American reacts to 13 WEIRDEST things in German supermarkets

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  • čas přidán 26. 10. 2022
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to 13 weird things in German supermarkets. Check out Easy German: / easygerman
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @melina9366
    @melina9366 Před rokem +586

    My German heart is really sad by watching this video, because the Germans actually made fun of the German food despite not even knowing a lot of this stuff which is sad by itself. Actually most of what they showed is just normal food, quite good and really popular. I really don‘t see their problem

    • @felicehallward8597
      @felicehallward8597 Před rokem +73

      I thought so too. Where is even the point in making a video about it then? Also, the foreigners were way more open towards the food then those two german were.

    • @carina4ever82
      @carina4ever82 Před rokem +63

      Ich hab auch ein Problem damit, wenn Lebensmittel als ekelig bezeichnet werden. Man muss ja nicht alles mögen, aber es ist nicht ekelig. So was weiß schon meine kleine Tochter.

    • @maximilianok.2342
      @maximilianok.2342 Před rokem +12

      Bullshit. Being cultural open means to accept things are sometimes funny or disgusting. Even in your own culture. I'm living in East Asia since 10 years now (as a german costa rican) and I see loooots of people in Vietnam hating Durian and making fun of it. Why not? The smell IS funny.
      And calling sausage with mayonaise a salad is freaking funny. Why not?
      Get yourself comfortable with your own culture but relax, my gosh.

    • @outofposition2042
      @outofposition2042 Před rokem +5

      this is how personal opinions work right?

    • @udornyc
      @udornyc Před rokem

      Yeah, that host is so incredibly ignorant, it hurts me to watch! Where did she grow up? DDR? How can you be so ignorant about the most basic, traditional foods.
      Her prejudice doesn't leave an opening to actually discover the food. She appears to be like an idiot to me! Very, very strange woman!

  • @simonl.6338
    @simonl.6338 Před rokem +155

    Die Co-moderatorin kennt also so gut wie nichts von den normalen Produkten, sinnvoll dass sie dabei ist.

    • @Randleray
      @Randleray Před rokem +55

      Beide Moderatoren haben zu 80% keinen Schimmer von der Küche und den Lebensmitteln ihres eigenen Landes (Deutschland). Ich sag das eigentlich nur ungern, weil ich sonst selber immer drüber schimpfe, aber hier trifft es wirklich mal voll ins Schwarze: Sowas wie dieses Video passiert, wenn es wichtiger ist, dass man augenscheinlich 100% aufgeschlossene, junge Studis an die Spitze setzt und davon ausgeht, die wissen automatisch bescheid. ich bin selber student und ich bin sehr progressiv und esse nur sehr wenig Fleisch. Aber meine Fresse, warum musste man denn hier zwei Starbucksmädels vorn hinstellen, die nicht nur nicht lesen können (auf dem EIERLIKÖR steht FILTRIERT und nicht frittiert), sondern absolut alltägliche Produkte wie den Speck nicht kennen und darüberhinaus auch noch als eklig bezeichnen. Ich mag Easy German normalerweise sehr, aber hier hat man mit der Moderation wirklich vollgas ins Klo gegriffen als man dachte dass zwei Veganer, die sich nur von Salat und Starbucks ernähren, ein gutes Video zusammenbringen würden...

    • @DerRusher
      @DerRusher Před rokem +23

      @@Randleray jeder Bauarbeiter hätte die Lebensmittel besser erklären können, aber es müssen ja immer die letzten Hipster herhalten

    • @viciousyeen6644
      @viciousyeen6644 Před rokem

      @@Randleray ja ich bin auch sehr enttäuscht, das die da zwei solche Backpfeifengesichter hinstellen

    • @ichnichdu123yuki6
      @ichnichdu123yuki6 Před rokem +9

      Ich als Koch, finde es dabei am schlimmsten, dass sie mit dem Lachsschinken leider auch noch recht haben.
      Der Sogenannte "Schweinelachs" ist das rücken fleischstück vom Schwein, aus dem übrigens auch Schweineschnitzel herausgeschnitten werden.
      Lachsschinken, ist in dem fall nur gepökelter- fein geschnittener Schweinerücken-schinken.
      Schinken umfässt im allgemeinen auch nur wurst vom Schwein, es gibt keinen Rinder Schinken oder Hühner Schinken.
      Das Problem hierbei ist aber leider eine gigantische Bildungslücke für welche die Damen leider nichts können.

    • @tarkitarker0815
      @tarkitarker0815 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@ichnichdu123yuki6 naja aber es gibt halt auch das lachsstück eines tieres, das ist ein wort welches halt für sehr feines fleisch benutzt wird. kann man wissen, muss man nicht.

  • @insideAdirtyMind
    @insideAdirtyMind Před rokem +694

    me literally eating Mettbrötchen with onions right now, the real Bauarbeiterfrühstück (Construction Workers Breakfast)

    • @waltherblack
      @waltherblack Před rokem +18

      Ess ich auch grade lel

    • @MHD-ARTs
      @MHD-ARTs Před rokem +10

      Ich habe es gesehen und direkt Heißhunger werd gleich erstmal in den Laden :D

    • @WarlockAzbad
      @WarlockAzbad Před rokem +15

      Muss ich mir auch mal wieder gönnen. Schön dick Mett mit Zwiebeln, Salz und Pfeffer.

    • @kai9137
      @kai9137 Před rokem +1

      Oh no u makin me hungry, Ich hab grad kee Mett zu Hause... 🥺

    • @colaweizen13
      @colaweizen13 Před rokem +3

      Hackbrot is noch geiler :)

  • @corinnaschmidt9735
    @corinnaschmidt9735 Před rokem +571

    What I find most amusing is that the two German moderators don't know so many things! Just by the way: the bacon is usually cut into small cubes and "left out" in the pan, which means: the fat becomes liquid, the pieces become brown and crispy. If you then beat eggs in, you get super delicious scrambled eggs!

    • @karlheinz9432
      @karlheinz9432 Před rokem +19

      ^^
      "left out" -> rendered down

    • @dorisschneider-coutandin9965
      @dorisschneider-coutandin9965 Před rokem +114

      Yes, shocking to hear from the hosts of the programme that they even don't know the most classic thing like Eierlikör. The brand is "Advocaat" and has nothing, absolutely nothing to do with avocados. It's similar to egg nogg, but cold, not heated up. Or "Lachsfleisch", which is some sort of the most fatless ham (cured, I would think) you can have. And Roquefort is a very, very expensive blue veined cheese, at least the original one from France; italian counterpart would be Gorgonzola. This blue mould is actually doing no harm to the human body, it is specially grown for being "injected" into the cheese.

    • @NerdyNomad21
      @NerdyNomad21 Před rokem +73

      I'm a little shocked about how less the hosts know about German food. I am a little bit picky about food, too. But they have mostly verly tasty things here. Brathering is a little bit sour and very tasty. And Lachsschinken has nothing todo with salmons nor with ham and is absolutly not disgusting.

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Před rokem +14

      @@NerdyNomad21 there was a misunderstanding about the Lachsschinken, they thought it was fish because of the 'Lachs' part and raw fish sealed in plastic would really be strange.

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Před rokem +29

      Was der Bauer nicht kennt,... 😉

  • @dagmarszemeitzke
    @dagmarszemeitzke Před rokem +195

    The Lachsfleisch is actually "Lachsschinken" it is smoked porkham wich has nearly no fat and looks like salomon.

    • @m.h.6470
      @m.h.6470 Před rokem +21

      exactly. "Schweinelachs" is just a butcher term for pork loin. In this case it is cured and sliced thinly. The salt curing turns it pink like salmon.

    • @lichansan1750
      @lichansan1750 Před rokem +11

      Exactly it is the name of a certain way to cut a certain region.
      Nothing to do with salmon

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Před rokem +3

      are you sure it is smoked ?🤔

    • @m.h.6470
      @m.h.6470 Před rokem

      @@grandmak. not always. salt curing is more common I believe.

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Před rokem

      @@grandmak. Lachsschinken und Lachsfleisch sind 2erlei. Lachs ist der Nachbar vom Filet. 🤣

  • @robertzander9723
    @robertzander9723 Před rokem +443

    I have to say that I personally always have a bit of a problem with it when someone automatically says the food looks disgusting, they have absolutely no idea what they are holding in their hand and what it actually tastes like, but they immediately say it looks disgusting. In any case, a good fried herring is not disgusting and pork bacon is used for different recipes, often gives the dish a different flavor and less salt is needed for the preparation. Fat is also a flavor carrier.
    Mayonnaise is not automatically something bad or completely unhealthy, there is always a lot of nonsense being spread, it's the amount of mayo that makes the difference.

    • @kroqgargrymloq
      @kroqgargrymloq Před rokem +18

      well, we all now that people that favour dried tomatoes and Pfeffi are the food gourmets to listen to with regard to meat, fish and cheese

    • @voyance4elle
      @voyance4elle Před rokem +6

      agreed

    • @silkwesir1444
      @silkwesir1444 Před rokem +7

      usually when a food looks disgusting to someone, they can't really help it

    • @alphagyne7325
      @alphagyne7325 Před rokem +13

      In Siebenbürgen ist dieser Speck („Bauchfleisch“) mit das Leckerste, was es gibt. Mjam.
      (Translation:) In Transylvania we loved this pure fat bacon. In small bits, on bread with green onions it was the snack to go for us kids on the street.

    • @00Jess_M
      @00Jess_M Před rokem +20

      I don't have that big of a problem with people saying something looks disgusting to them (some of my favorite dishes look questionable), I'm not a fan of people saying something IS disgusting. Either because they don't like it or worse, they've never even tried it. I wish there would've been a German in the video who actually knew or even liked those items, so they could explain how they taste or how you eat/use them (that's what I was expecting from the video tbh). Those two Germans looked like they barely know more than the other guys and girls. I don't like everything they picked either, but at least about half of it and that I don't like something doesn't mean it's disgusting. I just don't like it.
      When they said they never had the pork fat/bacon with such confidence, I wanted them to ask their parents/grandparents if that's true, because I bet they had it in some dish they ate as a child. I remember at least two dishes my mom used it for. And that's without soups or Eintöpfe. I appreciate that they put so much time and work into making those videos for foreigners and like many of them, but this one wasn't for me. Like I said, I wish there would've been someone in the video who would've had more to say than "yeah, I never had it, but I agree that it's disgusting". And where was the mustard for the Leberwurst and Harzer Roller? 🤨

  • @Neknesch
    @Neknesch Před rokem +297

    The gum would be a jawbreaker in the U.S.
    And by their reaction to basically everything that was shown, they have to be very picky eaters, nearly all that they have shown is normal food that basically everyone I know likes.

    • @Meeretto
      @Meeretto Před rokem +24

      Finally someone said it. I thought I was going crazy 😂

    • @shadowfox009x
      @shadowfox009x Před rokem +27

      Yeah, I thought so too, I mean... Bratheringe? Teewurst? Leberwurst? Fleischsalat? Really?

    • @christianvo382
      @christianvo382 Před rokem +4

      @@shadowfox009x Idk man, I know plenty of people that don´t like most if not all of those things. Maybe it´s a generational thing? I myself only really like Fleischsalat from among these and I can tolerate Bratheringe but miss me with Leberwurst and Teewurst.

    • @nebucamv5524
      @nebucamv5524 Před rokem

      Ehrlich? Selbst als Fleischesser fand ich Teewurst und Leberwurst damals eklig. Mein Bruder auch.

    • @jorgmintel3060
      @jorgmintel3060 Před rokem

      Auf Teewurst muss man auch Senf drauf tun 😋

  • @Stacybell92
    @Stacybell92 Před rokem +101

    It's so funny to me that they said "fein frittierter Alokohol" (deep fried alcohol) - it says "FILTRIERTER Alkohol", which means filtrated and makes so much more sense if you think about it for a second 🤣Also, it took me a few minutes to understand what they were on about with the "Avocado". According to Google, this type of eggnog originally comes from Brazil, where the drink was called "Abacate" by the Tupo-Guarani Indians, the natives of the Amazon region in Brazil, and was made on the basis of avocados. The Dutch conquerors generally thought the recipe with cane sugar and rum was great, but unfortunately they didn't have any more avocados for their "Advocaat" back in Europe. Mr. Eugen Verpoorten (the founder of the company "Verpoorten", which now sells this drink) had the idea to recreate the drink with eggs. So technically Eierlikör is the European/Dutch version of eggnog, which most Americans are probably familiar with.

    • @meretofabydos3645
      @meretofabydos3645 Před rokem +17

      It seems they really don’t know much about food! It’s like you sad it’s simply eggnog/ Eierlikör - avocado is only used in the original of brazil. Also referring everthing as meat ( like raw meat), but Fleischsalat isn’t made of raw meat, normally it’s cooked meat ( like cold cuts) like Lyoner. Also a lot of cheese made with different non-toxig molds ( white / blue-, greenish), for example Camembert or Brie with white mold. The other one looks like Harzer cheese, which is very healthy and has low fat, if it’s not old the taste isn’t strong, but sometimes a bit more chewy than normal cheese.
      And so on… If you made such a video you should at least take a person with you, who had a solid knowledge about the food you make comments on.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@meretofabydos3645so right! Well with 19 starting studying I only knew gouda and edamer ( from dutch border) my french friend ordered a olate with varies of cheese like blue mold cheese, cheese of goats and I did not like a thing. After two weeks visiting her I loved all of that stuff. Sometimes you can get used to a new taste if you give it a chance and do not react like a three year old kid.

  • @MediAndLemon
    @MediAndLemon Před rokem +234

    I am a simple man, I see Mett on the thumbnail and I click
    The fat from the pig is usually diced and then put into a pan first which releases all the fat, good for adding flavor to whatever you cook. My grandma usually used that for stews, fry a bit of this and then add it to the stew to make it more meaty.

    • @svengaefgen5909
      @svengaefgen5909 Před rokem +8

      It's used in small strings threaded through very lean game, too. My mother always used it for Rehrücken (roast saddle of venison),
      The technique is called Spicken, the special needle Spicknadel.

    • @MediAndLemon
      @MediAndLemon Před rokem +1

      @@svengaefgen5909 Ah yes, totally forgot that since we don't often do that in my family.

    • @svengaefgen5909
      @svengaefgen5909 Před rokem +1

      @@MediAndLemon I inherited the needles, but have not used them.

    • @RIP_Day
      @RIP_Day Před rokem +2

      I just slice it up (Thin slices) and put it on some Bread with mustard tastes gread

    • @MichaelFMeyer-lz5fv
      @MichaelFMeyer-lz5fv Před rokem

      oder im Grünkohl

  • @prody666
    @prody666 Před rokem +159

    Moldy cheese (like Roquefort or Gorgonzola) is made in a controlled environment. The Penicillium roqueforti fungus is not the same you get when you forget a piece of cheese for too long in the fridge and it gets moldy or the black mold in the walls. It is actually delicious. Gorgonzolla on pasta or pizza brings a unique flavor. That's some real cheese.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +3

      gorgonzola is too sharp for me, but there are great "flavourful" cheeses I like.

    • @Kulumpura
      @Kulumpura Před rokem +2

      @@HappyBeezerStudios there is also a dolce (sweet) one, dolce DOP.

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB Před rokem +2

      @@HappyBeezerStudios yes, white instead of blue ... eg brie, camembert, etc ... or in an italian pasta sauce so that i get only a milder taste and see nothing blue :-)

    • @ioannishoeft1272
      @ioannishoeft1272 Před rokem +3

      I think Roquefort tastes a little bit too strong. But I'm always down for a piece of Gorgonzola, weather it's on a slice of pread or on a spinach pizza👌

    • @prody666
      @prody666 Před rokem

      @@ioannishoeft1272 yes, Gorgonzola is a little softer. I like brown mushrooms with Roquefort, I like how they go together.

  • @oelboy
    @oelboy Před rokem +177

    As a (northern) German, the strangest thing about American supermarkets in my experience are the greeters. We don't have those here and it makes us feel uncomfortable. Same with being immediately serviced without asking for assistance.

    • @christianvo382
      @christianvo382 Před rokem +37

      Yeah that shit´s super weird. Let me do my groceries in peace for fuck´s sake.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +23

      @@christianvo382 thats part of the cultural difference. over there they think it's part of good service to be friendly and offer assistance, while we see it more as annoying and want to be left alone. We can ask if we need anything.

    • @gerdahessel2268
      @gerdahessel2268 Před rokem +12

      And behind that friendly people might be the shelves for the guns you can buy.

    • @lynnhamps7052
      @lynnhamps7052 Před rokem +11

      Ditto here in UK..what they call service is what we call annoying..lol

    • @christianvo382
      @christianvo382 Před rokem +8

      @@HappyBeezerStudios Yeah I also heard that it´s custom in the US for employees to wear fake smiles whereas in germany if you go to a convenience store the workers there don´t hide that they´re dead inside and I can´t blame them for that. I wouldn´t want to put on a fake smile either.
      Now that I think about it the whole "can I help you?" thing does exist over here as well but only in very select fields like fashion stores, jewelry stores, etc.

  • @genau14zeichen
    @genau14zeichen Před rokem +98

    Lol, most of these things only look weird but are actually really nice 😂

    • @kroqgargrymloq
      @kroqgargrymloq Před rokem +6

      and they focused on disgusting rather than weird... from my point of view it was extremely biased, but that is what expressing opinions is all about :-) but if you let people who do not like fish, certain meat or strong tasting cheese decide what is weird, the result is no surprise. I think it would have actually been more fun to display extraordinary items that seem weird... like people from the USA tend to be rather picky if it comes to organs (with heart, liver, lungs, tongue being rather common in supermarkets) or uncooked meat.
      And I think it is kind of sad that so many items were just badmouthed or judged from a heavily biased point of view... let's be honest, supermarkets would not sell these items, if they were disgusting and nobody likes them

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB Před rokem +2

      @@kroqgargrymloq yes, send some little children to do such shopping and they will return with all the vegetables they can find ...
      i had expected "weird" or "strange" foods, but not "most disgusting", and then tasting only those foods that people knew in advance they wouldn't like. in addition with no idea about half the items, what they were or how to eat/prepare them.
      ps: most of what they bought was almost identical or very sikilar to my usual shopping list :-)

  • @hypatian9093
    @hypatian9093 Před rokem +64

    The "mayonnaise in all the salads" is more a Northern German thing, in Southern Germany there's Wurstsalat (pretty close to the Fleischsalat, only more onions) and potato salad without mayonnaise, but with vegetable oil.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +1

      I'm from the north, but I like both. to mhey work for slightly different occasions and do better with different stuff in it.

    • @TheoStuss
      @TheoStuss Před rokem +1

      Also in the north of France close to the Channel Coast the salads contain lots of mayonnaise.

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Před rokem +2

      @@TheoStuss I can understand not using mayonnaise in the South of France - warm weather + mayonnaise dishes is not a good mix.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@hypatian9093because of the raw eggs in it.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 4 měsíci

      I do not like the southern oil&vinegar-style. I admit I am from the north. To be healthier I make asian "ketchup" and french "mayonaise" myself. So no addings, fresh, less sugar in tomato sauce and good oil in egg sauce.

  • @LoFiAxolotl
    @LoFiAxolotl Před rokem +22

    first one is just Eggnog... second one is peppermint schnaps... acting like its something crazy.... the egg hole maker thing is actually danish
    also there's plenty of mistakes in the translation... a channel that tries to bring german culture to an english speaking audience should really have good english translations....

    • @ann-kathrin7250
      @ann-kathrin7250 Před rokem

      Thought the same.

    • @LythaWausW
      @LythaWausW Před rokem

      I noticed this about their loose use of the word sausage, because in English sausage is always encased in a skin, giving it the traditional shape. Unless we're talking about Jimmy Dean patties but we specify "breakfast sausage" and still isn't spreadable.

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride Před rokem

      Plus, there is no rule that you actually have to drink the Eggnog. You can also use it for backing. Makes the cake very fluffy and moist. Or you can use it for filling if you do your own pralines.

  • @Glimmlampe1982
    @Glimmlampe1982 Před rokem +200

    The colored easter eggs are available all year long. They're colored to make them easily distinguishable from fresh eggs. Otherwise you might want to grab some fresh eggs for cooking and end up with cooked ones, or you want some as a fast meal and end up with fresh ones.
    the "Lachsfleisch" isnt fish, its meat from a pig, lamb or calf. I think its the inner part of the backmuscle, a bit like filet
    The pig fat they find so disgusting is used to cook, or you render the fat into lard. Which you can either use to fry stuff or as a spread on bread (especially tasty if you still have some meat in it, that will get crispy and extremely tasty -> "Grieben")

    • @cantinadudes
      @cantinadudes Před rokem +9

      Ich dachte mein gesamtes leben dass lachsfleisch wirklich lachs ist...

    • @Glimmlampe1982
      @Glimmlampe1982 Před rokem

      @@cantinadudes ist noch nicht so lange her dass ich das herausgefunden habe:D

    • @Xnhl
      @Xnhl Před rokem +2

      @@cantinadudes Hast es dann auch mit Senfsauce und Sekt gegessen?😆

    • @aphextwin5712
      @aphextwin5712 Před rokem +3

      @@cantinadudes There is also ‘Lachsforelle’ (salmon trout) which is not ‘Lachs’ (salmon) but at least it is fish (trout fed with special food that makes them look red-ish like salmon).

    • @LythaWausW
      @LythaWausW Před rokem

      But why do they call it Lachs if there is no salmon in it?

  • @winterlinde5395
    @winterlinde5395 Před rokem +12

    Janusz weiß, was gut ist! Roqueford, Brathering, Eierlikör 😋

  • @haukesattler446
    @haukesattler446 Před rokem +41

    Fresh eggs have a small air bubble inside on one end. This bubble would expand while cooking the egg, leading to a cracked shell.
    This probably doesn't happen in the USA because the eggs in US supermarkets are usually chemically treated, removing the outer protective layer of the egg. This protective layer makes the egg more resistant to germs. That why US supermarket eggs have to be kept refrigerated.

    • @SundaysSound
      @SundaysSound Před rokem +2

      That is so interesting! Didn't know!

    • @eaglevision993
      @eaglevision993 Před rokem +4

      @@SundaysSound Eggs in Germany are not washed so the protective layer stays on. This is called bloom and keeps the eggs basically air tight. Once you remove this layer the pores of the shell are exposed and the eggs are very vulnerable to bacteria.

    • @Lancor84
      @Lancor84 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Nah, pocking holes into the eggs are international norm. Look at japanese ramen cooks.

  • @frankfurt1063
    @frankfurt1063 Před rokem +13

    them calling it "stinky cheese" broke my heart lol, in my part of germany theres a dish with that cheese kinda brined in oil, vinegar and chopped onions and its pretty good, also if you are someone who worries about weight gain, this cheese is very low in fat, not sure if itll be mentioned in the video but i had to write this right when she said that

  • @saihsbaxton5979
    @saihsbaxton5979 Před rokem +41

    Can't believe they didnt try the BratHering, never seen it in a plastic box but out of a can you can totally eat it with cooked potatoes. Has a sour but good taste if you like stuff with vinegar.

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Před rokem

      🤢

    • @Lancor84
      @Lancor84 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@grandmak. dude it's fried fish in vinegar, of course it looks weird, but it tastes great.

  • @shadowfox009x
    @shadowfox009x Před rokem +39

    Bratheringe might look weird, but taste great if you like vinegar and sour things. That's a traditional Northern German food. I just had Fleischsalat. Very nice on bread. Or with fried potatoes. In some areas of Germany a variation of Fleischsalat without mayonnaise is served with fried potatoes and Bibliskäs (a quark version). Very traditional and supertasty.
    Bread with Leberwurst is a German classic and also very traditional.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem

      i recently noticed they have a Fleischsalat with oil dressing at a store here.

    • @stefankaiser3354
      @stefankaiser3354 Před rokem

      @@HappyBeezerStudios But the one with oil and vinegar is called "Wurstsalat". If there is also cheese in it, it's "Schweizer Wurstsalat" and the third versions name is "Schwäbischer Wurstsalat". Its the same like the standard "Wurstsalat" just with some "Schwarzwurst" (blood sausage) added.

  • @peachberry9774
    @peachberry9774 Před rokem +66

    "you're just looking for an excuse yo drink" is the most German thing. You drink to every occasion because there's a drink for every occasion. If it exists you can make alcohol out of it is a very accurate description of German alcohol consumption

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +16

      "oh funny meeting you here" - "yes. let's have a drink to celebrate the occasion"
      - two German neighbors meeting each other at the front door.

    • @redzora80
      @redzora80 Před rokem

      @@HappyBeezerStudios yeah theres always something to celebrate. And even if not, thats a reason to celebrate... where is my rum gone? or as anoyone a schnaps?

  • @zalba5710
    @zalba5710 Před rokem +24

    I remember when watching the original video how frustrated I was about them not knowing anything about Verpoorten (which is just a regular brand of bad egg liquor)

    • @alyweber260
      @alyweber260 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, like it's everywhere and I've seen it million times. I'm sure my grandmother is also actually buying that stuff regularly 😅

    • @Aio9818
      @Aio9818 Před rokem

      Verpoten ist so famous. Its THIS brand in germany for egg liquer.

    • @zalba5710
      @zalba5710 Před rokem +1

      @@Aio9818 it’s not a german brand tho, it’s from the Netherlands. The best (supermarket) egg liquor in Germany is nordgold imo

    • @hansmeiser32
      @hansmeiser32 Před 11 měsíci

      Ei, Ei, Ei Verpoorten🤣

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@zalba5710good you put it in brackets, because best eggnogs are selfmade. 😀🥳🥰🤪🥱😜

  • @amandaziccatti6195
    @amandaziccatti6195 Před rokem +42

    The smoked back fat from a pig is actually the best thing ever to add to Savoy cabbage or beans, but not to soups, what the girl suggested. That’s disgusting… 😅
    Anyway, before you add that to the cooked vegetables, you fry little pieces of the fat in its own fat in a pan until they are really crunchy. After that you add the fried pieces of the speck and the fat to your vegetables. It gives the cooked vegetables a smokey taste which is delicious 😄

    • @katharinawimmer7405
      @katharinawimmer7405 Před rokem +8

      Exactly!
      The girl that described it as the most disgusting thing ever, obviously had no idea how to cook it right. Because when you eat this stuff raw without frying it, than it’ll be disgusting. Otherwise it’s the best thing ever. 💁🏼‍♀️

    • @karlheinz9432
      @karlheinz9432 Před rokem +4

      if I`m not mistaken this fat is also used in some stews. these two women maybe just don`t know the difference between soup and stew.

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Před rokem +3

      @@katharinawimmer7405 I'm sure she has eaten it at her grandma's table before but isn't aware of it.

    • @RustyDust101
      @RustyDust101 Před rokem

      @@grandmak. 100% agreed. Fried well it is sooo good.

    • @torfinnsrnes6232
      @torfinnsrnes6232 Před rokem +1

      Its basically like extra fat bacon.

  • @juliabkw
    @juliabkw Před rokem +30

    Some things that struck me as VERY strange in US supermarkets when I fist saw them (30 years ago) were:
    - "cheese" in a plastic tube (I put it in quotes because to me, it couldn't be further from being real cheese)
    - whipped cream that's very different from what we're used to be whipped cream (in German it's actually called cream-to-be-whipped because it mostly comes as liquid cream and you whip it yourself)
    - the shape of the typical 1-gallon milk containers
    - frozen juice concentrate in a carton that looks like the carton in which ready-to-bake buns/rolls used to come (and still do) in Germany
    - the very little variety of cheeses and how very normal European cheeses are made the most special delicacy (including horrendous prices)

    • @DieGurke_
      @DieGurke_ Před 5 měsíci

      - "cheese" in a plastic tube (I put it in quotes because to me, it couldn't be further from being real cheese)
      There is a reason why American Cheese is not called cheese in germany
      - whipped cream that's very different from what we're used to be whipped cream (in German it's actually called cream-to-be-whipped because it mostly comes as liquid cream and you whip it yourself)
      What? whipped cream comes in 2 forms in germany usually. the liquid whipped cream which you have to whip it yourself and whipped cream in a spraycan.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 4 měsíci

      I only know it from shows showing how to educate dogs.

  • @Tarackgul
    @Tarackgul Před rokem +4

    Hello, as far as the moderators go, oh my oh my, but they have no idea. Some products are very common and taste very good, such as the pickled fish, very tasty. The moderators are absolutely not representative as far as German food culture is concerned. The painted eggs are called party eggs here and are always fresh (at least in the area where I come from). The hard cheese is common everywhere and not only in Germany, but also in the neighboring countries, mainly in the Alpine region. Women like to drink eggnog, but it is also often used for baking or for deserts. As far as liver sausage is concerned, it is very tasty and is eaten everywhere in Germany and is available in different versions (coarse, fine, mild, hearty, etc.). The packaged fish is not raw as was claimed, but either smoked or pickled... Greetings from Germany

  • @divingdave2945
    @divingdave2945 Před rokem +15

    Brathering is great. I buy it all the time. Doesn't look too good, but tastes good on a bun with Krautsalat.

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch Před rokem +126

    Eierlikör (egg liqueur) is an invention from the Netherlands -- long story very short: In their colonies in the Antilles they experienced an alcoholic drink, made from avocados. Back home in the Netherlands not having avocados (advocaatpeers) at hand they tried to copy it. A recipe with egg yolks came close enough. This drink still has the name "advocaat", meaning also avocado in NL. (I said very short...)
    When it is made from Avocado, it probably is closer to the original, haven't had it yet but will try it if I see it.

    • @karinemery
      @karinemery Před rokem +5

      I love Eierlikör!

    • @McMicday
      @McMicday Před rokem

      @@PeterPan-dz7mu
      laut wiki. heißt in NL avocado und anwalt advocaat und er funden wurde der eierlikör in seiner heutigen form nicht in NL erfunden -->> Nach Darstellung des Herstellers Verpoorten entwickelte der aus Antwerpen stammende Unternehmensgründer Eugen Verpoorten den Eierlikör in seiner heutigen Form in dem Bestreben, dieses Getränk zu imitieren. Da Avocados in Europa schlecht verfügbar waren, verwendete er stattdessen Eigelb. 1876 gründete er seine Firma in Heinsberg bei Aachen.
      Wer hat den Eierlikör erfunden? In den Niederlanden und Belgien tüftelte man besonders intensiv an einem Ersatz für den Avocado-Likör und verbürgt ist die erste Rezeptur eines Eierlikörs von Eugen Verpoorten aus dem Jahre 1876

    • @ABC-ei9ir
      @ABC-ei9ir Před rokem +4

      @@PeterPan-dz7mu Da muss ich Dich leider in deiner Aussage korrigieren.
      Ein Blick in die Firmenhistorie auf der Seite von Verpoorten klärt eindeutig darüber auf, dass das Originalrezept Avocados verwendet und Eigelb als Ersatz verwendet wurde, da Avocados nicht zur Verfügung standen.

    • @forkless
      @forkless Před rokem +2

      @@PeterPan-dz7mu Advocaat is a shortened version of advocaatpeer and the former is what is called a "false friend".

    • @ClaudiaG.1979
      @ClaudiaG.1979 Před rokem

      @@forkless i was today years old...

  • @voyance4elle
    @voyance4elle Před rokem +28

    All these things are super tasty.I don't eat them anymore since I am vegan, but I can assure you that almost everything in this video is actually super tasty. I used to eat a lot of these stinky chese and also the french cheeses. Teewurst and Leberwurst were two of my favorite things to put on bread and also the fish stuff they showed tastes amazing.... Please go to Germany and try everything :D

    • @Lena-ru2zx
      @Lena-ru2zx Před 10 měsíci +4

      Die vegane Tee- und Leberwurst von der Rügenwalder Mühle ist mega! Ich war so froh als ich entdeckt habe, als ich vegan geworden bin! 😂

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Lena-ru2zxKann man es mit Zwiebeln, Aepfeln, ... nicht selbst machen?

  • @atdynax
    @atdynax Před rokem +17

    If you buy soft cheese that has this white coating, that is actually edible mould. And it doesn't stink.

  • @volkerkoenigsbuescher2394

    That liqueur has nothing to do with "avocado" the fruit. "Advocaat" is a dutch word for a certain variant of "Eierlikör", egg liqueur. You mix egg yolk, cream from milk, sugar, and alcohol, mostly from brandy.

    • @ABC-ei9ir
      @ABC-ei9ir Před rokem +11

      Da muss ich Dich leider in deiner Aussage korrigieren.
      Ein Blick in die Firmenhistorie auf der Seite von Verpoorten klärt eindeutig darüber auf, dass das Originalrezept Avocados verwendet und Eigelb als Ersatz verwendet wurde, da Avocados nicht zur Verfügung standen.

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Před rokem +1

      @@ABC-ei9ir interesting, thanks.

    • @vHindenburg
      @vHindenburg Před rokem

      Isn't an Advocat a lawyer?

    • @trirain146
      @trirain146 Před rokem

      @@vHindenburg Yes, that word in some language mean a kind of the lawyer. Like some of the lawyers are advocats but not all of the lawyers are advocats. (at least in my country)

    • @that-possum-guy3209
      @that-possum-guy3209 Před rokem +1

      @@trirain146 And I assume none of the lawyers are avocados.

  • @tirirana4732
    @tirirana4732 Před rokem +6

    The eggs are also painted because they last longer. The eggs are painted by a machine directly after cooking so air can't get in and they last longer

    • @silkwesir1444
      @silkwesir1444 Před rokem

      also makes it easy to tell them apart from normal, uncooked eggs on the shelf

  • @buecherdrache1
    @buecherdrache1 Před rokem +11

    12:35
    Whenever you have some kind of fermentation you also have bacteria or yeast, which is just a special type of mold, in there.
    So baked goods with yeast, beer, wine etc have also mold in them, cheese, yogurt, vinegar etc all have bacteria in them. Because in Germany during the inter food was always scarce, a lot of fermentation was done to preserve things for the winter. That's why a lot of food in Germany is connected to some form of mold, yeast, bacteria etc.
    Just because something contains mold (which is again just a type of mushroom) or bacteria doesn't make it unhealthy, it's the type mold or bacteria that determines how healthy it is. If you couldn't eat anything with mold on or in it, you also couldn't eat a pizza (yeast), with parmesan (ripened cheese => certain types of mold and bacteria), mushrooms, smoked sausages (many smoked goods have also got types of good mold in them). The only thing probably without mold would be the tomato sauce, which is often so full of toxins used in farming, that it can actually be the most unhealthy ingredient on the pizza

    • @kleinshui9082
      @kleinshui9082 Před rokem +4

      Technically speaking, molds is a specific group of structurally complex fungi, while yeasts are unicellar fungi. Yeasts don't build molds but colonies when they spread on surfaces, same as bacteria.
      Otherwise message is correct. Many microorganism (MO) produce chemicals during fermentation that enhance food flavour and/or aid in preservation. Nothing nasty about is, as long as no toxin producing MO are presented too.

    • @AlphaCentauriB
      @AlphaCentauriB Před rokem

      @@kleinshui9082 and nower days you use starter cultures to promote the rapid growth of the good MO and limit the potenial of spoilibg MOs.

  • @claudiawerdennsonst6911
    @claudiawerdennsonst6911 Před rokem +6

    Brathering or "eingelegter Hering" are very popular in Northern Germany, the Netherlands and Scandinavia. I could eat it every day. :)

    • @karlheinz9432
      @karlheinz9432 Před rokem

      it`s also quit common as a topping for a Fischbrötchen - probably nationwide.

  • @rushinroulette4636
    @rushinroulette4636 Před rokem +19

    I thought Blue Cheese dressing is relatively popular in the US. It is basically made with mouldy cheese (hence the name) such as Roquefort or Gorgonzola. So theoretically you should have already eaten a product made with moudly cheese, you just havent registered to the fact that it was such.
    Although, no idea if the processed stuff you are served is actually made from moudly or otherwise cheese at all to be honest.
    But 2 of the 3 items the Asian lady bought out werent even German. The Dried tomatoes are more of a Mediterranean thing, and the Roquefort is a French cheese. They are just sold in German Supermarkets as well, due to being popular for enough people (not me personally though to be honest).

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Před rokem +1

      The import of raw milk cheese into the USA is prohibited, I believe!

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +2

      @@arnodobler1096 they don't have to import it, they could make it locally.
      but yeah, brie and Camembert are also body. the white fluff on the outside.

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Před rokem +3

      @@HappyBeezerStudios Only the original is the good stuff. In Roquefourt and other areas, they know what they are doing, otherwise it can really lead to problems (even death)!

  • @SepiaMaddy
    @SepiaMaddy Před rokem +14

    Here's some love for back fat. I actually enjoy nibbling on it (raw) while using it for cooking. It's a standard ingredient for a lot of recipes where I come from, including green bean soup, potato soup and sweet'n'sour eggs with potato mash. That fat looks awful, but its taste is a hidden treasure.

  • @Trianna91
    @Trianna91 Před rokem +8

    The thing with the "Lachsschinken" (or literally "Salmon-ham(?)") is: it isn't fish. It's usually pork. The word "Lachs" (which they literally translated to salmon) in this case only referes to the part of the pig that is used. It's a lean cut of meat from the back of the animal and a meaty part of the rip. So it has nothing to do with salmon, let alone raw salmon ;)

    • @kroqgargrymloq
      @kroqgargrymloq Před rokem

      Thank god it was properly explained by the people talking us through the video 🙂

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB Před rokem

      it's very similar to filet

  • @evemaniac
    @evemaniac Před rokem +6

    The colour on the eggs closes the pores of the shell and prevents it from spoiling and becoming bad. You can reach similar results with fresh eggs. Simply cover them with cheap cooking oil and fresh eggs will last for month, because without air no spoiling.. i learned from my grandmother

    • @christianvo382
      @christianvo382 Před rokem +1

      That´s super interesting. Learn something every day.

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB Před rokem

      or (in germany and most of europe) don't wash them which would remove the natural protective coating.
      MrPlastic: where do you live, or where does your grandmother come from, to have learned this trick ?

    • @evemaniac
      @evemaniac Před rokem +1

      @@Anson_AKB Germany

  • @spirwes64
    @spirwes64 Před rokem +3

    🤣 Everything exaggerated! Eierlikör, Brathering, Handkäse, Lachsfleisch, Fleischsalat, Tomaten, Hering, Roquefort (Absolute delicacy) ist alles super. The two girls are a liitle bit clueless! 🙂

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv Před rokem +6

    2:15 Verpoorten is famous for its egg liquor. The founder Eugen Verpoorten came from Antwerpen and opened 1876 in Heinsberg (Germany) near Aachen his liquor factory. His egg liquor was meant to imitate avocado-based Advocaat, a liquor from the Netherlands inspired by the Abacate (an avocado-based softdrink) made by indigenes in the Amazonas region.
    6:15 Selling cooked eggs e.g. for lunch became a thing the last 2 decades or so. They are colored to show they are cooked.
    9:00 Some things you should never ever buy in a supermarket, even a more classy one like Rewe. Rückenspeck is the same as bacon, but from the back, not the belly. It consists mostly of pure fat, not meaty strips between like belly bacon. If bought in butchers's shop, it is available raw, smoked or cured; raw one can be used to make lard or be used to make sausage, raw or smoked ones are for some recipes sliced thinly to wrap other meat in eat before frying it. German butchers and chefs don't like to waste any part of a slaughtered animal.
    Brathering is fried herring which can be than be pickled to preserve is. Some people love it, others don't dare to try it. (But it should never be a cheap supermarket brand.)
    9:43 "Schweinelachs" (lit. pig salmon) is the musculus longissimus dorsi of a pig (or a veal if it is Kalbslachs, or a lamb if it is Lammlachs). It can e.g. be pan-fried or grilled or first smoked and then cooked. They bought "Lachsschinken" (salmon ham), which is cured and smoked like ham. It is not cheap, but a bit overrated in my opinion. The name "Lachs" refers only to the color of the meat after removing fat and tendons.
    11:00 Mayonnaise-based "salads" are traditionally more a thing in the North than the South, but supermarkets did spread such products all across the country (and in some cases neighboring countries, too).
    11:25 Dried tomatoes are originally an Italian thing, including the pickled variety. But the supermarket version is not recommendable.
    12:15 Blue cheese from the Alsace. It is inoculated with blue noble-mould. Moulds are simply small mushrooms, some varieties are edible, others not. Camembert uses white noble-mould.
    14:10 Teewurst (tea sausage) is also a northern German thing. But while the Friesland region is the main tea land (East Frisia consumes about 300 liter of tea per capita and year, which is the highest consumption worldwide), in this case it originates from the Baltic coast: Teewurst was originally a brand of Rügenwalde, which is now Darlowo in Poland. It is made from pork and beef, originally small leftovers from butchering, which are grinded, then seasoned with pepper, dried bell pepper, nutmeg and juniper and cold-smoked. It is however not the only sausage spread - there are also some varieties of liver sausage (which consist up to 40% of liver, depending on the regional recipe) which can be eaten as a spread.

  • @susannee.7781
    @susannee.7781 Před rokem +5

    Tasty Mett is missing! I recommend a video from Bigfun American in Germany about it. He always tries food and beverage. Funny Guy.

    • @Marina_-_-
      @Marina_-_- Před rokem

      I don't think you can send cheese or meat across the border.

  • @sdemuth552
    @sdemuth552 Před rokem +8

    If Walmart counts as a supermarket: Firearms. Guns are a strange thing to buy in a supermarket

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB Před rokem

      i would count Walmart as a supermarket, but we have none in germany.
      they packed up and left after a few years when their business practises were neither accepted by customers nor by german laws, so that they couldn't reach their goal of 10% or more profit, but at most maybe 3% like german supermarkets.

  • @haraldpeter5828
    @haraldpeter5828 Před rokem +3

    The spreads they are showing are the most normal things in Germany. All my childhood these spreads and alot of others were the only thing you would eat for dinner (Abendbrot). It's used to be very normal to only have a cold dinner with bread in loads of different kinds of spreads! I actually never had a warm dinner until I was 19, or if you had a special occasion and went to eat out in a restaurant. Warm meals were only eaten at lunch time! Dinner is always differnt kinds of bread and cheese, meat, meat spreads, liver sausage spreads, and many many more spreads on bread. :-) Sometimes leftovers from lunch, though.

  • @MrJueKa
    @MrJueKa Před 10 měsíci +2

    In Germany we have a saying: "Was der Bauer nicht kennt, isst er nicht." = "What the farmer doesn't know, he doesn't eat."
    I find it ridiculous when people judge something and then reject it without knowing it or having tried it, but nowadays people like to debate and argue this way in general, many argue about things they don't know or don't understand instead of finding out beforehand, not only but especially in the younger generations.
    I quite often have the impression that this team seems to have little or no knowledge of or own (life) experience with many things in Germany, and that they often only consider their own points of view and their very special and typical Berlin experiences to be binding for the whole of Germany ... the point of view, which is exclusively shaped mainly or only in Berlin, is a recognizable problem that a lot of residents or even media based in Berlin and politicians working there often have either, that often doesn't have much in common with the realities of life in the huge rest of the country.

  • @uebelgunne
    @uebelgunne Před 10 měsíci +1

    The pork fat is not usually eaten raw either, but left out in small cubes in the pan and fried until brown. This result is then mostly used as an ingredient for hearty dishes. You can use it for example in fried potatoes, or in pea soup. It gives the dishes a smoky and hearty note.

  • @Talkshowhorse_Echna
    @Talkshowhorse_Echna Před rokem +6

    The 2 fish options they showed "Brathering" and "Teufelshering" is no bad at all. It might look strange but in the end its simply fish with different mixtures of sour or spicy taste.

    • @nox5555
      @nox5555 Před rokem

      Taht Brathering looked real bad, way to much sauce in that plastic container.

    • @Criseteno
      @Criseteno Před rokem

      You do have to love fish for it though (I do, and I love hering, but I know it isn't for everyone). If tuna is basically the most "vanilla" you can get with fish, hering and mackerel are way out there. And we haven't even started on things like anchovies or some of those outlandish Nordic fish (which I also love -- I know, I'm weird !)

  • @DKC0994
    @DKC0994 Před rokem +12

    For picking your eggs you simply pick them at the bottom where they have this little air pocket (inside them). That way nothing can spill out while cooking
    Edit: Meat Spread (''Teewurst'') tastes amazing, but is not to be confused with actual Tea as the name might imply

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +2

      you basically have it to your afternoon tea.
      Or as would be more German instead of having "Kaffe und Kuchen" you have tea and little sandwiches.

    • @DKC0994
      @DKC0994 Před rokem

      @@HappyBeezerStudios Yes you could, I just wanted to let him know that ''Teewurst'' doesn't contain actual Tea as the Name might be confusing to sb who wants to translate it to english. Heard People calling it Tea Sausage lol

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB Před rokem +1

      @@DKC0994 it is the correct literal translation, but meaning "sausage to go along with tea" and not "sausage made from/with tea"

  • @elisabethbauer7427
    @elisabethbauer7427 Před rokem +2

    Schimmel Käse is something I don’t eat on bread , but melted in some milk it’s delicious for a noodle sauce , with some ham , mushrooms and peas for example

  • @manatiluna
    @manatiluna Před rokem +2

    I'm shocked how those woman don't know much of the products. The first bottle was eggpunsch. It's super strong in alcohol. Burns in the mouth. Verpoorten is actually quite popular.
    The Wonderball changes colors while licking of the layers until you get to the core which is a huge chewing gum.

  • @SeiichirouUta
    @SeiichirouUta Před rokem +3

    Just from watching a video Ryan understands more about stuff he's never seen before than two people who live in the country where you can get these things.
    But while their videos are quite funny, imo they know surprisingly little. Advocaat and the Roquefort are not from Germany. Yes, you can get them in German supermarkets, but they could at least have mentioned where they are originally from. Also saying over and over again that certain types of food are disgusting, is outright rude. I, too, wouldn't eat most of these things (vegetarian), but to make fun of them is a no-go. So of course I liked it a lot, that their guests where much more open-minded then them. :)

  • @Xnhl
    @Xnhl Před rokem +6

    Handkäse usually gets marinated. Most commonly in oil, vinegar and onions. It's said to be mostly hessian. Def. does go with Äbbelwoi (cider) and is served with some bread.
    Mmmmmhhhh Mettbrötchen 😋

    • @SaridenChan
      @SaridenChan Před rokem +1

      Best way to eat Handkäs' is in Kochkäs' 🤌

    • @Xnhl
      @Xnhl Před rokem +1

      @@SaridenChan Auch lecker 😋

  • @qwstrfgqwstrfg360
    @qwstrfgqwstrfg360 Před rokem +1

    they have some mistranslations in their subtitles, for example: the painted eggs used to only exist "on easter" (not "in the east"). it's the same as in other countries, painting eggs was and is an easter thing here. but people liked buying pre-boiled eggs in the supermarket, so the supermarkets decided to just paint their pre-cooked eggs all year round so you could easily tell them apart from normal uncooked eggs.
    another mistranslation: the eggpick is for before putting the egg in the "pot" (not in the "pan"). its for hard-boiled eggs, and if there is a tiny hole in the skin, the air can get out while boiling the whole egg. it prevents the eggshell from cracking.

  • @hanniwe
    @hanniwe Před rokem +1

    Wurstsalat - YES!
    Leberwurst - YES! (especially Pfälzer grobe Leberwurst)
    Saure Gurken - YES!
    All the good stuff.

  • @jochendamm
    @jochendamm Před rokem +4

    Yeah, we love meat, especially pork in all shapes and sizes. Spreads are common. Leberwurst or Liver sausage is a spread that contans a small amount of liver with a maximum of 40 percent. Otherwise it would be too strong in taste. Freshly toasted bread with Leberwurst was my equivalent to PB&J sandwiches for breakfast before school almost every morning. More fancy and tasty are Mettbrötchen - an absolute must-try: Bread rolls with raw minced pork ("Mett") and seasoned with herbs and spices like raw onions. It's literally to die for - so good. But it has to be fresh as same day or packaged in containers with controlled atmosphere (reduced oxagen). There is also Mettwurst which is preserved and lasts longer. Mettwurst is a whole group of different types of sausages.

    • @trythis2006
      @trythis2006 Před rokem

      most of the time when people find either leberwurs or teewurst disgusting is when you put way too much on your bread, it gets very overwhelming, especially leberwurst since leber has a strong taste so most people probably wouldnt like it spread too thick, only for people that really do love these kind of meats otherwise just put a lil bit on it, really good.

  • @Causali1y
    @Causali1y Před rokem +3

    Lachsfleisch is not salmon meat. Lachs means salmon but Lachs has a culinary meaning as well, basically meaning pork loin. Lachsfleisch is pork loin ham.

  • @h.r.1976
    @h.r.1976 Před rokem +2

    It is always a bit funny, when Chinese people say, a dry tomato is horrible, but eating eggs stored in pee (yes, urine) from young boys (only boys, no girls). Tastes are different!

  • @jacksons8446
    @jacksons8446 Před rokem +2

    Mettbrötchen are really nice !
    and i personally like teewurst leberwurst and fleischsalat too ^^

  • @oliverbaumhofer4662
    @oliverbaumhofer4662 Před rokem +3

    Man, you need to try them all, they are so yummy! Liver sausage spread may sound irritation, but there is no liver in an tea spread is my kids favorite. I prefer the Brathering over the Fleischsalat, but both are on my plate every week. And Hackepeter (raw ground meat) is the best! I know I'm disgusting, but I'm really into German cuisine. I love eggs and bacon, though.

  • @lulaa123
    @lulaa123 Před rokem +4

    You can use the egg pick to make decorations for Easter as well: you take an egg and make small holes in it on both ends with the egg pick, then you blow air through one hole into the egg. The egg will then drain out of the other hole, leaving just the egg shell that you can then carefully clean

    • @MrHouser79
      @MrHouser79 Před rokem

      Also. Theres a airpocket in every eeg. On the botom. If u make a hole on the underside the air can leave. Otherwise it might expand from the heat and the eeg break

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Před rokem

      lula123 your head might explode if the whole isn't big enough😂

  • @Itazu
    @Itazu Před rokem +2

    Wow this moderators are strange. Eierlikör, bunte Eier, Rückenspeck, Brathering, Schimmelkäse, Leberwurst, Teewurst.. everything is disgusting for them? I'm a Fischkopp from Nothern Germany and love all of this.
    - Eierlikör is delicious especially with the chocolate cups.
    - Bunte Eier are so convenient for breakfast.
    - Rückenspeck is used in many dishes to give extra flavour.
    - Brathering looks disgusting but is very tasty.
    - Schimmelkäse, Teewurst, Leberwurst (and other cheese and meat) are the best for a typical german evening meal with bread. Teewurst is also really nice for afternoon meal with tea - I prefer Hagebutte Tee (rosehip tea).

  • @guzziwheeler
    @guzziwheeler Před rokem

    German here: It is amazing how a channel showing an american guy watching and commenting videos about Germany skyrockets as this one. I spend hours reading the interessting comments.

  • @senker1544
    @senker1544 Před rokem +34

    A lot of things are weird in american supermarkets. You have fake cheese in bottles, that´s disgusting :D And alle the sugar and fat is also disgusting.
    I´m veggie since two years but back then i loved mold cheese and "Teewurst". Teewurst is a cream of meat and it tastes really good. I also loved raw pork on a "Brötchen" it´s phenomenal and called "Mettbrötchen" 😉

    • @erikstolzenberger1517
      @erikstolzenberger1517 Před rokem +2

      mein Beileid ;)

    • @anna-ranja4573
      @anna-ranja4573 Před rokem +1

      @Senker If I think about american grocery shops I also find these things weird: a spraycan with cheese, milk in a big container an 0,1 fat or so, no Quark, gigantic packages and tons of sugar in all products.

    • @kleinshui9082
      @kleinshui9082 Před rokem +5

      If you enjoyed Teewurst. The vegan variant from 'Rügenwalder' comes close to the original. At least from my memory, haven't eaten meat in 20 years. Might give it a try?

    • @LythaWausW
      @LythaWausW Před rokem +1

      I'm a wimpy American and I won't eat spreadable meat. The fact that you called it "cream of meat" reinforces my resolution: )

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +1

      @@LythaWausW check how sausages are made, it's just as much meat paste in a shell.
      Personally I prefer the less cut Teewurst, because it still somewhat resembles meat. add some mustard and it becomes a whole new thing.

  • @DJone4one
    @DJone4one Před rokem +3

    I love Mett. Nice with pepper and onions.
    I also like smoked eel, or sometimes a fish sausage. That's right, a fish sausage.
    In Bremerhaven there are several shops where you can get it. Either the salmon bratwurst (my favourite), or the catfish bratwurst. Bratwurst (sausage).
    Or also fish meatballs. I made some myself once. They're really tasty and healthy too.
    Oh Brat Herring tastes delicious too, just like rollmops. Rollmops is the version of herring without being fried. It is pickled in vinegar or something and skewered with gherkins and onions.
    And coarse country liver sausage with bacon bits. Also mega tasty and spicy. Maybe not for everyone. But if you eat a hearty sourdough bread with it. Mega hearty and delicious.
    Especially in autumn and weather, you always get ravenous for something like this, because it's hearty and savoury. It makes you full.

    • @andreamuller9009
      @andreamuller9009 Před rokem

      Och , hör auf , ich krieg Hunger... ich geh schnell mal nen mettbrötchen holen ....

    • @DJone4one
      @DJone4one Před rokem

      @@andreamuller9009 oder ein leckeres Krustenbrot mit landleberwurst, einfach 🤤

  • @trumpalumpa9368
    @trumpalumpa9368 Před rokem +2

    I would literarily eat everything on the list.
    I love this kind of food.

  • @patiplatsch83
    @patiplatsch83 Před rokem +2

    I love this supermarket. Was clubbing in that area when i was younger.
    Egg liqueur is the best. You can do it on ice cream, drink it with your granny.
    Old people always have tiny little cups made of chocolate especially for egg liqueur.

  • @CliveBilby
    @CliveBilby Před rokem +3

    Love Advocaat, they do a chocolate version you can spoon, but I prefer the original from the Netherlands. Fleischsalat is my favourite naughty treat in Germany, worth saying German mayo tastes different too, I'm in the UK.

    • @guzziwheeler
      @guzziwheeler Před rokem +1

      Finally, a british guy who knows about good food! (No offense).

  • @pyrointeam
    @pyrointeam Před rokem +3

    Oh wow these germans don't know anything... that was very weird for me.
    It's weird how the germans in this video are so negative about all these products.
    Boiled eggs are usually not that old because they are bought a lot, also they expire much later than raw eggs and of course have an expiration date.
    Egg liqour is very yummy if it has not too much alcohol, but it is awesome used in cake or as topping on chocolate or vanilla icecream.
    Pinching a little hole in the eggs bottom (wider end) does not destroy the egg inside (as long as you don't go too deep) because their is an air pocket. This air is bubbling out when you put the eggs in boiling water, because the egg expands, which is the the reason why eggs crack when put into boiling water too fast.
    Handkäse / Hatzer Roller is stinky but it's pure protein there is no other cheese which is protein only. Great for keto! If you can handle it 🤣🤣.
    Speck (pork belly or back fat) is used by cutting it and letting the fat out into the pan by frying it, you will have a pan full of "Schmalz" (lard) which you can use on bread with spices (like butter) tasting awesome or use to fry things in it (which tastes a hundred times better than frying in oil esp. steak). It is also used to cut it into sticks and put it into you long holes you cut into your roast beef or turkey for the oven, this prevents it from becoming dry and tough and enhances the flavor by 999%. It's like the difference between a cheap steak and a fat marbled Wagyu Beef Steak.
    Brathering is super delicious, its sour pickled hering like Bismarkhering (which is raw) but this one is fried and tastes even better, of course it looks bad from the outside becouse the skin is roasted (brown) but i tastes sooo good. (if you like fish and vinigar pickled things)
    Lachs is not only the german word for salmon but also for the fillet part of a cattle or pig. So no this has nothing to do with salmon, and doesn't look disgusting at all. It is the most leanest meat so very good quality. Lachsschinken is not salmon ham (like google messes it up) it is fillet ham (pork or beef).
    Sundried tomatoes are awesome, but every taste differs.
    Teufelröllchen is are sour pickles herings (like Bismarkhering) rolled with a spicy bell pepper or chili inside, Rollmöpse are the same but with a pickle/gherkin inside.
    Pepperoni unlike in the U.S. where it is the word for a sausage similar to Salami in Europe, in german Pepperoni is a kind of green chili/bellpepper with mild or medium hot spicyness.
    Roquefort is a very strong molded cheese made from sheep or goat milk and a fungi only found in caves of Roquefort (France).

  • @ankekhalil3956
    @ankekhalil3956 Před rokem +1

    Speck, the pig fat, you cut it into small dices, put it in a pan and fry it, until it gets golden brown, than you can put it on potato salad. It gives a nice taste and crunch to it.
    The fish (Brathering) are herring, which are fried with breading and than put into a sauce made of vinegar, salt, sugar onions and spices, so you can keep it for a long time.
    I really like them, together with potatos cooked in water with salt. They really are not gross.
    Lachsfleisch is actually the meat out of the back of a pig, without bones. It is only spiced and then smoked, but only shortly, so that you have to eat fast. The name comes from the color, which remindes of salmon.
    It tastes really good, when you buy it directly at a butcher's. But even packed like in a supermarked it is not bad.

  • @Thorsten2101
    @Thorsten2101 Před rokem +1

    Here is a little fact about what was found out about mold as early as the Middle Ages.
    In order to treat wounds that had become infected with bacteria, the resourceful healers made poultices from barley bread. The special thing about it is that the bread they used for it was intentionally left moldy beforehand. In order to treat wound infections, molds were cultivated on special culture media containing honey and sheep excrement, among other things. The doctors scraped off the fungi and placed them in the wound. You have to know that certain molds produce penicillin.

  • @lIIest
    @lIIest Před rokem +7

    we don't need an excuse to drink

  • @freddyyy2go683
    @freddyyy2go683 Před rokem +3

    the thumbnail is soo good 😍😍

  • @blackeyedincubus
    @blackeyedincubus Před rokem +2

    The Monster Wonder Ball is basically a jawbreaker but hollow and giant.
    I loved these as a kid, although the gum's flavor only lasted five minutes. 😅

  • @alexradojkovic9671
    @alexradojkovic9671 Před rokem +2

    12:30... Nothing wrong with stinky cheese... Penicillin also come from mould. 👍
    14:00... Dinner in Germany is called Abendbrot (Evening bread) because the meal consisted of bread and cold cuts.
    The hot meal of the day was traditionally had in the early afternoon.
    That's why there are many strange items available there that can be spread onto your evening bread.

  • @chrismuller9289
    @chrismuller9289 Před rokem +5

    don't pick an egg at both ends... never do that... pick it just at the bottom... ONE pick... pls ;-)
    Aber Kinders, all das Gezeigte ist gnadenlos lecker und nicht ist "ekelig"...was ist denn nur mit unserer Jugend los? Ihr hättet vor 50 Jahren nicht einen einzigen Tag überlebt 😁

  • @JensE95
    @JensE95 Před rokem +4

    Everything they showed is tasty and nice 😊

  • @Pentagon2004
    @Pentagon2004 Před rokem +1

    For information
    The Rückenspeck is used to enhance the flavor on roasts and other meat dishes
    You can, for example, before you put a meat loaf into the oven, lay some strip from the Rückenspeck onto the loaf, then you put it in the oven. Makes it taste better, and afterwards you can eat the strip of rückenspeck as they then are fried

  • @lightbeaver1902
    @lightbeaver1902 Před rokem +2

    Lachsfleich is actually a every specific cut of Bakon

  • @markz3708
    @markz3708 Před rokem +3

    @Ryan Do you have a p.o box where we can send some items from germany to so that you can try them ? Would be great if you could do some unboxing and trying out on your channel

  • @ann-kathrin7250
    @ann-kathrin7250 Před rokem +4

    Egg liquor is like egg nog 😅

    • @Sashimi1408
      @Sashimi1408 Před rokem

      It IS egg nog 😋

    • @ann-kathrin7250
      @ann-kathrin7250 Před rokem

      @@Sashimi1408 yes! That’s why I’m wondering they didn’t mention it

    • @Sashimi1408
      @Sashimi1408 Před rokem

      @@ann-kathrin7250 I've noticed tha the subtitles are often poorly or incorrectly translated. Maybe that's why lol.

    • @LythaWausW
      @LythaWausW Před rokem

      @@Sashimi1408 There are some important differences between the two. I love eggnog but would never drink Eierliquor after trying it a few times.

    • @Sashimi1408
      @Sashimi1408 Před rokem

      @@LythaWausW I would say that they're technically made the same way, but only differ in spices added to eggnog that Eierlikör does not have. It's a matter of taste I guess.

  • @pouncepounce7417
    @pouncepounce7417 Před rokem +2

    Astonishing how little the germans know about there own kitchen
    Spreadable saussage is making use of the not so good looking bits of meat.
    The raw looking meat is cured meat so some sort of beacon but made from normal meat.
    The pork fat is for frying and adding taste, or melted, recoled and on bread with salt, allow you to drink insane ammounts of alcohole.
    That asians consider brimed fish strange is somethign i consider strange, given how one of there most cheerished sauces is produced...

  • @lutzherbst3083
    @lutzherbst3083 Před 5 dny

    Pork back fat is used in Germany by cutting it into small cubes, frying it in a pan under heat, seasoning it with salt and onions, and then leaving it to cool. It is often eaten on bread, but without butter. Bacon slabs made from diced back fat, brown in color, are often used in salads, especially in potato salad.

  • @Blubbii
    @Blubbii Před rokem +3

    Ich schäme mich für diese unreife ignorante Art der 2 Moderatorinnen. Absoluter Kindergarten was sie gemacht haben. 😖

  • @ronnyseffinga7950
    @ronnyseffinga7950 Před rokem +3

    those two moderators arent Germans at all, they are aliens, because they dont know nothing about German food and drinks...

  • @Setzei89
    @Setzei89 Před rokem

    I love how Francisco picked the Sollbruchstellenverursacher 👍

  • @p.f.5718
    @p.f.5718 Před rokem +2

    verporten egg liqueur is the best of the best 😂 It’s so expensive you can only buy it in a little bottle. You have it to give over a cake, waffle or pancake heavenly. I am astonished the german woman don’t know it. If you bring it as a present I would marry you 😊
    Love from Austria 🇦🇹

  • @aphextwin5712
    @aphextwin5712 Před rokem +4

    Boy, you are missing out if you don’t eat mouldy cheese. They add flavour to what otherwise would be relatively bland soft cheese. The surface-ripened (“white mould”) varieties like Camembert are the beginner version, though there are some that can develop a strong flavour like Chaource. But blue cheese like Gorgonzola is cheese with the most intense flavour.

  • @martinklaus2203
    @martinklaus2203 Před rokem +9

    Teewurst is actually very tasty.

  • @Alex_49_YT
    @Alex_49_YT Před rokem +2

    Salmon is often eaten raw on bread, at least in Switzerland and I believe in Germany too. It is really popular and if you like salmon it is genuinely amazing.
    The mouldy cheese in the video was Roquefort which is a french delicacy. I heard that it is banned in the US because it is considered a possible health risk, however it is not. It is understandable though that many people find it gross including me, despite I like cheese a lot.

    • @aphextwin5712
      @aphextwin5712 Před rokem

      I particularly like raw salmon with cream cheese on nice bread.

    • @NicolaiCzempin
      @NicolaiCzempin Před rokem +1

      But salmon was not in the video, and not strange in the US.
      What was shown is "Lachsschinken"; smoked sliced ham that looks a bit like salmon, but it's called that because of the look and the (butcher jargon) part of the pig it comes from.

  • @nelerhabarber5602
    @nelerhabarber5602 Před rokem +1

    I LOVE Schimmelkäse, its soo tasty, you can eat it on bread and also cook with it. It comes most from France and a really good one is not cheap AND the best, its HEALTHY! Blue cheese contains many valuable minerals, trace elements (sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium) and vitamins (vitamins A, E and B2).Thanks to the lactic acid bacteria and noble moulds, amino acids, peptides and valuable proteins are formed, which act as oxidation inhibitors.

  • @oelboy
    @oelboy Před rokem +4

    Also what is up with these gals? They seem like they have never had a drink in their lives and are just spouting half truths in that first segment.
    Edit: this video is aggravating to watch lol. They have no idea about anything, the blonde just keeps reading random words from the packaging and they seem to be extremely picky eaters. And the subtitle translation is a bit off as well.
    Edit 2: I'm only half way in and I can barely stand continuing to watch. Thank you for reacting, otherwise I would've stopped watching and downvoted this video about a minute in. They should stick to eating toast and McDonald's hamburgers if they don't like any actual food. It's a disgrace.
    Edit 3: "Lachs" when not referring to the fish is a cut of meat and the correct English translation would be "fillet." These girls have no idea what they are talking about and now even managed to cast a shadow on smoked fillet ham...

  • @moppels.6589
    @moppels.6589 Před rokem +2

    Pork bacon is used to keep meat juicy while cooking. Either by larding (with a special knife, small cuts are made in the raw roast, into which sticks of bacon are stuck.) Or you put thin slices of bacon directly on the roast. With a turkey, you can slide thin slices of bacon between the skin and meat so that the breast can Roast does not dry out so much. In general, fat is a flavor carrier, which is why pork bacon can also be used in the cooking of soups or sauces, and of course also for terrines and pies, etc. As far as I know, it is not eaten raw. Salmon ham has nothing to do with fish. The word salmon stands for a specific, high-quality part of the pig from which this ham comes. The ham is smoked, extremely tender and extremely tasty. Liverwurst and Teewurst are just a few of the spreadable sausages that are available in Germany and Austria. I didn't even know that there were no spreadable sausages in the USA. Personally, I find them very tasty. I also like Mett very much, you just can't think about it being raw meat. A dream with salt, pepper and onions - but you should pay attention to good quality, preferably organic - and of course only eat fresh food.

  • @Naturask
    @Naturask Před rokem

    When I was a small child my mother once made me supper from the little we had at home that evening: a slice of bread with slices of this smoked white bacon and mustard. I loved it.

  • @pandabaerhellas
    @pandabaerhellas Před rokem +1

    Product:
    1)vegan egg liquor ( instead of egg)
    2)peppermint liquor
    3)wonderball (chewing gum with many layers of different coloured and tasting sugar around
    4)( harzer cheese is a 1% low fat cheese)
    5) just ready boiled snackeggs
    6)the egg picker makes a hole to the bubble inside the egg in order that the air inside the egg doesnt crack the shell
    7) smoked backbacon... used to give flavour it melts nearly 99% in the pan ( no acid)
    8) fried pickled harring ...looks better on plate. Eaten with fried potatoes
    9)lachsfleisch is just a kind of ham... just looks like red smoked salomon
    10) meatsalad ... is like a shredded wiener with mayo and pickled cucumber.
    11) dried tomstoes with spices
    12) french blue cheese
    13) sülze meat ang vegetables in a vinegarbrinejelly
    14) teewurst is a smoked sausagespread..tasty
    15)meatsalad again
    16) liverwurst is a spreaded wurst that contain a few liver... but not strog liver tasing
    17) meatspread mettbrötchen
    Raw porkmeat with salt and pepper ... done here with freshest high quality meat. Know your butcher!!!
    ... hope i did not forget something

  • @harryundheididallmeier8089

    I find it very problematic when people call food disgusting.
    Eggnog is traditionally drunk during the Christmas season, at Christmas markets or given over ice.
    This Pfeffi-Schnaps is only available in Berlin, Germany is not only Berlin, there are different foods in the different federal states.
    There are also many European influences in German cuisine.
    Maybe they would have taken someone who grew up in Germany to have German food explained to them.

  • @quattrotobi
    @quattrotobi Před rokem +1

    Brathering with warm potatoes and onions is awesome, she got no clue. xD

  • @spezifisch4468
    @spezifisch4468 Před 11 měsíci +1

    At least in northern Germany we fry the back fat and eat it with bread in winter. Tastes awesome and you get full quickly.

  • @SatieSatie
    @SatieSatie Před rokem +1

    Native Korean but I love Sülze (meat jelly), Leberwurst (liver sausage), Lachsschinken ("salmon" ham, contains no fish, it's pork), sometimes even Mett (raw hacked pork meat), mold cheese (Gorgonzola, Roquefort, Camembert, Brie etc. - not German tho').
    But you can chase me away forever with Rollmops or similar.
    I like Easy German for the most part but they seem to know shockingly little about... food in general.

  • @fckSashka
    @fckSashka Před rokem +2

    8:20 some people actually eat this raw on bread with raw garlic (also popular in eastern europe) lol. It’ll keep you healthy :)

  • @barskalin3464
    @barskalin3464 Před rokem +2

    Concerning mouldy cheese, have you ever eaten Camembert or Brie cheese? If so, then you have eaten mouldy cheese cause the white layer on the outside is an edible mould. 😉

  • @Kivas_Fajo
    @Kivas_Fajo Před rokem

    About the giant lollipop with a chewing gum in the center.
    The blond girl said literally while looking at it: "Oh, god, it is huge!" and I was just like: "That's what she said!" lmao

  • @1994ALLES
    @1994ALLES Před rokem +1

    ... i got raised on the words "you eat whats on your plate, no leavings" so ... i eat it all XD