Because it's not competition, they completely ruined the traditional Sunday roast. Fixed was the word the import used. Too many imports think they need to fix our traditions.
@@autumn_worki wouldn't call it elevating, more to fit his Indian tastes. Eating with hands etc also not my cup of tea, looks awful. To be fair the presenter did put the word in his mouth.
@@chrisdowney1875 That's our job to maintain the traditions. And I'm not saying they ruined this one. I'm also not saying they didn't. But if they did, or do in the future, we have only ourselves to blame.
Best fish and chips I ever had was in a small coastal town in Scotland as a 24 year old American at the time I’ll never forget. A local was kind enough to take me there
I had the most memorable (I rarely ate English roasts anyway) trad Sunday roast with Yorkshire pudding in a pub in Haworth, West Yorkshire of all places. The pub overlooked the moors. It was real Heathcliff and Cathy country. You could imagine Kate Bush running around in a ref dress like a loon. It was packed Sunday lunchtime. We ordered two traditional English roast beefs with Yorkshire pudding and all trimmings. The landlord kept eyeing us with an amused look on his face. Pansy southerners I reckon he was thinking. When two ENORMOUS platters arrived, I understood what he thought was funny. I've never seen so much food on a plate before or since. The Yorkshire pudding itself was the size of a massive plate. If that's his challenge, sod him. I'll finish it. I thought. I must confess I failed. The person with me managed less than half. If I'd have known the portion sizes, one meal and two plates would've been ample. Three plates would probably be full. It was good food, but bejaysus, it was too much. No wonder Heathcliff and Cathy ran around the moors so much. They were working off the pub grub. The locals were demolishing their portions with no difficulty whatsoever.
@@OriginalBeardedHaggis no I wish I could remember the place …it was very small and not a pub somewhere between Edinburgh and Aberdeen. Somewhere I wrote it down I was a guest at Norton house hotel near Edinburgh By the way. It is truly haunted
The fact that he didn't come from much shows his appreciation for the tradition and understanding of how something so common could be so special. And the new version looks amazing too.
He didn't come from nothing but now he spends his days charging people £40 for fish and chips and £50 for a roast, he makes out he's not forgotten his roots, but he defo has
@@cittiavaticano As an Englishman I would say English/British food is not bland (or if it is then a lot of other cuisines with better reputations are as well) but is just often done really badly. My wife is Spanish and I would say the main reason why you'll generally eat better in Spain than in England is not the 'cuisine' but that the Spanish expect/demand more as food is more important to their culture than it is to the British. Obviously there are a lot of exceptions to this
Wish people would stop claiming British food is bland (stop rating it with fish and chips, thats a seaside snack that’s gets poshed up) . I like the natural flavours of ingredients, a little salt to accentuate it, we don’t need to smother our food in salt/vinegar/spices to enjoy it. I also love Mexican, Indian, Thai, Japanese, Chinese, Lebanese, Turkish, the list goes on so I’m not biased. Love the Yorkshire pudding by bowls, reminds me of bread bowls from the Middle Ages
Almost any dish can be bland or interesting. Part of the difference is the quality of the ingredients and the other part is knowing how to get the best out of what you've got.
It's been a stereotype for a long time. Even Orwell complained about it. The French did not hold English cooking in high regard. That seems to persist.
My family in Pennsylvania, would always do a traditional Sunday roast with Yorkshire pudding and mashed potatoes. I didn’t think anything of it as a kid but now as adult I wonder if it has something to do with the fact that my grandfather was a child of English immigrants. My grandmother in Pennsylvania is one of the few places I’ve ever had Yorkshire pudding in America. I have so many great memories of all my cousins and aunts and uncles going to my grandparents house for a big Sunday dinner. One of those things I miss the most about losing my grandparents. Rest in Peace Grammy and Pappy.
That's lovely to hear, you don't need to miss it though! That's the great thing about Sunday roast that he was trying to say, you just need to make a bunch of roasties, some gravy, yorkshire pudding and a main of some sort then invite the people you like. Top it off with a gentle walk for the full sunday experience 🙂
We lived outside of London for three years while I was on an assignment from the US. Our family loved Sunday Roast and partook weekly. It’s one of the things our family misses most about living there.
@@nicolajohnson1887London IS really England. All the little backwater, one horse towns up north like Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, etc aspire to be like London but will only ever be pale imitations.
Here in Australia we do legs of lamb more often than beef or pork. Try it sometime, with garlic and rosemary (stab holes into meat, put garlic in, cap with sprig of rosemary) then lightly oil it and roast it in the oven for 90-120mins.
@@dohmarauaye, I’m from Wales and leg of Lamb is typically what I go for. But Legs of lamb have become quite an expensive cut here in the U.K. £20 for a leg, unless you go for a really small half leg. Where as a whole chicken is £3-£5, beef and pork joints are around £7-£10
@@JaricDesann Interesting, lamb costs around $20 for a leg here, which is 10 GBP. Steaks on the other hand, have gotten quite expensive in comparison, you're paying up to $80 aud for a kilo of good steak where several years ago it was half that...
The Sunday roast isn't changing. Just because there's an asian "pub" jumping on the bandwagon it doesn't mean the English, Welsh, Scottish or Northern Irish are about to start copying it, far from it.
@@oelruof5816American style, slow cooked barbeque meat to replace the tradition English style roast beef would crush it. Their meat would go well with Yorkshires and veg.
@@_CH_ Someone will do it and it'll be a massive success and a I hope it's a British company that does it and successfully sends it back to the US. We successfully take their music and make new genres out of it so why not their food in general as theirs is European food bastardised anyway plus through the internet were more curious about each others food more now. Makes sense to me from a business perspective.
The irony that the English colonized so much of the world, but are now celebrating the diversity of their homeland. South Asian food became so popular that it evolved into it's own style of cuisine "British South Asian". The fact that specifically a Tamil pub is now popular is really cool, as the original South Asian immigration wave was mostly Bangladeshi. Should note that even in Tamil Nadu, cuisines are diverse. My family is Tamil Brahman and thus traditionally vegetarian; my family doesn't make anything like this.
Gravy is what makes Sunday Roast so special. Use the juices at the bottom of the roasting dish as the base, add a bit of flour then the cooking water from the veg, bit of wine and you are away.
@@desigo6293 It's funny because my fiancee is Australian. We like each other's accents and verbal expressions. We agreed we should never lose them. Of course I don't have an accent. Only her.
Some of my all time favourite puddings and desserts come from England. Banoffee pie, apple crumble, Bakewell tart, custard tart, Eton mess, trifle, sticky toffee pudding, Battenberg cake, jam roly poly etc etc. There are so many!
We all know how bad the mains in the UK are, just generally speaking, but we also all watch the Great British Baking Show and now how fabulous it's desserts are.
@@PapagenoMFyou do realize that’s a hangover from ww2 when the allied soldiers visited Britain and said the food was bland. 80YEARS AGO DURING RATION TIMES. Have you ever actually been there? The best isn’t even in London. Fresh and full of flavour. Tell me you’ve never visited without telling me you’ve never visited. 😅
I’ll eat anything. British food gets a bad rap, he got good food and bad food in any country and there’s nothing wrong with great tasting traditional, comfort food, I do love me some good bangers, and mash and a beautiful stout to go with that, I think if people visit the UK and give it some time they’ll find something very pleasing to the pallet. I did as an American.
I hope ALL of you know that a good gravy is essential to make all of this work. No gravy and you don't have much. My mom would roast the beef in a large French roaster, drain the fat for Yorkshire pudding, then deglaze the pan while the roast sat and with a butter roux made a gravy, an outstanding gravy at that. Fat back into the roaster where the pudding was made and after it came out golden, the beef was carved, we all ate family style. Of course there was always plenty of side dishes to make things interesting. Side note: During Thanksgiving break, my mom would post an invite at the local university for anyone that couldn't make it home could come to our house so we could enjoy the holiday together.
@@wessexdruid7598 I always wait for the roast to be done so I can utilize the 'fond' from the roasting pan. My gravy is always made from scratch, just before serving.
4:47 this makes me really, really cross. There is no problem to ‘fix’. This chap has just put a different spin on a traditional meal, and good for him. However, real, home-cooked British food is neither bland nor boring, and I am sick to death of hearing non-Brits like this reporter say stuff like this. Change the bloody record and get out there and do some proper research. I recommend reading the excellent book ‘British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History’ by Colin Spencer as a good starting point to understanding our food culture and not the stereotypes made popular by American GI’s after WWII that have been perpetuated throughout media, film and TV.
Exactly!!! Considering the appalling food, laced with chemicals banned in huge swathes of the world, Americans have no room to criticize any other nation about their food.
@@Railssob_Kaetson1 I MIGHT have a smidgeon of respect for your opinion if you could even spell what you denigrate. As lamb is not a common meat in the US, most Americans will only know about Cottage Pie. Same concept, still totally different. Also, in Britain, our livestock are raised purely on grass, to high welfare standards.
After the Sunday roast comes Monday bubble and squeak. Take the left-overs (make sure you make enough on Sunday to ensure left-overs) Mash the roasties in with the mash. Tear the meat into small pieces, also the Yorkshires. Add the peas, cabbage and carrots. Mix together and fry in a pan. After a while the mix will be begin to, well, bubble and squeak. Great with (Cumberland) sausages and brown (HP) sauce.
diversity is a good thing. but watering down other cultures traditions with anothers is how we start a race war. what a shame. just call it tamil food eaten on sunday. dont destroy a brittish tradition to make indians (who aren't even a minority in the world, brits are the minority! india is massive man) feel better because they chose to move abroad. what a shame.
We look forward to welcoming you to our shores and hope you enjoy seeing the sights, sampling the varied cuisine and meeting the many friendly people that make up these isles.
@@teeniemcneeToby Carvery is a pretty authentic working class British experience. It’ll be fine if you’re on a budget. But if you can do better, find a non-chain pub with good reviews for their Sunday dinners
So yummy! I grew up with Sunday roast.. my mom was English and she continued this tradition raising me in the US… I can literally taste the food in this video..
I love how the sunday roast is being embraced across the pond. I'm from Manchester and have met a few Americans here who always say they wish they could get it back home 😅
You can, you just have to cook it yourself. My sister and I have made Yorkshire pudding many times, mostly on Thanksgiving, usually with a big roast (and very good sides).
I will never understand why people say (European mainly) that in England they don't eat well. Not onky in England, but in the entire UK, you will find everything from any corner of the world just a few steps from your home and with the best quality too. The best!
@@newname2600 I think the point is that British cooking is now an amalgamation of cultures from all over the world. That other British staple Fish and Chips? Brought to the UK by Jewish immigrants in the 17th century
It’s only a roast with gravy and a simple pastry 😂. The rest of Europe would say this roast is eating normal. We would make a roast any random day, not necessarily for a festive family meal. On the continent, people would be happy to have a roast once in a while, but would be bored to tears to have it every week, especially if cooked always the same way. Also don’t forget the reporting is made by a U.S. journalist who thinks putting butter in a pan to grill a steak is cooking 😂.
When I was a kid, most Sundays we'd go round to my Nan's house for a roast. We didn't have much money, so dinners in the week were often cheap stuff. Made the Sunday dinner 10x better. Being with family was lovely as well, and something I appreciate more now looking back, but being a lad who played football 10 times a week it was the calories I wanted 😂 You can't beat a roast dinner if you're from England. It's still something special to me to this day, my polish wife is even better at making them than me.
You can tell Tom Kerridge is English and the woman is Australian because they both know how to use a knife and fork properly not like two shovels the way the Americans use cutlery. And yes you can get a vegan/ vegetarian version of the Sunday roast.
@@CanMav She was obviously making a joke. My god, you guys swear you have the best sense of humor in the world, but then an American makes a self-deprecating joke and you absolutely cannot fathom how it works.
Indian food is great, but it's not a Sunday Roast. You can't say a Sunday Roast is bland, if you do, you are doing it wrong. Eating at a Toby Carvery is not having a Sunday Roast, it's like comparing McDonalds to a Five Guys.
Yes when I stayed with friends in Surrey England we did have roasts on Sunday. Minus the Yorkshire pudding. No roast pumpkin though. When I roast vegetables I always add pumpkin here in Australia, apparently it’s not eaten in the UK. But when we went out for a meal there it was in Indian establishments
I am Australian and we always had a Sunday roast every week growing up. It's much more than just a meal, its all about family time. It's not something you can rush.
There are so many great pubs now I lived in Brighton for ten years, and I had a specific pub I would go to in any part of the city for good food. A sunday lunch is all about warmth, sitting with friends or family and enjoying a rewarding comforting meal after a long week That fusion roast looked fantastic!
Yes, they have veggie and vegan Sunday Roasts. Potatoes, carrots, mushroom gravies, that's all veg :) And traditional English nut loaf (a fantastic baked loaf that you slice, it has the look and feel of juicy meatloaf! Blew my mind the first time I tried it) is used instead of meat. Nut loaf is loved by meat folks in the UK too. So yes, veggie lovers enjoy British Sunday Roasts, absolutely!
The Hand and Flowers was right next door to my school. In the 1980's (well before Tom bought it) it was the place where you find anyone form the lower years from the school enjoying a pint or two (Gr7-8 in modern terms) :)
They skim over here one of the most interesting things about roast beef, which is that the technique that made it and English cooks famous historically - spit roasting over an open fire - has almost entirely died out. This is important, as this means one's dealing with almost an entirely different product.
British cuisine is not just fish & chips, but a Sunday roast could be beef, leg of lamb, pork or chicken. The smell and taste is amazing. Beef Wellington is a favorite of mine 🤩
Saturday night is perfect for a traditional British curry night as we Brits love a bit of spice but there is nothing bland about British food, it’s uncomplicated and honest. There is nowhere to hide with a traditional Sunday roast of either beef, pork, lamb or chicken simply seasoned with salt and pepper and served with a traditional condiment such as mint, apple, or horseradish sauce or a nice blob of English mustard. Bring it on and pour that gravy.
I once roasted lamb ribs, pork belly, a topside joint, a whole duck, and a whole goose on the same day. We also made our own yorkies, gravy, and sides, such as cheesy cauliflower, parsnips, brussel sprouts, mash etc. Everything was perfection. You are meant to make this at home with friends and family, not order it at a pub.
@@wessexdruid7598 Not only that, I have actually been to Yorkshire! Isn't that amazing. Black sheep ale right? Edit: I've been to York too. It left me in Shambles.
@@curiousnomadic There are shambles in lots of places - it's the name for where the butchers slaughtered their animals and sold the result. There is a shambles just close to me - Bradford-on-Avon is south of Bath. th-cam.com/video/rXqcKi01LCk/w-d-xo.html Edit - see at 0:36
Sunday roast and Sunday dinner are not always the same thing. It doesn’t mean one is better than the other. For me it’s about the family getting together. For those of you who go round their Mum’s or Nan’s house for Sunday dinner. Savour every moment and mouth full because you will spend a lifetime after they’re gone, trying to recreate it.
let just say "best of both world" with your passion to share food is a way to share peace and love in different idea. i loved to taste everything from different chef perspectives in respect, everyone had their creativity and a nostalgia add into it.
Give me that first traditional meal any day. That looked fantastic. The currey one i'd have from time to time but alsways prefere the traditional one. Also, someone mentioned Christmas in the comments. There will be no curry what so ever at Christmas in my house. Christmas and Christmas food is a huge part of our culture. I would laugh at anyone that asked for a curry on Christmas day.
I get what hes saying but no other cuisine other than indian is being adopted to the extent theres fusion roast dinners. Britain just loves our version of indian food. Yorkshire pudding burritos are popular at festivals and some historic towns
Great food aside love how this video features an English, Australian and American accents in unison over a good Roast Meal. The United Kingdom interacting with their former/current colonies
You know you’re a good person when asked about the competition, you have nothing but praise
@@iqunknown786😂😂😂😂😂
Because it's not competition, they completely ruined the traditional Sunday roast. Fixed was the word the import used. Too many imports think they need to fix our traditions.
@@autumn_worki wouldn't call it elevating, more to fit his Indian tastes. Eating with hands etc also not my cup of tea, looks awful. To be fair the presenter did put the word in his mouth.
@@chrisdowney1875 That's our job to maintain the traditions. And I'm not saying they ruined this one. I'm also not saying they didn't. But if they did, or do in the future, we have only ourselves to blame.
@@acharat6 its just everyday none stop bashing of my culture. I'm just over it.
As a brit watching this its hilarious ... so documentary style and presenting it as such an alien thing
I did smile a couple times myself 😂
I figure it’s like watching pancakes for a north american or chilaquiles for a mexican
@@Lily-cl6zk we literally have these in the States, too, so they’ve only themselves to blame for the naivety 😅
😅😂
Now you know what it's like being on the receiving end of it.
My mother, of English heritage, almost always made Sunday roast beef here in western Canada.
My Yorkshire mum also made Sunday roast beef with gravy and, of course, Yorkshire pudding!
My Canadian granny did the same thing. I miss it!
I had a Yorkshire pudding wrap for dinner. I have to have mint sauce in the gravy. I will go shop before I touch it if I have ran out.
What’s roast beef dude, are you talking about the stuff on subway sandwich’s ? I’m German American and just grew up eating medium rare steaks
Ich liebe Deutschland und Amerika. 🇩🇪🦅🇺🇸🤘🏻😎
Best fish and chips I ever had was in a small coastal town in Scotland as a 24 year old American at the time I’ll never forget. A local was kind enough to take me there
I had the most memorable (I rarely ate English roasts anyway) trad Sunday roast with Yorkshire pudding in a pub in Haworth, West Yorkshire of all places. The pub overlooked the moors. It was real Heathcliff and Cathy country. You could imagine Kate Bush running around in a ref dress like a loon. It was packed Sunday lunchtime. We ordered two traditional English roast beefs with Yorkshire pudding and all trimmings. The landlord kept eyeing us with an amused look on his face. Pansy southerners I reckon he was thinking. When two ENORMOUS platters arrived, I understood what he thought was funny. I've never seen so much food on a plate before or since. The Yorkshire pudding itself was the size of a massive plate. If that's his challenge, sod him. I'll finish it. I thought. I must confess I failed. The person with me managed less than half. If I'd have known the portion sizes, one meal and two plates would've been ample. Three plates would probably be full. It was good food, but bejaysus, it was too much. No wonder Heathcliff and Cathy ran around the moors so much. They were working off the pub grub. The locals were demolishing their portions with no difficulty whatsoever.
Let me guess, it was in Anstruther?
@@OriginalBeardedHaggis no I wish I could remember the place …it was very small and not a pub somewhere between Edinburgh and Aberdeen. Somewhere I wrote it down I was a guest at Norton house hotel near Edinburgh By the way. It is truly haunted
@@renesagahon4477 maybe in Arbroath or peterhead or something like that. Glad you enjoyed my country
My favorite fish n chips was halibut. So good.
The fact that he didn't come from much shows his appreciation for the tradition and understanding of how something so common could be so special. And the new version looks amazing too.
hurry, sweetie... off to Tesco, karen... buy more tin foil.. add layers to your tent
He didn't come from nothing but now he spends his days charging people £40 for fish and chips and £50 for a roast, he makes out he's not forgotten his roots, but he defo has
People always talk about an English breakfast, but I am the biggest fan of a good ol’ Sunday roast
Here here 👏🏻
i am a fan of both, bangers and mash, so much to love i dont find i bland at all, and im mexican/mixed
@@cittiavaticano As an Englishman I would say English/British food is not bland (or if it is then a lot of other cuisines with better reputations are as well) but is just often done really badly. My wife is Spanish and I would say the main reason why you'll generally eat better in Spain than in England is not the 'cuisine' but that the Spanish expect/demand more as food is more important to their culture than it is to the British. Obviously there are a lot of exceptions to this
The best English Breakfast I ever had was a full English served inside a Yorkshire Pudding.
lunch in German is like British lunch one steroids. Rouladen, Sauerbraten, köngisberger Klopse, Schweinebraten, Haxe, spatzle, klöse, rotkohl
Wish people would stop claiming British food is bland (stop rating it with fish and chips, thats a seaside snack that’s gets poshed up) . I like the natural flavours of ingredients, a little salt to accentuate it, we don’t need to smother our food in salt/vinegar/spices to enjoy it. I also love Mexican, Indian, Thai, Japanese, Chinese, Lebanese, Turkish, the list goes on so I’m not biased. Love the Yorkshire pudding by bowls, reminds me of bread bowls from the Middle Ages
Almost any dish can be bland or interesting. Part of the difference is the quality of the ingredients and the other part is knowing how to get the best out of what you've got.
It's been a stereotype for a long time. Even Orwell complained about it. The French did not hold English cooking in high regard. That seems to persist.
It’s pretty easy to knock on British cuisine but, gad dayum, that looks utterly divine
lol no! Its divine if you had boiled potatoes for an entire year.
Americans love to dunk on British food until they actually try it, and then they end up loving it
@@kevinkibble8342No, most british food is God awful. This is one of the only exceptions.
@@tony16991as opposed to Americans, who live off instant mash. Lol
@@tony16991You've never tried it when it is at this quality boy. You should be quiet as you are speaking about something you know nothing about.
Don’t knock British pub grub. It is heavenly.
A scotch-egg and a pint of porter please.
A gracious chef ❤providing the model for this special meal yet open to others taking his inspiration and making more culinary adventures.
He didn’t invent putting a roast in a Yorkshire pudding, it’s been around for donkeys years
My family in Pennsylvania, would always do a traditional Sunday roast with Yorkshire pudding and mashed potatoes. I didn’t think anything of it as a kid but now as adult I wonder if it has something to do with the fact that my grandfather was a child of English immigrants. My grandmother in Pennsylvania is one of the few places I’ve ever had Yorkshire pudding in America.
I have so many great memories of all my cousins and aunts and uncles going to my grandparents house for a big Sunday dinner. One of those things I miss the most about losing my grandparents. Rest in Peace Grammy and Pappy.
That's lovely to hear, you don't need to miss it though! That's the great thing about Sunday roast that he was trying to say, you just need to make a bunch of roasties, some gravy, yorkshire pudding and a main of some sort then invite the people you like. Top it off with a gentle walk for the full sunday experience 🙂
Maybe you can continue the tradition. Sunday dinner seems to be a dying institution, but it doesn’t have to be.
The roast beef looks so mouth-watering 🤤 The chef is very talented
We lived outside of London for three years while I was on an assignment from the US. Our family loved Sunday Roast and partook weekly. It’s one of the things our family misses most about living there.
London isn't really England tbh
We were fortunate to see and experience a lot of the countryside while we were there.
@@nicolajohnson1887 or UK
Why not continue having a Sunday roast?
@@nicolajohnson1887London IS really England. All the little backwater, one horse towns up north like Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, etc aspire to be like London but will only ever be pale imitations.
no one ever talks about how amazing our desert puddings are. They are the best in the world.
I love roast beef as a Yank. I'm going to keep it British as possible. Keep British traditions, your food is awesome!!!
we Brits do the best comfort food, its dark half the year and rains a third of the time, it is not surprising
Coming home after it's been raining and cold and there's toad-in-the-hole with gravy and buttery mash?? Divine!
I’m Indian and I’m not trading a traditional Sunday roast for ANYTHING! No experimenting with roast, it HAS to be the very British pork or beef roast.
Here in Australia we do legs of lamb more often than beef or pork. Try it sometime, with garlic and rosemary (stab holes into meat, put garlic in, cap with sprig of rosemary) then lightly oil it and roast it in the oven for 90-120mins.
@@dohmarau Garlic and rosemary with Lamb is also common in the UK (tho, less so than beef). I can confirm it is very good.
@@dohmarauaye, I’m from Wales and leg of Lamb is typically what I go for. But Legs of lamb have become quite an expensive cut here in the U.K. £20 for a leg, unless you go for a really small half leg. Where as a whole chicken is £3-£5, beef and pork joints are around £7-£10
@@JaricDesann Interesting, lamb costs around $20 for a leg here, which is 10 GBP. Steaks on the other hand, have gotten quite expensive in comparison, you're paying up to $80 aud for a kilo of good steak where several years ago it was half that...
seroius question, i thought Indians had a thing about cows and didnt eat them?
I was in scottland last year. Beautiful nature, food and culture!
Wow 40% of London's residents were born overseas. I didn't realize it was that much.
It's far more than that.
The number given isn't accurate. There are more foreign born people in London than there are people born in the UK.
A lot of them are students and exchange workers, interns etc! Some go back some stay.
@@Paterleano students and their uncles, aunts, brothers, sisters, fathers, mothers and half a dozen kids. The country is knackered mate.
@@Paterleano why would any of them go back. we both know theyre staying. don't even lie here. they're staying mate
The Sunday roast isn't changing. Just because there's an asian "pub" jumping on the bandwagon it doesn't mean the English, Welsh, Scottish or Northern Irish are about to start copying it, far from it.
@@oelruof5816American style, slow cooked barbeque meat to replace the tradition English style roast beef would crush it. Their meat would go well with Yorkshires and veg.
@@carltonlambert7608 no thanks!
@@_CH_ Someone will do it and it'll be a massive success and a I hope it's a British company that does it and successfully sends it back to the US. We successfully take their music and make new genres out of it so why not their food in general as theirs is European food bastardised anyway plus through the internet were more curious about each others food more now. Makes sense to me from a business perspective.
@@carltonlambert7608 no thanks!
@@_CH_ What about french food?
Nothing beats a proper roast and pudding.
Im an indian being in England since 2019,and i love sunday roast and fish and chips, making fridays and sundays the best days of any week.
😊😊😊😊😊 🙋♀️
INDIA!!!!!!!!!!!
The irony that the English colonized so much of the world, but are now celebrating the diversity of their homeland. South Asian food became so popular that it evolved into it's own style of cuisine "British South Asian". The fact that specifically a Tamil pub is now popular is really cool, as the original South Asian immigration wave was mostly Bangladeshi.
Should note that even in Tamil Nadu, cuisines are diverse. My family is Tamil Brahman and thus traditionally vegetarian; my family doesn't make anything like this.
@@nahor88I’m English, on Christmas day we have a tradition Christmas turkey lunch, then in the evening we have samosa.
@@jimjiminy5836
I'm English, at the family gathering after Christmas we all have Indonesian food because granddad was posted to Malaysia.
Gravy is what makes Sunday Roast so special. Use the juices at the bottom of the roasting dish as the base, add a bit of flour then the cooking water from the veg, bit of wine and you are away.
add stock lemon mustard
@@johnny1897 Sadly lots of chickens are sold without giblets these days, which are essential for a good chicken stock.
Guinness instead of water or wine.
I'm American and I am happy to have learnED this from our cousins across the pond. Its beautiful!!
Learnt! 😉
@@tiffany7985 LOL I wondered how long before a Brit spoke up! 😀🤣
Learnt……Canadian here!
@@desigo6293 It's funny because my fiancee is Australian. We like each other's accents and verbal expressions. We agreed we should never lose them. Of course I don't have an accent. Only her.
Some of my all time favourite puddings and desserts come from England. Banoffee pie, apple crumble, Bakewell tart, custard tart, Eton mess, trifle, sticky toffee pudding, Battenberg cake, jam roly poly etc etc. There are so many!
Apple pie is a big one too!
Hilariously American that the first thing the newscasters started with was the dessert of the sticky toffee pudding rather than the mains 😂
We all know how bad the mains in the UK are, just generally speaking, but we also all watch the Great British Baking Show and now how fabulous it's desserts are.
@@PapagenoMF How is any of this food not nice? Lmao
@@PapagenoMFyou do realize that’s a hangover from ww2 when the allied soldiers visited Britain and said the food was bland. 80YEARS AGO DURING RATION TIMES. Have you ever actually been there? The best isn’t even in London. Fresh and full of flavour.
Tell me you’ve never visited without telling me you’ve never visited. 😅
@@PapagenoMF There's no 'we'.
You're just ignorant.
@@PapagenoMF🤡
I’m English with Polish and Italian parents. But we always had a Sunday roast. Cooked by an Italian mother it was sublime !
The whole world should partake in this with us every sunday
Was that the thought that kicked off the British Empire? 😅😂
Agreed! Looks so yummy!
@@pantheraleo1047 lol yes
Meh
@@toddevans5731 The whole world except you
I’ll eat anything. British food gets a bad rap, he got good food and bad food in any country and there’s nothing wrong with great tasting traditional, comfort food, I do love me some good bangers, and mash and a beautiful stout to go with that, I think if people visit the UK and give it some time they’ll find something very pleasing to the pallet. I did as an American.
This is one british dish I wanted to try for a long time.
I hope ALL of you know that a good gravy is essential to make all of this work. No gravy and you don't have much.
My mom would roast the beef in a large French roaster, drain the fat for Yorkshire pudding, then deglaze the pan while the roast sat and with a butter roux made a gravy, an outstanding gravy at that. Fat back into the roaster where the pudding was made and after it came out golden, the beef was carved, we all ate family style. Of course there was always plenty of side dishes to make things interesting.
Side note: During Thanksgiving break, my mom would post an invite at the local university for anyone that couldn't make it home could come to our house so we could enjoy the holiday together.
The gravy should be the first thing that you start, imho.
@@wessexdruid7598 I always wait for the roast to be done so I can utilize the 'fond' from the roasting pan. My gravy is always made from scratch, just before serving.
Can I come over?
@@randmayfield5695 Oh yeah, you gotta have the fond.
@@randmayfield5695 I use a stock base - and I find the flavours develop best over time, but certainly you need the final juices to finish.
4:47 this makes me really, really cross. There is no problem to ‘fix’. This chap has just put a different spin on a traditional meal, and good for him. However, real, home-cooked British food is neither bland nor boring, and I am sick to death of hearing non-Brits like this reporter say stuff like this. Change the bloody record and get out there and do some proper research. I recommend reading the excellent book ‘British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History’ by Colin Spencer as a good starting point to understanding our food culture and not the stereotypes made popular by American GI’s after WWII that have been perpetuated throughout media, film and TV.
Exactly!!! Considering the appalling food, laced with chemicals banned in huge swathes of the world, Americans have no room to criticize any other nation about their food.
It's very bland. You should try expanding your palate from Sherphards pie and othe wretched English food.
@@Railssob_Kaetson1 what a presumptuous and arrogant comment. Maybe you should expand your knowledge and try reading the book I recommended.
@@Railssob_Kaetson1 I MIGHT have a smidgeon of respect for your opinion if you could even spell what you denigrate.
As lamb is not a common meat in the US, most Americans will only know about Cottage Pie. Same concept, still totally different.
Also, in Britain, our livestock are raised purely on grass, to high welfare standards.
@@Simulacra719 Whcih English cuisine isn't bland?
After the Sunday roast comes Monday bubble and squeak. Take the left-overs (make sure you make enough on Sunday to ensure left-overs) Mash the roasties in with the mash. Tear the meat into small pieces, also the Yorkshires. Add the peas, cabbage and carrots. Mix together and fry in a pan. After a while the mix will be begin to, well, bubble and squeak. Great with (Cumberland) sausages and brown (HP) sauce.
Indian food is good and very popular in England, but calling Indian food a sunday roast is just ridiculous.
diversity is a good thing. but watering down other cultures traditions with anothers is how we start a race war. what a shame. just call it tamil food eaten on sunday. dont destroy a brittish tradition to make indians (who aren't even a minority in the world, brits are the minority! india is massive man) feel better because they chose to move abroad. what a shame.
That's not a Sunday roast and never will be, if I want a Sunday roast ill either have it at home or in a pub that cooks one.
Well England's National dish is Chicken Tikka Masala that's why its Popular
@@GlenB-qo7wdAnything you roast on a Sunday is well....a Sunday roast. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday ermmmm...not so much.
* UK
I should be in England next summer. I can't wait to try this out.
We look forward to welcoming you to our shores and hope you enjoy seeing the sights, sampling the varied cuisine and meeting the many friendly people that make up these isles.
Don’t go to a Toby carvery if you want a decent roast
@@teeniemcneeToby Carvery is a pretty authentic working class British experience. It’ll be fine if you’re on a budget. But if you can do better, find a non-chain pub with good reviews for their Sunday dinners
So yummy! I grew up with Sunday roast.. my mom was English and she continued this tradition raising me in the US… I can literally taste the food in this video..
“We couldn’t get a Sunday roast, so we got entirely unrelated food instead”
I love how the sunday roast is being embraced across the pond. I'm from Manchester and have met a few Americans here who always say they wish they could get it back home 😅
You can, you just have to cook it yourself. My sister and I have made Yorkshire pudding many times, mostly on Thanksgiving, usually with a big roast (and very good sides).
Why can't they cook it themselves? It's not difficult!
That looks absolutely scrumptious
I will never understand why people say (European mainly) that in England they don't eat well. Not onky in England, but in the entire UK, you will find everything from any corner of the world just a few steps from your home and with the best quality too. The best!
But, is it good?
People are talking about British cooking, not what other cultures have in the UK.
@@newname2600 I think the point is that British cooking is now an amalgamation of cultures from all over the world. That other British staple Fish and Chips? Brought to the UK by Jewish immigrants in the 17th century
@@glostergloster6945 I’m responding to a comment, not the video.
It’s only a roast with gravy and a simple pastry 😂. The rest of Europe would say this roast is eating normal. We would make a roast any random day, not necessarily for a festive family meal. On the continent, people would be happy to have a roast once in a while, but would be bored to tears to have it every week, especially if cooked always the same way. Also don’t forget the reporting is made by a U.S. journalist who thinks putting butter in a pan to grill a steak is cooking 😂.
Even when my parents came to the US, we always had a roast dinner (my favorite roast potatoes) every Sunday.
When I was a kid, most Sundays we'd go round to my Nan's house for a roast. We didn't have much money, so dinners in the week were often cheap stuff. Made the Sunday dinner 10x better.
Being with family was lovely as well, and something I appreciate more now looking back, but being a lad who played football 10 times a week it was the calories I wanted 😂
You can't beat a roast dinner if you're from England. It's still something special to me to this day, my polish wife is even better at making them than me.
The great thing about a Sunday roast is that it is straightforward food, no gimmicks.
Sunday roasts used to be common here in Sweden. after they had been to church. the only thing we didn't have with it was yorkshire pudding
We were in London and Manchester for 8 days in 1996. We had decent food from small places. We were not disappointed.
arfriedman,
Faint praise, at best . . . ☆
Nothing beats a Sunday roast
You can tell Tom Kerridge is English and the woman is Australian because they both know how to use a knife and fork properly not like two shovels the way the Americans use cutlery. And yes you can get a vegan/ vegetarian version of the Sunday roast.
Pardon me but this American does not shovel food in. I have class and manners and etiquette.
Did anyone else catch that Yorksheer pudding?
"is there a veggie option?" Ugh, yanks and their ignorance.
@@CanMav She was obviously making a joke. My god, you guys swear you have the best sense of humor in the world, but then an American makes a self-deprecating joke and you absolutely cannot fathom how it works.
They sound Antipodean to me pal.@@1bwash
@@1bwash You mean an American who's not literal? Now I know that you're joking.
@@wessexdruid7598 you guys are the ones who can't catch a simple sarcastic joke.
"In the countryside outside of London" 😂
Knowing Americans they could be talking about Berkshire or Scotland.
London CountrySide of India
@@jdanlemz210 so you haven't been to the UK then
@@Publiusaurusthat woman is Australian……
Indian food is great, but it's not a Sunday Roast. You can't say a Sunday Roast is bland, if you do, you are doing it wrong. Eating at a Toby Carvery is not having a Sunday Roast, it's like comparing McDonalds to a Five Guys.
Or pop music - v- Mozart.
Yes when I stayed with friends in Surrey England we did have roasts on Sunday. Minus the Yorkshire pudding. No roast pumpkin though. When I roast vegetables I always add pumpkin here in Australia, apparently it’s not eaten in the UK. But when we went out for a meal there it was in Indian establishments
Pumpkin is seen carved at Halloween, I would never eat the stuff. Squashes are ok for soup, that’s it. Never seen it in Indian restaurants here.
They were doing it wrong with no Yorkshires, though many think they should only be with beef.
@@nicolad8822pumpkin and a variety of squash are used in Indian cuisine. If all you do is carve a pumpkin you’re missing out on some great veggies 😂
Swedes and turnips are more common in the UK, mainly used in stews, roast parsnips are quite common with roasts, and my favourite.
That’s the problem with southerners. You should always have a Yorkshire Pudding with it. It’s the law.
I am Australian and we always had a Sunday roast every week growing up.
It's much more than just a meal, its all about family time. It's not something you can rush.
both those roasts look incredible
It's been over thirty years since I have had a good British meal. Roast lamb with mint sauce
Amazing!!!!! This is a tradition I can get behind!!
As a Brit if I'm not working on a sunday and we're all in as a family we will always cook a sunday dinner... It's easy to do but all about timings.
What a brilliant alternative that restaurant had to our traditional roast. Loved that!
Wow that looks glorious!
There are so many great pubs now
I lived in Brighton for ten years, and I had a specific pub I would go to in any part of the city for good food.
A sunday lunch is all about warmth, sitting with friends or family and enjoying a rewarding comforting meal after a long week
That fusion roast looked fantastic!
‘I want to try and cook that roast for my kids…’ lol. The Sunday Roast is enjoyed in Ireland and throughout the Commonwealth of Nations.
Oh the roast beef of old England and old English roast beef
We had our first Sunday roast of the “season” today. It was delicious. No apple crumple for dessert though🇨🇦🇨🇦😢😢
No crumble!!!! That should be illegal
Yes, they have veggie and vegan Sunday Roasts. Potatoes, carrots, mushroom gravies, that's all veg :) And traditional English nut loaf (a fantastic baked loaf that you slice, it has the look and feel of juicy meatloaf! Blew my mind the first time I tried it) is used instead of meat. Nut loaf is loved by meat folks in the UK too. So yes, veggie lovers enjoy British Sunday Roasts, absolutely!
English breakfast and Sunday roast......best in the world!
Must have Yorkshire puddings and stuffing with loads of gravy
Tradition is not in restaurant it's cooking and eating home with family
The way she said pasties cracked me up. I was not expecting that 🤣
let the others exist, sure, but never do away with the traditional roast and the like.
Here here. They may all exist, but we must make sure we never lose sight of as much of the original intended format of the dish as possible.
It'll never go away, its a great family meal without much complication
The Hand and Flowers was right next door to my school. In the 1980's (well before Tom bought it) it was the place where you find anyone form the lower years from the school enjoying a pint or two (Gr7-8 in modern terms) :)
My Mom used to make Sunday roast I always looked forward to it especially the pudding.
We grew up dirt poor, hot dogs and chicken patties for dinner during the week. But on Sundays, we always sat down as a family and had an actual dinner
I'm moving to England, now.
Exactly what I was thinking!
they are all in Spain.. whining..
@@RotiJohnPrata-h9o
They skim over here one of the most interesting things about roast beef, which is that the technique that made it and English cooks famous historically - spit roasting over an open fire - has almost entirely died out. This is important, as this means one's dealing with almost an entirely different product.
British cuisine is not just fish & chips, but a Sunday roast could be beef, leg of lamb, pork or chicken.
The smell and taste is amazing.
Beef Wellington is a favorite of mine 🤩
Fish and chips are a delight if cooked properly but sadly most chippies do not and many home cooks simply don't know how to do them.
Battered Mars bar, Trifle, Treakle sponge. There are so many heavenly desserts here too 😋
Saturday night is perfect for a traditional British curry night as we Brits love a bit of spice but there is nothing bland about British food, it’s uncomplicated and honest. There is nowhere to hide with a traditional Sunday roast of either beef, pork, lamb or chicken simply seasoned with salt and pepper and served with a traditional condiment such as mint, apple, or horseradish sauce or a nice blob of English mustard. Bring it on and pour that gravy.
I just ate, but my mouth is salivating
😂😂. .
My third arm is also salivating
Can confirm as an American who lived in the UK. Sunday roast and a Full English are the best!
I once roasted lamb ribs, pork belly, a topside joint, a whole duck, and a whole goose on the same day. We also made our own yorkies, gravy, and sides, such as cheesy cauliflower, parsnips, brussel sprouts, mash etc. Everything was perfection. You are meant to make this at home with friends and family, not order it at a pub.
This is the first in this string to mention British cheese. Good call mate!
I want to eat both. And I really like how the chef/pub owner had nothing but admiration and praise for the Tamil Crown.
That looks pretty good. Never saw a Yorkshire pudding that big before.
How else do you put sausage and gravy in one?
@@wessexdruid7598 Pure madness, I don't know. I've never had a sausage in my Yorkshire pudding. Only gravy. I'm American so I have gone soft I think.
@@curiousnomadic At least you're an American that has eaten Yorkshire pudding and gets it.
@@wessexdruid7598 Not only that, I have actually been to Yorkshire! Isn't that amazing. Black sheep ale right? Edit: I've been to York too. It left me in Shambles.
@@curiousnomadic There are shambles in lots of places - it's the name for where the butchers slaughtered their animals and sold the result.
There is a shambles just close to me - Bradford-on-Avon is south of Bath. th-cam.com/video/rXqcKi01LCk/w-d-xo.html
Edit - see at 0:36
Sunday roast and Sunday dinner are not always the same thing. It doesn’t mean one is better than the other. For me it’s about the family getting together. For those of you who go round their Mum’s or Nan’s house for Sunday dinner. Savour every moment and mouth full because you will spend a lifetime after they’re gone, trying to recreate it.
As much as I love Indian food, I’d have a normal Sunday dinner over that any day of the week.
Watching this is making me hungry!!
A proper English Sunday roast should be cooked in a kitchen, not purchased in a restaurant or pub.
Not so easy or worthwhile if ur a single person household
Oh man, it ALL looks divine.
Too bad Dean Martin and Don Rickles are no longer with us, they really liked a good roast.
🤣🤣🙄
I see what you did there....
let just say "best of both world"
with your passion to share food is a way to share peace and love in different idea.
i loved to taste everything from different chef perspectives in respect, everyone had their creativity and a nostalgia add into it.
Give me that first traditional meal any day. That looked fantastic.
The currey one i'd have from time to time but alsways prefere the traditional one.
Also, someone mentioned Christmas in the comments. There will be no curry what so ever at Christmas in my house. Christmas and Christmas food is a huge part of our culture. I would laugh at anyone that asked for a curry on Christmas day.
boxing day however...
Roast dinner is fabulous, the York shire pudding g is amazing
Pair Yorkshire pudding with potatoes, carrots, and a mushroom gravy for a vegetarian or vegan meal
Exactly. That’s a completely valid option for people who are vegetarian.
Traditional Yorkshire pudding is made with milk and eggs and cooked in beef drippings and gravy is also made from meat drippings. Not vegan at all.
Nope, not vegan. The Yorkies are made with milk and eggs
The pudding is made with milk and eggs. So you might as well eat the beef and stop putting on a show for everyone.
@@LisaG442 They could be made with vegan milk and egg substitutes
I get what hes saying but no other cuisine other than indian is being adopted to the extent theres fusion roast dinners. Britain just loves our version of indian food. Yorkshire pudding burritos are popular at festivals and some historic towns
Can’t beat homemade Yorkshire pudding
Watching this on a Sunday while my wife is making us a Sunday roast dinner 😎 just tops the weekend off.
that looks like good food
greetings from germany
I made the mistake of doing that for family years ago. I was elected the pub of Xmas and have been doing it ever since
Jamas supe que comian los Britanicos; esto es y se nota super delicioso
Nothing can beat a good old roast!!
If you want to know about anything English/ British, you definitely don’t want to go to London.
That depends on what u want to know
The saucepan yorkshire pudding that makes a bowl…wow.
Great food aside love how this video features an English, Australian and American accents in unison over a good Roast Meal. The United Kingdom interacting with their former/current colonies
Who’s current 😂😂😂😂