@@louisfoglia7514 c'est un truc du Sud plutôt je crois, mais j'ai dû en voir peut être une ou deux fois dans ma vie ? Et la citronnade c'est de la limodade non pétillante, généralement ça se fait maison mais perso j'an fait tous les êtes c'est hyper rafraîchissant (même si c' était de la limonade dans la vidéo, non ?)
i feel like there's a more intense culture in italia with the "nonna cooking" compared to french grandmas : they feed you endlessly but there are less family recipes and traditions
I do eat frogs, I love them ! But it's not actually a staple in French cuisine, mostly a cliché. Escargots, on the other hand, is a national delicacy :p
@I like Potatoes I'm not French but in my country, we also eat escargots (at least in my area) and they're amazing (but they are probably not as popular as in France)!!! I also like most of the things you mentioned but I would rather eat escargots... I don't like bbq very much, hot dogs are not good at all unless you cover them with lots of things and mac and cheese is mostly a disgrace to pasta... although one of those disgraces that you may enjoy once in a while. I still prefer any other kind of pasta anyway. In any case, the dishes you mentioned are kind of basic... there's not much special about it... it is all about the quality of the product in most cases. Anyways, the dishes you mentioned are not comparable to the aforementioned dishes. The occasion to eat either of those probably wouldn't present itself at the same time.
@I like Potatoes What? I never said there was nothing special with American food... What I said is that what you mentioned is very simple and basic... The only thing that would probably be saved are bbq ribs when they're cooked for hours with just spices and not the sauce that is usually commercialized... but again, it's something that is very simple and it's just about the quality of the product and the time... And it definitely would not be on the same level
@I like Potatoes tell me when Central USA has anything to stake their claim on, because the South has fried chicken and other creole food, the West has mexican / multicultural food, and the east has chowders and hotdogs. Honestly nothing special and most of the stuff you can find elsewhere in the world. Most of your best food is made by generations of immigrant parents or people who were oppressed and lived off of basically nothing. Not much originality if you ask me.
list of Canadian items they should have actually done -Lay's ketchup chips -coffe crisp -Smarties (THE CHOCOLATE) -caramilk -wunderbar -dunkaroos (yes we still have them) Thank you that is all. Edit: so i may or may have not just found out that french people have basically all of the things on my list lol.
@@clojoliet Ahhh that might be it (: I lived in Belgium most of last year and definitely had some of those ketchup chips (; ! But my guess is that in the North of France, where you find Match and Delhaize, you probably find those too... I'll have to check ^^
I mean Joe Louis is quebecois but maple cookies is all over, the only family that ate that was my English grandpa, none quebecois really ate that except maybe at cabane a sucre XD
I live in the place called “Aix” where the Calissons d’Aix come from. Over here they don’t eat them at all and they’re mostly a touristic kind of snack
I have Hawkins cheezies as a mandatory road trip snack, and Joe Louis are for when I want to eat my feelings. I never encounter maple cookies unless they are being served to me by the elderly. But the pop I never heard of. (I live in BC)
Canada: papa, c'est quoi ça? France: une collation, mon cher Canada:.... bien... Canada: *tries it* pas mal! France: ... canada, tout est en érable ??? Canada: ;D Bonus: England: what did they say? America: *slurping some soda* Idk somethin stereotypical I think
Why do these French people speak such good English?? Is the guy in the yellow born or raised here?? I have so many questions Also, those cheezies are the worst.
The girl has a really, really good English but you can tell from how she speaks sometimes that it’s not her native language; the guy with the yellow shirt has *zero* accent, so I guess he was born in America from french parents...?
@@princeopumpkins I'm bilingual in English and French and familier with how strong French accents can be from our neighbours across the pond, so I was just surprised by their relatively slight (or in the guy's case, complete lack of) accent. Also, in France they usually base their English off of British pronunciation rather than American so I'm just quite surprised by the fact that these two seem to have a General American accent (the girl has a very slight French accent) and not the former.
I'm canadian and literally have not seen Hawkins cheezies since I was like 5 only ever got them in my halloween bags LMAO . IM 23 now Haha where the hell are they!?
I'm Canadian, 30, and I've only had the maple cookies! Those Jos Louis things look vaguely familiar, but I've certainly never seen one in person. The rest? No idea what they are!
I loved everybody in this video. Hat man, hit me up, French lady please be my friend, Canadian girl you're adorable and French man..also hit me up 😂. Du coup, je voudrais goûter tout les choses lá. Qui sont bilingue, un polyglot, français ou Canadien ici ? 🇺🇸🇫🇷🇨🇦
Living in Montreal, the only Canadian/Quebec snack I have seen sold here was Joe Louis (which is definitely common), but the others I have never seen anywhere. Strange choices of snacks to represent both countries.
I’m Canadian and yes maple cookies are freaking delicious but it is super sweet, pairing it with tea works great if you need that balance from the sweetness.
I am not French nor a child but I loooooooove Prince! It is soo good! It is not too sweet. It is delicious. When I went to Martinique I bought loads of it to take back home. Whenever my aunt visits she brings some back too. Soooo good
I’m danish and love these videos so I would love it if you guys made a Denmark and America swap snacks. If there’s someone else out there who also want this kind of video please like this comment.
As a french person, I really didn’t know at all what the lemonade was, nor the Calissons d’Aix. Idk where Buzzfeed found these things but they gotta change their producers
????? Encore les calissons c’est typique du sud on peut comprendre mais serieux la limonade ? Tout le monde connait la limonade vous abusez un peu 😭 le sprite et le seven up c’est de la limonade
When I visited Canada and tried the Maple crème cookies, I thought at first that they were okay but as I kept eating, I couldn’t stop myself. I ate all of them in like 2-3 hours, because I was trying to convince myself to stop eating them in between that time 😂😂😂
They should've had Whippets ☹️(one of the first Canadian products to bring revenue and gain popularity founded in Québec) Also, I saw the "Prince" cookies and had flashbacks to when I went to France, excited for cookies and deceived when I ate something so dry. (Although I must say, I frickin LOVE "Lion" bars from France 10/10)
I knew the French guy was actually American. The Canadian snacks were all different from American snacks. The closest thing in common would be Cheezies like Cheetos. But they are actually different taste and texture. Also the Canadian Cheezies use actual cheese.
@@diekje8728 There is no attested proof the fries are Belgian. They appeared between northern France and Wallonia (French speaking belgium), and is a traditionnal dish in both regions, it just makes sense to call them French fries.
@@tonyhawk94 They are not a tradional food in France compare to snail, ratatouille, boeuf bourgignon, they are just use for side dish. They're also called french fries, not because they are french, but because of the verb to french which mean to cut in piece
@@Broth8492 This is the exact Belgian narrative but it doesn't make it true. 1- YES it's a traditional popular dish in Northern France since the post revolution era 2 - The origin you say is one theory among others and not even the most plausible one. 3- as I said to this day NO historian can exactly state the place of origin of the fries with certainty, the most plausible from what we know is that it appears between Paris and Wallonia.
My tiny brain wishes the Canadians were all sitting on the left and the French sitting on the right like on the atlas 🌎 🗺 🥴 like reading left to right 📝🖍 🥴
I'm French Canadian living in Montreal and I've never heard of Hawkin's cheezees. We have something similar from Humpty Dumpty that we call "crottes de fromages"= cheese turd. "Jos Louis" are fine but "May West" cakes also from Vachon are WAY better imo. You guys just gave that soda because of maple syrup in it because I'm in the province of Quebec and have never even heard of it! I haven't eaten a maple cookie since 25 years ago (and I'm 38yo) cause it's too sickly sweet.
I grew up in Morocco and they sold a lot of French snacks there (bc they’ve colonised Morocco) and when I heard Prince I was like omg I want me some of that rn
There are plenty of stuff more representative than calissons , as he said you don’t go to a store just for them . And never once in my life saw this lemonade 🤣 where’s my orangina at?
@@tammyanderson8885 not as often as you think. If the wind is gusting a certain direction, you catch a whiff of some cheese. It's not entirely unpleasant, better smelling than fast food grease.
Wait, I'm a Canadian from Quebec and I don't know any of these beside the mapple cookies and the Joe Louis.. Have I been living under a rock all my life or what?
I hope the viewers realize THAT SODA IS 'NOT' A COMMON CANADIAN TREAT, in fact it's far from common. I have never ever EVER even heard of maple cola. The rest of the snacks? Ya, VERY common. That soda? NO
As a Canadian no one eats Hawkins cheeses we eat Humpty Dumpty or Cheetos. Jos Louis is eaten here. No one drinks bec cola, we drink Coke or Pepsi. And you only see the maple cookies at old lady houses or at charity or church parties, besides that Oreos are the go to.
French here: calisssons aren't snacks, they're fancy expensive treats that you gift to others. I've literally never heard of that lemonade before. French kids known that Orangina is where it's at (an orange-flavoured soda)! And omg, it's a criminal offense that they didn't give them milk to go with the Prince; dunking them until they're soft enough that they almost fall apart, really makes them a superior snack.
Please Pick person from Czech Republic and person from korean Because this states have totally different taste for everything. As a girl from Czech i thought these two People will be impressed in to it. Please do it it will be definetly fun. 💜 Btw I'm sorry for my English 😅
Hawkins Cheezies are popular in Ontario and the maple cookies are probably found in most grocery stores. The Jos Louis are found in grocery stores in Ontario and sometimes gas stations. I have never heard of the pop that was in the episode.
Ok, it should have been : Curly (or Monster Munch), Pim's, Orangina, Prince for French snacks and : Ruffles all dressed, Jos Louis, Canada Dry, Dare Maple Leaf cookies
A lot of people in the comments saying they haven’t heard of a certain snack in Canada and that these are a bad representation of Canada. And although I totally agree since most of these seem to only be from one province, just because you haven’t heard of it doesn’t mean it isn’t a canadian thing. Canada is a huge country with many provinces that have their own cultures and snacks to go with them. Especially Quebec and the east coast. But yes, let’s get more variety here people, or things we can get everywhere across Canada. Or some bagged milk, even though that’s contradicting myself.
I get it why Canadians are a little upset over the fact that most snacks are from Quebec, but I’m honestly really happy we finally get representation. Most people outside of Canada thinks that Quebec culture is just what’s in Montreal, but there’s more to us. Every time there’s Canadian representation they’re usually from Ontario or BC or Alberta. They could’ve definitely used snacks across the country, but It’s good that Quebec finally gets shown a little
Ohh I had the chance to try Prince's cookie and they are so good! Especially the double chocolate one! And France also have some Lu cookies or brand.. I don't remember exactly, but they're all good too! And I'm Québécoise hehe
As both a Canadian and a French (from France, just because I’m also Canadian doesn’t mean I’m québécois c’mon guys...), yes I ask my family in France to send cosmetics, no I have never heard of bec cola what even, and yes I do testify they picked the absolute worst Canadian snacks for this I’m appalled... Except for the maple cookies those were perfect... But like they should have had girl guide cookies. The mint kind.
I feel like buzzfeed doesn’t know what canadians eat either
Or the French
I've had calissons d'Aix like once in my life?
Rinou Mokao je n’avait carrément jamais entendu parlé et la citronnade non plus
@@louisfoglia7514 c'est un truc du Sud plutôt je crois, mais j'ai dû en voir peut être une ou deux fois dans ma vie ?
Et la citronnade c'est de la limodade non pétillante, généralement ça se fait maison mais perso j'an fait tous les êtes c'est hyper rafraîchissant (même si c' était de la limonade dans la vidéo, non ?)
Full on Canadian and I've never had a jos louis... zebra cakes were my jam haha
Well, most of our foods you can find anywhere in the US. So there are not a lot of things that are just Canadian
as a French person, I find that the French people have a good accent for French people haha
Anaïs Chpl merci Anais, je suis la personne dans la vidéo et je te remercie pour ton commentaire:)
@@MelissaPapel85 Vous vivez aux USA depuis combien de temps? Vous n'avez presqu'aucun accent!
Nochickenwingsforyou merci beaucoup! Depuis 2013:)
I’m American and I could hardly hear an accent from anyone in the video! It’s crazy
Samantha Groves thank you so much!!!
I need a video of Italian and French grandmas trying each other's dishes.
Yes!
i feel like there's a more intense culture in italia with the "nonna cooking" compared to french grandmas : they feed you endlessly but there are less family recipes and traditions
Whatisseems i’m french and you dont know my grand mother or just my mother 😆 that dépend where you are from
Provencale Grandmas try each others pieds paquets
Italia all they way our grandmas are the best... mine passed away when I was little but she was sweet
As a Canadian, these are not good representation of canadian snacks. wtf is Bec pop, never heard of her.
Megan Crofts asked my Canadian girlfriend if she heard of them
And if she didn’t, then I’m very concerned
I think it's to really focus on Quebecois snacks because they identify more with the French (even though the French are like "I don't know ha")
same for the lemonade and calisson they're very specific, not a snack
I am Québécoise and the only snacks that I know of are the maple cookies and the Joe Louis. What is Bec pop??
as a canadian, youre an idiot. try visiting a grocery store once in a while.
Calissons are not a snack, they're fancy holiday treats like fine chocolates. I'm confused.
I do eat frogs, I love them ! But it's not actually a staple in French cuisine, mostly a cliché. Escargots, on the other hand, is a national delicacy :p
@I like Potatoes I'm not French but in my country, we also eat escargots (at least in my area) and they're amazing (but they are probably not as popular as in France)!!! I also like most of the things you mentioned but I would rather eat escargots... I don't like bbq very much, hot dogs are not good at all unless you cover them with lots of things and mac and cheese is mostly a disgrace to pasta... although one of those disgraces that you may enjoy once in a while. I still prefer any other kind of pasta anyway. In any case, the dishes you mentioned are kind of basic... there's not much special about it... it is all about the quality of the product in most cases.
Anyways, the dishes you mentioned are not comparable to the aforementioned dishes. The occasion to eat either of those probably wouldn't present itself at the same time.
@I like Potatoes What? I never said there was nothing special with American food... What I said is that what you mentioned is very simple and basic... The only thing that would probably be saved are bbq ribs when they're cooked for hours with just spices and not the sauce that is usually commercialized... but again, it's something that is very simple and it's just about the quality of the product and the time... And it definitely would not be on the same level
@I like Potatoes tell me when Central USA has anything to stake their claim on, because the South has fried chicken and other creole food, the West has mexican / multicultural food, and the east has chowders and hotdogs. Honestly nothing special and most of the stuff you can find elsewhere in the world. Most of your best food is made by generations of immigrant parents or people who were oppressed and lived off of basically nothing. Not much originality if you ask me.
I like Potatoes those foods are normal for us, stop being so closed minded because you have different habits than us
As a Canadian living in France, these are bad representations of both country's snacks....
As a french living in Canada I agree :)
They are just American immigrants that live in Toronto being lazy.
I've never have those snacks before as a Canadian I mostly eat American.
Idk about Canadian, but I agree. Like what the hell is Calisson?
À part les princes
They picked the worst snacks to represent Canada...y'all got bad taste
For all countries till now they pick the worst 😂
they normally pick the worst snacks for every country lol
No, they didn’t pick YOUR favourite snacks.
They’re classics though; I respect their choices
Right? Those cheezies are the absolute worst! Ketchup or all dressed chips would be way better examples of Canadian snacks!
list of Canadian items they should have actually done
-Lay's ketchup chips
-coffe crisp
-Smarties (THE CHOCOLATE)
-caramilk
-wunderbar
-dunkaroos (yes we still have them)
Thank you that is all.
Edit: so i may or may have not just found out that french people have basically all of the things on my list
lol.
Smarties are available in europe
@@Spaghatt my bad
Ketchup chips as well (; !
But I'm curious about all the other ones now (:
@@Blullaby yeah but I've never seen ketchup chips in France (in Belgium yes though)
@@clojoliet
Ahhh that might be it (: I lived in Belgium most of last year and definitely had some of those ketchup chips (; ! But my guess is that in the North of France, where you find Match and Delhaize, you probably find those too... I'll have to check ^^
I feel like they should have made a distinction that this is French Canadian vs French because a lot of these snacks are very Québécois.
Im from Quebec and ive never seen these snacks except joe louis lol
@@alisondeschenes3907 same
JPM I mean I’m from Quebec and bec cola or bec pop? What is that
@@alisondeschenes3907 Same here
I mean Joe Louis is quebecois but maple cookies is all over, the only family that ate that was my English grandpa, none quebecois really ate that except maybe at cabane a sucre XD
Why is ketchup chips not one of the snacks?? Or even all dressed chips? That's true canadian snacks 🍁
@obsidianorchids except they're flavors u cant get basically anywhere else and are well known in Canada 🍁
Or COFFEE CRISSSP! Also aero. There’s better snacks to represent Canada :P
@@stinkfries except aero u can in the UK
Olivia I’m outraged. I don’t like all dressed and my fiancé thinks I’m crazy.
I live in the place called “Aix” where the Calissons d’Aix come from. Over here they don’t eat them at all and they’re mostly a touristic kind of snack
"The creamy inside of this is just so deliciousness"
I love seeing everyone in the comments who’s not from Montreal being extremely confused in a lot of these snacks
I have Hawkins cheezies as a mandatory road trip snack, and Joe Louis are for when I want to eat my feelings. I never encounter maple cookies unless they are being served to me by the elderly. But the pop I never heard of. (I live in BC)
have you tried those Vachon Caramel thingies, they're even better than Jos louis
Montreal is only a city though
Canada: papa, c'est quoi ça?
France: une collation, mon cher
Canada:.... bien...
Canada: *tries it* pas mal!
France: ... canada, tout est en érable ???
Canada: ;D
Bonus:
England: what did they say?
America: *slurping some soda* Idk somethin stereotypical I think
I hope this is a Hetalia reference or I will be very disappointed.
N. W. Flannel you guessed right ;3
@@n.w.flannel3463 we learn French in my school in England and I can translate some of it
@Logan: Haha! I can translate just fine. I was just referencing something.
@Aurora: Awesome.
Why is everyone in this video so attractive?!?
TheLightOne French genes
Thank you 😊
The Chinese thing is ew.
Melissa Papel You’re so welcome 😂
Eric Cartman
I live in Canada and I’ve never seen those items in my life. Cheezies is the only one I know and based on my experience, they’re so damn salty..
Same!!
Like meeee :)
Same i saw curly once im from Quebec
I’ve never seen any of them except the maple cookies those are pretty common in Quebec
I know right! They are gross. They sell them at the dollar store
Why do these French people speak such good English?? Is the guy in the yellow born or raised here?? I have so many questions
Also, those cheezies are the worst.
music, close proximity to England, books, they also learn English as standard in schools (much in the way those in the UK learn French), etc etc
The girl has a really, really good English but you can tell from how she speaks sometimes that it’s not her native language; the guy with the yellow shirt has *zero* accent, so I guess he was born in America from french parents...?
@@princeopumpkins I'm bilingual in English and French and familier with how strong French accents can be from our neighbours across the pond, so I was just surprised by their relatively slight (or in the guy's case, complete lack of) accent. Also, in France they usually base their English off of British pronunciation rather than American so I'm just quite surprised by the fact that these two seem to have a General American accent (the girl has a very slight French accent) and not the former.
In another video you can hear that the guy has a slight accent when speaking french so my guess is french parents but raised in america 🕵️
@@Junior-xe1xn Ah, that makes a lot more sense to me! Thanks
I love French Canada, Montreal's a nice city
thanks ! ;)
You don’t live there, do you?
No, no no no, this is Canada vs France. Not French Canada. Very different things my dude
mtl is nice
Weird, most Canadians hate French Canada.
Si t'as pas d'ami prend un curly!
Heda42 je préfère avoir un ami/une amie que des produits animaux (:
@@Cassxowary Très bizarre.
@@Cassxowary hein ?
Mdr
@@Cassxowary WTF? C'est quoi le rapport avec les curly?
The guy with black hat omg i'm pregnant
Me too and I'm a dude that's not into dudes
rustyz8 dude that’s gay
Bellaaa_ ikrrr😍
literally came for this comment. I was like I can't be the only one drooling lol
I'm canadian and literally have not seen Hawkins cheezies since I was like 5 only ever got them in my halloween bags LMAO . IM 23 now Haha where the hell are they!?
Same they were my mom fav
I'm Canadian, 30, and I've only had the maple cookies! Those Jos Louis things look vaguely familiar, but I've certainly never seen one in person. The rest? No idea what they are!
They are from my hometown, in Belleville Ontario. But you can generally find them in grocery stores, depending on where in Canada you are from.
I see them everywhere! I’m from Manitoba, if that makes a difference
I’ve spent most of my life in Quebec and have never seen them anywhere!
Those maple cookies dipped in Earl Grey tea is HEAVEN
Ok boomer >:)
I loved everybody in this video. Hat man, hit me up, French lady please be my friend, Canadian girl you're adorable and French man..also hit me up 😂. Du coup, je voudrais goûter tout les choses lá. Qui sont bilingue, un polyglot, français ou Canadien ici ? 🇺🇸🇫🇷🇨🇦
LuggageLife haha:) Im the girl in the video! Thanks and I’ll gladly be your friend :)
Je suis une canadienne et je suis bilingue
@@MelissaPapel85 omg you responded! 😭😭 merci beaucoup mdr! J'ai besoin des ami(e)s français(e) 😁 ❤
@@AllycatlovesAG whoo hoo! C'est très bien ça ! Vive les multilingues eh ? 😅✊🏻
@@LuggageLife Tu viens du canada aussi?
FINALLY some french products
Guy: have you ever had a french snack before?
Me: no but I sure am looking at one
2:46 “so deliciousness” I agree 😂
As a Québecer, I've never even heard of any of these! Besides maple cookies of course
I'm CANADIAN WHO IS FROM CANADA
Alyssa Foley Justin Bieber
Me
@@pierrethetrex6106 no one cares about him I lost my respect about him
Me im from Quebec
@@alyssafoley1439 why ?
Living in Montreal, the only Canadian/Quebec snack I have seen sold here was Joe Louis (which is definitely common), but the others I have never seen anywhere. Strange choices of snacks to represent both countries.
Melissa and Capri-Antoine would be a fantastic couple
nottenk0 Hahahah:)))) I wasn’t expecting this at all!!!
Ella Sparkles thank you 🙏🏻
I'm Moroccan and I'll pick "PRINCE" over anything it's my favorite snack
Omg I LOVE Prince!
I'd literally go to Carrefour everyday after school and eat a whole pack.
Dunked in milk it was sooooo good.
Tallinn milk! This never came to my mind!
@@LeonEllisZ Just a quick dunk so it doesn't get too mushy. I can't resist that stuff. You should definitely try next time!
(Speaks in a slimy American accent) "Hi! I'm French!"
slimy? lol
Prince cookies are loved in Belgium too 😍
Macydvh and Denmark
I’m Canadian and yes maple cookies are freaking delicious but it is super sweet, pairing it with tea works great if you need that balance from the sweetness.
Calisson is a fancy product. French do not buy it like snack but for special occasion.
Canadians are truly unable to say something rude or truthful about anyone
I am not French nor a child but I loooooooove Prince! It is soo good! It is not too sweet. It is delicious. When I went to Martinique I bought loads of it to take back home. Whenever my aunt visits she brings some back too. Soooo good
who else has never heard a french person without a french accent? :)
"The creamy inside it is so deliciousness"
I’m danish and love these videos so I would love it if you guys made a Denmark and America swap snacks.
If there’s someone else out there who also want this kind of video please like this comment.
As a french person, I really didn’t know at all what the lemonade was, nor the Calissons d’Aix. Idk where Buzzfeed found these things but they gotta change their producers
Honestly same...good to know that I’m not the only one. I would love to have one of those Petit Prince tho
On est d’accord
Malkiks same
????? Encore les calissons c’est typique du sud on peut comprendre mais serieux la limonade ? Tout le monde connait la limonade vous abusez un peu 😭 le sprite et le seven up c’est de la limonade
As a Canadian, the only two snacks I've had are Joe Louis and mapple Cookie and I LOVE IT
When I went to france my host family would always pack me those prince cookies I want them again 🥺🥺
Prince is actually a Belgian invention and can be bought in many countries in Europe... In Germany it's called Prinzenrolle.
When I visited Canada and tried the Maple crème cookies, I thought at first that they were okay but as I kept eating, I couldn’t stop myself. I ate all of them in like 2-3 hours, because I was trying to convince myself to stop eating them in between that time 😂😂😂
They should've had Whippets ☹️(one of the first Canadian products to bring revenue and gain popularity founded in Québec)
Also, I saw the "Prince" cookies and had flashbacks to when I went to France, excited for cookies and deceived when I ate something so dry. (Although I must say, I frickin LOVE "Lion" bars from France 10/10)
I knew the French guy was actually American.
The Canadian snacks were all different from American snacks. The closest thing in common would be Cheezies like Cheetos. But they are actually different taste and texture. Also the Canadian Cheezies use actual cheese.
OK but the hat guy was so handsome wth
Their English tho!!! Is so good. I certainly expected more of an accent
Ricky burwick: wanna cheezie? NO MY CHEEZIE
next vid: French fries vs American Fries.
Belgian fries. Not french
French Canadians are not the same as French though
@@diekje8728 There is no attested proof the fries are Belgian. They appeared between northern France and Wallonia (French speaking belgium), and is a traditionnal dish in both regions, it just makes sense to call them French fries.
@@tonyhawk94 They are not a tradional food in France compare to snail, ratatouille, boeuf bourgignon, they are just use for side dish.
They're also called french fries, not because they are french, but because of the verb to french which mean to cut in piece
@@Broth8492 This is the exact Belgian narrative but it doesn't make it true.
1- YES it's a traditional popular dish in Northern France since the post revolution era
2 - The origin you say is one theory among others and not even the most plausible one.
3- as I said to this day NO historian can exactly state the place of origin of the fries with certainty, the most plausible from what we know is that it appears between Paris and Wallonia.
The Canada guy is so cute omg
My tiny brain wishes the Canadians were all sitting on the left and the French sitting on the right like on the atlas 🌎 🗺 🥴 like reading left to right 📝🖍 🥴
I'm French Canadian living in Montreal and I've never heard of Hawkin's cheezees. We have something similar from Humpty Dumpty that we call "crottes de fromages"= cheese turd. "Jos Louis" are fine but "May West" cakes also from Vachon are WAY better imo.
You guys just gave that soda because of maple syrup in it because I'm in the province of Quebec and have never even heard of it! I haven't eaten a maple cookie since 25 years ago (and I'm 38yo) cause it's too sickly sweet.
The French people speak better English than most Americans. Lmao 😂
5:18
Those cookies are my childhood.
I grew up in Morocco and they sold a lot of French snacks there (bc they’ve colonised Morocco) and when I heard Prince I was like omg I want me some of that rn
clicked for elliott in the thumbnail thank you so much for this
Calissons is a boujee snack. My family lays it out whenever we go back to France. I haven’t had Prince biscuits in so long lol
stephen
We’re just so slow to eat them all that we have them essentially all year 😅
There are plenty of stuff more representative than calissons , as he said you don’t go to a store just for them .
And never once in my life saw this lemonade 🤣 where’s my orangina at?
I am a frenchman who move to the US and the soda i miss the most is orangina.
Capri is fine.
The French cake isn’t a typical ‘snack’... it’s a luxury treat. Cheats
Hawkins Cheezies are produced in my town! Right down the road from me!
Dose it smell like cheese? I live down the street from Labats brewery and every other day it smells really hoppy.
@@tammyanderson8885 not as often as you think. If the wind is gusting a certain direction, you catch a whiff of some cheese. It's not entirely unpleasant, better smelling than fast food grease.
@I like Potatoes not really. You'd think so, but bot super often.
Wait, I'm a Canadian from Quebec and I don't know any of these beside the mapple cookies and the Joe Louis.. Have I been living under a rock all my life or what?
On est deux, je connais pas les autres
The cola is a stereotypical Canadian drink. Lol
curly’s are soooo good 😭😭 i miss france i wanna go homeeee😭😭😭
The French didn’t even sound French lol
The woman has an accent but that guy is beyond perfect
I hope the viewers realize THAT SODA IS 'NOT' A COMMON CANADIAN TREAT, in fact it's far from common. I have never ever EVER even heard of maple cola.
The rest of the snacks? Ya, VERY common.
That soda? NO
The rest of the snacks are either excessively stereotypical or I have never heard of them and I am Canadian
3:24 BRO TELL ME HE DOESNT LOOK LIKE GRAYSON DOLAN RN
As a Canadian no one eats Hawkins cheeses we eat Humpty Dumpty or Cheetos. Jos Louis is eaten here. No one drinks bec cola, we drink Coke or Pepsi. And you only see the maple cookies at old lady houses or at charity or church parties, besides that Oreos are the go to.
French here: calisssons aren't snacks, they're fancy expensive treats that you gift to others. I've literally never heard of that lemonade before. French kids known that Orangina is where it's at (an orange-flavoured soda)! And omg, it's a criminal offense that they didn't give them milk to go with the Prince; dunking them until they're soft enough that they almost fall apart, really makes them a superior snack.
Nobody:
Canadians: LeTs PuT mApLe SYrup On SoDa
I'm half German and whenever I go to Germany, I also have the Prince Cookies.
We have the prince cookies here in California but they're called Principe
born an raised in canada toronto, never ate one of these things at all
I'm Canadian and there should be sugar maple candy 🍁🍁
Please Pick person from Czech Republic and person from korean Because this states have totally different taste for everything.
As a girl from Czech i thought these two People will be impressed in to it. Please do it it will be definetly fun. 💜
Btw I'm sorry for my English 😅
Those canadian snacks are definitely all eastern canadian cause i have never even heard of some of those before being from Saskatchewan...
Rebekah Polvi not even, I live in Nova Scotia and I’ve barely heard of most of them. For sure not popular snacks at all!
Hawkins Cheezies are popular in Ontario and the maple cookies are probably found in most grocery stores. The Jos Louis are found in grocery stores in Ontario and sometimes gas stations. I have never heard of the pop that was in the episode.
Ok, it should have been : Curly (or Monster Munch), Pim's, Orangina, Prince for French snacks
and : Ruffles all dressed, Jos Louis, Canada Dry, Dare Maple Leaf cookies
As a canadian from Quebec, I know those snacks.
I’m sitting here, eating my good old all-American Oreos!
A lot of people in the comments saying they haven’t heard of a certain snack in Canada and that these are a bad representation of Canada. And although I totally agree since most of these seem to only be from one province, just because you haven’t heard of it doesn’t mean it isn’t a canadian thing. Canada is a huge country with many provinces that have their own cultures and snacks to go with them. Especially Quebec and the east coast. But yes, let’s get more variety here people, or things we can get everywhere across Canada. Or some bagged milk, even though that’s contradicting myself.
When the guy said Canadian snacks are similar to american snacks i paused the video lol...
I get it why Canadians are a little upset over the fact that most snacks are from Quebec, but I’m honestly really happy we finally get representation. Most people outside of Canada thinks that Quebec culture is just what’s in Montreal, but there’s more to us. Every time there’s Canadian representation they’re usually from Ontario or BC or Alberta. They could’ve definitely used snacks across the country, but It’s good that Quebec finally gets shown a little
Ohh I had the chance to try Prince's cookie and they are so good! Especially the double chocolate one! And France also have some Lu cookies or brand.. I don't remember exactly, but they're all good too! And I'm Québécoise hehe
My Banned Lifestyle
Yea Lu, surprised they didn’t have Lu for this, I visited the factory :D
@@cheesethekoala8756 their factory can be visited?? Woahhh
Canadian and French people...
*Sweats in partial French Canadian lineage*
Those maple cookies are soooo so good !!!!!
You should’ve gave em those nice ketchup and all dressed chips
OOF yassss
Yass Lays 😍😭😍
Please do a video of French and Israeli people swap snacks. And do curly vs bamba (במבה). I’m so curious bc they seem so similar
Comparing , Calisson d'Aix a sweet full of tradition with the best ingredients with Joe Louis .
"Canadian and French People Swap Snacks"
coincidence? i think NOT!
I didn't know that the Dare maple cookies were Canadian since my family eats them religiously in Vermont😂
As both a Canadian and a French (from France, just because I’m also Canadian doesn’t mean I’m québécois c’mon guys...), yes I ask my family in France to send cosmetics, no I have never heard of bec cola what even, and yes I do testify they picked the absolute worst Canadian snacks for this I’m appalled... Except for the maple cookies those were perfect... But like they should have had girl guide cookies. The mint kind.
The sparkling lemonade is awesome
I have lived in Canada for 5-6 years and I have not seen a single 1 except the cheesie
The man has ZEEERO FRENCH ACCENT is he even French??? I REFUSE TO BELIEVE IT 😭😭😭
Snorts laughing. Joe Louis is pronounced loueeeee
@I like Potatoes A silent S.
@I like Potatoes no we don't pronounce the S
Do more videos with Canadian people swatching snacks