Is British Food REALLY the Worst?

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • British food is bad. It looks bad, it tastes bad, they put beans on toast... There's no argument against that...right? Well, let's actually look into why British food is considered "bad" and see if there's any surprising silver lining to the cuisine.
    Subscribe for more videos in the future: bit.ly/3Jz0f2c
    SOCIAL MEDIA:
    Twitter - / itsmatthewli
    Instagram - / randomchino
    Credits:
    Producer - Matthew Li
    Production Assistant - Mana Chuabang
    Script Supervisor - Russ Medcalf
    Special thanks:
    Louis Govier
    Yusef Iqbal
    Yeevonne Lim
    Dylan Payne
    Taylor Hartley
    @frankielollia
    SOURCES:
    NPR - tinyurl.com/yyazajyk
    The Outline - tinyurl.com/mr24fdj3
    Tasting Table - tinyurl.com/y4dnfyzz
    ISSUU - tinyurl.com/h7fjnwms
    Reuters - tinyurl.com/kfcczebs
    International Elle - tinyurl.com/3k32mwm3
    TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 - Everybody hates British food
    0:53 - What do British people think of British food?
    1:49 - The answer is complicated
    2:31 - Did WW2 ruin British food?
    3:59 - Debunking the myth of "bad" British food
    5:24 - I made a toast sandwich to see if it's actually good
    7:07 - Why do the British eat beans on toast?
    8:30 - How Heinz took over Britain
    9:57 - The key to why British food is "bad"
    11:10 - The final reason why everyone makes fun of British food
    12:35 - What I think about British food

Komentáře • 394

  • @mygetawayart
    @mygetawayart Před 24 dny +17

    I say this as an Italian, British food doesn't deserve the hate. It's warm, comforting, cozy and hearty. It's the perfect food for a cold dreary day. Wholly underrated. Much love from italy.

  • @zupermaus9276
    @zupermaus9276 Před 5 měsíci +52

    Toast sandwich is NOT a thing in the UK - often mentioned as a joke. The fact it's actually from a real recipe in the 19th century is news to me!

    • @jr_8292
      @jr_8292 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Americans often don’t get these jokes

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Před měsícem +1

      @@jr_8292 yeah like beans on toast, i dont get that joke but brits seem to love canned beans on toast. they dont even cook their own beans lmao.

    • @yourbestpallshawn4139
      @yourbestpallshawn4139 Před 2 dny

      @@jr_8292eat your beans and bread bro

  • @patryksz.8910
    @patryksz.8910 Před 6 měsíci +95

    tbf for European standards of bad food, UK gets too much bad rep. Their neighbor across the sea, the Netherlands, has a much worse cuisine, possibly one of the blandest in Europe.

    • @uyennguyen-ey8sw
      @uyennguyen-ey8sw Před 6 měsíci +5

      lol yes went i visited there, i had no idea what to eat, cuisine in general was terrible, all i ate was herring lol and stuff at the supermarkets and markets!

    • @kattkatt744
      @kattkatt744 Před 6 měsíci +15

      Yes, soo happy to see somebody saying this. Much of Dutch food is horrible (or rather horribly execute), and just like the UK they rely on the foods from their former colonies to make up the difference.

    • @dynasty0019
      @dynasty0019 Před 6 měsíci +20

      Pretty much any Western European nation with a drinking culture has bland food.

    • @thesupervideogamenerdmore3171
      @thesupervideogamenerdmore3171 Před 6 měsíci +3

      They have hagelslag, untoasted bread with butter and chocolate sprinkles.

    • @MichouThe
      @MichouThe Před 5 měsíci +6

      I have to disagree, the netherlands has better snacks amd better pastry

  • @brainwheeze6328
    @brainwheeze6328 Před 6 měsíci +69

    As someone who's lived in the UK for a time and visited a lot of different parts of the country, I've had the pleasure to try a lot of traditional dishes (or at least ones informed by them), and many of them were delicious. Particularly the desserts!
    One thing I think has resulted in this stereotype is poor eating habits. Like you say in the video, cooking is often regarded as a chore in the UK, and as such a lot of people opt for ready-made meals and take aways. It's like that joke about "British Tapas" being nothing but fries, hash browns, nuggets, and beans, in other words, foods that are already prepared and which you only need to heat up.
    Like you Matthew one of my parents (in my case, mother) is from the UK, but I think she introduced me to all the wrong aspects of British cuisine and eating habits. If it wasn't for the fact that I grew up right next door to my Portuguese grandparents, then I don't think I would've had much in the way of proper meals!

    • @bushcrafty7274
      @bushcrafty7274 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Britain has longer work hours than the rest of Europe. Who wants to spend hours cooking when you get home?

    • @brainwheeze6328
      @brainwheeze6328 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Isn't the average work day 9-5?

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Před měsícem

      worst food i ever had in my life was in fancy london resturant.

  • @Searrows
    @Searrows Před 5 měsíci +31

    Toad in a hole, Bangers and Mash, Cornish Pasty, Steak Pie, Full English, Yorkshire pudding, England has many really delicious savory dishes. English cuisine also has a mean desert game.

    • @avruvimtu2204
      @avruvimtu2204 Před 5 měsíci +1

      No toad in a hole, ty

    • @JohnSmith-sm7ez
      @JohnSmith-sm7ez Před 4 měsíci +3

      Is! Beef Wellington not British? Love veggie wellingtons also,

    • @hailhummus
      @hailhummus Před měsícem

      British desserts are underrated!

    • @lawsontse1545
      @lawsontse1545 Před měsícem +2

      Delicious by UK standards you mean

    • @zakugodofwar1005
      @zakugodofwar1005 Před měsícem

      They are not good by international standards… even criminally bad Wagamama has endless lines outside all their door fronts. You walk around the high streets you can feel the Brits have terrible tastes. They like Sushi bars where warm salmon are served… Japanese will vomit.
      Fish and chips and ADB are okay but miles apart from French and Italian.
      The likes of Steak Pie and Yorkshire Pudding are serviceable at best, many of them are just awful.
      Yorkshire shouldn’t even be called a pudding. Pudding looks like this 🍮… god!
      Why even bother making Toad in a hole…or black pudding… Those aren’t even food.

  • @njackson1989
    @njackson1989 Před 6 měsíci +46

    from the UK, never heard of a toast sandwich before this video.

    • @njackson1989
      @njackson1989 Před 6 měsíci +2

      great video though.

    • @thesupervideogamenerdmore3171
      @thesupervideogamenerdmore3171 Před 6 měsíci +9

      It was a dish that was made as a desperate option for a depression of economics there. Bread was not that expensive, and it filled you up.

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 5 měsíci

      I think is because is so bad

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Před měsícem +1

      in the US, i thought beans on toast was a joke. turns out its real 🤮🤮🤮🤮

  • @ParadoxriftsAU
    @ParadoxriftsAU Před 6 měsíci +75

    I think the key missing component to British cuisine that will never translate to an international audience is the cold rainy weather. Most signature dishes that evolved on the British Islands did so in order to be both warm and filling. It isn't a cuisine that adapts well to warmer and drier climates in the same way that the appeal of a banana split is largely lost on people living within the Arctic circle.

    • @ditta7865
      @ditta7865 Před 6 měsíci +6

      That is why fish and chips is ready good in Australia because we have a dry weather. My Nana was from UK and loved the food here that was British but done by Oz's.

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 5 měsíci

      But France is 10 .
      And British is 0
      😂 And the Border

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 5 měsíci +1

      British food is like Soviet home there is only one color and one taste

    • @ggarlick46
      @ggarlick46 Před 5 měsíci +1

      The most popular cheese in the world is English cheddar. Stilton is also in the top 3. Best variety of pies in the world, best desserts. British food isnt posh and full of overfussy sauces like the French but it is very delicious. Look at the many videos on ytube of tourists, particulary from the US, they love our pub restaurants.@@carkawalakhatulistiwa

    • @hanifleylabi8071
      @hanifleylabi8071 Před 4 měsíci +13

      @@carkawalakhatulistiwa French food is the most overrated on the planet.

  • @user-xm9qy2hy4o
    @user-xm9qy2hy4o Před 2 měsíci +9

    Swedish people squeeze fish roe mixed in with mayonnaise from a tube onto crackers with hard boiled egg slices for breakfast. The only reason why Brits get a bad rep for food is because they are a more well-known country with a higher volume of tourism.

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Před měsícem

      you wont find a british restaurant or a scandanvain restaurant in the US. theyre both garbage.

  • @Justicsgenie
    @Justicsgenie Před 5 měsíci +21

    Honestly british cuisine has some great gems like beef Wellington

  • @erint5373
    @erint5373 Před 6 měsíci +41

    Homemade Sheppard's pie can't be beaten on a winter's day. But 100% this is due to Brits having lost their connection with their own food culture, not being able to cook properly and subsequently over relying on factory made prepared garbage.
    There are a lot of local dishes that are actually delicious, when someone who can cook takes the time to cook them well. Let's not mistake microwave lasagne for Italian food, or Heinz for the extensive sauce and fermentation traditions that existed in these isles for centuries.
    For reference I have British parents but grew up in Ireland & NZ- and moved to UK about 7years ago. My experience of Brits is that nobody has ever really taught them how to cook, and when someone does it's seen almost as extravagant or poncy/posh/showoff. If you want to eat well here you tend to cook at home a lot.

    • @reeseprince8
      @reeseprince8 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Speak for yourself

    • @avruvimtu2204
      @avruvimtu2204 Před 5 měsíci +3

      I noticed here and people who talk about "British" cuisine actually refer to *English* cuisine not British cuisine because *British cuisine as a whole is even RICHER*. English cuisine though is *Jagged Hared, Roast Beef, Jellied Eels (yeah they are pretty good with lots of chili vinegar and an acquired taste), Shepherd's Pie, Stargazey Pie, Toad-in-the-Hole (not like it but some ppl might), Banger n' Mash, Beef Wellington, Steak and Kidney Pudding, Fish and Chips (contrary to the emerging belief now it wasn't invented by Sephardic Jews, the English people eat those seperately on regular occasions, the Sephardics just added them next to each other and did essentually nothing), Windsor Soup, Lancashire Hotpot, Pork Pie etc.*
      The English cuisine is not poor.

    • @hanifleylabi8071
      @hanifleylabi8071 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@reeseprince8 it's true. Compared to France, Italy, mid east, Asian nations we just don't have a big cooking culture.

    • @reeseprince8
      @reeseprince8 Před 4 měsíci

      @hanifleylabi8071 it's 2023 I think people can cook anything they want from tesco we're not limited to just english ingredients but world wide foods and you'll be surprised how much we have compared to many other countries in that field so I guess its who you ask

    • @hanifleylabi8071
      @hanifleylabi8071 Před 4 měsíci

      @@reeseprince8 I'm not surprised, I know our supermarkets sell a lot more international ingredients. And of course people in places like Italy also use convenience type ingredients. But the food culture here is nothing like there or places like Thailand, Vietnam, Turkey, Lebanon etc

  • @Arkantos117
    @Arkantos117 Před 19 dny +8

    As a Brit I just assume that fellow Brits who think that British food is terrible just had mothers who couldn't cook.
    Our takeaways often suck yeah, but actual British meals/recipes are great. Anything can suck when put together by an unskilled person.
    Also beans on toast (usually with egg) is great but heinz are one of the worst brands for it these days.

    • @newtube7187
      @newtube7187 Před 14 dny +1

      Yep try Branston and the difference is amazing.

    • @rodrigoperalta822
      @rodrigoperalta822 Před 4 dny

      I find British food just too bland and simple compared to the cuisine of other countries that include a lot of sauces and vegetables to give a lot of flavor

    • @Arkantos117
      @Arkantos117 Před 4 dny +2

      @@rodrigoperalta822 I doubt you've even eaten much British food.

    • @yourbestpallshawn4139
      @yourbestpallshawn4139 Před 2 dny

      Eat your bean bread bro

  • @Midget881
    @Midget881 Před 6 měsíci +17

    I’m British I have never ever seen or heard of a toast sandwich

    • @yourbestpallshawn4139
      @yourbestpallshawn4139 Před 2 dny

      I love how this is the only problem y’all got with the video lmao eat your bean bread

  • @shanicestella2226
    @shanicestella2226 Před 6 měsíci +18

    But their Pie Culture is amazing

  • @lorrainemoynehan6791
    @lorrainemoynehan6791 Před 6 měsíci +28

    aside from food, the UK public transport is light years ahead of US. All cities and towns have public transport and rural areas have some buses. This does not exist in the USA outside of a couple of cities - mainly on east coast and Chicago, and none of them match average towns in the UK

    • @dereksheffield7412
      @dereksheffield7412 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Bruh there’s public buses for almost every city in the US

    • @JohnSmith-sm7ez
      @JohnSmith-sm7ez Před 4 měsíci +1

      British produce and food standards is world class.

    • @tabernathy0428
      @tabernathy0428 Před 3 měsíci

      Only poor people ride public transportation. Lol.

    • @lorrainemoynehan6791
      @lorrainemoynehan6791 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@tabernathy0428 ah yes of course, that old chestnut. You live somewhere built for cars not people. What a dated concept! How very 1950s. So many of the cars that are driven in the land of the free are bearly roadworthy and would not pass an MOT or equivalent in other European countries, but hardly surprising as the road surface and other infrastructures are substandard. Would you be surprised to learn that extremely wealthy people use pubic transport outside of the USA - because it works efficient
      I feel sorry for people who live in a place with so few options

    • @tabernathy0428
      @tabernathy0428 Před 3 měsíci

      @@lorrainemoynehan6791 Extremely wealthy people don't even fly with the public. They get their own jets and own yachts. They might get a driver at minimum.
      Only the poor sing the virtues of being crammed on public transit with the unwashed masses and mentally ill. Stop deluding yourself. Buy a nice car and enjoy your ride.

  • @jr_8292
    @jr_8292 Před 4 měsíci +8

    As a British person, I have never heard of a "toast sandwich"

    • @AaronOne-ch6op
      @AaronOne-ch6op Před 2 měsíci +2

      He obviously got confused with cheese toasty lol

    • @DevonRex116
      @DevonRex116 Před 12 hodinami

      You could always just try Google.
      It was a recipe in the Book of Household Management by Mrs Beeton.
      It was essentially a cheap way of getting calories into people - particularly invalids.

  • @awestruckbeaver3344
    @awestruckbeaver3344 Před 5 měsíci +27

    Ive found that British and many other more northern European cuisines are not based on fanciful flavours or colours. Its about being hearty and filling. Something to keep you warm on a bitter winters night

    • @kibaanazuka332
      @kibaanazuka332 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I remember someone describing Northern European food as more of "soul food" than there to just look pretty or dazzle, which isn't too far off from reality in my opinion.

    • @yourbestpallshawn4139
      @yourbestpallshawn4139 Před 2 dny

      There 10x better food for a cold day or night lmao

  • @timothyhill5150
    @timothyhill5150 Před 6 měsíci +7

    I’m British and have never heard of a toast sandwich.

  • @Ulfcytel
    @Ulfcytel Před 6 měsíci +10

    French cuisine was fashionable in Britain for a long period which coincided with the growth of modern literature and journalism. What we would now call influencers looked down on native (peasant or provincial) dining compared with the smart ideas from Europe. Thus we made our own bad rep.
    In recent years, that trend has been reversed, with media chefs emphasising more traditional cookery methods and ingredients. Plus the growth of country pub dining, which also reflects those more local influences.
    Incidentally, the wartime rationing regime was carefully designed by a group of young nutritionists to be well balanced and healthy within the limitations of the situation (the UK, even then, imported a lot of its food and was just coming out of a severe agricultural crisis during the preceding decade). Indeed, it was one of the best diets the nation has ever had. Rationing actually got worse in the years after the War, when the country was virtually bankrupt and had lost a lot of shipping.

  • @PolarPhantom
    @PolarPhantom Před 28 dny +3

    I'm honestly sick of jokes about English Food. Oh yeah, all our food's brown and yellow and grey. Never heard that one before. I find it very Classist, this idea we don't eat other colours, cause that sort of stuff is most often eaten in low income areas of the UK.
    Yes I am English.

  • @Tax_Collector01
    @Tax_Collector01 Před 6 měsíci +15

    As an American, I always wanted to try Fish ‘n’ Chips in a local British chips shop. Although I’ve had my fair share of it in the U.S., I believe the U.K. has something different to offer I have yet to get my hands on.

    • @dynasty0019
      @dynasty0019 Před 6 měsíci +12

      Fish and Chips with beer from the local pub is an absolute institution.

    • @Tax_Collector01
      @Tax_Collector01 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@dynasty0019 Noted, thanks for sharing.

    • @Midget881
      @Midget881 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@dynasty0019pub fish n chips are horrible

    • @martinscott-reed5379
      @martinscott-reed5379 Před 5 měsíci +5

      If you truly want the best fish & chips in the UK don't go to any inland chippy. The freshest cod and haddock will always be found in coastal chippies. The best I have ever tasted has been in Whitby at The Magpie Cafe.
      Fish & chips from a pub will always be sub par in comparison.

    • @Tax_Collector01
      @Tax_Collector01 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@martinscott-reed5379 I see, that makes sense…fish loses freshness the further the distance is required to transport them. Thanks for the recommendations.

  • @ulexite
    @ulexite Před měsícem +4

    A big one for me as others have mentioned is our climate and culture. We are a cold damp country, with (what used to be) solidly defined seasons and very early or late sunsets in those seasons. We natively grew a lot of veg, root veg and herbs. Our historic foods were game animals, deer, pig/boar, lamb, fish and dairy. So robust hearty and warming long cold night food is close to the the heart of british food as is/was seasonal cooking.
    When we eventually got spices the majority of recipes put them into our desserts/puddings as they were an expensive luxury back then and were showed off and shared, we also have a big culture of bread, baking, cakes, desserts and local bakeries. I think we can see a resurgence of british food in a lot of the gastro pub scene along side the food stall and makers markets, the damage is being undone to the trajectory of our cultural food thankfully. I love how much of a melting pot of food cultures we are now and can understand why it makes us look bad in comparison but if you find that local gastro pub in a hillside village somewhere with its seasonal, local farm sourced menu then you will get an idea imo. I always reccomend finding (a not snooty) real gastro pub to visitors. :D
    Final note, the war deffo played a huge part in things but something people dont know is our education system made food technology (cooking, home ec, etc) really difficult to access, the classrooms were seen as too expensive, kids had to bring in all own ingredients which parents couldnt afford then the class was made optional so whole generations arent getting the education unless its passed on via family which hasnt helped us in our home cooking where you normally find the culture.

  • @neiltrott6461
    @neiltrott6461 Před 4 měsíci +14

    I consider myself a massive "foodie" and have been fortunate to eat in many Michelin starred restaurants including 3 stars) and eaten in many of the world's best food destinations (Thailand, India, France, Spain, Italy and Greece being my pick). It's helped me get a good understanding of quality food and cookery. I cook all sorts of cuisines at home.
    I love cooking and eating British food as much as food from any of those places. On a dish vs dish comparison, the best of British is as tasty as the best of anywhere. I still struggle to think of a final meal i'd sooner have than a British roast dinner with "all the trimmings". It's truly wonderful food that also lets quality ingredients (if you choose them) actually be the stars of the show.
    What British food lacks in comparison to many top food countries, is variety of choice. We just haven't retained many dishes that are still made in the home of restaurants. Even regional dishes like Sussex Pond Pudding, scouse and Lancashire Hotpot are seldom seen on regional menus, let alone garner the national recognition they deserve. Dishes like Ham and pease pudding, faggots, panackelt rag pudding and potted shrimp are just amazing things to eat that most Brits have probably never even tried.
    If we actually started eat more of our own traditional dishes, maybe the world would start to realise that there is a wider and brilliant cuisine there and the ropey reputation will wane. We will never have a food culture as strong as india, Spain, Thailand or Italy but then, nor do many places. It can be so much better appreciated than the ill-deserved rep it has, though.
    Incidentally, when it comes to desserts (puddings), I genuinely think there are only a couple of countries (Italy and France) that can beat the British. Where we lack variety in our main courses, we more than make up for in that area. The world-class British desserts are something that seem to go ignored when discussing our supposedly awful cuisine.

    • @Lixmage
      @Lixmage Před měsícem +3

      Finally some sanity - these five paragraphs contain more wisdom than Mr Li's ENTIRE video!

    • @ajaxtelamonian5134
      @ajaxtelamonian5134 Před měsícem +1

      With Roasts though there are a lot of shit ones as someone born in Sussex who's actually from Sussex I've made pond pudding and that was really good.

    • @martinsanchez4827
      @martinsanchez4827 Před 7 dny +2

      Someone having a nuance opinion on British food, I can't believe it.

  • @ichibanmanekineko
    @ichibanmanekineko Před 6 měsíci +37

    British food it's not bad and at this point it's lazy to say it is.......

    • @yourlastfoe
      @yourlastfoe Před měsícem +3

      Yes, it is. I visited there a month ago and for the second time. Traditional food is the only thing I don't like about Britain. For some reason even the Chinese food there doesn't taste like it does in the U.S. The only food that was amazing there was a chicken shawarma from some small Arab place. It was actually the best one I ever had.

    • @yedead1
      @yedead1 Před měsícem +1

      @@yourlastfoe All those places have something that britain natively doesn't and the reason why they have more flavour and colour and thats herbs and spices, the only real herbs that natively grow here are things like wild mint, fennel, garlic, onion and horseradish. Spices come from from hot countries which is why asian and middle eastern cuisine incorporate it, if spices weren't there then their cuisine would be just as bland as ours.

    • @TrevM0nkey
      @TrevM0nkey Před měsícem +6

      @@yourlastfoe you say 'for some reason even the Chinese food there doesn't taste like it does in the US'. That's because it's not supposed to. Chinese food in the US and the UK, won't taste like it does in China. When the Chinese settled in a country and started to open restaurants, they had to modify the taste to that of the locals otherwise they'd have gone bankrupt. You may prefer US Chinese food and that's because it's been aimed towards your tastebuds, but it may not actually be nicer, it's nicer to Americans. It's the same with Indian food; in the UK we have BIR which is British Indian Restaurant, and again it's aimed at our tastebuds compared to Desi which is the traditional way of cooking.
      That probably goes for the traditional British food as well, it's not necessarily that it's bad, but it's not to your taste from the food you're used to eating.
      Americans find it strange that we have beans on a breakfast whereas I find it strange Americans have pancakes with bacon and egg; is one wrong or are they both different and aimed at different tastes.

    • @93seronica
      @93seronica Před 21 dnem +1

      @@yourlastfoeI agree, I had a shawarma from a small place called Taza and it was delicious!

    • @yourlastfoe
      @yourlastfoe Před 19 dny

      @@TrevM0nkey I've been to China, the food taste exactly like it does here (for the most part, there's street food there I wouldn't touch). And if you think most Americans eat pancakes, eggs and bacon for breakfast, then you're VERY wrong. For Indian food from anywhere, no thanks. I've also been to South America, the food taste exactly the same as South American restaurants here. Your theory is off. Traditional British food is simply not good to the overwhelming majority of people not from there.

  • @ashhabimran239
    @ashhabimran239 Před 29 dny +2

    Ngl, most of the time it just feels like a stereotype created and perpetuated by Americans (who are notorious for stereotyping) who've never been anywhere near the UK, or if they had, they had their view shaped by ONE bad experience. Definitely pales compared to other cuisines, but the simplicity and comfort of it works for many. Also thought it was weird how other countries can have odd food combinations that look weird to the rest of the world and most people wouldn't bat an eye

  • @JamesCorp
    @JamesCorp Před 5 měsíci +4

    The reason for American stereotype of British food is bland is because of world war 2 when Americans where stationed in the uk and the uk was under rations so people had to make food last longer and use what they had available, so lots of boiled and bland food because of it.

  • @TaleOfTheToaster
    @TaleOfTheToaster Před 6 měsíci +8

    I'm English and I'd never heard of a toast sandwich until this year. You're mostly on the money though, the only part that's truly disagreeable is the UK having worse public transport than the US and that wasn't even a food opinion

  • @itsthequeenfatima
    @itsthequeenfatima Před 6 měsíci +9

    I really admire this series! I am learning a lot! Keep it up!

    • @Lixmage
      @Lixmage Před měsícem

      Shame the video is ill-informed, distorted and basically wrong.

  • @ramiro535
    @ramiro535 Před 6 měsíci +4

    This is my favorite niche youtube content creator. Thank you!

  • @harryjcurtis
    @harryjcurtis Před 6 měsíci +19

    I think the reputation is at least part self-made. There seems to be more of a tendency among British people to write off more everyday dishes as not rising to the level of a national 'cuisine' than exists in other European countries.
    Also, I wouldn't say there's a huge gulf between versions of what are essentially the same dish that exist in both British cuisine and French/other European cuisines, e.g. Shepherd's/Cottage Pie vs. hachis parmentier, or Lancashire hotpot vs. pot-au-feu. Take the filling out of a steak and ale pie, and you've got something comparable to boeuf bourguignon that's less fussy in its preparation and substitutes the alcohol used in the preparation.
    The fussiness of the preparation and the mystique that's been built up around the French counterparts naturally count for something, but it's a product of France itself taking its cuisine more seriously and having a better branding exercise for its food. Britain hasn't really done that for whatever reason.

  • @chrisdowdle1
    @chrisdowdle1 Před 4 měsíci

    well done matt. great stuff. look forward to more.

  • @wessexdruid7598
    @wessexdruid7598 Před 13 hodinami

    "It's July and it's cold!" Americans never seem to understand that the UK is at the same latitudes as Newfoundland and Alaska.
    That is why we need comfort food.

  • @carltaylor6452
    @carltaylor6452 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I've heard of a toasted sandwich, but never a toast sandwich. Brits will put pretty much anything between two slices of bread - for good reason - and even have fried bread for breakfast, or bread pudding for dessert, but putting toasted bread between bread sounds like someone is pulling your leg! 🙃

    • @ElDerpy
      @ElDerpy Před 4 měsíci +1

      It was a thing in some areas due to poverty in the 1800s. Usually bread fried in beef dripping (you've had fried bread, right?). Until the foodbanks thing, I doubt anybody but students and stoners bothered with it in the last 60+ years.

  • @ditta7865
    @ditta7865 Před 6 měsíci +8

    I have some old English country cooking books and I have cooked stuff for my foreign friends that keep shitting on English food then I say did you like your British food? Which they are shocked to find this out and I must show them the old books. The old dinner meals mixed of poor and upper class is good. You must find the ones that have never left or stood the test of time in a country kitchen. Find a good old English country book and cook something you might something you like.
    I am also getting sick of everyone being like we do not have to be kind to people because of the past. Really that would count the whole world in that bucket, and I think this generation is depressed enough as it is and falling into a blackhole is not a good idea. We need to move on. Remember the past, but do not blame it or it will be a black cloud over your head. I know this from my grandparents going through World War II and telling me some stories which had a lot of death of all around them. they also told me not to hate because you hate yourself and everyone around you then it makes your world darker.
    I am not trying to be meant, but I find this happening a lot now days and it is sad.

  • @yourbestpallshawn4139

    British people love there beans but hate the dentist

  • @lorrainemoynehan6791
    @lorrainemoynehan6791 Před 4 měsíci +2

    regardless of food, you stated that public transport in the UK is worse than the US. Where did this information come from? It clearly isn't true. It is possible to travel the entire country without a car - trust me, I know, I don't own one. It is also impossible to function as a citizen in the US, get to work/school/work, then shop for groceries, have a social event and return home using public transport outside of possibly 3 or 4 cities

  • @hanifleylabi8071
    @hanifleylabi8071 Před 5 měsíci +6

    British fokf is great when cooked well using great british produce. The problem is that good quality food isn't valued like it is in say Italy or Thailand.
    Many brits eat to live rather than living to eat so it's not uncommon for people to be pretty bad cooks.
    But if you look at our lamb, cheese, jams, chutneys, pies etc we have some amazing produce and recipes.

  • @aikidoshi007
    @aikidoshi007 Před 6 měsíci +6

    Bollocks! There's nothing better than sausages, baked beans and chips, or Shepherds Pie, or fish & chips, or Roast Beef/Lamb/Pork, or a Pie Floaters, not to mention all the hundreds of types of bread, pies, cakes and pastries. That's just scratching the surface.

    • @evemarie1605
      @evemarie1605 Před 5 měsíci

      You forgot to mention haggis and curried chicken plus the British invented currywurst after WW2 to feed hungry Berliners. Btw, some Brits are obviously cannibals:- they eat fruit cakes!

    • @ggarlick46
      @ggarlick46 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Best cheeses in the world as well Stilton and especially Cheddar the most popular cheese in the world. Apple pies are also British...not American.

    • @dannyblanchflower1882
      @dannyblanchflower1882 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@ggarlick46 Apple Pies are British? I never knew that. That's an iconic American dish. I'll remember that next time I hear an American complain about British food.

  • @markh4507
    @markh4507 Před měsícem +2

    As for British food is was far healthier before the arrival of certain US chains. Whilst the UK has a lot of very good local produce and is home to the largest lobster, crab, and shell fish ports in Europe. Similarly the UK is home to good quality fruit and veg, as well as fresh water fish such as salmon and some of the. Best quality meat and cattle to be found anywhere. The U.K. Is also Ho,e to numerous fine dining and Michellin starred restaurants, as well as an abundance of 5 star hotels.

  • @augth
    @augth Před 6 měsíci +3

    The industrial revolution and its consequences...

  • @HeatherLandon227
    @HeatherLandon227 Před dnem

    Beans on Toast is DELICIOUS!

  • @Whinenrages
    @Whinenrages Před 5 měsíci +3

    Ahh stereotypes like the one about Americans being as thick as two short planks.

  • @alicemi4144
    @alicemi4144 Před měsícem

    As a French, I can say I was impressed by the Toast sandwich

  • @EZXSniperZzz
    @EZXSniperZzz Před 6 měsíci +2

    We probably work less than peasants. A lot of work in terms of maintaining the house, getting firewood, open fire cooking, preserving food, taking care of animals, and even more basic stuff like clothes isn't counted by the book/study that popularized that idea. It was so much work, large families were needed (aside from the likelihood of death.)
    No joke, the washing machine was considered one of the great liberators of women because household chores ate a lot of time. That doesn't even account for them making/repairing clothes back in those days too.
    Heck farming for your own food isn't counted. The work that was counted in that study was the work required to exist on that land, aka, the rent work from your lord.
    None of what I mentioned may not sound like work, until you do it the old fashion way.
    And other studies suggest the amount of days worked for the lord is comparable.
    That study also forgets how lords treated the peasants. If it was nice, and there was way less work back then, they probably would not have rebelled as often as they did.

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Před měsícem

      probably eat worse than peasants too. at least they cooked their own beans.

  • @inegom1735
    @inegom1735 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I think one of our problems for perpetuation of the steretype is we have a lot of poor chain restaurants and food outlets which cater more to convenience than taste. I have had fantastic street food and small diner food across the world and you tend not to get that quality and love in the food here unless you find a gem or go to a good restaurant.
    Brits tend not to eat out anything near as much as the US or many other countries, so the real quality british food is cooked at home with recipes passed down through generations. Sadly this means most visitors don't get to encounter our wonderful foods. (There is also a whole other discussion on losing our cooking skills as a nation and losing these great foods, which i believe is also common across much of the western world).
    Seasoning wise, traditional british food uses local herbs and seasoning. These tend to be more subtle, earthy and peppery, rather than punchy and spicy by the nature of our climate.
    Good meat is also key. Britain had high quality meat in abundance during the rise of our nation, so we largely let the meat speak for its self with some herbal accents tis meant a lack of a need to develop interesting sauces etc to support the foods taste. Unfortunately meat has lost quality in mass production and we still season the same, so this can be why our food is sometimes on the blander side. But with a good leg of lamb, some rosemary and garlic; some carrots, onion and potatoes roast with sage and thyme... you have an amazing dish worthy of praise.

  • @capeverdeanprincess4444
    @capeverdeanprincess4444 Před 4 měsíci +2

    In terms of cooked food, British aren’t the best (prefer American, Brazilian, Jamaican, Cuban cooked food)
    However, British have the best desserts and chocolate I have ever had, in my opinion better than France.

  • @Eldiran1
    @Eldiran1 Před 5 měsíci +2

    British cuisine evolve like that but some other european country like France and Italy still protect their cuisine to this day. I've really glad, and to be honest a little proud that , as a french, we are able to do it. Food is still an important part of my culture and i know foreigner (at least the one i meet) that is weird that we can spend hours to eat at a restaurant or at a family diner. But that's what make France what it is i think.
    Also some say that we are weird to speak a lot about food when we eat, i dunno if it's true but you tell me.

    • @avruvimtu2204
      @avruvimtu2204 Před 5 měsíci

      I noticed here and people who talk about "British" cuisine actually refer to English cuisine not British cuisine because British cuisine as a whole is even RICHER. English cuisine though is Jagged Hared, Roast Beef, Jellied Eels (yeah they are pretty good with lots of chili vinegar and an acquired taste), Shepherd's Pie, Stargazey Pie, Toad-in-the-Hole (not like it but some ppl might), Banger n' Mash, Beef Wellington, Steak and Kidney Pudding, Fish and Chips (contrary to the emerging belief now it wasn't invented by Sephardic Jews, the English people eat those seperately on regular occasions, the Sephardics just added them next to each other and did essentually nothing), Windsor Soup, Bubble and Squeek, Lancashire Hotpot, Pork Pie etc.
      The English cuisine is not poor.

    • @Eldiran1
      @Eldiran1 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@avruvimtu2204 Every french know that roast beef is from england, this food is basicaly the nickname of english people since Napoleon! (As a teenager, i was surprise that englishman didn't eat roast beef more often)
      For the other names, i'm kinda confused. I didn't even know half of them.Why is it named "Toad in the hole" if they aren't any toad in this meal ?
      Anyways, a question still stand. Why aren't more english restaurant or even more young british who are proud of their cuisine like in france and italy ? I'm not sure i would like some of these meal but to be honest i didn't even know they existed before now, so maybe i shouldn't judge a book by it's cover.
      Maybe it's like what a german guy once said to me. Here we like your meal but when we go out, we want to try something new. We don't want to eat at the restaurant what we can already have at home.

    • @neiltrott6461
      @neiltrott6461 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@Eldiran1 There are no toads. It's made with sausages and a Yorkshire pudding batter, normally some fresh thyme or rosemary and sometimes red onion with the sausages. You then bake it so the pudding has risen and the sausages cooked. You'd serve it with steamed veg and a red wine, onion or ale gravy.
      Not sure on the etymology and why a sausage became "toad".

  • @MS-37
    @MS-37 Před dnem

    It’s climate. A lot of a countries cuisine is based on what was available.

  • @pastedsmiley
    @pastedsmiley Před 6 měsíci +11

    Lived in London for a bit as a poor student. Beans on toast with some scrambled eggs on the side, boom. Cheap and filling.

  • @HYPERIONNakayama
    @HYPERIONNakayama Před 2 měsíci

    Bro, where are all the views at? These videos are really good 👍

  • @vivianidelacerda9708
    @vivianidelacerda9708 Před 7 dny

    Yes sir... beans and toast, my goodness...

  • @markh4507
    @markh4507 Před měsícem +2

    I would suggest you look at the facts regarding some of the stats you use. In terms of British public transport the vast majority is related to heavy regional rail and not light rail,, whilst I would also examine the OECD functional area status as opposed to actual cities.

  • @ThisWontEndWell
    @ThisWontEndWell Před 6 měsíci +5

    Grew up on stews, roasts, shepherds pie, mince and onion, chicken and leek pie, sausage and mash fish and chips are the perfect foods for a cold wet island, beans on toast is a quick snack you make to get yourself through till dinner Americans obsess about it on CZcams it's the Brit equivalent of how Americans would use Kraft Mac and Cheese.

  • @dan1579
    @dan1579 Před 6 měsíci +12

    I said it once I’ll say it again, you are an insanely underrated Creator!
    The quality of your content and the level of insight you bring with your research. Your storytelling. It’s second to none.
    You will go far in the content space. I can’t wait to see you blow up the next few years.
    Sending this to my boi Brad in the UK right now.

    • @Lixmage
      @Lixmage Před měsícem +1

      This whole video is utter crap...

  • @formxshape
    @formxshape Před 6 měsíci +2

    The toast sandwich is two slices of toasted bread, then buttered and then add stuff! Like ham between the slices. What you made seems to be a joke…

  • @paulhorgan6152
    @paulhorgan6152 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Mate you as an American really need.as an American education being a country that doesn't believe there are no other ❤😢

  • @vickytaylor9155
    @vickytaylor9155 Před 24 dny

    Roast dinners can’t be beaten.

  • @Piratesaregay12322
    @Piratesaregay12322 Před 6 měsíci +9

    I went to the UK and I thought the food there was pretty good actually.

  • @McWaffles86
    @McWaffles86 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Toast on toast ? What lol I’ve live in UK all my life and never heard of that one.
    Btw Asian food gives you a smelly ass

  • @martinscott-reed5379
    @martinscott-reed5379 Před 5 měsíci +1

    You did not butter that toast sandwich. You waved the butter over it to tease it, then took it away. I'm 58 and have never heard of a toast sandwich.

  • @woltews
    @woltews Před 6 měsíci +4

    1- England traditionally had access to more meat than continual Europe did and so needed to do fewer showy things with vegetables
    2- England had more rain and a cooler climate, so warm hearty foods were more important than a salad or fruit dish
    3- England welcomed in a lot of other cultures the fish and chips is actually from Jewish refuges , the Indian and Asian foods the Caribbean foods from its vast empire. And unlike say the French that made a big deal about trying to preserve native foods the English embraced the best of many cultures, for example there is no commite to protect the English language .
    4-As you go farther north preserving food becomes more important and thats why English , Scottish , German , Scandinavian , Polish foods have more preserved foods . This is because you cant just go out to the garden and get whatever is fresh because for part of the year there is nothing fresh and the preserved foods are not as vibrant and colourful as the fresh stuff
    5-English women moved out into the work force before a lot of other nations and that ment no one was home to cook an elaborate meal , so they needed simple things that could be prepared quickly when both people got back from work

  • @caffeinerequired3136
    @caffeinerequired3136 Před měsícem

    Haggis bites is whisky sauce, cottage pie, macaroni pies sausage rolls steak bakes, beans on toast with chedder cheese, mice round with mash and gravy, haggis pizza, Britten loves donner wraps too, Sunday roast, jumbo sausage, sausage and mash with onions and gravy peas on the side

  • @bobbobertbobberton1073
    @bobbobertbobberton1073 Před měsícem

    The problem with British food is that it looks horrible, so people see it and are instantly turned off without actually eating it. British food is not the best but its still great. Also people have to understand that ALL food was this bad, before the Portuguese and the British brought Potatoes, Tomatoes and Spices to the the WORLD. Indian food would be nowhere without the Portuguese and the Brits, same with Italian food etc. We brought that shit to the world, the only reason why it didn't catch on was because Britain was too cold a sunless of a climate to actually grow all the shit (except for potatoes) we gave to the rest of the world.

  • @TheJohnboyhunter
    @TheJohnboyhunter Před 5 měsíci +1

    "Nando's is overrated"
    Nando's is South African, not British.

    • @TrevM0nkey
      @TrevM0nkey Před měsícem +1

      Tell Nando's that. Their website says "Born in South Africa with a blend of Portuguese and British culture."

  • @AndyBHome
    @AndyBHome Před 6 měsíci +1

    Totally uninformed opinion here: I would have guessed that Victorian era industrialism was the driving force behind British people losing their interest in food in general. People's focus shifted from enjoying life at home to focusing on the workplace, science, technology, and industry. Additionally the Victorian era emphasis on standardization made consistency a higher priority than flavor, or even enjoyment. I do think that British food is underrated, but I also think there are a lot of British people, as there are a lot of Americans, who have absolutely abominable taste in food. More precisely, I think they have very poor food sense or knowledge. They can't cook. French, Italians, Spanish all typically have very good knowledge of how to cook, what to do with ingredients, what things make good combinations and what don't. It's very common for British people to want to put things together that people from those other countries are appalled by. Ultimately i think the British culinary deficit is a product of a lack of knowledge. Why that is I can only guess, but ultimately I think it's literally most education and experience, or the lack thereof.

  • @RJL604
    @RJL604 Před měsícem

    British fish n chips is on another level (and our transport) we got chippys is every town, its cheap (where i am) being able to feed you for hours and my mum saw johnny depp JOHNNY DEPP in my local chippys..

  • @jeddvillaspin3379
    @jeddvillaspin3379 Před 2 měsíci

    Beef Wellington is the only best british food I know.

  • @yetidodger6650
    @yetidodger6650 Před 6 měsíci +2

    'Nando's is over rated'. Nando's ain't British ffs.

    • @reeseprince8
      @reeseprince8 Před 5 měsíci

      It's like saying pizza isn't American

    • @EasyPeasy_Japanesey
      @EasyPeasy_Japanesey Před 5 měsíci +1

      Brits don't have any good food. That's why they're always claiming nandos and Indian food as their food.

    • @TrevM0nkey
      @TrevM0nkey Před měsícem +1

      have a read on the Nando's website... under their About Us: Food, section is says "Born in South Africa with a blend of Portuguese and British culture."

  • @filipeareias3265
    @filipeareias3265 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Anyone who eats Portuguese food is unlikely to like English food

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto1654 Před 2 měsíci

    I think you underestimated the impact of food rationing for the Brits. It effectively made British food very bland, especially the effect of the strict rationing of food from 1945 to 1954. Indeed, it wasn't until the late 1990's that the British started to re-discover how to make proper cheeses using formulas from the 19th Century.

  • @LilDucki
    @LilDucki Před měsícem

    You made a video about food and only ate 3 slices of bread... nice

  • @haruzanfuucha
    @haruzanfuucha Před 4 měsíci

    British food is overhated. Chinese, Mexican, and Indian are undervalued. Japanese and French are overrated. Peruvian and Ethiopian are underrated.

  • @-Blackberry
    @-Blackberry Před 21 dnem

    Why do people think chicken tikka masala is THE british national dish? Who decided this, when and why? Sure it's a popular dish and invented supposedly in the UK but why is it given precedence over British dishes and other indian origin dishes for that matter.

  • @hailhummus
    @hailhummus Před měsícem

    A sunday roast (lots of nice vegan options now too) with a whopping yorkshire pudding, finished off with sticky toffee pudding is the definition of comfort eating

    • @ajaxtelamonian5134
      @ajaxtelamonian5134 Před měsícem

      No there aren't. If you don't eat meat in England a lot of people still act as if you've descended from a spaceship.

    • @hailhummus
      @hailhummus Před měsícem

      @@ajaxtelamonian5134 When I lived there I found plenty of places that served vegan sunday roasts, and plenty of restaurants with good vegetarian/vegan options. That's my experience. If you live in a place where that's not true, that's fine, but luckily for me not what I experienced.

    • @ajaxtelamonian5134
      @ajaxtelamonian5134 Před měsícem

      @hailhummus To be fair i just despise nut roast its just like sage and onion stuffing most of the time bland, flavourless and dry, and takes three weeks to swallow. With the dreaded ever present mushroom burger just waiting round the corner. So bland and uninspired. Not all places, though tbf Once you get somewhere, the demographic is under 60s it is better.

  • @MortemerRouge
    @MortemerRouge Před 6 měsíci +4

    Tbf, as a lifelong American... and a life long cook... American food does actually suck though, we've very few dishes that aren't just grease and salt.

    • @neiltrott6461
      @neiltrott6461 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Creole food is the real American food and is wonderful. Your BBQ scene is one of the best in the world. Your average American diner though, is serving up absolute crap sadly.

  • @yourbestpallshawn4139

    Short answer is yes

  • @youtubeuserremainsanonymou9022

    I think the description of british food as comfort nails it. It is not interesting but very cozy.
    However there is a point you missed. Some countries have a greater capacity to use non-starchy vegetables in a fun, flavorful way. England has few nonstarchy vegetable recipes people want. They are way better at dessert than America,

  • @zura7074
    @zura7074 Před 2 měsíci

    this is mostly english food, not british, you are missing quite a few recipies from wales ireland and scotland here

  • @Moemuntz
    @Moemuntz Před 6 měsíci +14

    Thank god for immigrants. They enrich our cultures. I’m one of those that don’t like my own cuisine. Immigrants and foreign exposure is a blessing.

    • @rarekev9332
      @rarekev9332 Před 6 měsíci +1

      You joined CZcams 17 years ago? Jesus Christ 😅

    • @Moemuntz
      @Moemuntz Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@rarekev9332 yeah probably signed up before 1st anniversary or right after.

    • @urmum3773
      @urmum3773 Před 2 měsíci

      We've got the recipes, they can go home now

  • @avis-javis2146
    @avis-javis2146 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Your editing, storytelling and quality is stellar.

  • @AndrewBroadhead-kb7oc
    @AndrewBroadhead-kb7oc Před 5 měsíci

    The toast sandwich recipe existed in a cookbook by Mrs Beeton in 1861 - and then disappeared. It hadn't existed in the UK for over 150 years. It didn't exist because of rationing caused by either world war - nobody had every heard of it, certainly nobody ever ate it. Then, in 2011, so 150 years after it disappeared from history, the Royal Society of Chemistry re-discovered the recipe and recreated it - as a laugh. To try and create the "cheapest sandwich ever". Not to try and reintroduce this recipe to public knowledge so that the British public would eat it. It's still not a real dish that anybody in Britain eats - or has eaten in (now) over 162 years.

  • @Yexito
    @Yexito Před 6 měsíci

    1:17 No Truer words have ever been spoken.

  • @ecos889
    @ecos889 Před 4 měsíci +4

    If you want to explore great British food, avoid London, unless you are Rich and can afford to go to actual high-class restaurants, as it's filled to the brim with Tourists traps that will overcharge you, use the lowest quality ingredients and cheapen on literally everything, try somewhere else like Edinburgh, which still has traps but less than London, if you want somewhere with old history. For more modern history though and better and more affordable food there is always Manchester which has a really good food culture and Liverpool which is really close to each other too and Chester is also close to them and you want a taste of history and is a cute little city that has some amazing places to dine at. Also vesting those three places would still be way cheaper than London by likely thousands when it comes to spending money and less crowds to deal with.

  • @wilshirebloke
    @wilshirebloke Před 6 měsíci

    fr

  • @maxgregorycompositions6216
    @maxgregorycompositions6216 Před 6 měsíci +11

    British food is amazing.

  • @glazersout4272
    @glazersout4272 Před 9 dny

    Heinz Beans on the thumbnail, as though tinned crap is representative of UK food? Really? Obviously never tried some real fish and chips, fresh caught down at the coast...

  • @homsey
    @homsey Před 4 měsíci

    subscribed

  • @Thomes-Maisling
    @Thomes-Maisling Před 13 dny

    Are you sure you didn't invent up toast sandwich as a thing? I promise you British people don't eat that.

  • @newtube7187
    @newtube7187 Před 14 dny

    Branston beans are way better,heinz taste bland and a thn sauce.

  • @leroyjenkins4811
    @leroyjenkins4811 Před 13 dny

    The video started off ALL wrong. What’s that at 00:30? Looks like somebody put a big ‘ol turd on top of a salad and shoved it into a to go box! Looks like one of them multicolored turds with several different layers from different meals too!

  • @KaziShumon
    @KaziShumon Před 5 měsíci

    awesome

  • @maruf.ahmed6432
    @maruf.ahmed6432 Před 25 dny

    OG British food was and is really bad. Whatever Good Food now exist in Britain has originated from abroad for obvious historical reasons.

    • @martinsanchez4827
      @martinsanchez4827 Před 7 dny +2

      I don't get comments like this, didn't you watch the video?

  • @bessycorrales6405
    @bessycorrales6405 Před 5 měsíci

    I’m a huge fan of beans, and enjoy the combo of beans and toast. Have always wanted to try British beans on toast I have to say that I’m not a fan. The beans were extremely bland.

  • @TaoistYang
    @TaoistYang Před měsícem

    I would like to know just where all those Britian is getting worse stats are from! You must have REALLY dug around for those bad stats. Transit worse than the US - look again!
    Toast sandwich - NEVER heard of it, let alone seen it! It's not a thing.
    Our food isn't bad but we are next to France - a country that has consistantly bigged itself up food-wise.
    We don't live in the mediteranean so haven't traditionally had access to the same range of ingredients (not that we didn't introduce many of those ingredients to Europe!)
    Also bear in mind our traditional fair is more filling than fancy, plus our food has been global for centuries.
    People should try it (and not the wierd international versions of it either.)

  • @bushcrafty7274
    @bushcrafty7274 Před 4 měsíci

    Its because posh food is expensive. Thats it.
    Also the long work hours in the UK, who has time to spend hours in the kitchen? No thanks.

  • @calex9398
    @calex9398 Před 6 měsíci

    Heyooooooo 🙌

  • @shanicestella2226
    @shanicestella2226 Před 6 měsíci

    I think the British and the Germans are more alchohol foward country , And even their own alchohol also considered as cultural icon

  • @mikacossey1319
    @mikacossey1319 Před 13 dny

    Nando’s isn’t British it South African 😂

  • @iTz_Nao
    @iTz_Nao Před 2 měsíci

    NGL food in the US and the UK is pretty similar.

  • @pdcookstar
    @pdcookstar Před 19 dny

    Heinz a very American name not german at all!

  • @Boogie3D
    @Boogie3D Před 6 měsíci +60

    Yep, UK eats like the Germans are still flying overhead. And also it is one of the two nations (the other is Netherlands) which sold spices to the rest of the world, but forgotten to bring it to their own.

    • @frenchcookerysnob8251
      @frenchcookerysnob8251 Před 6 měsíci +17

      Dead meme bruv

    • @Boogie3D
      @Boogie3D Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@frenchcookerysnob8251 Maybe the first part, the second one is true, I have lived in both countries.

    • @theotherfritz2643
      @theotherfritz2643 Před 6 měsíci +10

      Wow. What cool and original humour. You must be a very creative and hilarious person to have come up with such novel witticisms.

    • @Boogie3D
      @Boogie3D Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@theotherfritz2643 Wow, what a nice person you are! What a sense of humour! Amazing soft skills!
      What I've written over here is definitely not novel, but it is just truth.

    • @theotherfritz2643
      @theotherfritz2643 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Boogie3D Oh, so you're ignorant as well as unfunny. Good to know.