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Old Fashioned Halloween Candy & the First Halloween Party

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  • čas přidán 2. 10. 2023
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    #tastinghistory #halloween

Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +217

    LINKS TO THE TOUR (Reservations required at some events)
    Oct 18 6pm ET -- Ridgewood, NJ
    Bookends Bookstore
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    Oct 19, 7pm ET -- Atlanta/Decatur, GA
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    • @danielsantiagourtado3430
      @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Wish You the Best of time max! And please consider visiting Colombia! 🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴🙏🙏🙏

    • @ZeeTea87
      @ZeeTea87 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Good morning!!
      You missed LA , CALI ?? ❤🎉

    • @jonathanbair523
      @jonathanbair523 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Can you do the history of "rock candy" please?

    • @jessicamaldonado5683
      @jessicamaldonado5683 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ❤the one in GA is sold outtttt aaahhhggghgg looking for the next close one to Charlotte

    • @craftsfromtheburbs
      @craftsfromtheburbs Před 10 měsíci

      Wish you would come to Marylanc

  • @VectorLog
    @VectorLog Před 10 měsíci +2001

    I pity any trick-or-treater that dares to knock upon Max Miller's door, lest they be subjected to a 20 minute lecture on the entire history of halloween before they are allowed to leave

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +798

      😂 they should be so lucky!

    • @danielsantiagourtado3430
      @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před 10 měsíci +47

      ​@@TastingHistory😂😂😂😂

    • @elizabethmayberry3414
      @elizabethmayberry3414 Před 10 měsíci +62

      I want to see their cat’s costume though. C’man Max and Jose!

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Před 10 měsíci +85

      yall really gonna tempt me to fly to California just so I can knock on his door and be subjected to a 20 minute lecture on the entire history of halloween

    • @AC-ni4gt
      @AC-ni4gt Před 10 měsíci +71

      I would be the kid who would need their parent to drag them away. I love learning history.

  • @balaam_7087
    @balaam_7087 Před 10 měsíci +2854

    Forget the ghosts and goblins; combinations of words like “cabbage candy” or “vinegar candy” are the real horrors

    • @anna9072
      @anna9072 Před 10 měsíci +209

      That’s because you’ve never actually had vinegar candy. I don’t know about cabbage candy, though…

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +313

      😂

    • @meganrae2508
      @meganrae2508 Před 10 měsíci +132

      The cabbage candy sounds just as questionable as the turnip infusion a bartender I met was making 😳

    • @carameldare
      @carameldare Před 10 měsíci +76

      I'm an absolute noodle for vinegar so I could see a world in which it's good. But cabbage candy? Absolutely not. At it's best, cabbage doesnt taste like anything. At it's worst, it tastes like farts.

    • @buffy4525
      @buffy4525 Před 10 měsíci +49

      I grew up eating green cabbage and peanut butter together. I know it sounds horrible, but it's great! Max, if you're reading this, give it a try, pretty please? Simply layer peanut butter onto a cabbage leaf, fold it over (sandwich style) for easy handling, and eat! Don't knock it til you try it, guys!

  • @RachelKos
    @RachelKos Před 10 měsíci +425

    A few years back now the BBC did a series where they put modern confectioners into Tudor, Georgian and Victorian time periods to make sweets the old fashioned way. The Sweet Makers was its title, and they covered the history of sugar at the same time. Was really interesting to watch the old techniques.

    • @zenkakuji3776
      @zenkakuji3776 Před 10 měsíci

      I searched within CZcams, and I believe I found this BBC program. If you search "Tudor Sweet Makers", the video should be listed first. It's a little over 30 minutes long. Thanks for mentioning this program! 🙏🍬

    • @bjdefilippo447
      @bjdefilippo447 Před 10 měsíci +13

      Thanks for that recommendation. Sounds fascinating!

    • @JennsCorner777
      @JennsCorner777 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Thanks for this, gonna go find it and watch!

    • @TheDisquietingNight
      @TheDisquietingNight Před 10 měsíci +1

      Cool!

    • @Eldrygg
      @Eldrygg Před 9 měsíci +1

      got a link on youtube?

  • @leenoah1505
    @leenoah1505 Před 10 měsíci +338

    Great video! 🎃 I have a "sticky kitchen" story: my (very culinary inclined) grandmother thought that she would try and make her own maple syrup... She tapped the backyard trees, got a couple gallons of sap, and put it on the stove to boil down. She was in the next room when she heard an explosion... There was sticky syrupy sap on the ceiling, the walls, the cupboards, the floor... 😳 It was an epic mess! It happened before I was born, but she told me the story several times. She said that she found syrup in odd places in the kitchen for years. 😆 So, moral of the story: like making candy for the first time, be careful if you ever try to make syrup.

    • @stevenschnepp576
      @stevenschnepp576 Před 10 měsíci +23

      I wonder if that's why they used to do it outdoors.

    • @leenoah1505
      @leenoah1505 Před 10 měsíci

      @@stevenschnepp576 - 💯

    • @danadagostino948
      @danadagostino948 Před 10 měsíci +40

      Sounds as if your grandmother was using a pressure cooker to speed up the process and it blew. Fortunate for her that she was not in the room when it exploded, she might have been badly injured by the boiling liquid.
      Maple syrup is typically made outdoors because of the sheer volume of sap that must be boiled away to produce the viscous syrup. Depending upon the percent of sugar in the sap; it can take upwards of 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of syrup! Imagine hauling all that sap into your kitchen. Also, the lengthy boiling process will create a great deal of steam (which can be sticky) and leave you with a mess in the kitchen.
      Commercial maple producers often use a reverse osmosis system initially to remove the bulk of the water before finishing off in the traditional metal pans. Using a wood fire imparts a subtle smoky flavor to the resultant syrup. In many parts of the Northeast and Canada, maple sugar season is a community affair and provides an opportunity for social interactions between families and friends.

    • @justthinking526
      @justthinking526 Před 10 měsíci +25

      My sticky kitchen moment involves making crabapple jelly. They don't tell you all the steam eventually cools and coates EVERYTHING, and resists clean up. I thought my mom was going to kill me

    • @Cara-39
      @Cara-39 Před 10 měsíci +16

      My best friend and I tried to make caramel when we were abt 12. We melted sugar in a pot on the stove, it turned brown and smelled good, so we poured it onto a piece of wax paper on her kitchen table. It hardened to the table and we couldn't lift it so she got a meat mallet and gave me a knife and we proceeded to beat and scrape off what we could. Needless to say, her parents were furious when they returned home and my father, who owns a furniture store, helped to replace the table. Moral of the story, hot melted sugar is carbon, not caramel

  • @Abyssinian121
    @Abyssinian121 Před 10 měsíci +457

    Note to anyone who lives above 3500 ft above sea level: you will need to consult a candy-making chart and adjust for your exact altitude if you strictly use a thermometer, and not the cold water test. Your mixture will take longer to boil, and above 3500 ft, you can easily burn an entire pan of your candy mixture and still not reach the temperature written down in the recipe. You will need to adjust your temperatures, taking your mixture off of the stove at a lower thermometer temp, thanks to being at a higher altitude. Props to anyone in the Mountain Time Zone who has tried to follow a candy recipe and had to throw away a pan belching out black smoke.

    • @woodenkat8971
      @woodenkat8971 Před 10 měsíci +28

      My mom has a book of state fair blue ribbbon candy recipies from that area. Makes the best candy at altitude. Def an important thing for all candy makers and food canrs!

    • @allychristiansen
      @allychristiansen Před 10 měsíci +42

      omg I moved from the Rockies to East Coast USA and everything bakes so WEIRD here, thanks for spelling it out for me lol

    • @audreyferragamo
      @audreyferragamo Před 10 měsíci +13

      That's what happened when I tried to make a sugar glaze at 6000 feet. Thank you.

    • @AliciaAKAnderson
      @AliciaAKAnderson Před 10 měsíci +6

      Yeaaahhh I tried fudge at 6500 feet and… it didn’t go well

    • @kuraiwolf4047
      @kuraiwolf4047 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Having lived in the Ozarks for around 5 years. I noticed how different cooking was up there. How we had to adjust cook times and temps of many recipes.

  • @qjames0077
    @qjames0077 Před 10 měsíci +559

    None of my Grandma's Halloween parties were ever complete without her signature vinegar candy
    We used to give them to the problematic children

  • @vlamb4769
    @vlamb4769 Před 10 měsíci +108

    Pigs in a blanket made with oysters?! I think you're gonna have to do an episode on that, Max!

    • @redwolfdarkmoon5326
      @redwolfdarkmoon5326 Před 9 měsíci

      Like savory crepes ?

    • @hoppy5359
      @hoppy5359 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@redwolfdarkmoon5326 looked online and a recipe from 1884 said its large oysters wrapped with thin cut bacon seasoned with salt and pepper, cooked on a pan till crisp and served on toast

  • @lenabreijer1311
    @lenabreijer1311 Před 10 měsíci +46

    Omg i never knew that history of Halloween. We immigrated from the Netherlands in 58. The neighbours in the apartment complex initiated us kids into going trick or treating. We were shocked, going and knocking on strangers doors and demanding candy while wearing a costume? How strange, how exciting. The last few years we lived in a neighbourhood with a lot of new immigrants too and it was obvious that they felt the same way.

    • @dairallan
      @dairallan Před 10 měsíci +2

      Well when you ban allthe Catholic holidays you need some sort of ruse to keep diong them. In Scotland we revived old pagan stuff. In the Nederlands you got Bla....

  • @irononi
    @irononi Před 10 měsíci +551

    Honestly, I'm glad that the idea of "Throw them a party until they tuckered themselves out" was chosen over "beat the kids senseless beyond reason".

    • @JFairy189
      @JFairy189 Před 10 měsíci +40

      The fact they didn't take that route speaks volumes of the hell those kids raised back then. Probably had the adults too shook.

    • @timk8869
      @timk8869 Před 10 měsíci +37

      maybe they tried and it didnt work

    • @Rig0r_M0rtis
      @Rig0r_M0rtis Před 10 měsíci +42

      @@timk8869 They were probably beating them all the other days anyway.

    • @mcfarofinha134
      @mcfarofinha134 Před 10 měsíci +26

      beat 'em and they'll make sure to do it worse next time lmao

    • @phileas007
      @phileas007 Před 10 měsíci +8

      hey, the one thing does not exclude the other

  • @OlEgSaS32
    @OlEgSaS32 Před 10 měsíci +430

    For anybody as confused as I was when they heard "Olives A La Natural History" is the name of a food, I went and searched for you: apparently they were...literally olives that were cut and sculpted to look like things from nature such as animals, and as a bonus "Nut Cartoons" were basically just painted nuts to look like people or things...a bit like easter eggs but for halloween

    • @jackangiemeeker5518
      @jackangiemeeker5518 Před 10 měsíci +4

      There's a really scary thriller movie about this history. The chestnut something (killer maybe?) But this exact history

    • @thenovicenovelist
      @thenovicenovelist Před 10 měsíci +7

      Thank you very much. I was wondering about these things.

    • @BenChurchill76
      @BenChurchill76 Před 10 měsíci +15

      Wow, those things sound like a huge time-sink to make though! And just to have at a kids' party!

    • @TakenTook
      @TakenTook Před 10 měsíci +2

      Thank you!

    • @callysto11
      @callysto11 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Thank you 😊

  • @enriquehirshfeltikov2395
    @enriquehirshfeltikov2395 Před 10 měsíci +94

    When I went to culinary trade school in HS my Principal's family ran a candy shop locally from the early 1900's. He showed us many things his family had made for a variety of holidays over the century. These types of candies still amaze me. And, I blew a whole lot of money on a marble slab just to make candy canes for my kids from scratch every year.

    • @minabew
      @minabew Před 10 měsíci +3

      how lovely

    • @grbenway
      @grbenway Před 10 měsíci +3

      I use a marble slab to cut leather.

    • @joannesmith2484
      @joannesmith2484 Před 10 měsíci +2

      My brother and his family lived in a town that was the HQ of a huge, well-known, international candy company. His kids' school Halloween (and other holidays) parties and other local Halloween activities used to get absolutely deluged with candy the company donated.

    • @alexkaplan6581
      @alexkaplan6581 Před 10 měsíci

      Lofty pursuits has a great channel on youtube for this sort of thing.

  • @susansheffield2931
    @susansheffield2931 Před 10 měsíci +107

    I was awed by his ability to say "hotter equals harder" with a straight face

  • @princessstabity4640
    @princessstabity4640 Před 10 měsíci +451

    Having grown up calling the night before Halloween Cabbage Night, this really puts that into context now!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +83

      Really?! Where are you from?

    • @princessstabity4640
      @princessstabity4640 Před 10 měsíci +63

      @@TastingHistory New England!

    • @CatsPajamas23
      @CatsPajamas23 Před 10 měsíci +1

      😂😂😂 (Bet you didn't.)

    • @quoid9
      @quoid9 Před 10 měsíci +49

      Western MA native here. Ya. October 30th was always Cabbage Night.

    • @TheSacarlson
      @TheSacarlson Před 10 měsíci +29

      I grew up in Western Mass too, and it was always called cabbage night. Though I've also heard it called mischief night before too.

  • @benhipes4509
    @benhipes4509 Před 10 měsíci +233

    Was I the only one waiting for Max to clink the harder candy together like the hard tack?😂

  • @thenovicenovelist
    @thenovicenovelist Před 10 měsíci +72

    I live in the Appalachian part of Virginia. The next time I hear older folks in this region complaining about "kids these days" or how immoral they are for going trick-or-treating, I should show them this video 😂.
    Edit: I want to add that I love the way you pronounce "caramelization." I pronounce it the same way.

    • @jerricaleonard2123
      @jerricaleonard2123 Před 10 měsíci

      Considering that a lot of them may be Christofascists who wanna torment the kids for dressing up as things they don't like for one dumb reason or another and just generally think that Halloween is an evil holiday because they're pissed that their ancestors couldn't fully steal it from Irish pagans, they'd think the vandalism back in the day is better than what happens now.

    • @melissamoonchild9216
      @melissamoonchild9216 Před 10 měsíci +1

      just remember, even hank hill loves halloween 😅

    • @joquendof
      @joquendof Před 10 měsíci +7

      Yes, one of the things I enjoy about learning history is that you can refute people when they bring up the "Good Ol' Days". It's necessary to provide a more nuanced perspective based on historical facts and context.

    • @racheleast688
      @racheleast688 Před 9 měsíci +4

      I'm not far East of the Blue Ridge and yeah, it's ridiculous hearing about how kids are going to Hell for a costume and candy.

  • @vbrown6445
    @vbrown6445 Před 10 měsíci +40

    I have probably seen Meet Me in St. Louis more than half a dozen times in the last 4 decades. Of course, the scenes of Judy Garland singing in that movie are memorable and iconic ("Have Yourself a Merry Christmas"). But those chaotic Halloween scenes always hit me like a fever dream. The kids (little kids) almost seem demonic in how out of control they are- running wild, burning things, and playing horrible tricks on their neighbors. And now I know it was actually based on historic fact. LOL! Thanks, Max.

  • @christineh14
    @christineh14 Před 10 měsíci +231

    I was a child in the 60s before people started freaking out about homemade Halloween treats. My brother and I had a ranking system and the homemade stuff was #1- cookies, brownies, caramel apples, popcorn balls. I remember my mom making popcorn balls and Rice Krispie treats to give out. #2 was anything chocolate, #3 was caramels, Tootsie Rolls, taffy and all the chewy stuff, and the rock bottom was hard candy. Old ladies gave out Starlight mints.

    • @leannsmarie
      @leannsmarie Před 10 měsíci +50

      in 1972, an old lady gave me a can of corn. She'd forgotten what night it was and had no candy. I was five and very confused when she handed the can to me.

    • @Brandyalla
      @Brandyalla Před 10 měsíci +24

      @@leannsmarie I once got walnuts (in shell) because the elderly couple said they hadn't expected anybody. That would have been late eighties to early nineties

    • @CarlGorn
      @CarlGorn Před 10 měsíci +24

      @@leannsmarie In '78 one old widower gave me a handful of cheese puffs. I think I may have been the only kid to knock on his door, because I had to explain trick-or-treating to him.

    • @neilfisch6533
      @neilfisch6533 Před 10 měsíci +11

      A famous Motown star used to give the kids of Beverly Hills an apple. They didn't like her.

    • @jaded_gerManic
      @jaded_gerManic Před 10 měsíci +21

      One older lady in grandma's neighborhood was low-key famous for giving out full size candy bars. I say low-key because that wasn't info one shared with everyone. It's been over 20 years but I bet I could still find the right house.

  • @ghostdragon4164
    @ghostdragon4164 Před 10 měsíci +186

    I joined a Halloween costume contest when I was a kid that was hosted by my relatives. I came in dressed as Dracula. My parents would never let me check myself in the mirror cos according to them my make up looked scary enough to give me nightmares and apparently they were right cos I won the best costume award with my uncle emphasizing my scary makeup. The prize was a tub of ice cream with the flavor of my choice and a VHS tape with a horror movie of my choice. Fun times

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 10 měsíci +17

      @ghostdragon4164 - Every year, Provincetown on Cape Cod, has a parade with a theme for which many onlookers wear costumes. On year was "Myths & Legends". I bought a housecoat, fuzzy slippers, a hand mirror, a big tube of lipstick, along with a swim cap onto which I glued 100 toy snakes - I was "Medusa, primping". Although not technically on Halloween, later at the party at Town Hall, I won BEST COSTUME. My prize was a Cajun cookbook and CDs of a Cajun musical group to arrive by mail, though nothing ever came. So my win was a hollow victory. B^( But fun!

    • @exzyle2k
      @exzyle2k Před 10 měsíci +22

      You'd have been SOL checking your reflection anyways since vampires don't have any. So they were just sticking to the canon.

    • @Brandyalla
      @Brandyalla Před 10 měsíci

      Was gonna say the same thing! @@exzyle2k

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před 10 měsíci +8

      @@exzyle2k That's the scary part. Their vampire costume was so incredibly accurate that they actually didn't have a reflection.

    • @Cobalt360Degrees
      @Cobalt360Degrees Před 10 měsíci

      Did they at least take your picture so you could see it when you were older??

  • @sarahmihuc3993
    @sarahmihuc3993 Před 10 měsíci +55

    Omg! There are 3 regions in the US that still have old traditional names for Halloween (or the night before): Mischief Night in New Jersey and Cabbage Night in northern NY, Vermont, and apparently some pockets of the rest of New England (plus Devil's Night in MI). There's a Harvard Dialect Map for this. You've managed to explain the origins of both of the ones I had heard, something I had long wondered about.
    My college roommate & I both studied linguistics and come from Mischief Night & Cabbage Night lands respectively.
    Where I grew up, Cabbage Night is the night before Halloween (a way to get around the 'sane' Halloween??), and often involves both large bonfires (in places like the road/town center) from scavenged/stolen wood and cabbage pelting at houses (plus TP or eggs as well) by the town's most rowdy teens.

    • @Caprabone
      @Caprabone Před 7 měsíci +1

      Growing up in Manitoba in the '70's, we had 'gate night' on Oct 30, which included the egging and toilet papering of houses... a pain because egg on the windows would freeze...

  • @JellicleKitten
    @JellicleKitten Před 10 měsíci +30

    Petition to get Max to Lofty Pursuits to learn old fashioned candy making from the masters

    • @leodekalb2380
      @leodekalb2380 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Yes! I just made a comment to the same effect

  • @sharimeline3077
    @sharimeline3077 Před 10 měsíci +119

    My grandma was born in 1904 and she used to love to tell us kids about her childhood. They made all their own candy back when she was growing up - they didn't have much money and 9 kids to feed! It always sounded like another world to me, I was born in the 60's and we had all packaged store-bought candy.

  • @thesayerofthelaw
    @thesayerofthelaw Před 10 měsíci +75

    Oh my God, thank you! My grandma used to make this. We lived in a poor coal mining town in West Virginia, and she would make pounds of this with other foods for the miners. I have been wanting to try this candy again for decades, it was my favorite as a child.

  • @XISCify
    @XISCify Před 9 měsíci +19

    I love my grandma's stories about what Halloween used to be like. It was basically a children's version of The Purge. "Trick or Treat" is just a figure of speech now but back then it was an ultimatum

  • @jaded_gerManic
    @jaded_gerManic Před 10 měsíci +107

    My uncle gave us garlic hard candy once. My brother loved it and asked for more while I just thought it odd. Happy Spooky Month everbody! 🎉👽🧟‍♀️👻🧛

    • @hanzquejano7112
      @hanzquejano7112 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Question, do they taste like garlic? Sounds pretty obvious but a lot of food don't taste like their name.

    • @Mudhooks
      @Mudhooks Před 10 měsíci +9

      I’ve had garlic-chocolate fudge which was actually so good that my Mom and I ate the whole batch I bought and we went back to the garlic festival the next day but the vendor had sold out of all her fudge and closed up.
      I’ve never found it again. Most people would find it “weird” and wouldn’t try it but the chocolate and the garlic perfectly suited each other. AND it made you feel warm all over.

    • @jaded_gerManic
      @jaded_gerManic Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@hanzquejano7112 I remember spittting it into my hand because I thought it had "gone bad" somehow but when he said it was garlic flavor I tried it again but only got thru half of it. It was 'odd' because I'd never had garlic taste sweet before. This was also forty years ago so sugary garlic is the best description I can muster 😅

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@jaded_gerManic On sweet garlic, you can actually achieve that by bakin a head of garlic bcuz it cooks off the allin before it can become allicin and create those pungent garlic notes

    • @KellogsR-ny7ug
      @KellogsR-ny7ug Před 10 měsíci +2

      That might come in handy on St Andrew’s Day to compliment the garlic heavy roast with parsley root

  • @rom65536
    @rom65536 Před 10 měsíci +43

    my aunt used to own a candy factory. When we'd go visit her, she'd take all the kids into the "Taffy Pulling Room" (mentioned as the cure for Mike TV in Willy Wonka) and we'd make the sticky kind Max makes here. Only we'd roll the wad of candy in powdered cinnamon or ginger or mint leaves while stretching and twisting it.

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- Před 10 měsíci +16

    "My cabbages!" - Cabbage merchant, Avatar: The Last Airbender

  • @TheMountainWulf
    @TheMountainWulf Před 10 měsíci +24

    Ohhh my gosh, thank you! When I was a kid, I went to a thing where they had all the kids living like a pioneer for a day. We did many things, and along with milking a cow and making butter, I got to make a firm taffy with vinegar. I have spent thirty or so years looking for that recipe and really thought I'd never find it. So thank you!

  • @Xzor
    @Xzor Před 10 měsíci +34

    So glad you used the Fanny Farmer Boston school cookbook recipe. I remember making this exact recipe with my grandma. Her old fanny farmer cookbook from the 40's is one of my prized possessions.

  • @MossyMozart
    @MossyMozart Před 10 měsíci +214

    The more Mr Miller works with vinegar, the more I realize that we have lost a special ingredient that can do much more than become salad dressing. Thanks to Mr Miller for reintroducing this wonder.

    • @raerohan4241
      @raerohan4241 Před 10 měsíci +24

      ​@@gwennorthcutt421 Not used for texture, it's purely for flavouring. Modern day candymakers favour citric acid instead. Trust me, those candies would be very bland if they didn't have any acidity, since you aren't aiming for caramelisation either. Would basically be like taking a spoonful of sugar syrup

    • @alexsis1778
      @alexsis1778 Před 10 měsíci +14

      @@gwennorthcutt421 Yeah vinegar was easy to make anywhere and in higher concentrations could essentially last forever. Fresh citrus fruit was very seasonal and very much a luxury in most of the world. These days though so many makers just use lab made citric acid and don't even involve a fruit. So we kind of transitioned from vinegar to citrus fruit to fake citrus fruit.

    • @AliciaB.
      @AliciaB. Před 10 měsíci +16

      @@alexsis1778 it's not fake citrus fruit. citric acid isn't only produced by lemons and other related fruits, but also by certain strains of mold, which is how it's mostly made nowadays. the 'artificiality' lies more in the way that the acid is then isolated : precipitated out of solution into calcium citrate using calcium hydroxide, then converted back into citric acid using diluted sulfuric acid

    • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine
      @0neDoomedSpaceMarine Před 10 měsíci +9

      Vinegars are flexible. Spirit vinegar (12% to 24% acetic acid by volume) can be used for certain cleaning, it'll kill mold and it'll evaporate on its own.

    • @CharleneCTX
      @CharleneCTX Před 10 měsíci +1

      You can also buy powdered vinegar.

  • @WillLaPuerta
    @WillLaPuerta Před 10 měsíci +95

    My father was looking after me when I was little and I read a Raggedy Ann and Andy book with one story called The Taffy Pull. It wasn't exactly a recipe but it gave us a rough idea of what we needed. Sugar, butter, and vinegar! It took two tries but we did actually make some taffy. I just sent him a link to this video. I think he'll get a kick out of it.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 10 měsíci +2

      @WillLaPuerta - Sweet memory.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před 10 měsíci +1

      That's the kind of thing that would've been the most fun a kid can have.

    • @raerohan4241
      @raerohan4241 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Definitely. But I would advise it do be done only with an older child, or a child that listens well if young. Hot sugar burns are catastrophic, and you don't want a kid touching that sugar while it's cooking, or before it's cooled enough to start pulling safely

  • @tubeyhamster
    @tubeyhamster Před 10 měsíci +15

    Also, I know I always bring up Laura Ingalls Wilder, but in her book, Farmer Boy, about her husband Almanzo's childhood in northern New York State, there is a good description of making candy like this. One of the characters says that usually it would be made in the wintertime, but the children in the book are unsupervised for a week in the summer while their parents are away, and make the candy anyway, and it won't harden. Theirs was brown because it was made with molasses.

  • @AzraelWolf-vr4ku
    @AzraelWolf-vr4ku Před 10 měsíci +65

    As part Irish American and a huge fan of Halloween, I Thank you for bringing the origin story of the holiday because it came from both Scotland and Ireland Gaelic countries.

    • @debbylou5729
      @debbylou5729 Před 10 měsíci

      Really? I knew a few people from Scotland when I lived in Canada. They wouldn’t allow their kids to go out ‘begging for candy’. If it had only been 1 family I probably wouldn’t have noticed

    • @ExploreTayo
      @ExploreTayo Před 10 měsíci

      The Irish origins of Halloween are fascinating.
      czcams.com/video/ttCngH088Fg/video.html

    • @jdools4744
      @jdools4744 Před měsícem

      Halloween has little to do with Scotland and especially not Ireland

  • @Chocobo0Scribe
    @Chocobo0Scribe Před 10 měsíci +163

    My mom told me about all the homemade treats she got when she trick or treated as a kid. Popcorn balls were one of her faveorites.

    • @RenayOpish
      @RenayOpish Před 10 měsíci +14

      I got popcorn balls a couple times- they were a favorite, nothing was going to make me throw those away!

    • @georgiafrye2815
      @georgiafrye2815 Před 10 měsíci +13

      Popcorn balls were my Mother's Christmas treat. I figured her Mother having six children's during the depression was a reason as an inexpensive sweet , colorful treat. It was better with at least two people making the balls as hot and needed to work quickly with buttered hands.

    • @tsugima6317
      @tsugima6317 Před 10 měsíci +10

      I was the popcorn ball maker in our family. We lived way out in the country and didn't have any trick or treaters (or any neighbors to trick or treat from!) so they were all ours!

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Před 10 měsíci +14

      I made popcorn balls and molasses poof candy (which is what I thought the vinegar candy was going to be, see recipe below) from my grandma's old recipe cards when I was 12ish. My mom was trying to get me to learn to cook/follow a recipie better and told me we could make any recipe I found in her box, so my sweet tooth self went straight for the candies!
      So molasses poofs start like this with vinegar instead of water to dissolve the sugar and a bit of molasses (or honey if you perfer) for flavor, but then after you reach hard crack stage you dump in a tablespoon of baking soda and stir the whole thing, from the bottom for 10-15 seconds before you dump it into the pan, spread it flat, and leave it to cool until hard. Then you crack it up into pieces that would fit into your mouth and either eat it all right away or in a day or 2 tops if stored in an airtight container. You can also coat it in chocolate to make it last for a little longer, but any poof part exposed to air will melt from the humidity. Yes it's as messy as a volcano made the same way, yes, your pot needs to be twice the size you think you need. The smashing of the candy can be a bit of a problem in terms of shattered sugar dust all over the place. I got the wise idea to use a muffin tin layered with choco chips to make smaller pieces, but that did not go according to plan...

    • @alienonion4636
      @alienonion4636 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Oh yes homemade popcorn balls... factory made didn't come close.

  • @PoppycockPrincess100
    @PoppycockPrincess100 Před 10 měsíci +217

    I've heard a lot of stories about the origins of Halloween but this is the first I've heard about the Scottish cabbage tradition. Thanks for teaching me about that, Max!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +43

      Always something new to learn. It never ends 😁

    • @kkpenney444
      @kkpenney444 Před 10 měsíci +8

      When I grew up in Boston in the 60s we had Cabbage Night, I believe on the 30th. It was basically community-sanctioned vandalism 😊

    • @thenovicenovelist
      @thenovicenovelist Před 10 měsíci +2

      Same here, and I'm Agnostic Pagan. So I thought I've already heard many of the stories involving Samhain/Halloween. But I seem to learn something new with each episode. Thanks, Max and José!

    • @SputnikDeb
      @SputnikDeb Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@TastingHistory I'd always heard that Halloween originated in Ireland (e.g., carving turnips into Jack O'Lanterns). On the other hand . . . there are people with my uncommon maiden surname who insist that our roots began in Scotland, whereas all my ancestors on one side insist that we originated in Ireland. One of the greater Scottish contingent and one of my aunts would do battle about this regularly. I didn't know about this until I met a guy at a company bowling league who shared my maiden name. Never heard of him before, and he wasn't part of my extended family. *He* was the one who'd done battle with my aunt over the years, and that was the first I'd ever heard of Scotland perhaps being involved. Go figure!

    • @lindoriel7286
      @lindoriel7286 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@SputnikDeb There's so much cultural crossover between Scotland and Ireland that it would be really hard to pinpoint exactly where and when the traditions first popped up. Most likely it's just an amalgamation of various regional celebrations/traditions that organically spread out and adapted over time, much like how the US version of Halloween has changed from its origins. So it's likely that both sides of your family are right (or wrong, lol.)

  • @Luckdragon12
    @Luckdragon12 Před 10 měsíci +24

    Thanks for sharing the Scottish origins of Halloween! I've often heard of Samhain when folks want to pinpoint the origins of the holiday, and I think you've talked about it before, but this is the first time I've heard of Scottish kids stealing cabbages and tormenting their neighbors. Who knew the parties were meant to stop the tricks by giving treats! Another great video. Happy Halloween, Max! 🎃

    • @a.katherinesuetterlin3028
      @a.katherinesuetterlin3028 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I've seen both the egging and TPing, but not cabbage. As pranks go, I would prefer the TPing. One, TP is not a food item, let alone a messy one. Second, birds can use the TP for their nests, and thirdly, TP actually looks properly spooky, like there are ghosts in the trees. Eggs, and tossed cabbage, are just messy, and it's food wasted. But that's my middle-of-the-road thinking. 🤷‍♀️

  • @tremorsfan
    @tremorsfan Před 10 měsíci +13

    I remember having a Halloween party in Elementary School. Because some of us were losing our baby teeth, we went "fishing for donuts" instead of bobbing for apples. The teacher tied donuts to strings and we had to catch them.

  • @user-nu4uh9fh1b
    @user-nu4uh9fh1b Před 10 měsíci +44

    I’m over 70, my mother and my aunts made vinegar candy as treats a few times a year with us kids involved in the folding and kneading “taffy pull”. I thought it was a French-Canadian thing like the Barley Candy lollipops the nuns would make. To me both were delicious but, what did we know in the 1950s?

    • @the_Pons
      @the_Pons Před 10 měsíci +4

      Hehe, yeah, I thought it was a Swedish thing 😛 We have a peppermint version here, very similar to candy canes. And Brazil apparently has a coconut version 😄

    • @OliveJewel
      @OliveJewel Před 10 měsíci +2

      I was thinking about the barley sugar too.

  • @Apathy293
    @Apathy293 Před 10 měsíci +53

    I forgot there was a time people would throw away toilet paper and eggs for a prank. That would be a quite a flex nowadays.

    • @McBernes
      @McBernes Před 10 měsíci +4

      Ikr? I remember when I was in my late teens egging a few houses. I also distinctly remember pouring maple syrup into someone's air conditioning unit. But thinking of that in the context of the great toilet paper shortage during the pandemic hit differently now lol.

    • @callysto11
      @callysto11 Před 10 měsíci +1

      😄

    • @laurieleannie
      @laurieleannie Před 10 měsíci +1

      😂🤣😂

  • @wildflower1335
    @wildflower1335 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Now I'm so nostalgic! I was 14 yrs old (74 now) my Dad & I made this from his hand written recipe (At 13 yrs He had to sneak ingredients to make it) Thank you for the treasured memory of my Dad & I.

  • @anonymousperson4214
    @anonymousperson4214 Před 10 měsíci +12

    One time my sister had to proctor a test on Halloween (not her decision) and she felt so bad about it she made candy corn for everyone. Two batches, one with vegan butter for that crowd. She makes Really good candy corn

  • @mattwilson8298
    @mattwilson8298 Před 10 měsíci +56

    Pro tip: you can use a pastry brush dipped in water to GENTLY brush the sides of the pan to dissolve any sugar crystals that may be clinging to the sides. They act kind of like seeds and can cause a chain reaction of crystallization and ruin your candy.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 10 měsíci +11

      @mattwilson8298 - That is also a good tip to use when making invert sugar
      HOWEVER if you put string or wooden sticks into the syrup and CAUSE a run-away chain reaction, you end with yet another old-fashioned sugary treat, rock candy.

  • @fhey7903
    @fhey7903 Před 10 měsíci +14

    I love the idea that our modern tradition of dressing kids up in Superman costumes and giving them candy has its roots in what basically sounds like the 19th century version of the Purge.

    • @ashkitt7719
      @ashkitt7719 Před 10 měsíci

      Wait till you learn exactly why Christmas was cancelled back in the day in England. Not only was it seen as "pagan" but it was basically an excuse for folks to fuck shit up.
      Of course, banning Christmas also led to riots in the streets so that backfired.

  • @bettyc.parker-young1437
    @bettyc.parker-young1437 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Thank you for the memories! I am 63 and we use to make this candy at my church when I was a little girl. We made it not just at Halloween but at different parties during the cold months. It was called candy pulling parties. We had so much fun with a partner and you would always get tickled. Our candy was very vinegary and sometimes we added food dye. Those were such good times . Have a fun and safe 🎃 Halloween.

  • @williamhyde2310
    @williamhyde2310 Před 10 měsíci +6

    There used to be "taffy pulls" at churches and school activities when I was a kid in the 60s and 70s but I havent heard of any in a looong time 😊

  • @Marge411
    @Marge411 Před 10 měsíci +62

    I grew up in a town in northeast New Jersey in the 1970s, and we always called the night before Halloween "Cabbage Night". It was the night when kids threw toilet paper at houses, etc., but was always pretty tame. It seemed we were the only town whose kids (and adults) called it "Cabbage Night". We never knew why but always wondered how it got that strange name, and now I know. Thank you!

    • @umsami
      @umsami Před 10 měsíci +4

      We had "Devil's Night" in Michigan.

    • @joannesmith2484
      @joannesmith2484 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Yeah, I grew up in north-central NJ (Morris County), and it was always Mischief Night. Never heard of Cabbage Night. It was mostly TP-ing, soaping windows, and (from the "bad" kids) egging houses.

    • @jmcg6189
      @jmcg6189 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Beggars Night in my Chicago suburb. They had bonfires.

  • @MsWillowbayOrelse
    @MsWillowbayOrelse Před 10 měsíci +93

    My grandma use to make vinegar punch and it was surprisingly refreshing. I may try making the vinegar candy just for the hell of it.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +58

      Kinda like switchel.

    • @cutman15
      @cutman15 Před 10 měsíci +17

      Im imagining pumpkin spice switchel now

    • @Caldella
      @Caldella Před 10 měsíci +9

      Seconding the switchel - one of its nicknames is "Haymaker's Punch," so I'm guessing your grandmother's was similar. It can contain helpful stuff like electrolyes for people with labor-intense jobs (like bailing hay). It's quite tasty!

    • @tinamarie7568
      @tinamarie7568 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I love apple cider vinegar in iced water. It's especially great on hot days, and when feeling a little off, and it seems to suppress the appetite

    • @nicksteele9436
      @nicksteele9436 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@TastingHistorymy first thought was posca tbh.

  • @marywest2896
    @marywest2896 Před 10 měsíci +3

    this is making so many memories come forward, one year, about 3 years before my father died, he and my mama decided that instead of waiting for their great grand kids to come and trick or treat them, they got dressed up in costumes and went to the great grand kids'houses before they left for their trick or treating and trick or treated the kids....the great grand kids loved it, now those great grand kids are in their 30's and still remember when their gramma and grampa trick or treated them...my parents had a great sense of humor.

  • @xbreezybx8403
    @xbreezybx8403 Před 10 měsíci +10

    My mom taught me how to use the candy thermometer leading into the holidays of my preteens. We got pretty handy at making what we wanted from each stage. I highly recommend for parents because it really helped instill a deep love and appreciation for cooking and making, and to respect the tools. It also demystified candy, once I realized I can make my own sweets at any time. I know my mom well enough to know she didn't anticipate that, but I'm grateful nonetheless. Thanks for the walk down memory lane, Max.

  • @BRUXXUS
    @BRUXXUS Před 10 měsíci +52

    I love this! I’m sure like 509 people have already said it, but the vinegar probably serves more as a stabilizer than a flavoring. Candy making is almost as fun as tormenting the citizens of your town on Halloween!

    • @be.A.b
      @be.A.b Před 10 měsíci +12

      Old recipes like pointing out the saddest ingredient, and making it the focus. Vinegar candy, water pie, mayonnaise cake.. I’m so glad modernity prefers the nuances of keeping “secret” ingredients

    • @redwolfdarkmoon5326
      @redwolfdarkmoon5326 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Vinegar in small amounts adds many fruity or sweet flavors! Its the other reason it's in pie crust

    • @freecakesandale
      @freecakesandale Před 8 měsíci

      No, it's also the flavor! (and it's WONDERFUL! Think "shrub")

  • @Firegen1
    @Firegen1 Před 10 měsíci +129

    I'd love to see what a Midnight Cake looks like in real life.
    Wow, the taffy ended up looking really cute!

    • @quoid9
      @quoid9 Před 10 měsíci +5

      This, please!

    • @shellylloyd1458
      @shellylloyd1458 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Yes! I need to know how Midnight Cake is different than other cakes!

    • @jalifritz8033
      @jalifritz8033 Před 10 měsíci

      I found the recipe online:
      Ingredients
      1/2 cup shortening
      1-1/4 cups sugar
      2 eggs
      1 cup hot water
      1/2 cup cocoa
      1-1/2 cups sifted Gold Medal "Kitchen-tested" flour
      1 teaspoon salt
      1 teaspoon baking soda
      1 teaspoon baking powder
      1 teaspoon vanilla
      1 egg white
      3/4 cup sugar
      1/8 teaspoon cream of tartar
      3 tablespoons water
      1/2 teaspoon vanilla (or other flavoring)
      Instructions
      Cream shortening, add sugar gradually, and cream until fluffy.
      Blend in well-beaten eggs.
      Slowly add hot water to cocoa and mix until smooth. Stir to dissolve completely.
      Sift flour, salt, soda, and baking powder together, and add to creamed mixture alternately with hot water and cocoa mixture.
      Blend in vanilla.
      Pour into an 8-inch square pan (2-1/2 inches deep) which has been greased and lined with paper.
      Bake 50 to 55 minutes in a moderate oven (350 F).
      Now for the frosting: Combine in top of a double boiler the egg white, sugar, cream of tartar, and water, and beat together just enough to completely blend ingredients.
      Place over rapidly boiling water, and beat with rotary beater until mixture is white and very light. (Icing is done when it barely holds its shape and is not runny as the beater is pulled out.)
      This takes 5 to 7 minutes depending on the size of boiler and vigor of beating.
      Remove from over hot water, and do not beat any more.
      Fold in the flavoring.
      Spread on the cake.

    • @ashkitt7719
      @ashkitt7719 Před 10 měsíci

      I would like this comment but it's at a Nice like ratio

    • @jadsel
      @jadsel Před 10 měsíci +3

      That looked a lot like a devil's food type Black Midnight Cake my mother used to make, originally from a Betty Crocker cookbook. She iced it with a slightly fluffy meringue type White Mountain Frosting also from Betty Crocker, which looked a lot like what the version shown in the video was using.

  • @jamesk370
    @jamesk370 Před 10 měsíci +11

    My late grandmother was born in 1900, and your episode reminded me of the stories she told me of Halloween when she was a girl. Anyway, I have a sudden craving for some candy now.

  • @Indianny
    @Indianny Před 10 měsíci +4

    When my grandma passed i got a bunch of her old recipes & cookbooks. She had this old, old recipe for a ‘Vinegar Pie’. Essentially a sugar Creme pie with a healthy addition of white vinegar. I’ve never been brave enough to try it but just the idea of a vinegar pie lives in my brain rent-free

  • @marich8356
    @marich8356 Před 10 měsíci +52

    Here on Brazil we make this candy with sugar and coconut milk, the final texture melts in your mouth when made properly. We usually make this for birthday parties.

    • @lynxlightning9505
      @lynxlightning9505 Před 10 měsíci +8

      That sounds great! Recipe??

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 10 měsíci +1

      @marich8356 - Sounds wonderful!

    • @Vaeldarg
      @Vaeldarg Před 10 měsíci

      Probably misspelling it but guessing you're talking about "brigadero" (the fudge balls covered in coconut shavings/sprinkles). It's tasty and goes quickly.

    • @marich8356
      @marich8356 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@Vaeldarg Brigadeiro is a different kind of candy and this fudge kind of candy has some variants of it, the one made with chocolate is called brigadeiro and the one made with coconut is called beijinho (with means little kiss). The one I'm talking about is another coconut candy.

    • @marich8356
      @marich8356 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@lynxlightning9505 The ingredients are easy, but the tecnic is kind of complicated. I can try to explain it to you or give you a link to a video for it, although it's in portuguese you can try to follow what the person is doing.

  • @misskinsCO
    @misskinsCO Před 10 měsíci +48

    My grandma always called candy corn 'chicken feed' and I still call it that! I didnt realize that it wasnt something that grandma made up, haha!

  • @suebob16
    @suebob16 Před 10 měsíci +8

    Max, I'm so happy that you showed moments from the film Meet Me In St. Louis. It is a favorite movie of mine, and their version of early 1900's Halloween is so interesting to watch. I hope you had a chance to view the entire movie--Judy Garland is wonderful in it.

    • @melissamoonchild9216
      @melissamoonchild9216 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I have a feeling hes definitely watched it in full, probably more than once 😉

  • @beerme2
    @beerme2 Před 10 měsíci +4

    As a Child in the 60s I was taken to the Halloween parade in Hiawatha. I did not realize that it went back so far, but for my Dad it was a memory of His youth.

  • @neil2796
    @neil2796 Před 10 měsíci +87

    We made pull candy several times when I was a child. We flavored it with McCormick extracts and we didn't pull it nearly as long as this recipe so the candy was more translucent.

  • @jetcitykitty
    @jetcitykitty Před 10 měsíci +57

    No candy could be as sweet as Maxxy ❤

  • @pthaloblue100
    @pthaloblue100 Před 10 měsíci +12

    I'm so delighted to see you feature vinegar candy Max! My Mom used to make vinegar candy and popcorn balls as Halloween treats for our grade school Halloween Carnival back in the early 1970's. She would often give us a small piece of the super warm taffy to pull for ourselves and I would marvel at how she was able to handle that hot taffy with her hands, she always made the "hard crack" version and it was delicious!

  • @midoriya-shonen
    @midoriya-shonen Před 10 měsíci +11

    Wow. I've never heard a history of Halloween before that covers anything besides Samhain. This absolutely blew my mind! Thanks Max!

  • @jackangiemeeker5518
    @jackangiemeeker5518 Před 10 měsíci +52

    👁👀IMPORTANT NOTE!!!!!👁👀 Make sure you lift your candy thermometer up away from the bottom of your pot. About a 1/2 inch so you get the correct read on temp! ❤ Otherwise, if it's touching the bottom it's going to read hotter than it actually is and can hinder your batch you're making. Just wanted to throw that out there as a candy maker ❤❤ My husbands mom made vinegar candy his whole life growing up. I love seeing this video on it. Thanks Max!!

  • @barbararey-constantin5679
    @barbararey-constantin5679 Před 10 měsíci +29

    Hooray for civic organizations trying to make their communities a better place to live. My Cuban grandmother used to make a taffy with honey and peanuts. My sister and I would pull it and it looked like your taffy. I hope to learn more about old fashion candies next year. Thank you for another interesting and entertaining program. :)

  • @vivianehakemi291
    @vivianehakemi291 Před 10 měsíci +6

    In appearance, it reminds me our brazilian Bala de Coco, probably a coconut flavored tropical version of the same recipe. Thank you so much for your hard work in enlighten us in historic culinary with so much fun added. ❤ Love from Brazil.

  • @SuperHalberd
    @SuperHalberd Před 10 měsíci +6

    Thought you might like to know that I found your recipe book at a small independent book store in Ottawa today. It’s really awesome that it’s so widely available

  • @aaronaakre9470
    @aaronaakre9470 Před 10 měsíci +5

    We used to soap car windows…. Mom would not allow eggs to leave the house. The grocery stores would not sell eggs to kids for about a week before Halloween.

  • @sukulmati
    @sukulmati Před 10 měsíci +12

    That haunted look that Max has while saying that his kitchen is now sticky says so much.

  • @DanielDPastore
    @DanielDPastore Před 10 měsíci +5

    Here in Brazil we would call this "bala de côco" (coconut candy), which would be basically this candy with coconut milk added for flavoring. It's more common to have the harder kind too, for the softer kind we usually make it even softer and cover in coconut flakes and even fill with other flavors (just as we mix everything up here in Brazil 😂).

  • @cherub3624
    @cherub3624 Před 10 měsíci +4

    There's nothing scarier in this Halloween video than Buttered. Hands.

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před 10 měsíci +141

    That pikachu and the pumpkins are perfect max! So cute! Hearth for fan please! ❤️❤️❤️❤️🎃🎃🧡🧡🧡🖤

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +19

      ♥️ 💜 ❤️

    • @danielsantiagourtado3430
      @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@TastingHistory 🥹🥹🥹🥹

    • @angelinaduganNy
      @angelinaduganNy Před 10 měsíci +5

      The squished looking jackolantern is so cute.

    • @KittyCatSpartan117
      @KittyCatSpartan117 Před 10 měsíci

      @@angelinaduganNy cute indeed! 🎃I need one, I wonder where Max got it from? Anyway, happy spooky season everyone 🧡🖤💜

  • @Tergara1
    @Tergara1 Před 10 měsíci +16

    My Mom is from Hiawatha. They still do the parade and it's something they are proud of.

  • @manicmuffin
    @manicmuffin Před 10 měsíci +2

    The vinegar is for texture rather than flavor, preventing crystallization by breaking some of the sucrose bonds into glucose and fructose. The glucose and fructose prevent the build up of sucrose, stopping crystallization and also resulting in a more uniform-textured candy. Cream of tartar is another acid that is very commonly added to taffies for the same purpose.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Před 10 měsíci +8

    When I saw "vinegar candy" I admit I was horrified - it sounds TERRIBLE - but wow!! That looks and sounds like it tastes much, much better than molasses candy, honestly.
    I'd love to see you tackle a series on the history of popular candy, even the oldest ones! Like Necco Wafer, because I do NOT understand why that was popular. Then again I also don't understand why pastilles are popular :P

    • @evan8463
      @evan8463 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Necco wafers were truly the stuff of nightmares 😂

  • @marybrewer2203
    @marybrewer2203 Před 10 měsíci +19

    Growing up in the 1960s, we threw corn at doors of those folks who didn’t give out treats. Window-soaping was common as well. Those who got caught in the act had to wash those windows the next day. A similar tradition has arisen in recent years, in which Peeps candy chicks or similar marshmallow treats are moistened and stuck to the windows in question. “Window peeping” is what they call it.

  • @christopherduffy9854
    @christopherduffy9854 Před 10 měsíci +17

    I grew up in the northeast of England and to prepare for bonfire night (guy fawkes) we had the tradition of 'bonnie raiding'. Kids from different streets would spend a week building the bonfire and would steal material from neighbouring bonfires. It was exciting as we'd take turns to guard or raid. This was done with the approval of the parents who would step in if it got too rough.

  • @leeannemyers4104
    @leeannemyers4104 Před 10 měsíci +3

    💞💞My family made this candy for giving every Christmas from the 50's until late in the 70's... What wonderful memories! My father was in charge of the pulling after Mother assembled and cooked the ingredients...he doled out to each of us a handful of Taffy that we pulled, slathering our hands with butter. Oh Daddy, it's hot! He would then say to us... put more butter on them and keep pulling! Such wonderful memories, thank you! 👍👻🎃🤗

  • @AngelavengerL
    @AngelavengerL Před 10 měsíci +5

    Loved this! Vinegar candies are still one of my favorites. I adore the medium texture taffy that you can suck on or chew. Also really loved the jack-o-lanterns decorations and pikachu. Usually the background is so blurry they are kind of hard to see. I really liked how it was easier to see them this time.

  • @429supercj
    @429supercj Před 10 měsíci +38

    You've recently become my favorite channel. Nothing is better than a history lesson involving food.

  • @seangallagher779
    @seangallagher779 Před 10 měsíci +45

    Max’s exercise program is definitely paying off. Keep it up, Max! You’re adorable.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Před 10 měsíci +17

      Thank you!!

    • @beckstheimpatient4135
      @beckstheimpatient4135 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ⁠don't thank us! You're the one doing the work 💜

    • @zacknight7640
      @zacknight7640 Před 10 měsíci +8

      The first thing I thought when I clicked the video was damn max is getting swole 😆

  • @sydsmith8731
    @sydsmith8731 Před 10 měsíci +1

    hiawatha ks native here! halloween is such a big deal now that growing up you’d probably think it was a national holiday lol! there’s no school that day and going to the parade is a very big deal. the history of it is very important to us and it’s a holiday I hold dear to my heart! so glad you talked about it!!!

  • @noob19087
    @noob19087 Před 10 měsíci +2

    The temperature of the sugar syrup really doesn't matter, it's just an indicator of the water concentration (the less water in the syrup, the higher the boiling point, and the harder the candy). So if you wanted you could caramelize the sugar really well, then add water to cool it down again to whatever texture you like.

  • @janettedargy7941
    @janettedargy7941 Před 10 měsíci +16

    Chicken feed! I always thought the stuff Cinderella give to the chickens (and gus gus attempts to carry) WAS candy corn 😂 15:55

  • @Sam-lm8gi
    @Sam-lm8gi Před 10 měsíci +130

    It's ironic that even though Halloween is as popular as ever, we've lost so many cool Halloween traditions, like the bonfires and divination games. Modern Halloween is just so shallow and commercial; we need to get back to its spooky roots and exploit the thinning of the veil between worlds!

    • @bonniebrush94
      @bonniebrush94 Před 10 měsíci +10

      Yes, many only want the "trunk or treat". No games or costume parades by age or grade, no bobbing for Apple's or trying to grab a donut from a string (hygiene, germs).

    • @ktiemz
      @ktiemz Před 10 měsíci

      Burn the witch!

    • @Imperial_Lizardgirl
      @Imperial_Lizardgirl Před 10 měsíci +12

      "Exploit the thinning of the veil between the worlds!" I strictly recommend not to do it... it's will show "unforeseen consequences"

    • @Trekki200
      @Trekki200 Před 10 měsíci +8

      And to taking the neighbors fence to the bonfire😂

    • @Sam-lm8gi
      @Sam-lm8gi Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@Imperial_Lizardgirl Depends on what you're trying to do.

  • @noonynoonynoo
    @noonynoonynoo Před 10 měsíci +2

    This is how I make sugar wax! Although I stop when it's just sticky enough to adhere to the hair.
    Adding vinegar is actually supposed to help the mixture stop crystallizing (invert sugar). Lemon juice is also an acceptable substitute.

  • @erinMcL281
    @erinMcL281 Před 10 měsíci +6

    This was so interesting, I'd never heard about this Halloween history! My family is very Irish and we used to celebrate Samhain. Would love to see something about the foods of Samhain!

  • @dspecht337
    @dspecht337 Před 10 měsíci +15

    I'm from around Hiawatha. They still do a Halloween parade every year and it was fun to get a reminder and to get the story. I only knew it was the oldest Halloween parade because of the sign.

  • @gardnerhill9073
    @gardnerhill9073 Před 10 měsíci +11

    My condo puts on a Halloween party for the little'uns on Oct. 31. Because we're neighbors, we can have homemade goodies like cupcakes and my homemade marshmallows and chocolate skulls. (Even more welcome for the teens dragged along to a little-kids party are the pizzas we provide!)

  • @shelleynewstead3861
    @shelleynewstead3861 Před 10 měsíci +1

    My Mother made similar, what was called
    " Pull Toffee " . Oh, the patience she had as my Brother and I pulled and twisted and pulled and twisted that sticky toffee. Thank you for reminding me of such special Memories.

  • @blatherskitenoir
    @blatherskitenoir Před 6 měsíci +1

    Laura mentions going to a taffy pull in the Little House books. Taffy pulls were often courting events meant for young people to get to know each other and flirt. Sort of like a going to a dance or social. Teen boys and girls would be paired to pull the taffy and talk to each other for the 20 minutes or so it took to pull the taffy, and then continue socializing as they then ate the taffy together.

  • @rhondawest6838
    @rhondawest6838 Před 10 měsíci +11

    There was an old Acadian tradition of stealing cabbages on Halloween, but they used it make Soupe de la Toussaint, or All Saint's Day Soup.

  • @daughteroftheblackmadonna8936
    @daughteroftheblackmadonna8936 Před 10 měsíci +10

    We always made popcorn balls. I remember buttering our hands to mold them into balls.

    • @thecupthatcheers9763
      @thecupthatcheers9763 Před 10 měsíci

      So did we! We also made cookies (the kind of sugar cookie that you cut in shapes and decorate), and we would hand them out instead of candy to trick-or-treaters. That all changed by the end of the '80s, and the authorities ordered everyone to only hand out individually-wrapped, sealed, packages of commercially-produced treats, because they were "safer" than homemade ...

    • @CatsPajamas23
      @CatsPajamas23 Před 10 měsíci

      ❤ It's fun.

  • @marilynrowland5197
    @marilynrowland5197 Před 10 měsíci

    When I was a child in the 50s, only town kids could go trick-or- treating. I lived on a farm out in the country, where it was not possible. Nearest neighbors were a quarter of a mile away. In 15 years on that farm, not one trick-or-treater ever knocked on our door. Our school was where Halloween parties were held, with various diversions available, from bobbing for apples to having a gypsy read your palm and tell you your fortune. The "gypsy" was an easily recognizable teacher in a costume. That was my personal favorite. These parties were lots of fun, as almost all the students participated!

  • @reneeugrin7037
    @reneeugrin7037 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Thank you. I hope you will make a video on classic candy beginnings. My dad born in 1917 told me that the three muskateer bars were made in three parts, each a chocolate covered nougat, flavored with the three most popular flavors, a vanilla, a chocolate and strawberry. I think he said that a quarter pound bar cost a nickel. I so enjoy your videos 🎉😊
    .

  • @mossflowergreen4042
    @mossflowergreen4042 Před 10 měsíci +31

    My Dad, who grew up in the 1940's, had a penchant for stealing cabbages on Hallowe'en - it's just what he did with his friends and yes, they got into trouble many times. I wish he were still here to laugh at his many, many adventures. I miss his stories of him being a delinquent youth, dagnabbit!
    But thank you for the candy recipe, it looks delicious. And now I know why cabbages were taken on Hallowe'en. Maybe I'll hand out brussels sprouts this year ;)

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Před 10 měsíci

      Nah, they "fixed" 'em and now they don't taste as bitter.
      Though to be fair, cabbage and brussel sprouts (and broccoli, collard greens, kale, and kohlrabi) are the same species, just like different breeds of dogs can look very different but come from the same stock.

  • @robviousobviously5757
    @robviousobviously5757 Před 10 měsíci +5

    "Hotter equals Harder"... quote of the day...😂

  • @maruca3112
    @maruca3112 Před 10 měsíci +1

    My grandmother use to make this vinegar taffy. When we were little all us kids would take turns pulling the taffy. Years passed and we lost the recipe my grandmother had. This video brings up wonderful memories for me. I will be making this recipe soon.

  • @TheAyaReina
    @TheAyaReina Před 10 měsíci +1

    That pumpkin on the right. An absolute mood.

  • @joanignasi91
    @joanignasi91 Před 10 měsíci +57

    Offering vinagre candy is a great way to get trick or treaters to not bother you over the next Halloweens, as long as they don't try to turn your house into a rotten egg salad for eternity.

    • @sapphirejade5029
      @sapphirejade5029 Před 10 měsíci

      Wait! What happened?!😅

    • @CatsPajamas23
      @CatsPajamas23 Před 10 měsíci +3

      ...or a giant toilet paper collage`.

    • @xx_worldjaxx_xx1494
      @xx_worldjaxx_xx1494 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Or turn your car into a rotting apple covered mess for all eternity.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@CatsPajamas23 - My partner, who has little sales resistance, just ordered a 90 roll bail of White Cloud toilet paper, the good stuff that is so hard to find around here. So very, very much!!!
      So, I suggested that was what we could give out rolls of TP on Halloween, as long as the tricksters promise not to spread it around OUR house. No tooth-rotting sugar involved, though I doubt that parents will appreciate that fine point.

    • @CatsPajamas23
      @CatsPajamas23 Před 10 měsíci

      @@MossyMozart 😂They probably will.

  • @tyrant-den884
    @tyrant-den884 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Small towns reading what Hiawatha did then: "festivals, parties, and parades; what a wonderful idea!"
    Small towns reading about it now: "More cops, what a wonderful idea!"

  • @BenChurchill76
    @BenChurchill76 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Well, thanks to you, today I learned that not only was Halloween pretty crazy, but apparently so was the 4th of July! I noticed that little tidbit in there in one of your quotes about a "sane" 4th, and now a "sane" Halloween. Makes me wonder what shenanigans people were up to on the 4th, considering how some people are still playing with fire, literally, LOL.