@@nat3007 Yeah and it’s not like they’re really hard to make. I don’t understand people who make such blanket statements on food when they’ve never actually had it at home. If you buy it from a supermarket then of course it’ll be shite lol
@@nat3007 I suppose they may exist as some sort of niche product (I once had a Scotch egg with crushed pickled onion monster munch instead of breadcrumbs and a pickled egg in the middle, it was quite nice). Even in London though a beef scotch egg must be odd.
Beans on toast in D tier???? My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined! Annnd then he goes on a put scotch eggs in F tier??? I'm literally crying and shaking rn.
@@luke_cohen1 And he's talking about British customs, so it's a fair correction, unless one is talking about the full English, then sausages are a breakfast thing.
I remember seeing on Reddit someone describing British foods as “something beige which you put in the oven at 170 for 20 minutes”. I think about that a lot.
I can’t get past the fact that Evan called baked beans a carbohydrate as part of the, ‘carb on carb action.’ I know this is nerdy but haricot beans (or baked beans) as well as all beans, are a protein. I like how this is what I found wrong with this... not that beans on toast should most definitely be in at least A tier, with the cheese pushing it up to S!
@@flappetyflippers I'm sure there's good American cheese, too, unfortunately, it's not the kind that's sold most in the supermarket, and not everyone lives close to a specialised cheese shop.
Was going to ask about that, then realised that that and Christmas Pudding are probably so low because he doesn't like raisins and that's 90% of what they are, so that makes sense. It's wrong, but it makes sense.
@@nat3007 there was that one medivial dish that was the legs of a pigs sewed to the head of a goose or something. I don't know what is was called though :(
Not raisins but dates are the traditional ingredient to put in a sticky toffee pudding, lot's of places still do it. I do agree however that it ruins the dessert for me.
"Tastes like cough sirup". Proceeds to put it higher than toad in the hole and Christmas pudding. Apparently Evan buys some really tasty cough sirup. ;-)
The trouble with pies is the results are so dependent on the ingredients; a good steak pie (made with stewing steak or braising steak) or a good chicken pie can be amazing, but so often the frozen ones you get in the supermarket aren't made with the same quality of meat (or you get gristly bits), and it definitely makes a difference! My rough plan when I make them is to slow-cook the filling like a casserole, and only then (hours later) is it ready for a pastry case!
That happens because you can like and comment immediately and you have to watch for a certain amount of time before it counts as a view so people dont get views from people watching the video for one second.
Evan. How can you rank a toad in the hole in D tier but Yorkshires in A tier. They are the same thing. In fact toad in the hole is even better bc it's just one absolutely giant Yorkshire pud slathered in gravy with some (cumberland) sausagey goodness too.
I'm from Yorkshire and Yorkshire puds are my favourite bit of a roast but I have to agree toad in the hole isn't that great. Yorkshire puds need to be light and fluffy (and much easier to make smaller) the sausages weigh it down and you always end up with a too thick chunk of soupy batter in the middle of a toad in the hole in my experience. Yorkshire puds should cook in hot fat, so they balloon up! Thin layers of crunchy, then light and airy batter! Maybe I've just had bad toad in the hole though.
If you make it right Toad in the Hole is light and fluffy and the sausages don’t just sit on top like what that’s about they should be IN the hole 😤 a good Toad in the Hole is S class all the way.
@@hanvyj2 I’m sad that you’ve never had a decent toad in the hole. It is a hard dish to nail but once you’ve perfected it it’s literally the most incredible thing - absolute S tier and beyond 😍 I hope you persevere and have a tasty toad some time soon
No just make Christmas Dinner as normal and have bubble and squeak for weeks after!!!! (Put extra turkey in gravy in the oven for a bit and it's literally the best thing)
I visited in 2005 and stayed at a youth hostel, so we saved money by getting things in the store and cooking in the hostel's kitchen for half our meals. But the ones we did have out, I really liked. We had a Cornish Pasty from a street stall in Bath that was amazing, delightful scones and tea in Glastonbury, and the hostel had a serve-yourself breakfast bar with all the items each morning. The biggest shock to me was those beans were cold. I'd never had cold baked beans before. Everything, even the blood pudding, was very tasty. (also, I've had haggis and love it.)
Evan just violated me. He obviously never grew up in the uk and went home from an early morning club on a Saturday and nibbled on a scotch egg and feeling great. Scotch eggs are S tier. No further questions
Missed out my favourite Sunday teatime meal, rissoles. Dad used to make them by mincing left over roast beef with an onion, seasoning them, patting them in flour to a disc shape then frying them. They were so light and fluffy and ate them with lots of brown sauce.
I am from Northern Ireland and am going to America for college. I didn’t realise America didn’t have Sunday roasts and now I am so sad, it is my favourite meal and I look forward to having it every sunday
We do have roast dinners, but I don’t think it’s as much of a thing and no Yorkshire pudding. My mom would make something similar after church when I was growing up.
American food is very regional, some parts of the country do Sunday roasts but it depends where you are (and possibly where your family immigrated from)
My parents local butcher made ones that were about the size of a man's fist and had black pudding sausage meat. I was so-so on scotch eggs before I tried them. Now everything else pales in comparison.
Banoffee pie is an English dessert pie made from bananas, cream and a thick caramel sauce, combined either on a buttery biscuit base or one made from crumbled biscuits and butter. Some versions of the recipe also include chocolate, coffee or both.
27 seconds in, ready to get triggered Ok, I’ll stay subbed purely for the chicken tikka masala respect. Truly a god tier meal. The Welsh cake SLANDER however, is unforgivable. They are an elite snack and clearly you’ve not had proper ones. I’m talking hot from the pan dripping in sugar and cooked by a little old granny called Gwenyth deep in the Welsh hills. Perfection in its purest form is a Welsh cake.
I am currently for one year studying in england and proud I have already eaten nearly everything on this list:) i was actually introduced to chip butty on my very first day and asked numerous times if it is really the right way to put the chips on the bun... I always say that british food not often looks delicious but often surprises you in a positive way;)) And I want to add that eventhough in every tv commercial there is christmas pudding, but nobody I talked to about it actually liked it. A weird tradition that is hated by most if the country.
@@SeaKnight_Rory fair enough. Tbh I cant handle sweetness much at all because eight year old me was so dedicated to being not like other girls that I just stopped eating sweets. Now its physically difficult to eat stuff like chocolate ice cream but sticky toffee pudding is just. So good
My brother stoicly hated mince pies for 25ish years, until he tried homemade mince pies a few years ago and now hes hooked, I understand maybe you don't like them because of your raisin aversion but id recommend home baked ones!
Hate to break it to you Evan but even the sticky toffee puddings ‘without dates’ still almost definitely have dates in them, they’re just blended/mushed up into the sponge mixture!
I’d have agreed with you on Bakewell tart - until I went to the village of Bakewell and had the most incredible tasting desert I ever imagined! Bakewell tart, from Bakewell is a taste sensation! Go there, try it (after covid, of course). There’s also a Bakewell pudding, just as amazing
@@elladriver7357 I prefer crumbles to cobblers. Nice bit of crunch and texture to a good crumble. My gran made a wonderful gooseberry crumble, and I've never seen them for sale. :(
Evan, I'm a firm believer you need someone from the countryside to take you around the little pubs that have an amazing chef that do FANTASTIC beef welly and cakes etc. Bc you're in London and Londoners are more concerned with it looking flashy etc which yeah fair enough it has its place. (Patissery and fancy restaurants mainly) Edit/further clarification: I think the joy of British food comes from being on a long cold walk or helping in the allotment and then having a treat that's hot and stodgy. I honestly don't cook British classics during summer, I'm usually in for a stir fry or burgers etc but in winter is when you want potatoes and gravy with everything. I think the American equivalent is the sort of stuff cowboys eat (according to food network). Good, hearty meals for working all day.
Banoffee Pie was invented at the now, sadly defunct, Hungry Monk restaurant in Jevington, East Sussex. If you follow the northern variation on the South Down's way from Eastbourne to Alfriston, you go right past it. For anybody who walks that route, there is a blue plaque up on the wall of the Hungry Monk cottages to commemorate it.
You've put Cumberland Sausage and Yorkshire Pudding in A, but Toad in the Hole in D? But Toad in the Hole is just sausage in Yorkshire Pudding, basically...
@@Hellfirem4ge toad in the hole doesn't have the crisp airy lightness of a Yorkshire pud. Maybe I've just never had a good one. But the ones I've had are too thick and battery.
@@hanvyj2 you've definitely not had a good one then. It should be nice and crispy on the outside and light and fluffy in the middle just like a normal Yorkshire pudding
For the records, other countries have black pudding too. Just to name some, there's morcilla, Blutwurst and sanguinaccio. There's also a sweet version. Not everyone's cup of tea but I love them.
Bakewell puddings from the town of Bakewell are soooooo much better than any tarts that I've ever tried. It's worth visiting for them and, it has the bonus of being in the peak district so there are some good walks around as well.
my heart broke when you put bangers and mash low. it's one of the dishes that helped me through some incredibly hard times. even now, as a vegetarian, i seek out veggie sausages to have in my bangers and mash because it's just one of my comfort foods.
I really miss the one that came by us years ago! Fond memories of going down the street to get like a dozen fish and chips for the workers who helped us get the silage in each year on the farm😊 fish n chips is deffo a class of its own!
@@lornatw you see in America, we have grandma’s homemade apple pie with aunties homemade vanilla ice cream on top, complete with eating outside on a porch watching fireworks on forth of July, a bald eagle flying over head, the national anthem being sung loudly while holding red solo cups. Now that’s a freedom pie 😂 (this is a joke idk anyone who is like this please do not take this as a representation of all Americans.)
As a kid I would have totally agreed with you about Christmas puddings and mince pies but now I’ve really grown to love them! Also basic scones are fine, but throw some spices in there and they go up a good couple of tiers
Omg a Victoria Sponge scone and Yorkshire pud are S class. They are just perfection. A Victoria sponge done correctly is not dry. Great vid as always. Merry Christmas.
As vegetarian from Yorkshire I am ready to square up with anyone who says they don't like Yorkshire puddings. Especially for me, they are the best part of a Sunday roast.
Sticky toffee pudding, also known as sticky date pudding in Australia and New Zealand, is an English dessert consisting of a very moist sponge cake, made with finely chopped dates, covered in a toffee sauce and often served with a vanilla custard or vanilla ice-cream. (Wikipedia)
@@MsPeabody1231 I mean literally. Legally. They have to (unless they're homemade but you gotta be a pretty good cook to pull that of to quite the level of a perfect pasty).
@@karankhatana9528 actually the tikka masala was invented in Britain and curry culture has become rather prevalent Also if not original kebabs have been adopted as the drunk mans food
Have you ever tried Egg Custard tarts? Also- Bangers and mash can be improved by cooking grated cheese onto the mash, making cheese and potato pie. Then you serve with beans as well as the sausages
With many of these, I think it may also be a bit of the case that Evan and friends are not the best at cooking said recipes (at least for a home cooked meal), as these meals can be quite unforgiving if made poorly. A Victoria Sponge for example, is just a plain regular cake, using a sponge that is quite common in cake recipes. If it's dry, it has likely been left out too long or baked too long. Though they are also known to be temperamental, which is why oven manufacturers use sponge recipes for testing the temperatures in ovens. One thing I've noticed about Yorkshire pudding recipes is that they often have one egg in the recipe, possibly because the recipe books came about when we were a bit more restrictive on eggs. I've found that three eggs causes your puddings to take off faster than a Northerner in London upon finding out about Tier 4. A good Yorkshire pudding recipe is the difference between making a hearty toad in the hole and a stodgy mess. Also, in my controversial opinion, a roast dinner varies greatly in quality depending on if the roast in question is beef, lamb, or chicken. And yet, Evan still has yet to actually try an actual cheese toastie (which is different to cheese on toast) which is a toasted cheese sandwich that has been pressed together. Even doyenne of middle class London Pret knows that! And finally, if you find beans on toast a strange idea, in Australia there is a popular children's treat called fairy bread: a buttered slice of white bread topped with sprinkles/hundreds and thousands. And is apparently delightful.
Definitely a fan of Pret's cheese toastie, although they've either done away with it, here in the US or rechristened it as a grilled cheese sandwich. :-o
What!!!! Lincolnshire sausages in E tier!!! That feels bad as I'm from Lincolnshire, you need to try some the local butcher back where I grew up (I'll tell you privately the name of the butcher if you want to try them so I don't reveal where exactly I grew up), they are amazing, though a generic one from a supermarket I can see why. Also go to melton mowbray to get a really proper pork pie. Also homemade bakewell tart is much better than a commercial one.
The batter you'd make yorkshire puddings with is the same as you'd use for pancakes. If you need to describe them to somebody they are savoury pancakes made in the oven
You should really make the internet mad at you and do the same kind of ranking for entire national cuisines: is German food better, worse , or on a par with English food? How about Greek, or American?, etc.
Evan, you need to try the Morello Cherry Bakewell Tart, it is found in the Frozen section near other cakes, pastries, and the like. I have seen it most recently in Tesco's, but have also had it from Iceland before. Make sure to follow the cooking instructions and enjoy.
Ok so I'm ready to get really upset and edit this comment about 100 times DO NOT COME FOR THE BANGERS AND MASH? WHEN ELSE WOULD YOU EAT SAUSAGE? NOT THE BEANS ON TOAST?? BEANS ON TOAST IS GOD TIER Black pudding is gross f tier ):< IT IS NOT ABOVE BEANS ON TOASTT Chip buttys are class I think you did it justice there Fish and chips are god tier Pork pies are SO GOOD Ok so a fresh handmade scotch egg is god tier HOW DARE YOU PUT IT IN F Sunday roast is absolutely ELITE 👏🏻 Yorkshire pudding is definitely s tier Bakewell tarts are well overrated banoffee pie is a crime agaisnt humanity Christmas pudding is awful my nan makes one every year it's always REALLY BAD Mince pies are one of those eh things you only eat at christmas cos it's a christmas thing Scones are god tier I will accept no other answer Treacle tart has that primary school pudding nostalgia which is why I think its s tier just because of that NOSTALGIAAAA You have done Victoria sponge dirty there me mam makes a banging Victoria sponge Welsh cakes are pretty good but I'm not keen on raisins so
No apple crumble? Or any crumble like blackberry or rhubarb. Also no cauliflower cheese, pigs in blankets, Lancashire hotpot, Battenberg cake, thin pancakes with sugar and lemon, crumpets, hot cross buns, spotted dick, bread and butter pudding, knickerbocker glory or jam roly-poly. Ok now I’m hungry
Your placement of trifle disappointed me. Gets an F from me, I can’t believe the audacity of Victoria sponge & scone placement! That killed me off. They gotta be S tier, the most superior foods.
Man's never had a good Victoria Sponge if he's put it with fucking christmas pudding
I think that's his point.
He called Victoria Sponge dry. They're light a fluffy not dry. So that makes me think he's had only bad ones.
Christmas spud is the best
He didn't have English Grandparents. He just doesn't understand...
@@nat3007
Yeah and it’s not like they’re really hard to make. I don’t understand people who make such blanket statements on food when they’ve never actually had it at home. If you buy it from a supermarket then of course it’ll be shite lol
I think the problem Evan has with Scotch eggs is that he's the only person in the UK to be inexplicably finding beef ones.
yeah that what I said
@@nat3007 I suppose they may exist as some sort of niche product (I once had a Scotch egg with crushed pickled onion monster munch instead of breadcrumbs and a pickled egg in the middle, it was quite nice). Even in London though a beef scotch egg must be odd.
@@nat3007 2 shops? Luxury!
No wonder he put it in F tier who uses beef instead of pork for a scotch egg?
That was my first thought where the hell did he get beef in a scotch egg??
Beans on toast in D tier???? My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined! Annnd then he goes on a put scotch eggs in F tier??? I'm literally crying and shaking rn.
i know right
I’m with you Evan. Stand strong. Beans on Toast are 🤢
CHEESE ON TOAST IS DIFFERENT than beans and cheese on toast!!!
@@CodeDeb spaghetti on toast. Ftw.
Lmao what a British response
I love how these comments are just 80% Brits roasting the hell out of Evan's assessment
YESS
i needs to be im barley into the video and raging.
As we should
Well, we DO love a good roast, and even Evan put a roast in S tier!
I'm offended as a Brit to watch you place BANGERS AND MASH SO LOW. you have sinned sir.
Not only that: He forgot the onion gravy! Sacrilege!
Also sausages are a tea thing not a breakfast
@@luke_cohen1 And he's talking about British customs, so it's a fair correction, unless one is talking about the full English, then sausages are a breakfast thing.
Cheese on toast somehow better than bangers and mash??
This was so upsetting
me: comes into this video in an effort to keep an open mind
Evan: puts beans on toast in D tier
me: >:( *clenches fists angrily*
I remember seeing on Reddit someone describing British foods as “something beige which you put in the oven at 170 for 20 minutes”. I think about that a lot.
Where is the lie??
Em excuse me. It’s 180
Sausages are dark beige, actually
A plate of chips, fish fingers or chicken dippers and beans is the best beige meal or as we call it, british tapas
180 for me. But yes, we are either a shade of beige or red.
Never before has one man been this wrong
HAHAHA
You forgot apple crumble! A quintessentially British desert.
He probably meant crumble when he said cobbler
@@AntonoirJacques I did watch it and think WTF is a cobbler apart from someone who fixes shoes?
@@jameslewis2635 pretty sure cobbler is a savoury dish made with lamb or beef - no idea why he's on about putting peaches and apples in there.
And bread and butter pudding although not actually sure where it originated. And Pineapple upside down cake. And rice pudding (with nutmeg)!
With custard.
Have to say level D probably offended every British person at a basic DNA level.
I can’t get past the fact that Evan called baked beans a carbohydrate as part of the, ‘carb on carb action.’ I know this is nerdy but haricot beans (or baked beans) as well as all beans, are a protein. I like how this is what I found wrong with this... not that beans on toast should most definitely be in at least A tier, with the cheese pushing it up to S!
Exactly
Can't beans be both? Carbs and protein?
@@apainintheaas I guess they can, I didn’t think about that, they’re just more often considered protein, but yeah I suppose you’re right!
I also thought that! But I get what he means as in like stodge factor and texture... But cheesy beans on a baked potato is one of my absolute faves ❤
Beans have about 2-3 times as much carbs as protein, and by itself it's not a complete protein, so I think it's solidly a carb
Did evan really just say "american stable" cheese. American cheese is borderline plastic.
No, he was saying that cheese is an American staple, not that they cheese we use is that American plastic.
It is plastic. No question. In my opinion the British and the French have the best cheese. No question.
@@flappetyflippers I'm sure there's good American cheese, too, unfortunately, it's not the kind that's sold most in the supermarket, and not everyone lives close to a specialised cheese shop.
@@barvdw So you're telling us you can't buy a nice bit of Brie, Edam, Gouda or Camembert in American supermarkets?
You can’t get good fresh American cheese in the uk
*places Scotch Egg in F tier*
You have sinned.
im scottish and scotch eggs are VILE
@@MikuPoutQueen Ye lads can't say shit with yer haggis.
And the fact he said scOne not scone.
Yo.....as an Indian Australian I can say that a premium scotch egg is a perfect snack.
Haggis is great
I didn’t know how offended I could feel from just an American man disrespecting our food - HOW CAN YOU HATE MINCE PIES????
I know right! Mince pies are delicious!
I’m making my first minced pie this Christmas! I’m excited (and American).
They’re so good! My respect for him is destroyed 😡😡😡
And how the HELL did he compare them to a POP TART?!!!!
Was going to ask about that, then realised that that and Christmas Pudding are probably so low because he doesn't like raisins and that's 90% of what they are, so that makes sense. It's wrong, but it makes sense.
You literally started a war with every British person
mhm
@@nat3007 there was that one medivial dish that was the legs of a pigs sewed to the head of a goose or something. I don't know what is was called though :(
@@nat3007 we totally should
@@nat3007 he should also add Bradford curries, HOLY TEA, and coffee that you've left for 30 mins and is now cold
@@nat3007 I'm not sure
the victoria sponge cake is gODLIKE how DARE YOU
Who the heck is putting raisins in a sticky toffee pudding? That deserves a very solid tut.
Raisins in sticky toffee pudding is yum
@@susanesmith1 BURN THE HERETIC!
I think I've heard of people putting Dates in them, yet doesn't having raisins in them make them Spotted Dick with Toffee Sauce?
Not raisins but dates are the traditional ingredient to put in a sticky toffee pudding, lot's of places still do it. I do agree however that it ruins the dessert for me.
@@susanesmith1 please stop 😿😿
"Tastes like cough sirup". Proceeds to put it higher than toad in the hole and Christmas pudding. Apparently Evan buys some really tasty cough sirup. ;-)
Strawberry calpol is the only answer to that
Cough syrup can taste good
Anyone gonna mention he said a scotch egg was beef
I was shook. It’s pork god dammit. Also I’ve had some excellent scotch eggs. Like pulled pork, warm, with the runny egg.
Lol he said the pork pies were beefy so...
@@nat3007 not the person you were asking but yes not in the same way tho one of the most common pies is steak, gravy and onion
@@kerri01 I think he meant beefy like really filling? Not that it is actually beef
@@nat3007 He said they were eggs wrapped in beef
The trouble with pies is the results are so dependent on the ingredients; a good steak pie (made with stewing steak or braising steak) or a good chicken pie can be amazing, but so often the frozen ones you get in the supermarket aren't made with the same quality of meat (or you get gristly bits), and it definitely makes a difference! My rough plan when I make them is to slow-cook the filling like a casserole, and only then (hours later) is it ready for a pastry case!
31 likes and 0 views. Thanks TH-cam
And for the record I forgot Welsh rarebit but I rate it above a cheese toastie!
0 views and 2 likes 😂
That happens because you can like and comment immediately and you have to watch for a certain amount of time before it counts as a view so people dont get views from people watching the video for one second.
Pictures for ants?! Not everyone knows all the dishes...
scotch eggs have pork not beef you dirty heathen lol
AND SAUSAGE ROLLS!
Evan- moans about british food for years
Also Evan- only scores 9 dishes at below average
I mean that is the perfect British thing to do, if you're not moaning about something or other, you ain't British.
@@teadrinkingturret2088 ah very true but I doubt you'll hear some knock a Tikka Masala
@@turtlingmywaydown3999Ah yes, the national dish...
Chicken Tikka Masala
Evan. How can you rank a toad in the hole in D tier but Yorkshires in A tier. They are the same thing. In fact toad in the hole is even better bc it's just one absolutely giant Yorkshire pud slathered in gravy with some (cumberland) sausagey goodness too.
Yeah. Its like 2 things mashed togetehr
I'm from Yorkshire and Yorkshire puds are my favourite bit of a roast but I have to agree toad in the hole isn't that great. Yorkshire puds need to be light and fluffy (and much easier to make smaller) the sausages weigh it down and you always end up with a too thick chunk of soupy batter in the middle of a toad in the hole in my experience.
Yorkshire puds should cook in hot fat, so they balloon up! Thin layers of crunchy, then light and airy batter!
Maybe I've just had bad toad in the hole though.
I totally agree
If you make it right Toad in the Hole is light and fluffy and the sausages don’t just sit on top like what that’s about they should be IN the hole 😤 a good Toad in the Hole is S class all the way.
@@hanvyj2 I’m sad that you’ve never had a decent toad in the hole. It is a hard dish to nail but once you’ve perfected it it’s literally the most incredible thing - absolute S tier and beyond 😍 I hope you persevere and have a tasty toad some time soon
As someone who's only exited Lincoln a few times in my life, there's 2 types of sausages: Lincolnshire sausages, and bad sausages.
After this evenings news, beans on toast for Christmas dinner, for the win!
No just make Christmas Dinner as normal and have bubble and squeak for weeks after!!!!
(Put extra turkey in gravy in the oven for a bit and it's literally the best thing)
There's an assumption there will be any beans left to buy
Christmas is a roast where the food should drown even more in gravy
I visited in 2005 and stayed at a youth hostel, so we saved money by getting things in the store and cooking in the hostel's kitchen for half our meals. But the ones we did have out, I really liked. We had a Cornish Pasty from a street stall in Bath that was amazing, delightful scones and tea in Glastonbury, and the hostel had a serve-yourself breakfast bar with all the items each morning. The biggest shock to me was those beans were cold. I'd never had cold baked beans before. Everything, even the blood pudding, was very tasty. (also, I've had haggis and love it.)
Evan just violated me. He obviously never grew up in the uk and went home from an early morning club on a Saturday and nibbled on a scotch egg and feeling great. Scotch eggs are S tier. No further questions
As a welsh person, I can attest that Welsh cakes are made with currants or sultanas (not raisins) - there is a difference and it matters
Where's the difference between sultanas and raisins? I've been thinking it's the same thing for my whole live now!
I was today years old when I learnt that trifle is a British food and not international.
Really you didn’t know?
You can find it in Italy too, it's called "English soup" 😄
@@ioanapirate7537 fr? That’s crazy lmao.
@@ioanapirate7537 Good ol' zuppa inglese.
@@ioanapirate7537 hahaha
Welcome back to a man who if he were a bear would be called Evan Edin-GRRRRR
someone clearly hasn't ever had a scotch egg that isn't from the supermarket...
I was shocked when he put the Scotch egg in F tier. How can someone be that wrong about anything
I can't believe you missed sausage rolls! Our Christmas number 1 for the last 2 years have been songs about sausage rolls...
Wow, Evan you forgot to have sausage rolls on your list, LadBaby would be offended. You also forgot Jam Roly Poly.
Jam roly poly is elite.
Crumpets
It’s probably for the best - what if he rated it low alongside baked beans.
Don't forget the Custard on the Jam Roly Poly.
Custard makes most deserts better.
Or Custard-based Ice Cream.
@@sam_laufeyson_monroe yes completely forgot about crumpets.
Missed out my favourite Sunday teatime meal, rissoles. Dad used to make them by mincing left over roast beef with an onion, seasoning them, patting them in flour to a disc shape then frying them. They were so light and fluffy and ate them with lots of brown sauce.
I am from Northern Ireland and am going to America for college. I didn’t realise America didn’t have Sunday roasts and now I am so sad, it is my favourite meal and I look forward to having it every sunday
It has vegetables in it, of course the yanks don't have it
Dude, I feel so bad for you. I'm an American and I grew up on sunday roast. I don't know whats happening in other parts of the US, but I am so sorry!
F
We do have roast dinners, but I don’t think it’s as much of a thing and no Yorkshire pudding. My mom would make something similar after church when I was growing up.
American food is very regional, some parts of the country do Sunday roasts but it depends where you are (and possibly where your family immigrated from)
"a jar of golden syrup poured into a tart" : *is literally called TREACLE tart*
Scotch eggs, have you ever had a homemade one? 100% better than any commercial made ones and are about the size of a tennis ball
Thissss fresh homemade scotch egg is just unexplainable but amazing
My parents local butcher made ones that were about the size of a man's fist and had black pudding sausage meat. I was so-so on scotch eggs before I tried them. Now everything else pales in comparison.
There’s an amazing scotch egg place in Bath. Pulled pork scotch egg, or a turkey and cranberry one. So many choices.
I made them in school, it was fun. Never have since though (and now I'm vegetarian!)
@@DairyFreeAutism yess someone else from bath!!
Banoffee pie is an English dessert pie made from bananas, cream and a thick caramel sauce, combined either on a buttery biscuit base or one made from crumbled biscuits and butter. Some versions of the recipe also include chocolate, coffee or both.
27 seconds in, ready to get triggered
Ok, I’ll stay subbed purely for the chicken tikka masala respect. Truly a god tier meal.
The Welsh cake SLANDER however, is unforgivable. They are an elite snack and clearly you’ve not had proper ones. I’m talking hot from the pan dripping in sugar and cooked by a little old granny called Gwenyth deep in the Welsh hills. Perfection in its purest form is a Welsh cake.
I had a Welsh cake from morrisons when in Aberystwyth, absolutely disgusting. Never had a real one but these were full of gritty raisins and just eww.
Welsh cakes are fit. They do some great ones in Cardiff indoor Market 😋😋😋😋
I feel the same way about his views on Victoria sponges he clearly has not had good cakes smh
Never get the ones from her cousin Bronwyn who lives two down, mind you, they're fit for the chickens to eat!
@@evorock I might know the place actually my brother's girlfriend used to work there it's delicious
I am currently for one year studying in england and proud I have already eaten nearly everything on this list:) i was actually introduced to chip butty on my very first day and asked numerous times if it is really the right way to put the chips on the bun... I always say that british food not often looks delicious but often surprises you in a positive way;))
And I want to add that eventhough in every tv commercial there is christmas pudding, but nobody I talked to about it actually liked it. A weird tradition that is hated by most if the country.
I thought the video was nearly over at 9:30, then Evan moved up and revealed EVEN MORE
Evan starting the video by immediately putting Bangers and Mash and Beans on Toast in D should be a war crime.
If sticky toffee pudding isnt in atleast A I will be incredibly upset
how do you feel?
@@Gingerninja800 mad as heck
I love the dessert but..... It's a bit sweet.... I'd much rather have an apple crumble with a bit of sourness to it.
@@SeaKnight_Rory fair enough. Tbh I cant handle sweetness much at all because eight year old me was so dedicated to being not like other girls that I just stopped eating sweets. Now its physically difficult to eat stuff like chocolate ice cream but sticky toffee pudding is just. So good
My brother stoicly hated mince pies for 25ish years, until he tried homemade mince pies a few years ago and now hes hooked, I understand maybe you don't like them because of your raisin aversion but id recommend home baked ones!
Hate to break it to you Evan but even the sticky toffee puddings ‘without dates’ still almost definitely have dates in them, they’re just blended/mushed up into the sponge mixture!
Thats exactly what I was thinking. I remember making it in school and it was like 50% dates but it ended up tasting amazing so I guess I dont care.
I’d have agreed with you on Bakewell tart - until I went to the village of Bakewell and had the most incredible tasting desert I ever imagined! Bakewell tart, from Bakewell is a taste sensation! Go there, try it (after covid, of course). There’s also a Bakewell pudding, just as amazing
I don't know if this is a north/south thing, but I've never heard a "crumble" called a "cobbler". It's a crumble because it has a crumbly top.
A cobbler is different to a crumble. Cobblers have a topping that is more the consistency of scones.
@@robinlizzy That doesn't sound as nice as a crumble 🥺
@@elladriver7357 I prefer crumbles to cobblers. Nice bit of crunch and texture to a good crumble. My gran made a wonderful gooseberry crumble, and I've never seen them for sale. :(
@@hanvyj2 anything that starts "my gran made" has to be good. Gooseberry crumble sounds amazing
@@elladriver7357 true! It helps it's one of those flavours that I've literally never tasted anywhere else.
Evan, I'm a firm believer you need someone from the countryside to take you around the little pubs that have an amazing chef that do FANTASTIC beef welly and cakes etc. Bc you're in London and Londoners are more concerned with it looking flashy etc which yeah fair enough it has its place. (Patissery and fancy restaurants mainly)
Edit/further clarification: I think the joy of British food comes from being on a long cold walk or helping in the allotment and then having a treat that's hot and stodgy. I honestly don't cook British classics during summer, I'm usually in for a stir fry or burgers etc but in winter is when you want potatoes and gravy with everything. I think the American equivalent is the sort of stuff cowboys eat (according to food network). Good, hearty meals for working all day.
the word tier is SENSITIVE at the moment evan...... (yes i’m salty about being in tier 4) also trifle is eliteeeee but i thought everyone ate it aha
see only reason I like tier 4 is cause it means I'm not in the highest tier here in Lincolnshire anymore but I feel sorry for yall
@@lyrawaters7742 ayyy Lincolnshire friend! Did you see the Lincolnshire sausage slander? Hahaha
@@hollyhales2831 was outraged I'm sorry but they are the only good thing coming out this county and they are far superior
I honestly don't know what my opinion on trifle is! I don't think I like the the custard bit but can't fault it otherwise.
I would be in tier 4, but in early 2020 I moved up North to Liverpool, where my accent is a conversation starter now. so only tier 2 for me
Can't wait to see the community vid for this next weekx
Yes!
No no no my butchers makes real scotch eggs and omg fricking S tier. Yes supermarket ones are a solid F but wow a real one and its heaven
Yeah, this. There really is a world of difference between a good and bad Scotch Egg.
Banoffee Pie was invented at the now, sadly defunct, Hungry Monk restaurant in Jevington, East Sussex. If you follow the northern variation on the South Down's way from Eastbourne to Alfriston, you go right past it. For anybody who walks that route, there is a blue plaque up on the wall of the Hungry Monk cottages to commemorate it.
You've put Cumberland Sausage and Yorkshire Pudding in A, but Toad in the Hole in D? But Toad in the Hole is just sausage in Yorkshire Pudding, basically...
Better separate, in my opinion, and I'm from Yorkshire!
@@hanvyj2 you sir, are a traitor to your kind 😅
@@Hellfirem4ge toad in the hole doesn't have the crisp airy lightness of a Yorkshire pud. Maybe I've just never had a good one. But the ones I've had are too thick and battery.
@@hanvyj2 you've definitely not had a good one then. It should be nice and crispy on the outside and light and fluffy in the middle just like a normal Yorkshire pudding
@@Hellfirem4ge well then I guess I haven't had a good one since I've had the same experience as @ANameThatIsn'tMyOwn
For the records, other countries have black pudding too. Just to name some, there's morcilla, Blutwurst and sanguinaccio. There's also a sweet version. Not everyone's cup of tea but I love them.
Sausage and mash in Tier D because the sausages aren't good enough but Cumberland sausages in Tier A.
Wha?!
Yep, it makes no sense at all....it's like he's had some crap ready meal version and judges it on that!
ABSOLUTELY NOT
it's just I use sausages mostly for breakfast and so my decision was based on that
@@evan OK, so bangers and mash for breakfast would be criminal, but there are many times in the day a sausage can be eaten beyond then.
Bakewell puddings from the town of Bakewell are soooooo much better than any tarts that I've ever tried. It's worth visiting for them and, it has the bonus of being in the peak district so there are some good walks around as well.
Beans on toast with grated cheddar and hp sauce is a solid S tier
Absolutely.
Correct!
my heart broke when you put bangers and mash low. it's one of the dishes that helped me through some incredibly hard times.
even now, as a vegetarian, i seek out veggie sausages to have in my bangers and mash because it's just one of my comfort foods.
We have a fish and chip van that drives round my local area and sells fish and chips in car parks and it is the greatest invention ever
Yep, we often get them visiting on caravan sites, they have a rota as to when they come. Always a fun treat Whedon on holiday.
I really miss the one that came by us years ago! Fond memories of going down the street to get like a dozen fish and chips for the workers who helped us get the silage in each year on the farm😊 fish n chips is deffo a class of its own!
The flip of Evan's video from the bottom to the top when he was half way through the list was SO SATISFYING! Also loved the little heart/kiss edit!
I’m nearly losing my mind because haggis and Christmas pudding aren’t perfectly lined up with the rest 🤯
As someone from Cornwall, I felt alot of pride when you were talking about cornish pasties ngl 😂
But absolutely NOT when he called them British and never seems to have eaten an actual Cornish one 😂
U speak of them like u didnt steal them from devon...
I agree, you should never put raisins in a sticky toffee pudding
They are dates not raisins but are still quite similar. I still agree though.
This is the reason as a child I would never eat one because of raisins being in it 😂
Some people put sultanas in them 🤢 I love dates but hate sultanas
"It's definitely above average."
*Proceeds to put more foods into that category than any others*
The difference between British and American apple pie: freedom. When I tell you I almost fell of my chair laughing I’m not kidding 😂😂😂
We have like a whole selection of different apple pies in the UK
@@lornatw you see in America, we have grandma’s homemade apple pie with aunties homemade vanilla ice cream on top, complete with eating outside on a porch watching fireworks on forth of July, a bald eagle flying over head, the national anthem being sung loudly while holding red solo cups. Now that’s a freedom pie 😂 (this is a joke idk anyone who is like this please do not take this as a representation of all Americans.)
@@annaf2828 ah haha, i just got to that part in the video! Love it haha
Yes, we all had a little chuckle at that one.
@@annaf2828 this just made my day! 😂
As a kid I would have totally agreed with you about Christmas puddings and mince pies but now I’ve really grown to love them!
Also basic scones are fine, but throw some spices in there and they go up a good couple of tiers
And glace cherries!
The sausage snobbery is real here.
Scones should be much higher! Yes it can get messy which is why you have a plate and a fork. I LOVE them!
Omg a Victoria Sponge scone and Yorkshire pud are S class. They are just perfection. A Victoria sponge done correctly is not dry. Great vid as always. Merry Christmas.
Yorkshire pudding is above S tier that stuff is God tier.
As vegetarian from Yorkshire I am ready to square up with anyone who says they don't like Yorkshire puddings. Especially for me, they are the best part of a Sunday roast.
Sticky toffee pudding, also known as sticky date pudding in Australia and New Zealand, is an English dessert consisting of a very moist sponge cake, made with finely chopped dates, covered in a toffee sauce and often served with a vanilla custard or vanilla ice-cream. (Wikipedia)
I want to force feed Evan actual good tasting food and get his reaction
Like I mean if you get haggis from London of course its going to be different
Why would you buy Haggis from London? Even Cornish pasties have to be made in Cornwall.
@@MsPeabody1231 I mean literally. Legally. They have to (unless they're homemade but you gotta be a pretty good cook to pull that of to quite the level of a perfect pasty).
I’m insulted that Lemon Drizzle isn’t ranked. Lemon drizzle over Vicky Sponge
gotta love a scotch egg, nice substantial meal... defo a substantial meal
Thing you forgot: Ulster fry, curry chip, battereed sausages, kababs, gravy chip and Christmas dinner
Kababs aren't British cuisine, the fact that he said chicken Tikka masala is a staple in British cuisine pisses me off enough
@@karankhatana9528 actually the tikka masala was invented in Britain and curry culture has become rather prevalent
Also if not original kebabs have been adopted as the drunk mans food
Beans on toast is at least S tier Evan, how dare your opinion differ from mine :
Meh a B I'd say, but beans and sausage (as in the tinned) that's definitely superior!!
@@leubell8341 facts
Exactly.
@@leubell8341 Oh god yeah I forgot about that. Beans and sausage on toast is A tier EASILY.
Haven't we had enough of Tiers this week Evan?
Have you ever tried Egg Custard tarts?
Also- Bangers and mash can be improved by cooking grated cheese onto the mash, making cheese and potato pie. Then you serve with beans as well as the sausages
Egg custards....
S tier all day long, with a nice strong cup of Yorkshire tea 😋😋😋😋😋😋👍
He did NOT just put toad in a hole in D… I refuse to believe that just happened
excuse me??? a scotch egg in F??? i mean,, its not top grade material but they're still pretty average,, smh. and i always finish them.
Fresh out the fryer with a hot with a runny yoke
I’m from the midlands and the farm shop down the road does a pork pie so big we have to store it in a cake tin, s tier!
Reminding us Brits about 'tiers'...
With many of these, I think it may also be a bit of the case that Evan and friends are not the best at cooking said recipes (at least for a home cooked meal), as these meals can be quite unforgiving if made poorly.
A Victoria Sponge for example, is just a plain regular cake, using a sponge that is quite common in cake recipes. If it's dry, it has likely been left out too long or baked too long. Though they are also known to be temperamental, which is why oven manufacturers use sponge recipes for testing the temperatures in ovens.
One thing I've noticed about Yorkshire pudding recipes is that they often have one egg in the recipe, possibly because the recipe books came about when we were a bit more restrictive on eggs. I've found that three eggs causes your puddings to take off faster than a Northerner in London upon finding out about Tier 4. A good Yorkshire pudding recipe is the difference between making a hearty toad in the hole and a stodgy mess.
Also, in my controversial opinion, a roast dinner varies greatly in quality depending on if the roast in question is beef, lamb, or chicken.
And yet, Evan still has yet to actually try an actual cheese toastie (which is different to cheese on toast) which is a toasted cheese sandwich that has been pressed together. Even doyenne of middle class London Pret knows that!
And finally, if you find beans on toast a strange idea, in Australia there is a popular children's treat called fairy bread: a buttered slice of white bread topped with sprinkles/hundreds and thousands. And is apparently delightful.
Definitely a fan of Pret's cheese toastie, although they've either done away with it, here in the US or rechristened it as a grilled cheese sandwich. :-o
Statistics students loving that probability curve
Thanks for complimenting our German cakes. If you're ever in my area you'll get a truck load of cakes made with my grandma's recepies : )
What!!!! Lincolnshire sausages in E tier!!! That feels bad as I'm from Lincolnshire, you need to try some the local butcher back where I grew up (I'll tell you privately the name of the butcher if you want to try them so I don't reveal where exactly I grew up), they are amazing, though a generic one from a supermarket I can see why. Also go to melton mowbray to get a really proper pork pie. Also homemade bakewell tart is much better than a commercial one.
Can confirm that Melton is the best place for pies of any kind. Is anyone really going to disagree though...
The batter you'd make yorkshire puddings with is the same as you'd use for pancakes. If you need to describe them to somebody they are savoury pancakes made in the oven
Popovers
"Bangers, they're not that bangin'"
- Evan Edinger, 2020
Great way to start the video off with a . . . bang.
You should really make the internet mad at you and do the same kind of ranking for entire national cuisines: is German food better, worse , or on a par with English food? How about Greek, or American?, etc.
I definitely agree about sticky toffee pudding, why ruin it with dates or raisins?!
Always so disappointing ): makes the texture so weirddd
I wouldn’t put raisins in mine but if you soak the dates properly then it’s amazing. Really makes the dish.
Sticky toffer pudding is made with dates everything else is a syrup sponge.
Its not just the north that eats chip butties, its very common
I guess Evan is just too ace for the f-ING section
Evan, you need to try the Morello Cherry Bakewell Tart, it is found in the Frozen section near other cakes, pastries, and the like.
I have seen it most recently in Tesco's, but have also had it from Iceland before.
Make sure to follow the cooking instructions and enjoy.
I love beans on toast, but I'm not even european so my parents think I'm insane
Europeans hate baked beans lol. Its a very British/American thing
NoOoO thanks
@@addicted2caffeine Huh, didn't know that
@@addicted2caffeine don't think Americans eat it
Cornish Pasty getting an A makes me proud. Just never ever get a Ginsters pasty and youll be safe at least.
Or even better try the original style from across the Tamar
Why did Evan visit Walsall of all places in the Midlands?? I must know, being from Walsall myself its not a place I would want to visit
Honestly, unless he met with a friend? Only reason I could think of.
@@katie2471 twitter picked him a random place iirc
threw a dart at a map for an underpaid spon
@@evan You got unlucky then. There are so many better places in the West Midlands :D
as a scot:
S: Chicken tikka massala, Fish and chips, Haggis, Lincoshire sausage, Sheperds pie, Steak pie, Sunday roast, Banoffee pie, Scones, Sticky toffee pudding.
A: Chip Butty, CumBerland sausage, Apple pie, Eton mess, Trifle.
B: Bangers and mash, Beef wellington, Victoria sponge cake.
C: Full english Breakfast.
D: Bakewell tart, Mince pies.
E: Cornish pasty, Ploughmans lunch, Christmas pudding.
F: Beans on toast, cheasy Beans on toast, Black pudding, BuBBle and squeak, Pork pie, Scotch egg, coBBler, Treacle tart, Welsh cakes.
Ok so I'm ready to get really upset and edit this comment about 100 times
DO NOT COME FOR THE BANGERS AND MASH? WHEN ELSE WOULD YOU EAT SAUSAGE?
NOT THE BEANS ON TOAST?? BEANS ON TOAST IS GOD TIER
Black pudding is gross f tier ):< IT IS NOT ABOVE BEANS ON TOASTT
Chip buttys are class I think you did it justice there
Fish and chips are god tier
Pork pies are SO GOOD
Ok so a fresh handmade scotch egg is god tier HOW DARE YOU PUT IT IN F
Sunday roast is absolutely ELITE 👏🏻
Yorkshire pudding is definitely s tier
Bakewell tarts are well overrated
banoffee pie is a crime agaisnt humanity
Christmas pudding is awful my nan makes one every year it's always REALLY BAD
Mince pies are one of those eh things you only eat at christmas cos it's a christmas thing
Scones are god tier I will accept no other answer
Treacle tart has that primary school pudding nostalgia which is why I think its s tier just because of that NOSTALGIAAAA
You have done Victoria sponge dirty there me mam makes a banging Victoria sponge
Welsh cakes are pretty good but I'm not keen on raisins so
Wow, look at all of these CORRECT OPINIONS
This is completely correct there is nothing wrong with it
No apple crumble? Or any crumble like blackberry or rhubarb. Also no cauliflower cheese, pigs in blankets, Lancashire hotpot, Battenberg cake, thin pancakes with sugar and lemon, crumpets, hot cross buns, spotted dick, bread and butter pudding, knickerbocker glory or jam roly-poly. Ok now I’m hungry
Your placement of trifle disappointed me. Gets an F from me, I can’t believe the audacity of Victoria sponge & scone placement! That killed me off. They gotta be S tier, the most superior foods.
There is a distinct lack of Greggs sausage roll on this list...
P.S i love the vid Evan!