American reacts to Traditional German Meals / Food

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 ต.ค. 2024
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to German Food: From Schnitzel To Black Forest Gateau - Mahlzeit
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ความคิดเห็น • 653

  • @BunterAlltag
    @BunterAlltag ปีที่แล้ว +392

    German chocolate cake is unknown in Germany. It‘s a cake from the US invented by Samuel German an English-American chocolate maker. The cake‘s named after him. :)

    • @Bratmann
      @Bratmann ปีที่แล้ว +63

      I think that is the third time this information is in the comments from different videos, Ryan will never learn this fact. :D

    • @ole7236
      @ole7236 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @@Bratmann I wonder if he reads the comments at all, I highly doubt it.

    • @Techmagus76
      @Techmagus76 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@Bratmann he will only beliefe it, if chatGPT is telling him so.

    • @winterlinde5395
      @winterlinde5395 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      @@ole7236 He does. Here and there at least. But I appreciate him prioritizing being a dad. And we have learned by nowthat the „average American“ has far less free time and no parental leave.

    • @voyance4elle
      @voyance4elle ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@winterlinde5395 very ture :D Thanks for commenting that!

  • @K__a__M__I
    @K__a__M__I ปีที่แล้ว +193

    When I was working in a nursing home we had this guy who went around the whole place delivering the food carts to the stations. And all he would do when entering or approaching was bellow a hearty "MAHLZEIT!" and everybody replied "MAHLZEIT!". So I gave him the nickname Mahlzeit because i had no idea what his actual name was...the funny thing is that _everybody_ across the whole facility knew instantly who I was talking about when i referred to him as 'Der Mahlzeit'.

    • @LeroxYT
      @LeroxYT ปีที่แล้ว +26

      Well to me as a german....THAT is so damn funny....😂

    • @michanone
      @michanone ปีที่แล้ว +3

      MAHLZEIT! Now I'm hungry. 😂😂

    • @spitefulwar
      @spitefulwar ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LeroxYT It's outright hilarious

    • @marlinboudreau983
      @marlinboudreau983 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It is the traditional greeting you give to someone, if it is around 12-2 PM.
      It pretty much means "Have a good meal", since Germans tend to eat a hearty meal around this time and in rural regions stores might even close for their employees to have time to eat.
      It also means "meal" in general.

    • @ramona146
      @ramona146 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@michanone 🤣🤣🤣

  • @katse1204
    @katse1204 ปีที่แล้ว +168

    There's a German saying that my grandmother always used.
    "Morgens wie ein König, Mittags wie ein Kaiser und Abends wie ein Bettler."
    (In the morning like a king, at midday like an emperor and in the evening like a beggar)
    It refers to the three meals an how they should be regarding quantity and quality. (In case of Breakfast that often only applies on weekends and holidays, cause there's simply no time when you have to go to work/school.)
    Many people hold the opinion that eating a lot in the evening is unhealthy, so dinner is often just a slice of bread with wurst, cheese,... and some vegetables. On some days it may even be left out completely. (for example when you had cake or something in the afternoon)

    • @frogbound
      @frogbound ปีที่แล้ว +36

      eating a lot and very late in the evening has significant impact on your quality of sleep. Your body will process food instead of recovering from the day. Eating a light meal a couple of hours before going to bed can significantly increase your quality of sleep.

    • @Rabarach87
      @Rabarach87 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I was about to post that as well! 👍🏻😁

    • @bierkraftwerk
      @bierkraftwerk ปีที่แล้ว +5

      German "Abendbrot" culture is barbaric. At least according to a lot of my international colleagues. One of them suggested, that there must be something that ze Germans want to collectively punish themselves for by serving the traditional Abendbrot. As a native, I tend to agree.

    • @basti5263
      @basti5263 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Well... It is not so much an opinion.... But more like a scientific fact.

    • @JayMyrrdin
      @JayMyrrdin ปีที่แล้ว +2

      In general, it doesn't matter whether you eat warm food in the evening or not. It also doesn't matter how much you eat, as long as you have an appropriate distance to go to bed. If you fill your belly and lie down 20 minutes later, you won't sleep well, whether it's in the evening or at noon.
      By the way, the fact that we Germans eat cold food in the evening only became common in the 1920s. At that time, Germans mainly worked in factories, which opened more and more canteens. As technical progress made work somewhat 'easier', a hot meal in the evening was simply no longer necessary and people made it easy for themselves.

  • @hoernchenmeister3216
    @hoernchenmeister3216 ปีที่แล้ว +118

    As a german I never heard about the combination of pasta and potatoes 😄 sounds pretty wild

    • @wernerhiemer406
      @wernerhiemer406 ปีที่แล้ว

      I remember some grated potatoe roasted in a pan and mixed with spaghetti and diced bacon. Also without potatoe but "Salat" aka letuce.

    • @evaloehrke3476
      @evaloehrke3476 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Pasta and potatoes not in combination,but either or !

    • @wernerhiemer406
      @wernerhiemer406 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@evaloehrke3476 It was a little late. The later was scrambled eggs instead of potatoes.

    • @willow9526
      @willow9526 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@wernerhiemer406 you mean " Spaghetti carbonara ??? There is no potatoes in. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @celianeher7637
      @celianeher7637 ปีที่แล้ว

      I personally love potato salad ( Schwäbisch ) with bread. 😂😂😂😂❤❤

  • @kelalia
    @kelalia ปีที่แล้ว +46

    We typically only eat ONE warm meal per day. We either have a big lunch, with proper cooked food and then just something like very simply sandwiches. OR we have a small lunch, like salads, or again sandwiches or maybe a thin soup and THEN a proper diner, with hot food, prepared on a stove or oven etc. No matter what we do, the ratio is more of less allways, 2 small meals, one big one.

    • @IZaubermausI
      @IZaubermausI 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are European, I suggest German, right?
      Cause I experience it the same way.

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 ปีที่แล้ว +59

    "Himmel und ÄÄd" = Heaven and Earth = Rhenish specialty made from apples, potatoes and black pudding or liver sausage. Potatoes are also known as "earth apples".

    • @all_in_for_JESUS
      @all_in_for_JESUS ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Gibt's auch in Hessen

    • @M_a_r_y_89
      @M_a_r_y_89 ปีที่แล้ว

      Das kenne ich gar nicht ^^

    • @helloweener2007
      @helloweener2007 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I would translate Himmel in this case with sky. Heaven means more the biblical place.
      For us Himmel can have both meanings, sky and heaven.

    • @xYZFxrider
      @xYZFxrider ปีที่แล้ว

      Bin Hesse. Hab das noch nie gehört.

  • @herrhartmann3036
    @herrhartmann3036 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    "Kaffee und Kuchen" is basically like Dessert, disconnected from the main meal, and turned into a family event all of its own.
    "Schnitzel" comes from "Schnitt", which simply means "cut".
    And about things that look like someone already ate them; take a look at "Labskaus" if you dare.
    It actually tastes quite good!

    • @TB-kf8xf
      @TB-kf8xf ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Labskaus is the shit! It really looks like someone has eaten it already like 2 times but there nothing better when hangover like a labskaus with freshly made fried eggs. Love it....well....maybe Döner is better but that´s more like a drunk food....as you probably know. Only thing is: when very drunk you crave for a Döner but it tends to "explode" in your hands....at least you think it must have exploded as meat and sauce are everywhere on you if you don´t eat a little bit carefully.

    • @Merrsharr
      @Merrsharr ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Tiegelwurst looks like it has already been eaten _all the way._ It has colloquial names comparing it to dead people or car crash victims, but really, with the color it turns it looks like a different kind of accident to me. It tastes amazing though.

    • @Jasonslittlesister1
      @Jasonslittlesister1 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Look at 'Knipp' from Bremen or 'Grützwurst'! The nightmare food of one of my fellow patients at a hospital 😂 but we like it, my son even wants to eat it for our elegant Christmas dinner!
      (Usually we eat Wild for Christmas, deer or wild pork or duck or goose with red cabbage, dark sauce and potato dumplings).
      Knipp is sort of a grey brown, cutted, cooked meat, mixed with grain and a lot of fat in it. You'll eat it with boiled potatoes and pickles, usually served with a beer or, for kids, with a Malzbier (maltbeer without alcohol).
      It looks like crap 😂 but we love it :)

  • @noe9361
    @noe9361 ปีที่แล้ว +254

    there are actually 10% vegetarians and 3% vegans in Germany, our traditional dishes have a lot of meat but for most people traditional dishes are not a daily thing or even a big thing at all (maybe less so on the country sides)
    especially the younger generation has a lot of vegetarians & vegans. I’m learning to be a baker at the moment and almost 50% of my classmates are vegan or vegetarian including myself.

    • @Silphiroth
      @Silphiroth ปีที่แล้ว +22

      Thats really nice to hear that so many people in your class are way more aware of their environment than the generations before you. I definitely was the odd one being Vegetarian in my class 10 years ago

    • @nosomusk864
      @nosomusk864 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      I really noticed that with a friend of mine. She’s Vegan and from the city so she never has any major trouble with ordering food but when she visited me in the country area, many old traditional restaurants don’t even offer a proper vegetarian option, just something where half the dish is just missing with a side salad, but even more modern places aren’t guaranteed to have vegan options. As a vegetarian, you’re fine but as a vegan you become a real problem for your friends because they can’t take you anywhere. During the day it’s less of a problem because when they have cold dishes they can easily leave the butter of the bread or something but in the evening it gets really complicated.

    • @MellonVegan
      @MellonVegan ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@Silphiroth as a vegan at school, so was I but now 15 years later, a third of my office is vegetarian or vegan. Funnily enough, our managers will still book team events at steakhouses but oh well 🙄

    • @1983simi
      @1983simi ปีที่แล้ว +8

      that's actually really nice to hear. my best friend was vegetarian (veganism was still very exotic back then) when we went to school in the early 2000s in Bavaria. It was still super tricky to get even anything properly vegetarian to eat anywhere. I don't know how often we had a waiter ensure us that something was vegetarian just to find out it clearly had small bacon pieces in it or was made with chicken or beef broth. then the eternal discussion "Oh, you're vegetarian? But you eat chicken right? WHAT? No chicken? But fish, right? Surely you must be eating fish at least? What???!!! Also no fish??? So... errrm... in that case we have only Käsespätzle, Rahmpilze with Knödel, or Kaiserschmarrn for you."
      It was like a big deal for her when BurgerKing, yes BurgerKing, started offering a decent-tasting veg burger (the one they have today is not the same). And we knew of one 'Fleischerstatz-Steak' from the Reformhaus that tasted quite good, while all other meat replacement products still had an aftertaste and smell of Mehrschweinchentrockenfutter. XD For BBQ she was limited to Haloumi cheese for more than a decade. I would often cook veg dishes from scratch for her (either Indian or fusion Italian), but it was still comparably easy because she ate milk products and once in a while egg too.
      If she had been vegan back then it would have been insanely difficult with what the supermarkets had to offer back then, and most likely expensive too, because you would have had to buy mostly at the Reformhaus in that case. I'm baffled and amazed at the selection of vegan foods that can be found even at normal supermarkets today and at the amount of restaurants that offer at least a few vegan options on the menu. Those used to be such rare finds. It really makes me very happy making the choice to eat vegan or at least vegetarian has become so much more accessible for more people.

    • @petrophaga8523
      @petrophaga8523 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      just wait5-6 years...

  • @klausjuergen
    @klausjuergen ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Schnitzel basically comes down to the way how you cut the meat. If you cut it across the muscle fibres, then you get Steak. But if it is cut along the muscle fibres, it is called Schnitzel. If it has breading, then it is called Wiener Schnitzel, but only if it is calf meat. If you use other meats like pork it is called Schnitzel Wiener Art (Vienna style).

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Schnitzel is usually tenderised as well. But not while listening to Rammstein.

    • @warmsnow
      @warmsnow ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@Llortnerof or it won't fit the pan anymore. Germans know that 😶☝️

  • @HittesMittes
    @HittesMittes ปีที่แล้ว +4

    You nailed the vibe of "Mahlzeit". Thats perfectly how its supposed to be understood.

  • @InspektorDreyfus
    @InspektorDreyfus ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I just got myself a Mittagstisch from the local butcher: Roulade mit Spätzle und Rotkohl. Now I need a nap to recover. 😂

    • @adlerweb
      @adlerweb ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Well, the "Mittagsschläfchen" (noon nap) is also a German tradition, right? ;)

  • @gameboy-nq7je
    @gameboy-nq7je ปีที่แล้ว +79

    Eating out in Germany is a lot different to doing it in America, while there are some more casual sit down places, which are becoming more popular in larger cities, usually your choice is between fast food and a real restaurant, so you have to plan in at least 2-3 hours, often reserve a table and spend a lot of money, min 15-20€ per person, for drinks and a main course, more if you want appetizers or desert's

    • @MrMond-gc4rv
      @MrMond-gc4rv ปีที่แล้ว +40

      My man, 15-20€ is a relic of the past, inflation hit hard and in my experience its more in the 20-30€ range 🥲

    • @gameboy-nq7je
      @gameboy-nq7je ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@MrMond-gc4rv depends on what you order/where you are, if I go out it's usually only in small cities or villages so it's ofcourse cheaper than in a big city, I just roughly calculated 1 main course (10-15€ unless you go for a big meal or something fancy) plus either a big water or a sweet drink and small water, so closer to what you would normally eat for dinner

    • @madeye6896
      @madeye6896 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MrMond-gc4rv based

    • @madeye6896
      @madeye6896 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@gameboy-nq7je sorry but not true, was a week ago in some East German Kaff and it’s still 20-30 euros. I ate at a normal greek. And here in the west it’s the same

    • @olafgogmo5426
      @olafgogmo5426 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oh, game boy, 15-20 Euros for a meal is not "a lot of money". In other european countries you will pay much more.

  • @corinnaschmidt9735
    @corinnaschmidt9735 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I am German and 60 years old. I have never eaten or even seen pasta with fried potatoes anywhere in Germany. That seems to be a pure family dish of the photographer. Sounds pretty weird to me. Porridge is the classic Irish breakfast and has found more and more fans in Germany in recent years. It is oatmeal boiled in water (or milk) and eaten warm. Fruit is often added as a topping. It's healthy and the warmth makes you feel good. At least me.

    • @adlerweb
      @adlerweb ปีที่แล้ว

      At least in the southern Rhine area pasta with potatoes not unheard of.

    • @animalfriend6413
      @animalfriend6413 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I grew up with that. It's called "Grenadiermarsch", but it originates in the Austro-Hungarian kitchen.

    • @marcbaur677
      @marcbaur677 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But i saw a Pizzeria selling a Pizza with fried Potatos on it.

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch ปีที่แล้ว +36

    The "Abendbrot" (evening bread) stems from the times after WW II. It is a cultural thing. Women also started to work and hence didn't have time to cook. At the same time the working population could go into very often into a factory canteen or received, from their employers, a coupon to reduce the price of the lunch meal in a restaurant. Restaurants offered, and still do, a shorter menu with smaller portions and reduced prices. In many there is even only one three or two course menu with soup, main course and dessert. To profit from the cheaper meals look for "Mittagstisch" (literally: noon table) [If you need more information about "Tisch" in combination with a meal, please use the search engine of your trust.]

    • @AntiProElite
      @AntiProElite ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Which is also why we slowly go back to a warm Abendbrot. Because most of the time both partners are at work middays

    • @agenturensohnDLX
      @agenturensohnDLX ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I'd say the habit is even older. When the industrialization hit in the second half of the 19th century and then up until the 1930s, many people worked in factories for long hours and the began to having a warm meal in the factory canteens or in small kitchens in town that especially opened for the workers at lunchtime. SO they got a good meal to get going until the late evening hours. When they got home, time was extremely short and they already got a big meal during the day, so a simple meal that can be made and eaten quickly was preferred.

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch ปีที่แล้ว

      @@agenturensohnDLX This might be true, but I wasn't sure and didn't have the time to do a thorough search. Thanks for adding it.

  • @FrogeniusW.G.
    @FrogeniusW.G. ปีที่แล้ว +10

    You get that absolutely right, about the Bratwurst + roll!
    It's just a "handle", right in the middle.
    😅
    Also people often break the sausage in half and put the two halves next to each other in the roll.
    😁👍

    • @EternalBiohazard
      @EternalBiohazard ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yes. Just say you'd like a 'gezwickte' if you are in Lower Franconia. Problem solved.

  • @noahsarkhive4482
    @noahsarkhive4482 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    schnitzel meat is a very specific part of the pig and also it gets usually beaten thin (to tender the meat) before you bread it.
    but yeah, it is a very simple dish, like all good soul foods :”)
    fun fact about the schnitzel- it often will be served with a slice of lemon because for some reason many eat their schnitzel with fresh lemon juice on top of it.

    • @bierkraftwerk
      @bierkraftwerk ปีที่แล้ว +3

      The most iconic of the Schnitzels, the "Wiener Schnitzel" ("Viennese Schnitzel") is made of veal, btw. And this is also the reference to "Schnitzel coming to Germany via Austria" mentioned in the DW clip.

  • @novy1198
    @novy1198 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    im not german, im polish, but we have pretty similar culture. we eat breakfast, then a nice dinner around 1/3PM but some people eat it around 5/6PM, after dinner we have "podwieczorek" which is pretty much a lunch but after the dinner, and supper late in the day

  • @melanielife769
    @melanielife769 ปีที่แล้ว +31

    about the warm/cold meals, it's about the amount of food you eat, our warm meals tend to be very filling which means you'll prefer a smaller meal later. So if you ate a big warm meal at the canteen you won't be hungry for something big again in the evening, hence the "cold" meal that's a salad or sandwich. I would also add that soup is common in the evening and eaten with pfannkuchen the german pancake equivalent, super yummy

    • @gameboy-nq7je
      @gameboy-nq7je ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Also it causes problems for a lot of people to eat big meals before going to bed, so what kind of dinner you eat often depends on the time you eat it at and the time you go to sleep

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Flädlesuppe ❤😋

    • @sorvahr8761
      @sorvahr8761 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Wir essen Suppe mit Pfannkuchen? Das hab ich noch nie getan. Hab gerade Flädlesuppe gegoogelt, wegen des Kommentars von @Arno Dobler und will das nun unbedingt mal probieren :D

    • @dunkelklinge
      @dunkelklinge ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@sorvahr8761 ich glaube allerdings, dass der original Kommentar meinte, dass der Pfannkuchen als Beilage gegessen wird. Wird in der Gegend aus der ich komme sehr viel getan. Und Flädlesuppe ist definitiv sehr empfehlenswert.

  • @madonnella
    @madonnella ปีที่แล้ว +88

    I‘m a German vegan. It’s actually mostly easy to be vegan in Germany (unless you live in the countryside) but I gotta admit: I rarely go to German restaurants anyway, it’s just too bland for me. There’s plenty of international restaurants everywhere. But in more traditional restaurants, you find vegan options sometimes too! Some offer Sellerie-Schnitzel or Kohlrabi-Schnitzel, and often you will also find vegan Thai Curry as the vegan option as well 😂

    • @motionpictures6629
      @motionpictures6629 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      You're welcome. I tortured German restaurants since 1990 with "extrawünschen", it started around 2005 that you could get at least something vegetarian in restaurants. I remember not eating for an entire weekend, in summer camp, in the late 90s because there was nothing vegetarian to eat. When I started crying because I was hungry, I was bullied. Times change

    • @ida6950
      @ida6950 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Celery Schnitzel is soo good!!

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride ปีที่แล้ว

      Frankly, it really depends on the kind of restaurant you visit. Yeah, the standard German restaurant which caters to the masses is pretty bland, but that is imho true across the board, no matter which cuisine you pick. If you are ready to pay just a tiny bit more, though, you can get an experience. Currently I am really into fusion cuisine, though.

    • @LeroxYT
      @LeroxYT ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Vegan...immer noch n schwieriges thema aus meiner Sicht...nicht Wegen den ganzen Vorurteilen oder dem geschmack...auch wenn das mit den geschmackverstärkern etc so ne sache ist....und ich gefühlt alles rausschmecke....ich mein wurst (nicht vegan) und dann auf einmal 5% mehr speck....schmeck den unterschied direkt, aber das ja persönliche sache, generelle sache ist ja, das vegan sein sehr viel platz wegnimmt, Landwirtschaft usw, und das zerstörte ja die natur noch mehr...

    • @ida6950
      @ida6950 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@LeroxYT Sorry, aber das stimmt einfach nicht und ich weiß auch nicht wie du auf diese Behauptungen kommst.
      Geschmacksverstärker sind nicht auf vegane Produkte reduziert und Massentierhaltung trägt massiv zu Umweltverschmutzung (Nitrat, Düngemittel, Pestizide, Umwandlung von Natur zu Ackerland), zur Klimaerwärmung (Treibhausgase -15% des weltweiten CO2 Ausstoßes) und zur Abholzung des Regenwaldes (Import von Soja als Tierfutter aus Südamerika) bei.
      83% der weltweit landwirtschaftlichen Nutzfläche wird für die Produktion von Fleisch und Tierprodukten genutzt. Demnach nimmt eine omnivore Ernährung weitaus mehr Platz ein als eine vegane.
      Jeder kann essen was er oder sie will, aber ich sehe es SO oft, dass sobald jemand das Wort „vegan“ auch nur erwähnt, Leute ankommen um Menschen ungefragt mit ihrem Halbwissen zu belehren (etwas, dass ironischerweise Veganern nachgesagt wird).

  • @RevPeterTrabaris
    @RevPeterTrabaris ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Yes, the main meal is in the afternoon. I don't know if everyone still does this. Back in 1978 I spent a month in Germany. The morning meal was as described. Bread, lunch type meats and cheese. The midday meal was when we ate the major hot meal of the day. We had cake and coffee in the late afternoon. And at about 6:30 pm I think, just bread and cheese, and maybe fruit. It is really a much healthier way of eating. Your body has a good amount of time to burn off the calories of the primary meal. I don't eat German food today, but I still try to have my major meal in the early afternoon. Great video. Thanks, Ryan. Peace

  • @FrogeniusW.G.
    @FrogeniusW.G. ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Yes, dessert is really not big here.
    Maybe some ice cream here and there or some pudding or fruit.
    It's not "necessary", bc. lunch is already big/filling, and in the morning or evening, you can have jelly or sth. sweet with your bread anyway.
    Instead we have "Kaffee & Kuchen" at around 16:00 (4 pm).
    Like english tea time!!
    😂

  • @ElaMongrella
    @ElaMongrella ปีที่แล้ว +3

    As a German, I think it makes more sense for the bigger mean to be at lunch time, and a small meal for supper, because you're not gonna be doing much more after supper, and soon go to bed. So why pump up full of calories for that then? If you eat the mail meal for lunch, you have a lot more time to burn it off, and then have a sandwich or two for dinner, when you're gonna, just sit and watch a movie or something and go sleep soon anyway.

  • @valskye3251
    @valskye3251 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    The reason why we usually eat warm lunch and bread with sausage and cheese in the evening is that large companies had canteens very early after WWII where employees could have a warm meal at lunchtime. Therefore, it was not necessary to have a second warm meal in the evening.

  • @panther7748
    @panther7748 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    For us eating out is a special occasion, not a regular way of just consuming food (at least not for most Germans). So it happens a lot less often than in the US, but it also means that we value it higher. We go to a restaurant with friends or family to have a good time or to celebrate a birthday, etc. And they don't rush you trough the restaurant like on a conveyor belt, you can sit there for hours, talk and drink alcohol, just have a good time.

    • @IZaubermausI
      @IZaubermausI 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Exactly! 👍🏼

  • @mickypescatore9656
    @mickypescatore9656 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Hi, Ryan! The story behind "Pumpernickel" is that Napoleon"s favourite horse was called "Nicole", and he always wanted some bread for Nicole to feed her. So he needed "bread for Nicole", what is called "pain pour Nicole" in french. The simple/ common folk in occupied germany coudn`t speak french, so they said something that sounds similar to what they have heard. In addition to the dialekt in the area around the river Rhine it became "Pum per nickel" and at last "Pumpernickel". (It`s a very special sort of dark bread by the way). Funny, isn`t it? Greetings! 🍞😊

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Funny, but also completely wrong. Pumpernickel as a word way predates Napoleon Bonaparte by several centuries and has been used to refer to a specific bread more than 100 years before his birth.

    • @mickypescatore9656
      @mickypescatore9656 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Llortnerof Interesting... Then there are probably different sources of knowledge. 🤔For me my source seems very plausible to me. ...But a second short research creates different stories, indeed!!!! Maybe it`s a typical kind of rumor from Cologne. Sometimes people there are so proud (and funny), that they tell strange stories! ...At least the rumor should be true that the origin of the Cologne carnival has something to do with Napoleon and his soldiers, who were supposed to be made fun of by the residents!
      If not, I just hope, Ryan could taste Pumpernickel one day! -Do you agree?

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mickypescatore9656 Having him try German bread in general could be interesting. It's quite a different thing that the baked bads sold in the US.

    • @mickypescatore9656
      @mickypescatore9656 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Llortnerof 😁

  • @kelalia
    @kelalia ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Schnitzel is often pork, BUT Schnitzel Vienna-style, i.e. the original version is ONLY beef from a young cow, a calf.

  • @starlighttigerx268
    @starlighttigerx268 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    When I grew up my family and I ate our warm meal in the evening, because my dad was working till afternoon. Since his working place did not had a cantine or a proper "Teeküche" to reheat something, he had to eat sandwiches at work. That lead us to eating our warm meals in the evening. When my brothers and I came home from school, we just ate the typical sandwiches than.

  • @utebellasteinweg3976
    @utebellasteinweg3976 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Particularly juicy schnitzel can be prepared from pork if it comes from the hip. It is interspersed with fine fat vein. But the meat from the leg is also well suited for preparing uniform schnitzel from it.

  • @W0Ndr3y
    @W0Ndr3y ปีที่แล้ว +29

    Schnitzel is not just meat, it must be covered in flower, egg and ground bread (as he did in the video) and then fried, preferably in a pan and lots of oil or even better lard.

    • @pentragon90
      @pentragon90 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      not always zigeunerschnitzel for example is not covered in that stuff (paniert) because the sauce would destroy the breading (Panade). But its still called Schnitzel.

    • @KolaKoala-jn2jr
      @KolaKoala-jn2jr ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Wrong! The "panierte Schnitzel" is one of many variants.

    • @FrauElkePoon
      @FrauElkePoon ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The word "Schnitzel" comes from "schnitzen" (to carve).... That's why there is the "Sellerieschnitzel" (celery root schnitzel)...sliced, breaded and fried

    • @derhavas
      @derhavas ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Schnitzel just means a slice of meat,
      just ask any butcher. If it's covered in breadcrumbs (and egg and flour), it's correctly called Wiener Schnitzel. But as Wiener Schnitzel is the most common form of Schnitzel, the names became mostly synonymous.

    • @Skilan506
      @Skilan506 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@derhavasthat’s not exactly correct. To be called Wiener Schnitzel veal meat must be used. If other kinds of meat are used it is called Schnitzel Wiener Art.

  • @1983simi
    @1983simi ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I found the question of whether people eat their warm meal for lunch or dinner in Germany really depends on their job/family situation. When I was growing up all the kids whose moms were housewives or only working part-time were used to having their warm meal for lunch and only a cold meal for dinner, while kids like me whose parents were both working full-time would have to make do with some cold snack for lunch after letting ourselves in at home with our key after school and our parents would try to make sure we'd get at least a warm meal in the evening.
    When I was growing up schools in my part of Germany didn't have the option for a warm lunch at school (now they do because the schoolsystem changed a little), so really dinner was my only chance for a full warm meal until I learned how to cook some simple things for myself because I would basically be alone at home from 2 to 5.30pm.
    Then later for adults it also really depends on your job situation. If your job has a canteen or at least gets a good discount with some nearby restaurant, many people will indeed have their warm meal for lunch and not really bother cooking something warm after work for dinner. But if food options at your workplace are limited or too heavy/unhealthy/expensive on the daily many people opt for taking a sandwich or salad they prepared at home with them in a lunchbox and prepare something warm and simple in the night or just go out for food.
    So the question if you can have your warm meal for lunch really depends on your work situation / on whether there's someone at home to prepare a warm lunch for you. It's true, however, that very few people will go through the trouble of having a warm meal twice a day, so either it's for lunch or for dinner.

  • @FrauElkePoon
    @FrauElkePoon ปีที่แล้ว +2

    "...it can't look like someone already ate it..."
    NEVER order Labskaus! 😅

  • @darkflex91
    @darkflex91 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I guess I'm a little late for it but.... @Ryan:
    Schnitzel is any thin cut of meat. Its basically when you no longer are allowed to call it a steak thin...
    What makes them speciall are the suffix used. Here are a few examples:
    "Wiener schnitzel": The Classic - its from vienna (Wien) and has to be prepared from Veal. The preparation has to follow proper way to ensure the famous airy structure and right crisp is present.
    "Schwein/Huhn/Puten - Schnitzel": Some times also refered in old Restaurants in Vienna as "Alt wiener Schnitzel" meaning in old viennese style, usually followed by a "vom xxx" which ever animal was used. Thats the Everyday Mans Schnitzel you see every where from Austria to German to even America, they may call it different but that's the most eaten way, just because of simplicity. Varities are usually then with panco or cornflakes. All goes.
    "Jägerschnitzel": Or Huntsman Schnitzel as you would say in english. Thats were oppinions differ... The Germans make it in the breading and top it with sauce, as an Austrian I can tell you, its no oppinion, the german are wrong! Just do a thin slice of Meat beat it thin as usually and fry it after a short flour dusting. When the Color is right take it out, make your classic pan sauces usually with Mushrooms fried too before adding liquid to get a classic middle European Huntsmansauce. Put the Schnitzel back to let it adjust in the Sauce and bring it back up to temperature.
    I probably have forgotten a lot of variants like Sur-Schnitzel and the like. But those are just like the second enumeration a variant of meat.
    Gordon Blue's are no Schnitzel but thear own Dish, we have to thank the French for that genious Dish, Honor to whom honor is due. (PS Snails are originaly from Austria, so are Croissants! HA!)
    PS: Love your reactions! Maybe do a reaction on some comments that "enlighten" you and clear up stuff you were confused at first in the video ^^ Could be fun, cya.

  • @Nico.18.201
    @Nico.18.201 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Hi Ryan I can tell you you really have to try the schnitzel it's just an absolute delicacy. .A schnitzel is basically made like this: you take a piece of good quality meat (usually pig) that is pounded with a meat mallet (to make the meat tender), seasoned with pepper, salt and paprika, then breaded with flour, egg and breadcrumbs and fried in the pan fried. (as an attachmentthere are usually fries or mashed potatoes) I can only recommend it to everyone, it's just indescribably good 👍

    • @KaroF.
      @KaroF. ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh Gott bitte nicht 😂

  • @knutritter461
    @knutritter461 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Originally lunch used to be the biggest meal of the day. However during work hours this meal is usually reduced considerably so you don't get so tired. Currently dinner gets more and more important... this might depend on the region of Germany as well.

    • @melchiorvonsternberg844
      @melchiorvonsternberg844 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Man sollte in diesem Zusammenhang, auch an die vielen Handwerker denken, die oft weder Zeit noch Möglichkeit haben, im Außeneinsatz ein warmes und umfangreiches Mittagessen zu sich zu nehmen. Da wird schon fast zwangsläufig das Abendessen, zur warmen Hauptmahlzeit des Tages...

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The issue are the current working hours. I used to have lunch, but currently it is simply impossible to take a warm meal during the work day, consequently currently dinner is my most important meal.

    • @ello7222
      @ello7222 ปีที่แล้ว

      Breakfast = a cup of coffee or tea, lunch = a roll or 2 slices of toast with some kind of sausage, cheese, fish and sometimes an egg, dinner = the main meal of the day. Usually meat or fish, veggies and potatoes, rice or pasta, of course cooked at home, no junk.

  • @l3lue7hunder12
    @l3lue7hunder12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Schnitzel is whole boneless low-fat tenderized veal meat with breadcrump coating using egg yolk cooked in oil. It is traditionally served with a lemon slice, some usually brown sauce and a side dish made from (somewhat) salted potato products, traditionally french fries, and a small bowl of salad from tomatos, cucumber and a lettuce leaf with one of various types of light ( vinegar ) dressings.
    The best known Schnitzel are the "Wiener Schnitzel" which traditionally is just simple, the "Schweine Schnitzel" which is the same using pork but also used as the base for an increasing number of other "Schnitzel", the "Jägerschnitzel" wich adds mushrooms to the brown sauce, the "Paprikaschnitzel" which comes with a red slightly spicy sweet pepper sauce, the "Putenschnitzel" which again usually is the simple variant but uses turkey meat, and the "Rahmschnitzel" using a cream based heavy yellow sauce.
    "Schnitzel" however also is a whole family of tenderized breadcrump coated oil cooked slaps of meat allowing for great variety, including exotic options without even "Schnitzel" in the name, such as "Cordon bleu".

  • @Silphiroth
    @Silphiroth ปีที่แล้ว +11

    My boyfriend is from the UK and it is still weird to me to eat big/ warm on evenings. My dinner is usually some bread rolls and thats it. I was not aware that Germany is the odd one in that regard until I met him

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I agree with your boyfriend 😁

    • @JeeWeeD
      @JeeWeeD ปีที่แล้ว

      AC-tually, it is not: in the Netherlands it was quite normal as well. The big difference is that in the Netherlands things have changed quicker, so warm lunch is less normal now.
      My maternal grandparents only changed to warm evening meals when I was already living at the other side of the country, after 1998; my parents ate in the evening, because it was more practical for them to do, just like with my paternal grandparents.

    • @saya-mi
      @saya-mi ปีที่แล้ว +2

      No, Germany is not the odd one. I'm sure more european countries have it this way too. At least Czech Rep., Slovakia... You know, it just makes sense, you shouln't eat too much or too heavy food in the evening but you need the energy durning the daytime

  • @tannywel24
    @tannywel24 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm from Germany. When I work the early shift, I usually eat a little something in the morning, a warm main meal at lunchtime and a mostly cold and smaller meal in the evening. When I work the late shift, I have a hearty breakfast, with bread or rolls, croissants, or whatever, at lunchtime there is nothing (at most a little something) and in the evening there is a warm main meal.
    When I was a child, we usually had breakfast with bread, rolls, jam, Nutella, ... (in any case only sweet toppings in the morning) or cornflakes. After school there was a warm main meal at home (school ended at 12 noon to 2 p.m.). And in the evening there was again a cold meal with bread (covered with hearty things like sausage or cheese), and in between (mostly on weekends) between 4 and 5 o'clock in the afternoon there was coffee and cake.
    And here in Saarland, in the summer months, people "swivel" especially in the evening (we Saarlanders don't grill, we swivel (in german: Schwenken), because we use a so-called "swivel grill" or tripod grill). We have a saying: The swivel (the one who stands at the grill) swivels the swivel (that's what we also call the special grilled meat) at the swivel (the special grill). In German: "Der Schwenker schwenkt den Schwenker am Schwenker." There are also various side dishes such as potato salad, pasta salad and baguettes. By the way: Saarland is the most French-inspired part of Germany.th-cam.com/video/RZ3vhPYex90/w-d-xo.html

  • @johanneskaiser8188
    @johanneskaiser8188 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Always watching your videos during my lunch break, so ... Mahlzeit!

  • @agnieszkamanko8023
    @agnieszkamanko8023 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In Poland we eat warm lunch and a smaller, usually cold dinner. I guess when somebody can't eat something warm while at work, then eats bigger warm dinner in the afternoon

  • @crefelder1
    @crefelder1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Pumpernickel is a german word. It describes a very dark baked bread. But it is freshly soft and at the same time firm to the bite. You will love Schmitzel and also Mettwurst with Grünkohl.

  • @gwalon2089
    @gwalon2089 ปีที่แล้ว

    legendary outro! : "Thank you for existing. (...) Don´t let your dreams be memes!" 😂

  • @airenaDE
    @airenaDE ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Germany is also known as the land of poets and thinkers

    • @louisr6560
      @louisr6560 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      you spelled "potato" wrong...

    • @Frenchie100
      @Frenchie100 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@louisr6560 🤣

    • @bierkraftwerk
      @bierkraftwerk ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Also "drinkers" is spelled incorrectly.

  • @Harzer-Roller
    @Harzer-Roller ปีที่แล้ว +1

    These typical German dishes are very traditional, that is, brought here from the past. Modern, young German cuisine is international. Recipes from Italy, Greece, France and Spain play an important role here.
    But the cuisine of America and Asia is also widespread. Steakhouses and Asian restaurants can be found in almost every city.

  • @leavoda3791
    @leavoda3791 ปีที่แล้ว

    The thing about warm meal around midday is that then your body has enough time to digest it before falling asleep. You drink enough water to move everything along and at the evening you eat something that won't overstrain your digestion system.
    If you have a filling, heavy meal before bedtime, your digestion suffers bc you are lieing down, so the stomach acid isn't digesting the food properly, you get heartburn and the feeling of "weight" in your belly, you get very thirsty and your sleep pattern gets interrupted so you would drink and replace the fluids that were needed for the food to get digested. You allso have to go to the bathroom.... It's usually not something you have to do if you eat a good lunch and a light dinner.

  • @eastfrisianguy
    @eastfrisianguy ปีที่แล้ว

    In my family, when I was a kid, we had the hot meal at noon on weekdays (school was over by 1:30pm at the latest), at least for my mom and us kids. I always took 1-2 slices of bread with cold cuts, cheese or jam to school - I couldn't eat anything before the first break, otherwise I got terribly sick with all the consequences. Some of the hot food was set aside and we ate supper around 5-5:30pm, when my dad came home from work, then the set aside portion from lunch was warmed up for my dad and my mom and us kids ate bread or cereal.
    I always thought the dinner routine was weird - but I have a hunch that my stepmom wanted to watch her shows weekdays in the early afternoon and in the evening after 6pm in peace without cooking. 😂 Since my parents retired, they eat hot for lunch and bread in the evening and morning.
    And the regional aspect is totally true, because in Northwest Germany and the Netherlands there are a lot of similarities in traditional food (in winter a lot of stews, sausage specialties are quite similar etc.).

  • @Jasonslittlesister1
    @Jasonslittlesister1 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Abendbrot is really really good! Our favourite food time, because we can eat together and have fun conversations at home.
    No job, no school interference.
    And you can add so much more to your Abendbrot (evening bread) than what you had for breakfast.
    For breakfast we have/oftentimes eat more white wheat bread like Brötchen or Semmeln (bread rolls) with sweet things like marmelade, honey and Nutella, and in the evening you won't eat sweet things.
    The bread we use for the evening bread time is often more on the high protein and full grain side, darker and it'll fill your stomach more naturally because of its indigriences that should make you 'satt' (not hungry anymore).
    Add a salad, tomato&cucumber, special meat like Mett, grapes and cheese, or melon and ham, fried eggs and pickles...
    And you'll have the perfect Abendbrot! 😊❤

  • @Rick2010100
    @Rick2010100 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    The family is eating the sunday roast traditionally at 12:00 or 12:30, if you invite guests for dinner in the evening, the dinner time usually 20:00. A invitation for coffee and cake is usually for 15:00-17:00. The evening meal is traditionally more or less cold and smaller than the lunch, because a full stomach makes you sleep restlessly.

  • @annuitcoeptis9997
    @annuitcoeptis9997 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    "German Chocolate Cake" isn't from Germany, it was invented by a baker named "Samuel German" in the US, hence the name.

  • @markusschenkl7943
    @markusschenkl7943 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Indeed many Germans do a lot more home cooking than in the US. Personally I'd say I eat out maybe once per month -- plus maybe one or two home orders per month when I'm absolutely not in the mood for cooking. ;-)

    • @LJJ22
      @LJJ22 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I think so too. Many students tend to eat at the mensa for lunch, but since 2019 I have only eaten at a restaurant 3 times and 2 times were with colleagues.
      I usually eat simple/cold things during the day and then cook something when I get home in the evening between 6 and 8; on weekends it can also be 2 times per day.
      Meanwhile when I was in China, I enjoyed eating in cheap restaurants multiple times per week. All depends on the price and what's available closeby.

  • @voyance4elle
    @voyance4elle ปีที่แล้ว +1

    hahaha your reaction to "Mahlzeit" is so funny :D I laughed hard!

  • @maxbarko8717
    @maxbarko8717 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In the city where I studied there was a restaurant specialized on Schnitzel. They had 38 different Schnitzel dishes. It was so good!

  • @lyaneris
    @lyaneris ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It is normal to eat one warm meal per day. Eating it in the evening is becoming more popular as lots of people don't have time to cook at lunchtime.

  • @MichaelJohnson-vi6eh
    @MichaelJohnson-vi6eh ปีที่แล้ว

    I heard that napoleon had a horse who got a treat of dense brown bread. The horses name was Nickel. So he had Pain pour Nickel.

  • @Blutwind
    @Blutwind ปีที่แล้ว +1

    On the Sausages on the kale most common is called "Pinkel" as its ofen even called Kohl und Pinkel.
    Kale while to a degree eaten all over germany is something very popular in northern Germany and is a big social event "celebrated" by a so called Kohltour were you and your friends go for a long walk (in january/feburary) playing various traditional games and consuming quiet the high amount of alcohol after reaching the resturant you get served the afromentiond "kohl und pinkel" the pinkelwurst itself is kinda special in that its technicaly a meat and spice mix cooked in sausage form and consists mainly of beacon,onions,grains and various spices giving it a somewhat gritty texture.
    On the note of schnitzel while its mainly just a thin slice of meat its also quiet important to tenderize it by beating it even thiner with a pan or hammer.

  • @sorvahr8761
    @sorvahr8761 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Finally someone thanks me for existing! You're welcome! :D love your videos man^^

  • @HafdirTasare
    @HafdirTasare ปีที่แล้ว

    11:20 I believe this comes from the late Working Class tradition.
    -Little quick breakfast, few slizes of bread with toppings
    -Lunch: When the Working Household Members and school children come home and have a prepared warm Lunch together (Often followed by a siesta)
    -Smaller Dinner, with bread and cold topping
    That way, the mother only had to cook one hot meal a day besides also having to manage the household.
    This of course is different to Weekend Meals.
    For example, in my family, at weekends, we had a late Breakfast / Brunch, skipped the Lunch and had a warm dinner.
    And in traditional Families, there would be a bigger, longer prepared Lunch on Sundays (from the time when people all still went regulary to church and then had a hot meals all together)

  • @FrogeniusW.G.
    @FrogeniusW.G. ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Nearly no one eats (ate) warm in the evening!
    The word for dinner even _contains_ bread:
    "Abendbrot" (evening bread) is a synonyme for Abendessen (which translates to dinner)!
    It's from the time where men ate their warm lunch at work and women (housewives) and kids after school.
    Now more women work professionally than traditionally and more and more people eat cold for lunch. So they cook (together) in the evening.
    I myself still eat bread in the evening.
    Btw. that's a reason why a bed is more important/significant then a kitchen.
    You can eat for weeks or month without a stove, as a German.
    But you can hardly sleep on the floor (except it's maybe june till august), bc. it's cold..

  • @digger66a
    @digger66a ปีที่แล้ว

    11:00 What it means traditional we had cold Breakfast warm Lunch and cold Dinner.
    We switched that to cold Breakfast Cold Lunch and Warm Dinner since its hard to make warm food at work so we eat the warm food after work in the evening.

  • @CycloneFox
    @CycloneFox ปีที่แล้ว +119

    As a vegetarian German who tries to live mostly vegan (who also loves the taste and texture of meat, but decided not to consume it anymore for moral reasons) I can tell you that sausages (or any form of blended/minced meat) is actually the easiest to substitute. Vegan sausages and minced meat have actually gotten so good in the past few years that I like a vegetarian burger, lasagna or hotdog just as much as the version with meat. The kinds of taste that can't really be replaced are cheese (which I still eat) or something like a really high quality beef steak.

    • @MerlinDerMagier
      @MerlinDerMagier ปีที่แล้ว +9

      100% True 👍🏻

    • @irgendeinname9256
      @irgendeinname9256 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      I mean when it comes to morals dairy products aren't any better

    • @CycloneFox
      @CycloneFox ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@irgendeinname9256 Yes. I don't want to defend myself here. I think consuming dairy products is very similar. Cows are held in intensive mass farming, just like in the meat industry, they permanently get impregnated and separated from their children, which is proven to cause trauma for them and the children are being brutally processed into animal meal.
      I could argue that I think the CO2 footprint is not as bad for dairy products compared to meat. And I think that is another relevant argument. But overall I agree that if anything it isn't much "better".
      Cheese is one of the last few animal products i consume pretty regularly. (Because it is so hard to substitute as I stated above) But I try to get it down to a minimum.

    • @jugro7639
      @jugro7639 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I mostly like vegan meat substitutes even better than the "real thing". I always hated it, when I chewed on gristles when eating Schnitzel. 🤢

    • @Bizi1988
      @Bizi1988 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yes true. Never had any Problems as a vegan ❤ even in south germany. Spätzle, braten and Co are also easy to veganize

  • @BjornsTIR
    @BjornsTIR ปีที่แล้ว +2

    imo it makes a lot of sense to have the biggest meal either in the morning or around noon, when you actually need the energy and have enough time to digest.

  • @alexia2189
    @alexia2189 ปีที่แล้ว

    In Romania we also eat soups plus main dish for lunch like : mashed potatoes with stake or stews or pasta etc and dessert if given and for dinner we would eat the leftovers or some potato salad with egg, sandwiches and during the summer, a lot of mayo veggie salads: zucchini salad, eggplant salad, calliflower salad etc. We also fry zucchini in egg and flour and it is amazing during the summer with fresh tomatoes from your own garden...yum yum. The Romanian grandmas force you to have soup, because they would say: if you don't eat soup, you won't have a good digestion😂😂

  • @xSuii31
    @xSuii31 ปีที่แล้ว

    My friend ate 3 times outside last week and he said „Wow I am living such a decadent life at the moment.“ Now he wants to stop eating outside for this month completely. In germany, eating outside is often considered not only expensive but also „luxurious“ in a way. We usually eat at home or bring prepared meals when we have a long day ahead. So healthy!

  • @obiwanfisher537
    @obiwanfisher537 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    No, schnitzel is not JUST a thin slice of meat, it's 99% beaten, flattened and breaded pork (but there are chicken alternatives sometimes)

  • @krakentoast
    @krakentoast ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You are right. There is A LOT of creative people in Germany. Especially where I live, in Berlin.

  • @HafdirTasare
    @HafdirTasare ปีที่แล้ว

    12:48 "Can't we eat out this week dad?" "Son... is our last name Croesus??"

  • @Andi1878
    @Andi1878 ปีที่แล้ว

    Schnitzel is NOT just a thin slice of meat.
    It's either veal or pork, it gets thinly pounded and breaded before being fried to a light golden brown perfection. Best served with some lemon (Vienna style) or different sauces (Hunters' style with mushroom sauce for example).

  • @Zafer258
    @Zafer258 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is usually one warm meal in the day in Germany if you eat up to 3 times, 4 times is rare but usually invaves 2 warm meals. It's not set in stone by any means but what you'd find most people custom to.
    And the schnitzel is a thin slice of meet mostly hammered flat, breaded and than (fried ?!?) cooked with oil (not deep fried).

  • @julianegner1741
    @julianegner1741 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    "Himmel un Ääd" is from the Rhineland region and literally means "Heaven and Earth". It consists of Blutwurst (Blood Sausage) and Kartoffelbrei (Mashed potatoes)

    • @s.kurzeck3020
      @s.kurzeck3020 ปีที่แล้ว

      Mashed potatoes are the "earth". You forgot the "Heaven" - which is Apple Sauce or sauteed Apple cubes. And as much as I like Blutwurst - my kids prefer Bratwurst or Nürnberger and caramelized onions.

  • @panther7748
    @panther7748 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    A Schnitzel is a thin (beat) slice of meat that is breaded (coated in flour, eggyoke and breadcrumbs) and fried. That's the definition.
    Kaffee und Kuchen, "coffee and cake" is our traditional afternoon ritual, similar to the british tea time, just with coffee instead of tea. We drink our afternoon coffee and enjoy some nice cake along with it. It can be very fancy, with a nice tablecloth, silverware and porcelain, especially on weekends or if you have guests.

  • @ParaSpite
    @ParaSpite ปีที่แล้ว

    Schnitzel, or escalope in English, is meat that has been hammered flat. In Germany usually served breaded even if there's also a sauce, but in Austria it is only breaded by default if there is no sauce.

  • @mercyunselt2035
    @mercyunselt2035 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I just make Spätzle for my son just while ago. There are more than 1 meal, so I will pack it later and put it in the freezer for the future use.

  • @nayaraa-h279
    @nayaraa-h279 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow, was watching your videos and I was sad because I watched all the new ones. Then there popped this new one up, perfect timing! ^^

  • @HalfEye79
    @HalfEye79 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The best cake is cheesecake ("Käsekuchen"). I've eaten several versions of that. Bienenstich follows after that as is delicious, too.

  • @willewiking98
    @willewiking98 ปีที่แล้ว

    omg i love her attitude so much this is golden hahahah

  • @Megacillin23
    @Megacillin23 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    As a german living in Norway since a few years ago I get weird looks from my colleagues all the time for eating warm lunch cause all they eat for breakfast and lunch is knekkebrød (crispy flat bread) with cheese and jam or mayonaise. It seems like it's a very german thing to have your main meal at "lunchtime".

  • @RynTyrell
    @RynTyrell ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Abendbrot , or the evening meal is more like sandwiches. In germany its normal to have a good meal in the morning, consist mostly of Sandiwch style stuff or cereals, to have the energy to work for the day , at lunch its a warm meal and in the evening its sandwiches. Maybe in the Afternoon its some Coffee and cake too.

  • @petouser
    @petouser ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Ever wondered why Brits call their midday meal "dinner"? It's just something i now figured and I may be wrong, but it may be that the main warm meal used to be eaten in the midday, but in the US it was shifted to the evening. So they eat the same type of meal called dinner, but at different times of the day. It kinda makes sense to me, since in the old days people used to do a lot more physical work, so they needed a big meal and lots of calories before and during work, not after.

  • @matthewrandom4523
    @matthewrandom4523 ปีที่แล้ว

    An old saying is "Eat like an emperor in the morning, in the afternoon like a king, in the evening like a pauper".

  • @SasukeGER
    @SasukeGER ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Of course I eat the warm meal in the evening, I work from morning too afternoon. There is no Canteen or something here so I can only eat what my Wife cooks at evening

  • @JustMe-pb9ep
    @JustMe-pb9ep ปีที่แล้ว +1

    the original Schnitzel from Vienna is made from veal. however in Germany all kinds of meat are used, usually pork, beef or chicken

  • @Jackcaos
    @Jackcaos ปีที่แล้ว +2

    to blow your mind even more, at somedays i don't even eat a warm meal at all

  • @benediktwinter3037
    @benediktwinter3037 ปีที่แล้ว

    We don't do lunch our dinner is literally called "Midday-eating" and takes place accordingly while "Breadtime" is basicly evening breakfast

  • @MiciFee97
    @MiciFee97 ปีที่แล้ว

    A schnitzel ist a thin slice of meat but with breading and fried as they did in the video

  • @6Korn6Slipknot6
    @6Korn6Slipknot6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In my area it is actually uncommon to eat warm dinner at home in a normal day. We usually eat "Vesper": Bread with different sausuages, cheese, eggs, maybe fresh or pickled vegetables, spreads and so on. Rarely jam and alike. It is a different thing if you go out for dinner (what is not that common as she says). A Vesper btw also could be your lunch box at work or school weather it is warm or cold. Warm food in the evening is mostly the rest from our lunch or only for that person who has been working in the midday and did not have warm food yet that day. So that happens 2-3 times a week I guess.

  • @Nils.Minimalist
    @Nils.Minimalist ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Schnitzel is probably the most popular food in Germany. I've been a vegetarian for over 24 years, but I remember that my little brother always wanted only one thing when we went to restaurants to eat Italian, Indian or Chinese, even in these international restaurants: Schnitzel 😂

    • @reinhard8053
      @reinhard8053 ปีที่แล้ว

      To me it's also some kind of a fallback choice. If the menu doesn't show anything interesting (I'm a bit picky) or the interesting stuff is too expensive, there is always the Wiener Schnitzel. It's served in any general restaurant.

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@reinhard8053 It's the opposite for me...Schnitzel is actually one of the few dishes I am able to do myself just fine, hence I only order it in Restaurants where I know they have perfected the art of Schnitzel.

  • @robfriedrich2822
    @robfriedrich2822 ปีที่แล้ว

    Schnitzel means sliced meat. Vienna is beef from calf, butterfly sliced to get bigger size, covered with egg and breadcrumbs, they claim, these have to be from Vienna white bread, fried in a frying pan, but it has to swim in the fat. Initially the rule was, only side dish is cucumber or tomato salad. In Austria they call tomato paradise apples. But also they call potatoes earth apples.

  • @robfriedrich2822
    @robfriedrich2822 ปีที่แล้ว

    Sometimes I eat pancake in the morning, sometimes fried potatoes with egg, when it isn't sure that I have a good lunch.

  • @Reboegga
    @Reboegga ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I think it is more the older generation who still eat only little in the evenings...or have the classical Abendbrot. My parents were born in die 50s, they still do it, unless i come visit😅. When us kids were younger, we also used to do it, but i guess we rebelled long enough, so we got our main meal in the evenings. And only on sunday evenings we ate Abendbrot. On Sunday we had the usual "Sonntagsbraten" etc for lunch. Also, i guess it is a matter of money. Students etc probably need to save more money and can't afford to have several big meals a day.😊

  • @whisped8145
    @whisped8145 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    5:30 Yes, this edible handle is how the hamburger was invented. Such a breadroll, but with a meatball instead of a bratwurst.

  • @joanarohde6889
    @joanarohde6889 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I LITERALLY am a German graphic designer eating schnitzel while watching you video! :O (no joke)

  • @Faeyeful
    @Faeyeful ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Our main (and warm) meal also strongly depends on age and workplace. When I was in school (and my brothers/sister) we mostly ate around 2PM Mittag (translates to "Midday", or Mittagessen "Middayfood/eating"). The kids were out of school, mother at home and there was still a lot of time to do dishes etc. My father was also mostly at home around the time or my mum brough him his meal to his workplace with a bike. :) He was working nearby.
    Many years later, living alone or married, many people and singles either a) eat with collegues their warm meals on break in the work canteen or go out to eat for a small bite (for real dining out we need our 2 hours roughly ;) No workbreak is that long, but in my old workplace we had 3/4 hour for lunch) or b) in the evening when they come home from work - hence also the split in the main meal time.
    For the vegans and vegetarian topic: I am not a vegetarian, but I mostly eat meat only 1, maybe twice a week and only from local animals who were allowed to live on grass and enjoy the lifetime they had and were also locally butchered without long transports. It is pricey, but the least we can do if we really want to eat meat. Except once a month for a steak, I only eat chicken meat, and maybe one small package of Mettwurst a month for a few days of something else than jam, butter and salads on bread. :D I know a lot of people that do not consume lots of meat, but here and there still enjoy a good sausage on the grill in summer or a steak when they dine out on birthdays and such.

  • @nichtthunder
    @nichtthunder ปีที่แล้ว +2

    11:15 You understood it correctly. Most Germans (At least from my experience) eat their warm meal at lunchtime, and for dinner they eat something quick and easy, like a slice of bread or something

  • @claudiaberger9639
    @claudiaberger9639 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The ingredients must be natural and not genetically modified.
    In Germany, it is not important how cheap ingredients are, but how genuine.
    Bon appétit. 😋

  • @HafdirTasare
    @HafdirTasare ปีที่แล้ว

    The Term "Schnitzel" realy just describes a thin ( often tenderised) slize of meat.
    The thing most germans will relate to when they hear "Schnitzel" is the Vienna Version, that we see here.
    Which is Veal that is breaded as shown in the video.

  • @MsKissbone
    @MsKissbone ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In school they taught us the healthiest way to eat would be:
    - Breakfast like a king
    - Lunch like a farmer
    - Dinner like a beggar
    But having a full-time job, thats just not feasible for me.

  • @drunkoctopuswantstoplay7029
    @drunkoctopuswantstoplay7029 ปีที่แล้ว

    5:55
    Pumpernickel comes from the old german word
    "Pumper" wich means "Fart" The reason is because the bread is hard to digest and Nickel was the old price for this bread 1 Nickel

  • @DerEchteBold
    @DerEchteBold ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Haha, I didn't think that cured sausage on the cale looked like a weenie, I thought it looked like a radish.
    Btw, of course she pronounced the 'h' in herbs, she's sounds British and therefore she knows how English words are pronounced ; )
    And that constant "Mahlzeit" around noon can sometimes get a bit annoying at the workplace.

  • @laur4a768
    @laur4a768 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    11:30 We are from France in part that was German and people eat cold things for dinner, maybe some salty cheesy bread spread, maybe cheese and bread, some cold salad. Rarely in oven, usually at weekends. My origin is Serbian and it is same there, you eat what you find in fridge or remains from lunch since Serbs make big meals for lunch and there is always leftovers...

  • @shasacosmica9572
    @shasacosmica9572 ปีที่แล้ว

    There is a german saying about eating.
    Morgens wie ein König,mittags wie ein Kaiser,abends wie ein Bettelmann. It means you should eat a breakfast as good as a King, a lunch as good (or much) as a Emperor and in the evening your meal should look like the meal of a beggar.

  • @grischakugelmann2660
    @grischakugelmann2660 ปีที่แล้ว

    Our tradition is to eat warm at lunch time and bread in the evening (Abendbrot). But today there are to many people working over lunchtime without the opportunity or will to eat lunch and so many German familys adapted the dinner from England (or USA). From Monday to Friday my wife eats Dinner and the kidds and me Abendbrot and on the Weekends we all eat lunch and Abendbrot together. One warm meal per day is enough and we love our bread. cheers