Max.
Now that i am stuck in a rehabilitation home for the next at least 8 months, content like yours are the only highlight to my days. Im up to 5 unaided steps at a time, so im getting there. Thank you, this stuff is more precious to me than you will ever know
Keep kicking @$$! ❤❤❤ You are so strong. ❤❤❤
Keep up the work. Take it one day at a time.
Remember, progress not perfection. You can do it.
Wow! 5 steps! You'll continue to get stronger and walk farther soon! Keeping up your spirits with Max is a good strategy!
That’s good progress. I had to learn how to walk again last year- took 9 months of rehab. It will happen. Just deal with one day at a time ❤
good luck on your recovery
I literally said out loud before I clicked on the video, "If he doesn't say first thing in history time that the colosseum wasn't actually called the colosseum I am going to be disappointed." Another happy watch.
I mean, what'd you expect? This man does his research. :p
I just wanted to say thank you for your cookbook. I got it in the mail today.... and loved reading through it. There were a quite a few recipes I know that I will try. It's a beautiful book and full of lovely history of the recipes and I appreciated the substitutions for ingredients that can't be found today.
Thank you for the great historic and cooking video, Max Miller! I've just cooked some delicious stuffed dates. Every friend of my mom are impressed and now asking me for the recipe! I gave them link to this video and did translation for the recipe myself, bc they aren't English speakers. Anyway, Romans really knew some good stuff about cooking!
They did serve wings at the Colosseum. Along with the rest of the bird -- small birds, roasted whole. At the Colosseum today there are displays of the bones from what were presumably game food.
sounds like going to medieval times and getting to eat a whole chicken
We make a stuffed date for the holidays, we put goat cheese inside of it then drizzle it with honey. It has been a family tradition since I was a kid.
We stuff dates w walnut halves, then roll in sugar. Yours sounds yummy, too!
Yeah, with a kind of creamcheese here in the Netherlands in my family. I didn't like them as a kid. But I think you could make a slit in them for stuffing so you didn't need to cut them in half as far as in the video. Keeping the filling in better.
These posters here - too whimpy to sauté in Vesuvius-hot honey, eh?
Ohhh! Goat cheese has always been a bit too savory on its own, for me, but as a date stuffing it makes perfect sense as sweetness mellows out savoriness.
i remember a tumblr post where someone had a similar dish for lunch, to which her coworker remarked, "why do you always eat like a roman emperor?"
I have never been this glued to a video. I could listen to you tell stories everyday.
Yo I truly dig every aspect of your show. A high brow clean delivery while still being warm and welcoming. Keep doing you dawg.
Little tip, if you put a few long pepper in a pestle, give them a few whacks to break them up, you can then put them in a grinder and they will grind up beautifully. Just make sure you use a highly quality grinder that can grind it very finely.
That’s actually what’s in my everyday pepper grinder.
@@TastingHistory Hahah I should have known! I use a brass greek coffee grinder. Had it for 35 years and it still grinds like dust.
Whenever I break up a long pepper, it makes me think of blackberries because they have that same developmental structure
Thanks for this! I just bough my first packet of long pepper and I am so excited to try it! The smell is amazing, and makes me think of chai. Gotta find my grinder!
@@RachelleHinrichs You are very welcome. If you don't have a stone pestle (And it needs to be stone, they are actually pretty hard) put a few in a zip top bag, lay it on its side on a hard surface and give it a few whacks the side or the top of a hammer. Remember you are not pulverizing it, you are just getting pieces big enough to fit into the grinding gears. peppercorn sized is not a bad thing to shoot for. And only do enough for a few days, so they stay fresh. Once you try it, you ain't going back.
A Day At The Coliseum:
*hit in head with date*
*hit in head with wooden ball*
*hit in head **_for_** wooden ball*
😅
My local Indian spice shop has long pepper and it’s amazing 🤩 it’s so cool to taste things from ancient civilisations
i can’t pinpoint why exactly - but this might be my favourite video of you yet 🤩💗 the story and visuals you provided is so immersive. the food feels very contemporary/present and simple that it felt accessible to me. also i am a sucker for salty/sweet/spicy combo lol
There is a really well done historical fiction Korean comic about a Korean warrior enslaved as a gladiator in Ancient Rome. The characters are nearly all fictional but the author did his research on traditions and practices of the day. It’s called the long way of the warrior and it’s a great read.
Hey! Whats it called?!
@@westpeaceSeconded
Ty I will read!
@@westpeace the long way of the warrior
A comic book?
I'd imagine that the remaining fried honey mixture would make a great glaze for ham or poultry
Reduced honey is a key ingredient in a LOT of wonderful sauces and glazes. It takes on the character of the other ingredients and spices, so it's extremely flexible.
Shoutout to Jose's captions as always, the [CHOMP] and [munch munch] really had me giggling! 😁 Appreciate so much that you guys put in the effort to make these episodes accessible to your hard-of-hearing or English-as-2nd-language audience members, and love how your senses of humor come out even in the CCs. Thank you!
Absolutely love your channel. Amazing, informative, fun and interesting content. What a joy to be a part of this community 🥰
Completely agree! In addition to the wonderful video content it's always fascinating reading the family anecdotes, local recipe variations etc that members of this watching community share in the comments.
As a woman and a peasant, I imagine I would be in the nose bleeds thinking how unfair it is that the gladiators get better food than me. Or just salivating over the dates and ignoring the action.
At least you can enjoy that tasty lead water that makes the brain tingle so nicely
Well, women fans were famous for salivating during the gladiators fight, and also enjoying the food.
You just know the planners were like, “The women just want to gossip. They’ll be fine at the top where they aren’t in the way of those watching.”
@@crystallinecrisis3901 They put them at the back so no one else had to deal with the unwise actions such admiration can cause
Before they were called the cheapseats
I love this format! Please feel free to indulge us with a day at Stonehenge, or a day spent building the pyramids, or a Georgian Sunday, or whatever your heart desires. My heart would love that!
@mirandamom1346 - How about a day at the ball games at Chichen Itza? A free severed head with every 10th ticket punch.
Max you and your videos are really the only thing giving me some happiness in this life at the moment. Thank you for what you do.
I'm so glad I found this channel! My two favorite things, history and food!
Lol. that cat was definitely thinking "Where's MY chicken".
That cat is more a kitten. Actually, an adolescent.
He seemed a bit offended. He looked at Max’s plate like “hello, kind people share.”
You know, I actually made this recipe years and years ago, after seeing it in my old Latin textbook in high school. These are delicious, and after seeing this...I really do feel inspired to making them again.
Huh! My Latin textbook did NOT have recipes! I wish it had; we could have had a day of bringing in historic snacks!
Wish my Latin texts had included recipes!
Oh man, you had a way cooler textbooks than I did!
Awesome content as always! I love learning about the history, anthropology, and recipes that made the old world go round!
Perfect part of a platter of goodies to watch Spartacus, Ben Hur or Gladiator on the household big screen.
Max from The Guild of Millers has done it again! Great video!
Maximus Molitor. 😄
As a lover of history and cooking/baking, this channel is one I look forward to every week. Thanks for such great content!!
Thank you so much!
@@TastingHistorythank YOU! 😊
this was such a wholesome interaction
great video thanks !!! this reminds me of a book i had when i was little , showing how to make other recipes and arts/crafts from ancient history , even the bowls are similar . thank you so much ❤❤❤
Max, you make everything come to LIFE! Thank you! I just have visions of you hosting dinner parties in the evenings after your research/recording work and passing out treats and concoctions.
“Taylor Swiftus”! 😂 Thank you, Max.
So she's a man?
I think she'd be Taylor Apus. That's the Latin for the swift, from Greek _a_ without, _pous_ feet/legs. The ancients thought that swifts had no legs, not a mistake any of would make today.
I love when you do ancient recipes, please can you do more ancient Chinese or Korean ones please??
Yes I can 😁 Just got a great book on Korean food history
@@TastingHistoryPlease do a Hakka episode! Actually, there are a lot of minorities in the East which have interesting histories and I'm sure interesting cuisine, including ones from Japan and the Malay Archipelago. But I am a Hakka so that's my request C:
I'm so happy I stumbled across this channel a year ago. Content is always amazing and you make a wonderful host! Keep up the great work!
Thanks for this recipe! It's the first one I've tried from your channel. It turned out really good! I didn't find long pepper at the grocery store when I went, but I'll try to get some next time. You're right; the pepper and salt are surprisingly tasty and quite unexpected, balancing all of the sweetness.
“Not that praetorian guard” Im even more trash than you expected Max, I was definitely thinking of Caesar’s guards in Fallout New Vegas 😂
Same lol
It could be worse, at least it's not the non Canon sequels 😂
Ave, true to Caesar!
Patrolling the Mojave almost makes you wish for a nuclear winter.
At least those guard an emperor of sorts.
Life of Brian told me they ate these delicious snacks
Larks' tongues. Wrens' livers. Chaffinch brains. Jaguars' earlobes. Wolf nipple chips. Get 'em while they're hot. They're lovely. Dromedary pretzels, only half a denar. Tuscany-fried bats.
Alright, bag of otter's noses, then...
Dromedary pretzels sound kinda good. Imagine a strip of meat folded into a pretzel shape and then fried so that it stuck together.
Glad I wasn’t the only one thinking of that scene.
Bigus Dickus
@@landosalemchainsaw Came special because I wanted to complain that the clip wasn't used in the video.
I completely enjoy your story telling...takes me out of the day-to-day and transports me to other worlds. Mahalo nui loa!
You don't drown by falling in water. You drown by staying there.
When I visited Pompeii, I saw their fast food stands and was kind of jealous.
Not just fast food but also their local eatery, many of the villagers chipped in some food and paid a fee to pay the chef to cook for everyone there. They figured this out at pompeii, it was optional since they still had local kitchens but a great option for the poorest.
Oh yeah, they had all kinds of stuff there!
A bit overcooked, tho
@@TheChzoronzon no! xD That's terrible lol
I feel the dopamine hit as soon as I see the thumbnail for a new Tasting History episode. Thanks, Max!
I love that
these have been on my mind ever since watching this video and i finally made them, they are SO GOOD
One of my favorite treats is warmed dates (halved) with butter and salt in the middle! So good. Gotta try this out, thanks for the video!
I've been wanting that Lego Colosseum ever since it was released. First I need the money. Second some place to build it where my cat won't destroy it.
It’s massive. And yes, the cat has destroyed much of it.
Maybe they should sell a complete one with all the features of the old colosseum, so those with cats can have it destroyed to look like it does in our time!
@@lhfirex - .^_^.
@@TastingHistory the cat: colosseum delenda est
Unfortunately, they retired it in November 2023. I too was waiting to have the space and money :/
Did anyone else go "awwww" when the cat made an appearance?
Max, The picture you painted pf being at the games was the best I ever heard! Ever! Loved it
I just made my first batch of these dates. I've been watching your videos for a while, but this was the very first time I tried to cook one of your recipes.
I used too much pepper, but the dates turned out great! I'm about to grind some more nuts to dilute the pepper in the mix a bit and I'll make a second batch. I really love how it turned out, and it'll be the perfect treat for the apéro with my Italian colleagues next week.
These are rather similar to the stuffed figs my grandmother in Italy still makes; a much loved element of her care packages!
Ooh! I love figs!
cool tip about stuffing dates hehe is if you just use tweezers pull the pit from one end you are left with a little hole you can stuff, think like an olive and tweezers work great
A small fraction have mold growing inside so I always like to open them to check as it doesn't really grow on the pit. Maybe it's safe to eat like blue cheese but I always throw them out to the birds and squirrels
This was so interesting!! Thank you very much Max, your videos are always so fun and educational! One of the best channels out there for sure!!🥳😋
My husband and I binge watch your videos. Thank you so much for creating such amazing content that is family friendly!
That Coliseum roof is the inspiration for Montréal’s Olympic Stadium moving canopy. Guess what? Adjustable roofs don’t work in snowy weather, and we’re still gonna pay 870 millions (ok, Canadian ones) for yet another new roof! Our third!
Fortunately for Rome, the Flavian Amphitheater is in a sub-tropical climate.
I always wondered why Montreal had one. Lovely place, but snow+canopy made me wonder.
"gonna"???? Inner city urban USA lingo
I teach Latin, but I share about Roman culture in my classes. This is perfect for my class. No nudity (yes, Rome was filled with nudity, but this is a school), no swear words, only using the word prostitutes. You also chose pictures that were appropriate without excessive nudity as well. Thank you so much!
So you are one of those "I censor nude ancient art because I'm a prude" kind of teacher.
err...almost all schools, public or private, would ask you to censor most of the phallic images of Roman times. It's graphic. @@BillyBoze
Can't teach much about ancient Roman culture without including the plethora of cults and superstitions that revolved about the male reproductive organ.
@@BillyBoze easier than having to deal with irate parents
@@BillyBoze Don't be an ass.
It's much more "I censor nude history because I like my job." And if they get fired - which would be a black-ball for education in general - who will teach ancient history, then?
I love history. I love learning new recipes. I adore cooking. Your videos always give me a spark of inspiration. ❤ Thanks for the content!
I love how there are so many words associated with the coliseum experience that are still used (in whole or in part) today.
it would never have occured to me to fry something in honey... my horizon has been widened a little more yet again. brilliant.
I'd love to see an episode on the wealthy Roman gourmet and bon vivant, Lucullus. He was famous for coming home one night and finding the table not set elaborately and asking his head steward why. The steward told him that no guests were invited for dinner that evening, to which Lucullus replied, "Ah, but tonight Lucullus dines with Lucullus>".
This channel is absolutely fantastic! Great work.
Your channel is one of my favourite on YT. Going to Rome this year and I doubt even a local tour guide could paint such a vivid picture of the Colosseum (Amphitheatrum Flavium, excuse me).
Titus Flavius Vespasianus (Vespasian for short) was the father of Emperors Titus and Domitian. The most amusing anecdote about him was that to repair the state finances he imposed a charge on all public urinaries. When he was chided about it, he picked up a handful of denarrii and sniffing them claimed that money had no smell. 😂
The people who complained the most were the dyers -- who used aged urine as a bleach.
"Pecunia non olet."
I’m picturing Derek Jacobi as Claudius in the wonderful BBC series.
This is ABSOLUTELY FASCINATING and I can't believe I have never heard these things before.
You are seriously one of the best historians on UA-cam!! Hands down 👍👍👍👍 absolutely awesome!
What gets me about the timing of these videos is I'm always at work and so have to constantly pause and/or pretend I'm 100% focused on work. Then, I listen again after work. I could wait, but it's just too tempting. A big piece of mental chocolate cake
While I love dried dates, I recall 100 years ago eating "fresh" dates that were not nearly as dry as the ones we get in the grocery store that were AMAZING. I suspect that the Romans would have had use of Dates that were closer to fresh than dried.
Keep up the great work!
Dates are found in very hot regions, Romans would have imported these dates from North Africa or the Middle East. I doubt they were having fresh dates.
One of your best videos ever. Just a stunning job. I learned so much.
Awww thank you!
Do you think that there would be Roman fathers and sons who smuggled there own snacks like my dad and i did at games and the movies. Winter was the best because i always had those giant goosedown coats with 4 to 8 big pockets
I’ve no doubt
I saw a documentary about the Coliseum some time ago. (It was probably "NOVA" on PBS - Public Broadcasting Service, USA). The floor was engineered so that it could be raised and lowered between acts to change it for the next thing, like so many modern stages. That documentary was where I learned about the awnings, too.
I remember hearing that the colosseum could be flooded as well to simulate navel battles too (I think it was connected to the aqueducts or some other channels)
These look incredible. I’m going to make these. I love dates and nuts so much, especially together!
First time watcher and new subscriber. Wow, this is a great show. Reminds me of a wonderful program called 'Dinner and a Movie' back on TBS I believe. It's just the vibe I get. Wonderful host, great content, and new things to cook/eat.