German Street Food is NEXT LEVEL!

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  • čas přidán 2. 05. 2024
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to German Street Food
    Original video: • Street Food In Germany...
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Komentáře • 384

  • @charlyquinn
    @charlyquinn Před měsícem +317

    We should send Ryan a snackbox with German food. Poor dude should get a chance to try all the delishs

    • @TheOnlyOneSpeedfreak
      @TheOnlyOneSpeedfreak Před měsícem +41

      Mettbrötchen nicht vergessen

    • @ninieh5336
      @ninieh5336 Před měsícem +34

      ​@@TheOnlyOneSpeedfreak das würde die Reise wohl leider nicht überleben, aber wäre sooo wichtig für das volle Vergnügen😅

    • @Kloetenhenne
      @Kloetenhenne Před měsícem +41

      ​@@TheOnlyOneSpeedfreak ih 😂😂 das krabbelt dann alleine aus dem Paket 😂

    • @senker1544
      @senker1544 Před měsícem +7

      @@Kloetenhenne Das gehört selbstverständlich zur Erfahrung dazu 😄

    • @Kloetenhenne
      @Kloetenhenne Před měsícem +17

      @@senker1544 da soll er besser mal nach Deutschland kommen 😂 aber Mettbrötchen MUSS eigentlich sein ❤️

  • @andreasherzog2222
    @andreasherzog2222 Před měsícem +51

    Street food doesn't need a lot of chemicals. Is it healthy?
    Here's the final word on nutrition and health. It's a relief to know the truth after all those conflicting nutritional studies.
    1. The Japanese eat very little fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
    2. The Mexicans eat a lot of fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
    3. The Chinese drink very little red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
    4. The Italians drink a lot of red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans...
    5. The Germans drink a lot of beer and eat lots of sausages and fats and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.
    CONCLUSION: Eat and drink what you like. Speaking English is apparently what kills you :)

    • @sk21011962
      @sk21011962 Před měsícem

      Your conclusion is not correct. Being an American who don't walk but drive a car for a distance of 100 m kills you!

    • @gvoluto2816
      @gvoluto2816 Před 27 dny +1

      😅😅😅😅

  • @S.T.A.L.K.E.R.-Strelok
    @S.T.A.L.K.E.R.-Strelok Před měsícem +199

    There is no way you see deep fried dough and say it looks like breakfast food lmao

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Před měsícem +31

      you should see the stuff americans eat for breakfast..
      its deep fried and full of sugar..

    • @CodeNascher_
      @CodeNascher_ Před měsícem +12

      'MURICA

    • @Hey.Joe.
      @Hey.Joe. Před měsícem +16

      @@mats7492 Yes, they even also eat just desserts and calls it breakfast. Take a look at that big stable of pancakes with sirup.

    • @ryanwass
      @ryanwass  Před měsícem +47

      proof of Americanhood

    • @S.T.A.L.K.E.R.-Strelok
      @S.T.A.L.K.E.R.-Strelok Před měsícem +4

      @@ryanwass like the founding fathers intended 🫡

  • @peterhoz
    @peterhoz Před měsícem +99

    Crepe is basically a very thin pancake. Not a "tortilla thing". Banana and nutella is bloody awesome as a crepe filling. But you can have savoury too - creamy chicken and pineapple is a good option.

    • @Bioshyn
      @Bioshyn Před měsícem +6

      I like it simple, just sugar and cinnamon.

    • @PotsdamSenior
      @PotsdamSenior Před měsícem +2

      That bottle of Eierlikör conveniently placed next to the bananas... sounds like a good combo!

    • @marenzimmermann4693
      @marenzimmermann4693 Před měsícem +1

      Nothing better than a Crêpes with Banana and Nutella filling!! You have to try it, Ryan! (Great combination, even with pancakes for you Americans :D )

    • @pt.is.education5747
      @pt.is.education5747 Před měsícem

      Nutella is crap

    • @WooShell
      @WooShell Před měsícem +1

      @@pt.is.education5747 Nutella has really become quite awful with the last "optimization" of the recipe.. even more fat and less nuts than before. The crepe stand outside our Globus market is offering Nudossi instead, it's awesome with bananas.

  • @SilverDragon67
    @SilverDragon67 Před měsícem +44

    In the northern part of Germany a very common street food is the Fischbrötchen / Fish-Bun, you get Fried Fish, or pickled fish or other yummy fishy things with salad and sauces between two bun-halves :)

  • @Skorpi.
    @Skorpi. Před měsícem +162

    As a german I really love how multicultural our cuisine is.
    Not only the difference between northern to southern Germany but the huge variety of food from other countries like france, türkiye, polen, russia, spain, usa, etc.

    • @Optimismus53
      @Optimismus53 Před měsícem

      Sie sollten jetzt noch auf Vorrat essen, wenn die AFD gewinnt gibt es nur noch arischen deutschen Stockfisch.

    • @AussieFossil
      @AussieFossil Před měsícem +13

      Where I live in Australia we have food from many countries in my local area. German, Swiss, French, Italian, Hungarian, Greek, Lebanese, Israeli, Russian, Nepalese, Malaysian, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, South African, Sudanese, Pacifica and more. There are over 200 languages spoken in Melbourne and almost 25% of our population were not born here. Everyone is welcome!

    • @blondkatze3547
      @blondkatze3547 Před měsícem +5

      Not to forget the original Italian pizza from the Italian pizzeria. Mmmm...so delicious.🙂

    • @Northerner-Not-A-Doctor
      @Northerner-Not-A-Doctor Před měsícem +5

      As a Pole I also love how multicultural your cuisine is.
      In Poland we have only several hundrets of kebab people (we are too poor for them to come) but in exchange we have lots of Viets who make even better dishes.

    • @blondkatze3547
      @blondkatze3547 Před měsícem +3

      I wouldn`t have thought that over 200 languages are spoken in Melbourne. Great@@AussieFossil

  • @harry69linz
    @harry69linz Před měsícem +75

    Crepe with Nutella and bananaslices are great! You definitely should try those.

    • @ololic
      @ololic Před měsícem +1

      Yeah, it´s not a "tortilla thing", but rather thin, soft and lightly sweetened dough.
      Also it´s not pronounced "crape", but pretty much like the English "crap" with a hard and almost raspy r like we also have in some German words.

    • @Ned-Ryerson
      @Ned-Ryerson Před měsícem +2

      It is, indeed, a vast jar of Nutella.

    • @norbertzillatron3456
      @norbertzillatron3456 Před měsícem +1

      Top level version: Add a few sprinkles of Eierlikör (Egg liquor).

  • @trisanatandler
    @trisanatandler Před měsícem +94

    It isn't like a crepe it is one 😂

    • @suessigkeitenlp
      @suessigkeitenlp Před měsícem +18

      And the thing looking like a nutella glas is a Nutella glas :D

    • @trisanatandler
      @trisanatandler Před měsícem +2

      @@suessigkeitenlp true i love crepe with Nutella

    • @hollerschnigge5133
      @hollerschnigge5133 Před 8 dny

      Mais c'est francais, pas d'allemagne...

  • @JenMaxon
    @JenMaxon Před měsícem +29

    One thing that amuses me - and I like - about Germany is that any time there is any - any - excuse for some sort of event - doesn't matter what it is - their immediate response is to get out the street food stalls, those long tables with the benches to sit on and also the beer tent. Everyone comes out onto the street and has something delicious and eats it standing or sitting on the pavement (sidewalk). We have some sort of street local shop promotion thing going on tomorrow. No idea what it is really but I'm already looking forward to my lunch barbecued in the park just down the road from our flat (apartment).
    That's what Germany is to me: summer or winter + something, something, whatever = street party. Hurrah!

    • @Salige150
      @Salige150 Před měsícem +9

      Yes we(tyrol village)are having a seedling celebration tomorrow with music just so everyone can buy their baby vegetable plants😊

    • @JenMaxon
      @JenMaxon Před měsícem +1

      @@Salige150 Sounds excellent - enjoy

    • @Salige150
      @Salige150 Před měsícem

      @@JenMaxon Danke😄

  • @richardharrison284
    @richardharrison284 Před měsícem +26

    Ryan's "o" face when the crate of pretzels came out made watching the video to the end worth it.

  • @Flamebeard0815
    @Flamebeard0815 Před měsícem +20

    "I can just imagine people's reaction when I say some of the stuff I say..."
    Yep. It's "Oh, Ryan... He's special, bless his heart!" most of the time. :P

  • @corbanx0809
    @corbanx0809 Před měsícem +19

    "Regular" street food vendors are rare in Germany. These are all market stalls. Either during Christmas Market oder some Volksfeste. You might find 1-2 on "Weekly-Markets" (where you get regional stuff like Eggs, Potatoes, Meat, Fisch etc.). And on the Kirmes of course.

    • @liosscip
      @liosscip Před měsícem +4

      Na.. rare ? .. in every city you have tons of street food vendors
      ofcourse on markets and on festivals you have more, but small street food vendors aswell as street food trucks can be foudn in almost every city

    • @franhunne8929
      @franhunne8929 Před měsícem +4

      @@liosscip Have to agree with you and Ryan's chosen video did not even cover the Bratwurst/Currywurst/Brathähnchen part of the street food - which are very, very widespread.

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před měsícem

      Yeah, the farmer's market in my hometown (Lower Saxony, 20k inhabitants) has a stand, manned by the local butcher, with Bratwurst, Currywurst, Shashlik etc., the next -door Pizzeria has a small stand and at the fishmonger's you can get Fischbrötchen.
      btw: it's interesting how many of these German food items have their own Wikipedia page in English :)

    • @corbanx0809
      @corbanx0809 Před měsícem

      I live in a ~600k city and we have 1-2 Hähnchen/Spießbraten wagons, and 1? Fisch-Wagon that stands on parking lots or infront of supermarkets. We had an Indian "Spießbraten" guy, but I'm not sure if he's still around. His seasoning was amazing.

  • @rhysodunloe2463
    @rhysodunloe2463 Před měsícem +13

    Crêpe is basically an extremly thin pancake. It's made only with eggs, flour, milk and a bit of salt. No baking soda or an other levening ingredient like the American ones.
    You can put anything in there. Savory or sweet. I've seen crêpes with ham, cheese, pineapple, berries, all kinds of candy bars like kinder chocolate, Snickers, yoghurette... There are even alcoholic ones with cream liqueurs like eggnog or Bailey's.
    Most people I know eat them with Nutella or ham and cheese.
    Nutella and banana slices is also a popular topping.

  • @rigsbyrigged1831
    @rigsbyrigged1831 Před měsícem +30

    The meat in the big Smoker is called Leberkäse! Which means Liver Chees, but ther is neither liver nor cheese in it. It is just a Meatloaf.

    • @RobotboyX2
      @RobotboyX2 Před měsícem +5

      Leberkäse has to contain liver according to german food law stuff, only "Bayrischer Leberkäse" may be without Liver or Fleischkäse. But i personally havent seen anyone sell "Leberkäse", just the options without Liver

    • @rigsbyrigged1831
      @rigsbyrigged1831 Před měsícem +1

      @@RobotboyX2 Fair! People say Leberkäse meaning Fleichkäse. But as you say, "Bayrische Leberkäse" does not need to include liver - Personally, I hate the stuff and stick to my Pommes Rot Weiss 🙂

  • @meraluna666
    @meraluna666 Před měsícem +5

    We put everything in a Crepe...You may have it sweet with nutella, cinnemon and sugar, banana and chocolate or even a snickers. Others like it with cheese and ham or they put some liqueur like chantreau or Advocaat in it. I like them ALL :)

  • @hellemarc4767
    @hellemarc4767 Před měsícem +3

    The big hash browns Are called "Reibekuchen", they're basically like latkes, grated potatoes with onion, egg and parsley.
    The thing in the tin foil seems to be Raclette, it's molten cheese. When the cheese is cold, it has a consistency similar to the Dutch Gouda cheese, but with a stronger taste and smell. It's a French dish, usually served with potatoes (boiled or baked) and things like ham, salami, salads... It tastes amazing, but you can't each too much of it, you feel full very quickly.
    These traditional French crêpes are made with flour and water only, you can fill them with whatever you want, sweet or savory.

  • @kurotsuchiiwa3627
    @kurotsuchiiwa3627 Před měsícem +21

    that cheese at the start is racklette. you heat it from the top until its molten and charred and scrape it off onto bread or potatoes or some other stuff

    • @becauseican2607
      @becauseican2607 Před měsícem +1

      🇨🇭

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před měsícem

      I have never seen that (lived in Lower Saxony + Berlin), but it looks yummy.

    • @kurotsuchiiwa3627
      @kurotsuchiiwa3627 Před měsícem +1

      @@hypatian9093 most people have racklette with slices that are then put under a heating mashine that has a plate on top where you can make bacon and stuff. but traditionally you do it like this with one big half wheel of cheese th

  • @norrinradd2364
    @norrinradd2364 Před měsícem +69

    13:15 No, we call it Schaschlik. It has Hungarian roots and was very popular decades ago, but has still been a staple in German fast food. It is different from shish kebab. It consists of pieces of meat, usually pork, onions and peppers. Shish kebab comes from Turkish cuisine and is not made from pork. They use ground meat lamb or beef and other spices.

    • @Blutwind
      @Blutwind Před měsícem +3

      Yeah there were Schaschlik but i think the focus was on Grillfackeln.
      For those interested its basically a long and thin ribbon of porkbelly wrapped around a wodden stick grilled to a slightly chared extirior and jucy intirior.
      Basically a grilled bacon lolipop

    • @sandra7790
      @sandra7790 Před měsícem +1

      Haha, die Übersetzung hat shish Kebap mit Schaschlik übersetzt 😅

    • @Tusyk
      @Tusyk Před měsícem

      Just dont call it then schashlik. Just dont.

    • @bleifussKA
      @bleifussKA Před měsícem

      *tatarian roots

  • @ralfbauerfeind8236
    @ralfbauerfeind8236 Před měsícem +4

    10:00 Ryan: "This thing might be healthy."
    Any German: "Haha.... No."

  • @ayoutubechannelhasnoname6018
    @ayoutubechannelhasnoname6018 Před měsícem +53

    Technically its swiss streetfood (cheese in the beginning)...
    Plus you will never have a Crêpe, if you keep pronouncing it wrong 😂

    • @deryorsh
      @deryorsh Před měsícem +4

      I mean Europe is still just one country, soo it's not that bad of a mistake lol

    • @loboptlu
      @loboptlu Před měsícem +6

      @@deryorshplease tell me you are joking please.

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Před měsícem +3

      @@loboptlu An American billionaire was on a journey around the world. He asked his pilot where they were. The answer: "If you look out the windows on the left you will see the Eiffel Tower in Paris." The billionaire replied: "No details please, continents suffice."

    • @loboptlu
      @loboptlu Před měsícem +2

      @@McGhinch seems unrealistic ,an american knowing about continents 😉

    • @deryorsh
      @deryorsh Před měsícem

      @@loboptlu hmmm.. :D

  • @BennoWitter
    @BennoWitter Před měsícem +9

    Street food is amazing: One 🥔 potato=10 cents, the same potato cut in a spiral and deep fried=3€

    • @Holilo7
      @Holilo7 Před měsícem +8

      Yes, with the remaining €2.90 the food truck owner pays for the oil to fry, the energy to do it, the professional deep fryer in which it happens, the inventory needed, car + fuel to get there, his employees, his taxes and his own salary.

  • @Kutchulu
    @Kutchulu Před měsícem +3

    1. "Rievekooche" or "Puffer" they are a kind of thick hash browns. In the North-Rhine-Westphalia region it is normally served with apple sauce or the better with apple compote.
    2. Raclette cheese on a sandwich. (Swiss)
    3. Crepes, but I cannot tell what he is putting on it (prop. sliced banana). There are several different styles, and yes the jar is Nutella which goes great in a small pancake like the Crepes. (French)
    4. Might be Schnitzel with chips.
    5. Hard to tell, looks like "Spießbraten". Googled it, they are "Baconbomb Hamburger".
    6. There are differente kinds of "Kebab" which literally means "roasted or grilled meat". You may have a Dürüm which is a roll like a burrito. Then there is a "Döner Kebab" normally served in a quarter of fresh roasted flatbred with a lot of vegetables. Lahmacun is a Turkish pizza, also rolled like a "Dürüm" but the flatbred has a tomato spread with minced beef on it, plus the Kebab and vegetables by choice. Or you go with a "Döner plate" containing Kebab, with vegetables and French Fries or rice. All variants come with Tzatziki or a saffron sauce and can be mixed with hot spice. A Sis Kebab is roasted meat on a stick.
    7. Bretzel. No comment.^^
    German food regulations are very strict. If the "Gesundheitsamt", an office responsible for food safety, closes your shop/restaurant one time, it might be the end of the business. If it is not, a second failure will be the end.

  • @kragiharp
    @kragiharp Před měsícem +7

    No, don't get the first brezel you can get.
    Go to Baden-Württemberg or Bayern an get a self made brezel at a lokal bakery or a simple mobile cart on the streets. The ones with the sticky black stuff (leftovers from the baking process).
    Best when they are still warm.
    Bite a piece off and put butter on the bite area.
    Or slice it in half an fill it like a bagel.

  • @anglosaxon5874
    @anglosaxon5874 Před měsícem +9

    Yes, the Germans do know how to make outdoor food for festivals etc. and in general too!
    One of the things I love about my 'motherland' [was born there and my mother came from there], that and the scenery!
    Edit: Just had a pretzel whilst watching this! lol

  • @ThomasEhrenberg-gp9dk
    @ThomasEhrenberg-gp9dk Před měsícem +6

    The food isn‘t realy healthy. But it tastes great. If you you walk across a market, you have to resist all the nice smell. The first one is my favourite called Reibekuchen. Sliced potatoes backed in oil.

  • @NightwaIk3r
    @NightwaIk3r Před měsícem +9

    nothing is burnt on the cheese, it's perfect brown ;) . the "Rostbratwurst im Brötchen" is not comparable to the pathetic hotdog! the first crêpe has white chocolate in it, if you've never had one you must try it with chocolate and banana it's one of the best things the French have brought us, but a German pancake is also very tasty with chocolate and banana or strawberry jam or even the mixture of sweet pancake with cheese and ham :Q . "Schich kebab" (is Turkish for meat on a skewer) is usually meat from veal or sheep, the one in the video is usually called "Schaschlik" (Russian) in Germany, but there are many different variations with meat from different animals as well as vegetables, fish, shrimps and much more, but often it consists of meat from pigs, so it has nothing to do with "Schisch kebab", which comes from Turkish (Islamic) :)

  • @donkfail1
    @donkfail1 Před měsícem +5

    Don't be ashamed when you realise you pronounce a foreign word wrong. Seeing and admitting when you make a mistake is the best way of learning. And acknowledging and admitting your own flaws is one of the finest qualities in my mind.
    If we were more humble in general the world would be a better place. So in conclusion; you are making the world better by admitting your few flaws.
    Greetings from Sweden!

  • @crkTyphoon
    @crkTyphoon Před měsícem +6

    Crêpes can be topped with almost anything. The contents of the dough itself allow for it to harmonize with sweet, sour, rustic, or even mixed taste toppings.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před měsícem

      In france crêpe, made of wheat goes with the sweet and for f.e. eggs and baken they take galette, made of gluten-free buckwheat (sarrasin, Buchweizen, which is actually not wheat, no grain at all).

  • @pepelongsleeve
    @pepelongsleeve Před měsícem +5

    its called crêpe, which is like a thin pancake, originated in france, served salty with cheese and ham or sweet with things like nutelle, banana, cinnamon, but you can put almost everything on it. it is mostly served at village festivals or bigger concerts

  • @carobock5683
    @carobock5683 Před měsícem +13

    This Crepe thing really is a Crepe. And Crepe is eaten in France in sweet ways like with Nutella or sugar and cinnamon powder. Or with Nutella and Banana or other fruits. And there is a delicious hearty version with cheese, ham, egg, vegetables, mussels and other stuff. But you mostly get some sweet Crepes here at those stalls or at markets.

    • @Al69BfR
      @Al69BfR Před měsícem

      But crêpes are just very thin Palatschinken.

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Před měsícem

      @@Al69BfR ...with less color...

    • @carobock5683
      @carobock5683 Před měsícem

      @@Al69BfR and in Germany it is Pfannkuchen in most regions. Only small differences. And nothing wrong with that. All tasty, whatever you call it.

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před měsícem +1

      @@Al69BfR They're not. The dough tastes different.

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před měsícem +3

      Nutella is a very new thing for crêpes in France. Sweet crêpes as street food back when I first ate them as a small child in the 1950s were originally with a squirt of lemon juice and a sprinkling of sugar. It was in restaurants that you got crêpes with banana or fruit fillings with cream and maybe even flambé.
      The savoury crêpes were more of the gallette type, made with wholemeal flour or even buckwheat flour. Those were more substanstial, not as thin as crêpes and meant as something that would satisfy your hunger for a few hours.

  • @Herzschreiber
    @Herzschreiber Před měsícem +7

    Breakfast? hahaha! If you try to get street food for breakfast in Germany, you will be lost! Street Food is mostly found at markets or festivals, the trucks arrive in the morning, have to set up everything and then start selling around 11 am! Even the ones in the cities, which are installed in malls or shopping streets will not start earlier. Germans don't regard street food as breakfast, because a typical German breakfast is eaten at home and sold in bakeries! We do not "cook" things for breakfast, we either have cereals or bread/ bread rolls with marmalade, nutella, ham, cheese, whatever, but normally nothing fried or even warm!

    • @juwen7908
      @juwen7908 Před měsícem +3

      Einfach zum Bäcker gehen und ne ofenwarme Schrippe auf die Hand, Tada streetfood for breakfast 😉

  • @flatterkatz
    @flatterkatz Před měsícem +7

    That's raclette in the beginning. Swiss speciality.
    But never saw that at a street food stand

    • @vonBlankenburgLP
      @vonBlankenburgLP Před měsícem +1

      I did, but it was in the Black Forrest.

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Před měsícem

      In Switzerland you didn't get it on bread -- I don't know about today -- but a couple of years ago when I lived there it was always served with Raclette potatoes -- here in Germany "Drillinge" is close enough.

  • @sarerusoldone
    @sarerusoldone Před měsícem +2

    a lot of the stalls you see here, if not all of them, are from either christmas markets, summer festivals (Kirmes) or food festivals, you'll only rarely see food trucks or food stalls randomly in the streets. those markets and festivals have a ton of customers at once, so especially at christmas markets they tends to prepare a lot of food and can then display that behind the plexiglass.
    most of the street food outside of those events we get from bakeries i'd say.

  • @trisanatandler
    @trisanatandler Před měsícem +7

    Well at least at food stalls you usually pay in cash. They have to pay a fee for electronic payments and most do not want that for a smaller shop or stalls

  • @jesskar
    @jesskar Před měsícem +11

    1:56 - Raclette (swiss)
    3:03 - sausage in bread (german)
    3:47 - Crêpe (french) - and yes that is a gigantic glass of Nutella there
    7:01 - sliced Schnitzel (technically austrian, if made with calf...however german, if made with pork - if you ask Austrians, made with pork is not a Schnitzel at all, but for us it is)
    9:12 - really looks like fresh potato chips - never saw that though. Must be a thing in the south.
    9:41 - does indeed look like a Mett-Brötchen, no idea why they´re adding salad instead of raw onions
    10:52 - looks pork in flaky pastry (Schweinefilet in Blätterteig) to me, similar to a british Filet Wellington. Maybe a fellow German here can enlighten me, what it actually is
    12:38 - various kinds of meat, mostly pork and on sticks (looks very german to me, but specifically southern or bavarian)
    14:12 - needs no explanation, it´s Brezeln (bavarian)
    It does look all very southern german to me. The north would have much more fish f.e.

    • @dnocturn84
      @dnocturn84 Před měsícem +1

      10:52 That's either a loaf of Leberkäse or Pulled Pork.

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Před měsícem +3

      9:41 I don't think it is Mett, it is the preparation for slices of Leberkäse -- or if that are pulled pork loafs -- for slices of these.
      By the way: When it comes out of the mother cow it is a _calf,_ when it enters a kitchen it is re-branded (😀) to _veal._

    • @irasan77
      @irasan77 Před měsícem

      Traditionally Wiener Schnitzl is calf, but in reality most of the time Schnitzl will be pork or alternatively chicken. ....and now I want one 🤤

    • @birgitbeckers1242
      @birgitbeckers1242 Před měsícem +2

      And at the very beginning there was potato pancake😊

    • @Salige150
      @Salige150 Před měsícem +3

      If you call it viennese-style schnitzel it doesn't have to be made from veal.😊

  • @sunbrosolair8627
    @sunbrosolair8627 Před měsícem +8

    4:50 it's Nutella

  • @Karla-fo8nk
    @Karla-fo8nk Před měsícem +10

    I'm starving rn too (there's no food at home😡) and know this video, wow😂

  • @alidemirbas6566
    @alidemirbas6566 Před měsícem +2

    I remember the time when my father bought me a streetfood Currywurst. E.g. in our small town on Saturday, or just outside the big Quelle Store. It was awesome. The price was about 2,70 DM. This was years before Döner Kebap invaded and occupied Germany.

  • @onkelpencho8609
    @onkelpencho8609 Před měsícem +3

    The Tortilla Thing is a Crêpe you can order it with Nutella,Fruits,Jams or with Bacon,Cheese,Mushrooms and so on

  • @X25_Networking
    @X25_Networking Před měsícem +1

    10:45 Its a Fleischkäse-Burger. Meat loaf is a name for a mass in which pork is finely pureed with spices in a food processor and filled into a cake pan. The whole thing is then cooked in the oven at 140 C° for an hour. The name comes from the shape the loaf has. It looks like cheese, which is why it is called meatloaf even though there is no cheese in it. It is a very tasty dish.

  • @gt748r
    @gt748r Před měsícem +1

    Dear Ryan, this video was the one and only reason I had to eat a Käsleberkässemmel this afternoon, because I just couldn't get it out of my head. Thx a lot. Feel giulty! 😉🤣🤣😂

  • @Starkiller21Nikki
    @Starkiller21Nikki Před měsícem +2

    At 2:45 it's calling a "Ketwurst" it's a Sausage with Ketchup filling in a Bread.
    It's kinda the German Hot Dog. ^^

  • @pyrointeam
    @pyrointeam Před měsícem +7

    Kebab is persian/arabic/turkish for grilled or fried meat, while Döner Kebab means Spinning Grilled Meat. In Germany we call it Schisch Kebab/ şiş kebap (from turkish/persian "skewer with grilled meat" ) only when we eat at an oriental restaurant or "Imbiss". Otherwise it is "Grillspieß" (grilled skewer) or often "ungarischer Grillspieß" (hungarian grilled skewer - with bell peppers / "Paprika" between the meat chunks) at german bbqs.

    • @sihilius
      @sihilius Před měsícem

      I know Turkish style grilled meat skewers actually under the term adana rather than kebab.

    • @averies23
      @averies23 Před měsícem

      @@sihilius i believe adana is a type of kebab. so it would still be correct to call it kebab

    • @pyrointeam
      @pyrointeam Před měsícem

      @@sihilius Well Adana is a a city in Turkey i guess it's like with many foods where the origin of the style (like spices) are named before the food but with time people drop the actual foods name and go with the city only like Frankfurter Bratwurst (grilled sausage from Frankfurt) becomes "Frankfurter", Hamburger Frikadellenbrötchen becomes "Hamburger" or Adana Kebap turns into "Adana".

    • @pyrointeam
      @pyrointeam Před měsícem

      @@sihilius Well Adana is a a city in Turkey i guess it's like with many foods where the origin of the style (like spices) are named before the food but with time people drop the actual foods name and go with the city only like Frankfurter Bratwurst (grilled sausage from Frankfurt) becomes "Frankfurter", Hamburger Frikadellenbrötchen becomes "Hamburger" or Adana Kebap turns into "Adana".

    • @sihilius
      @sihilius Před měsícem

      @@averies23 Might be that way🤷‍♂. Just saying that's the word I know for it.

  • @mickypescatore9656
    @mickypescatore9656 Před měsícem +2

    4:48: It IS Nutella! Btw, you can certainly eat a crepe sweet (eventually also with banana and cinnamon) or sometimes spicy, for example with minced meat or with vegetables. You can also eat it with a bit alcohol like Orange-liqueur or egg-liquer. (The last one is very nice)! Mostly this little Sales stands offer the sweet ones.
    ...😅😂🤣😂Yes, nothing of these things are healthy, except the banana in the crepe! 😂
    ...And "Mettbrötchen" (you know, "the raw thing") you get sometimes in a bakery or at a private party!!! (And at Karneval-time)!😆
    Ooooh, you poor boy!...

  • @dietermcdevitt4015
    @dietermcdevitt4015 Před 11 dny +1

    What is also very exciting - in the first shot, potato pancakes (Reibekuchen) are offered in the background. Very traditional food - always 3 pieces, usually served with apple sauce. Unfortunately, I can't say why there are always(!) 3, but that's the way it is. You can't buy 1, 2 or 4 anywhere, it's always 3.
    If anyone here knows the reason, I would be grateful.

  • @luisekahnt7387
    @luisekahnt7387 Před měsícem +1

    If you like German street food, you might want to check out "Muttbraten". It's a spitroasted roast traditionally served with bread, Sauerkraut and mustard. It's absolutely delicious, but pretty regional and you can mostly find it at Christmas markets and other markets.

  • @VanillaCinammon
    @VanillaCinammon Před měsícem +1

    the jar at the crepes stall IS Nutella, in germany most people eat crepes with banana and nutella

  • @janpracht6662
    @janpracht6662 Před měsícem +1

    What I miss a bit here in Germany is "Pastrami", a sandwich with cured and smoked beef and Swiss cheese. The origin was probably from Eastern Europe. In the USA (especially in New York) you see it often, in Germany rarely.

  • @pepperpiet
    @pepperpiet Před měsícem +2

    @6:06 yes we like banana slices with nutella in crepes

  • @Paddeltroll
    @Paddeltroll Před měsícem +1

    Banana fits on Crepes. 12:00 seems to be a 'Bayerischer Leberkäse' meatloaf

  • @LuciaSims745
    @LuciaSims745 Před měsícem +1

    I miss eating Bretzeln, Spätzle and Schnitzeln :-'( When I was in Germany I ate German Food and I love German cuisine so much! I am half Portuguese but I feel more German because I was born in Germany and raised in Germany and with 16 I didn't live with my portuguese parents anymore, I was taken by the Jugendamt, I was then raised by Germans in a "Wohngruppe".
    Since 2013 I fell in love with a portuguese man, who lived in Germany, but he went to Portugal and I missed him so much that I had to fly alone to Portugal to live with him, I live now in Portugal but I really miss Germany so much, really but I'm happy here too! Really, I wish more Germans could come to Portugal and make German Restaurant's and German Stores because we don't have any German food here in Portugal. Portuguese Food is good too but If you eat that every day you gonna miss German food... Bretzel, Schnitzel and Spätzle :'(
    Wish more Germans could come to Portugal to give us the German culture. We have Aldi and Lidl but they just sell Portuguese food there, I just found Wiener Würstchen from Austria there, but I couldn't find any Spätzle, just italian and french food, but nothing German there :(

  • @Ultraporing
    @Ultraporing Před měsícem +6

    12:06 looks like a loaf of Leberkäse (from wikipedia: Baked loaf of finely minced sausage meat in Austria and the Swabian, Bavarian and Franconian parts of Germany). Its finely minced meat. Love that stuff and a staple here, you can buy the loaf ready made to bake it your self or cooked and as cold cuts. Also a very popular street food, every butcher sells it and some bakeries. They cut pieces off and put them on a Brötchen (bun) with or without ketchup/mustard (your choice). I always buy it and put mustard on it at home :).

    • @Sibian_Wolf
      @Sibian_Wolf Před měsícem +3

      12:06 could also be the pulled pork meatbefore it gets ripped appart.

  • @Jochen.Lutz-Germany
    @Jochen.Lutz-Germany Před měsícem +1

    A crepes with Nutella (chocolate-creme) with banana slices - so yummy !

  • @mariethomas7760
    @mariethomas7760 Před měsícem +3

    Ifs funny, when u said "all this mashines in Germany" i laughed. Coz i watched some Japan vlogs in the last 2 days. About Shimkansen, sleeping busses, napping pods, all the automatics and an roboter who makes coffee. Japan is for Germany like future age. For Americans is Germany future age. Its wild.
    And yes, it was Craps. U can put everything in it, from sheese, Nutella, champignons, banana.. what ever u want. And powder sugar above. But all this street food isnt common every day. Its more amusement park thing. Or a street fest thing. Than yes, its common. But not on everyday.

  • @steven03048
    @steven03048 Před měsícem +1

    The first crepe she made was with banana slices in it!

  • @hattinah6176
    @hattinah6176 Před měsícem

    I can confirm, that all of these are amazing. This is the food you can eat at a typical German fun fair. It's awesome.

  • @assellator7298
    @assellator7298 Před měsícem +3

    13:25 no Kebab, only Schaschlik..😅

  • @larskoenig6021
    @larskoenig6021 Před měsícem +1

    german here and sorry, yes we have tons of great different streetfoods here, but theres no way we can beat the variety of the american because of literally every influence from the whole world in there. or streetfoods in asia. we cant possibly beat anything of that. nontheless, love your channel and your enthusiasm for our country :)

  • @renerieche6862
    @renerieche6862 Před měsícem +2

    She asked for salt AND pepper and uses two mills . You were right ;)

  • @Duconi
    @Duconi Před měsícem

    Crêpe are like very thin pancakes. You can do everything on them. Yes, that is a Nutella jar. Besides sugar and cinnamon, Nutella is probably one of the classics. Banana are also a common option. You can see an egg liqueur bottle as well. But there are not just sweet ones. Some are done with cheese for example. Crêpe booths usually have a list of about a dozen different options.

  • @davidmalarkey1302
    @davidmalarkey1302 Před měsícem +1

    Ryan actually replied to comments with a heart well that's a first. Ryan has never had anything other than burgers and fries and pizza.He has the pallet of a child and never leave his bubble.

  • @X25_Networking
    @X25_Networking Před měsícem +1

    In Center of Germany we love our CURRYWURST! It´s so delicious you cant believe...

  • @patriciamillin1977
    @patriciamillin1977 Před měsícem +1

    Those “tortilla things” are actually crêpes 😂, and yes, you can put Nutella as well as bananas on them, or sugar, cinnamon, jam, even bacon or salami, whatever you want. They’re like very thin pancakes. The things you thought were like hash browns are called potato pancakes and are very popular here.

  • @biloaffe
    @biloaffe Před měsícem +1

    You can't compare a crep with a totillia, it's like comparing apples with oranges. They are completely different types of dough!

  • @alanpotter8680
    @alanpotter8680 Před měsícem

    Haven't watched this yet, but coming from Greece, and after visiting Germany over 50 times, I'm not sure what to expect!

  • @Ilias_Goddess
    @Ilias_Goddess Před měsícem +2

    totally reccommend Döner, soo good
    thüringer bratwurst in a bun is tasty too, dont forget the hela ketchup
    also you can get pizza slices to go
    also your schnitzel pronounciation is pretty good
    cheese and bacon pretzels hell yeah

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch Před měsícem +3

    1:05 This is Raclette in its semi-original form. Originally, in the western Swiss Alps where they speak French, the cheese was molten held to the open fire. After it was molten enough it was scraped off on a plate and eaten with potatoes. The "grill" resembles the open fire. Is it healthy? I don't know but the Swiss survived it. 🙂 And, if you like cheese, it is good. The cheese served as a topping on a bread is a German innovation.

    • @MINOUTFTABOU
      @MINOUTFTABOU Před měsícem

      Raclette is from france. Fondue is from Switzerland, but *Raclette comes from France*

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Před měsícem

      @@MINOUTFTABOU Well, as long as Valais is in France you are correct. Yes, there is a cheese Raclette de Savoie, but even the French Wikipedia says the dish is of Swiss origin.

    • @MINOUTFTABOU
      @MINOUTFTABOU Před měsícem

      @@McGhinch
      Unfortunately, it originated in Switzerland.🙁🙁
      However, it is well known that Riches Montes tastes better with the dish and the French are also proud to be the founders of Riches Montes.
      This cheese tastes much better than the Swiss raclette cheese.

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Před měsícem

      @@MINOUTFTABOU I do not argue about that. 🙂 The French make really good cheeses. Unfortunately I live in an area where you usually have the choice of one Raclette cheese. 😞 So, Raclette is not a spontaneous thing here, it needs planning to procure the right cheeses.

  • @user-we7vk5zg7l
    @user-we7vk5zg7l Před měsícem +1

    My God...I'm f'n starving to death here watching this!!! :)

  • @Jochen.Lutz-Germany
    @Jochen.Lutz-Germany Před měsícem +1

    The guy in front of the 2 mobile stoves is making bread.

  • @Chaos2Go
    @Chaos2Go Před měsícem +1

    Crepés are originally from France, and really fantastic with fresh cut bananas and nutella inside, it this kind of food the first time i visited Korsika .....

  • @Jochen.Lutz-Germany
    @Jochen.Lutz-Germany Před měsícem +1

    The meat on the stickis grilled bacon twisted around the stick. Oh man I'm getting hungry.

  • @matzevogl6641
    @matzevogl6641 Před měsícem

    At 06:14
    These are Crépes. It´s a frech thing. The dough is totally thin and sweet. The glas which you saw is Nutella. That´s right. BUT! You can get it also with ham and cheese. The second one was with cheese.
    At 10:40
    This is Spanferkel. Spanferkel means suckling pig. It´s very slow cooked, more than 6 hours is common.
    The pork is very juicy and soft. It´s common to eat it like a burger.
    At 13:00
    This is called Schaschlik. It´s an North Caucasian recipe

  • @corncutter
    @corncutter Před měsícem

    Regarding your questions about the Crêpes-stand: Yes, that's Nutella and yes, those are bananas. And my favourite Crêpes ingredient is the combination of both - Nutella & banana. You should definitely try that!

  • @Lance3015
    @Lance3015 Před měsícem

    3:16 damn we had those in elementary school. fairly a lot smaller and cheaper, but they were awesome, for 1,20€ back then. didnt know this was an actual thing.
    this is the first time seeing this in over 20 years.
    they were also called hotdogs, so i was surprised when i was older and saw "actual" hotdogs. wondered why they were originally made cut up and so inconvenient to eat, with half the stuff falling off haha

  • @oskarprotzer3000
    @oskarprotzer3000 Před měsícem +1

    Salt and pepper? Ryan: Dr Pepper! xD

  • @sascharichter1614
    @sascharichter1614 Před měsícem

    in the crepe was white choclat she ask for it at 4min 04 sec. banana and nutella is so great you must give a try.

  • @birkplaum9042
    @birkplaum9042 Před měsícem

    Visit Germany. We have more street food, but we usually eat it at events like the Christmas market or the Schützenfest (Shootersparty). In the northern part you can find Fischbrötchen (fish sandwiches) even on normal days.

  • @zinta0904
    @zinta0904 Před 21 dnem

    The cheese thing is called raclette and is one of the most iconic foods in switzerland!

  • @horstadler1340
    @horstadler1340 Před měsícem

    At 4:09 it was white chocolate! And Nutella is cheap chocolate cream, mostly it is really sugar.

  • @dfg12382
    @dfg12382 Před měsícem +1

    How did anyone in the western world not have a crêpe yet? This is insanity.

  • @matthewrandom4523
    @matthewrandom4523 Před měsícem

    The first Crèpes was filled with white chocolate - Yummy 😋 But you can put almost everything in, even bananas!

  • @StewO101
    @StewO101 Před měsícem +2

    At 04:10 min he is putting the toppic on the Crêpe with the same hand he later touches the coins. Thats definetely not german hygiene standard.

  • @Bullraid
    @Bullraid Před měsícem

    You can eat crepes with sweet things like banana and nutella or PBJ. And every other sweet candy you like depending on the booth what they offer. But also as a kinda real meal with cheese and ham or other things they offer.

  • @Cranaghas
    @Cranaghas Před měsícem

    Where they push the hot dog into the bread, its more likely adaped from poland. There you get Hot Dogs like that at every corner. And a giant Hot dog is a 1 Meter Bratwurst im Brötchen ^^

  • @flibflob2785
    @flibflob2785 Před měsícem +1

    "It's like a crepe" no, it is a literal crepe. Also that thing that looks like a jar of nutella is actually... a literal jar of nutella. Crepe filled with nutella is the classic here

  • @elikurtz729
    @elikurtz729 Před měsícem

    Hope you had some good food in the meantime :D
    5:50 Crépes can be salty or sweet: so yes Banana/Strawberry & Chocolate/Nutella is an option. But you could also have apple & cinnamon or cinnamon sugar, eggnog or some type of jam. The spicy/salty variants will have cheese, bacon or any kind of topping you might find on a pizza. My personal favourite is plain classic cinnamon sugar.
    6:30 Got to love cork-screw potatoes. They became popular maybe 10-12 years ago when people used simple selfmade gadgets consisting of an electric drill and a radish-cutter/pencil sharpener like thing. They are very popular on any festival so I guess there was a market for more professional machines :P The fun is that you often get just one spiral which can be very loooong, springy and crunchy. They are best with just pepper&salt I think.
    9:30 Love specialty burgers that are inventive and out of the standard. Pulled Pork is really yummy. Combine it with some sauteed vine "Sauerkraut" and a savvy sauce and it is amazing ... and likely very German. My favourite festival food truck has an increadible burger called "Pirate Burger". It is a beef burger with a lot of juicy ingredients and my go to on any festival here ^^
    As speciality burgers go we have one that combines a dry aged beef patty with various vegetables, red onion, bacon, tomato in a Pretzel type bun. They have the yummiest sauce I have ever tasted also made of vine :D This is of course served in a vine restaurant (Bürgerspital) :D

  • @ESCLuciaSlovakia
    @ESCLuciaSlovakia Před měsícem

    6:13 I've had a banana in crepes, not unusual here at all. A hot crepe with Nutella and a few banana slices inside. I'm pretty sure other countries put fruits in/on crepes too, especially strawberries, raspberries, kiwi, currants, blueberries, blackberries and other berries... coated with sugar or with whipped cream and chocolate or cocoa powder... And we also consider this a main dish in Slovakia, not a dessert.

  • @maikgehteuchnichtsan6844
    @maikgehteuchnichtsan6844 Před měsícem

    This is called Shashlik. Originally from the Mediterranean region and then became famous in the Balkans. Many people associate Hungary with it. So no shishkebab

  • @thomasp.5057
    @thomasp.5057 Před měsícem

    Crepes origins from france and are very thin pancaces. You can choose your toppings. Spicy with sausage, ham, or bacon or (most common) sweet with sugar (with or without cinamon), jam, banana or NUTELLA (tadaaaa!), which is a cream of nut and nougat. You amis might choose maple sirup. 😀

  • @StevePerryisthebest
    @StevePerryisthebest Před měsícem

    The crepes can be served savory and sweet - very different toppings possible and very delicious 😋😋😋

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv Před měsícem

    1:25 Raclette is a Swiss speciality. Mountain cheese grilled until it melts.
    3:20 Not a hotdog, but a Bratwurst (grilled sausage) of the brighter variety (the red ones would be pre-smoked).
    3:30 Crêpes are originally from France. Using Nutella as filling is typical for German fairs, but other fillings are also available, often also hearty/salty ones with e.g. cheese.
    6:45 Making potato chips
    8:00 I would not expect a good Schnitzel at such a potato stall at a fair. The potato wedges however look good.
    12:00 Could be either neck of pork or "Fleischkäse" - German meat loaf.
    13:20 It is mostly simply called a Fleischspiess - meat skewer - or sometimes Schaschlik - shashlik.
    14:10 Looks like a Dinnede - the Swabian version of pizza bread (made from bread dough with cheese, onions, bacon, but without tomatoes).

    • @MINOUTFTABOU
      @MINOUTFTABOU Před měsícem

      No . . .Raclette is from france. Fondue is from Switzerland, but *Raclette comes from France*

    • @MichaEl-rh1kv
      @MichaEl-rh1kv Před měsícem

      @@MINOUTFTABOU from the French part of Switzerland, you wanted to say. Originally it was called "raclette du Valais".

    • @MINOUTFTABOU
      @MINOUTFTABOU Před měsícem

      Unfortunately, it originated in Switzerland.🙁🙁
      However, it is well known that Riches Montes tastes better with the dish and the French are also proud to be the founders of Riches Montes.
      This cheese tastes much better than the Swiss raclette cheese.

  • @WooShell
    @WooShell Před měsícem +1

    You really have to make a trip to Germany some day.. see all those things in real life for once. With all your followers, I'm sure you'd find a lot of people willing to show you around in their towns.

  • @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl
    @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl Před měsícem

    S-paetsl ... made my toe nails roll up
    It's written Spätzle but it's pronounced shpae-tslae (the vowels are the same but the second one is significantly shorter).
    Kind Regards from Swabia - home of Spätzle
    P.S.: but you're right, what you saw was a Schnitzel; Spätzle are a kind of Swabian pasta/noodles (Italy is just on the other side of the Alps, some 180 km away).

  • @rainermarx5217
    @rainermarx5217 Před měsícem +2

    7:50 I don't like collecting money and touching food.

  • @nitka711
    @nitka711 Před měsícem

    Crepe with Nutella + Kinderriegel is the best!
    Ryan: you can eate Crepe with anything. Banana + Nutella, Marmalade, Applesauce, cheese + salami…. Whatever

  • @schortii
    @schortii Před měsícem

    Not alone we put everything on display, we often use some special lamps with colors just for the meat.

  • @Dirk-Ulowetz
    @Dirk-Ulowetz Před měsícem

    Crepe. There are spicy ones and sweet ones. And what I can say for sure: a crepe with Nutella and Bananas is absolutely awesome! 🤤

  • @stefankaiser3354
    @stefankaiser3354 Před měsícem +1

    _"German street food is next level"_
    Hm... 🤔
    I don't know man, I always buy Currywurst and occasionally a Döner...
    I'm such a bore! 🤭

  • @CelinMa
    @CelinMa Před měsícem +1

    Ryan DU bist auch ein Schnitzel 😂

  • @dradux2079
    @dradux2079 Před měsícem

    That ja looked like Nutella, because it was Nutella. And yes we put bananas in the crepe, if the customer wants it. Banana & chocolate is a great combo, a bit like a banana split (ice cream), if you know that.
    I at least, could probably live 2 weeks only of bananas and chocolate... and yes my stomach would hurt, but I would be sooooo happy. xD