The Seattle book talk next month is sold out, but I’ll be sticking around to sign books and meet everyone until they force me out, so come down! booklarder.com/products/in-person-book-signing-max-miller-tasting-history
Not just "What's for Dinner?" but more like "Is it chow time yet?" and "I wonder what swill the Chow Hall has for us today?" More often than not, nobody really cared much, as long as their belly was full.
I always use to say, on any deployment, no matter how long that deployment was, soldiers spend the first 7 days complaining about not getting to have sex. From day 7 onward, it's about wanting to get good food. lolfof
It actually makes sense. He would not have been referring to Granny Smith apples or Golden Delicious like we know them. I believe those are modern varieties. See, apples don't grow true to the seed. If you get a Golden Delicious at the supermarket it's grown from trees that are grafted from the particular singular tree that happened to produce the first Golden Delicious. Each variety of apple is like this. Apple trees, when planted, will more likely than not produce crabapples. It's not a different species of tree. If the apple is good or not it's completely up to chance. Avocados are the same way. So they quite literally were hoping that there were good apples at the market, ones that tasted edible.
The Lucco the pigherd story is what I love most about history. 2,000 years later, on a technology completely unimaginable at the time, strangers from all over the world are simultaneously thinking about Lucco & his pigs.
It's a Giada-sized peppermill. As big as the giant ones she likes to use in her restaurants, and also approximately the same size as Giada herself lol.
I'd love to see a restaurant open up with ancient roman dishes like this one. Sounds amazing to go along somewhere on a night out and experience what an "ancient roman flavour" is like, same as you would any regional cuisine today!
That would be cool af. You could even make it look like an ancient Roman eaterie and try and cook with some ancient methods. Like a living history resturant but with obvious modern health standards n what not.
So I just made this dish for my family. Granted, some of the ingredients were impossible to find in China, I was able to find substitutes for most, including Teochew fish sauce for Garum. Some I had to improvise. Needless to say, the end result blew mine and everyone’s minds. The taste was so foreign yet mixed eloquently, the vinegar, spices and sweetness create a wonderful flavor! Thank you Max!
The concept of Hadrian’s Wall honestly cracks me up. Here we have the Roman Empire, conquering everything in sight, and when they came across the Scots they were just like “Nope. Don’t want to deal with that. Wall it is.”
I studied English history in college, and it wasn't a "wall" in the sense that we think of it--it was, more accurately, a giant linear toll road. There was plenty of trade and activity north of the wall, but it was specifically for collecting tax on trade with the northerners moreso than defense. It continued in that purpose well after the Romans left.
The Scotts lived in Ireland at the time. So a good bit of Irish Scotts music goes The time that Julis Caesar tried to land tried to land down at Lands end The coast guard couldn’t stop them For the Dubliners they did send And just as they were landing lads They heard three ringing cheers ‘Get back to Rome like blazes Here’s the Dublin fusiliers’
The Romans worked with the Picts and Caledonians and built many structures North of Hadrian's wall. Bridges, Villas, Roads. There was continuous trade with the Northern clans and tribes, but they would never submit to Roman rule. So, it ended up a kind of gentleman's agreement that they would trade and respect each other, with occasional departures from the peace, of course....
"So thank you to Wondrium for sponsoring this video as we dine on Hadrian's wall." My first thought was "Dang, that's gonna need a LOT of tenderizing!"😅
You mentioned "a more edible carrot", and that reminded me of what I learned about carrots years ago. They were first domesticated in Afghanistan as a dye plant (originally, purple was the most common color for carrots). The first carrots were pretty tough and woody, not good for eating at all. Eventually, someone got the bright idea to breed carrots with more palatable texture and flavor. They caught on, and because Afghanistan was in the middle of so many trade routes, they spread rapidly around Europe and Asia. The Romans became quite fond of them, as noted in the video, and helped spread them further. Purple was still a common color, but yellow and orange variants also existed. The Dutch, in particular, liked the orange carrots, so much so that they became a symbol of William of Orange, and this ultimately led to the popularization of what we now think of as the standard orange carrot. Source: I read it on some website years ago. It seemed reasonably reliable, but I don't actually remember where it was, so take this history with a grain of salt. I got interested when I first encountered purple carrots at the grocery store; I wondered where they came from and was surprised to learn that purple was the original color. Max, any interest in doing an episode on carrots?
Some of that is true, some of it is not. Based on the Wikipedia page and a little quick Googling about carrots, they were indeed not super edible at first and were selectively bred over time to become more palatable (like a lot of vegetables we now eat). But it seems the earliest cultivated carrots were grown for their tops and seeds, not for use in dyes, and I haven't found any indication that purple was either exclusively or primarily their original color- only that purple, red, orange, yellow, and white varieties were all known as far back as their earliest mentions in written history. There are prominent Roman illustrations of orange carrots from the 6th century, and by the 11th century orange carrots were being traded from the Middle East up to Southern Europe. Orange carrots were already commonly depicted in art across Europe by the mid-1500s, before William of Orange's rise to prominence or the related Dutch flag based on his colors. So, like most history- the boring parts are true, and the "wow what a convenient confluence of events" parts were invented/exaggerated/misattributed.
@@its_clean The original carrot is still with us, a wild flower known to us as Queen Anne's Lace (Daucus carota). And yes, its seeds are a delicious seasoning, while the roots and leaves are useful for flavoring soups, and the fresh flowers can be battered and fried as fritters. I love seeing them bloom, and keep them as a 'favored weed' in my yard, along with nettles, dandelions, bittercress, and others. The variously colored versions of modern carrots have become quite popular as a novelty during the last decade or so.
That looks delicious! Pork and apples always works. I also loved the insights into Roman logistics and camp life. As an Army veteran I can really identify with the guy telling his brother to send him a care package if he really loves him hahaha.
We've got letters from soldiers on the Wall asking their Italian Mamas to please send more woolly socks in the next care package, because the new posting is DAMP and chilly. Nothing changes, not for armies.
It never stops amazing me how many similarities there are between being a soldier in the US military and being an inmate in the US prison system 😂 in both situations you’re stuck in a place you don’t wanna be depending on the generosity of others to get things you used to like and forced to befriend the best guys in your same situation to pass the time Only difference is you get paid for one and charged for the other lol And the prison uniform doesn’t get as many chicks but it still gets more than you think 😂
Max, I appreciate your pronunciations of the various non-English words you use throughout your series. It adds that extra connection to the subject on top of your presentation. Honestly, I think you're the next Alton Brown when it comes to culinary media. This is one of the best channels on TH-cam.
I can relate so much to the thought how cool it is to know about some average pig farmer living centuries ago. There are so many sources about the lives of kings and other "important" figures, but I always find it comforting to learn about some average Joe who just lived their modest life somewhere but still isn't completely forgotten because they dropped their grocery receipt somewhere.
I love little stories like that too, there’s an ancient graffiti on a wall of a brothel in Pompeii two best friends wrote when they had the night of their lives. Seeing to dudes being bros in History is so wholesome
So the Romans are the reason I believe pork chops and applesauce taste great together? I learn something new every day! I can hardly wait for garum redux.
I saw the news with the potential rediscovery of Sylphium sometime last year. It was found growing near the ruins of an old Roman settlement in Turkey, supposedly transplanted there, and the locale proved to be beneficial to its life cycle. Regardless of whither its the real thing or not, its been successfully grown in a greenhouse, and I couldn't help but wonder if you'd heard about it. Was a pleasant surprise to see you mentioning it in this video!
I just watched an episode of Cogito on TH-cam earlier today and he talked briefly about the potential discovery in Turkey. Now I see it mentioned again in this video. I'm hoping it turns out to be legit because I think he said some researchers believe it might have some "cancer fighting" properties near the end of the video. But nothing verified yet.
8:14 I'm a historical musician at a Fort, we reenact stuff from the 1800s and part of my job is playing certain songs for the soldiers whether it's for assembling them, telling them its lunch time, or ending the shift in the evening. That's one of the ways the musicians helped tell the time we used duty calls.
I love these Roman entries the most. I wish I'd had this channel back when I had to make a dish for a Roman feast back in high school... but there wasn't even any internet back then.
And the Wright Brothers had just flown for the first time, and the War of the Roses had just ended, and Prometheus had yet to carry fire down from the heavens, and dinosaurs still roamed the earth, and... 😂
Real pleasure that isn't faked is always worth seeing----if it comes from someone you can regard as a friend, even better. The only Max reaction I like better than this one is for Pumpion Pie.
Perfect. Was going to say that exact thing, within half a second you can tell by very slight "oh yeah" face.. or that slightly confused "what did I just put in my mouth?" look
I love that you read from the Vindolander Tablets. It's like a quick, friendly peek into Ancient Roman Life, and pleases the frustrated ARCHAEOLOGIST in me! You're the BEST, Maximus!
When I saw it was pork and apples I immediately knew it was gonna be good; those two somehow go incredibly well together. My wife recently made a dish that contained both pork and apples, and while it wasn't anything like this, it was still amazing. I don't know why tender pork and soft, juicy apples pair so well but they really do.
Oh, dear. Making actual garum in your backyard?! I remember something from a previous episode of yours about garum production being banned near cities because of the smell. This is shaping up to be an interesting summer on the olfactory front for your neighbourhood, I guess :)
Eh, industrial production was banned. I'm sure couple of liters of homemade garum won't stink up the neighborhood too badly. Last year I kept a bucket full of fermenting weeds to make liquid compost and my neighbors did not complain.
Unfortunately, the weather in SoCal has been unrelenting rain, so it might be awhile until conditions permit the making of that video. On a plus side, the state has received so much snow that the ski resorts will remain open until June.
I knew of someone here in Australia who tried to ferment Woad in their back yard - complaints from various neighbours and the local council made them give up. I think fermenting fish may be worse than fermenting woad.
Vindolanda is such an amazing place- definitely one of the best Roman sites in Britain. The Vindolanda Tablets are such an amazing discovery, as they record so many little details about everyday life. The most famous one is from a woman called Claudia Severa who was the wife of one of the camp commanders, asking her sister to come to her birthday party, which is one of the first known examples of writing by a Roman woman. There are also lots of drafts of letters by soldiers to their families, many of which complain about the cold, wet weather in Britannia (a tradition that endures to this day) and beg them to send warm clothing such as socks and underpants. Yes, Romans sometimes wore socks and underpants, at least when the army sent them to the North of England- who knew?
I live in Chester, UK. In Roman times it was known as Deva. On the river Dee defended by walls that remain today. I suppose that those who were stationed at the fort were well looked after. There were baths and a large amphitheatre with all the food outlets and memorabilia stalls that was common at large important venues. It was rumoured that they were thinking about making Deva the capital. But, they retreated before that could happen. After all, there was a main road straight to Chester. There's so much history in Chester from the Romans to the civil war. A good place to visit?
After seeing channels like this, I would love to see a restauraunt themed around historic meals like this from differing time periods and parts of the world.
All Scandinavia has Viking menu &-themed restaurants, usually adjacent to famous archaeological sites. England had Elizabethan/Tudor feasts. Good idea, & good question for Max.
I especially enjoyed this episode due to a family tradition linked to the Roman soldiers stationed at Hadrian's Wall. According to said tradition, a Roman centurion named Dionysius was stationed at Hadrian's Wall for the last part of his military career. When he reached retirement age, he married a local girl and settled near the wall. He is said to be the ancestor of English families with the surnames Denison, Tennyson, Dyson or Tyson. My great-great grandfather, whose last name was Dyson, immigrated to the US from Lancashire, not far from the western end of the site of the Wall, in the mid 19th Century.
Surnames aren’t really attested in England prior to the Roman Conquest, let alone ones that persisted through generations. At most, variants of “Dionysus” might have started out as more common given names in that family than in others, but that would quickly become “watered out” as people didn’t just name their children after ancestors, but also after family friends or other people they wanted their child to resemble in character. Most English people didn’t have a “proper” surname until after the Black Death.
Some of those surnames derive from "Denis", which ultimately does come from "Dionysios", but it morphed into Denis in France, became the name of a Christian saint, and only came to Britain with the Norman conquest. At which point it became a fairly common first name. Many people called Denis presumably had sons, giving rise to the patronymic "Denis's son." There aren't any extant English surnames with unbroken lineage going back to the Roman period, let alone to a single person.
As the two folks above me have described more eloquently than I can, this is a clear case where the family folklore is in conflict with hard history. That being said, I see no reason why OP shouldn't continue to enjoy his family's tradition, so long as he acknowledges (silently, perhaps) that the history behind that tradition is more than a little wobbly. But then again, if we gave up on all family rites that couldn't be traced to documented history, probably none of us would have any traditions left at all!
@@its_clean Well said! That's exactly why I stated it as a family tradition rather than presenting it as a cold, hard fact. I choose to believe it, but I don't think any less of others for not doing so.
This channel is my catnip. I wish I had discovered it while my dad was still around. We used to call each other just after every Bills game and F1 race, and I can imagine us doing the same after every new video on this channel, because history and cooking are two more passions he passed down to me. Also, the news that the garum vid is getting a part two is especially awesome! I think part one was my first or second time seeing Tasting History. Great stuff!
Max your show is really high-quality and its merit far exceeds that of many shows on TV. Informative and interesting. Love your voice as well. Thanks for another great video!
Online content in general is just slaughtering TV even at stuff traditionally TV was okay at, I don't even have television or radio in the house because of it, looking forward to seeing television die.
Our cable TV went out and when the repair guy asked how long it had been out I had to say “Not really sure- no one has had the TV on since last October.”
@@christineh14 I’ve got _one_ TV show I watch, and it’s only on for the first ten weeks of each year. And since it’s on the national broadcasting station it’s also available online, so I don’t even need anything specific beyond a general internet connection.
Given all this craziness we see in our society today, the death of TV would be the best thing that can happen. Just think , people would actually hav to “think” for themselves. And no more Khardashians , the greatest human disaster to ever exist ! 😮😊😮
I live alongside Hadrian’s Wall (within spitting distance!) and it’s fun to know what they ate here! Next time do the C2C - where you walk allllll along it, stopping at pubs, eating good food and getting drunk at night!
Had great food at the old Grey Bull at Haltwhistle for several days decades ago. French sole by ex-pat London chef. Drafty cold room, rudimentary bath, but the pub was jolly lively! Raconteurs & balladeers abound up there. 👍🏼🏴
We just made this recipe, took some slight liberties with the amounts and used mushroom garum because of my friend's fish alergy and I can safely say this was one of if not the BEST thing we ever made! We hade some wine the way the romans liked it (fermented in amphorae [qvevri] and a lot) so my hangover is also true to period. Thank you Max, keep on making top content❤
19:36 I could see you standing over Jose at the dinner table at dinner time with that pepper grinder asking "Would sir care for some fresh ground pepper for his meal."
I found you because of Garum and I specifically remember you saying you were hoping to make actual garum one day in a back yard! Can’t wait to follow the process 😊
Someone in my friend group was wondering why we pair pork and applesauce. WOW this right here gives us the answer! You are amazing, Max!!! Thanks for that connection to history. 💚
This dish reminds me a lot of Filipino Adobo. Before having Chinese and Spanish influences, our original adobo is basically pork cooked in vinegar and local herbs. The basic modern recipe often has soy sauce and potatoes. But many households have their own spin to it, like my mom loves to dump huge amounts of dried oregano sprigs. I think I want to try making this dish and just replace the spices I can't get with ones that are available. Definitely considering using apples instead of potatoes. So interesting!
I just wanted to say that I always loved your intro theme and animation! It reminds me of watching those PBS history shows in my childhood with my family. Very nostalgic and warm
If only you had posted this two weeks sooner Max! Although I wish I could have prepared this instead, I’m happy to report that my rendition of your Globi recipe was received very well by the guests at a Bacchanalia celebration I attended recently. I’ll just have to make this dish next year and report back…unless there’s an even better Roman recipe in your book when it arrives soon! PS- I made a few batches of globi with the addition of a little powdered sugar, a drizzle of a fig-balsamic glaze, or both. The fig-balsamic I *highly* reccomend, the tart and fruity is a lovely bit of contrast to the fatty sweetness of the globi!
I’m glad yours turned out and you got to try them. Mine exploded on that last batch and sent me to hospital with burns to my hands and face. Turned out to be a blessing in disguise as my blood pressure was in very dangerous territory. Max literally saved my life. I recovered with only one small scar on my chest (didn’t know it has been burnt) and now, 2 years later, my blood pressure is under control. By the time I got home, my dad had thrown them out, so I never did get to try them and, understandably, I’ve never attempted to make them again either.
I read some where about an old norse recipe that includes pork, bacon, apple, and onion, cooked in beer. Since then I developed on that recipe and basically made a spicy apple pork dish that's my family's favourite! Fruits were commonly cooked back then and tracing old dish gave me a new appreciation for fruits in savoury dishes.
the fragments of writing are the best parts of anything. the little journals and memos that we keep are, like, the first things we throw away. no one keeps a shopping list. but they are always the most fascinating!
YES Vindolanda! The things they have found from that dig are amazing! Leather and fabric in the least, actual writings from soldiers has been mind blowing!
One ofy fave parts of any episode is waiting for Max's reaction to taking the first bite. This time didn't disappoint! I loved his expression of pure fascination turning into joy in the span of a millisecond.
Gracias for telling from where the word "cerveza" came. In Germany, there are 20+ recipes of pork and apples. e.g. schweinebraten mit apfelsoße, schweinebraten mit apfelfüllung, -Apfelmus, -Wein, -Spritzen, -saft etc.
That looked freaking good! And the fact that the chosen food for punishment for a Roman soldier would be the chosen ingredient for merriment for practically anyone else is just too good 😂
Eat a bowl of plain barley or barley bread and you will soon understand the punishment. Its the culinary equivalent to standing with your nose in the corner.
15:39 this note feels like something you would find in a survival horror game as a hint for where to find the key to the store house in order to find some key item you need.
I knew the moment you took a bite of it that you loved it. It's all in the way your eyes light up with delight at the taste. Your expressiveness always gives you away good sir.
I love your facial expressions on those first bites. Your eyes just dart around enthusiastically followed by this slowly widening mischievous grin, it's just fantastic. I'm getting pretty good at determining which dishes you're giving a hearty thumbs up to before you actually speak on it - you have extremely communicative emotions and it's absolutely wonderful to watch. As an aside, this dish looks amazing, and I'm going to have to try making it. Some rarer ingredients in this one, but I can accumulate them over the course of a few weeks methinks.
This was one of the first Roman recipes I made almost 30 years ago 😍 Though the first time I did make it with apricots, as that was what my translation said "mala matiana" were. Today, I'd rather go for crabapples or maybe very acid and firm apples like Granny Smith.
That detail of soldiers marking their grinding tools with their names is so cool. Nothing really changes. I mark all of my tools at work with my name and they still go missing, damn it
I was also at Vindolanda this summer! My favorite artifacts were the child's wooden sword in the soldier's weapon display, the loaded dice thrown down the well, and the letters. One letter was a birthday party invitation from a rich lady to her friend a few miles away and another was a soldier thanking his mother for a care package with socks.
As a former soldier, I can very much understand why that legionnaire was thankful for socks. Don't underestimate the value of a good pair of socks, my friend.
You should totally introduce a line of historical condements and sauces premade and ready to go. You have a particularly unique knowledge of historical condements and sauces, you have the experience to make them "correctly", and it is a unique product which would be useful and enjoable for all the Tasting History fans who want to try out these fun flavors but don't have the time or skills to prepare them themselves.
@@maudline I'd buy a Powder Forte and Powder Douce. The two main blends for Medieval cookery. THose might be easier to formulate, then have produced and packaged and sold, as they have shelf life.
I am from the UK and my wife used to live very near Hadrian's wall and I am from York (Eboracum) which was the military staging area for administering Hadrian’s Wall. We now live further south in England and about 50 yards in front of our house is a Roman temple buried now under a field. Our garden still has a plant called 'Ground Elder' in it which Romans introduced to the UK and used to eat as salad and wild garlic which they would also have eaten. I make two dishes which are versions of this dish in the video. Tuscan Roast pork with fennel seeds which has pork crackling and another dish called Normandy Pork with cider cream and apples. I like to think Romans from Italy or Gaul (France) sent to the UK would have eaten those. Roman history is still living among us in our food, our buildings, our language and even growing in our garden.
I love the eyebrows - you can always tell when Max likes a dish - the eyebrows followed usually by the cheeky grin - looked amazing - glad it tasted that way too
I remember reading a story about a former Roman Decurio (think Sergeant) chastising a more current troop after they let Huns capture a Roman citizen, stating that "they should be fed on the barley and vinegar of disgrace", so that fits in well with what you are saying Max.
When I lived in Arizona… there were a lot of restaurants that offered dishes served with pork of various cuts along side of apples with various forms including apple sauce. Not that that necessarily has anything to do with this video but it does remind me of that time in my life. That was a first for me to have pork with apples… and it was delicious.
My mom loves mudlarking (digging through the mud of The Thames) and I really want to go with her and find some Roman stuff. You have to get a license and register real finds and I would but you can keep a lot of stuff.
You didn't even need to say it was fantastic You could tell just from the light that emitted from your eyes the minute you took the first bite. That's part of what I love about your channel Max is that you do things that are different and you're finding these delicious recipes from 2000 years ago
my sister and i always end up watching your videos over dinner. she’s always happy to watch, though i do hope i’ll one day be able to cook something from your channel.
God, what at treat this channel is. I love every bit of it. Real Garum, Hard Tack (TM) [clack clack], and a good attitude. Thank you for creating this joy!
i absolutely adore that little grin on first taste you get when it's a home run of a dish. just the "Oh yeah...this is awesome, gonna devour the rest of this off camera" grin.
Try a chatGPT's Garum recipe: Ingredients: 1 cup soy sauce 1/2 cup rice vinegar 1/4 cup mirin 2 tbsp fish sauce 2 tbsp anchovy paste 2 garlic cloves, minced 1 tsp dried seaweed (kombu or nori) 1 tbsp brown sugar 1 tsp black pepper Instructions: Combine: Mix all ingredients in a bowl. Infuse: Let the mixture rest for 24-72 hours in the fridge. Strain: Strain to remove solids. Store: Store in an airtight container in the fridge for several weeks. This recipe mimics the umami and salty profile of traditional Garum without using fermented fish.
I was rewatching all your videos and was reminded of my first meal I made for my family when I was probably 10 years old. My dad showed me how to make pork chops,fried apples and green beans. Never felt so proud as when Mom said WOW
The local cats and coyotes are going to love visiting your back yard, Max and Jose. Get some "trail cameras" with low light capability to watch the hijinks! 😇
You know what I'm hoping? that the scrolls/signs from Pompeii's first excavation (allegedly destroyed for censorship/ not ruffling the feathers of the pious back home) leave private collections for a year so the world can f*cking look at them at least once
Hello Polywrath in the background, and thank you Max for this Roman recipe of pork and apples. Hadrian's Wall is definitely one of the longest (lasting) Roman monuments from across the vastness that was the Empire. I prefer the Column of Vespasian myself, Marcus Aurelius' statue on horseback too.
My 6 year old loves your videos. I kept trying to find ways to get her more interested In history...your videos did that. Thank you also one of my favorite channels.
Fantastic video as usual. I’d definitely like to visit Hadrian’s Wall on a future visit to Britain. Knowing about recipes and reading letters from ordinary people from centuries or millenia ago definitely brings us closer to their experience and enables us to draw parallels with our own. You might enjoy Lindsay Davis’ Marcus Didius Falco series of historical thrillers, they’re well written and rich in detail about the daily life of IIRC late Republican-early Imperial Rome and the characters grow on you as well :) (many return in several books such as Falcon’s wife Helena). Quick note : The subtitles mispell century as sentry.
@@moleshaman3040 I would also recommend visiting the Roman sites in Dorset and around Salisbury, and the Lunt Roman fort near Coventry (which has the only remaining Roman circus, or horse training ring, in the UK). Chester also has very well-preserved Roman remains. There are a LOT of Roman sites in the UK (including a small amount of Roman wall in London) - don't just visit the famous ones! For example I live in Winchester which is not really known for its Roman history but was a Roman town known as Venta Belgarum, and still has some Roman walls.
Verulamium is another site to pay a visit to, pre Roman as well as Romano-Celtic town (it was destroyed by Boudicca and rebuilt). I might be slightly biased though as I was born a few miles away from there and it sparked my interest in early British history.
The Seattle book talk next month is sold out, but I’ll be sticking around to sign books and meet everyone until they force me out, so come down! booklarder.com/products/in-person-book-signing-max-miller-tasting-history
Hurray! You announced that on my bday so...here's hoping I can make it in.
Any chance you will include Denver on your tour?
Damn I wish
So pork and apples were had in Roman times.
I hope you come to Houston, Texas.
even in ancient rome the concept of "only buy eggs if they're cheap" existed
There's nothing new under the sun, so I've been told.
Army food, like its equipment, is usually produced by the lowest bidder.
I mean if you need 200 eggs, better hope they're on sale.
Humans
@@Intranetusa Nothing has changed though the centuries.
0:20 "all you can think is: What's for dinner?" -- that nicely sums up my experiences of military life. Some things never change ...
The men at the wall were constantly bored. It turns out there wasn’t as much raiding from the north as they thought 😂
@@TastingHistory Boring, sure; but if you offered them a posting in Germania I'm guessing they opt to stay at the wall.
Not just "What's for Dinner?" but more like "Is it chow time yet?" and "I wonder what swill the Chow Hall has for us today?" More often than not, nobody really cared much, as long as their belly was full.
I always use to say, on any deployment, no matter how long that deployment was, soldiers spend the first 7 days complaining about not getting to have sex. From day 7 onward, it's about wanting to get good food. lolfof
Let's get that out onto a tray. Nice!
I love how the concept of "if you love me send me things for food" is ancient
Humanity has not changed 😂
Why would it be new? Of course it's ancient lol
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” kinda deal
Bro if you love me, gimmie a taco from taco bell.
Ah, family...
I love the thought of an annoyed Roman at the market pawing through mounds of apples looking for "100 good ones" 😂
It's the origin of the saying "How bout them apples"
Nice PFP 👌
It actually makes sense. He would not have been referring to Granny Smith apples or Golden Delicious like we know them. I believe those are modern varieties. See, apples don't grow true to the seed. If you get a Golden Delicious at the supermarket it's grown from trees that are grafted from the particular singular tree that happened to produce the first Golden Delicious. Each variety of apple is like this. Apple trees, when planted, will more likely than not produce crabapples. It's not a different species of tree. If the apple is good or not it's completely up to chance. Avocados are the same way. So they quite literally were hoping that there were good apples at the market, ones that tasted edible.
lol
I’m just barely peeking in here
who on this list of comments have tried this and what does it taste like?
The Lucco the pigherd story is what I love most about history. 2,000 years later, on a technology completely unimaginable at the time, strangers from all over the world are simultaneously thinking about Lucco & his pigs.
What he did in life, echoed in eternitiy
And he's known for something he did presumably somewhat well, not the shitty quality of the copper he sold.
Never tire of seeing the hard tack clip incorporated whenever possible! 😂
CLACK CLACK
that's the running gag on this channel! love it
Never gets old
@@theConquerersMama 1 billion years ago that hardtack will still be there,forever unbreakable
just a little reminder of the pure density in these pucks of toothache
Max's comically large pepper grinder took me completely off guard, I choked on my tea a little 😂
LOL me too! And the fact that he played it totally straight made it even funnier.
I'm just imagining an ancient Roman soldier pointing at it like: and WHAT is that?
@@jeli26ll It doubles as a club in a pinch!
Straight out of the 70s!
Fresh a'pepper?
Love how he oh so casually used the biggest pepper mill I've ever seen without mentioning it lol
I know!
It's a Giada-sized peppermill. As big as the giant ones she likes to use in her restaurants, and also approximately the same size as Giada herself lol.
he makes that big cookbook money now, he likes to splurge
@@brianbarker2551 r u telling me the pepper mill is the cooking historian version of the F BOI Lambo?
I was so stunned when I saw that I had to pause the video. Am I crazy or was this the first time he's whipped that out?
I'd love to see a restaurant open up with ancient roman dishes like this one. Sounds amazing to go along somewhere on a night out and experience what an "ancient roman flavour" is like, same as you would any regional cuisine today!
Garum and pine nuts with a bit of honey and wine
That would be cool af. You could even make it look like an ancient Roman eaterie and try and cook with some ancient methods. Like a living history resturant but with obvious modern health standards n what not.
As a huge nerd for ancient rome, I would LOVE this!😭
There is one in Geneva, Switzerland, called Nunc est bibendum.
Yea and it’d be like $40 a dish..
So I just made this dish for my family. Granted, some of the ingredients were impossible to find in China, I was able to find substitutes for most, including Teochew fish sauce for Garum. Some I had to improvise. Needless to say, the end result blew mine and everyone’s minds. The taste was so foreign yet mixed eloquently, the vinegar, spices and sweetness create a wonderful flavor! Thank you Max!
The concept of Hadrian’s Wall honestly cracks me up. Here we have the Roman Empire, conquering everything in sight, and when they came across the Scots they were just like “Nope. Don’t want to deal with that. Wall it is.”
You can’t build a wall !
That’s not inclusive !
😂🤣😆😂🤣😆😂😂
I studied English history in college, and it wasn't a "wall" in the sense that we think of it--it was, more accurately, a giant linear toll road. There was plenty of trade and activity north of the wall, but it was specifically for collecting tax on trade with the northerners moreso than defense.
It continued in that purpose well after the Romans left.
Of course, there weren't any 'Scots' there then: there were Picts and Caledonians. The Scotii came over from Ireland, after the Romans had left.
The Scotts lived in Ireland at the time.
So a good bit of Irish Scotts music goes
The time that Julis Caesar tried to land tried to land down at Lands end
The coast guard couldn’t stop them
For the Dubliners they did send
And just as they were landing lads
They heard three ringing cheers
‘Get back to Rome like blazes
Here’s the Dublin fusiliers’
The Romans worked with the Picts and Caledonians and built many structures North of Hadrian's wall. Bridges, Villas, Roads. There was continuous trade with the Northern clans and tribes, but they would never submit to Roman rule. So, it ended up a kind of gentleman's agreement that they would trade and respect each other, with occasional departures from the peace, of course....
"So thank you to Wondrium for sponsoring this video as we dine on Hadrian's wall." My first thought was "Dang, that's gonna need a LOT of tenderizing!"😅
No, you’re just meant to sit on the wall 😁
Nothing like a bit of organic aged rock au gratin.
Bahahaha
Still not as bad as hard tack
@@Criminalupper2200 clack clack
You mentioned "a more edible carrot", and that reminded me of what I learned about carrots years ago. They were first domesticated in Afghanistan as a dye plant (originally, purple was the most common color for carrots). The first carrots were pretty tough and woody, not good for eating at all. Eventually, someone got the bright idea to breed carrots with more palatable texture and flavor. They caught on, and because Afghanistan was in the middle of so many trade routes, they spread rapidly around Europe and Asia. The Romans became quite fond of them, as noted in the video, and helped spread them further. Purple was still a common color, but yellow and orange variants also existed. The Dutch, in particular, liked the orange carrots, so much so that they became a symbol of William of Orange, and this ultimately led to the popularization of what we now think of as the standard orange carrot.
Source: I read it on some website years ago. It seemed reasonably reliable, but I don't actually remember where it was, so take this history with a grain of salt. I got interested when I first encountered purple carrots at the grocery store; I wondered where they came from and was surprised to learn that purple was the original color.
Max, any interest in doing an episode on carrots?
It would give him an excuse to do his best Bugs Bunny voice!
@@lindafreeman7030 Or, in Latin: _"Quid nunc, O vir doctissime, tibi adest?"_ (approximately translated, "What's up, Doc?")
Some of that is true, some of it is not. Based on the Wikipedia page and a little quick Googling about carrots, they were indeed not super edible at first and were selectively bred over time to become more palatable (like a lot of vegetables we now eat). But it seems the earliest cultivated carrots were grown for their tops and seeds, not for use in dyes, and I haven't found any indication that purple was either exclusively or primarily their original color- only that purple, red, orange, yellow, and white varieties were all known as far back as their earliest mentions in written history. There are prominent Roman illustrations of orange carrots from the 6th century, and by the 11th century orange carrots were being traded from the Middle East up to Southern Europe. Orange carrots were already commonly depicted in art across Europe by the mid-1500s, before William of Orange's rise to prominence or the related Dutch flag based on his colors.
So, like most history- the boring parts are true, and the "wow what a convenient confluence of events" parts were invented/exaggerated/misattributed.
@@its_clean Figures.
@@its_clean The original carrot is still with us, a wild flower known to us as Queen Anne's Lace (Daucus carota). And yes, its seeds are a delicious seasoning, while the roots and leaves are useful for flavoring soups, and the fresh flowers can be battered and fried as fritters. I love seeing them bloom, and keep them as a 'favored weed' in my yard, along with nettles, dandelions, bittercress, and others.
The variously colored versions of modern carrots have become quite popular as a novelty during the last decade or so.
That looks delicious! Pork and apples always works. I also loved the insights into Roman logistics and camp life. As an Army veteran I can really identify with the guy telling his brother to send him a care package if he really loves him hahaha.
the original pork chops & applesauce
We've got letters from soldiers on the Wall asking their Italian Mamas to please send more woolly socks in the next care package, because the new posting is DAMP and chilly. Nothing changes, not for armies.
It was one of the most relatable parts of the entire video lol.
When I was deployed, I constantly asked for bottles of Cholula hot sauce 🤤
@@donovanb9020 you mean you didn't hoard the mini Tobasco sauce bottles in the MREs?
It never stops amazing me how many similarities there are between being a soldier in the US military and being an inmate in the US prison system 😂 in both situations you’re stuck in a place you don’t wanna be depending on the generosity of others to get things you used to like and forced to befriend the best guys in your same situation to pass the time
Only difference is you get paid for one and charged for the other lol
And the prison uniform doesn’t get as many chicks but it still gets more than you think 😂
Max, I appreciate your pronunciations of the various non-English words you use throughout your series. It adds that extra connection to the subject on top of your presentation. Honestly, I think you're the next Alton Brown when it comes to culinary media. This is one of the best channels on TH-cam.
I can relate so much to the thought how cool it is to know about some average pig farmer living centuries ago. There are so many sources about the lives of kings and other "important" figures, but I always find it comforting to learn about some average Joe who just lived their modest life somewhere but still isn't completely forgotten because they dropped their grocery receipt somewhere.
I love little stories like that too, there’s an ancient graffiti on a wall of a brothel in Pompeii two best friends wrote when they had the night of their lives. Seeing to dudes being bros in History is so wholesome
It's quite wonderful how the most random things end up being preserved.
So the Romans are the reason I believe pork chops and applesauce taste great together? I learn something new every day! I can hardly wait for garum redux.
Me, who was once chastised for eating pork chops with applesauce: "I feel validated".
No the Redux was the first one he made this is the full version
@@liwiathan A redux is a second attempt at something, not a reduction of something
That's been a thing since 1837. It's called Worcestershire sauce
Garum, isn't that the Roman version of nuoc mam (Vietnamese sauce made from fermented fish)?
Max has that strong 'your favourite grandmother' energy in that gorgeous kitchen and always being in an apron
and the kind eyes
He’s definitely my favorite TH-cam grandmother.
#grammaMax
More teeth than one but not as good a beard as the other...
This is such an adorable take, 100% here for it 😊👵🏼
I saw the news with the potential rediscovery of Sylphium sometime last year. It was found growing near the ruins of an old Roman settlement in Turkey, supposedly transplanted there, and the locale proved to be beneficial to its life cycle. Regardless of whither its the real thing or not, its been successfully grown in a greenhouse, and I couldn't help but wonder if you'd heard about it. Was a pleasant surprise to see you mentioning it in this video!
has anyone tasted it yet?
What the other guy said - how's it taste? Jesse, we need to cook!
I'd like to know how they are sure (or even suspect) that this particular one is the same as the silphium of old.
I just watched an episode of Cogito on TH-cam earlier today and he talked briefly about the potential discovery in Turkey. Now I see it mentioned again in this video. I'm hoping it turns out to be legit because I think he said some researchers believe it might have some "cancer fighting" properties near the end of the video. But nothing verified yet.
@@slwrabbits Try reading about it? Why are some Americans (my assumption, sorry) so dubious about the abilities of scientists?
8:14 I'm a historical musician at a Fort, we reenact stuff from the 1800s and part of my job is playing certain songs for the soldiers whether it's for assembling them, telling them its lunch time, or ending the shift in the evening. That's one of the ways the musicians helped tell the time we used duty calls.
I love these Roman entries the most. I wish I'd had this channel back when I had to make a dish for a Roman feast back in high school... but there wasn't even any internet back then.
And the Wright Brothers had just flown for the first time, and the War of the Roses had just ended, and Prometheus had yet to carry fire down from the heavens, and dinosaurs still roamed the earth, and... 😂
@@its_clean hey, I'm not THAT old. Ground sloths at most.
Always so entertaining to watch Max take that first bite of something. So many expressions flowing over his face in a just a few seconds.
I love the little smile that says "Day-yum, this is good!"
you know it's good when he goes for a second bite before describing any kind of flavor lol
Real pleasure that isn't faked is always worth seeing----if it comes from someone you can regard as a friend, even better. The only Max reaction I like better than this one is for Pumpion Pie.
Perfect. Was going to say that exact thing, within half a second you can tell by very slight "oh yeah" face.. or that slightly confused "what did I just put in my mouth?" look
@@Lunchboxico Or the dreaded “yep, that’s leather” face.
it cracks me up every time you say hard tacks and you put that hard tack segment 😂
So you could say you love hard tack crack.
That is truly hysterical 😂
I love that you read from the Vindolander Tablets. It's like a quick, friendly peek into Ancient Roman Life, and pleases the frustrated ARCHAEOLOGIST in me! You're the BEST, Maximus!
When I saw it was pork and apples I immediately knew it was gonna be good; those two somehow go incredibly well together. My wife recently made a dish that contained both pork and apples, and while it wasn't anything like this, it was still amazing. I don't know why tender pork and soft, juicy apples pair so well but they really do.
My mouth waters just thinking of that classic combo
Throw in a sweet potato and you have bliss! The perfect trio.
@@andreagroon9458 I think that'd be oversweet for me, I'm all about the classic roasties haha
Pork and apple sausages are definitely a thing here in the UK, or apple sauce with roast pork. Lovely
@@andreagroon9458 I just made this recipe, and I can vouch that mashed yam is very good alongside!
That impish smile on Max’s face when he tastes something wonderful is the best! It always makes me want to try the food too.
"Someone?"
Oh, dear. Making actual garum in your backyard?! I remember something from a previous episode of yours about garum production being banned near cities because of the smell. This is shaping up to be an interesting summer on the olfactory front for your neighbourhood, I guess :)
Eh, industrial production was banned. I'm sure couple of liters of homemade garum won't stink up the neighborhood too badly. Last year I kept a bucket full of fermenting weeds to make liquid compost and my neighbors did not complain.
Fortunately, scale does matter here.
Unfortunately, the weather in SoCal has been unrelenting rain, so it might be awhile until conditions permit the making of that video. On a plus side, the state has received so much snow that the ski resorts will remain open until June.
I knew of someone here in Australia who tried to ferment Woad in their back yard - complaints from various neighbours and the local council made them give up. I think fermenting fish may be worse than fermenting woad.
If the batch is big enough he could bribe the neighbours with ancient roman fish sauce.
Vindolanda is such an amazing place- definitely one of the best Roman sites in Britain. The Vindolanda Tablets are such an amazing discovery, as they record so many little details about everyday life. The most famous one is from a woman called Claudia Severa who was the wife of one of the camp commanders, asking her sister to come to her birthday party, which is one of the first known examples of writing by a Roman woman. There are also lots of drafts of letters by soldiers to their families, many of which complain about the cold, wet weather in Britannia (a tradition that endures to this day) and beg them to send warm clothing such as socks and underpants. Yes, Romans sometimes wore socks and underpants, at least when the army sent them to the North of England- who knew?
Underpants? Unlike the hardy Scot!
Huh, I wonder what Roman birthday parties were like.
I live in Chester, UK. In Roman times it was known as Deva. On the river Dee defended by walls that remain today. I suppose that those who were stationed at the fort were well looked after. There were baths and a large amphitheatre with all the food outlets and memorabilia stalls that was common at large important venues. It was rumoured that they were thinking about making Deva the capital. But, they retreated before that could happen. After all, there was a main road straight to Chester. There's so much history in Chester from the Romans to the civil war. A good place to visit?
After seeing channels like this, I would love to see a restauraunt themed around historic meals like this from differing time periods and parts of the world.
All Scandinavia has Viking menu &-themed restaurants, usually adjacent to famous archaeological sites.
England had Elizabethan/Tudor feasts.
Good idea, & good question for Max.
"I went to a restaurant that serves 'breakfast at any time.' So I ordered French Toast during the Renaissance."
- Steven Wright
I especially enjoyed this episode due to a family tradition linked to the Roman soldiers stationed at Hadrian's Wall. According to said tradition, a Roman centurion named Dionysius was stationed at Hadrian's Wall for the last part of his military career. When he reached retirement age, he married a local girl and settled near the wall. He is said to be the ancestor of English families with the surnames Denison, Tennyson, Dyson or Tyson. My great-great grandfather, whose last name was Dyson, immigrated to the US from Lancashire, not far from the western end of the site of the Wall, in the mid 19th Century.
Surnames aren’t really attested in England prior to the Roman Conquest, let alone ones that persisted through generations. At most, variants of “Dionysus” might have started out as more common given names in that family than in others, but that would quickly become “watered out” as people didn’t just name their children after ancestors, but also after family friends or other people they wanted their child to resemble in character. Most English people didn’t have a “proper” surname until after the Black Death.
Some of those surnames derive from "Denis", which ultimately does come from "Dionysios", but it morphed into Denis in France, became the name of a Christian saint, and only came to Britain with the Norman conquest. At which point it became a fairly common first name. Many people called Denis presumably had sons, giving rise to the patronymic "Denis's son." There aren't any extant English surnames with unbroken lineage going back to the Roman period, let alone to a single person.
As the two folks above me have described more eloquently than I can, this is a clear case where the family folklore is in conflict with hard history. That being said, I see no reason why OP shouldn't continue to enjoy his family's tradition, so long as he acknowledges (silently, perhaps) that the history behind that tradition is more than a little wobbly. But then again, if we gave up on all family rites that couldn't be traced to documented history, probably none of us would have any traditions left at all!
@@its_clean Well said! That's exactly why I stated it as a family tradition rather than presenting it as a cold, hard fact. I choose to believe it, but I don't think any less of others for not doing so.
This channel is my catnip. I wish I had discovered it while my dad was still around. We used to call each other just after every Bills game and F1 race, and I can imagine us doing the same after every new video on this channel, because history and cooking are two more passions he passed down to me.
Also, the news that the garum vid is getting a part two is especially awesome! I think part one was my first or second time seeing Tasting History. Great stuff!
Max your show is really high-quality and its merit far exceeds that of many shows on TV. Informative and interesting. Love your voice as well. Thanks for another great video!
Thank you 😊
Online content in general is just slaughtering TV even at stuff traditionally TV was okay at, I don't even have television or radio in the house because of it, looking forward to seeing television die.
Our cable TV went out and when the repair guy asked how long it had been out I had to say “Not really sure- no one has had the TV on since last October.”
@@christineh14
I’ve got _one_ TV show I watch, and it’s only on for the first ten weeks of each year. And since it’s on the national broadcasting station it’s also available online, so I don’t even need anything specific beyond a general internet connection.
Given all this craziness we see in our society today, the death of TV would be the best thing that can happen. Just think , people would actually hav to “think” for themselves. And no more Khardashians , the greatest human disaster to ever exist ! 😮😊😮
I live alongside Hadrian’s Wall (within spitting distance!) and it’s fun to know what they ate here! Next time do the C2C - where you walk allllll along it, stopping at pubs, eating good food and getting drunk at night!
I cant believe roman cuisine is thousand years old and still better than fucking HAGGIS /s
Had great food at the old Grey Bull at Haltwhistle for several days decades ago. French sole by ex-pat London chef.
Drafty cold room, rudimentary bath, but the pub was jolly lively! Raconteurs & balladeers abound up there. 👍🏼🏴
We just made this recipe, took some slight liberties with the amounts and used mushroom garum because of my friend's fish alergy and I can safely say this was one of if not the BEST thing we ever made! We hade some wine the way the romans liked it (fermented in amphorae [qvevri] and a lot) so my hangover is also true to period. Thank you Max, keep on making top content❤
19:36 I could see you standing over Jose at the dinner table at dinner time with that pepper grinder asking "Would sir care for some fresh ground pepper for his meal."
I found you because of Garum and I specifically remember you saying you were hoping to make actual garum one day in a back yard! Can’t wait to follow the process 😊
Someone in my friend group was wondering why we pair pork and applesauce. WOW this right here gives us the answer! You are amazing, Max!!! Thanks for that connection to history. 💚
This dish reminds me a lot of Filipino Adobo. Before having Chinese and Spanish influences, our original adobo is basically pork cooked in vinegar and local herbs. The basic modern recipe often has soy sauce and potatoes. But many households have their own spin to it, like my mom loves to dump huge amounts of dried oregano sprigs. I think I want to try making this dish and just replace the spices I can't get with ones that are available. Definitely considering using apples instead of potatoes. So interesting!
1:44 Brother, may I have some hunting-nets
I just wanted to say that I always loved your intro theme and animation! It reminds me of watching those PBS history shows in my childhood with my family. Very nostalgic and warm
This is exactly why I followed him during lockdown. It’s very PBS in presentation
Oh yes! Same!
If only you had posted this two weeks sooner Max! Although I wish I could have prepared this instead, I’m happy to report that my rendition of your Globi recipe was received very well by the guests at a Bacchanalia celebration I attended recently. I’ll just have to make this dish next year and report back…unless there’s an even better Roman recipe in your book when it arrives soon!
PS- I made a few batches of globi with the addition of a little powdered sugar, a drizzle of a fig-balsamic glaze, or both. The fig-balsamic I *highly* reccomend, the tart and fruity is a lovely bit of contrast to the fatty sweetness of the globi!
That sounds super fun!
your friends threw an 8 people bacchanalia?
I’m glad yours turned out and you got to try them. Mine exploded on that last batch and sent me to hospital with burns to my hands and face. Turned out to be a blessing in disguise as my blood pressure was in very dangerous territory. Max literally saved my life. I recovered with only one small scar on my chest (didn’t know it has been burnt) and now, 2 years later, my blood pressure is under control.
By the time I got home, my dad had thrown them out, so I never did get to try them and, understandably, I’ve never attempted to make them again either.
Cerveza (or Cervisia) being Roman-time beer is one of the things that stuck in my head thanks to Asterix.
Congratulations! I loved your video. And, as a Brazilian, I thank you for the quality of the subtitles in Portuguese. She is great.
I read some where about an old norse recipe that includes pork, bacon, apple, and onion, cooked in beer. Since then I developed on that recipe and basically made a spicy apple pork dish that's my family's favourite! Fruits were commonly cooked back then and tracing old dish gave me a new appreciation for fruits in savoury dishes.
the fragments of writing are the best parts of anything. the little journals and memos that we keep are, like, the first things we throw away. no one keeps a shopping list. but they are always the most fascinating!
I live for when you say "hard tack" and we get that delightful snippet of film!!! Gets me everytime!!! Thank you!!!
CLACK CLACK
YES Vindolanda! The things they have found from that dig are amazing! Leather and fabric in the least, actual writings from soldiers has been mind blowing!
"Please send more socks."
Loving the food details from the writing...never thought about those before
Here’s hoping there weren’t any “Dear John” letters, or in this case, “Carissime Ioannes”.
One ofy fave parts of any episode is waiting for Max's reaction to taking the first bite. This time didn't disappoint! I loved his expression of pure fascination turning into joy in the span of a millisecond.
Gracias for telling from where the word "cerveza" came. In Germany, there are 20+ recipes of pork and apples. e.g. schweinebraten mit apfelsoße, schweinebraten mit apfelfüllung, -Apfelmus, -Wein, -Spritzen, -saft etc.
That delightful little twinkle in his eye when Max realizes the food is good! Really, really good! Such fun to watch!
Everything stops when Tasting History notification pops up
😂 yep
That looked freaking good!
And the fact that the chosen food for punishment for a Roman soldier would be the chosen ingredient for merriment for practically anyone else is just too good 😂
Maybe that was part of the punishment? That they were eating up the barley that they’d much rather malt and make beer from?
@@ragnkjathe daily meal for slave gladiators was barley and beans. To help them put on a layer of fat as protection.
@@ragnkja the Romans had a distaste for beer and much preferred diluted wine.
@@HappyBeezerStudios Honestly, I don't blame them, I'm not much of a beer person either...
Eat a bowl of plain barley or barley bread and you will soon understand the punishment. Its the culinary equivalent to standing with your nose in the corner.
15:39 this note feels like something you would find in a survival horror game as a hint for where to find the key to the store house in order to find some key item you need.
the little smile he does when he tries the apple is honestly adorable, Max you are adorable.
The combination of the swelling musical cue with the growing delight on Max's face when they taste of the dish is just delightful.
When he tastes it.
95% of humanity is very sure of their gender.
I knew the moment you took a bite of it that you loved it. It's all in the way your eyes light up with delight at the taste. Your expressiveness always gives you away good sir.
one reason to look forward to Tuesdays. thanks for your weekly episodes!
I love your facial expressions on those first bites. Your eyes just dart around enthusiastically followed by this slowly widening mischievous grin, it's just fantastic. I'm getting pretty good at determining which dishes you're giving a hearty thumbs up to before you actually speak on it - you have extremely communicative emotions and it's absolutely wonderful to watch.
As an aside, this dish looks amazing, and I'm going to have to try making it. Some rarer ingredients in this one, but I can accumulate them over the course of a few weeks methinks.
Hey I’m curious,
When Hadrians Wall was finished, did the laborers all shout
“Yo Hadrian! We did it!”
“Hadriaaaaaaaaan!”
This was one of the first Roman recipes I made almost 30 years ago 😍 Though the first time I did make it with apricots, as that was what my translation said "mala matiana" were. Today, I'd rather go for crabapples or maybe very acid and firm apples like Granny Smith.
That hardtack clip takes me out everytime. I know it's going to happen and I still laugh.
"clack clack" 😂
I love it so much.
Max, you are so adorable when you're enjoying your food. 😂
That detail of soldiers marking their grinding tools with their names is so cool. Nothing really changes. I mark all of my tools at work with my name and they still go missing, damn it
Belgium has been the centre of beer--making in Europe for millenia Asfoetida may be found in Indian spice stores It is also called "Hing"
I was also at Vindolanda this summer! My favorite artifacts were the child's wooden sword in the soldier's weapon display, the loaded dice thrown down the well, and the letters. One letter was a birthday party invitation from a rich lady to her friend a few miles away and another was a soldier thanking his mother for a care package with socks.
As a former soldier, I can very much understand why that legionnaire was thankful for socks. Don't underestimate the value of a good pair of socks, my friend.
You should totally introduce a line of historical condements and sauces premade and ready to go. You have a particularly unique knowledge of historical condements and sauces, you have the experience to make them "correctly", and it is a unique product which would be useful and enjoable for all the Tasting History fans who want to try out these fun flavors but don't have the time or skills to prepare them themselves.
Or spice blends ‘Miller’s Mixes’
@@maudline I'd buy a Powder Forte and Powder Douce. The two main blends for Medieval cookery. THose might be easier to formulate, then have produced and packaged and sold, as they have shelf life.
This would be fantastic merchandise for the channel, I would definitely be a customer
The hard tack (clack clack) always catches me off guard and make me choke on a laugh 😂
absolutely killing it . . . . . that has to be the most underrated comment he has ever made.
I am from the UK and my wife used to live very near Hadrian's wall and I am from York (Eboracum) which was the military staging area for administering Hadrian’s Wall.
We now live further south in England and about 50 yards in front of our house is a Roman temple buried now under a field. Our garden still has a plant called 'Ground Elder' in it which Romans introduced to the UK and used to eat as salad and wild garlic which they would also have eaten.
I make two dishes which are versions of this dish in the video. Tuscan Roast pork with fennel seeds which has pork crackling and another dish called Normandy Pork with cider cream and apples. I like to think Romans from Italy or Gaul (France) sent to the UK would have eaten those.
Roman history is still living among us in our food, our buildings, our language and even growing in our garden.
I love the eyebrows - you can always tell when Max likes a dish - the eyebrows followed usually by the cheeky grin - looked amazing - glad it tasted that way too
I get so vicariously happy when Max is that obviously delighted with the outcome of the day's recipe. 💖
I remember reading a story about a former Roman Decurio (think Sergeant) chastising a more current troop after they let Huns capture a Roman citizen, stating that "they should be fed on the barley and vinegar of disgrace", so that fits in well with what you are saying Max.
Decurio - commander of 10. Actually came to mean an officer commanding 32 cavalry . Centurio - commander of 100 - actually 80 less detached troops.
@@brucelee3388 Yes, but I was trying to keep it simple.
When I lived in Arizona… there were a lot of restaurants that offered dishes served with pork of various cuts along side of apples with various forms including apple sauce. Not that that necessarily has anything to do with this video but it does remind me of that time in my life. That was a first for me to have pork with apples… and it was delicious.
13:53 shoutout to my mand Lucco who tends the pigs
So pumped for garum: part 2. That was indeed the episode that first captivated me. Haven't missed an episode since!
My mom loves mudlarking (digging through the mud of The Thames) and I really want to go with her and find some Roman stuff. You have to get a license and register real finds and I would but you can keep a lot of stuff.
What a cool hobby!!! Has she actually found anything of worth?
My cousin mudlarks too!
Having to get a license to sift through the mud _and_ hand over the coolest finds would ruin the fun for me :/
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Eh, it’s only if you find something of that really belongs in a museum. But I take your point.
Everytime we get the Hardtack bit, i still can't get enough of it.
Max, the captions on your videos are fantastic. I am very appreciative of the correct spellings of the ingredients. Give José my thanks!
You didn't even need to say it was fantastic You could tell just from the light that emitted from your eyes the minute you took the first bite. That's part of what I love about your channel Max is that you do things that are different and you're finding these delicious recipes from 2000 years ago
my sister and i always end up watching your videos over dinner. she’s always happy to watch, though i do hope i’ll one day be able to cook something from your channel.
I LOVE your genuine reactions, I can tell you really liked this!
God, what at treat this channel is. I love every bit of it. Real Garum, Hard Tack (TM) [clack clack], and a good attitude. Thank you for creating this joy!
i absolutely adore that little grin on first taste you get when it's a home run of a dish. just the "Oh yeah...this is awesome, gonna devour the rest of this off camera" grin.
Max just casually showing off his jumbo-sized pepper grinder like we wouldn't notice.
You know it's an extra special episode of Tasting History when you get the combo of Garum and Hardtack!!!😝 Looking forward to the Garum videos.
Visited Aqua Sulis just yesterday. Perfect timing for Roman Britain!
Try a chatGPT's Garum recipe:
Ingredients:
1 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup rice vinegar
1/4 cup mirin
2 tbsp fish sauce
2 tbsp anchovy paste
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 tsp dried seaweed (kombu or nori)
1 tbsp brown sugar
1 tsp black pepper
Instructions:
Combine:
Mix all ingredients in a bowl.
Infuse:
Let the mixture rest for 24-72 hours in the fridge.
Strain:
Strain to remove solids.
Store:
Store in an airtight container in the fridge for several weeks.
This recipe mimics the umami and salty profile of traditional Garum without using fermented fish.
Max you really ought to do an Apicus special, the man has given you half of your content and deserves an episode of his own!
But I like barley! Barley & beef soup is amazing. And one thing I recommend you try: barley risotto.
I love that the hard tack clip is still being used. It's as long lasting as the real deal :')
I was rewatching all your videos and was reminded of my first meal I made for my family when I was probably 10 years old. My dad showed me how to make pork chops,fried apples and green beans. Never felt so proud as when Mom said WOW
I will never get tired of seeing that hard tack clip pop up.
The local cats and coyotes are going to love visiting your back yard, Max and Jose. Get some "trail cameras" with low light capability to watch the hijinks! 😇
Yes… there will definitely have to be some anti-critter measures taken, or there will be an unhappy ending to the episode.
Max, you have retained your enthusiasm for the food and the history you bring us. Thank you. Your seem to be having the time of your life👏🏼
Here’s hoping they find a cookbook in the Herculaneum Scrolls! Always happy with your ancient content!
They found scrolls in Herculaneum??? 🤞Claudius's histories🤞🤞Claudius's histories🤞
You know what I'm hoping? that the scrolls/signs from Pompeii's first excavation (allegedly destroyed for censorship/ not ruffling the feathers of the pious back home) leave private collections for a year so the world can f*cking look at them at least once
Hello Polywrath in the background, and thank you Max for this Roman recipe of pork and apples. Hadrian's Wall is definitely one of the longest (lasting) Roman monuments from across the vastness that was the Empire. I prefer the Column of Vespasian myself, Marcus Aurelius' statue on horseback too.
My 6 year old loves your videos. I kept trying to find ways to get her more interested In history...your videos did that. Thank you also one of my favorite channels.
Fantastic video as usual. I’d definitely like to visit Hadrian’s Wall on a future visit to Britain. Knowing about recipes and reading letters from ordinary people from centuries or millenia ago definitely brings us closer to their experience and enables us to draw parallels with our own. You might enjoy Lindsay Davis’ Marcus Didius Falco series of historical thrillers, they’re well written and rich in detail about the daily life of IIRC late Republican-early Imperial Rome and the characters grow on you as well :) (many return in several books such as Falcon’s wife Helena). Quick note : The subtitles mispell century as sentry.
Definitely visit Vindolanda. They do good storytelling
@@TastingHistory Will do when I’m able to go :) Thank you !
Depending on the time of year you can walk along side a lot of the wall. I would not recommend it in the winter though.
@@moleshaman3040 I would also recommend visiting the Roman sites in Dorset and around Salisbury, and the Lunt Roman fort near Coventry (which has the only remaining Roman circus, or horse training ring, in the UK). Chester also has very well-preserved Roman remains. There are a LOT of Roman sites in the UK (including a small amount of Roman wall in London) - don't just visit the famous ones! For example I live in Winchester which is not really known for its Roman history but was a Roman town known as Venta Belgarum, and still has some Roman walls.
Verulamium is another site to pay a visit to, pre Roman as well as Romano-Celtic town (it was destroyed by Boudicca and rebuilt). I might be slightly biased though as I was born a few miles away from there and it sparked my interest in early British history.