Fun fact: Hollandaise might only be a recognized mothersauce because of a mixup. Alex did the research and concluded that mayonaise should hold the title according to Escoffiers original work. I would wager that western cuisine is using more mayonaise based sauces then hollandaise sauces nowadays too.
Another fun fact, is the best the Dutch Cuisine ever made. 😅 Further more we just made some very practical hotchpotch recipes... thank god kale is superfood nowadays.
Okay, I get this is kind of an extremely dumbed down version of everything for TH-cam, but honestly, you should try doing a collab with Tasting History or Townsends or something. It would be fun to see them make a historical dish, and then you do a modern hoity-toity version.
So much this. To not have salt 50k years ago you'd have to be part of a population that had never -- and had never had any contact with a population that had ever -- come in contact with a seacoast. Salt is more core to humanity than yeast and wheat
The tomato bit was backwards. Wealthy were the ones getting sick because they were eating on pewter plates - the acidity of the tomato leeches lead from pewter, causing poisoning. Peasantry ate on ceramic, wood, or trenchers which meant they were totally safe. Tomatoes were also previously called Wolf Apples
Its sad to me they remodeled the mcdonalds to all look depressed. They shoulda done a 60s vibe. Its a burger nugget and fry and frosty stop man.. forgot where they started
Fun fact: Korean red pepper originated (like all chili peppers) in Mexico. Then traveled to Japan through conquest of Mexico and then trade via Portugal. And then moved to Korea by a failed invasion by Japan. Fast forward a few centuries. Now we have the Mexican tortilla meeting back with its old friend the Korean red pepper in this wonderful quesadilla. Your welcome. (Also, Mexican Korean mixed foods are amazing. Me (Korean) and my brother in law (Mexican) come together and make combos we think of all the time and it’s amazing)
I can’t stop eating food i love food but i’m a healthy weight and i love my body and you should to i don’t understand how anyone could hate food but ok np bye
Well he knows an awful lot about it, I have been watching his channel as long as this one. He actually does tons of research. I think Tasting History is Awesome ❤️ but this video was different, and that is cool too. ❤
Joshua, I think you have your early timeline way out of wack. Hominins/hominids were using hand axes and other cutting tools as far back as like 1.75 million years ago. There's evidence of stone spears going back half a million years ago. Heck, by 100,000 years ago we became what's known as anatomically modern humans, and absolutely had mastery over stone tools. And, as one last thought, humans really emphasized the gathering part of hunting and gathering, as much as 90% of calories came from things like fruit, nuts, tubers, edible greens, etc. This made me a little dubious of the no spices part. You think early humans didn't think to eat combine things like onion grass, wild garlic, etc with meat?
Not surprised, quality of content he's producing seems to have plummeted, so just went for clickbait/fast stuff. This was evident in the completely moronic excuse of him not acknowledging how gadgets can help people with disabilities... seems like he can't do research / make accurate content anymore.
We also have proof carbon dating can indeed be wildly inaccurate. Just as much recorded history is severely lacking. You can thank the idiot that destroyed the Great Alexander Library, it's believed it effectively reset humanity in a bad way. In short those guys have to justify their grants and lately last 20 years shown to make it up in papers. Peer review process has become a farce and every guy/girl is aiming to get a publishing it seems.
and curry as a dish or concept preceded even pasta by at least 600 years. this is unfortunately part of the larger problem of popular history and its eurocentric biases
“Respect traditional recipes, but learn how to break the rules” may be my new favorite cooking motto. You should collab with tasting history for another video about this subject! I’m sure he’d have a lot more to offer you on this subject :)
Something is wrong at 2:55 . Wok didn’t appear until the Song dynasty since iron was still a stated owned resource and it was VERY expensive to get iron ores. Things changed at the Song dynasty due to a significant higher wealth among civilians and that was when both the wok and the food delivery service started in China
It is interesting that you didn’t include early versions of Egyptian bread, before they discovered gluten. It was basically a hearty pita. You could have included Roman focaccia bread or Panis Quadratus, a kind of precut white bread that was extremely popular. Eitherway, awesome video.
For the TV dinners, if they are available you should find the ones in aluminum trays and bake them. That was a huge childhood relief for my Mom during my childhood.
@@puggirl415 Well it wasn't meant for the microwave to begin with. You put them in the oven. 1986 is when they became available for the microwave since the trays were no longer metal.
@@kentuckymafia1610 Yes at 62 I think I know that. I was simply pointing it out because this video made many mistakes and assumptions about food throughout history. Your tone suggests pedantic and disagreeable so I'm giving it back so you can hear yourself.
They definitely had herbs 50,000 years ago. They gathered a lot of local plant based food. Meat was more of a supplement to the plants. We just don't eat most of that stuff anymore because agriculture basically made it redundant. Hunting tools and animal bones last longer and thus were available to be found by early anthropologists. The baskets and plant based stuff pretty much rotted away. You should collab with Milo Rossi. You both have very similar senses of humor.
Also, herbs and various spices pop up in early writing as possible cures and wards for a variety of health related issues. That wasn't plucked out of thin air. But a progression of early chemical exploration by our ancestors. Did they luck into half of it? Yeah. But that knowledge was shared in oral histories and storytelling to build out a basic societal upkeep as normadic existence began. I hate seeing people shark jump to the Ancient Greeks (Athenians to be precise cos apparently fuck the rest of the city states 🤦🏾♀️ or god forbid the Minoans) from generic image of cave person. It's tiresome
That’s completely untrue. Meat was the DOMINANT source of calories. We can analyze what people are through nitrogen analysis. We were HYPER carnivores-more so than foxes and wolves, even. Go out into the wild forest and try to survive on mostly plants. You won’t. Not unless you eat several coconuts a day and potatoes and then some meat, but maybe only 5% if the population would’ve had access to that
Ray Kroc didn’t open the first McDonald’s. The first was opened by Maurice, and Richard McDonald in 1940 and revamped in 1948. They franchised in the 50s but they were around for 15 years before that.
Ray Kroc made MacDonalds popular and fast food as we know it today although I think Harland sanders would have been a better choose for this video the man took the first commercial pressure fryers and added them to his restaurant franchise
@@carbonfiber492 McDonald’s was already very popular. He franchised it but it was definitely very popular already. And I agree Sanders was very innovative with his pressure fryers.
Josh, you provide some of the most entertaining material on you tube, or tv in general anymore. Just tuning in to anything you put out there with your fun personality makes me smile!
Not gonna lie....this is very Joshua Weissman. There are so so many historical cooking videos that are very interesting and way more on point. Josh is just Joshing this. It's like he just started with Josh and worked backwards instead of doing it the other way around.
Josh the earliest known use of tools is 3.3 million years ago. At least one group of early humans had tools at the given year of 2,500,000 B.C. It was part of whats called the Paleolithic Period, a period beginning 3.3million years ago and with it's main defining feature being the use of stone tools.
@@delxinogaming6046 Yeah the tricky part of the debate is the fact we had stone tools long before we were homo sapiens, so some ponder if the true Stone Age is during this time as well or only truly begins with us as 100% Homo Sapiens.
@@delxinogaming6046 They weren't. They were not nearly as intelligent as us... so uh... we definitely had tools. Humans almost certainly evolved with fire and hand tools. Homo Erectus almost definitely had fire. We 100% did.
Its called Manga Meat. Has been around LONG before One Piece. If you look up that instead you will discover a world of recipes instead of the weird as hell chicken leg with an egg. (gross)
It's obvious you put a lot of effort into creating your videos. You deserve the success Josh! Love your content and your humor, keep up the great work!
Fun fact about why they thought that tomatoes were poisonous, the nobility used pewter plates and the acidity in the tomatoes reacted with it. Since there was a lot of lead in the plates, it would lead to lead poisoning :)
Josh, one thing that your great channel video collection lacks is a perfect Persian dish. We have lots of delicious recepies; you can make a research for yourself; I suggest maybe start with the most common Persian stew: Ghormesabzi.
@@martijnbuunkHoi mate! just to clarify, rendang is an Indonesian dish and not Indian. But anyhow, Thanks for liking our culinaries! love from Indonesia
@@muhammaddarrenputra6389 for sure I ment Indonesië, I'm Dutch and my phone is always correcting me when I type stuff in English.. sorry for that, I got some friends from Indonesia and their mom is an awesome cook, tried many dishes and I love it .
@@martijnbuunk You definitely should try Persian recepies, or else you’re missing out big time. We have so many varieties of stews (all of them served with rice/saffron rice or “tahchin”), most international ones are Ghormesabzi and Gheyme, also different kebobs, and many others. As a reference you can check out e.g. Mark Wiens’s or food ranger’s Iran food tours videos on youtube to get an idea of what’s going on :)
16:24 In the interest of historical accuracy, Ray Kroc did not open the first McDonald's in 1954, that's when he discovered the restraunt. The first McDonald's was opened in 1940 by the McDonald brothers, Maurice and Richard McDonald. In 1955, Ray Kroc made a contract with the brothers to start franchising outside of the local area where the restraunt was founded, later that year he founded the McDonald's Corporation and in 1961 he finally bought the McDonald's name and brand from the brothers. They made a movie on it, The Founder, depicting the purchase of the McDonald's brand by the McDonald's corporation as a hostile takeover, but that portrayal has been disputed.
A Monster Hunter's Well-Done Steak! All that's missing is that little custom cooking spit they carry around, which just attached a winch directly to the end of the bone. And the music of course. So tasty!
If anybody is interested a mural was recently discovered in Pompei which, if interpreted correctly, would suggest that the idea of a "pizza" or a flat bread with toppings existed as far back as the first century (they used to put fruit on it mainly so idk if it counts, but tomato is technically a fruit as well, so I think it counts)
Might be a common sight and taken for granted for a chef at your level . But being someone who tries to cook every once in a while , I could not help but appreciate the level of precision and control over your culinary works . It is a work of art.
When the Indian recipe said pepper, they probably meant pepper corn. That was the spice of choice to add heat to dishes in India before chilis, bell peppers and such were introduced through colonization. But I’m probably thinking about it too much. Actually, maybe I am thinking too much because that would be a little too much pepper corns
@@dylancool Columbus sailed to America in 1492. The first attempted colonization of India was by the Portuguese in the early 1500’s. But you are right in your larger point. This is a recipe of British India, so bell peppers and chili peppers would have been familiar to India by now.
I paused at that moment, too, thinking of long "pepper". However, at that time, chili peppers were already cultivated and popular. Plus, that quantity of long pepper would be super gross, even by historical standards. Likely both were used.
@brandonfoley7519 yep they're all from the America's, but were among the earliest spices brought to Europe and Asia by the Portuguese during what's commonly called the Columbian Exchange
I really miss the single recipe videos... I instantly subscribed because I could learn new stuff in cooking for me, and a I loved the videos! I really hope he gets back to good old Josh
I'm sure they also had fire too keep warm in those frigid ass climates. Now whether or not they used fire too cook could be debatable. However since we have an attraction too cooked meat (like the just imagining the smell can make you salivate) it would have had the same alluring incentive for early human. It's one of those cravings that's programmed into our DNA. Just like our love for simple sugar since it's such easy energy it was life saving in those days. Hence why we crave such sweet foods that has high sugar.
I admire you very much. You are always a source of ideas and motivation for me to learn to cook and develop my passion for cooking This is the number of people who also admire you and consider you a driving force for development 👇
By god I swear: Coffee in the middle east is amazing. For a little bit of history lesson for you reading this: Coffee was not allowed for catholics (Mostly all of europe at the time, before Protestantism). Then, some genius decided "Screw that, I'll show them" and did. They served coffee to the pope, and not to long after that, it was deemed "very christian, papal stamp of approval". Then not long after that, the first coffee houses started appearing. Kinda like a pub, but more like the cafès of modern europe. So thank you a lot, coming from one of the most coffee drinking nations on the planet. As I usually joke with my coworkers when I get my coffee: "most important meal of the day". God I love the stuff.
I don't know exactly what i was expecting, but i was a bit disappointed the video wasnt more informative. Like a video from Tasting History with Max Miller
I love how you take a massive joint of meat, perfectly frenched it and even carved the meat before glazing it and baking it to perfection just to make it look like something Fred Flintstone would have for dinner 😂
Double Quarter Pounder has always been the goat at MCD's, no clue who is out there eating Big Macs or really any of the other burgers. They are surprisingly good, as you just found out!
Oldest known use of stone tools - 3.3 million years ago Oldest known use of fire - 300,000 to 400,000 years ago. We have been bbqing for THAT long, God I love that!
@@InvisableCactus101 its almost like we don't have every piece of info from the time period the recipes were in and therefor up to interpretation. because we do not physically have all the knowledge. WOW. IMAGINE THAT.
The TV dinners were originally heated in the oven. Modern average homes didn't have microwaves till about the mid 70s. The marketing was targeted at housewives who's list of to-dos was longer than they were tall.
5:10 sugar was actually produced in India since 1500 BC... and Indian recipes ("CURRY") didn't started in 18th century... the written record you are saying about is from british which was written in English in that year... but in reality, written curry and Indian recipes can be dated back to 1500BC... don't think the origin of a recipe is the day when britishers decided to write it
Old school Kyoto style pickled mackerel sushi is amazing. It looks the same as modern nigiri sushi, but is way different in both flavor and texture. The fish has a wonderful firm bite and texture with a balanced salt and acid flavor from the preservation process. Because it's aged, it has a much stronger flavor. Modern nigiri is subtle in comparison, even with soy sauce and wasabi.
this would actually be a really cool tv show for you. like making and trying foods from different periods of history and then you could make your own modernized version of it
Speaking of burgers (because of the mcdonald's section), buffalo wild wings burgers are HIGHLY underrated. I never hear anyone talk about them but they're better than many restaurants I've been to that specialize in burgers. Highly recommended.
I used to be a chef, 90% of my meals are made from scratch. That being said, I LOVE the Hungry Man Fried Chicken TV Dinner. Pro tip, cook it in the oven instead of the microwave so the chicken gets a little crispy.
Funny thing with T.V. dinners: My grandma would get the family sized Salisbury steak T.V. dinner, and instead of microwave it, put it unwrapped, on a baking sheet, in the oven on low. Would make mashed potatoes with the potato flakes, and green beans from a can. Homemade salad. Best thing ever. Something about the Salisbury steaks being cooked in the oven versus the microwave change the flavor, and then she would use the gravy on the mashed potatoes..... She is a wizard in the kitchen!!! ❤
I will always trust Josh when he says anything is delicious because if someone knows the deliciousness that is SPAM and how to elevate it. They have a palette that can be trusted.
You are one of my favorite new generation of chefs. Love your book. You are probably not going to read this but take a look at Townsend and son (spelling) it’s a Historical cooking reenactment. Really fascinating.
point at the end was beautiful, i think the fusion cuisine thats become popular recently if anything is paying homage to what makes certain cuisines special, kimchi quesadilla is a perfect example of that. some might prefer being rigid in tradition, but in order for a lot of these "new" ideas to work they need to pay attention to how the rules work to know what to do.
Shoutout to this guy for living 1 million years to film this
I know, his dedication is insane!
Fr
Fr
Fr
Fr
Fun fact: Hollandaise might only be a recognized mothersauce because of a mixup. Alex did the research and concluded that mayonaise should hold the title according to Escoffiers original work. I would wager that western cuisine is using more mayonaise based sauces then hollandaise sauces nowadays too.
Agree! Josh should be up to date with this fact.
Another fun fact, is the best the Dutch Cuisine ever made. 😅 Further more we just made some very practical hotchpotch recipes... thank god kale is superfood nowadays.
i lost two braincells reading this
my boy alex accidentally becoming a legend historian
Even more fun fact from a French class. Hollandaise and Mayonaise are the same thing, the only difference is how the emersion happens.
Okay, I get this is kind of an extremely dumbed down version of everything for TH-cam, but honestly, you should try doing a collab with Tasting History or Townsends or something. It would be fun to see them make a historical dish, and then you do a modern hoity-toity version.
He should make hard tack *clack clack*
So much this. To not have salt 50k years ago you'd have to be part of a population that had never -- and had never had any contact with a population that had ever -- come in contact with a seacoast. Salt is more core to humanity than yeast and wheat
I watch way less of his videos than I used to
@@PanagiotisPolitis-bl9xj yes, max's "clack clack".
@@skapunker21 Max's eyes turning cold and dead as he bangs the two biscuits together.
The tomato bit was backwards.
Wealthy were the ones getting sick because they were eating on pewter plates - the acidity of the tomato leeches lead from pewter, causing poisoning.
Peasantry ate on ceramic, wood, or trenchers which meant they were totally safe.
Tomatoes were also previously called Wolf Apples
Its sad to me they remodeled the mcdonalds to all look depressed. They shoulda done a 60s vibe. Its a burger nugget and fry and frosty stop man.. forgot where they started
Awesome
@@TheAnnoyingBossbro what
Dude who discovered fire, such a bro for that.
@Glorg445that's what discovery means? He said discover not invent
@Glorg445it’s aight bro don’t beat yourself up about it. The important thing is that you acknowledge your mistake 👍
@Glorg445 no worries
For real
Well i dont remember the name of the king ig but thunder striked wood and created fire so they learnt and invented fire with stone
Fun fact:
Korean red pepper originated (like all chili peppers) in Mexico. Then traveled to Japan through conquest of Mexico and then trade via Portugal. And then moved to Korea by a failed invasion by Japan. Fast forward a few centuries. Now we have the Mexican tortilla meeting back with its old friend the Korean red pepper in this wonderful quesadilla.
Your welcome. (Also, Mexican Korean mixed foods are amazing. Me (Korean) and my brother in law (Mexican) come together and make combos we think of all the time and it’s amazing)
NO NO NO YOU CANT SAY THAT TO ME 🥵😡🤬
OK. I'll pretend like I never said it.
FULL CIRCLE, HUMANS WERE MADE TO WORK TOGETHER
I never thought I’d be represented in food form 😅
As if every single kind of peppers would come from a single place lol
"shoutout to farming practices that are questionable" literally had me in stitches.
u snitch?
Nah but he has a free snitch tho
As someone with an eating disorder and rarely wants to eat I have to say this video made my mouth water. Thanks for stimulating my hunger lol
I can’t stop eating food i love food but i’m a healthy weight and i love my body and you should to i don’t understand how anyone could hate food but ok np bye
Me and my ED are right there with you my friend lol
you should make collab with tasting history, because he knows best about history of food
That is some claim that he "knows best" of all people with knowledge of food/culinary history/anthropology
Well he knows an awful lot about it, I have been watching his channel as long as this one. He actually does tons of research. I think Tasting History is Awesome ❤️ but this video was different, and that is cool too. ❤
Would love to see that!
We all want a history of capsicum vid, (as silly as this one or not!) but Max isn't "spicy" enough, gourd-love-him, LOL
Joshua, I think you have your early timeline way out of wack. Hominins/hominids were using hand axes and other cutting tools as far back as like 1.75 million years ago. There's evidence of stone spears going back half a million years ago. Heck, by 100,000 years ago we became what's known as anatomically modern humans, and absolutely had mastery over stone tools. And, as one last thought, humans really emphasized the gathering part of hunting and gathering, as much as 90% of calories came from things like fruit, nuts, tubers, edible greens, etc. This made me a little dubious of the no spices part. You think early humans didn't think to eat combine things like onion grass, wild garlic, etc with meat?
Not surprised, quality of content he's producing seems to have plummeted, so just went for clickbait/fast stuff. This was evident in the completely moronic excuse of him not acknowledging how gadgets can help people with disabilities... seems like he can't do research / make accurate content anymore.
Shout to Tasting History: MAX, SAVE US FROM LAZY FOOD HISTORY!
We also have proof carbon dating can indeed be wildly inaccurate. Just as much recorded history is severely lacking. You can thank the idiot that destroyed the Great Alexander Library, it's believed it effectively reset humanity in a bad way. In short those guys have to justify their grants and lately last 20 years shown to make it up in papers. Peer review process has become a farce and every guy/girl is aiming to get a publishing it seems.
and curry as a dish or concept preceded even pasta by at least 600 years. this is unfortunately part of the larger problem of popular history and its eurocentric biases
Lol you would think 8 million subscribers could buy you one researcher...
“Respect traditional recipes, but learn how to break the rules” may be my new favorite cooking motto.
You should collab with tasting history for another video about this subject! I’m sure he’d have a lot more to offer you on this subject :)
That's a life advice, honestly...
Josh and Max in the same video was something I didnt know I need it
I love spam and bacon but they have nitrates so I don’t eat them
@@vazpazzaz7045 umm… good to know? Thanks for sharing lol
@@evanweaver1060 i didn’t even mean to comment on this lmao
Man didn't really invent fire, but rather discovered it and learned to control it. I just watched a documentary so now I think I know everything.
fun fact: hollandaise isn't one of the 5 mother sauces, it should actually be mayonnaise- It was a typo in the translation of Escoffier's book lmao
Are you a fan of Alex? His series on the subject was very educational for me.
there weren't any typos
@@darkikins Correct, it was a translation error
The cave
man in video💀
@@darkikinshe meant a translation error
If tasting history with max miller was in this video it would have been goated
I was thinking the exact same thing! Kinda disappointed he skipped basically all of the B.C. E., but I suppose that's what we have Max for.
Yeah they need to do a collab
I was thinking about this the whole time I watched! He's collabed with Babish, now I need him on this channel
He would be angry. This was not a well done video, history wise.
Don't forget Jas Townsends too, he's also very historically accurate on his meals!
Something is wrong at 2:55 . Wok didn’t appear until the Song dynasty since iron was still a stated owned resource and it was VERY expensive to get iron ores. Things changed at the Song dynasty due to a significant higher wealth among civilians and that was when both the wok and the food delivery service started in China
0 likes and no replies? i will fix this
probably because your comment is 5 days ago
@@matthewnggametime2537 stop commenting on yourself mf
There is a lot wrong with this video. Italians didn't have tomatoes until the 16th century, yet their 14th century lasagna had a tomato based sauce.
And the chinese did not have carrots in the 6th century but oh well
It is interesting that you didn’t include early versions of Egyptian bread, before they discovered gluten. It was basically a hearty pita. You could have included Roman focaccia bread or Panis Quadratus, a kind of precut white bread that was extremely popular. Eitherway, awesome video.
For the TV dinners, if they are available you should find the ones in aluminum trays and bake them. That was a huge childhood relief for my Mom during my childhood.
Closest thing is the pot pies with aluminized containers for oven heating
I don't think too many (if any) people had microwaves when the TV Dinner debuted.
@@puggirl415 Well it wasn't meant for the microwave to begin with. You put them in the oven. 1986 is when they became available for the microwave since the trays were no longer metal.
@@kentuckymafia1610 Yes at 62 I think I know that. I was simply pointing it out because this video made many mistakes and assumptions about food throughout history. Your tone suggests pedantic and disagreeable so I'm giving it back so you can hear yourself.
They definitely had herbs 50,000 years ago. They gathered a lot of local plant based food. Meat was more of a supplement to the plants. We just don't eat most of that stuff anymore because agriculture basically made it redundant. Hunting tools and animal bones last longer and thus were available to be found by early anthropologists. The baskets and plant based stuff pretty much rotted away.
You should collab with Milo Rossi. You both have very similar senses of humor.
i can see an edited-in giga-slap for underselling how cool our ancient ancestors were
Also, herbs and various spices pop up in early writing as possible cures and wards for a variety of health related issues. That wasn't plucked out of thin air. But a progression of early chemical exploration by our ancestors. Did they luck into half of it? Yeah. But that knowledge was shared in oral histories and storytelling to build out a basic societal upkeep as normadic existence began. I hate seeing people shark jump to the Ancient Greeks (Athenians to be precise cos apparently fuck the rest of the city states 🤦🏾♀️ or god forbid the Minoans) from generic image of cave person. It's tiresome
Didn't agriculture start way after 50,000 B.C. tho?
That’s completely untrue. Meat was the DOMINANT source of calories. We can analyze what people are through nitrogen analysis. We were HYPER carnivores-more so than foxes and wolves, even.
Go out into the wild forest and try to survive on mostly plants. You won’t. Not unless you eat several coconuts a day and potatoes and then some meat, but maybe only 5% if the population would’ve had access to that
You're clueless.
Ray Kroc didn’t open the first McDonald’s. The first was opened by Maurice, and Richard McDonald in 1940 and revamped in 1948. They franchised in the 50s but they were around for 15 years before that.
Yes
Morris Ultrakill invents fat people confirmed
Ray Kroc made MacDonalds popular and fast food as we know it today although I think Harland sanders would have been a better choose for this video the man took the first commercial pressure fryers and added them to his restaurant franchise
maurice from ultrakill started mcdonalds!?
@@carbonfiber492 McDonald’s was already very popular. He franchised it but it was definitely very popular already. And I agree Sanders was very innovative with his pressure fryers.
Josh, you provide some of the most entertaining material on you tube, or tv in general anymore. Just tuning in to anything you put out there with your fun personality makes me smile!
Not gonna lie....this is very Joshua Weissman. There are so so many historical cooking videos that are very interesting and way more on point. Josh is just Joshing this. It's like he just started with Josh and worked backwards instead of doing it the other way around.
what
what
Wtf are u saying u mindless human
what
Yah I agree, the McDonald’s history is completely incorrect
Josh the earliest known use of tools is 3.3 million years ago. At least one group of early humans had tools at the given year of 2,500,000 B.C. It was part of whats called the Paleolithic Period, a period beginning 3.3million years ago and with it's main defining feature being the use of stone tools.
Those weren’t homo sapiens
@@delxinogaming6046 still early human ancestors
@@delxinogaming6046 Yeah the tricky part of the debate is the fact we had stone tools long before we were homo sapiens, so some ponder if the true Stone Age is during this time as well or only truly begins with us as 100% Homo Sapiens.
@@delxinogaming6046 They weren't. They were not nearly as intelligent as us... so uh... we definitely had tools. Humans almost certainly evolved with fire and hand tools. Homo Erectus almost definitely had fire. We 100% did.
Dude accidentally made the best luffy meat on the bone of all time. Never seen one closer.
Exactly what I thought😭😭
Its called Manga Meat. Has been around LONG before One Piece. If you look up that instead you will discover a world of recipes instead of the weird as hell chicken leg with an egg. (gross)
pause? luffy meat??
@@jediaeprobably a sex thing lol
@@jediae yes, it's what happens to meat when you cook it wrong. It becomes rubbery. luffy power is rubber. ergo Luffy meat.
It's obvious you put a lot of effort into creating your videos. You deserve the success Josh! Love your content and your humor, keep up the great work!
Fun fact about why they thought that tomatoes were poisonous, the nobility used pewter plates and the acidity in the tomatoes reacted with it. Since there was a lot of lead in the plates, it would lead to lead poisoning :)
lead to lead
Fun fact, there is no year 0 in the Julian and Gregorian calendars. It goes from 1 BC to 1 AD. Other calanders do include a year 0 though.
0 hadn't been invented yet
fun fact: you do not have any friends...nor do i
Josh, one thing that your great channel video collection lacks is a perfect Persian dish. We have lots of delicious recepies; you can make a research for yourself; I suggest maybe start with the most common Persian stew: Ghormesabzi.
Oh yeah I’m Persian and that would be amazing
Never thought that, myself I love the Indian stews like Rendang.. I never tried Persian food, you made me curious now😅
@@martijnbuunkHoi mate! just to clarify, rendang is an Indonesian dish and not Indian. But anyhow, Thanks for liking our culinaries! love from Indonesia
@@muhammaddarrenputra6389 for sure I ment Indonesië, I'm Dutch and my phone is always correcting me when I type stuff in English.. sorry for that, I got some friends from Indonesia and their mom is an awesome cook, tried many dishes and I love it .
@@martijnbuunk You definitely should try Persian recepies, or else you’re missing out big time. We have so many varieties of stews (all of them served with rice/saffron rice or “tahchin”), most international ones are Ghormesabzi and Gheyme, also different kebobs, and many others. As a reference you can check out e.g. Mark Wiens’s or food ranger’s Iran food tours videos on youtube to get an idea of what’s going on :)
16:24
In the interest of historical accuracy, Ray Kroc did not open the first McDonald's in 1954, that's when he discovered the restraunt. The first McDonald's was opened in 1940 by the McDonald brothers, Maurice and Richard McDonald. In 1955, Ray Kroc made a contract with the brothers to start franchising outside of the local area where the restraunt was founded, later that year he founded the McDonald's Corporation and in 1961 he finally bought the McDonald's name and brand from the brothers.
They made a movie on it, The Founder, depicting the purchase of the McDonald's brand by the McDonald's corporation as a hostile takeover, but that portrayal has been disputed.
Bro went from eating dirt to fried rice like Sumeria didn't exist. Skipped Tuh'u. Josh is the Ea-nāṣir of youtube chefs.
1:10 iconic meat on a stick
A Monster Hunter's Well-Done Steak! All that's missing is that little custom cooking spit they carry around, which just attached a winch directly to the end of the bone.
And the music of course. So tasty!
Nah its nikuuuuuuu
MEAT!
If anybody is interested a mural was recently discovered in Pompei which, if interpreted correctly, would suggest that the idea of a "pizza" or a flat bread with toppings existed as far back as the first century (they used to put fruit on it mainly so idk if it counts, but tomato is technically a fruit as well, so I think it counts)
oh yeah flat bread was huge in the ancient world before it got to europe.
The Persians heated flatbread with toppings on their shields 2600 years ago
Another point for "Pineapple Belongs On Pizza" confirmed.
Focaccia is still under-rated.
Might be a common sight and taken for granted for a chef at your level . But being someone who tries to cook every once in a while , I could not help but appreciate the level of precision and control over your culinary works . It is a work of art.
When the Indian recipe said pepper, they probably meant pepper corn. That was the spice of choice to add heat to dishes in India before chilis, bell peppers and such were introduced through colonization. But I’m probably thinking about it too much.
Actually, maybe I am thinking too much because that would be a little too much pepper corns
Spices were introduced via colombian exchange centuries before colonisation of india
@@dylancool Columbus sailed to America in 1492. The first attempted colonization of India was by the Portuguese in the early 1500’s. But you are right in your larger point. This is a recipe of British India, so bell peppers and chili peppers would have been familiar to India by now.
I paused at that moment, too, thinking of long "pepper". However, at that time, chili peppers were already cultivated and popular. Plus, that quantity of long pepper would be super gross, even by historical standards. Likely both were used.
@@hawkatsea I'm only familiar with "capsicum" kind of peppers
Which is exclusively from the americas
@brandonfoley7519 yep they're all from the America's, but were among the earliest spices brought to Europe and Asia by the Portuguese during what's commonly called the Columbian Exchange
I really miss the single recipe videos... I instantly subscribed because I could learn new stuff in cooking for me, and a I loved the videos! I really hope he gets back to good old Josh
... They definitely had tools to hunt during the Ice Age. Bro wasn't bringing down a mammoth with his bare-ass hands!
I'm sure they also had fire too keep warm in those frigid ass climates. Now whether or not they used fire too cook could be debatable. However since we have an attraction too cooked meat (like the just imagining the smell can make you salivate) it would have had the same alluring incentive for early human. It's one of those cravings that's programmed into our DNA. Just like our love for simple sugar since it's such easy energy it was life saving in those days. Hence why we crave such sweet foods that has high sugar.
I admire you very much. You are always a source of ideas and motivation for me to learn to cook and develop my passion for cooking
This is the number of people who also admire you and consider you a driving force for development
👇
You totally could have expressed gratitude without like baiting
True@@NorthernHarker
What do you even get from youtube comment likes?
You re so fcking cringe with that baiting with likes
Dear reader, your mother.
I don't get it.
NnNnoOoOoOoOo YoUr MoThEr
Bruh 😂
🤣🤣
How dare you 😂
AM SO GLAD THAT YOU GOT THE COFFEE HISTORY CORRECT, YEMENI PEOPLE HAVE BEEN GROWING COFFEE FROM CENTURIES ❤
By god I swear: Coffee in the middle east is amazing. For a little bit of history lesson for you reading this: Coffee was not allowed for catholics (Mostly all of europe at the time, before Protestantism). Then, some genius decided "Screw that, I'll show them" and did. They served coffee to the pope, and not to long after that, it was deemed "very christian, papal stamp of approval". Then not long after that, the first coffee houses started appearing. Kinda like a pub, but more like the cafès of modern europe. So thank you a lot, coming from one of the most coffee drinking nations on the planet. As I usually joke with my coworkers when I get my coffee: "most important meal of the day". God I love the stuff.
I don't know exactly what i was expecting, but i was a bit disappointed the video wasnt more informative. Like a video from Tasting History with Max Miller
Yeah too much creative liberty here and really modern heavy. I was also disappointed.
I love how you take a massive joint of meat, perfectly frenched it and even carved the meat before glazing it and baking it to perfection just to make it look like something Fred Flintstone would have for dinner 😂
I love to see the different food throughout the years!! The kimchi quesadilla and the pasta look amazing😊
Double Quarter Pounder has always been the goat at MCD's, no clue who is out there eating Big Macs or really any of the other burgers. They are surprisingly good, as you just found out!
Back in the day, just put quarter patties on instead of the smaller meat to a Big Mac.
I really like the McChicken sandwich from McDonald's xD
Dear reader, your father.
Why is this top comment
He’s dead. Idk if I can tell him.
@@BlobTube3same
@@nickmitros7185 yo same
Dear writer, your mother
This man took the content genre differently 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
I wanted to comment on someone’s comment to make them happy🎉 16:30
@@milokiely3958 thx
Oldest known use of stone tools - 3.3 million years ago
Oldest known use of fire - 300,000 to 400,000 years ago. We have been bbqing for THAT long, God I love that!
9:25 BOY that beef welly is perfect 😭
Ray Kroc did not open the first McDonalds - the McDonald's brothers did. He just franchised their concept.
I tried 100000 years of food. ❌
I wanted to try some historical dishes. ✅
"If you like bacon and ham you will like spam" you heard it here first folks
PS: not even kidding at 14:48 it gave me an add for spam lol
1:45 roast nuts too.
Tomatoes weren't introduced to Italy until the 16th century, so whatever lasagna they had during the 14th century would not have a tomato based sauce.
As a local Hawaiian, born and raised, it deepens my heart to see more mainlanders respect spam for what it is
Almost every single recipe has a side note of "Maybe they added this, maybe they didn't." - and it's usually cheese.
Maybe um, just do more research.
no Fr tho like why make a video on food and then be like "maybe they added this maybe they didn't" shit is WILD
@@InvisableCactus101 its almost like we don't have every piece of info from the time period the recipes were in and therefor up to interpretation. because we do not physically have all the knowledge. WOW. IMAGINE THAT.
@@Daeneiracorn this proves people now in days can't understand SATIRE.
5:46 bro got radioactive chicken from futurecanoe
😭😭🧐😈🤫🧏🗿
1:14 Japanese manga meat!
Really enjoyed watching this!!
The TV dinners were originally heated in the oven. Modern average homes didn't have microwaves till about the mid 70s. The marketing was targeted at housewives who's list of to-dos was longer than they were tall.
A good cook you are, a historian you aren't.
Imagine getting offended by not believing the earth is over 1 million years old
Me kinda
The earth is about 7000 years old
@@Envixity_.-._.-._.-._.-.x isnt it 4 billion
this was absolutely fire, glad too see somebody like a chef care so much about food history. Thank you for this video god bless you amen !🙏
3:55 why are the shield pizzas 😭
As someone from yemen, thank you josh for mentioning my country ❤
Everyone here suddenly lived 500 thousand years ago. Jeez relax. Enjoy the video😘
Liked
Respect to this dude for living for 1Million years
5:10 sugar was actually produced in India since 1500 BC... and Indian recipes ("CURRY") didn't started in 18th century... the written record you are saying about is from british which was written in English in that year... but in reality, written curry and Indian recipes can be dated back to 1500BC... don't think the origin of a recipe is the day when britishers decided to write it
I hope everyone that likes this becomes ultra successful post 2024 👏🔥🔥🔥
Well, I hope so! O:
MAN THIS IS SUCH A GREAT POST
THIS POST IS AWESOME
THIS POST IS THE BEST POST IN THE ENTIRE WORLD
Bro, humans were not even a thing in 1.000.000 BC
why is this the top comment for me?
@@caenen_cantspel I don't know brother, maybe the algorithm loves big numbers
4:48 I’m Italian and I can confirm that you are under arrest for calling noodles the “tagliatelle”
C'mon Josh... 0:04
Let us see those legs bro...
Sorry Josh, this time you were not accurate in almost every recipe…
Yeah, like how he said narezushi is from Japan
It is though@@JohnathanJohaisen
Ok
@@JohnathanJohaisenhe a dumbass
you care so much about Italians but not us Korean :( why kimchi quesadilla. Thats more than putting pineapple on pizza
He has a great way of encouraging appreciation for modern inventions rather than only pining over historical times due to the authenticity/simplicity.
Luffy meet 2:06
Who’s luffy is it a food type or something
@@Epicgame6699hes a anime character
@@Epicgame6699food typle
0:45 You know you all paused
3:40 soy sauce was very expensive back then in china
Old school Kyoto style pickled mackerel sushi is amazing. It looks the same as modern nigiri sushi, but is way different in both flavor and texture. The fish has a wonderful firm bite and texture with a balanced salt and acid flavor from the preservation process. Because it's aged, it has a much stronger flavor. Modern nigiri is subtle in comparison, even with soy sauce and wasabi.
1:15 Fucking love Monster Hunter bruh
Mostly inaccurate
Spam is fire ASF. Nothing better than a friend spam sandwich with some mayo on it. Ultimate comfort food
this would actually be a really cool tv show for you. like making and trying foods from different periods of history and then you could make your own modernized version of it
Mentions Ceaser Salad was created in Tiajuana, shifts map to western hemisphere yet just barely leaves Tiajuana out of frame.
*2.5 million B.C.*
Five minutes later:
*300 years ago*
lol it took awhile but we made it boys!!! what a time to be alive. I love all kinds of food.
Speaking of burgers (because of the mcdonald's section), buffalo wild wings burgers are HIGHLY underrated. I never hear anyone talk about them but they're better than many restaurants I've been to that specialize in burgers. Highly recommended.
I never knew they had burgers! I make sure to try them in the future.
Great video Josh! Wish one day I can make great videos like you
I used to be a chef, 90% of my meals are made from scratch. That being said, I LOVE the Hungry Man Fried Chicken TV Dinner. Pro tip, cook it in the oven instead of the microwave so the chicken gets a little crispy.
Funny thing with T.V. dinners: My grandma would get the family sized Salisbury steak T.V. dinner, and instead of microwave it, put it unwrapped, on a baking sheet, in the oven on low. Would make mashed potatoes with the potato flakes, and green beans from a can. Homemade salad. Best thing ever. Something about the Salisbury steaks being cooked in the oven versus the microwave change the flavor, and then she would use the gravy on the mashed potatoes..... She is a wizard in the kitchen!!! ❤
I will always trust Josh when he says anything is delicious because if someone knows the deliciousness that is SPAM and how to elevate it. They have a palette that can be trusted.
shoutout to this guy for asking his ancestors for these recipes
I can't believe I'm watching a guy eat meat, fried rice, and basic pasta as if I haven't experienced the same thing myself seven thousand times.
Can we just appreciate the fact that he animated each food he made so he could bleep out cuss words 😂
few things make me proud of humanity...but this..this makes me proud to see
He has a millennium of experience.
The perfect video for people who loves to learn about cooking and have a short attention span, and enjoys history lessons.
17:01 i"d die for a happy meals burger 😢
I usual don’t like food videos but this was a FIRE vid 😀
You are one of my favorite new generation of chefs. Love your book. You are probably not going to read this but take a look at Townsend and son (spelling) it’s a Historical cooking reenactment. Really fascinating.
Shoutout to pioneers of food, because of them we know what to eat and what can kill us
point at the end was beautiful, i think the fusion cuisine thats become popular recently if anything is paying homage to what makes certain cuisines special, kimchi quesadilla is a perfect example of that. some might prefer being rigid in tradition, but in order for a lot of these "new" ideas to work they need to pay attention to how the rules work to know what to do.
that shoutout about questionable farming exercises took me out 🤣🤣
hollindaise is a daughter sauce of mayonnaise
mayo is the mother sauce. hollindaise was a typo in the English translation