Italian-Americans Try Candy From Italy

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • Mike and Giana from Hardcore Italians taste test candy that has been imported from Italy. They try different Italian treats and give their honest opinions.
    Try the candy for yourself:
    Golia Candy: amzn.to/3Jpw1xD
    Ambrosoli Frugelé Gummy Candy: amzn.to/3Q9NldA
    Sperlari "Gran Duetto" Fruit Jelly Candy: amzn.to/4aIErMK
    Ferrero Pocket Coffee: amzn.to/447xKB5
    Sperlari Galatine Strawberry Milk Candy: amzn.to/3UjFT29
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Komentáře • 16

  • @Leash23
    @Leash23 Před hodinou

    I grew up eating the Golia in NY as a kid. I get it now in Dallas when I go to the one Italian store. They are the best

  • @kristenrenda3514
    @kristenrenda3514 Před 24 dny

    I bring back Golia for my dad and uncle every time I’m in Italy. They love it!

  • @Wendysworld1
    @Wendysworld1 Před 24 dny +2

    Your pocket coffee shouldn't be runny. Probably cracked or melted during handling/shipping. Should look like a block of chocolate, not sticky.

  • @fcole90
    @fcole90 Před 26 dny +1

    The pocket coffee was meant to have liquid coffee filling, so they probably broke along the journey 😅 the list of ingredients you've shown is in German, not Italian tho 😃

  • @markantony3875
    @markantony3875 Před 28 dny +4

    Serious question: Why can't you two read ingredients in Italian? That is Italians biggest beef with Italian-Americans. We get America's majority spoken language is a form of English, but Italian words, especially basic words, are not hard to learn . This is something you should be able to do if you think Italy is you ancestry "mother" country.

    • @HardcoreItaliansTV
      @HardcoreItaliansTV  Před 25 dny +3

      Thanks for asking in a kind way!
      When Italians immigrated to USA they we're treated like rats. Watch the Cabrini movie, it tells a good job of the history. Due to this we had a lot of pressure to Americanize. The Italian language wasn't passed down.
      I don't think all Italian-Americans butcher the language, the ingredients in this video were in German. It's pretty easy to get the vocab of Italian correct. I think a lot of the other Italian-American pages play into the stereotype purposely.
      We understand a lot of Italians from Italy have a gripe with that. I would be annoyed too. But understand you probably see mostly stereotypes. People from Italy had a lot of hardship when they moved here. This is your people!

    • @markantony3875
      @markantony3875 Před 25 dny +1

      @@HardcoreItaliansTV I get that. I know Italians in USA were (are??) treated like crap by Anglo society. Now many USA Anglos are treating people from South America like crap in USA. Many people in South America also have partial Italian ancestry. In some countries like Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay and south Brazil the majority of people have Italian ancestry. Stay strong and keep learning about your ancestors culture!

    • @bczephyr924
      @bczephyr924 Před 24 dny +2

      I have 50% Italian heritage (used a couple DNA tests to confirm). My mom is 100% and I've traced our lineage back to Italy. My great grandma was an illegal immigrant since she was brought to the US as a baby - her parents were immigrants and spoke Italian, and learned english. Both my grandparents (and great grandparents and great great grandparents) on my mother's side spoke Italian. It was only spoken in homes since Italian immigrants were treated poorly. They never taught my mom or her siblings! They kept it as their secret language so they could talk around the kids. They were only taught "mangia" "vino" and other small words, like cuss words, nothing more. It takes one generation for a language to die. Sad, but true. I've been learning Italian, slowly, over apps and through books - not ideal. But it's all I have available. I'm not the only one. Most other Italian Americans had the same or similar experience, and they likely don't have the 50% Italian heritage that I do.

    • @bczephyr924
      @bczephyr924 Před 23 dny

      ​@@HardcoreItaliansTV Ingredients in German? Maybe some, not all. Strawberry was not in German. It was Italian, and it was butchered as "Fra-JO-La" instead of "Fra-Go-La"

    • @markantony3875
      @markantony3875 Před 23 dny +1

      @@bczephyr924 What part of Italy did they come from?