Rich Food VS Poor Food

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  • Опубліковано 20 кві 2024
  • What’s the difference between Rich Food and Poor Food when the same ingredients are being used? What exactly is the dividing line between the two classes when it comes to the supper table? We try to find some answers in this episode.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 303

  • @DrLicuid
    @DrLicuid Місяць тому +626

    I glanced at the preview with asparagus standing in a loaf of bread and my first thought was - "Happy Birthday!"

    • @righteousviking
      @righteousviking Місяць тому +25

      I would be a sad 21st century American if I was given bread and asparagus instead of cake hahaha!

    • @faithrada
      @faithrada Місяць тому +11

      ​@righteousviking Actually the Asparagus "cake" would not disappoint here. I'll take Asparagus soup over Asparagus ice cream however. 😉

    • @Sorcerers_Apprentice
      @Sorcerers_Apprentice Місяць тому +5

      @@righteousviking I would love it as part of a side dish for a nice birthday dinner.

    • @AdamtheRed-
      @AdamtheRed- Місяць тому +6

      Worst. Birthday. Ever. Lol

    • @oldasyouromens
      @oldasyouromens Місяць тому +3

      Yes, with hollandaise would be wonderful. ​@@Sorcerers_Apprentice

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Місяць тому +391

    18th century: Salmon is much cheaper than chicken.
    21st century: Chicken is much cheaper than salmon.

    • @silverjohn6037
      @silverjohn6037 Місяць тому +40

      Yes and no. If you're close to the source salmon and lobster would be common but, inland, they wouldn't be available to even the wealthiest person. Likewise, before refrigeration and reliable steam powered transportation, even royalty couldn't expect fresh fruits and vegetables year round the way the poorest people can today.

    • @Kelnx
      @Kelnx Місяць тому +25

      @@silverjohn6037 A lot of it had to do with tastes and attitudes too. All shellfish for the most part were seen as poor people food during the colonial era, not only because they were so plentiful but because of some social attitudes towards "bottom feeder" sea food (the primary exception being oysters which also got cheaper as popularity exploded). It also didn't help that, before the lobster industry took off, there were so many lobsters off the New England coast that piles of them would wash up on shore and just rot and stink. Not something that really added to their appeal.

    • @MrTeddy12397
      @MrTeddy12397 Місяць тому +8

      @@Kelnx i have heard that back in the day they first killed the lobsters before boiling, making them taste disgusting.

    • @mrjones2721
      @mrjones2721 Місяць тому +16

      @@MrTeddy12397Nowadays restaurants kill lobsters immediately before boiling. The kill isn’t the problem, it’s how long you wait after killing.
      If they were killing lobsters well beforehand, I question their common sense. Surely it’s easy enough to keep a lobster in a bucket of water until you’re ready to cook it.

    • @dividingpicnic
      @dividingpicnic Місяць тому +8

      Chicken didn’t get cheap until post-WWII I think. One of the early 20th century presidents (Hoover?) campaigned with the slogan “a chicken in every pot”, which was supposed to suggest bringing luxury to everyone, because chicken was a somewhat fancy kind of food.

  • @NoPantsBaby
    @NoPantsBaby Місяць тому +259

    You know when you're REALLY rich?
    When the food isn't edible anymore. When you're just supposed to appreciate it as an art piece.

    • @blargghkip
      @blargghkip Місяць тому +13

      Pineapples come to mind

    • @WaterZer0
      @WaterZer0 Місяць тому +23

      Someone is attending dinner with the Shogun.

    • @Chris-ut6eq
      @Chris-ut6eq Місяць тому +7

      @@WaterZer0 Or certain roman emperors.....

    • @dziooooo
      @dziooooo Місяць тому +24

      This is why I DESPISE cake covered in fondant. It's barely edible, and almost always the "art" is of the quality you'd expect from a 6th-grader playing with Play-Doh.

    • @Just_Sara
      @Just_Sara Місяць тому +7

      @@blargghkip I heard the other day that people used to RENT pineapples, you too?

  • @jaydoggy9043
    @jaydoggy9043 Місяць тому +27

    "Purges by urine." - That might be my favorite description of asparagus ever.

  • @robzinawarriorprincess1318
    @robzinawarriorprincess1318 Місяць тому +225

    We live near Andrew Jackson's home, the Hermitage. It is a super nice house, but it has a lot of construction fakery, such as wood columns painted with a sand mixture to look like stone. They also painted plain wood with grain lines to make it look like expensive wood.

    • @roberttalada5196
      @roberttalada5196 Місяць тому +10

      Yeah, I’m not surprised.

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 Місяць тому +33

      "Rich" people have always been full of pretenses to make them feel they are better than the rest of us.

    • @Norbrookc
      @Norbrookc Місяць тому +17

      @@sr2291 One of my cousins, who was fairly well-to-do but not "Rich" told me about moving into their new house. They were apologetic to the moving people because of all the furniture, and the movers told them not to worry about it, and that many of the 'upscale' houses in the area really didn't have much in the way of furniture. It was all about appearances.

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 Місяць тому

      @@Norbrookc Thanks for sharing that.

    • @littlekong7685
      @littlekong7685 Місяць тому +15

      @@Norbrookc Yup, my grandmother did catering for rich families back int he day. Apparently she had to bring her own cutlery because most only had 1 set for each person living there, she also had to bring table cloths, serving dishes, and a bucket to wash dishes in because the sinks were fake (Sometimes the fridges were too). She would be working while rented furniture and rented lamps were brought in for the party. The family either lived in another house, or only in 1 room and went out to dinner nightly (And the 1 room they lived in had the cheapest most well worn stuff imaginable).

  • @katertran1718
    @katertran1718 Місяць тому +75

    It's so fascinating that the more complex dish isn't even considered the main dish, it's just a side. Crazy how different people were eating

    • @PySnek
      @PySnek Місяць тому +4

      Yes but food back then was so much more than today. No TVs, no Smartphones, just a very small collection of books. You'd spend much more time thinking about food preparation and presentation than today, because it was one of the main attractions. Nowadays food has to be something that we can be done with as quick as possible or we eat while watching TV or UA-cam/streams.

    • @teneillesw.4312
      @teneillesw.4312 Місяць тому +6

      @@PySnek i mean we still make giant spreads at thanksgiving and Christmas. normally we're more like the poor people of times past haha

    • @TonyFontaine1988
      @TonyFontaine1988 Місяць тому

      ​@@PySnekmaybe in the USA. Not in Europe

    • @sd-ch2cq
      @sd-ch2cq Місяць тому +1

      It reminds me of 'instagram food', which is all about presentation

  • @floramew
    @floramew Місяць тому +90

    This kind of video is why I love you guys. I mean, "just" focusing on the recipes themselves is interesting enough already, but I really love connecting bits and pieces of knowledge together, trying to get a more holistic view of things, and like you said, reading in between the lines and drawing cultural conclusions etc from the context -- absolutely fascinating, thanks so much.

  • @LookingBackwards
    @LookingBackwards Місяць тому +86

    The quality of content and production in these videos is phenomenal. Don’t ever change, thank you for doing what you do

  • @benjaminscribner7737
    @benjaminscribner7737 Місяць тому +55

    Our man Ryan once again wowing us with his knowledge. Another great video.

  • @sonipitts
    @sonipitts Місяць тому +62

    Early Americans were really leaning into the "fake it til you make it" strategy. But in the end, we never lost the cultural impetus to obtain and maintain the appearance of wealth (or, more likely, what we *think* wealth looks like) regardless of our actual circumstances.
    Also...now I'm craving asparagus. 😆

    • @strongback6550
      @strongback6550 Місяць тому +3

      Should also be pointed out that many who didn't make it often turned to piracy and other forms of crime.

    • @silverjohn6037
      @silverjohn6037 Місяць тому +5

      Starbucks has made a fortune catering to that mind set. Their coffee isn't necessarily that much better than what you could brew at home but all the fashionable people have to buy the cup everyday to pose with rather than bringing a thermos to work.

    • @SRMC23
      @SRMC23 Місяць тому +2

      makes sense, it was a bunch of people being sent out or escaping from England to get a better jab at life, people wanted what the higher society had back in London or other big cities but they had to come by with what was around in the frontier.

    • @hrhtreeoflife4815
      @hrhtreeoflife4815 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@strongback6550
      😂
      They made it through theft
      They didn't die of starvation

    • @aidansearle5023
      @aidansearle5023 Місяць тому +1

      They still do that don't they? Lol

  • @aribantala
    @aribantala Місяць тому +50

    I absolutely did not expect a crash course on "Diplomatic posturing", if one may forgive the term... And how the dining table was (and frankly is in many parts of the world) the place where you conduct diplomacy... Even if it's as simple as bonding a person to person relationship, or as grand as geopolitical correspondence.
    The inner, basic but fulfilling desire for food is such a strong force that it's really baffling that something as simple as "Making foods presentable" can forge the fate of Nations

    • @Vaeldarg
      @Vaeldarg Місяць тому

      "Panda diplomacy" started that way. IIRC the story went that Ms. Reagan commented on the image of one on a pen of an official from China at a dinner. She said it was cute, and pandas were offered as a diplomatic gesture. Next thing you know, the U.S is turning a blind eye to human rights abuses otherwise have children crying over their zoo having to send back the pandas whenever the CCP gets upset.

    • @littlekong7685
      @littlekong7685 Місяць тому +2

      The entirety of the middle east's land borders were drawn after WW2 over dinner and handshake agreements. The strategists and experts made maps in conferences and with great debate, but all that was basically ignored because the men approving the lines made their own maps over dinner and wine.

  • @FruitMuff1n
    @FruitMuff1n Місяць тому +14

    Ryan's solo videos are just getting better and better. Love it!

  • @palaceofwisdom9448
    @palaceofwisdom9448 Місяць тому +17

    This vaguely reminds me of green bean casserole, taking a humble green veggie and elevating it to something remarkable.

  • @MC-810
    @MC-810 Місяць тому +21

    My favorite Sunday morning activity! A leisurely cuppa and Townsends.

  • @Grandwigg
    @Grandwigg Місяць тому +8

    A side dish of a second course for one, the whole dish (meal?) for the other.
    Says a lot.
    This was an excellent video for sure.

  • @cherub3624
    @cherub3624 Місяць тому +4

    That asparagus coming out of that thing looks like a 7 year olds first attempt at creating a dish.

  • @janemack8852
    @janemack8852 Місяць тому +12

    I wish you had tasted the bread with each. That seems an important ingredient.

  • @virongreene5146
    @virongreene5146 Місяць тому +12

    A history class with a cooking show mixed in....or do I have that backwards. As always, love the channel!

  • @tatalsaba
    @tatalsaba Місяць тому +2

    Food showing class and social hierarchy is a very interesting subject, both abundance, type of dishes, ingredients, cooking method and utensils all play into it.

  • @maiabravo5978
    @maiabravo5978 Місяць тому +8

    This is the only channel recipe I've ever made myself. Loved it.

  • @SimpleDesertRose
    @SimpleDesertRose Місяць тому +2

    We have asparagus growing in our garden this year. Come winter it should have been growing long enough to start harvesting crowns. I want to try this recipe. Most of my veggies I cook in butter, but this looks and sounds really good.

  • @juliegolick
    @juliegolick Місяць тому +2

    I've heard that nowadays you can tell someone's class by their attitude toward food:
    - Lower class: is there enough?
    - Middle class: is it good?
    - Upper class: is it well presented?

  • @jackknifer1
    @jackknifer1 Місяць тому +2

    I love this presenter, he has an air of tranquility around him. Lovely video, thank you

  • @veesimmons2464
    @veesimmons2464 Місяць тому +3

    For the love of asparagus! The fancy one does look divine, but I'd love the simple one just as much. Interesting video. I'd like to see more like this.

  • @SargeOfTheGuard
    @SargeOfTheGuard Місяць тому +9

    Your version of 'Asparagus Forced in a French Roll' as it was being prepared appeared more pleasing to my eye than the one that Jon Townsend did a few years back... but the way he sliced his open for consumption was more tastefully done than the way you excavated the innards of yours with a spoon... however, I'm sure that they both tasted just as good as one another! 😁

  • @gtbkts
    @gtbkts Місяць тому +1

    Thanks for all the awesome content and great videos!

  • @olddawgdreaming5715
    @olddawgdreaming5715 Місяць тому +1

    Thanks for sharing with us. We use to get our asparagus the same way in Colorado along side the roads. Thanks Ryan for showing the differences between the haves and the have nots. Stay safe and keep up the great videos. Fred.

  • @kellymurdock5982
    @kellymurdock5982 Місяць тому +2

    Coat asparagus in some olive oil, finely chopped garlic and sea salt. Let it sit for maybe a half hour and then grill it. Cooks fast and it is so good. Once I tasted it at a restaurant I never boiled again.

    • @LissyVee
      @LissyVee Місяць тому +1

      I bought a bunch of asparagus the other day and I just cut it into pieces, put it in some hot oil in a skillet with S&P and cook it for 4 minutes but I also put fresh grated Parmesan over it when it’s done and it is SO GOOD.

    • @malcolmdarke5299
      @malcolmdarke5299 Місяць тому +2

      To be honest, "in fat with a bit of salt" is a top-notch way of cooking greens. It works well for courgettes, Brussels sprouts (I used a bit of cayenne for that one), leeks and apparently asparagus.
      I'd say that I don't understand why people don't like vegetables, but I do. It's that they haven't experienced vegetables cooked properly, which is a crying shame.
      Get your veggies fresh and prepare them simply. Let the flavours present themselves!

    • @jeffhampton2767
      @jeffhampton2767 25 днів тому +1

      I like butter and fresh lemon on my asparagus

  • @SteampunkKittyWorkshop
    @SteampunkKittyWorkshop Місяць тому +1

    Thanks Ryan...the way you explain the history of each dish makes me want to try them all the more. I also like asparagus and going to add this to my recipes.

  • @dmr6640
    @dmr6640 Місяць тому

    As always, I really like Ryan's topics and presentations. Keep em coming.

  • @zenhydra
    @zenhydra Місяць тому +1

    I love it. Thanks for the great video. I'm going to have to make a variation on the "rich" variation this weekend, and I truly appreciate the modern options we have in part because of educational material just like this.

  • @christophermeister3706
    @christophermeister3706 Місяць тому +1

    Always love your insight talking about the why behind these things.

  • @deborahcaldwell9775
    @deborahcaldwell9775 Місяць тому +1

    You really cheered me up with this analitic explanation. Wonderful.

  • @Faceplay2
    @Faceplay2 Місяць тому +2

    Always love these videos!

  • @JJW77
    @JJW77 Місяць тому

    Excellent enjoyable video - I love the interesting history and comparison of the two food groups...

  • @rikwilliams6352
    @rikwilliams6352 Місяць тому +3

    Fascinating, thank you for shareing.

  • @amel2784
    @amel2784 Місяць тому +1

    Excellent research and presentation. Thank you very much. 👍💯🏆

  • @hayeonkim7838
    @hayeonkim7838 Місяць тому +3

    Thanks for interesting and valuable video as always ❤❤❤

  • @dianebondhus9355
    @dianebondhus9355 Місяць тому

    Mmm, you guys find the best recipes! Thanks for another top notch video. ❤

  • @TextileGeorge
    @TextileGeorge Місяць тому

    great video guys, really enjoyed this on

  • @windycricket
    @windycricket Місяць тому +1

    Sizzle some asparagus in olive oil until nearly preferred doneness. Squeeze some lemon juice on it with salt and pepper and pinch of garlic powder sizzle until done. OR cook some asparagus in olive oil/butter mixture until almost done. Then drop some eggs and seasoning in it and scramble it up. My two favorite ways to eat asparagus. Poor people style :)

  • @walterengler5709
    @walterengler5709 Місяць тому

    Very nice episode. Thanks!

  • @ethangrazier4899
    @ethangrazier4899 Місяць тому +2

    Love Ryan as a presenter! Same with the sourdough video. 10/10

  • @davestelling
    @davestelling 17 днів тому

    Everything looked very good, enjoyed - thanks Ryan...

  • @KakavashaForever
    @KakavashaForever Місяць тому

    Great stuff as always!

  • @SheyD78
    @SheyD78 Місяць тому +4

    Am I the only one tempted to mix those two piles of asparagus together to make it buttter, cream and egg asparagus?

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Місяць тому +1

    6:12 I am utterly amazed that you found an old script font that includes the long s that looks like an f

  • @yep8058
    @yep8058 Місяць тому

    Really love your cooking videos

  • @SandrA-hr5zk
    @SandrA-hr5zk Місяць тому +1

    Asparagus was cultivated in California by Chinese immigrants when the San Juaquin Delta was turned into agricultural lands. Stockton even has a festival for it. Filipinos and Vietnamese immigrants were also used for growing/harvesting the crop.

  • @martykitson3442
    @martykitson3442 Місяць тому +2

    It looks like john has almost entirely handed the cooking over to you, good job Ryan🤠👍👍

  • @PulpParadise
    @PulpParadise Місяць тому +2

    A recipe with nutmeg and Jon's not around. I hope that doesn't mean he had to go to nutmeg rehab. 😉This looks like such a lovely recipe - thanks for sharing Ryan and @Townsends!

  • @jeffd.7092
    @jeffd.7092 Місяць тому

    Thanks for an informative video. I’m gonna try both recipes with my family.

  • @donbachmeier7617
    @donbachmeier7617 Місяць тому

    You are a very good communicator, sir.

  • @davidshettlesworth1442
    @davidshettlesworth1442 Місяць тому

    Thank you for a great history lesson and entertaining video. Carry On Sir.

  • @xavierisrael3320
    @xavierisrael3320 Місяць тому

    Really like this format

  • @usapatriot4163
    @usapatriot4163 Місяць тому

    Great video! Love the poor food series. Thanks!

  • @Blrtech77
    @Blrtech77 Місяць тому +1

    Thanks Ryan for the history lesson. Amazing 👏

  • @cliffwoodbury5319
    @cliffwoodbury5319 Місяць тому

    I know i said this before, but AMAZING VIDEO. It's cool you are on this channel, because you have what it takes to have your own channel, and I would hope in the future this channel expand if it can attract other talents of the same pedigree, because it is cool to have multiple talents under one roof/channel, covering the same topics in their own unique entertaining way.

  • @mr.stevens-pg6ff
    @mr.stevens-pg6ff 21 день тому

    Showing this to my students. Thanks Townsends!

  • @truthreigns7
    @truthreigns7 Місяць тому

    great presentation.

  • @rahannneon
    @rahannneon Місяць тому

    Excellent video.

  • @brucetidwell7715
    @brucetidwell7715 Місяць тому +1

    Another great episode! The asparagus in custard looks delicious. QUESTION: When all of those dishes were laid out on the table, did the guests pass them around hand to hand, or did a servant bring them around the table and then leave them in the appropriate spot?

  • @peterott-tn6pf
    @peterott-tn6pf Місяць тому

    Awesome video man! Asparagus is one of my absolute favorite veggies!!

  • @jojomojo6569
    @jojomojo6569 Місяць тому +1

    Great video, loved it! Also, he looks a bit like Penn Jillette?

  • @Strix-gp9xg
    @Strix-gp9xg Місяць тому

    amazing stuff!

  • @DireWolf28
    @DireWolf28 Місяць тому +1

    Silent Bob is a great teacher. I find the history of how people dined fascinating!

  • @outdooraddventure
    @outdooraddventure 24 дні тому

    I grew up in a single parent family. So I learned to appreciate what food we got. I know one thing for sure. My mother made us always good meals. Christmas birthdays etc was always great. We didn't have what all the other kids had. But I was a strong as hell athlete when I reached my early teens and into my high school years / adulthood

  • @successthruknowledge
    @successthruknowledge Місяць тому

    I think that I will try to cook the wealthy family's version of the asparagus recipe! I meant several times to try some of your recipes. I love asparagus so you must succeed with such a simple recipe!

  • @gerrymarmee3054
    @gerrymarmee3054 Місяць тому

    I love these videos!

  • @larrymiller5253
    @larrymiller5253 Місяць тому

    Bruh! Love your videos

  • @MsLeenite
    @MsLeenite Місяць тому

    Thank you, Ryan.

  • @gailsears2913
    @gailsears2913 Місяць тому

    Good one Ryan!

  • @dwaynewladyka577
    @dwaynewladyka577 Місяць тому +1

    A very nice looking dish using asparagus. Can you do a video on what dishes were served at banquets in the 18th century, in North America? Cheers!

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 Місяць тому

    One thing do notice different between those earlier cookbooks and now.(a side
    from not assuming you know things) Is
    I don't remember ever seeing urine mentioned anywhere. 🤔 Nope I sure
    don't. 🤷🏼‍♀️😉😅
    Thanks Ryan and Crew another wonderful
    video. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🌹

  • @BlessingsfromNorthIdaho
    @BlessingsfromNorthIdaho Місяць тому

    In Wyoming along the irrigation canals asparagus grows wild and you can cut bags of it in the spring ❤.

  • @beckypennington79
    @beckypennington79 Місяць тому

    Thanks for the video it was fun and very interesting

  • @DannysGalaxyTab
    @DannysGalaxyTab Місяць тому

    Hope we see more of this guy!

  • @gkeuler
    @gkeuler Місяць тому

    This guy narrates amazing videos

  • @chicagorandy
    @chicagorandy Місяць тому

    Thanks for sharing the novel recipe and the history behind it. I do believe that to know any people, learn what they eat and try it.

  • @MakoRuu
    @MakoRuu Місяць тому +1

    That Asparagus loaf is very similar to Green Bean Casserole that we make for Christmas time. Perhaps they share a similar origin.

  • @michaelshuman3319
    @michaelshuman3319 Місяць тому +1

    Ah-Ha !! Early version of a Panera Bread Bowl !!

  • @geomundi8333
    @geomundi8333 Місяць тому

    love this video; love his glasses. i have big old thick pop bottle lens so probably wouldn't work with my prescription lol

  • @angelamneeley1797
    @angelamneeley1797 Місяць тому

    What a blessing Father is always right on time thank you fir your obedience to post about asparagus right now we just harvested some from the garden looking forward to trying these recipes. May YAH bless you and keep you and your families

  • @mrjones2721
    @mrjones2721 Місяць тому

    My father had an asparagus patch that was about 8x8. It took very little work, and during the spring it was woefully productive. (Did I mention that I don’t like asparagus?) You harvested the stems multiple times, until it got late enough in the season that it didn’t taste good any longer. After that you let it grow unhindered into an unbroken patch of fluffy green, decorated with little red berries.
    Because it’s a perennial, that piece of ground is permanently occupied by asparagus. That would be a problem in a tiny English country garden, but Americans had more space to spare. So I’m not entirely sure why asparagus became a “fancy” food, unless the attraction is having asparagus out of season.

  • @lynnsenger9950
    @lynnsenger9950 Місяць тому +1

    My dad grew asparagus. We were the only two in the family that liked it. I thought I was the luckiest kid in the world.

  • @goofusmaximus1482
    @goofusmaximus1482 Місяць тому

    The more things change, the more things stay the same. Three centuries later that does not change so much. Quite remarkable!

  • @mikeks8181
    @mikeks8181 8 днів тому

    Born in 1966! We would have spaghetti and sauce( sometimes with 75/25 ground beef) one dinner. The next dinner was the best! Spaghetti Srambled eggs with applesauce on the side! Hot dog and hamburger Buns were only for Special occasions! Plain white bread unless Dad felt like toasting on the grill! Moms Salisbury steaks were just hand made burgers shaped into an oval. Steaks were Chuck roast cut into slices.
    I DON'T regret Any of them! Still enjoy my spaghetti and eggs!
    Hard Times!
    Simple Times!
    Best of Cooking!

  • @thak44
    @thak44 Місяць тому

    This is so interesting I love it

  • @farmerswife51
    @farmerswife51 Місяць тому

    Oh yes! We still know where the wild asparagus is in our neighborhood, and still pull over in these spots, even though we have asparagus beds in our yard.

  • @unclebob1959
    @unclebob1959 Місяць тому

    Proud subscriber for 5 years!

  • @hawktheelfowl
    @hawktheelfowl Місяць тому

    It always tickles me when one of the recipes featured is still something I make routinely. Asparagus cooked/ fried in butter is decidedly the best!

  • @ZippyMrMw
    @ZippyMrMw Місяць тому

    The chart of dishes.. fascinating

  • @chrisd7287
    @chrisd7287 Місяць тому +1

    I haven't kept up too much with the channel and i'm not sure who this chap is, but i like him . 🍻

    • @DavidCowie2022
      @DavidCowie2022 Місяць тому

      Going by the other comments, his name is Ryan.

  • @aurinsaint9058
    @aurinsaint9058 Місяць тому

    I was at 2:50 roughly.....and hear our host say Rich people like food are tools! I just started laughing! He called Rich folk Tools! Lol
    It just made me laugh. I needed that laugh so bad.

  • @coppergearheart4125
    @coppergearheart4125 Місяць тому

    This episode reminds me of reading Alexis Soyer's works, and he weirdly differentiated between asparagus, and something called sprue grass which I could only assume is wild asparagus.

  • @jocelynnlillis2921
    @jocelynnlillis2921 Місяць тому

    I would love to see a video on the history of the Chef during this time frame , was they well respected? considered a servant? where they "peasants" and wht sorta foods would you find in a freestanding restaurant/tavern of the time

  • @smrk2452
    @smrk2452 Місяць тому

    What does it look like in context? I’d image a presentation with asparagus sticking up from bread would have a complementary look in a room filled with tall candle sticks. And the context flavors would go well against highly decorated walls. It all fits in context.

  • @agimagi2158
    @agimagi2158 Місяць тому +1

    I was searching for a recipe for green aspargus (white is more common here). Guess I've found not one, but two!

    • @LaundryFaerie
      @LaundryFaerie Місяць тому

      Fun fact: white asparagus is the same plant as green asparagus; the only difference is that one is covered with mulch so it doesn't develop chlorophyll.

  • @sheilam4964
    @sheilam4964 Місяць тому +4

    The narrative contains a lot of great observations between the poor and the well-to-do, all worth remembering and keeping in mind when reading about the past.

  • @Kennybecker777
    @Kennybecker777 Місяць тому

    Nice video ❤