American reacts to ICONIC German Food

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ต.ค. 2024

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  • @A._Meroy
    @A._Meroy 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +869

    No, we don't dip our pretzels in nacho cheese. We have something better to dip it in: Obatzda. It's made from ripened French soft cheese, butter, onions and spices.

    • @mereloostdam
      @mereloostdam 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      oh god now I'm hungry! I need to go back to Germany soon!

    • @miguialvarez
      @miguialvarez 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Oh Yes, obatzda! Bread or Breze with Obatzda is the best thing

    • @Winona493
      @Winona493 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      Although German I've never heard of "Obatzda"! Oder wie hieß das?😂 I come from NRW, the Ruhrgebiet, but I've lived maaany years in the north, in Hamburg and really, I only ate Brezel or pretzels once. Just to underline that this Germany is not Germany everywhere. Edit: in Hamburg we don't eat Brezel, we eat FRANZBRÖTCHEN!😂😂

    • @Deliciousfoodofficer
      @Deliciousfoodofficer 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      ​@@Winona493obatzda ist was typisch Bayerisches :) eine Art Käsecreme (?)

    • @Winona493
      @Winona493 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@DeliciousfoodofficerDanke! Wo kommt der Name her? Klingt iwie polnisch....?

  • @SindySaalfeld
    @SindySaalfeld 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

    One thing got overlooked ... "Kassler" is also a super tasty slice of pork, which would make it on my favorite list.

    • @JohnDoe-rm1kw
      @JohnDoe-rm1kw 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      yeh smoked pork chop aka Kassler with sourkraut and mashed potatoes with roasted onions. 🚀🚀🚀

    • @Robin93k
      @Robin93k 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@JohnDoe-rm1kw Damn you got my mouth watering.

    • @aruruaurynwolferson9713
      @aruruaurynwolferson9713 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      mmmh kassler🐺🤤

  • @Enkrod
    @Enkrod 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +127

    Ryan: "Nobody walks here."
    Also Ryan: "It's a wonder how you guys are thinner than Americans."

    • @holzvonobi1851
      @holzvonobi1851 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      we dont eat that huge amounts of sugar

    • @Chauldron
      @Chauldron 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@holzvonobi1851 and even the REALLY sweet things only have sugar in it and not this incredible unhealthy corn sirup!

    • @lethfuil
      @lethfuil 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      ​@@Chauldron AND what we call REALLY sweet is standard sweet in the US. A little sweet here isn't at all sweet there.

  • @fullmoon7185
    @fullmoon7185 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    The "whipped cream" on the beer is foam, it's also called the "foam crown" or "flower" - and at some places in Germany it is considered an art form to achieve the perfect foam crown

  • @nordwestbeiwest1899
    @nordwestbeiwest1899 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +190

    Jäger (german) = Hunter (english)
    And again to explain to an American who has no idea about beer: Beer that is freshly tapped must have foam on top, because that is a sign of quality for freshness. Foam also protects the beer from too much oxygen, which makes it bitter.

    • @strasbourgerelsass1467
      @strasbourgerelsass1467 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      Foam also shows that the whole tapping process is clean, including the glass. Well, thats finally a part of the quality.

    • @trythis2006
      @trythis2006 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      was reimt sich auf jäger

    • @nordwestbeiwest1899
      @nordwestbeiwest1899 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Ärger
      @@trythis2006

    • @huehnerschreck751
      @huehnerschreck751 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Jägerschnitzel is what you get when the deer won.

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@huehnerschreck751 don't spread fakenews to the Amis ;-)
      So yeah, "Jägermeister" = Hunt master ('s drink); "Jägerschnitzel" = Schnitzel hunter's style (mushrooms are associated with forests)

  • @Onkel_Wuschel
    @Onkel_Wuschel 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    I missed another German popular food which you will get on season markets (and which will be served in many German homes as a main dish): "Kartoffelpuffer". These are grated potatoes fried in lard. Mostly they will be served with "Apfelmus" (smashed apples). Try them, they are delicious.

    • @PhoenixNL72-DEGA-
      @PhoenixNL72-DEGA- 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Think Apfelmus is called Applesauce in english

    • @Onkel_Wuschel
      @Onkel_Wuschel 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@PhoenixNL72-DEGA- You are probably right. I never came across applesauce when I was in the United States.

  • @jgr_lilli_
    @jgr_lilli_ 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +317

    Giving little kids a Brötchen to gnaw on is a standard parenting hack in Germany. I remember when my dad picked me up from Kindergarten in the afternoon, we always went to the store down the street and got me a fresh Brötchen, which I then nibbled on on our way home.

    • @juliaspoonie3627
      @juliaspoonie3627 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      Did the same with my daughters but my youngest one always chose a cucumber instead lol Strangers were always fascinated and commented on it

    • @Apophis1966
      @Apophis1966 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      Meine wollten immer eine Laugenstange oder ein Hörnchen

    • @juppschmitz1974
      @juppschmitz1974 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      It simply works!
      Not only with children. If you want to shut up someone and/or keep them busy, give them food! You can't complain while you're chewing. Even the ancient romans did know that.

    • @davidpelc
      @davidpelc 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Same here in Czech republic. Brötchen/Semmel or Hörnchen. :)

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Haha, yeah. In my case, that once ended in my aunt adressing my mom in a very seriously calm manner with "you know, he isn´t breathing any more right now." Because I, at that point blue in the face and flaining around, had stuffed the entire roll down my throat without taking a bite.....I am fine, btw, they got it out in time. It´s almost 40 years ago now. i am fine.

  • @chrisrudolf9839
    @chrisrudolf9839 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    5:30 No, the Jägerschnitzel sauce doesn't have liquor in it. The word Jäger means hunter, so the dish literally translates to "hunter's schnitzel" or Schnitzel prepared in hunter's style. You know, because hunters go into the forest and shoot the mushrooms for the sauce ;-). It used to make more sense way back in the old times when they used assortments of different kinds of forest fungi that would actually be gathered in the forest for the sauce, instead of just cheap cultivated mushrooms that have never seen a forest. The liquor you mean is called "Jägermeister" (= hunt master), but doesn't have anything to do with the sauce.

    • @535phobos
      @535phobos 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Also, the Jägerschnitzel in the East is something completely different

    • @mangantasy289
      @mangantasy289 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ..nor is it really a mushroom cream sauce. That exists too but is lighter in colour. Although there's lots of variations, the "Jägersosse" usually has a brown grawy like sauce as a base. A cram sauce does not.

    • @natiranrw6417
      @natiranrw6417 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@535phobosMy Dad was so disappointed the first time he ordered a Jägerschnitzel while visiting me in NRW. The next day we bought Jagdwurst... ;)

    • @lutzj74
      @lutzj74 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@535phobos A thick slice of sausage "Jagdwurst", breaded and fried. Usually with tomato sauce to make it taste like anything at all. :)

    • @JohnDoe-rm1kw
      @JohnDoe-rm1kw 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hunt-Master .. yes, no, is clear 🤣🤣ROFLMAOQWERTZ

  • @amandaziccatti6195
    @amandaziccatti6195 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +199

    We have lots fish dishes in northern Germany like for example Fischbrötchen, Fischfrikadellen etc. He just didn’t mention them as his favorite German dishes are probably heavily meat based South German dishes. To be fair in any other parts than the North traditional German food consists of meat. But he should have also mentioned stuff like Maultaschen, Grünkohleintopf, Wirsinggemüse, Spargel, Kohlrabi, Labskaus, Frankfurter grüne Sauce, Saumagen etc. in order to include dishes from other parts of Germany as well.

    • @Kath-Erina
      @Kath-Erina 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      I totally agree and to be fair he did mention Spargel... On the other hand I belive he lives in Bavaria and so naturally is exposed way more to southern foods than northern foods. Only if you travel regularly (which will get expensive fast here) you'll get an idea of a more middle and northern German cuisine.

    • @luigiwalker8148
      @luigiwalker8148 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      In the south, we also like to eat fish, but rather freshwater fish

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Kath-Erina He lives in Freiburg and i think he just loves meat and beer. Freiburg is surrounded by vinyards, strawberry and asparagus fields. And while old people here love their meat too, the younger ones are far more leaning towards vegan or vegetarian food with occational meat. Fish, especially fresh fish, is sadly not that common here cause we don't really have big bodies of water around us where you can get it from on a big scale. Still, we have as many "Nordsee" as we have McDonalds in the city center (still 10 times more Kebap stands than both combined together though).

    • @leopard-druckerfischyay7075
      @leopard-druckerfischyay7075 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Oh and not to forget about "Krabbenbrötchen" and "Backfischbrötchen"

    • @martinkasper197
      @martinkasper197 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      We South Germans ❤️ our Forelle or Karpfen blau....🤣🤣🤣 And btw. Maultaschen or Hergottsbscheiserle are also South German. Ba-Wü is the Maultaschenlandle...

  • @OdaNobunaga89
    @OdaNobunaga89 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    This! This is the kind of stuff I love to see; somebody from abroad coming to germany and loving our food so much that he goes and tells the world about it, so that even I as a german can get to appreciate it once again. Forget all that stuff about cultural- or societal differences, just tell me what kind of food from my home you love any we're good.

  • @cadifan
    @cadifan 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +463

    The reason German bread is less fattening than American bread is that American bread is loaded with sugar and chemicals to preserve it!

    • @steemlenn8797
      @steemlenn8797 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      There is literally double as much sugar in American sandwich bread (I intentionally avoid the German name here) than in German.

    • @RustyBear
      @RustyBear 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      @@steemlenn8797tOaST bRoT 🍞 🗿

    • @Dragonheng
      @Dragonheng 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      And good Cake is expensiv when you buy it..

    • @RustyBear
      @RustyBear 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Dragonheng fr

    • @smaragdwolf1
      @smaragdwolf1 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      how dare youre calling it "bread" .... per definition, what the USA calls "bread", is actually a cake because of the ingredients.

  • @LoFiAxolotl
    @LoFiAxolotl 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    Pfannkuchen will be wildly different depending on what region you're in.... in Berlin a Pfannkuchen is basically a doughnut with filling.... in Westphalia it'll be a pancake (It literally translates to pancake)

    • @iriswaldenburger2315
      @iriswaldenburger2315 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      No, in Berlin it’s a Berliner and not a Pfannkuchen. It’s a Pfannkuchen everywhere else in the region

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same in Saxony-Anhalt

    • @June-l8v
      @June-l8v 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@AlexandraVioletta und in Rheinland Pfalz

    • @arthurdent5357
      @arthurdent5357 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Krapfen Are called Krapfen in Berlin but Berliner in other regions.
      It's not pancakes anywhere.

  • @SovermanandVioboy
    @SovermanandVioboy 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +160

    Curry Ketchup tastes a lot different than regular Ketchup, its basically a new sauce based and only based on Ketchup. So even if you dont like Ketchup, you should def give Curry Ketchup a chance.

    • @TUBEED00
      @TUBEED00 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      And there are s lit if ketchups available which all taste a little different. I personally don't like ketchup with to much vinegar which taste way to sour to me.

    • @alihorda
      @alihorda 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      basically sweet ketchup

    • @carstentripscha4609
      @carstentripscha4609 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      An ex of mine from the US compared it to barbecue sauce when she tried it, because it had a bit of a sweet tang to it, but I never found a barbecue sauce in the US that tasted similar

    • @martinkasper197
      @martinkasper197 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      HELA Curry Ketchup is just cult...🤘👍

    • @mastermoritz1
      @mastermoritz1 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That is right. HOWEVER the real deal is the Gewürtzketchup made by Heler. It is more lik a sirup type of ketchup but it just makes EVERY kind of meat better. And you can get it in spicey and mild.

  • @TF2CrunchyFrog
    @TF2CrunchyFrog 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    _Sauerkraut does _*_not_*_ contain vinegar, despite its acidic taste, just white cabbage and salt!_ Traditionally Sauerkraut is made by chopping up heads of raw white cabbage into thin strips (after removing hte outer leaves and stem), washing them, then tightly layering the chopped cabbage into barrels, with each layer being covered in salt before the next layer is added. The cabbage has to be well-mixed with the salt (which draws out the juices to form brine) and pressed so that it's always covered by the brine. Then the barrel is closed and the sauerkraut is left to ferment at 20°C for several days and then at 15-18°C for 3-8 weeks, via a process called lactic acid fermentation aided by bacteria. It's common to add spices during fermentation: either a few bay laurel leaves, caraway and juniper berries placed on top, or mixing the sauerkraut with white grapes if you want a fruitier taste.
    Sauerkraut was invented separately in Germany and in China (where it's called "kimchee"), basically in any agrarian region which has cabbage growing soils and people needed to find ways to preserve the cabbage and its Vitamin C for the winter.

    • @MinkaSchlossberger4ever
      @MinkaSchlossberger4ever 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Wunderbar erklärt!!!ich habe noch so einen blau-grauen SteingutTopf von meinen Großeltern!

    • @desperadox7565
      @desperadox7565 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Kimchee is Korean but the rest is true.

    • @lloydevans2900
      @lloydevans2900 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      There is another important difference between sauerkraut and kimchi: Sauerkraut is usually made with white cabbage, whereas kimchi is more often a mixture of both cabbage and radish. They can often look similar, because the radish varieties used to make kimchi are large oriental white radishes, not the small red-skinned radishes which are more popularly eaten as salad vegetables in Europe. As a result, kimchi can have some peppery spiciness to it from the radishes, which sauerkraut doesn't have, unless it has had pepper deliberately added to it.
      But otherwise yes - the processes used to make both are essentially the same - lactic acid bacterial fermentation.

  • @cherryarun
    @cherryarun 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +128

    Germany, as well as other EU countries, has laws that regulate how much sugar is allowed in all foods. F.ex. a Coca Cola in Europe generally contains less sugar than its US version. Same for all other consumables.
    That is one of the biggest reasons why we generally are less obese.

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nah, it's just because you won't find people in Germany who believe that drinking water is dangerous. And because in Germany drinking tap water is completely safe, while in the US it isn't. Also, a bottle of water doesn't cost 3€ or more here - because we have tons of natural springs and veils where it can literally be taken from directly. The US doesn't have that it seems, they import water.
      As for sugar regulation: Yes, but in Germany there is a law that dictates a MINIMUM amount of sugar in lemonades and sodas, or they are not allowed to be called as such. We just don't drink 2 liters of coke every day, and in most german schools we have some kind of biology/nutrition/food theory classes where we learn what nutrients are, what they do and what happens if you eat fast food like a pig.

    • @gehtdichnixan8561
      @gehtdichnixan8561 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      That's actually a common "urban legend". Coca Cola has the exact same amount of sugar everywhere on the planet (53g/500ml). The one decisive difference is the type of sugar; in the US, Coke is sweetened with corn syrup, whereas in Europe, it's crystalized "white sugar". Which leads to the US-variant tasting significantly better - and accordingly, (probably just as significant) higher consumption amounts.

    • @mariandecker3942
      @mariandecker3942 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Germany still has to regulate sugar and is falling behind other european countries
      F.ex. we still allow Sweets-Commercials to be targeted at children or we still don't have extra sugar taxes

    • @Randleray
      @Randleray 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@gehtdichnixan8561 "Which leads to the US-variant tasting significantly better"
      So how exactly does the same amount of sugar make something taste better?
      It may taste different, yes, but 'better' is just wrong wording in this case.

    • @MikrySoft
      @MikrySoft 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@Randleray Corn syrup has free glucose and fructose, normal white sugar has those two bound in a sucrose molecule. Additionally, high fructose corn syrup has, as the name suggests, more fructose than glucose (55% in case of HFCS used in drinks), so having the same amount, by mass, of different sweeteners can easily result in different taste.
      But yes, sugar-coke is generally considered superior to the HFCS-coke, hence the popularity of the "Mexican Coke".

  • @carstentripscha4609
    @carstentripscha4609 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    There is a German restaurant in Chicago called Berghof that serves a "Jägerschnitzel" that actually has Jägermeister in the sauce... it always amuses my colleagues and me when we are in Chicago for work and a customer or partner wants to give us "a taste of home"... because no, Jägerschnitzel does not have any Jägermeister in the sauce :P

    • @mikemaier6330
      @mikemaier6330 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Jägerschnitzel mit Jägermeister in der Soße? Iiiii Bähh 🙂

  • @Thunderwingisatakenalias
    @Thunderwingisatakenalias 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +205

    Sauerkraut can be understood by simply translating it. It means „sour cabbage“, and that‘s what it is. It is white cabbage which was fermented to conserve it. Before freezers and international shipping, if you wanted to eat something in the winter, you would have to pickle or ferment it. And cabbage was the go to option: It was easy to ferment and widely available, as it was cheap and easy to farm. And so it became a staple of german cuisine.

    • @schnetzelschwester
      @schnetzelschwester 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      German Kimchi.

    • @82evene
      @82evene 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      as a German I can say its disgusting^^

    • @johannesmarg6903
      @johannesmarg6903 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      …a hint of pineapple does wonders….but nearly all the food shown is more or less from the southern parts…great stuff, but by far not all of the specialities. Taste „Franzbrötchen“ , a kind of cinnamon rolls, „Labskaus“, a very special sailors dish….and many more….just enjoy…

    • @MrStanley85
      @MrStanley85 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      serve with Bratwurst, mustard and potato :D

    • @aurelije
      @aurelije 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      The gift from slavic farmer tribes to germanic hunter tribes

  • @morbvsclz
    @morbvsclz 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    The funnel cake you mentioned looks a lot like "Schneeballen". Deep fried dough with powdered sugar, not on a plate, but in a ball shape. So it's more of a "to go" food you carry along, break a piece off and eat it over a period of time. (And get your Shirt / Jacket covered in powdered sugar in the process). They exist in Germany and are common at christmas markets, but to me they are levels behind Schmalzkuchen, if carbs deep fried in fat is what your cardiologist prescribes 😀

  • @DaGuys470
    @DaGuys470 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +173

    The "watered down beer" is about 5 times as strong as the normal US beer (based on my experiences with Bud and Coors)

    • @thomasbarchen
      @thomasbarchen 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Bud light will turn ya into a sissy

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      50/50 soda and beer in germany will result in about 2 - 2.5% alcohol per volume.

    • @iriswaldenburger2315
      @iriswaldenburger2315 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Radler ftfw

    • @BertholomaeusRexodus44x2
      @BertholomaeusRexodus44x2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Exactly, there is a rock star who always says he loves it to play concerts in Germany because of the fans and the tasty and strong beer. I think it was Billy Idol but I am not sure about it 🤔

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Yes. It's like American coffee. That's why they could drink 10 coffee per day or 30 beers... Bc it's Spülwasser

  • @conbertbenneck49
    @conbertbenneck49 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Ryan,
    Brat = means fried in a pan. You already know "bratkartoffel" which are pan fried potatoes.
    There are probably hundreds of "brat" wurst types in German, since every butcher builds his own variety of "bratwurst", so if you see a "bratwurst" on a restaurant menu it might - and probably does - taste totally different than the bratwurst you had yesterday in a different town, and that was made by a different butcher.
    Now to totally confuse you: a "Braten" is meat that is roasted in the oven; such as a Rinderbraten (beef roast) or Gaensebraten; (roast goose), or schweine braten (roast pork)
    Sauerkraut (thinly sliced fresh cabbage) that is packed with salt and fermented is cooked differently in different areas of Germany. Bavaria does it their way, and North Germany does it differently. There is no "standard" German sauerkraut.
    Also note that all the bread you see was hand made and baked by a baker. It is real BREAD not the American WONDER BREAD filled with sugar and chemicals which is total garbage.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +213

    One of the things which surprised me when first visiting Germany was that most young kids eat a brezel (pretzel) rather than a chocolate bar as a snack when out shopping or "hanging in the mall" as American younglings call it. It's shocking for Americans to see a group of teens (16ish) chatting, eating brezel while chugging a bottle of beer, while sitting on a bench in the middle of the shopping street.

    • @gameboy-nq7je
      @gameboy-nq7je 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

      That's because they cost about as much as a chocolate bar and are way more filling
      (Tho personally I don't like them, but if you are out with friends and getting hungry a bakery is usually the first place you look for)

    • @OpaSpielt
      @OpaSpielt 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      Wonder why Americans are shocked with that. It's quite normal here. However, I think 16 is a bit too young, and 18 is okay.
      With 18, you're adult and can eat and drink what you like.

    • @SkandalRadar
      @SkandalRadar 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

      It is also due to German history. In the past, people started their apprenticeship at the age of 14. From the age of 16 at the latest, you were de facto considered an adult. In the past (Middle Ages and before), beer was a staple food, like bread. It has quite a few calories and was also considered a meal. Because alcohol made beer last longer and disinfected, it was often preferred over dirty water in medieval times. Greetings from Kiel, Germany.

    • @MaryRaine929
      @MaryRaine929 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Eat me all up alive but I let my 11 year old son drink alcohol free Radler beer, which is beer mixed with lemonade. We love to drink our „Feierabendbier“ together and I hope to take the sensation of drinking beer out a little bit by normalising it in a healthy proportions.🍻

    • @flibflob2785
      @flibflob2785 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I mean german kids eat chocolate too

  • @Mephistokles333
    @Mephistokles333 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Germany has lots and lots of fish. I myself am from the northern part of germany called Mecklenburg Vorpommern. The area I grew up had hundrets of lakes and over half of my family where hobby-fisherman. Mecklenburg also borders to the baltic sea and to get there we had to drive just about an hour by car. Also our neighbor next door was a fischerman, so we had fish usualle at least once a week. The only thing I miss since I moved to the southern part of Germany is the variety of tasty fish for an affordable price -.-
    Sauerkraut is fermentet white cabbage and litterally means sour cabbage. You can eat it in many different ways but I think the most common thing is the cooked version with small, fried ham cubes - delicious ^.^

  • @1983simi
    @1983simi 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +80

    tbh if you only had American pretzels you didn't really have pretzels yet. German Brezn (pretzels) are not hard or oily, they're just perfectly filling without being too heavy, soft and light inside with some crunch in the middle part, fitting perfectly with fresh cold butter and chives, obazda (Bavarian cheese spread), cottage cheese, or just on its own. you can have them for breakfast, along with many main dishes for bigger meals or just as a snack in between. they're also perfect to give to small children to snack on. toddlers chew on that stuff for ages and are fully content doing so.

    • @PauleLR
      @PauleLR 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Still warm, from a street vendor👍

    • @reqz16
      @reqz16 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      pfefferbreze am besten als butterbreze beste

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Or with strawberry jam. 😋🍓

  • @Leitvinc
    @Leitvinc 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    We don't dip bretzels into cheese sauce, but it's pretty popular to bake them with a slice of cheese on top. Delicious

  • @blablubb4553
    @blablubb4553 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +67

    "Water with gas" is not something we Germans actually say. Usually, we will call it Mineralwasser, mineral water. And it comes it 3 versions: Classic, which is very bubbly water, Medium which is moderately bubbly water and Still or Naturell (natural water) which is normal bottled mineral water without any bubbles.

    • @fraum3725
      @fraum3725 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      And to make it more complicated: Mineral water is bottled directly at the spring (after cleaning and filtering of course) and table water (Tafelwasser) is just carbonated tap water. There are many rules for water in Germany ^^

    • @thorstenjaspert9394
      @thorstenjaspert9394 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      ​@@fraum3725the Trinkwasserverordnung.

    • @Reboegga
      @Reboegga 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I was also confused about this term, considering Walter has been traveling and living in Germany.😂 We just call it Sprudelwasser vs. Stilles Wasser.😊

    • @alx314
      @alx314 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Maybe he's lost in translation... "water with/without gas" is maybe from the Spanish version how to order water there ... "aqua con/sin gas".

    • @JohnDoe-pc1qf
      @JohnDoe-pc1qf 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      "Water with gas" = farting water?

  • @Justforvisit
    @Justforvisit 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    10:35 The word he said there was "Pfannkuchen" which directly translates to "Pancakes", the basic is very similar to what an US citizen might be used to, but where it differs is: Instead of drowing them in Maple Syrup like americans do (or at least that is what countless cartoons have made me believe) we usually have many many variations what you can top them with, like different fruit jams, Nutella or just plain sugar. And you can eat them either flat or you roll them up and them as a roll, either with knife and fork or with bare hands.

    • @isalablomma
      @isalablomma 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I think he was talking about Berliner / Krapfen not pancakes

    • @tomkronberger8710
      @tomkronberger8710 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@isalablommaLike He descripted it I guess your right.

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@isalablomma Which are called Pfannkuchen in Berlin, ironically.

  • @SvenBolz
    @SvenBolz 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +86

    Many of those digestive herb shots have their roots in pharmaceutics. That's why they contain all kinds of herbs, especially bitter ones. They're not supposed to taste great, but help with digesting as the bitter stuff raises acid levels in your stomach.

    • @RainerLP
      @RainerLP 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      When you are little, your mother is out and your stomach hurts. Dad: "I have medicine for you."

    • @user-cx6kt3ku2f
      @user-cx6kt3ku2f 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      "Digestive" is bs btw. They just called it that so that people wouldn’t feel bad knocking one back after dinner.

    • @user-cx6kt3ku2f
      @user-cx6kt3ku2f 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@RainerLPI remember as a kid, that my dad gave me something really good against my ear pain on a long flight. (I had a infection or something idk). I always assumed it was some kind of special medicine. Nope. Just hard liquor. It worked though, so I guess he had a point.

    • @SvenBolz
      @SvenBolz 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@user-cx6kt3ku2f oh yeah, I don't believe in the effectiveness of it either. But I think people at some point in time genuinely believed that it would work. After all a shot won't get you drunk and the bitter stuff doesn't taste that great.
      Just like people believed that bloodletting cures all kinds of diseases, while it actually harmed the patient.

    • @wurstsalatplays523
      @wurstsalatplays523 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      yeah.. theres nothing pharmaceutical about it.. its more a cultural thing. It being pharmaceutic is rly just an excuse.

  • @AlJR189
    @AlJR189 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I'll never get over the fact that marketing made some digestif cool that as a kid I only knew from my great-grandmother drinking it.

  • @hammerlord893
    @hammerlord893 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +75

    14:15 Sauerkraut literally means "sour cabbage" in german, so it's just that. Fermented white cabbage. (Edit: not pickled but fermented)

    • @gamepat9
      @gamepat9 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      In my opinion it kind of tastes a bit like kimchi, if you have never tried it and in case you are wondering.

    • @madebymanu
      @madebymanu 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      It's not pickled at all. Pickled means to put it in vinegar. Sauerkraut is actually fermented cabbage. You only need to cut it up, put salt to it then press it into a container with the ability to let air out but not in, then let it sit for a couple of weeks in a dark, cool place. Not cold mind you, 10-14 degress celcius is perfect. Cheers!

    • @hammerlord893
      @hammerlord893 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@madebymanu I was under the impression that fermentation is a type of pickling, so thanks for correcting me. I'm gonna edit the original comment

    • @6AvengingAngel
      @6AvengingAngel 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Sauerkraut is not pickled exactly, it is fermented like kimchi.
      fermenting cabbage is a very old technique and a way to preserve vegetables. It was one of the only options to have vegetables during wintertime, when there were no freezers and more important no growing vegetables in winter at all.

    • @DieGurke_
      @DieGurke_ 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@DeFilmKater If you want to punish somebody, force the person to drink Sauerkraut Juice. Yes that a real Thing in Germany. I know it because my Mother-in-Law did a Sauerkraut Diet. I have no idea how this works but i imagine you eat so much Sauerkraut and drink so much Sauerkraut Juice till you puke

  • @TF2CrunchyFrog
    @TF2CrunchyFrog 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Geman hotels used to have breakfast included, but in the last 20 years more and more hotels have switched to "breakfast must be booked and paid for separately" (although they tell you ahead of time what the breakfast buffet costs). Some hotels lure you with a cheap price for a room with two beds or doublebed (+ bathroom of course), then charge you an additional 12-18€ for the breakfast buffet per person. (Note: In Germany we pay by room, not by number of beds or persons, so price would be the same regardless of if you're sleeping alone in there or with two people. Single-bed rooms in hotels have become rare, but if the hotel offers them they're cheaper as they're usually smaller; you still find them in business hotels for traveling businesspeople.)

  • @caccioman
    @caccioman 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    Stilles Wasser (still water) is not from the tab, it is supposed to be from a certified spring. Otherwise you would ask for Leitungswasser (piped water) or Hahnenwasser (tab water)

    • @how2pick4name
      @how2pick4name 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Tap not tab.

    • @JohnDoe-pc1qf
      @JohnDoe-pc1qf 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hahnenwasser ist doch Schweiz.

    • @frankgunold268
      @frankgunold268 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@JohnDoe-pc1qf Leitungsheimer ! : - )

  • @hanibalsk
    @hanibalsk 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    For instance In Slovakia, we have fermented cabbage. Perfect thing. We have some local recepture, but I am sure in Austria and in Germany, they have similar

  • @arthur_p_dent
    @arthur_p_dent 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    10:25 Europe uses beetroot sugar, America uses corn syrup. Even with people consuming the exact same things, this alone would account for Americans weighing a couple of kilos more than Europeans.
    The best testimony for that is Mexico. Mexicans used to be thinner than US Americans, but that changed a couple of years after NAFTA forced Mexico to allow the import of US corn syrup.

    • @n0rmal953
      @n0rmal953 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I think that the most important factor is walking. A lot of Americans simply don’t walk enough. High calories food + no exercise is what makes someone gain weight.

    • @helloweener2007
      @helloweener2007 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      And a drinking liver.
      Corn syrup has more fructose than beetrrot sugar. Fructose goes directly into the liver and the energy is saved there as fat.
      Result is a fat liver like a drinker.

    • @arthur_p_dent
      @arthur_p_dent 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@n0rmal953 can't underestimate that, of course. But corn syrup alone goes a long way in making people gain weight - again, corn syrup is the sole reason why Mexicans are now, on average, more overweight than US Americans. That wasn't the case before Mexico had imported all that corn syrup and Mexicans didn't suddenly start eating more or walking less.
      Eating too much sugar is always very unhealthy, everybody knows that. But if the sugar comes in the form of corn syrup, this is doubly true.

    • @T0MT0Mmmmy
      @T0MT0Mmmmy 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Corn syrup is less sweet (and less expensive) than beetroot sugar. So you need more to make something sweet, but this comes with more calories.

  • @kbittorf335
    @kbittorf335 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I know I have said it before; if Americans want to try a Bavarian style pretzel the Milwaukee Pretzel Company in Milwaukee, WI makes them and they have online shopping. Aldi had selections of frozen chicken, pork, and beef Schnitzel from Germany to take home and prepare yourself this Autumn. It is similar to anything labeled as chicken fried in the US. I can find authentic German mustards at many stores, they are so much better than the yellow mustard everyone grew up with here. Enjoyed the vid!👍🇩🇪🇺🇸

  • @kathilisi3019
    @kathilisi3019 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

    Ryan, don't you think it's time to visit Germany and see all the sights and eat all the food? 😄

    • @voyance4elle
      @voyance4elle 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      he has a very little son /baby :) maybe one day when his son is older...

    • @just_4_comment
      @just_4_comment 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@voyance4elle In Germany, vacation is free for children under 2. Isn't that the case in the USA? We had taken several flights with our son, including long distance flights, which were free of charge for him.

    • @davidmalarkey1302
      @davidmalarkey1302 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Ryan do you ever shut up talking crap.

    • @reqz16
      @reqz16 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ja geh doch noch bürgergeld beantragen :D@@just_4_comment

    • @holzvvrm7718
      @holzvvrm7718 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@just_4_comment I guess the bigger problem is flying transatlantic with a little child. Big vacvations in general can be stressful with small children.

  • @sarahmichael270244
    @sarahmichael270244 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    germany has 2 coasts . 1. Baltic sea 2. North sea

  • @EvaCornelia
    @EvaCornelia 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +82

    It would never have occured to me that a shot of "Schnaps" after a fat meal would be associated with alcoholism. It was medicine when I was a child. I haven't used it for decades because I usually don't eat this kind of fat food anymore.

    • @xYonowaaru
      @xYonowaaru 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      That's rather concerining. Of course that's rather an alcoholic thing. Also it doesn't work, it might even make the stomach worse.

    • @WooShell
      @WooShell 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      The criteria is *one* Schnaps after the meal, not half a bottle or so much that you get drunk..

    • @xYonowaaru
      @xYonowaaru 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@WooShell Which doesn't help your digestion at all, the opposite can even be the case.

    • @dnocturn84
      @dnocturn84 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@xYonowaaru A shot after a meal will make your stomach calm down. It relaxes its muscles and will remove the feeling of being too full. Sometimes this is all you want. Of course it's not a good idea to do this, if you've got serious health issues or really consumed too much fat through that meal. Then this shot will indeed make it worse.

    • @darthplagueis13
      @darthplagueis13 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      The alcohol itself doesn't help digestion but for one, this is usually done with herbal liquors that may or may not have some active ingredients to get it all going and second, it's more of a psychological thing because the feeling of the spicy liquor burning its way down your throat after a heavy meal can be quite cathartic.
      But no, it's not linked to alcoholism. We're talking about one shot of liquor after the kind of meal most people don't have that often to begin with, maybe on holidays or big parties. The alcoholic version of this is having a shot first thing in the morning just so you can stomach breakfast, which isn't anywhere near as common.
      A shot to help settle a heavy meal is indicative of a custom, rather than a habit.

  • @kortanioslastofhisname
    @kortanioslastofhisname 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Funnel cake was brought to the US from Southern Germany (by the Pennsylvania Dutch who call it "Drechderkuche"), in Germany it's called Strauben these days (also still mostly a Southern German thing). It's originally originally from Persia, but many places in Europe, the Middle East, and Southern/Central Asia have some spin on it since it's tasty and has been around forever.

  • @carobock5683
    @carobock5683 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    We do not dip our Brezel in anything. In Bavaria you dip it in Obatzda, but the Brezel there is different from the Brezel where I came from: Baden-Württemberg. Everyone I know eats the Brezel cut open and with a thick layer of cold butter or just put butter on it for every bite you take. It is the only, best and purest way to get the taste of a Swabian Brezel. NEVER EVER dip it in mustard 😅

    • @h4zelnuts117
      @h4zelnuts117 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "NEVER EVER dip it in mustard" wasn mit dir los mann. Zach da amoi a Weisse eine, dasd a amoi wos gscheids gessn host.

    • @carobock5683
      @carobock5683 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@h4zelnuts117 ja die Weißwurst gehört da rein und der Senf dann dazu. Aber im Schwäbischen wird die Brezel in nichts getunkt, da kommt wenn überhaupt Butter drauf. A Brezel die in ebbes getunkt werden muss, is nix gscheids.
      Aber jedem seine Meinung ;)

    • @topps1471
      @topps1471 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Baden Württemberg. Ist es nett da?

  • @frankmeyer9984
    @frankmeyer9984 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    About the Pfannkuchen, this word has two different meanings in Germany. The first, most obvious for English or American people, is Pancake (can be sweet, neutral, or salty/spicy, in some regions of Germany they also cut them into thin stripes and add it to soup). The other use of this word is for a "Berliner", a piece of dough as big as a fist and with a round shape, baked in a "pan", floating in hot oil. After the baking process, some jam/marmalade / plum jam gets injected into it with a syringe. And then it either gets coated with sugar, powdered sugar, or "liquified" sugar / frosting. As a special prank, instead of jam some hot mustard can be injected. And you can't see it until you take a good bite... 😂

  • @arthur_p_dent
    @arthur_p_dent 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    7:30 Fish would be the dish of choice on the North German coast, whereas most Americans, when they think of Germany, mostly dig up Bavarian stereotypes. So no surprise when most Americans aren't going to think of fish when they think of German food.

    • @heikeg4761
      @heikeg4761 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      There are also some amazing fish dishes in central and southern Germany. The only thing is they use freshwater fish.

    • @arthur_p_dent
      @arthur_p_dent 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@heikeg4761 true, but they are not particularly well known compared to the likes of Bratwurst or Sauerbraten or Käsespätzle.

    • @shadowfox009x
      @shadowfox009x 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@arthur_p_dent Which is kind of interesting as fish is a traditional German christmas dish and also often served as a salad on New Year's Eve.

  • @2MannzumHochbeamen
    @2MannzumHochbeamen 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    "Jäger" is just the German word for "hunter". Food with "Jäger" in it would be best translated as "hunter's style". Usually it has ingredients that are found in or associated with the forest. Jägerschnitzel has mushrooms, and Jägermeister (the spirit you call "Jäger") has wild herbs (traditionally, nowadays they are of course cultivated).
    Berliner Weiße is a very special low alcohol variant that is served with different kinds of sweet syrup (raspberry, waldmeister).

  • @Spielkinder
    @Spielkinder 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

    "You guys like cabbage!"😂 oh Ryan, you sweet boy. Germany is famous for cabbage. Sauerkraut is cabbage and many many traditional dishes contain some kind of cabbage (kohlroulade, Rotkohl, Blumenkohl, Rosenkohl).

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ....Grünkohl, Wirsing, Krautsalat,.....

    • @danieldieste9905
      @danieldieste9905 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Brokkoli, Grünkohl...

    • @addjem
      @addjem 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Romanesco - the really weird cabbage

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      yeah! The fractal veggie! I love the stuff. 50/50 cauliflower and broccoli @@addjem

    • @synthellaart1587
      @synthellaart1587 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I am hungry now, hahaha

  • @tramper42
    @tramper42 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    7:40 „Dip your Prezel in mustard in Germany?“ NO, we normally DON‘T … BUT, we cut it open, and put BUTTER 🧈 AND SALT on it…WAY BETTER.!!!
    But, we Germans UNDERSTAND putting mustard of everything.. there STILL is a saying in Germany 🇩🇪 „do you have to put your mustard to anything?“ in a sense „You always add your opinion to ANYTHING?“ .. as mustard was NEW to Germany… about 805+ AD … we ALSO tried EVERYTHING with mustard.

  • @tomsun3159
    @tomsun3159 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    @Ryan your biggest misunderstanding is that you think nacho cheese has something to do with cheese (it just chemical processed crap) you can go for cheese video (probably more european style) in france for example they have sorts of cheese than days in the year (and that does not mean simply different brands for the same type.

  • @TF2CrunchyFrog
    @TF2CrunchyFrog 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    "Digestives" is the term for alcoholic drinks served in a tiny glass _after_ a heavy meal to help the stomach digest any fats and oils. "Aperitif" is the term for a small glass of (usually sweet) liquor, i.e. a Sherry, served _prior_ to a meal as an appetizer. Quite common in Europe. At French and Greek and Asian restaurants here in Germany you'll usually get served a tiny glass of some high-percentage liquor as digestive automatically, on the house. All that olive oil of the Mediterranean cooking, you know. In German restaurants, you might need to explicitely order one.

  • @alexanderwilking840
    @alexanderwilking840 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    Well, a Currywurst isn't just ketchup with curry spices. Normally there is made a special "Currywurstsauce" the version with the ketchup and the curry spices is a quick version that you can make at home

    • @Snailing_Suika
      @Snailing_Suika 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      you can just make the schaschliksauce at home when you make well a schaschlik and then freeze the sauce and just have it rdy for the next quick curry wurst

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      the original invention was just ketchup and curry powder. using shashlik sauce was a later development that absolutely improved it. I like the version with shashliksauce, ketchup, curry powder, mayonnaise and chopped onions.

  • @psymcdad8151
    @psymcdad8151 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The Sausage-Love is real!
    Go to your local butcher and get a fresh Bratwurst (rough cut filling, aka: "grobe Bratwurst/grobe Schweinswurst"), panfry it a little longer than you think you shoud (it should be a little black on the outside) and then just cut a few potatoes into the still greasy pan, fry them gold brown and crispy, add salt, pepper, diced fatty bacon and a little bit of rosemary in the process. Take the Potatoes out and smack 1-2 Eggs in the pan. Put the fried eggs on top of the potatoes and the sausage, and enjoy. :D Goes well with spinach too.

  • @korolevich1999
    @korolevich1999 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    I can't wait for you to actually visit Germany and vlog your experience there.

  • @eaglevision993
    @eaglevision993 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    We have cheese pretzels, which is basically a standard pretzel with molten cheese topping. But the nacho cheese idea actually sounds good.

  • @BennoWitter
    @BennoWitter 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    I know your American hotel breakfast. They give you a packaged danish or a bear claw and a coffee and call it "continental breakfast". I still don't know a single continent where this counts as a breakfast, but it can't be on this planet. In Germany small Bed&Breakfast places still have a small breakfast with fresh bread rolls served with some ham, cheese and jam. In most hotels it's usually a breakfast buffet and those usually include scrambled eggs, bacon, etc.

    • @shadowfox009x
      @shadowfox009x 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Right? If they serve breakfast at all it's always these supersweet danish things.
      We tried it the first day and after that went to the diners in the neighborhood for US breakfasts.

  • @philomat666
    @philomat666 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love your videos, often, they show me tiny parts of german life i dont know of or do not recognize, that they are typical german. If you are ever in the Pfalz, try a Pfälzer Teller. It has all of our favorite food on it. Whats fascinating, we are so local. Take a step over a River, not even a mile or so, you can geht totally different food, the people talk in a different accent, have different things to cellebrate, etc. If you ever come to Speyer, komm vorbei und sag Hallo. Greetings, Phil

  • @Lisa-xn9xc
    @Lisa-xn9xc 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +68

    The weird looking pretzels were baked with cheese on top of them instead of salt.
    The tip with the Jägermeister is not alwas when your stomach hurts, it's only when you have eaten too much fatty food. And it's only one shot. It's still something that is usually recommended by people who drink a lot of alcohol.

    • @avysark2034
      @avysark2034 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That they help digest is a myth that has been disproven. It makes it actually harder for your stomach to work through it.

    • @LoFiAxolotl
      @LoFiAxolotl 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Placebos are stronk though.... and i mean.... a german discovered the Placebo effect so makes sense@@avysark2034

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The weird looking Bretzeln could also just have been covered in seeds or smth, here in the area of Freiburg that's quite common to do with sesame for example.

    • @raatroc
      @raatroc 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's the answer. Take some alcohol if you had too much alcohol. Best way to become an alcoholic.

  • @saladspinner3200
    @saladspinner3200 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    "You serve pretzels for breakfast?!?!" The American exlaimed in disbelieve.
    That's sweet coming from a country that decided waffles are a good thing to eat for breakfast....

  • @voyance4elle
    @voyance4elle 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    Hahaha how you said "What's even in Sauerkraut?" and then you asked "You guys actually like cabbage???" Yes!!! XD That's what we're famous for!!! Sauerkraut IS white cabbage fermented (it has similarities to Kimchi from Korea - maybe you had that one before?)

    • @BIP64
      @BIP64 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I really do like cabbage, but Sauerkraut... no. Just no.

    • @markusweber3669
      @markusweber3669 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sauerkraut with Schlupfnudeln and Bacon❤

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sauerkraut with Casseler! Eisbein with Sauerkraut! Sauerkraut on Frikadellensemmel! Sauerkraut with roasted Leberkäs! Leberknödel with Sauerkraut! ....Sauerkraut straight from the can, with, like, a fork....just don´t forget liberal amounts of caraway seeds with it.@@markusweber3669

    • @NNRedemption
      @NNRedemption 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      INfamous Not famous

    • @MaxedEntropy
      @MaxedEntropy 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It's so good with sausage or tiny bacon bits

  • @SilkeJuppenlatz
    @SilkeJuppenlatz 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Spätzle are fresh dough scraped into hot water, making egg noodles, basically. (I make them with a squisher, because I don't have the right board to scrape them into the hot water.)
    You can have different "additives" for want of a better word, like cheese, for instance. Knödel also come in different ways, one I didn't notice on the video is Grießknödel. (Semolina. We do a lot of Semolina dishes in Swabia.)

  • @beyonderprime5020
    @beyonderprime5020 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    Hallo Ryan, it is not the alcohol that helps with digestion, but the herbs present and dissolved in Jägermeister or Underberg stimulate the flow of gastric juice.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Alcohol also relaxes the muscle between stomach and intestine, so it makes you feel less stuffed, it´s definitely a part of the effect.

    • @beyonderprime5020
      @beyonderprime5020 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@paavobergmann4920 ............ Even though alcohol relaxes the stomach muscles and creates a pleasant feeling, it also delays digestion.

    • @christophreich3456
      @christophreich3456 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Good old magenbitter...my grandpa gave me herbal liqueur like jägermeister when i was a kid and felt sick..it also relaxes the stomach when it hurts^^

  • @TF2CrunchyFrog
    @TF2CrunchyFrog 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    18:38 "Water with gas" = what he means is "carbonated water". When in Germany, just ask for "Wasser mit Kohlensäure" (water with carbon dioxide) or "Sprudel" (bubbly water), all restaurants and supermarkets have it. If you want mineral water without carbonation, ask for "Mineralwasser ohne" or "stilles Wasser" (literally "quiet water"). If you want plain tab water ("Wasser aus dem Hahn"), you have to specifically ask for that! Unlike in France, where restaurants always place a decanter of tab water on the table free of charge, in German restaurants you have to pay for a bottle of water while tab water is free, but if you asked for a whole decanter of it the restaurant staff would think you're trying to be a cheap-ass. Most Germans only use tab water for brewing tea or coffee or cooking, but buy mineral water with carbonation in bottles.
    You an also buy "Sprudel mit Geschmack", which is carbonated water with sugar and flavours added... what Americans call a Soda, I guess? (Note: In Germany, Soda water means a mineral water with high mineral content, no flavours.) "Sprudel mit Geschmack" is usually quite cheap in price, it's even more diluted than Schorle but often has sugar added.

  • @Anne-qc7pl
    @Anne-qc7pl 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    14:46: It is beer, but with raspberry syrup. It is a special beer from Berlin. I think that the green version is even better - with woodruff syrup.

    • @KeesBoons
      @KeesBoons 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I hate any beer with syrup in it. It just becomes a softdrink with alcohol.

    • @michaelmatschke525
      @michaelmatschke525 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@KeesBoons Berliner Kindl basicly tastes like a bland softdrink gone slightly sour as milk would... As someone who likes proper beer I have to say it actually tastes better with syrup than without...😅

  • @TheCovenant2
    @TheCovenant2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    the mustard you folks have in the USA looks way different already - it looks really.. processed and like plastic sauce to be honest :D
    The Berliner Kindl beer: it is a normal Pils Beer - but you also have "Berliner Kindl Weisse" this one has a different colour since its just meant to be refreshing on a hot day. you mix it with a syrup (typically "Waldmeister" or raspberry) and enjoy it icecold with a straw ^^ (and females love it more but also guys drink it as well just because it tastes nice ^^)
    Buuut, Berliner Pilsener is probably more famous here in Berlin - I personally enjoy it more than the normal Berliner Kindl
    and we dont call it "Water with gas" we just call it "Selter" or "Sprudel" :D or the dry approach "Wasser mit Kohlensäure" which basically just means Water with carbonoxide/carbonoxided water xD
    And the Döner Kebab definately has to be on your list - and please for the love of god, go to a good one in Berlin since in most other places it just tastes.. meh.. when youre used to the great Berlin Döner.. if you did not experience a Döner in general you will be fine with others but you wont see them the same way after trying one in Berlin :D James Bray actually made it to Germany now and tried it - he exploded from the enjoyment :D

  • @juwen7908
    @juwen7908 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    16:13 this is not only Berliner Pilsener, it is Berliner Weisse, which is Pils with syrup out of raspberry or woodruff. This is what makes it so colorfull.
    Mixing beer is a big thing here. You can also have Radler, its beer with lemonade, Diesel, which is beer with coke or U-Boot, a beer with a dropped shot inside and so on.
    Greetings from Berlin 😎

    • @boreasreal5911
      @boreasreal5911 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      beer with coke is also known as Krefelder

    • @BIP64
      @BIP64 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@boreasreal5911 And if you mix coke with Altbier it's called Alt Schuss.

    • @martinkasper197
      @martinkasper197 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@boreasreal5911 Also called Moorwasser or Schmutz...

    • @martinkasper197
      @martinkasper197 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Korea=beer with Red wine...Absolutely awful....🤓

    • @martinkasper197
      @martinkasper197 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Berliner Weiße mit Waldmeister ❤️ Although it's more a Ladys beer...Berliner Weiße is kind of a sour wheat beer...Obergährig...🤓

  • @whisped8145
    @whisped8145 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    5:05 Schweineschnitzel (Pork Schnitzel) is the standard. This guy is weird. Like the last time you covered a video of his.

  • @blondkatze3547
    @blondkatze3547 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

    We always eat red cabbage with fresh apples and a little cinnamon as a side dish with our Christmas dinner, it tastes so delicious. Half a meter of Bratwurst fresh from the grill in a bun with mustard is something you should definitely try at the Christmas market , also very tasty.

    • @user-cx6kt3ku2f
      @user-cx6kt3ku2f 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Cinnamon? Where are you from? I never heard of someone doing that here. The apples, sure, but not cinnamon.

    • @blondkatze3547
      @blondkatze3547 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I come from northern Germany and the recipe for the red cabbage is from my late grandmother which we only eat with a little cinnamon at Christmas. Otherwise we only eat it with apples.@@user-cx6kt3ku2f

    • @karllagerbier4688
      @karllagerbier4688 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Try adding some bitter chocolate, 70%+. And some cayenne pepper.

    • @schnetzelschwester
      @schnetzelschwester 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@user-cx6kt3ku2f I know it with cloves, bay leaves and pimento, but I never heard of cinnamon. Maybe it is a family tradition.

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I eat it all year bc I love red cabbage

  • @eosbeneder977
    @eosbeneder977 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    5:34 "Jäger" is german for hunter. "Jägerschnitzel" - Hunter's Schnitzel - is called that because it has mushroom sauce (mushrooms grow in the forest, hunters work in the forest, they probably also know a thing or two about mushrooms due to easy acces, badabing-badaboom, Jäherschnizel). "Jägermeister" - Master Hunter - is called that because the founder of the brand realy liked hunting.
    5:57 "Schweinshaxe", from "Schwein" - Pig - and "Haxen" - slang for "Bein", which means leg - is, well, a pig's leg. In Austria, it's called "Stelze", which is jet another word for leg.
    7:33 A country doesn't need acces to the ocean to have acces to fish, both Austria and Germany have lots of lakes and rivers, full of trouts and other tasty freshwater critters.
    8:12 The crusty looking prezels are "Käsebrezeln" - cheese prezels. They are sprinkled with shredded cheese before baking. Don't worry about your prezels dipped in nacho cheese, it's an approved combo.
    10:19 The closer you get to the Alps, the deeper "Wandern" - hiking - is ingrained in the culture (and, like, up the mountain, it's terrible, do not, I repeat, DO NOT go on a hike with someone who lives in the Alps, they think spending 4h hiking up the mountain just to enjoy the view, have a snack, and go back down is, like, an normal past time...)
    10:42 Be carefull with this, "Pfannkuchen" literally translates as pancake (Pfanne = pan, Kuchen = cake), and can mean anything from crepe to pancake to the desert shown in the video, which I think is called a "Dutch Baby" in English.
    12:52 Spätzle (or Nockerl) are made from eggs, flour salt and water. They are not eaten plain as a main dish, usually either as "Käsespätzle" (Käse = cheese) or "Eierspätzle" (Eier = eggs), but they are often served plain as a side dish with stews or meat dishes with a lot of gravy. They are pretty good just plain with salt, if you have a picky kid who only eats buttered noodles. (Also, if you are in either Austria or Germany on the 20th of April, and you go to a restaurant, and their special of the day is "Eiernockerl mit grünem Salat" - egg Spätzle with green salad - for €18,88, leave. Thats Hitler's birthday, his favorite food, the numbers in the price stand for letters in the alphabet, and the restaurant's owner is a Nazi.)
    14:02 Fermented cabbage is not a strictly german thing, it's very common in central europe (great way to store cabbage for a long time without spoiling, ritch in probiotics and vitamin C, the works).
    14:15 Shredded cabbage, salt, lactic acid. Optional spices: bayleaf, cumin, juniper berries
    16:34 Budweis is in Czechia.
    16:38 Heineken in from the Netherlands.
    19:43 Jägermeister is the kind of stuff some old grandma with white hair, round glasses and a crochet shawl around her shoulders would have in her cupbord to put in her tea or just drink a Stamperl (really small glas, think shot glas, commonly used for Schnaps) of when she feels under the weather. I know people who say they don't like it because it's "too sweet" and "tastes like cough sirup". It's made with medicinal herbs, so that isn't an unreasonable opinion to have.
    Please excuse my inconsistent spelling, and any factual mistakes I might have made (and also my rambling), English isn't my first language, and I'm not from Germany, I'm Austrian (and it's well past 1am, I should realy go to bed), but I really like facts and sharing knowledge and I hope this brings someone joy :)

  • @scelestion
    @scelestion 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    18:37 He's got the German wrong there. "Wasser mit Gas" or "Wasser ohne Gas" is not how you would say it. People probably would even have a hard time understanding what you're talking about unless they know English. We say "Wasser mit/ohne Kohlensäure" (literally "water with/without carbonic acid"). Or, as he also mentions, you can say "lautes Wasser" ("loud water") or "stilles Wasser" ("silent water").

  • @lutzherbst3083
    @lutzherbst3083 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Jägerschnitzel doesn't have much to do with a hunter, but rather a thick breaded slice of hunting sausage (Jagdwurst) is fried like a schnitzel. Hence Jägerschnitzel.

  • @Mad3011
    @Mad3011 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    Sometimes the currywurst sauce is ketchup based, good shops make their own from scratch thogh. Everyone has their own secret recipe.

  • @flexi0693
    @flexi0693 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    we have out of season fruit and veggies in germany as well. every supermarket has them
    however seasonal fruit is advertised and usually cheaper, as seasonal foods are more available/less transport and less effort in growing the crop - they follow their natural growing cycles, helped by fertilizers and stuff of course

  • @blablubb4553
    @blablubb4553 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    Fun fact: I've been to several hotels in Germany, and most of them, if not all, are Breakfast Included. Most of the breakfast buffets that I've seen actually included bacon & eggs, as well as pancakes, along with traditional German breakfast food options.

  • @Zireael83
    @Zireael83 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The "Jägerschnitzel" that is shown in the video only looks like this in some parts of germany.
    Where I live, the "Jägerschnitzel" isn´t a kind of steak but slices of really big sausages, fried in a pan. and it is served with tomato sauce and not with mushrooms
    And the "Pfannkuchen" he talks about, we call "Eierkuchen" were I live.
    "Pfannkuchen" is only another word for "Berliner" ^^
    and I dont like "käsespätzle" and hate aspargus ^^.
    Sauerkraut is nice :) - but "Rotkohl" is oftenn better
    and "Berliner Kindl" isn´t a beer and doesn´t taste good. It´s some kind of weird mix ^^
    and Becks is definitely NOT the "national beer of germany". Becks tastes like sh*t ^^ Nearly every other beer here is better
    And most of the time I drink water without gas

  • @MrFusselig
    @MrFusselig 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    5:30 "Jäger" is the German word for "Hunter", Jägermeister is "master hunter" because the beverage came from a very conservative background of Hunters' Associations, but changed it's image to a party drink ages ago.

    • @BIP64
      @BIP64 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, I actually kind of watched from afar the change from a boring after-dinner-shot for lame old people to a party drink. I still don't understand how this could happen. When I am at a party I want to have fun, not gulp down a foul tasting liquid.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "Very conservative" meaning "Hermann Göring and his buddies".... ;-)

    • @MrFusselig
      @MrFusselig 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@paavobergmann4920 Yeah... definitely them as well... they called him "Meier", after he claimed he will be called "Meier" if only a single enemy aircraft is crossing the border into the Reich.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Haha, that´s cute, I didn´t know that!@@MrFusselig

  • @MarcelGramm
    @MarcelGramm 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Its nearly Just about southern food...typical for americans Just Report of southern stuff of germany

  • @cayreet5992
    @cayreet5992 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    Jägermeister and Underberg are 'Magenbitter' - they were originally brewed to be taken with heavy food. Yes, they're liquours, but they do actually help with digestion, too. If you live on German food, you need German solutions for your stomach...

    • @DasBonbonAusWurst
      @DasBonbonAusWurst 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      They do not help with digestion. It's a common myth.

  • @shadowfox009x
    @shadowfox009x 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    LOL, he's hitting all the touristy stuff. Schweinshaxe/Eisbein is something that's mostly served in restaurants catering to tourists. Most places catering to locals rarely serve it unless they are uber-tradiotional.
    Frikadellen are usually made out of minced pork mixed with minced veal, it's 50/50.
    Sauerbraten these days in done with veal, but traditionally was actually done with horse meat.
    Pretzel dipped in mustard? What? You put butter on it and eat it with with your coffee as second breakfast.
    Fried eggs and/or boiled eggs are usually served in better hotels in Germany.
    Käsespätzle is not a side dish but a main dish. It's basically the German version of Mac&Cheese. It's spätzle mixed with cheese, baked and often they add fried onions on top.
    Berliner Weisse is a special type of beer that can be mixed with raspery or sweer woodruff syrup. It's really nice during hot summer days.
    The US hotel I stayed in served something they called continental breakfast which were mostly different types of Danish. We usually went to small diners and tried out different types of US breakfasts. Although I will never try grits again. But the US version of pancakes with lemon butter? Yes please.

  • @DerJarl1024
    @DerJarl1024 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    We have a whole range of more dishes to offer in our kitchen than just the ones mentioned. But I'm glad that there were far more dishes mentioned here than schnitzel, sausages and pork knuckle than is the case in most videos. There are many different types of roasts, sliced meats in various variations, meatloaf and meatballs missing, including, for example, the well-known Königsberger Klopse and we love rich sauces with everything.
    Especially in northern Germany there are numerous fish dishes, and in central and southern Germany there are also poultry and game dishes. Various soups and stews are also usually completely missing. German cuisine is also very diverse due to its history, the former division into numerous individual countries, counties and cities with their own very regional cuisine. This broad division, each with its own legislation and requirements, taxes and customs duties, etc., ensured the variety of different types of beer, bread and sausage that Germany is known for today. It was not until 1871 that these many regions became a true nation-state under one legislature. Nevertheless, much of German cuisine has remained within the framework of regional traditions.
    In fact, Germans love and eat a lot of cabbage, but there's a lot more to it than just fermenting white cabbage into sauerkraut. Delicious German cabbage varieties include wild cabbage/cliff cabbage (mainly a specialty on the island of Heligoland), white cabbage and pointed cabbage, red cabbage, savoy cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, kale, Brussels sprouts and also kohlrabi. There are also foreign varieties such as Chinese cabbage / Pak Choi or Romanesco. They are boiled, steamed, served with sauces or even baked with cheese. Other common vegetables include peas, green beans, broad beans, white beans, leeks, carrots, turnips, parsnips, chard, pumpkin, rhubarb, celery and fennel, spinach, asparagus and tomatoes. From the neighboring countries there are zucchini, peppers and eggplants. The side dishes mainly include potatoes in various forms, be it boiled, fried, deep-fried, mashed, mashed and deep-fried as croquettes or simply as dumplings; new varieties such as sweet potatoes are also becoming more and more popular. Furthermore, pasta products such as noodles and spaetzle or dumplings are particularly common. Rice has been around for a while now and is also found in classic dishes like chicken fricasses.

    • @manuelaprem3795
      @manuelaprem3795 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Excellent description. In Hamburg, northern Germany, are many fish 🐟 restaurants and in northern Germany we are not obsessed with cabbage but the "average" family eats a lot of vegetables like beans,carrots, brussels sprouts and especially boiled potatoes or potatoe smash. Pasta is very trendy in northern Germany and at every corner you can find an Italian restaurant. 😊Our breakfast typically is either muesli (sugar free) with plain yoghurt (sugar free) and sliced fruit and more common the typical "continental breakfast "- a role with jam or cheese 🧀 or Aufschnitt ( sliced meat) such as smoked hamon or sliced turkey breast or sliced salami - and so on....there certainly are more than 50 types of sliced sausages/ meat as described before and hundreds of sorts of cheese 🧀 in every average supermarket! Marshmallows or other sweets are NOT breakfast (because unhealthy) and we do not know pop tarts. Bacon,eggs and pancakes 🥞 we do like a lot, but is considered as an English breakfast. For breakfast we drink coffee or English tea, the kids typically drink Milk, hot chocolate (as a drink) or freshly squeezed orange juice, 🍊 if you care for healthy food, vitamines, being healthy or ÖKO....😊 and a normal juice from the supermarket is not considered as healthy enough. The typical German is obsessed with healthy food😊 !!!!

  • @thierryf67
    @thierryf67 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    i think "Jäger" is hunter... if i'm not wrong (not german).

  • @zurnotaucharzt9446
    @zurnotaucharzt9446 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    I have stayed in many hotels in Germany and the EU, and every good hotel also had bacon and scrambled eggs, some even had pancakes.

    • @madscientist8286
      @madscientist8286 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Some even have a pancake machine nowadays! Where you press a button and a ready-made pancake comes out! I'm making no jokes here.

    • @walkir2662
      @walkir2662 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I specifically go to restaurant breakfast buffets / brunches mainly for those, yes. Still, not what I would want to start a day with as the main thing. That's more a weekend/vcation/celebration thing.

    • @TanjaHermann
      @TanjaHermann 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      And I have never heard a traveling German complain about the warm breakfasts with eggs and bacon and pancakes in the US or the full English/Irish breakfast spread when in GB. However, even the upper mid class hotels in the US serve horrible, factory-made breakfasts that are barely edible. Cracker Barrel, on the other hand, though: YUM!!!!

  • @bartholomaus8818
    @bartholomaus8818 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Best Thing is GRÜNKOHL

  • @ayoutubechannelhasnoname6018
    @ayoutubechannelhasnoname6018 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    People complaining about food being different while being abroad should immediately get deported to their home country. Experienced it all over the world. So dumb and annoying.
    All the cultures of this planet have so much delicious food to enrich your life.
    Personally i loved american food. I also loved living and eating in taiwan because their food is also beyond real. So tasty. I've been in so many countries and they all had dishes that just made my mouth water.

    • @yunkinto
      @yunkinto 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yeah, i don’t get why some people are like „let‘s go to a different country, just so i can do and eat the same things i do at home“

  • @eulenbaergnom
    @eulenbaergnom 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    21:17 Döner are a german Food. The first Döner was made in Germany, but from turkish Immigrants.

  • @Jeni10
    @Jeni10 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

    German mustard is different. So is French mustard and English mustard.
    Every adult human on the planet should walk 10,000 steps per day.
    Pennsylvania Dutch and German immigrants brought funnel cakes with them. They’re called funnel cakes because the batter flows from a funnel into the hot oil.

    • @SkandalRadar
      @SkandalRadar 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      The statement of 10k steps (in my case around 6-7km) per day has been refuted by studies. Spending around 10km - 15km (around 6-9 miles per day) a day walking is more significant for your health. But of course 10k steps are better than none at all. That is clear. Greetings from Kiel, Germany.

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Even German mustard has multiple variations. From the smooth ones stronger than wasabi to the coarse sweet ones... huge difference, so it's difficult to just say you don't like mustard. Same about ketchup... there's just a big variety.

    • @RustyDust101
      @RustyDust101 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@SkandalRadar sorry, the studies have shown that there is no appreciable health benefit beyond 6000 steps a day. At roughly 12-14k steps a day there is even a slight decrease to long term health due to wear and tear on ligaments and joints, especially in the legs. The 10k steps myth was propagated by a Japanese advertisement for the very first marketed step-counter. There was absolutely NO , NADA, NONE of research done to support that claim. It came straight from the marketing department of that company.

    • @gordonzug9418
      @gordonzug9418 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Löwensenf is the best musrarch.

    • @SkandalRadar
      @SkandalRadar 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@gordonzug9418 That depends on the taste. My favorite mustard is “Bautzner Mittelscharf”.

  • @LoFiAxolotl
    @LoFiAxolotl 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Sauerkraut is cabbage.... it's just pickled cabbage.... it was popular among sailors back in the day because it had a pretty high Vitamin C content for things that are preserved and was basically the solution the scurvy

  • @CynderNeko
    @CynderNeko 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    My family eats a lot of Sauerkraut because we still make it ourselves.
    We cut it into half and then slice it into fine stripes.
    Then we put it into a box with salt and use a special tool my grandpa build. It's literally a knife on a pole with the blade facing down. We just stomp through the cabbage to cut it, then put it into a fermentation pot. That's a pot, where the lid sits in a water channel. In this pot we stomp it through with another special tool... an axe pole. We fill the pot gradually with cabbage and salt until it's full. There should be enough juice from the cabbage to cover everything.
    When the pot is closed we first put it in a warmer place for a few days. Then we move it to a colder place.
    After some weeks, usually about six weeks, you can eat it raw or cooked.
    Actually my grandpa's Sauerkraut is so popular that we cut up 125kg of cabbage, last year.

  • @renekeller3292
    @renekeller3292 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It is like in most of the case, where typical bavarian food is shown as the typical german food.
    It is just a part of it.
    There is so much more, so much better things.....

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Thurinigian Bratwurst (Thüringer in German) is a white-ish (pre-cooked) one with herbs in it and an length of at least 15cm (no upper limit). Nürnberger or Nuremberg bratwurst are similar, but only 7 to 9 cm long and served as triple within a breadroll or half a dozen per plate ("small portion") or a full dozen per person. There are many other regional varieties with more coarse or more finely minced fillings, some with beef, others pure pork, some pre-smoked (which gives them a more red-brown color). The skin is in most cases made from pig's intestines, but there are also "naked" varieties like the Upper Swabian White, also called "Geschlagene" (whipped or beaten one, because the dough is whipped into hot water instead of filling it in a skin). Some sausages like Frankfurter, Wiener (which means from Vienna) and Saitenwurst (all very similar, only slight variations on the meat mixture) have skins from sheep's intestines, but they are "Brühwurst" (scalded sausage), not Bratwurst and therefore not intended to be grilled, but to be heated in hot water, like the Munich Weißwurst - those are white because they contain no nitrite-based curing salt, but more than 50% veal and are pre-cooked, while Frankfurter and Wiener are red-ish because they are slightly pre-smoked and contain mostly pork (Wiener also beef). A Bockwurst is similar to Frankfurter, but thicker and within a skin from pork intestine; it got its name because it was served often as side dish to a Bock bier (which is a strong beer with at least 6.5% alc., first brewed in Einbeck in Lower Saxony, since 1573 also in Bavaria and Franconia).

    • @alx314
      @alx314 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thurinigian Bratwurst is not always scalded / pre-cooked, you often also can buy it raw. Every region of Thuringia is using different herbs and spices, for example, the more eastern the more caraway. And, of course, every region has the ONE well known butcher with the best Bratwurst. The long bratwursts, often sold on christmas markets, are about half an meter long, this is about 20 inch or 1,6 foot. It's often served in a 1 foot bread roll.

    • @andik859
      @andik859 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hier in Nordhessen gibt es die beste Bratwurst. Früher wurde die wie Ahle Wurscht schlachtwarm hergestellt. Eine gute Bratwurst ist im Grunde nur gut gewürztes grobes Gehacktes in einem Schweinedarm. Da wird nichts gebrüht. Einfach in der Pfanne oder am besten auf dem Holzkohlegrill zubereiten. 🌭🍻

  • @angelikazarske7734
    @angelikazarske7734 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The Berlin beer is "Berliner Weisse" and it is beer with sirup, and the sirup has different colours that change the colour of the beer. The green one is Waldmeister, which is a famous german flavour. Hard to discribe the taste...

  • @pRaX85815
    @pRaX85815 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Fresh warm Pretzels with a side of compound butter (basicly a salty garlic and parsley butter) is heaven.

  • @KR-bz9zw
    @KR-bz9zw 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As a German the "normal" Shot after a heavy meal is a "Obstler" it's a alcohol distilled of one kind of fruit. Most popular is a "Marillen Schnaps" i think.
    It's like a Apricot Brandy.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      where I like, it´s mainly apple and pears.

  • @miss_nerdy1716
    @miss_nerdy1716 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Be aware that a "Jägerschnitzel" in north east germany is vastly different to the "Jägerschnitzel" shown here.
    In West/south germany the serve a pork schnitzel with a creamy mushroom sauce
    in East/north you get a "Jagdwurst" that is breaded like a schnitzel, typically with a red tomato Sauce

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That bummed me out so much the first time i was in Hamburg (from the Black Forest). Here, the "Jägerschnitzel" is supposed to be a meal that a hunter 'of old times' would have eaten: Meat of the animal he hunt and mushrooms and some herbs he gathered.

    • @martinkasper197
      @martinkasper197 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      In Hamburg you got a Jägerschnitzel DDR? Quite surprising...🤔 I wouldn't have thought that... Even on Mallorca you get the BRD one, which I ❤️ as a Swabian...🤘👍

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I have seen both in Hamburg. Under the same name. The former usually in restaurants the latter in cafeterias. @@martinkasper197

  • @fafnirdrache1210
    @fafnirdrache1210 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    He talks about German “national” beer - and you guessed Bud Light? We drink beer - not hamster piss. 😂

  • @D-F-D-F
    @D-F-D-F 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    This guy must be in Bavaria. Things like pretzels and Haxe are not that common in other parts of Germany

    • @tobiasmuth2372
      @tobiasmuth2372 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      A pretzel goes everywhere in Germany. Alternatively, pretzel sticks! I don't know of any bakery in Germany that doesn't have something like this...

    • @schnetzelschwester
      @schnetzelschwester 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Americans always mix up Bavaria and Germany. They know Neuschwanstein but never heard of the North Sea coast with its endless tide lands or the heathlands near Lüneburg.
      "German food" is more than Haxn and Pretzl.
      Funny: I once asked a Chinese colleague what German food he liked most. He answered "Pizza".

  • @Boredofmostofit
    @Boredofmostofit 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Regarding the "Spätzle": there are a lot of recipies for those, but you can make great ones with just eggs and flour. And yes they are great even bland, although no one woud skip on the many sauces here in their right mind...

  • @alkant3855
    @alkant3855 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Heineken and Amstel are beers from the Netherlands, not so popular in Germany, and not the best beers either

  • @remoschramm
    @remoschramm 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    as a german it's so funny to see your "american" reactions, makes me smile a lot
    so just a short thing about Sauerkraut, it's a fermented white cabbage and a favorite sidedish for Bratwurst, Haxe
    but we don't eat it as often as everyone is thinking
    Berliner Weiße is a mix with beer and sirup (green or red)

  • @IronMunky86
    @IronMunky86 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I never thought of dipping a brezel in nacho cheese. I am German. I tried it after you said it. I'll allow it. It's actually not bad 😂

    • @juliaspoonie3627
      @juliaspoonie3627 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I‘m from Austria and you should try popcorn with nacho cheese next. It’s sooo good!

  • @ztranier7968
    @ztranier7968 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    plz do not aim to find a place where they offer you ketchup or mostard from little plastic cushions, those places got no honor!!!
    Only cheap ingrediances, which includes the saussage as well. Since we do have great homegrown/handmade mostard all over Germoney it is worth to taste one/all of them.
    Also it is a big differnet between stock Saussages on a market and a good handmade saussage from a lokal butcher

  • @OpaSpielt
    @OpaSpielt 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    7:31 Even people of landlocked countries like Switzerland can catch and eat fish, freshwater fish from rivers and lakes. 😉

    • @juliaspoonie3627
      @juliaspoonie3627 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep, same here in Austria!

    • @karinwenzel6361
      @karinwenzel6361 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Exactly, freshwater fish like trout, carp (e.g. as a Christmas diner), whitefish / coregonus (= Felchen) abd others can be found on menues in the south of Germany, Switzerland and Austria, the fish usually caught in nearby rivers or lakes.

  • @ascaniusvotan2319
    @ascaniusvotan2319 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The tiny fork is probably for french fries, excuse me, POMMES!

  • @matthiaspfahl3746
    @matthiaspfahl3746 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Currysauce isn't just Ketchup with Curry Spice. Currysauce is a tomato sauce with a lot various ingredients like apple sauce sometimes honey and a lot of spices. In Germany we have bad Currywursts with a bad Wurst and an awful curry Ketchup but also very delicious Currywursts with handmade sauce and Wurst.

  • @TheDendran
    @TheDendran 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Those Brezen you coudn't identify earlier were with *_cheese_*
    They are in a layer of cheese; just one variant of them. Some have poppy seeds sprinkled on them, I even recall seeing some with granulated nuts on them