You Know You’re Dating an American When... | Feli from Germany

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • Take your personal data back with Incogni! Use code FELIG at the link below and get 60% off an annual plan: incogni.com/felig
    👉 What's it REALLY like dating an American man? Ben and I sat down to react to a video about this very topic and share our personal experiences with you!
    Original video "You Know You're Dating a Texan Man When..." ▸ • You Know You're Dating...
    What it's REALLY like dating a German! ▸ • American Boyfriend Rea...
    Dating Beyond Borders Podcast with Feli ▸ • Biggest Culture Shocks...
    or listen on Spotify ▸open.spotify.com/episode/3LxI...
    Our INTERCULTURAL RELATIONSHIP ▸ • Our INTERCULTURAL RELA...
    Answering YOUR Questions About Our Relationship! ▸ • Answering YOUR Questio...
    Get your Bavarian beer mug or Servus t-shirt ▸felifromgermany.com/
    Check out my PODCAST (with Josh)▸ / understandingtrainstation or linktr.ee/Understandingtrains...
    FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook▸ / felifromgermany (Feli from Germany) Support me on Patreon▸ / felifromgermany Instagram▸@felifromgermany▸ / felifromgermany Buy me a coffee▸www.ko-fi.com/felifromgermany
    ▸Mailing address:
    PO Box 19521
    Cincinnati, OH 45219
    USA
    -------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    5:59 Reaction to @DatingBeyondBorders
    28:20 My 2 Cents
    31:45 Spam bots (beware!)
    -------------------------
    ABOUT ME: Hallo, Servus, and welcome to my channel! My name is Felicia (Feli), I'm 29, and I'm a German living in the USA! I was born and raised in Munich, Germany but have been living in Cincinnati, Ohio off and on since 2016. I first came here for an exchange semester during my undergrad at LMU Munich, then I returned for an internship, and then I got my master's degree in Cincinnati. I was lucky enough to win the Green Card lottery and have been a permanent resident since 2019! In my videos, I talk about cultural differences between America and Germany, things I like and dislike about living here, and other topics I come across in my everyday life in the States. Let me know what YOU would like to hear about in the comments below. DANKE :)
    -------------------------
    MY FILMING EQUIPMENT
    Camera: amzn.to/3mSp0Lf*
    MAIN LENS (Sigma 18-35mm F1.8): amzn.to/31IjdgU*
    Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 Lens: amzn.to/2AT9R3J*
    Tripod: amzn.to/2LXpb5t*
    Remote: amzn.to/2oe3Hsd*
    Lighting: amzn.to/3EWV86O*
    Back Light: amzn.to/3gJD8QL
    H1 Zoom Recorder (audio): amzn.to/33gKWDf*
    Lav Microphone: amzn.to/2VobCPP*
    GoPro Vlogging Setup:
    GoPro: amzn.to/2OycAav*
    Case: amzn.to/2IzIzmY*
    Tripod: amzn.to/2os3DoB*
    Microphone: amzn.to/31ZR6Y5*
    Mic Adapter: amzn.to/2AUq1K3*
    Mount: amzn.to/33oDciL*
    *These links are Affiliate links. If you buy the product through that link, I'll receive a small provision while the price for you stays the same! Thanks for your support! :)
    -------------------------
    Music by ARTMAN MUSIC www.artman-music.de/ based on a theme by www.twinmusicom.org/ (CC BY 4.0)

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @FelifromGermany
    @FelifromGermany  Před 3 měsíci +55

    What did you guys think of this video? Was there anything missing? Let us know in the comments below! 😊👇
    ▸Take your personal data back with Incogni! Use code FELIG at the link below and get 60% off an annual plan: incogni.com/felig

    • @chijimmy1
      @chijimmy1 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I enjoyed the video. I like when you two do them together. Like the Aldi and of course the trips to Europe. I'd like to hear about the early days of you two dating. That's probably a little to invasive but I'm curious what things bugged you in the beginning.

    • @jay143.
      @jay143. Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm curious about the difference between cat-calling in Germany vs. United States. Are the cat-calls different in Germany, or do they not exist?

    • @MlleLaura6
      @MlleLaura6 Před 3 měsíci

      Is there a similar website for Germany?

    • @clarencesmith2305
      @clarencesmith2305 Před 3 měsíci

      I thought you two got married last year?

    • @douglasfur3808
      @douglasfur3808 Před 3 měsíci +1

      He's a keeper. I'm impressed by his composure and openness.

  • @kevinlee7263
    @kevinlee7263 Před 3 měsíci +240

    "Sweetie" and "sweetheart" are not condescending in the south, but "bless your heart" definitely can be.

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 Před 3 měsíci +45

      "Bless your heart" isn't condescending, it's downright vicious.

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa Před 3 měsíci +11

      I'm a New Englander, I use sweetie, sweetheart, and love being called "honey" at the Dunkin drive thru

    • @nicholasharvey1232
      @nicholasharvey1232 Před 3 měsíci

      I'm from the South but can speak as bluntly as the Germans. I never say "Bless your heart"... I just say, "You dumbass!"

    • @coldwar45
      @coldwar45 Před 3 měsíci

      Bless your heart is the polite Southern way of calling you a fucking idiot LOL

    • @cj4505
      @cj4505 Před 3 měsíci

      You can insult yankess in the South, and they won't even know it.

  • @ae2yosemitesamvp48
    @ae2yosemitesamvp48 Před 3 měsíci +103

    A 75 year old man, VietNam Veteran, married 50 years, 4 kids, 9 grandchildren living up a West Virginia mountain holler here.
    I too say Yes Mam no matter her age, open doors or let them go first, offer to lift heavy groceries, it’s called manners. My children and grandchildren were taught to be polite to everyone.

    • @mh-jg4tv
      @mh-jg4tv Před 3 měsíci +2

      We are grown up women and absolutely able to open a door!

    • @glennhurley1479
      @glennhurley1479 Před 3 měsíci +19

      @@mh-jg4tv That isn't the point, and if you're grown you know it, Please don't tell me that you are one of those people when someone holds a door for you (regardless of their sex) you don't put your hand on the door like you think they're going to turn it loose and let it close in their face as they walk through it. That's the epitome of rude, even if you'd rather open your own door. It's like someone offering you a glass of cool water, and you take it from them and then throw it in their face. It's a simple courtesy that acknowledges that you exist. F'm People these days!
      I'm in my 70's and showing it, and I from time to time have store clerks offer to take my purchases to my car. I accept graciously even though I could have carried it myself with some difficulty, and thank them for their help. I'm not offended, Hell, I am old and broke my back in a fall last September and grateful for the help even though I wouldn't have asked them for it because I'm pretty independent, too. I could hava carried it, but if you think that's the point then you missed the point entirely. It's as simple as one human helping another - just accept graciously, and thank them. See, no sweat, and your femininity or masculinity or however you see yourself wasn't challenged at all.

    • @garymatthews1280
      @garymatthews1280 Před 3 měsíci +6

      I’m 15 years younger but with grandparents and parents from Martinsburg, I was taught the same manners.🎉

    • @rickieoakes5267
      @rickieoakes5267 Před 3 měsíci +7

      It's not the point that you can or can't open your own door, it's considered poor manners if a man doesn't hold the door for you. Maybe you are just inconsiderate of their feelings.

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@mh-jg4tv By the same vein, I'm a grown man and am able to sort out my own feelings - don't ask me how I'm doing!
      Do you see how that's not how it's meant? It's not meant to be derogatory. It's just being respectful. If you feel that it IS derogatory, either the guy you're with is an exception or (more likely) you're just looking for something to complain about

  • @robertspitz9832
    @robertspitz9832 Před 3 měsíci +121

    I'm 70 yrs old, grew up in NY, and these points are basic manners that we were taught.

    • @painthorse1628
      @painthorse1628 Před 3 měsíci +9

      That is right good manners were not isolated to one state😢

    • @kiowastew
      @kiowastew Před 3 měsíci +12

      As how it should be. However, I've made more than a few northern non-texans uncomfortable simply by being polite with the yes ma'am/sir, no ma'am/sir, and holding doors open. I lived for a time up in Iowa and Wisconsin. I've had several women become upset with me and pointedly ask me to stop calling them ma'am because it makes them feel old. What passes for a standard after-thought way of treating people decently here in Texas is uncommon elsewhere in my experiences. Even people from Dallas get upset with politeness and don't always practice it. In Texas, many people refer to anything from Dallas and above as 'northern'. I feel like America as a whole used to be more friendly and polite, but the culture has gotten out of practice with it except in the South as a general way of doing things.

    • @jasonknight5863
      @jasonknight5863 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Well good to hear at least one New Yorker has good manners in how they treat people. Because every New Yorker I have met has always been extremely rude expect one of them. His wife also a New Yorker is again like every other New Yorker I’ve met super rude.
      Same with New Jersey natives.

    • @kiowastew
      @kiowastew Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@jasonknight5863 I visited upstate NY and Cooperstown for the 2014 MLB HOF induction and the amount of foul mouth bitching I heard in Jersey and NY accents was jarring as someone being from down South. Definite culture shock.

    • @octaviusmorlock
      @octaviusmorlock Před 3 měsíci +4

      It is worth noting that there are basically two New Yorks. (Upstate and Downstate).
      Results will vary.

  • @Jessica_P_Fields
    @Jessica_P_Fields Před 3 měsíci +100

    In the South (including Texas), BBQ is ALWAYS cooked over smoke low and slow. Cooking food on a grill is called 'grilling" or "grilled". Many people do actual BBQ (low and slow) in their backyard, so when they invite you to a BBQ they are still talking about this instead of grilling. But they may say "we're cooking out" or "we're grilling" if they mean putting food on a grill like hamburgers or hot dogs.

    • @texburleson
      @texburleson Před 3 měsíci +4

      There’s smoking meat and grilling meat 👍

    • @conlon4332
      @conlon4332 Před 3 měsíci

      To me barbecue means over a fire.

    • @chefnick5231
      @chefnick5231 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Barbecue is always cooked in a Barbeque you don't need smoke for BBQ, or else you would call bacon BBQ. most Americans just don't know cooking techniques and what makes it most confusing is Americans call a "grill" with the pull-up lid a BBQ when a BBQ is not a grill.

    • @lrajic8281
      @lrajic8281 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Some people who know what they are doing: they have a smoker! That’s a n oven with hickory or mesquite wood is also added, has a hood, takes a long time! And drink beer! Or cocktails ! 😊

    • @dux_bellorum
      @dux_bellorum Před 3 měsíci +3

      This is the best way to describe BBQ vs grilling! 🤌🏾

  • @Aeyrie1
    @Aeyrie1 Před 3 měsíci +44

    I'd like to add a sixth season for some areas of the US: Hunting Season. I've lived in areas that closed school for a couple days when deer hunting season began.

    • @charlesmaurer6214
      @charlesmaurer6214 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Good call, remember going to school on the bus on the first day of hunting season and 2/3rds the guys got off the bus after seeing a couple bucks. From WV nextdoor to both their states.

    • @JR-tr1df
      @JR-tr1df Před 2 měsíci

      I'm... o.o not young 😋 we had ehhh guess was 6th grade firearm safety & hunting license classes 😁 at school. In the field

  • @jernidis3316
    @jernidis3316 Před 3 měsíci +55

    Ben is the cutest sweetheart. The way😢 he looks at Feli, you can tell he admires and loves her so much 💗 so happy for you both. You make a great match❤

  • @The_Dudester
    @The_Dudester Před 3 měsíci +37

    16:09 Grew up in New Mexico, but went to college in Texas. Returned to NM for 18 months where I worked as a cop,
    Anyway,
    I had gathered seven subpoenas for a big case I was working on. I was about to walk out the door to serve them when a shift supervisor asked if I was going to serve the Subpoenas.
    "I'm fixin to" I replied
    The entire PD came to a stop and everyone stared at me as if I had just outed myself as a Martian spy.
    "Fixin to?" the supervisor asked.
    "Bye" I said as I headed out. I could hear everyone laughing.

    • @kimberlywilson7929
      @kimberlywilson7929 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I grew up with that too in VA. But it's "fittin' to" 😂😂😂

    • @andreperrault5393
      @andreperrault5393 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Or, in New Jersey, greeting a group of high schoolers with: “Hey, how y’all doin’?” Got a laugh every time.

  • @tomhalla426
    @tomhalla426 Před 3 měsíci +86

    As a California transplant, Texas purists call very slow cooked offset smoke cooked brisket or ribs “barbecue”. Direct cooking over a grill is grilling.

    • @hctim96
      @hctim96 Před 3 měsíci +4

      That's how I read it. Love Texas BBQ and NC coastal BBQ
      Pig or cow, I want it now!!

    • @conlon4332
      @conlon4332 Před 3 měsíci +1

      To me barbecue means over a fire.

    • @chefnick5231
      @chefnick5231 Před 3 měsíci +2

      you barbecue in a barbecue you grill on a grill

    • @zaram131
      @zaram131 Před 3 měsíci

      Texas barbecue is the only real deal.

    • @glennhurley1479
      @glennhurley1479 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@conlon4332 who wrote "To me barbecue means over a fire". You are right when the Spaniards landed in Florida they found the natives building racks of wood high over a small smokey fire and they called that meat, fish, anything easily spoilable "barbacoa". The Spanish, just like the other "new permanent visitors" didn't make much of an effort to get the name right. I've seen the drawings they made, and from the the height from the fire and the constant addition of greenery to make the fire smoked, I'd call what they made either "smoke-cured" or "jerky".

  • @user-mq5wl7jn6i
    @user-mq5wl7jn6i Před 3 měsíci +26

    I’ve been married to the same Lady for 49 years and she does our books so she picks up the checks in restaurants. I still open her door and pull out her chair if she gives me time. I’ll help her with her coat and all that kind of stuff but we are both Texans

  • @TroyBrinson
    @TroyBrinson Před 3 měsíci +34

    Not just a southern thing. Most in the Midwest and former military say sir and ma’am

    • @scottbaron121
      @scottbaron121 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I really think it's more of a "generational" thing. Us oldies were just raised like that. It matriculates down through the ages but it's becoming more rare as time passes, I suppose.

  • @user-gk9lg5sp4y
    @user-gk9lg5sp4y Před 3 měsíci +17

    I dated a German woman for a couple of years when I lived outside of Stuttgart in the 1980s. I was in my early 20s at the time. I have to say that German culture and attitudes were different than I was used to, but in good way. I loved her and her family. We kept in touch for many years afterwards. I'm so thankful for that experience.

  • @brentbrod6974
    @brentbrod6974 Před 3 měsíci +65

    "Fixing" is essentially "preparing". Fixing dinner - preparing dinner. Fixing to go shopping - preparing to go shopping.

    • @lesliesheppard6112
      @lesliesheppard6112 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Fixing or fixinta lol

    • @user-gk9lg5sp4y
      @user-gk9lg5sp4y Před 3 měsíci +2

      'Fittin' to also works 😁

    • @effulgENTPossibilities
      @effulgENTPossibilities Před 3 měsíci +4

      I'm used to fixin, not fixing. You don't pronounce the g.

    • @Neoyorchese
      @Neoyorchese Před 3 měsíci +4

      Finna

    • @TravisAviation
      @TravisAviation Před 3 měsíci

      Fixing is also preparing... Preparing to "fix" something that is going to take 3 times longer than initially expected. In a sentence: "I am fixing the car."

  • @Irishfan
    @Irishfan Před 3 měsíci +10

    Ma'am and Sir are the polite way to address someone you don't personally know, a stranger. We are taught to do this starting at a young age. You will hear people use Ma'am and Sir everywhere in the US. I am from Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan. And I have traveled throughout the country and I can tell you it is common. What will be surprising is the first time after you reach adulthood, because children may get addressed as young man or young lady.

  • @marklaurenzi1609
    @marklaurenzi1609 Před 3 měsíci +41

    I do the chivalry thing and I'm from NE Ohio. My brother-in-law in Germany makes fun of me for opening doors for my German wife, yet I suspect his wife wishes he would.

  • @davidbraun6209
    @davidbraun6209 Před 3 měsíci +15

    By the way, in African American Vernacular English, the expression "fi'nta" means "fixing to" (as in "to be about to").

    • @salzlakritz818
      @salzlakritz818 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Thank you for explaining. I wondered what 'finna' ment and where it came from.
      Greetings from Germany. 🙋🏼‍♀️

  • @paulmaseman2171
    @paulmaseman2171 Před 3 měsíci +6

    The mustard in South Carolina sauces originates from German immigrants. In North Carolina, livermush is a typical barbecue-related food that also originates from German immigrants. (In other regions, such as Ohio and Pennsylvania, that same dish is called scrapple.) North Carolina and South Carolina barbecue are largely pulled pork. The oldest barbecue traditions in the United States are from eastern North Carolina, where pulled pork is whole hog over Hickory wood open pits. In the central part of North Carolina around Lexington and Charlotte, it is mainly pork shoulder and the sauce has some tomato product in it, whereas in eastern North Carolina it is entirely vinegar based with no tomato product. This tradition near Lexington and Charlotte is called "western style" unlike the geographical western region of North Carolina, where there is no indigenous barbecue tradition. In some parts of Kentucky, mutton is slow roasted with a mustard sauce, particularly in the region around Owensboro. Texas barbecue tradition is largely brisket, brought to the state in the mid 1800s by German immigrants to the central Hill country. These are the German immigrants who settled around Austin and Fredericksburg. Regardless of the region in the United States, any place that professes to be interested in barbecue always defines it as low and slow. Brisket or pulled pork can take 12 hours or more to cook, not including several hours of rest time. High heat and quick cooking is always "grilled", and barbecue never refers to the equipment with which you cook the food, which is always referred to as a "grill" or a "smoker".
    Obwohl ich ein großes Interesse für Kochkünste habe, besonders für Barbecue, bin ich auch Deutschlehrer in Nord Carolina und folge oftmals diesen Videos. Die sind absolut großartig und nützlich in meinem Klassenzimmer, meine Schüler beizubringen. Ich habe oft Rinderbrust und Schweineschulter für zwölf oder mehr Stunden langsam gekocht, und habe vorgehabt, ein CZcams Video darüber hochzuladen. Viel Glück und viel Erfolg wünsche ich euch!

  • @deanmarcone5171
    @deanmarcone5171 Před 3 měsíci +11

    Mustard based barbecue is SC style. NC has vinegar or tomato based depending on which part of the state you're in.

  • @douglasfur3808
    @douglasfur3808 Před 3 měsíci +11

    A former member of my church, who had come to the US for her graduate degree, went back to Germany. She had found US dating too foreign to her. Her take was that Germans made friends first, than romance came later, that one could have a friendship with the opposite gender without romance being the ultimate goal.

  • @cubanmop
    @cubanmop Před 3 měsíci +25

    1. Ben, your country music taste is spot on.
    2. In the South, barbecue is a noun referring to meat cooked low and slow. I grew up in the South, and when I hear that work I expect to eat pulled pork, ribs, brisket, etc. In the north, barbecue is a verb. When northerners hear that word, they expect to grill meat on a charcoal or gas grill. They will expect to eat hamburgers and hotdogs and the like.

    • @rickieoakes5267
      @rickieoakes5267 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Maybe that's why the company calls it a BBQ grill 😮 when they advertise one!

    • @johns1039
      @johns1039 Před 3 měsíci

      I grew up in the Northeast, and "barbecue" absolutely has both meanings and is used both ways where I am from.

    • @glennhurley1479
      @glennhurley1479 Před 3 měsíci

      @@johns1039Shame on you!

    • @jennaflint977
      @jennaflint977 Před 3 měsíci

      We donuse both though.. because we have fast food places up here that serve actual BBQ meats/ meals so most of us know what we all mean if it is used as a noun or a verb… a lot of people up here actually do smoke there own meats (mostly rural areas) but that is entirely different than BBQ meats..

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee8831 Před 3 měsíci +13

    Hello Feli and Ben. Patrick Stewart called my county of Yorkshire the Texas of UK, proud of the similarities with his home county. A friend's parents here started teaching line dancing and a relative used to import US cars, back about the time Dukes of Hazard was on TV. I always wondered how many would have swapped having Robin Hood as our local hero for Daisy Duke?
    I stayed a month in Texas, but the family had ancestors there before the English speakers. The dad was embarrassed that from songs and learning French that I understood more Spanish than his kids. Other than that he was all Texan, which is why my friend's sister from Yorkshire married him.
    Come on Ben! Take the poor lass dancing and to the Kentucky Derby to show her off in style.

  • @JWCorne67
    @JWCorne67 Před 3 měsíci +15

    BBQ is slow and low. It is on charcoal or wood fire, and it takes a while. Grilling is hot and fast. Grilling is typically done with gas, and the flame sears the meat.

  • @danabondy2812
    @danabondy2812 Před 3 měsíci +65

    No matter where, men SHOULD NOT wear a hat at the table.

    • @oldtop4682
      @oldtop4682 Před 3 měsíci +9

      Most cowboys will remove the hat and set it on its crown close at hand.
      Edit: Except at a honky-tonk/bar. Any place that serves food, or if you go into a house, that hat should come off.

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 Před 3 měsíci +1

      What's the thought process behind that one? I feel lie a lot of "old fashioned" manners still make some sense and even if they don't I can see where they're coming from and I generally do follow these but I've never even heard that one
      Is it just your personal opinion or a culteral thing?

    • @oldtop4682
      @oldtop4682 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@samstromberg5593 I was raised in the West - this was what was taught to us from a young age. The idea is to keep the brim from flattening out - though the evidence for that happening with a well constructed hat is kind of minimal. A decent hat will cost you upwards of $400 and they go much higher.

    • @ol.grumpy.bastard
      @ol.grumpy.bastard Před 3 měsíci +2

      When I walk into a house, restaurant, office, church, or small shop, the hat comes off as soon as I'm through the door; however, it stays on when I go to places like the supermarket, a big box store, or a store in a mall.

    • @oldtop4682
      @oldtop4682 Před 3 měsíci

      @@ol.grumpy.bastard Egg-zack-lee!

  • @timprussell
    @timprussell Před 2 měsíci +2

    Canadian here, we will hold the door for the next person regardless of gender. It's automatic you go through a door and check to see if someone close to the door that they will be there in 2-3 seconds. The challenge is the zone of politeness, holding the door for a stranger that is outside the zone then puts pressure on them to maybe speed their pace so then your polite gesture in a way becomes rude. Now if say an elderly person is approaching a door and no one else is close you may wait the few seconds outside the door and open it for them. If its raining we might step inside and then when the person is at the door open it for them.

  • @tormentorox1
    @tormentorox1 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I’m from Massachusetts and “barbecue” can be interchanged with “cookout” as a verb up here but only if there’s charcoal or wood smoke being used otherwise it’s just a cookout.
    As a New Englander we also have a very specific type of cookout called a “clam bake” or “Boil”. Clam bakes are all seafood and usually include lobster, crab, clams, and corn. We cook the food in a hole in the ground on a beach with a layer of charcoal as the base, then a layer of stones, and finally wet seaweed. The seaweed acts as a bed for the food and helps with the steaming. We also add lemons with the lobster. Finally we cover it with more seaweed and let it go low and slow for hours.

  • @250Rem
    @250Rem Před 3 měsíci +21

    Ben, Carolina barbecue is actually vinegar and tomato base in North Carolina. What you’re thinking is South Carolina barbecue with base even though you’re from Kentucky be careful they got about you but it may come back to get you.😊

    • @ericweeks8386
      @ericweeks8386 Před 3 měsíci +4

      And as a KC BBQ purist, none of those things are real BBQ ;)

    • @chefnick5231
      @chefnick5231 Před 3 měsíci

      rem, that bbq sauce! barbecue sauce isn't barbecue it's a cooking technique, in how you cook something not what you cook .

    • @scottbaron121
      @scottbaron121 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah...the SC sauce is vinegar based. Let's just say it's an "acquired taste". Especially if you're used to tomato-based sauces. Lived most of my life in Georgia. Never quite got the taste for the SC sauce...but those folks are rabid about it. Whatever. It's SC. They suck anyway. LMAO!

    • @johnthomas2485
      @johnthomas2485 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@ericweeks8386Gates or Bryants?

    • @andrewcherry5696
      @andrewcherry5696 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@scottbaron121 oh dear, no. Mustard is SC’s differentiator. Up here north of the border, it’s vinegar out east, and tomato in the west.

  • @usaverageguy
    @usaverageguy Před 3 měsíci +19

    I am from an older generation. And so, I hold a door for anyone behind me (male or female). A few women get indignant when I do this. I explain to them, "My mother would beat me to death if I did not hold the door for you" That always gets a laugh. And ends the hostility.

  • @AwesomeRando
    @AwesomeRando Před 3 měsíci +13

    I never thought Feli would get sponsored by Incogni. But it’s nice that she is more conscious about her personal information. I think everyone should be.

    • @glennhurley1479
      @glennhurley1479 Před 3 měsíci

      I've always solved my own identity theft problems, but it's a long drawn-out battle and takes a huge amount of time, memory and effort. I'm going to check out Incogni, I'm really tired of having to do all that by myself and constantly monitoring my credit score to spot every little blip.

  • @mikemoholland8675
    @mikemoholland8675 Před 3 měsíci +16

    Oklahoma is also fixed on high school football. In 1983 when the US invaded Granada, news of th3 invasion was buried inside. The previous evenings high school football game was front page.

    • @patbens9501
      @patbens9501 Před dnem

      Jay Leno loved OK students to participate in his Jay-walking.

  • @clarky417
    @clarky417 Před 3 měsíci +18

    the women here in the ozarks are real and down to earth. my late wife was an amazing woman.

    • @jayclarke6671
      @jayclarke6671 Před 3 měsíci

      Yea good point. American women are mostly good digging trash nowadays 🤷

    • @kimberlywilson7929
      @kimberlywilson7929 Před 3 měsíci

      Sorry for your loss.

  • @George-ux6zz
    @George-ux6zz Před 3 měsíci +14

    I lived in Tampa Florida for 34 years. High-school football actually has their own TV channels. The news even fly by helicopter to cover High-school football. Also, college football and sports in general are huge. That's something that many Europeans wish they had college sports in their countries.

    • @allisonhamilton1245
      @allisonhamilton1245 Před 3 měsíci +1

      And we still do!! 😅😅

    • @dux_bellorum
      @dux_bellorum Před 3 měsíci +3

      As a fellow Tampa kid, I remember that if you didn't at least try out for the football team, life was going to be rough, and you better be good at baseball or soccer... maybe that was just my school, though, but yea, FL, TX, and maybe Cali are huge on football, at least when I was in high school.

    • @aquilapetram
      @aquilapetram Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@dux_bellorum Southern California is a big high school football area;; the Los Angeles basin is a prime recruiting area for the collegiate football factories of the southeast and the midwest. Northern California isn't nearly as football-intensive, but we do get high school football games on Friday nights on some of the smaller TV channels in the Bay Area.

    • @dux_bellorum
      @dux_bellorum Před 3 měsíci

      @aquilapetram that's what my understanding was, southern Cali was super big on it.

    • @kenkur27
      @kenkur27 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I get the impression that in Europe, competitive sports for young people are based in sport clubs rather than educational institutions. University sports there tend to be more recreational, not the source of future pros or Olympians. Here in Canada it's kind of like that too although many of our top young sports people go to U.S. colleges on athletic scholarships.

  • @Casprizzle
    @Casprizzle Před 3 měsíci +4

    Fixing to = Going to
    Fix us some food = prepare us some food
    Also, in more urban areas you might hear "finna" which is to "fixing to" as "gonna" is to "going to"

  • @bradwatson7324
    @bradwatson7324 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I‘m from Texas and one really doesn’t see cowboy boots or cowboy hats unless you go to a rural area, or unless you’re going to a country-themed bar.

    • @car2nerr
      @car2nerr Před 2 měsíci

      yup. I see more ballcaps and sneakers in everyday life.

  • @roberthohlt469
    @roberthohlt469 Před 3 měsíci +16

    Hallo Yall, I am Texan since birth. I have guns and a pickup truck. Have never line danced. Ben right about Americas Team, no championships since 1995. By the way a great Dallas Cowboy quarterback Roger Staubach is originally from Cincinnati if I recall correctly. Even as a Texan I give thanks for Kentucky the "Bourbon capital" of the planet.
    Alaska can hold at least 2 Texas's, It's really big. Deana and Phil (another German/American) couple in Germany called Bavaria the "Texas of Germany". Quite the compliment in my opinion.

  • @johnvickers5424
    @johnvickers5424 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Highschool football is big in a lot of small towns in Texas because there is nothing else to do there. On friday night the whole town shuts down to go to the game.

  • @tomhalla426
    @tomhalla426 Před 3 měsíci +18

    Texas is big enough that Houston is rather different from Dallas/Ft Worth, both of which are different from Austin, which is different from it’s suburbs.

    • @coldwar45
      @coldwar45 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Which is totally different than Lubbock which is totally different than El Paso etc etc

    • @nicholasharvey1232
      @nicholasharvey1232 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Which is different from Beaumont which is different from Lufkin etc.

    • @John-ct9zs
      @John-ct9zs Před 3 měsíci +4

      Houston and Dallas are more alike than either of them want to admit. Now Austin, Lubbock and El Paso are absolutely different.

    • @nicholasharvey1232
      @nicholasharvey1232 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@John-ct9zs What about Beaumont which practically thinks it's in Louisiana. Swamps, alligators, and Cajun people. And east-central Texas (Lufkin and environs) is about the most densely forested area I've been to, and known for its timber industry-- very Southeastern in character (It can be a bit hilly in places!). The panhandle, though I've never been there, is very Midwestern in character, lots of grain silos and grain elevators (not to mention a more Midwest-like climate)... basically a southern extension of Kansas. El Paso, Laredo, and Brownsville can nearly be described as Mexican cities on the wrong side of the Rio Grande. And when I was in the middle of Dallas it felt like I could have just as well have been in Boston.

    • @eduardocruz4341
      @eduardocruz4341 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@nicholasharvey1232 You are correct😅😅😅😅

  • @oldtop4682
    @oldtop4682 Před 3 měsíci +6

    I was taught these same manners and "Chivalry" from my folks. Not so much the Ma'am and Sir for my parents, but definitely opening the doors etc. Folks dressed as cowboys (yes I have boots an a couple hats lol) is common in all western states, but Texas is a whole other ball game!
    Totally agree on poppy country! I can't stand the stuff! I have a band for you - try Midland. Matter of fact, start poking around the music scene in Texas in general - all genres.
    For Feli - country music was fairly well known in Germany for many years - including Waylon Jennings. This probably had more to do with the number of US military there and particularly AFN playing country shows and covering a larger area of the country then. Some country singers did tours through Germany, but they weren't as big, nor promoted as rock bands. Saw Charlie Daniels the first time there in 1980. There were even German country dance clubs in some places (Nurnberg had one called The Nashville for instance - big club too). Times change, music changes.

  • @almarollins3642
    @almarollins3642 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I live in TN. Once at a restaurant in Louisville KY with some design students from around the world, I tried to get our waiter's attention. I didn't know his name so I said "Excuse me, hun." One of the ladies in our group was shocked. She was from Quebec, an area that has a strong French influence. She said that it sounded very forward, like I would hand over my hotel key. The young waiter was about my son's age and I would have called my son "hun". Besides it sounded better than just saying "hey, you"

  • @thatguy8869
    @thatguy8869 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Long time ago I lived in the Pacific NW. As kids, we almost didn't know the meaning of "ma'am" or "sir". Then a few years later, we were in the deep south. When I said "yeah" to a teacher, her head nearly exploded.

    • @teriannebeauchamp254
      @teriannebeauchamp254 Před 3 měsíci

      I was born in raised in the Pacific Northwest. I beg to differ. We were taught to address our elders as Sir or Ma'am. My teachers were referred to a Miss, Mrs. Or Mister and we always said yes sir or yes, ma'am .

    • @thatguy8869
      @thatguy8869 Před 3 měsíci

      @teriannebeauchamp254 Well, we have different memories of the PNW. My memories were from many years ago, so there's that. Also, like other regions, the PNW is not monolithic. We did address teachers as Miss, Mrs., or Mr.; and it was "uncle Bob, uncle Carl, aunt Jean". Not Bob, Carl, or Jean.

  • @MrMacLover10
    @MrMacLover10 Před 3 měsíci +4

    “Super size me” was a documentary on the “super size” meals from McDonald’s in the ‘90s, and he’s absolutely right: essentially it’s the idea of “if we can make it bigger, why not?”

  • @christopherkagy5319
    @christopherkagy5319 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I'm from Columbus, and Cinci is definitely much more southern in culture than any of the other metro areas.

  • @adamrspears1981
    @adamrspears1981 Před 3 měsíci +12

    Servus von Corpus Christi, Texas!
    You guys should visit The River Walk & The Alamo in San Antonio.
    So when are y'all fixin to come visit?🤠

  • @dmbfan19711
    @dmbfan19711 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Hi Feli and Ben! I live in Texas just north of Houston. I am a proud 1st generation American. My lineage is all German. I really enjoy your videos. I haven't been to Germany since I was 8, I'm 52. I have wonderful memories of visiting for the summer several times. I have family in Munchen, Hamburg, Duesseldorf and other places. Your videos are great, thank you! In TX, when you say barbecue, it can mean many different things. Everything you and Ben said is accurate. BBQ is bigger than football! I could be going to a barbecue at my friends house and it could be anything cooked outside except seafood. That's called a boil. Crawfish season is coming soon. The Houston Rodeo is starting soon , but first, there will be the cook-off...basically a giant barbecue competition for several days that is taken verrrry seriously. There are BBQ restaurants everywhere down here. The typical menus are smoked or grilled meats served in various ways. Brisket chopped or sliced, chicken, sausage links, ribs. There are many different kinds of restaurants here including German. A quick question I haven't seen you mention... in Germany, do people still use the big goose feather beds? My sister and I both still use them. Thanks!

    • @30Mauser
      @30Mauser Před 3 měsíci +2

      As an American expat who has lived (mid-1990’s) in Germany and who is currently living in Austria, I have indeed slept on goose feather beds, but it has been many years since I’ve seen one. Always loved my visits to Texas!!

  • @revgurley
    @revgurley Před 3 měsíci +1

    I'm a wedding minister, and I always warn my autumn couples because they're getting married during football season. That means every anniversary will be spent watching football. I married a basketball-loved college man in March. During March Madness (the one-and-done big finale to college basketball). I spent my 10th anniversary at a Final Four game. Know what you're getting into! 😅

  • @greengummibear
    @greengummibear Před 3 měsíci +3

    Texan here - Those caricatures are more so the more rural you go, so say San Antonio, maybe, Ft. Worth, likely, Lubbock, etc., sure. But Dallas, Austin, not so much - more urban and transplants. So most of us don't wear the hats (though often we knew someone with one); things are more diluted these days than the video.
    The BBQ question - yes, we can sometimes conflate the two, though often we will say grilling rather than BBQ. Steak, hamburgers, etc. are grilled over a fire. When you talk Texas BBQ, especially that we love our BBQ, that passion is for smoke, basically indirect cooking. Let's put it this way, if you were to say we're going to go out for BBQ, you're expecting a smoke house that puts brisket, sausage, maybe ribs and turkey, on butcher paper and charge by the pound. NOT steak. That's a steakhouse.
    And while steak is an important and major food group, not having a bit on Tex-Mex…well, that ain't right. While there's a good chance they went to a Mexican place on the Riverwalk, they still should have had a scene where he orders a bowl of queso then asks her if she wants one too (we can eat a whole bowl as a meal). And tacos…let's not even go there. I literally had a breakfast taco for lunch a little while ago
    I would say one of the bigger things it missed was trucks. EVERYONE drives one. And that might be an over all US thing, though I think US is more SUV, Texans have trucks. Now the…newer…Texans will often have a big, clean truck that they can't park at HEB, so it's annoying, but either way it's a status symbol for all, natives or transplants.
    And yes, football is life down here, high school is nothing but football, stadiums that rival pro teams (i.e. Allen, Prosper). That's your Friday night, which again more so the more rural you go, but the big cities and suburban high schools are also big players (just means the afterparty could be in a field when more rural). Then Saturday is all about college. Throw a rock and you'll hit a ut "fan", Costco is full of nothing but ut and a&m branded shirts, mugs, tents, etc. College stadiums BIGGER than pro. Then Sunday, that's pro football, usually Cowboys, but not only with all the transplants you have fans of Eagles, New York, etc., but as previously noted how important college ball is, you'll have Kansas City fans because Mahomes went to Tech (the most NFL players come from Texas colleges). Biggest radio station? The Ticket in Dallas. Yes, it's more than a sports station, but year round you will have at least one segment about the Cowboys, and during football season…nothing but. Since this seemed to be in San Antonio, I get why they wouldn’t have it, but if it was in Dallas there would for sure be a scene where he gets in his truck and it's already set to the Musers in the morning.
    Maybe they should have had a bit where they stopped to get gas, he gets out of the truck, then opens her door, expecting she would want to go in as well. "Why did you think I'd want to go into the gas station?" "Because it's Buc-ee's". Not exactly romantic, but you can spend hours in one, eat, have desert, find an outfit…I almost always stop at the one outside of New Braunfels on my way back from San Antonio.

  • @josealfonsosilvalatorre1826
    @josealfonsosilvalatorre1826 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Amazing video 😊

  • @mattm.2591
    @mattm.2591 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I just want to say that I thoroughly enjoyed that video, including seeing you two interact with each other.

  • @tabush142
    @tabush142 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Always great to have Ben on the channel! He provides great commentary that compliments your own well 😊

  • @texburleson
    @texburleson Před 3 měsíci +4

    Y’all check out the band, Texas Tornadoes. They are the definition of original Texas music back when the Mexicans and Germans got together and jammed out.

  • @emilybrookharrison7562
    @emilybrookharrison7562 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you the scan information OMG that is so helpful!

  • @McCumberIndustries
    @McCumberIndustries Před 3 měsíci +2

    "Fixin" is one of those phrases that depends on how it's used and the context of the statement that dictates it's meaning.
    "Fixin" by itself can mean making something like dinner or fixing something that is broke.
    "Fixin to" means that you are/were about to do something.

  • @johnlabus7359
    @johnlabus7359 Před 3 měsíci +3

    North Carolina barbeque is NOT mustard based. That's South Carolina. In NC there are two styles: Eastern is vinegar based, and Lexington (Western) is tomato based.

    • @ysbel
      @ysbel Před 3 měsíci +2

      South Carolina has the same distinction. Near the coast, the barbecue is vinegar based but to the west starting at Sumter-Columbia, it’s mustard based. The famous barbecue chef from Hemingway, my mom’s hometown, cooks vinegar based barbecue.

  • @kilsestoffel3690
    @kilsestoffel3690 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I've done line dancing here in Germany, we had lots of fun.
    I would love to hear ben' s country music playlist.

  • @30Mauser
    @30Mauser Před 3 měsíci

    Excellent video again, and great taste in country music!!

  • @12hairyjohn
    @12hairyjohn Před 3 měsíci +3

    Football on Thursday, Sunday, and Monday only applies to the NFL. Some weeks during football season, games are broadcast every day.

  • @tbergstrom4599
    @tbergstrom4599 Před 3 měsíci

    Feli .... your English is really amazing, especially how expressive and instantaneous your expressiveness is.

  • @robertdtimmerman
    @robertdtimmerman Před 3 měsíci +6

    Kentucky has one of the biggest high school football rivalries in the nation. The Trinity Shamrocks x St. Xavier Tigers football game can draw upwards of 40,000 fans to the game.

    • @orangeguy3314
      @orangeguy3314 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Ohio st games can draw up or close hundred thousand fans at a game. Most college games I been have around 60 to 80 thousands fans to game.

    • @quarrydesigns
      @quarrydesigns Před 3 měsíci +2

      Kentucky also has 3 of the top 5 winningest high school football programs in the country, Louisville Male, Mayfield and Ft Thomas Highlands.

    • @robertdtimmerman
      @robertdtimmerman Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@quarrydesigns….Don’t forget the Trinity Shamrocks. 28 state championships in football.

  • @MickeyGSinger
    @MickeyGSinger Před 3 měsíci +7

    Good info about barbecue. Didn’t know. It’s like barbacoa in Mexico, sometimes translated as barbecue, and it’s the meat dish itself, in slow cooked pit.

    • @mikedechant1
      @mikedechant1 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm from Texas and eat both barbecue and barbacoa. Very similar and probably a bit of cross over influence there

    • @McCumberIndustries
      @McCumberIndustries Před 3 měsíci +2

      Barbacoa is usually braised, not barbecued. However, with that being said, it's not too different but the flavor is obviously very different

    • @mikedechant1
      @mikedechant1 Před 3 měsíci

      @@McCumberIndustries czcams.com/video/U5cM_VU2iDw/video.html

    • @lastfm4477
      @lastfm4477 Před 3 měsíci +1

      barbacoa is no where *near as good* as Texas BBQ brisket and ribs. No where near.

  • @the_bourbon_mill
    @the_bourbon_mill Před 3 měsíci +3

    Feli! No filter!!! Kudos. She's a keeper, Ben... KEEP HER...

  • @NIcu3734
    @NIcu3734 Před 2 měsíci

    Greetings from Cincinnati! love the videos!

  • @Alexandra11090
    @Alexandra11090 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video! I love seeing your videos evolve over time. I also like seeing how different things are over the country. As a NYr, it is very different in the South than in the North. Not good or bad, just different. It’s interesting to see.

  • @marksevigny1148
    @marksevigny1148 Před 3 měsíci

    You and ben are awesome keep up the great videos

  • @meg8294
    @meg8294 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I live 20 miles outside Cincinnati. I definitely say things like “I’m gonna fix me a sandwich” or “I’m fixin to go to the store” 😂

  • @murob2347
    @murob2347 Před 3 měsíci +4

    You two are so perfect together!

  • @foxdogjake
    @foxdogjake Před 3 měsíci +4

    I am from and live in Cincinnati! This is a great video and I love your other videos. Ben, I am curious as to just how far south in Kentucky you are from. You sound just like my friends from Cincinnati. Also, Who Dey!

  • @CriticalPoliteness
    @CriticalPoliteness Před 3 měsíci +3

    @Texan politeness: Coming from Germany, I once made an internship in Houston, Texas. One day my car broke down in the MIDDLE lane of the biggest highway during the RUSH HOUR. I blocked a whole lane and later on somehow managed to go on but only with the speed of an elderly lady with rollator. Being used to the Autobahn I completely freaked out. But you know what? Nobody - not one single driver honked the horn!!! "Drive friendly - drive the Texan way!" was not only a saying.❤

    • @uliwehner
      @uliwehner Před 3 měsíci

      come to atlanta. you won't survive that same scenario!

  • @alanzimmerman1674
    @alanzimmerman1674 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Bluegrass music is awesome! Glad you're a fan!

  • @pqrstsma2011
    @pqrstsma2011 Před 3 měsíci

    wow Feli, smooth segue into the ad!!!

  • @jackhogston6119
    @jackhogston6119 Před 3 měsíci +2

    "Barbecue' used to be used synonymously with 'grilling' or 'cookout' in the northern states and probably still is used that way in many places. In southern states it refers to cooking and smoking meats 'low and slow,' ie. on low heat for a long period of time. I think this latter definition has gradually been creeping north over the years.

  • @kevingaukel4950
    @kevingaukel4950 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Water Tower is a Country thing - very common in Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, etc. Very much.

    • @michael-1680
      @michael-1680 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Specifically, it's peculiar to flat areas of the country, where it's used to provide water pressure to the surrounding area. In mountainous regions, you don't see them, because they're not necessary..

  • @turbochargedsports6327
    @turbochargedsports6327 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Feli & Ben: y'all are just SOOO cute together. ❤️ Gotta say I'm looking forward to the day wedding bells ring for the two of you. I smile every time the two of you make a video together. 🥰

  • @robbicu
    @robbicu Před 3 měsíci

    Nice to see Ben again.

  • @jaytoser5212
    @jaytoser5212 Před 3 měsíci +2

    One conversation I overheard on an airplane, one fellow was talking about how grand Texas was [I completely agree]. He was interrupted by another from Alaska. He said "Pardon me, but if someone cut Alaska in half, Texas would be the third largest state in the Union". I had to check the Wikipedia for that.

  • @fchouzal
    @fchouzal Před 3 měsíci +1

    Hi Feli, love your channel.
    Now about the fixing, as in refrence to "going to do something".
    I'm from Brazil and in Portuguese we have something similar.
    we say "vou me arrumar" which it means i'm going to get dressed but we also say "vou arrumar o encanamento" which it means i'll fix the plumbing.

  • @hannahbellebraden1883
    @hannahbellebraden1883 Před 3 měsíci +10

    My two favorite people!!!♥️

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Like Feli is great and I'll watch her videos but my favorite ones are when she has Ben join her, he's so wholesome and fun

  • @Sirk1966
    @Sirk1966 Před 3 měsíci +2

    BBQ is know and big in KC, St.Louis, Chicago, TX, and throughout the south. Grilling, and BBQing is different. Grilling is hamburgers, hotdogs, and chicken. BBQing, is slow and low temp and takes a long time, like Brisket, Steaks, some Roasts, and some Chicken. Chicken can be done both ways.

  • @user-om5rg3pd9b
    @user-om5rg3pd9b Před 3 měsíci

    Great video and yes, I also got one of those FAKE contact me posts.
    Wishing you both a great weekend.
    Your pal in Helen, Georgia.

  • @runawaytechgal1467
    @runawaytechgal1467 Před 3 měsíci +3

    As a female, I held 2 season tickets to the Bengals for 7 seasons until I moved away. Football is life! And I used to always "fix" myself dinner. I haven't said that in a while. Lol. That means prepare. These things are a Southern Ohio thing too. Fun video!! Thanks!

  • @allenc4909
    @allenc4909 Před 3 měsíci

    Dallas, TX here: this was 100% spot on. 🤠👏

  • @user-dc9xg4qe3f
    @user-dc9xg4qe3f Před 3 měsíci +5

    I'm from the west (Idaho) and anyone who has grown up on a ranch or a farm pretty much has a pair of cowboy boots. I've got two. If you used to ride horses as a kid and participate in moving cows around, it's a given. I am now a performance artist and fine artist and know few men that watch football regularly. Maybe that is just because I mostly know artistic people. Good video though!

  • @jakedunnegan
    @jakedunnegan Před 3 měsíci +4

    Well, I thought it was absolutely charming how you unconsciously put your arm around your dude. To put it into perspective for the channel - is that a universal thing or more American or more German? Regardless - your affection shows through and it's very sweet. :)

  • @JohnHollands
    @JohnHollands Před 28 dny

    In Australia, barbecue is both the apparatus used for cooking AND the event itself. You can USE a BBQ and you can GO TO a BBQ. The food is NOT barbecue except as an adjective as in: barbecued steak, barbecued sausages, barbecued chicken.
    A grill is a hotplate inside your oven, at the top. Pubs and restaurants will serve a “mixed grill” which is cooked in their kitchen and typically includes steak, sausage and chops.

  • @coyotelong4349
    @coyotelong4349 Před 3 měsíci +1

    One interesting thing with “fixing to” used as a substitute for “going to” is it also has a shortened version
    “Going to” = “gonna”
    “Fixing to” = “finna”

  • @brianharp4252
    @brianharp4252 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Bar-B-Q in the U.S. is regional. Texas bbq is mostly beef smoked with oak, pecan wood, and/or mesquite with a heavy tomato based spicy sauce. Tennessee and the Carolinas are all about pork, either whole hog or just a pork butt smoked with hickory, and may or may not have a cider vinegar based sauce. Kentucky is different from the rest of the South, with mutton bbq being popular.

  • @russellfisher2853
    @russellfisher2853 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Food eating contest are not just Texas.
    They're all over the country.

  • @DarrylCarroll
    @DarrylCarroll Před 3 měsíci +1

    Danielle Boone, David Crockett, James Bowie and Sam Houston all came to Texas from Kentucky. Many of early settlers of Texas can from Appalachia. So there are alot of cultural similarity

  • @connkahn
    @connkahn Před 3 měsíci +1

    I live in California, on the central coast. It is quite common to see people in plaid, cowboy boots, and cowboy hats.

  • @garysenn4809
    @garysenn4809 Před 3 měsíci

    You 2 are make an Awesome couple! ❤ That was a Fun video.

  • @Celtic-Texan
    @Celtic-Texan Před 3 měsíci +1

    Being Gen-X I can appreciate your boyfriends preference for older or classic country, vs the contemporary popish stuff cranked out nowadays. Also, as some have mentioned in the comments, BBQ in Texas tends to be meat slow cooked in smokers, typically prepped with some kind of dry rub, like brisket, smoked 12+ hours, or ribs typically 5 hours, or other slow cooked meats. But things like steaks or burgers are typically referred to grilling, which can be in smokers or traditional grills, but at higher temps and not a slow process. I personally cook brisket, ribs, chicken, sausage, and turkey, on my smoker, and start Prime Rib on the smoker, then slice it into individual steaks to sear on a cast iron skillet on the stove before serving. If I invite folks over for "BBQ" that means I will have done quite a bit of prep before the arrive, and will be pulling things off the smoker just prior to their arrival, but if I say come on by and we'll slap something on the grill, then they can expect a steak or some burgers that I'll be grilling while they're here.

  • @Jessica_P_Fields
    @Jessica_P_Fields Před 3 měsíci +15

    "To fix" = "to prepare" is less geographically specific in the US.
    "Fixin' to" = "going to" is more geographically specific to the South in the US. "I'm fixin' to" is closer to "I'm getting ready to" in terms of time vs. "I'm going to".

    • @nicholasharvey1232
      @nicholasharvey1232 Před 3 měsíci

      I thought all English speakers, or at least all North Americans, said "fixing to".

    • @nicholasharvey1232
      @nicholasharvey1232 Před 3 měsíci

      P.S. I thought everyone "fixed" themselves something to eat. Shania Twain-- a Canadian-- even says "Fix me up my favorite treat" in her song "Honey I'm Home". Never thought of this meaning of "fix" as being more of a Southern thing either.

    • @Jessica_P_Fields
      @Jessica_P_Fields Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@nicholasharvey1232 "fixin' to" is not the same as "to fix" as in prepare. I agree that most North American English speakers sometimes use fix as a synonym for prepare, as in "I'm fixing dinner" or "I'm fixing my hair". Southern US speakers also use the term "I'm fixin' to..." as in "I'm fixin' to go to the store" or "I'm fixin' to make dinner", and this specific usage is generally more specifically associated with Southern US English speakers.

    • @JasMcKenzie
      @JasMcKenzie Před 3 měsíci +2

      ..."finna" ....meaning "fixing to" ....meaning "about to"
      Whatcha finna do?

  • @lattetown
    @lattetown Před 2 měsíci

    I really enjoyed watching both your reactions! 🙂 As far as the word "BBQ" it can mean several things...it can refer to the outdoor grill where you cook with fire (as in "I warmed up the BBQ"), or it can refer to the food cooked on the grill (as in "we're havin' BBQ for dinner"), or it can refer to a specific way you season and prepare the food. Usually, when I hear a place name in front of "BBQ", then I think it is referring to last meaning. "Texas BBQ" means it's prepared with a dry rub that marinates overnight..it also usually refers to a large cut of meat like a brisket or a whole rack of ribs slowly cooked in a smoker with the lid closed, instead of just a steak on an open grill. "Kansas City style BBQ" to me refers to a slow roasted rack of ribs with a sauce marinate instead of a dry rub.

  • @352kemosabebrian7
    @352kemosabebrian7 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I just want to point out also coming from the south myself guys can give a girl a compliment and not just be flirting it's being nice it kind of goes with the ma'am sir it's respect, and as far as the barbecue it is a Spanish term for like Barbie Cola meaning cooking over hot coals I think these days most people water that down. Me being not only Native American but a Florida native respect is everything and shout out to been my mom was born in Kentucky but moved here and her early teen years so I understand what he's talking about country music but I do love jelly roll his music is something else but I also like old country as well especially 80s 90s country. Love the content yall keep up the great work, stay safe and stay blessed my friends

  • @rebekahtaylor9307
    @rebekahtaylor9307 Před 3 měsíci

    This makes me miss home 😢 we moved to the Midwest from Texas 9months ago. San Antonio you will always hold a special place in my heart ❤️

  • @billwalbek1911
    @billwalbek1911 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks!

  • @chrisromig7390
    @chrisromig7390 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I had never really thought about it, but
    barbecue is a tricky word.
    It is an event:
    "Coming to my barbecue this weekend?"
    "What are ya fixin'?"
    "I'm grilling burgers and hotdogs"
    It is a meat: Pork, chicken, or beef brisket (the fattier the better) that has been dry rub spiced and slow cooked with wood smoke, and usually served with a barbecue sauce.
    A grill is also sometimes referred to as a barbecue, but that sounds a little Australian to me.
    Love your videos Feli. If you've ever addressed window screens and air conditioning, I missed it. Would also be interested what you think about the German plan to replace gas and oil heating with heat pumps. I see the biggest problem as where do all the outdoor heat exchanger units go on German dwellings?

    • @theoriginalpointby
      @theoriginalpointby Před 3 měsíci

      And we have friends that invite us over for a BBQ and they order pizza and we sit outside and eat it. But that's just them being weird.

  • @easttexasoldcoot8813
    @easttexasoldcoot8813 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Feli, you ask about different types of barbecue in Texas. The low and slow smoking style comes from German immigrants and originated in the Hill Country and German and Czech farm regions of S.E. Texas. No sauce used in the cooking. The meat is seasoned with a dry rub. Any sauce is served on the side. This style is typically just known as Texas barbecue. You're welcome, Ma'am.
    Edit: Also, the meat is usually beef brisket. The fire source is hardwood, often oak but I think pecan is best. I'm also curious, since the smoking method was introduced to Texas by German settlers, do they not smoke meat like this in Germany these days?

  • @thorthorson9926
    @thorthorson9926 Před 3 měsíci +1

    In Wisconsin, we only have 2 seasons......
    1) Winter, and...
    2) Road Construction

  • @Shad0wProphet
    @Shad0wProphet Před 3 měsíci +2

    I would say it’s a location and sport. So I agree that Texas is all about football, but in Minnesota it is like that for Hockey. So it would depend on where you came from.

  • @texasflood1295
    @texasflood1295 Před 3 měsíci +1

    “Fixin’ to” means that I am going to do something but the time that I will begin to do it is uncertain.

  • @Trifler500
    @Trifler500 Před měsícem

    We don't use "fixin' to" in the north, but we do use "go fix a drink" because "fix" can be used as a synonym for "prepare"