Irish People Try Stereotypical Irish Foods
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- čas přidán 30. 01. 2015
- "It tastes like dog food?."
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We had irish people try out those "traditional" irish foods kindly supplied by the CZcams commenters.
Haggis, Corned beef & cabbage, Pigs feet, Guinness, Lucky
Charms and Colcannon.
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Produced by Creative Nation
Music licensed from AudioMicro
Other Videos of ours :
Irish People Taste American Christmas Treats
• Irish People Try Ameri...
Crisp Sandwiches
• Crisp Sandwich Taste Test - Zábava
I've never in my life assumed they ate Lucky Charms
Aside from the Irish stereotype , I do like my beer and I do like to fight lmao
Well now Ye feckin know ! 😂💚
Right? Thanks for that generalization lol
seriously that's like the most disney shit ever.
They don't? The next thing your going to tell me is captain crunch isn't a real sea captain.
"This is not what we're like. only half of my family can juggle marshmallows" 😂😂
I saw 'haggis' in a ton of comments and was like, "That's Scottish, but go off, I guess." 😂😂
Before I went to Scotland I thought that was a stereotype, like obviously people eat it, but I thought it was like something your grandma makes every once in a while. But it was everywhere! They even sold Pizza with Haggis
@@lmn6023 Pizza with Haggis???
Wrong on a million levels!!!
It is Scottish
Ioana is so hot!
Feel lucky they didn't get cullen skink
In defense of us Americans, I have never met anyone who thought haggis was an Irish food.
Or lucky charms
Trust me as an Irish person you meet a lot of them out there
@Alistair Bolden no, it’s of Scottish origin therefore it’s Scottish. Nothing else
@Alistair Bolden sure there are, they are different by culture, accent, geographical location
You'd be surprised 😅
"only half of my family can juggle marshmallows" lol
The Irish accent is the most beautiful thing I have ever heard.
ShastaMusic I 'swoon' over women with Irish accents. lol :)
morning morality Against the peoples republic of Cork accent?!!? How dare you lol. I can't speak I have the dreaded Northern Irish accent.
ShastaMusic How about an Irish accent of someone who has lived in the south-proper(perhaps Charleston?). I'd kill to meet her
Thank you! :D
morning morality Yeah, people in Crumlin and Ballymun sound very sophisticated, lol.
Who in their right mind would think Lucky Charms are part of Irish people's typical food?
I can say most of my American countrymen are not very cultured and have no clue what is going on beyond their 4 walls.
Students
Ikr
Are you kidding? It was a part of every good leprechaun's fight against the English.
I love the way us Irish say "sláinte (health)" before drinking alcohol
i came to the comments simply for this. thank you
But I cannot pronounce it! Not even trying.
All I ever heard in Ireland was "Drink up guys..and we'll have one more for the road!"
@Gggg Yeah...Because they don't "consume" it...They "main line" it!
BADGUY 1
We say slainte all the time.
Lol love it when the guy looks at the red-headed girl and says I don't know where they get that
Yeah, that was a very subtle joke. I think many people missed that.
Jacket Jesus is the funniest of the lot. If he had his own show I'd watch the shit out of that.
Morgyn Smith THANK YOU!
he has his own channel
Jacket Jesus!! LMAO!!
"This is not what we're like...only half of my family can juggle marshmallows." LOL DYING
😂
I honestly got so triggered when the comments came up on the screen saying that Irish people eat haggis ! NO ! That’s Scottish ! I’m Scottish 🏴! Just don’t 😂!
I'm Scottish and haggis is disgusting
Scottish eggs are awesome! Choose life! Lol sorry I'm reading Trainspotting
Scotts-Irish American and only a real git would think Haggis is Irish
"it's sugary, but delicious." you could say they're Magically Delicious(TM)
We've just added English subtitles(closed captions) to the video which you can access via the "CC" button under the player.
And I love them. Especially caption for the sound she makes around 2:34. "Blugarblar" Makes the video that much better.
Why? They're speaking English.
SirAntoniousBlock Are they? are they really?
xD
You idiot there not speaking English they're speaking Irish douuuuuhh
Irish people are such gems.
thank you' no fear of us getting a big head or anything :)
Hannah Maris YEAH THEY ARE! THIS GAL KNOWS WHAT SHE'S TALKIN' ABOUT!
Beautiful people all around :,)
Especially the ladies
I honestly read that as "germs" at first and was preparing my finest rants
Hannah Maris Thank you. :)
"I'm sure it's lovingly prepared...but it's a FOOT." LMAO
with fricking hair still on it
@@crashland5711 I hadn't seen this video for a couple of years & did not remember it. So, I watched again and that comment STILL makes me laugh today.
I just love the "this is not what we're like, only half my family can juggle." 10/10
I love how they're all like "yeah, we don't really eat this stuff" and then when they break out the Guinness they're all like "FUCK YEAH!"
I actually have no clue what a typical Irish meal looks like, but I can assure you I never once thought it was pig's feet and Lucky Charms. I still do think there's a lot of cabbage and potatoes involved.
+GummyTumor The sunday roast is still quite popular, chicken, beef or ham with carrots/broccoli/cabbage/peas and potatoes.
+GummyTumor Well you're not wrong.
+GummyTumor I daresay they too have McDonald's
For breakfast it would be like sausages and eggs and toast for lunch it would be sandwhices and for dinner a roast on Sundays
+Honney Bunny sausages and eggs wouldn't be a daily thing, cereal and porridge are pretty popular. The likes of spaghetti bolognese is a normal enough dinner these days.
The videos including this young lady are by far my favorite. She’s a
stunner.
"Young"
just an Irish lad passing through the comments
Colman O'Flynn welll shcandal boyy
Same
"Come out ye black and tans"
I'm sorry if that's offensive but mid video on I just started visualizing everybody as pirate captains, even the red head woman. Guess it was the accents and the background music. lol
+Lucas Simões No offence taken... We can't help but do it now too! (And yes, we're Irish)
Facts. Arrr!!! :D
+Lucas Simões Were not pirates mate ^-^
I'm Irish and that's funny as hell
+Lucas Simões Arrgh matey, now off to walk the plank with ye
I'm suprised there wasn't any potato's.When I think of Irish sterotypes that's the first that comes to mind.
there was in the colcannon and I think the guy said "Potato again" so I assume there was some potato with the bacon and cabbage.
Mysticm1 There was some potato in the Colcannon and the Corned beef & cabbage, we had originally talked over having them try a raw potato but ended up taking it out of the final video!
We all eat potato.
Bugsaresocool Here up in the North its nothing but bloody potatoes. D:
Do any of you know that potatos nevr came from Ireland in the first bloody place? It came from New Jersey and other places like that.. Just because they grow them there like every other place in the fricken world does not mean they are addicted!
love from Italy :) you guys are great ! always respect to Ireland :)
So I married an Axe Murderer, taught me that haggis is Scottish and Mike Myers would go on to make millions with his excellent Canadian/Scottish accent in an animated movie series.
No one in America actually thinks Lucky Charms are Irish tho.
Fuck ya viola, I am too Irish ya swag bottler.
Wow, Lucky Charms. *slow clap* You're so clever. I'm so impressed by your vigor. Pat yourself on the back, would you. I'm...I think I'm blinded by your glory.
Fuckin' rights.
AoifeL93 lol. what.
AoifeL93 No, an overweight, American hillbilly with a contrived hick accent would be just that--a stereotype. It would not be racist. White people cannot be racist against whites because we cannot be oppressed just like perpetuating a stereotype about a leprechaun is not oppressing any Irish people. Racism indicates oppression.
"Guinness is an Irishman's battery." Yes.
I thought that was hysterical.
We took over loads of porky recipes with us...just what the hell are they eating now?
Spoken like a true Irishman. Lol
Human Tacos works on Irish-Americans as Well
I'm Irish I even use Guinness is great to add to plump pudding better taste😊
I think I'm in love with that irish red head
In that last bit, Elga looks like Scully listening to one of Mulder's theories.
I had an Irish foster mom and she made really good corned beef and cabbage, soda bread and pies. (That was over 60 years ago.)
Damn how old are you
but that's american and not really irish (the corned beef and cabbage combo)
@@legoswreviewsandcomparison3685 Over 70. Yes, people do live that long and more and I'm still working f/t.
Oh man I love the soda bread.
This is quickly becoming one of my favorite channels on youtube.
This channel and their videos have replaced the in my life. This is my new show.
What no soda bread
joe Duca what, no question mark
Love the music!
I think the people working in Facts thought it'd be funny if you guys ate lucky charms cause I never 'once' thought Irish people ate them.
I've never seen lucky charms for sale here.
+SunBeast66 I think the only time you can get them in the UK and Ireland is if you have an import section in the local supermarket XD
I always thought Lucky Charms were American?
+Tre ori And they are dear, it's a pitiful breakfast meal only the dim serve to their children.
+Mary Kay yeah, it's not meant as a breakfast. it's to give to stoners with the munchies
MrZee lol same here!
Do people actually think that Haggis is Irish?
Im surprised they didn't put shepherd 's pie on that list
Facts. You racist anti-english IRA supporters make me laugh.
+Scorpion20012001 naw we don't have any of that pigs feet and all up in the north I'm from Strabane it's a Catholic town up in Tyrone
+Scorpion20012001 There not up North either. I'm from Derry and I've been to Donegal, Fermanagh, Armagh, and Antrim and never seen them.
Haggis isn't actually scottish either, historians actually think its Danish
Love your videos
There’s a wonderful Irish pub that serves Colcannon in my town and I LOVE it! It is amazing but then again I love most traditional Irish Foods!
the only thing this proved to me is the irish people are hot.
It truly is a cross we all have to bear.
Ha, we like you, your invited to the party!
come visit any time ill show you around :)
Yes....the red head girl haha.
0____0 Yes....how unfortunate that is hahahahaha! I mean the accents....the beards.... 0_0
*cries in a corner* XD
I can't believe someone actually put Lucky Charms in front of them and stated that Americans think that is traditional Irish food. They must now think we are a bunch of morons. At least put down some "Irish Stew" or something. It is good to dispel misconceptions and learn the truth about another culture. The cereal was lame.
Sorry Facts, I thought I was on BuzzFeed.
Irish stew is actually Irish.
+Michael Hartman me too
I have no clue why they put that xD and I'm american
+David Parsons Justin is Canadian...
These Irish men are so handsome, I'm in love. 😍😊❤️
You are a dog though - you will love anyone who'll feed and pet you 😄😉
The music is fire, that flute action
I rewound the red headed girls reaction to the pigs foot like 15 times.
I just commented the SAME thing...and I STILL cant stop watching. LOL
TURN IT INTO A TRY NOT TO LAUGH
You could buy pickled pigs feet in the liquor store around the corner from my home growing up. And I grew up in Los Angeles, CA.
My dad is from Mississippi and they eat them there too. I didn't think pigs feet were a multicultural thing but learn something every day.
Carbonsnail my dad is from a small town called Starksville up in the northern area. Nice.
Carbonsnail he was born in 54. But raised on a farm with his grandfather till his early teens. So he has a lot of random stories and mindset of a generation earlier.
In brazil we say that tradicional Irish food is guinness and when I came in Ireland I discovered that we are right hahaha...CHEERS!!
+Thiago Racca Food? lol
Doge kidding man.. did you watched the video.. in the title is written food, but they taste guinness anyway (just like in Ireland haha) CHEERS
+Thiago Racca the fuck is guinness?
Mugiwara Nami what?!?! guinness is a beer not sex... did you watched the video?
Thiago Racca "the fuck is guinness" means "what the fuck is guinness"
Corned beef and cabbage. I've had that growing up... I'm Canadian. Nova Scotia... new Scotland. I think it's lovely.
Hello there
That music never fails to raise my spirits. I'm constantly on the lookout for stuff like it. I literally just came off of a 4 hour binge, adding songs to my Spotify. I'm so American but I swear I can feel the Irish blood coursing through my veins! Speaking of which... this music is my personal battery! (2:58) Well, music in general is what keeps me going but still!
I thought this was buzzfeed for a sec
Same
+Brandon Reyes this is basically an irish buzzfeed- which isnt a bad thing- i like it all the same
Like the less popular, Irish Buzzfeed. Still good.
Did anyone else come thinking this was buzzfeed -.-
It's only your comment that made me realise that it wasn't haha
Omg same
IT TOOK ME A WHILE TO REALIZE
i was about to comment saying "wtf are you blind this is buzzfeed" then saw again
Hahaha same here
lol the guy in the blue shirt, deadpan: "warms the cockles of my heart"
as an american, i have to say i love our corn beef and cabbage parties on st. pat's day. big pots of corned beef with little potatoes, carrots and of course cabbage. such yummy food. accompanied of course with many pints of black & tan. again, yummy.
I love watching Europeans eat our cereals and being both delighted and disgusted at the same time. We are so weird.
As someone who just gained and lost weight in the last couple months from "treating myself", seeing anyone eat our frosted sugar minibombs makes me cringe. Shit's diabetes in a box.
@@manictiger I love the taste of diabetes in the morning.
Even I, an American, look at our cereal choices and say, "WTF?" Then a grab that big Economy Family size box of Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs
@@justacountryboy2346 🤣
U say europeans as if it’s a country
Stereotypical joke:
An Irish man walks out of a bar.
Everyone laughs
+Sophie Smith Like the leather jacket guys joke about a hockey game broke out in a Canadian bar/pub/tavern fight type deal.
+Alucard Hellsing Why Canadians do it doggy-style?
So they can both watch the hockey game.
I don't get it....
+pinksparkles2278
Jokes like this usually start with, "An Irishman walked into a bar ...." Such as :-
An Irishman walked into a bar and died.
It was a iron bar.
David Keenan If he was in Scotland, it would have been a Barr's Irn-Bru bar.
i love the irish flute music :)
LOL I Love It!!!! finally get a chance to see what Irish people eat
Theres not one thing here that we eat
What's up with the vampire leprechaun Russel Brand? He's unearthly pale but hilarious
+Ice Bear Heard its always cloudy there.
+bulok69
He is translucent.
+bulok69 I gotta feeling he's wearing make up. But if I was a rock producer I'd sign him up for sure.
+bulok69 irish people are more pale thats what happens when there's not a lot of sun.
Ice Bear yup
I'm American. My mother's grandparents all came from Ireland over a hundred years ago. My mother's one grandfather came here on the maiden voyage of the Carpathia. He brought two pieces of luggage. One was a bag of clothes and some personal items. The other was a case of whiskey. He had heard that America doesn't have whiskey and figured it would last him a month or so until he got settled and could send for more. his dad, my great, great grandfather, had stolen it along with many other cases of booze from some undisclosed business sometime in the 1870's. When he got here he found that not only did America have whiskey but suddenly he liked it more than Irish made whiskey. So the case got put into the back of a closet in his aunt's house. When he married he moved to a new house and took the whiskey with him, unopened. Over the years, at some important family occasion his relatives would urge him to open a bottle and make a toast with the "special" whiskey. When I was a kid, half the case was still there. When my great grandfather died my grandfather ended up with what was left. Over the years he too would occasionally open a bottle. My mother inherited three bottles. I don't drink at all but my other four siblings do. So my mom in her motherly wisdom, gave it all to me a couple of years before she died. I asked her why since I don't drink and she said it was because my brother's would drink it away in a week and my sister would give it to her husband who would drink it away in a day. She said in my hands it would pass to the next generation. I opened on bottle two years ago mostly because I was just dying to find out what 140 year old whiskey tastes like. I don't know what all the fuss is about. It tastes exactly like turpentine, just like any other whiskey I have tried except maybe slightly stronger flavor. I put the cork back in the bottle and wrapped the whole thing up in plastic and keep all three bottles in the top shelf of my cabinet. I collect antique bottles and as far as I'm concerned, the value is as a collectible bottle. It looks good in a cabinet but tastes like crap.
@Cillian O'Brien Northern Ireland
This person never once claimed to be Irish. They clearly stated they are American with Irish ancestry. IDK why people are getting up in arms about them claiming to be "Irish" even though that isn't the case what so ever.
nunya biznez no one cares
@Adam Bohan: Obviously you do since you responded. (insert rolleyes emoticon)
Great story!
I'm from Glasgow and grew up on a lot of cabbage, corned beef and potatoes, one of my favourite dinners!
All these videos make me miss Ireland!
Just so people know, there are quite a few American's who don't resort to stereotypes about other countries. I personally love to hear how they truly are. So, let's not resort to American stereotypes in a video trying to combat stereotypes, k?
We get it. Everything thinks Americans are ignorant and selfish. That's kind of like when you lump everyone into one category. What's the word for that again?
Exactly what I was thinking.
Generalisation?
georgemiser lol
The thing is though, steriotypes can sometimes be true although usually are just silly (you should not take offense lol). They can be quite accurate as they are a generalisation of a population of people. For example most Irish do drink a lot, but not all, some would take offense to that statement, but its wasted energy. I love traveling to America, I've been there several times and to many different states. American's are generally ignorant towards other cultures. So ignorant and clueless that its comes across as stupidity but its mostly just ignorance. Every country has its stupid people, so this steriotype is false in my opinion. America's problem is that the average Joe truly believes that America is NO.1 at everything, without a doubt in their mind. They have no interest in looking at the rest of the world because of this. I met a lot of lovely people who did not think or act in this way and many lovely people who did. From my experience i would just call it a small part of American culture. Don't worrie, the French are ignorant too :D , America's not the only one lol
BarocaS2 I hope we are more individualized. Being an American on CZcams has become quite embarrassing to me. Just think, we reach more people world wide via the internet than any other way and here we are trying to act so righteous. What has happened to us?! We are supposed to be the "melting pot" of cultures. Our money says " e pluribus unum" (from many comes one) , how have we lost that mind set? We should be embracing other cultures and here we are acting like a bunch of spoiled children.
I was gonna say... I really thought haggis was a scottish thing.
It is xD
it is
they put haggis in for a joke because some dumb person thought it was irish
It is!
well actually it is both because Irish and Scottish cuisines are very similar to each other so it is right to think that it is Scottish but really its both
Aidan Walker It is Scottish.
Omg... the woman's reaction to the pigs feet nearly killed me. I haven't laughed so hard in a while. Fucking hilarious!! You know its bad when you automatically spaz out. Lmao
probably my favorite one so far
Not a single Potato dish? Really?
***** lol
***** teehee
***** tá tú ag Sasanach salach tee hee
***** id say you're not the best at english either LOL
***** grammar lessons from a YT bigot hahahaha fucking brilliant
"Corned beef and cabbage" was invented by Irish immigrants living in the slums of New York City. It was made from the cheapest ingredients they could buy because many weren't hired due to the racist attitudes of the time. The corned beef was actually due to Jewish influence.
What race are the Irish exactly ?
Caucasians believe it wasn't racism but they were discriminated against for sure mostly because so many came at one time and over whelmed the system.
Derek Quinn What race are the Irish? Irish of course. Race can be defined as cultural not just by skin tone
Derek Quinn Believe it or not most cultures have had issues with racism and prejudice's. Some more extreme then other's of course.
Derek Quinn I don't need anthropology lessons, I know how skeletons are classified. Skeletons are also of course only one way to classify race. Culture is another way. Anthropometric features aren't the only way to distinguish between groups of people, after all.
Jon Mayo Yes... i know
the fork sex trick is hillarious. i have not had a guiness in years. this video brought back a lot of memories about great irish friends.
I think that's the best mood I've ever seen Ryan in
He's all hopped up on Lucky Charms.
"I'm sure that's lovingly prepared, but.... just... it's a foot, like, it's a foot." hahahahahaha
I think what happens a lot of times in the US is that we can be a bit of a time capsule. The culture that is brought over with the big immigration waves is a product of the time that those waves took place and as such it kind of freezes at that point and gets handed like that to the kids, grandkids etc. Meanwhile back in the old country, life is progressing and going on into modernity. It's a funny thing how America is "The New World" and yet among the immigrant populations it can actually be very old fashioned.
Now in the case of Lucky Charms, that's just marketing! Nobody really believes it's an Irish breakfast staple. lol I do love that little Leprechaun though. hehe
That's how it is in the Arab American community, as well! I went to Dubai recently and was surprised to see that the entire region was nothing like what our grandparents remembered, lol.
Yes. I am from Minnesota, where we still eat lutefisk and other things from Norway which they have since abandoned in Norway proper.
Very well said, I'm an irish girl who went, many moons ago, to the states to work in an irish restaurant for the summer during college. There was corned beef and cabbage on the menu and I remember a patron asking me if this was what we really ate, and I said no, I've never had that for dinner in my life! :D
Andrea Byrne-Gul LOL
+Ibbygirl PERFECT explanation!
the irish accent is my favorite accent ...i wish i had one
I have one 🙋🏻
shi.x dont rub it in lol were u born in ireland
You might want to reconsider because almost every county has a different accent and then the travellers have their own too, But my point is not all Irish accents sound good
johnny kelly yah i guess your right
Saaammmeee
I just fell in love with the redhead!
Her name is Elga Fox and I've been in love with her for four years.
@@jackdull5699 You lucky bastard.
I'm irish and I never went to the shops and seen lucky charms in my life
I think they're only sold in the USA
same
The best part is calling Guiness "An Irish Man's Battery. You Pop That In and They're Good To Go." =D
They have a more stereotypical view of Americans than we have of them. In all honesty I don't know very many Americans that think about "stereotypical" Irish foods all that much. The first thing that comes to mind when I think of Ireland are potatoes and beer that's pretty much it, besides that they're not much in my thoughts or much of anyone else's here. Our stereotypes tend to be directed towards each other here, rather than Europe but, apparently they think otherwise.
Dean wcw One thing most people realize when their talking about stereotypes is that they're not true. They seem to believe them.
America is a big, loud(don't take it the wrong way, I mean on the "world stage"), and is quite active in the global community. That means we in other countries hear a lot about you. Since we are thinking of your country some people will turn to makign steryotypes, which they do for your country rather than say.... new zealand, because yours in more prevalent in our minds. Also some americans come across as EXTREMELY vocally patriotic (not saying that is wholly a bad thing, just some of you are) which can be a bit... irritating from our side of things. Which leads to some negative feedback.
Not trying to be mean here, just trying to give you the perspective from the other side of this, to help you understand the roots of it. Also keep in mind, much of it is just in jest. It's not to be mean, it's just joking around.
Sorry about the slightly block-o-textish reply, but have a good day.
mafiacat88 That's understood and I know exactly what you are referring to. It's completely understandable that they would have a bigger opinion on us than we have on them specifically for the reasons you've stated. While often it is simple jest as you stated there can still be some who seem to take it a bit far, but we are online after all so I think its best to consider those people a minority.
Id hate to see his reaction if he was french...my gawd!! ;)
E: Check my links up the page, you'll see why they do the things they do.
*I love every last one of these people* they're hilarious!
What is that super catchy tune going on in the background? You could start a hoedown with it 😤😎
Americans probably think we live on potatoes and cabbage and beer xD
Dam k So you guys don't live on potatoes,cabbage,beer and lucky charms
And wear kilts and are all red headed and drunk 100% of the time
well we do 😂😂
Well don't you?
I believe most irish are good looking
Lucky charms is kind of referencing the leprechaun and his pot of gold (the cereal) at the end of the rainbow...I don't think anyone ever pictured it as Irish food.
Is made in kilkenny and exported by the CIA
You'd be surprised 😅
When the Irish first arrived they couldn't afford more expensive beef so the corned tough beef and then boiled it til tender. Usually served with onions, potatoes, carrots and cabbage. Love this so much. Mom made it all the time in the winter. We were always taught that the Irish in Ireland never ate corned beef. It's great in a sandwich like a Reuben.
These videos are so funny!! 😂😂
Hello Sara
I'm Irish and I have never had any of those
Neither have I!
i dont think anyone has thats the point :P
***** well, not exactly but I see where you're coming from
Jon Mayo I should have mentioned, I'm twelve
Jon Mayo Yeah, still don't know how my cousins in America can eat that...
Why do they assume only Americans think these things? We are not all ignorant!
It's an American cereal! With an irish stereotype on the front. Possibly that's why. Maybe you would have thought about that if you weren't such an ignorant American! :)
That's complete bull shit. The lesson here is people need to be more considerate of not stereotyping others. Everyone is unique and fact is Americans aren't all ignorant. I resent that you believe that.
Well a lot of people do, so get used to it.
Wizadora if anything I'd honestly say that you are the one who is being stereotypical towards Americans by assuming we are all ignorant and misinformed about other cultures. Im not saying all Americans aren't your typical American stereotype who drink beer all day and party all night and have no respect for countries other than they're own, but America does have some great people despite popular belief. Just like every other country or cultural area. Point being the place where people live, or where their raised, or their cultural identity doesn't actually define the person themselves. People are different and cultures may also be different than popular belief. So, please don't be close minded and assume al Americans are the same. I know this isn't a good argument but im sure you understand what im trying to say.
they've taken the info from youtube comments . . . and its because americans are more vocal about their opinions and you're not all ignorant but there are a fuck load of you who are .
I think a lot of these foods are very common in countries with a large rural population. My grandmother loved old fashioned dansh meals like pigs feet, tale and intestines. You would use every part of the animal to make a meal so it didn't go to waste.
I loovvveee corn beef and cabbage! my gran was irish and made all the "traditional" irish dishes.
Ireland's considered one of the most friendliest countries :) Who else is Irish?
I'm Scottish
But not Irish
im more irish than lucky charms ;P
+lil Dragon I'm fully Irish. Seriously.
+Jaeger Morrice legend
yes Kate.. there are some real Irish here..
nobody in America thinks that Lucky Charms is Irish food
lol!!!!!!!!!!!!! but i guess i understand what they were going for.
OH SHIT!!! I could watch this all day and half of tomorrow!!! LOL
I like the music
I'm Australian and I always thought lucky charms were American
Same
+Amy They are.
They are. The video is stereotypical foods. Foods they don't actually or normally eat but people think they do due to stereotypes.
They are.
D Patrick Americans.
I am of Irish heritage, and these Irish folks' pronunciation of potato is exactly how my grandfather and his dad pronounced it. Almost like it was spelled "budaydah". I would love to go to Ireland some day. My Mom & Dad went some time ago (both of their lineages include Irish folks) and they loved it.
I love irish bangers and irish soda bread!
there's a huge Irish community in my Canadian province and most of these meals are strongly integrated in our culture too.
That didn't look like corned beef and cabbage. That looked like canned corned beef, possibly hash, plopped on top of boiled cabbage. Canned corned beef is the equivalent of SPAM. Corned beef and cabbage is a cut of beef roast that is stewed with spices and cabbage in a pressure pot until it is tender enough to fall apart. It's actually quite good when made correctly- but is hard to make. Corned beef hash is to corned beef what canned tuna salad is to fresh tuna steak: not even close to the same.
You're RIGHT. That's NOT Corned Beef (the one sold in a sealed bag or at the butcher's that you have to cook slowly to tenderize). It's American CANNED CORNED BEEF HASH with cubed potatoes (should cost roughly $2/can in almost any US supermarket, I've almost picked a can myself about an hour ago). Also the cabbage look shredded (I don't believe is supposed to be before cooking).
The other thing called "corned beef" is the quite fatty one (without potatoes) in a trapezoidal can (started as Libby's brand in Chicago, US in the 19th Century, now mostly brought from Argentina, Brazil or Uruguay, even the Libby's and Hormel brands in that particular shape of can... That thing can stand 10 years unopened (meat version of the infamous and dense Christmas "fruitcake").
Of course...it's all kind of a moot point since corned beef is a JEWISH food, *not* Irish. Traditionally it would have been cabbage and pork belly or shank or mutton shanks...basically any cheap cut of meat that could be cooked slowly in a pot and be ready to eat down the pub after work on a day of celebration. But when Irish immigrants came to America pork belly (which is probably the most traditional version of the dish) was more expensive, so the large number of immigrants in the New York area (where the American version of St Paddy's Day got it's origin) turned to their Jewish deli owning neighbors and bought another cheap cut of meat - corned beef. Corned beef, btw, used to be made of the cheapest, stringiest cuts of beef and, since it was brined for so long, the fibers in the meat broke down, making it easier to eat, and, coincidentally, cheap to buy.
Anyway...that's how 'Corned Beef and Cabbage' became known to Americans as 'traditional Irish food'. See...I knew those Culinary Anthropology classes would come in handy some day. Mom would be proud. :D
Totally agree! I have no idea what they were eating in this video but it isn't corned beef and cabbage- which is delicious.
I've eaten BOTH corned beef and cabbage and "corned beef hash with cubed potatoes" from a can and the one that's slow-cooked is far more delicious (the one from cans are just "edible", but you eat it it's well seasoned enough (there's always Latin "adobo" seasoning...) and you don't have much income (proper thing is adding 2 fried eggs and toast to the "hash").
Jon Mayo My mother used to boil corned beef, cabbage and potatoes with seasoning on the stove on St. Patrick's Day. Sometimes she would add cream to it. I cant remember if it was a heavy cream or milk? Anyways, just wondering if you ever heard of it prepared that way?
That dude in the black coat reminds me of black jack
LBK yes lol
He reminds me of the guy in that Princess Bride movie lol
he looks like an Irish Rasputin or a muskateer.
I love leather jacket guy! He has his own channel, "Are ya having that?"
Jack Black? More like Sirius feckin Black before Azkaban
Now you understand how texas feels we're not all sgit kickers
Most, but not all.
I always wanted to try haggis.
Lol we Americans don't assume that you guys eat "lucky charms". It's just a cereal with a funny leprechaun
We don't it's not even a cereal over here
triggered
Oh shut up with your triggered
triggered by "triggered"
Yazzie A. yeah, I don't think that we think they eat much at all. We know they're not the food people like Italians, French etc.
0:30 The guy on the right is cuuuuuuuuuuute. 😍😍😍😂😂😂
Hello there
Corned beef, cabbage, potatoes, and carrots. Served with light rye bread. That's what my kiddos love. ☺
I can't believe they didn't like the pigs feet lol my family migrated from Ireland in the early 1900s and I grew up eating pigs feet. They're pretty good lol they're especially good pickled.
I wanted to make a traditional Irish dish for a Saint Patrick's day potluck in the US so I discovered colcannon, which is great. For the same potluck, I made chocolate Guinness cupcakes with Irish whiskey frosting. That may not be traditional, but it is delicious. Sometimes I like to vary colcannon by adding some sweet potato and chipotle.
"yeah I don't know where they get that from" as he push back his chair to look at the red head lady next to him. Gosh I would love to hangout with this dude he is just hilarious
I miss these old Facts videos.
In Mexico we have Montalayo (mexican haggis) and crubeen with beans, and both are great!!!