My grandmother-in-law was from an entirely different culture, so when we visited, she'd make pizzelles. I'd never had them before, and LOVED them. So the next Christmas, I asked if she'd bake me a batch of pizzelles and ship them to me. Nope! She bought a pizzelle baker, included her recipe, and told me "learn to make them yourself." I did! And I still make several batches around the holidays for neighbors and workers (police, mail persons, trash collectors, etc).
@@PersephoneDaSilva Yes, they are, but she was straight from Sweden, so I don't know how she learned to make them, or if she called them something else in Swedish?
Oooooh boy I've been waiting for this one! As a Belgian, let me tell you we have not two but THREE types of waffles! We have the "gaufre de Bruxelles", the Brussels waffle, for which you fill the iron, and it's airy and light. Then we have the "gaufre de Liège", or Liège waffle (Liège being another Belgian city), for which the batter is usually a bit thicker and you don't fill the iron in order to get a rounder shape. We usually don't use sugar pearls in the Brussels waffle, but we do use if often in Liège waffles. You'd eat Brussels waffles with topping, my favorite is raspberry and redcurrant jam, and the Liège waffles bare since they already have the pearl sugar. But in the countryside in the south, we also make what we call galettes. It's similar to Liège waffles, but it's even thicker, and we use potatoes in the dough. Galette day was a whole ordeal at my grandparents' house, they'd make the dough in a big laundry basket -yes you read that right- the day before and would let it rest overnight, then on cooking day, my grandparents would be at it from 7am until the evening, using two waffle irons. Each had their role and they had a whole system. My grandma would grease the iron with a paintbrush, my grandpa would scoop in some dough, they'd close it, flip the iron, and take care of the other machine. By the end of the day, there would be stacks of waffles all over the kitchen. They made two types of galettes, most of them were made with sugar pearls like the Liège waffles, but a few very precious ones would be made with bacon. You read that right, bacon waffles! My grandma would put a strip down on the iron before adding the dough. Some even more rare were the double bacon ones, a strip both under and on top of the dough before closing the iron. The reason they were so rare is that they were more difficult and annoying to make than the sugar pearls ones. They were made only for my mom and it was the greatest of honors when she gave one or two to someone else, because there weren't many to begin with and she didn't like to share those. I only know one person outside of the family who ever got one of her bacon waffles. My grandparents would start with the bacon waffles to pre-grease the irons, then they would mix in the sugar pearls in the dough to get started on the sugar ones. They don't make them as often now because they're really old, but it's still very special when we get to have a galette fresh off the iron.
Thank you so much for this story, as a newcomer in Brussels I was really surprised when I bit into what I thought was a regular liege waffle, which turned out to be a galette. I couldn't understand why the flavor and texture were so different, but them being a bit more savory because of the potatos make so much sense now.
@PittiKoles I didn't know they had some in Brussels too! Do you remember the name of the place by any chance? I'd like to go and try some when I visit 😄
This waffle episode reminded me of pancakes, and of my maternal grandfather who was a camp cook in lumber camps, fishing camps, and construction camps around southern British Columbia from the1930s to 1960s. He lived with us after he had a stroke and was no longer able to go out and work. He cooked a lot of 'camp food' for us-- thick pea soup, baked beans, potato casseroles etc. But our favourite meal was pancakes and gravy. His pancakes were a bit yeasty-- not just baking soda and powder like our mom made. And he would serve them with vegetables-- fried greens usually-- and a very hearty gravy made from the last few days meats. We loved his cooking, and the stories that went with them. He lived with us from the time I was about six, until he died when I was 12. The cook in these camps was the most important person in recruiting workers in many years. Men would be 'in camp' for two to six weeks and had little to look forward to besides food while they were there. I think it would be interesting to explore the history of work-camp cookery. Their tools were basic but often self-invented. And the food was not just Wasp! So many of the workers came from other parts of the world that the 'Cookies' used yoghurt, paprika, buckwheat and other ingredients long before the city residents. Love your show and all the history behind the recipes. 👍❤️🥞
My grandfather was a lumberjack in the Northwest (Washington/Oregon) in... probably the 1920's I guess. He probably ate the kind of food your grandfather cooked. ^_^
Your story reminds me of my grandmother I loved immensely. I still remember her chicken soup with fresh, handmade pasta, cherry cake…and of course her stories about everything in the world.
When my sister-in-law got married they did a waffle bar for the reception instead of the little cups of mints and nuts, and slices of cake everyone else was doing. We had like 8 waffle irons going and bottles of chocolate sauce, homemade caramel sauce, homemade syrups, ground nuts, chocolate chips, sprinkles, cans of whipped cream ... it was crazy!!! And EVERYONE loved it! There were guests arriving, walking the reception line, making their plate of waffles, sitting and talking while they ate, for hours! And everyone felt like family.
Fun fact: the waffle also helped pave the way for Nike sporting goods. Saw this on a show called Mysteries at the Museum: one day a teacher (forget his name) wanted to make better running shoes for his athletes (at this time, the shoe bottoms were just flat pieces with metal spikes on them, and often got stuck in the ground), and so at breakfast one day, upon being served waffles by his wife, he was struck by inspiration. Taking the waffle iron to his workshed, he poured in a rubber mixture, pressed it down and then applied the resulting product to some custom-made shoes. Upon presenting them to his athletes, they worked even better than before, and thus the shoe as we know it today, and Nike, were born.
I used to work for a small Franciscan University, and we found the old communion wafer iron that they used in the earliest days of the university. It was really cool.
I'm guessing about the common etymology here, but it might be because it was considered the best what came out of the grain after milling, like in French fine fleur.
British English still uses the phrase "flowers of sulphur" to describe finely powdered sulphur. (It's used by gardeners to adjust soil pH.) It's sulphur flour, but the old name and spelling have persisted.
"I like waffles. Waffles are like pancakes with syrup traps. A waffle says to the syrup, “Hold on now. You ain’t going anywhere. Don’t even be trying to creep down the side. Just rest in these squares. If one square is full, move on to the next one. When you hear the butter, split up.” 🧇 -Mitch Hedberg
Years ago as a young father of a young family, I was diagnosed with severe food allergies...my food became incredibly expensive. So, I did a lot of research and calculations on how to feed myself adequately in the morning for the least cost possible. After much work, the math proved a homemade waffle each morning would be cheapest, even cheaper than regular food. I have been eating homemade gluten free waffles each morning for over 10 years. Thank you for going over the history of waffles. Best breakfast a celiac could wish for.
Recipe please? Very impecunious gluten-sensitive person here... (By which I mean that, through experimentation, I have determined that gluten does appear to be the cause of the constant wind and mild but definite abdominal pain, plus daily emergency toilet trips, which I'd been suffering for over two years. Worth being hungry a lot of the time to at least be free of pain and not constantly farting.)
Oh my. I'm also a cœliac sufferer. Can't even eat honey, I think maybe from the whole current fake honey thing and fake honey situation? Usually has glucose syrup, usually from wheat and yea anything with wheat glucose usually makes me sick as a dog, sometimes just gas and mild cramps. Actually that's even true if I straight up eat a regular hamburger or something, which I might do once a year. Usually regret it sometimes I get off easy. Then I remember I'm putting myself at risk from lymphoma, etc🤣😬 Anyway, would you please share the recipe?
You remind me so much of my brother, Will. Your mannerisms, so much of the way you look, so many of the faces you make...my brother died of cancer 3 years ago at the age of 32. I love your channel for the content but I can't help but love it even more because you remind me of him. I'm sure you're nothing alike in reality. But it's so nice to see my brother in your face and eyes even though he's not here. Thanks for your videos and hard work. I appreciate all you do on this channel. You can't do much about looking like a perfect stranger, but thanks for that, too. ❤️😭❤️
I hosted my first proper adult dinner party at my own place yesterday. While doing the food prep I had tasting history playing - the 15ish minute videos made pretty reliable time gauges for one video per task. By the time the titanic sinks - the salad should be done, and by the time Napoleon has a tummy ache, by god the chicken better be in the oven. Thank you for the company ;)
I actually found a cast iron waffle iron in my grandparents' attic last summer. Completely covered in rust, but once I got it cleaned it made some really nice waffles.
@@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407 Waffles made with an electric waffle maker also have an unpleasant smell to them. Like electricity. I'd guess the resistors generate small amounts of ozone that then get trapped in the waffle. Anyway no such problem with a cast iron iron, they just smell like batter.
@noob19087 perhaps but perhaps the mineral oil and plastics and crap on the hot plate? I find myself wondering if heavily tinning the cast iron ones would make them more nonstick and serviceable 🤔
I remember when I was wiring my first house, my father insisted I make sure there was an outlet in the dinning room close to the table so you could put a waffle iron on the table to make them at the table.
The Norwegian iron you held up is actually a "Groro" iron, which makes a popular wafer cookie for Christmas. The name is a contraction of "god raad" (good advice), which were sayings or Bible verses. Modern irons are sections of scroll patterns. The Norwegian waffle iron is also stovetop, producing round waffles with heart-shaped sections fron a sour cream batter.
Wait, cardamom in waffles isn't normal?? I'm used to two main types of waffle here in Norway; the sweet one with cardamom and the "sour" ones made with sour cream. The latter is a good way to use milk or cream that is about to go sour.
In Poland we call waffles gofry and they are a dessert. not a breakfast, usually served with lots of whipped cream, caramel or chocolate and fresh fruit. They are a very popular street food, and you can find them in every tourist spot.
I'm delighted that you mentioned Våffeldagen and its (possible) linguistic origin. "Vår Fru" means "Our Lady", a common term for the virgin Mary as seen in the Notre Dame church. I can't help but think that us Swedes will come up with any excuse to devote a holiday to a pastry of some sort.
Waffles for Mama ❤. Methinks it's fitting. Delicious yet relatively simple. If something similar existed in first-century Galilee, I could picture her making it for Jesus and Joseph - and then, in her later years after Joseph passed on but before the public ministry, Jesus paying it back by making some for her. 😊
Just in time for Swedish waffle day next week! The reason we eat waffles on March 25th is because of a mishearing. The Feast of the Annunciation in Swedish is called among other things vårfrudagen (day of our lady), which when pronounced a little sloppily or by children, often turns to våffeldagen (waffle day). Somehow we collectively decided to roll with it and have been eating waffles in late March since at least the 1800s.
I was told many years ago våffeldagen was also a cheat day from lent, where you were allowed to use the eggs your hens had started laying after winter. But then I was newly told that eggs actually were eaten most days during lent, here in protestant Sweden. Does anyone here have an opinion or knowledge about this?
Springtime is breeding season for pikes, so those "luce wombes" would probably have been full of eggs for a dish made around lent! Wafers with fish roe and cheese is not a dish I'm familiar with, but it doesn't sound bad at all on paper.
We have crab cakes and salmon cakes, so I don't know why Max is so surprised with fish roe cakes. In Mexico shrimp cakes in tomato sauce are very popular during Lent
I need to break out my mom's 1955 electric waffle iron and whip up a batch of waffles! As a kid, the object of dressing our waffles involved filling EVERY divot with butter and then syrup. My favorite syrup was Knott's Berry Farm Boysenberry! 😋
Same, my grandmother got us a Mickey Mouse waffle maker and we loved tracing the indents with syrup. The best part was the ears, they could hold a lot! And I miss the Knotts Berry Farm boysenberry syrup, it was my mom's favorite
In France, when waffles have yeast, we call them "gaufres de lièges". They have pearl sugar in them. And it’s one of the most delicious desserts you can have. You should try them and see for yourself. Btw, i freaking love your work. I’m glad i speak english because i was looking for this kind of channel and there is none in french.
Stroopwafel's are my favourite waffle variant, they're perfect with tea or coffee. The proper Dutch way to eat it is to sit it on top of a cup of tea or coffee and let the heat from it melt the syrup. Also, the steam makes them nice and soft.
As a child preparing for my first Communion, I watched a Maltese Nun prepare Communion Wafers. A specialised electric wafer iron was used, apparently with a starch slurry. The small, white, round hosts popped easily out of the cooked sheet. The class tasted the scraps, and it was a fascinating excursion for small people. Nowadays our local parishes order the Communion wafers in boxes.
Now you've reminded me of the antique Westinghouse waffle iron we bought the year we got married, 1965. It was the most elegant little thing, with Queen Anne legs, and an arching handle that opened the lid when you pulled it down toward you. IIRC, it was dated 1918.
My family is Catholic, and my dad would tell me stories if when he was an alter service in Mexico. It was up to them to make the communion wafers with presses like the ones you talked about at the start. He would also talk about times that they would make the batter a bit thicker so when they would pop the wafers out of the iron they would eat the left over cooked wafer
when a baker tells you that you don't need to grease it..and when a baker tells you that BUTTER made a grease fire....YOU KNOW IT'S SEIROUS. Also my Catholic heart was all aglow. Love how Max is so respectful
In Germany, in the Bergisches Land region, waffles are part of the traditional„Bergische Kaffeetafel“(Bergisch Coffeetable) which include several dishes in a certain order. Waffles here are served with cold whipped cream and hot cherrysauce on top. A delight!
Dear Max, I bought your cook book and can't wait to dive in. My current kitchen is not a good space to cook in - most of my meals come out of the microwave. But I'll be moving soon to a house with an actual kitchen that I don't have to store my pots, pans and baking sheets in the oven. I've always been interested in historical cooking and will be trying my hand at most of the recipes, save the fish pudding 😅 - Also I want to thank you for providing me with the one anti-anxiety remedy that doesn't involve pharmaceuticals. I have severe PTSD from a brutal attack and your calm, informative dmeanor relaxs me and sertle me down without drugs. You've found your calling and I wish you nothing but the best. Congrats on you marriage to Jose, you make a wonderful couple. Sincerely, TC Williams
It was so fun to hear about the etymology of these terms as a native Polish speaker. Here we have opłatek - communion wafer (we even have a Christmas Eve tradition here, where we share a bigger, rectangular opłatek with family wishing the best for each other right before the dinner), wafel - which is a thin, crispy wafer, wafelek - wafers layered with flavoured filling in a form of a bar, sometimes coated with chocolate, gofr - a fluffy waffle, our traditional treat during hot summer days, often topped with whipped cream, jam, fruits or powdered sugar and let's not forget about our Silesian specialty oblat which is similar to a communion wafer, but sized up
We used to receive an oplatek from our Polish relatives every year in the US and my father would break it and we all got a piece. As a child I was actually under the impression that it was a consecrated communion wafer sent to us from Poland for Christmas.
German actually uses both of those word roots to describe wafers (Oblaten) and waffles (Waffeln). The most common waffle shape are six-sided with petal-like sections. They are commonly eaten with hot fruit sauces (cherry, raspberry or blueberry) and whipped cream, sometimes icecream, too. Oblaten are generally only used for communion or as a basis for sweet baked goods. But there are these plate-sized ones with intricate patterns and a nut filling named Karlsbader Oblaten. Which, given that town is in modern Czechia, has led to come dispute over naming rights.
Oblaten is also used as a base for Lebkuchen that is traditionally eaten at Christmas time. They are a kind of ginger cookie/cake, generally using honey, cinnamon, ginger, cloves. You can get them plain, glazed and chocolate dipped.
My husband introduced me to a Mexican candy called Obleas, which you usually get with Dulce de Leche (cajeta) inside. We’ve always said the texture reminds us of communion wafers. This totally explains why!! I love it
My grandma would have loved those cheese-filled waffles! She usually ate waffles with thin slices of sharp cheddar on them vs syrup. My grandpa, her husband, made the BEST waffles! They practically melted in your mouth. He made them from scratch, but sadly never wrote down the recipe. Since Grandpa died, my brother has tried and tried to recreate those waffles with no success. He's tried everything he can think of. And, yes, they did taste pretty good with a slice of sharp cheddar cheese. 😊
My friends and I in college used to have waffle parties where we all brought a different type of cake mix to make different kinds of waffles. I had no idea we were tapping into a centuries-long tradition!
MAX POSTED OH BLESSED DAY i just got my finals results and this is the perfect way to celebrate! my friends and i are all history/anthropology majors and thought it would be funny to make a batch of hardtack as “finals rations,” but they were surprisingly good with hot coffee and cocoa. maybe wenll make waffles today. we love your channel! i’ve heard like five history undergrads in my class namedrop you 😂😂😂
My friends and I have a continuation of that waffel party tradition where "everyone helps" but in the form of sushi or dumpling parties where everyone helps construct the dishes and then we all eat them together.
@@alanhindle3149 Yeah, probably not relevant to the UK. Southern USA and probably Mexico. Flesh is edible but eggs aren't, and seemingly mostly used for its almost armored leather, and perhaps the sport of fighting a fish that can cause serious damage if allowed to fight back. Sort of the freshwater equivalent of hunting barracuda.
@@lestranged I think what the original text is referring to is the space where roe is produced and stored. These were guys making waffles with fish eggs. They weren’t exactly scientists...
when i was a young boy, many decades ago, my favorite syrup was Knot's Berry Farm Blueberry... i know ... and when we didn't have that, Log Cabin. i think we always had either bacon or spam when we had waffles. Thank you so much for your story telling skill which keeps me engaged and curious all the while having a good time!
I love this channel, I have learned so much about food and history. I'm 62 and I still love to learn about everything and this guy makes it so much fun. I would love to give him a big hug 🤗. Take care and see you next time.
@@TastingHistory thank you 😊. I look forward to all your videos. I don't do much cooking anymore because of my bad back, but I've got my daughter interested in some of your recipes you have tested, she loves to cook. Thanks for responding, take care and have a wonderful day.
I work at a historic site, and we had a waffle frolic for one of our events. I made the invite you described using silk satin, sewing it, and scorching it with the waffle iron. It was delightful!
@@BSWVI Absolutely. One of my biggest culinary surprises was that using cardamom in sweets was... apparently a weird thing? Aside from being used in blends like in gingerbread and pumpkin pie.
@@catc8927 Oh yeah I've made that and I love it! Another good one is tonka bean coffee. Oh wait tea? I thought you were talking about cardamom coffee. Cardamom tea is actually a new one for me. Thanks for the idea!
I'm always happy when non Dutch speaking youtubers do their best to pronounce Dutch words. Your "Antwerps kookboek" was done very well. Also it is always funny to hear people get excited about Belgian waffles. I never know which one they mean. The Liège one is great, especially in winter fresh from the iron. Great video again
You’re research is top notch. To find all those old paintings with waffles or waffle irons is great (I don’t care if there is some easy way to do it, it’s more than I’d do and I’m impressed either way.) I especially liked the one with the little girl holding the big platter and whom I presume to be her grandfather helping hold it up while her presumed mother tending the iron. It made me smile and warmed this cold cold heart. Thanks Max! Always look forward to Tuesdays because of you.
My Dad’s waffles: Standard modern waffle batter, and shredded cheddar 1-2 cup. While that’s rising, cut a pack of bacon in half width ways and cook until firm but not crispy. Once that’s done, heat waffle iron and add crushed walnuts, toasting them briefly before adding a slice of bacon; pour batter over and cook as usual. Good with maple or fruit syrup.
In Switzerland, we bake these thin, crispy wafers for Christmas called Bräzeli/Bricelets. The batter is either so thick that it can be shaped into balls to produce flat wafers or it can be thin and pourable to make wafers than can be rolled. The classical ones have a rich, buttery taste with a hint of lemon. Before this video, I never thought about the historical connection, but now I see that waffles are basically just big leavened wafers.
In the Netherlands, we make thin, rolled up wafers for new years! My mom makes them with cinnamon, but I also know people who go for vanilla flavour. The batter is pourable, and they're served filled with whipped cream. They're called nieuwjaarsrolletjes, knijpkoekjes or kniepertjes.
I don't know if you've ever looked into the history of baking powder and soda, but it's an interesting subject because it democratized so much food that had been reserved for rich people. In particular, cakes became cheaper and easier to make, where before they were a temperamental baked good.
You are Literally Tied As One of the Best Three Cooking Shows That I Watch! ALL of You Are So Genuine and Honest about how you Relate! None of you Never Cover your Mistakes and Admit Them to Us! IT is Amazing how Easy it is to Learn History and How to a Cook a dish with You! The Original Grilled Cheese Was a Waffle!!? Let's ADD BACON and Maple Syrup!!! PERFECT!!!!
You should make a video about crêpes, they were first made for French travellers in the papal states and those travellers then brought the recipe back to France
I suspect the "womb of the pike" would actually be the unfertilized eggs, we eat something similar in Denmark today called "Rogn" often from Cod. It is similar to caviar in taste.
In sweden, waffles are very thin and shaped like 5 hearts stuck together. I either have just sugar or raspberry jam and whipped cream on them. It's such a nostalgic childhood treat that reminds me of spring/summer
I'm so used to the thin ones I forget that they're not that thin anywhere else than Norway/Sweden, so when he said stack, I tried to depict a stack of waffles like that and really made me sad for how cold they'd be. -_-
So Greek person here, "ovelos" is a spit for cooking meat over coals. There was a type of bread that was made by wrapping dough around a smaller spit that was also named "ovelias". That is probably how the "obelos" thing came about. The word "ovelias" survives in modern Greek but only used to describe lamb or goat cooked over coals on a spit.
If more people cared about baking/cooking then this channel would be even more populated. Alas, the fast food industry and modern convenience has led to a departure from truly interesting and sound content. Keep on striving for excellence in learning food history.
In the Netherlands we still make the thin waffle type, we eat on new years day (especially in the north of the Netherlands) we call them kniepertjes. Also: the stroopwafel is a thin waffle cut in half filled with syrup. the thicker version we bake in heart shaped rounds we eat them a lot during carnaval with some cinnamon sugar on them. The squares are more from Belgium.
Not really, the thicker square versions are traditionally made for New Year's Eve in Limburg. I believe 'waffele' are even more popular than oliebollen there.
My family's waffle-maker was a cast Iron one, made to be used over a heat source. It had a cast iron ring for the base, and the two sides of the waffle iron proper connected to the base in a ball joint. You poured the batter in, closed it, let it rest on the base, then to flip it you just lifted it up, rotated the iron around on the ball joint, then set it back down. Really effective and efficient, and I guarantee at some point in its time with our family, it was used over a wood-burning kitchen stove.
My family also had such a waffle iron which became an item of dispute. Each of the six children wanted to inherit it. When I saw such an iron in an antique store I snapped it up and took myself out of the running. Cast iron is wonderful for cooking.
Love this episode. Oh! My wife had ordered an Autographed copy of your book in December. I was given it as my Birthday present yesterday. What an amazing present. It is incredible. Thank for putting in the work and effort Max.
So many fascinating comments! Here's mine: First, LOVED the episode! Also, my Italian grandmother and her sisters always made a pizzelle-like cookie for special occasions, but they called them "schuldinis". I have no idea why. They were made on top of the stove with a long-handled iron with a grid pattern. In the center was the year my grandparents married, so it must have been a wedding present. Finally, the batter contained a bit of red wine, as well as sugar, eggs, flour, anise seed and some other ingredients I did not commit to memory. We would always have great fun making them together. They had to cook about 30 seconds on each side and we would all count out loud during the process, yelling "TURN!" when it was time to flip them over. They were so delicious, best with a cup of my grandmother's favorite spearmint hot tea with sugar and lemon.
I also love "Le Ménagier de Paris"! I get a kick out of thinking about how this busy (lawyer?) could have picked up all that household knowledge. My sister and refer to him as the Lady Catherine de Bourgh of medieval France.
Leggo my eggo Time to waffle And dine A great American breakfast Dessert or snack with wine Spoonfuls of yeast Rise a golden shine Put to a plate For a much cherished mealtime
Amazing history. The etymological link between wafers and waffles, the long history of baked goods with ornate patterning, the link between those and waffle irons and the way those patterns currently manifest in cookies like Oreos internationally and custard creams here in the UK. Also, the strange way waffles have gone from being as international as sausages to being almost exclusively associated with Belgium and the US, though not explained here, is just fascinating to note. Can confirm Liege waffles are incredible.
I was amazed when you talked about the French "Oblie"! In Mexico and Central America we have something called "Oblea" which are thin wafers similar to the communion wafers and are eated with "Dulce de Leche" 😋 they also usually have a grid pattern on them! I did not think they had such an origin and that they are related to waffles.
I remember a very long time ago when I first got into Tasting History, I went on a short research tangent into the history of waffles, and I figured it would be a perfect subject for an episode. It's nice to see you finally got around to it! It'd be really cool to see if you could get that oldschool waffle iron cleaned up from the rust to make a wafer with it.
In Norway, my family eat cold waffles with jam, sour cream and brown goat cheese. In Sweden, we eat them warm with jam and whipped cream, or vanilla ice cream and warm cloud berries boiled with sugar.
18:00 As a non native english speaker I´m delighted to hear such intonation kkkk Fun fact: To dedicate a product to an upper class and sell it to common people it´s an old marketing trick.
I think the "womb of a pike" may refer to caviar/roe. Apparently in some Scandinavian countries and Russia, sour cream and fish roe on thin crepes are still popular!
As a Belgian from Antwerp, we still use those cast iron waffle irons (but with deeper holes, as you say, for yeasted doughs)! But we use them on a gas stove 🤭 We have a family recipe and it's by the bucket. Literally. We don't do waffles if we're going to make less than a bucket of dough 😅 and then we start baking, and tell all our friends and family that we're having a "wafelenbak" (waffle bake). So they can drop by whenever they like that day to eat lots of waffles and have a natter with whoever has also turned up 😅
The Norwegian iron would presumably be for making Goro (short for 'good advice'), which are slightly thicker than Krumkake (curved cake, literally). Both Goro and Krumkake are mainly considered Christmas cookies nowadays, don't know if that was always the case though.
When I was a child (about 4 or 5) my granma used to make mildly sweet waffles, that we ate with keschmier (a german-ish salty sourcream, popular here in southern Brazil) and molasses. Sometimes we had them with a strong cheese and goiabada. She had those big round waffle irons, that made them in a 4 leaf clover shape, and we called those "vaffel", from the old Rhineland dialect most of the older people spoke. Sweet+Savoury flavours go toghether better than most people believe.
Fish flavored wafers reminds me of the prawn crackers you can find in street stalls in Southeast and East Asia! Very medieval looking press to squeeze the batter and meat into a crisp form
There are still thick waffle batters made with yeast today. One of the most delicious are Lütticher (as in a town in Belgian) Waffeln. You make a very thick batter with yeast. After rising, right before you put it in the waffle iron, you add pearl sugar, so the waffel carmalizes. So, so, so wonderful. Thank you vor your content.
In the state of Yucatán here in Mexico there's a dessert that's sold in street carts call Marquesitas. The traditional ones are thin waffers filled with Edam cheese. Now they are filled with other things like Nutella or strawberries and other things.
Back when I was a kid, say the very early 2000s, and I used to go look for stuff at the Goodwill, and Saint Vinnie's. For a long run, there was a crazy amount of waffle irons that kept being dontated. Lived in suburbs of Tacoma, and I'm still unsure where a never ended load of donated waffle irons came from. About a year in, and I stopped seeing them, like ever again. Lots of waffle irons. *Edit: I forgot to say that the irons where really big, like the size of a stovetop, or a very big fireplace. That's what made the memory remain after decades, not just one but many that kept showing up.
@@BSWVI Nothing but metal, big metal irons. My older sister said they must have been family crests, but an older kid is still a kid. We settled on family crest waffles, because for a glorious moment in time, my big sister played the part of the smart phone, and I just went with it. Tacoma was a logging town way beforehand, though it was the amount of big waffle irons that made me say anything about it.
@@jbaby362 That sounds like a reasonable enough explanation. People collect anything and everything, and if no arrangements have been made for after one's passing, the contents can end up going wherever next of kin figure they can get rid of them, if they don't have a good idea of the value or where to sell. Assuming there is value.
Max, as a Dutch-speaking Belgian, I must say that I very much approve of your Dutch pronunciation (Don't ever try Flemish, though, for your own sake). Also, I highly recommend Belgian waffles to anyone who hasn't had the pleasure of having one.
My mum's family is from Norway so the recipe we have creates circular, heart shaped waffles with an iron. They have sugar, eggs, flour, cardamom, milk and butter in it. Magnificent, but definitely a desert.
Waffles and wine sounds like “Sunday Brunch,” they might have Champagne on Sundays where those waffles also had fruit, sausage and even chicken, because the Day of the Lord should be celebrated 😂
I’d love to see you tackle lutefisk. A fermented whitefish from Scandinavian countries, still popular in parts of MN. It’s certainly, um, an acquired experience.
As a Swede, I don't find lutfisk particularly strange. I would say it's rather bland and boring. It's not fermented though. It's cured in lye. Which is interesting, as lye is of course completely inedible. So you need to soak it for almost a week before you cook it. If you're ever served lutfisk that smells odd, or has a strange gelatinous texture, it's probably because it hasn't been soaked sufficiently.
12:43 - This reminded me of a samosa vendor that would always set up shop at our local Farmer's Market back when I was a kid. Their samosas were insanely popular (I have yet to find any that match them to this day) and created such huge lines that they were blocking access to other vendors. The vendors complained and, rather than move their location as the people in charge of the market suggested, they just stopped going. You could only get them from their family-owned convenience store.
When I was in college I studied medieval history. I also loved to cook. My mom was a smart woman -- she found me the books Fabulous Feasts and To The King's Taste with their translated medieval recipes. Unlike many of my colleagues, for whom history began and pretty much ended with chronicles and cartularies, I was fascinated by the whole package -- what music did they play? what books did they read? what clothes did they wear ... and, of course, what foods did they eat? I ran across several wafer recipes over time (including a pepper and cardamom one that was ... interesting). Thank you for reminding me so much of my love of putting a fuller picture back into history, a vision of people living real lives, not just names and dates. 🙂
An excellent thing about scandinavian waffle day is that it occurs right around the time it is reasonable to keep your windows open to ventilate the cooking fumes that inevitably come from proper waffles... For me, waffles are also closely associated with small, local heritage houses on the countryside. The batter is easy to prepare and the waffles are easy to serve warm as a heavier snack so it fits perfectly for roadtrip flea markets and stops along hiking trails (: My mum's husbands family ran a "waffle cottage" in the mountains and he maintains that the ONLY correct waffle recipe is two parts heavy cream whipped, into which you mix one part flour and one part water, as well as some salt. Makes for very crispy waffles. Delicious with hjortron or queensberry jam.
I cannot WAIT for the new cookbook with the recipes and histories!! I don’t know which is better, the recipes or the history! Kudos to you for all the research you do for us. Love ya, man!! ❤️❤️
5:38 That's specifically an iron for making "goro", which I just learned googling it is a shortened form of "gode raad" (antiquated spelling of "gode råd" meaning "good advice"). It's one of the 7 kinds of traditional cookies that is considered "mandatory" to have for Christmas. There's not a definite list of which ones are the correct 7; and almost all of them are basically various ways to combine flour, sugar and butter and/or cream and sometimes egg, and often not much else, so my family isn't too bothered about having all of them, because most of them are actually kind of boring. But goro is very often considered one of the 7 kinds, and it's one of the better ones in my opinion despite being one of the butter, eggs, flour, cream kinds. We wouldn't call goro a "vaffel" (lit. waffle) though, even though it's obviously a related recipe; our waffles are almost always a ring of 5 heart shaped waffles that form a rough circle, and they are fairly thick and soft (unless you overcook it until crispy). We generally serve our waffles with jam (traditionally strawberry or raspberry jam) and sourcream and sugar. There's also an interesting tradition in some parts of Norway where use waffles (the whole circle) as a tortilla to wrap sausages for hot dogs. The traditional hotdogs here are sausages wrapped in "lompe" which is a sort of a soft potato and flour tortilla (lompe is very similar to "lefse" which I understand is still a thing in the regions of USA with a lot of Scandinavian heritage; except lompe always has potatoes and flour, while lefse is often just made of flour) (I just realised I have not taken my ADHD meds... I forgot where my comment was going, lol)
To clarify a bit more; sack was a very popular fortified (with brandy) wine, mainly produced in Spain. Regular sack was also (somewhat to very) sweet, and used as a sweetening ingredient in recipes. Dry sack was less sweet and used differently in recipes - adding more citrussy notes, and it was usually called out as such (dry sack). Port and sherry are now used as direct replacements, and you can get dry and sweet versions of both, depending upon which type of sack you want to replace. Another fantastic video! I will try this recipe asap.
How lovely! I’ve actually just finished baking prosphora, a bread used for communion in orthodox Christianity that is stamped with the sign of the cross and other symbols. It’s so interesting to see that tradition in other denominations
I bought a cast iron waffle maker years ago and it's great. Heavy as sin but makes great waffles. I bought it after being completely frustrated in finding an electric waffle maker that wasn't for Belgian waffles after the ancient one my mother gave me finally died. Those huge holes are great as a desert base but I want the smaller holes for the proper butter/syrup/waffle ratio.
What is your favorite topping on a waffle? Lately I've been a banana with boysenberry syrup fan.
Maple syrup from my family sugar bush, in production since 1920. And lots and lots of butter, of course.
Anything Boysenberry.
Cinnamon maple syrup
Good ol syrup to fill the syrup pockets. Strawberries in there somewhere if I can manage.
Syrup, whipped cream and strawberries!
I knew the upload was coming, so I tried summoning Max by chanting "Hard tack" to myself.
*clack clack*
Clack clack 😂🤣
Clack clack
😂 clack clack!
clack clack
Max: “1 TSP of Grated Nutmeg.”
Townsends: “I have been summoned!”
I really did expect him to pop in or a insert @ 20:32. lol
I know what you mean! Just shred my fingertips, why don’t you?
Ohh that's funny!
I came here to make this kind of comment! 😂❤
I was SO hoping a clip of Townsend happily grating nutmeg was going to pop up. 😅🤣
My grandmother-in-law was from an entirely different culture, so when we visited, she'd make pizzelles. I'd never had them before, and LOVED them. So the next Christmas, I asked if she'd bake me a batch of pizzelles and ship them to me. Nope! She bought a pizzelle baker, included her recipe, and told me "learn to make them yourself." I did! And I still make several batches around the holidays for neighbors and workers (police, mail persons, trash collectors, etc).
Now that's a gift that will last a lifetime! What a favor. Or should I say flavor.
Great story thanks for sharing
Italian culture.
I Love everything about that, wish I Had a grannys Like that
@@PersephoneDaSilva Yes, they are, but she was straight from Sweden, so I don't know how she learned to make them, or if she called them something else in Swedish?
Oooooh boy I've been waiting for this one! As a Belgian, let me tell you we have not two but THREE types of waffles! We have the "gaufre de Bruxelles", the Brussels waffle, for which you fill the iron, and it's airy and light. Then we have the "gaufre de Liège", or Liège waffle (Liège being another Belgian city), for which the batter is usually a bit thicker and you don't fill the iron in order to get a rounder shape. We usually don't use sugar pearls in the Brussels waffle, but we do use if often in Liège waffles. You'd eat Brussels waffles with topping, my favorite is raspberry and redcurrant jam, and the Liège waffles bare since they already have the pearl sugar.
But in the countryside in the south, we also make what we call galettes. It's similar to Liège waffles, but it's even thicker, and we use potatoes in the dough. Galette day was a whole ordeal at my grandparents' house, they'd make the dough in a big laundry basket -yes you read that right- the day before and would let it rest overnight, then on cooking day, my grandparents would be at it from 7am until the evening, using two waffle irons. Each had their role and they had a whole system. My grandma would grease the iron with a paintbrush, my grandpa would scoop in some dough, they'd close it, flip the iron, and take care of the other machine. By the end of the day, there would be stacks of waffles all over the kitchen.
They made two types of galettes, most of them were made with sugar pearls like the Liège waffles, but a few very precious ones would be made with bacon. You read that right, bacon waffles! My grandma would put a strip down on the iron before adding the dough. Some even more rare were the double bacon ones, a strip both under and on top of the dough before closing the iron. The reason they were so rare is that they were more difficult and annoying to make than the sugar pearls ones. They were made only for my mom and it was the greatest of honors when she gave one or two to someone else, because there weren't many to begin with and she didn't like to share those. I only know one person outside of the family who ever got one of her bacon waffles. My grandparents would start with the bacon waffles to pre-grease the irons, then they would mix in the sugar pearls in the dough to get started on the sugar ones. They don't make them as often now because they're really old, but it's still very special when we get to have a galette fresh off the iron.
Thank you so much for this story, as a newcomer in Brussels I was really surprised when I bit into what I thought was a regular liege waffle, which turned out to be a galette. I couldn't understand why the flavor and texture were so different, but them being a bit more savory because of the potatos make so much sense now.
@PittiKoles I didn't know they had some in Brussels too! Do you remember the name of the place by any chance? I'd like to go and try some when I visit 😄
@@manon_0411 I don't remember what the name of the stand was, but they were at place Jourdan on a Sunday.
@@PittiKoles thank you!
Sounds like those bacon waffles were fire!
This waffle episode reminded me of pancakes, and of my maternal grandfather who was a camp cook in lumber camps, fishing camps, and construction camps around southern British Columbia from the1930s to 1960s. He lived with us after he had a stroke and was no longer able to go out and work. He cooked a lot of 'camp food' for us-- thick pea soup, baked beans, potato casseroles etc. But our favourite meal was pancakes and gravy. His pancakes were a bit yeasty-- not just baking soda and powder like our mom made. And he would serve them with vegetables-- fried greens usually-- and a very hearty gravy made from the last few days meats. We loved his cooking, and the stories that went with them. He lived with us from the time I was about six, until he died when I was 12.
The cook in these camps was the most important person in recruiting workers in many years. Men would be 'in camp' for two to six weeks and had little to look forward to besides food while they were there. I think it would be interesting to explore the history of work-camp cookery. Their tools were basic but often self-invented. And the food was not just Wasp! So many of the workers came from other parts of the world that the 'Cookies' used yoghurt, paprika, buckwheat and other ingredients long before the city residents.
Love your show and all the history behind the recipes. 👍❤️🥞
Those recipes sound amazing! I would buy that cookbook
Wow he sounded like an interesting man!
My grandfather was a lumberjack in the Northwest (Washington/Oregon) in... probably the 1920's I guess. He probably ate the kind of food your grandfather cooked. ^_^
This would be fascinating. I would love a video on this!
Your story reminds me of my grandmother I loved immensely. I still remember her chicken soup with fresh, handmade pasta, cherry cake…and of course her stories about everything in the world.
Wine on waffles? Why has nobody informed me of this before! I've got flour, eggs, a waffle iron... Vodka. Close enough.
😂
Vodka could actually make a very fluffy waffle, like voda in pie crust... **makes note**
🔥🔥🔥🔥
@@GiselleMFI put in pączki (donuts).
Vodka? Try Everclear 190.
That delivery of, "I'm making waffles!" is one of my favorite line readings of all time.
I quote that every time I'm in charge of doing breakfast for the kids in my family. Never fails to be fun.
Same!
Shrek: “GAAAHHHRRR!!!”
In Polish they say "zrobię jajecznicę" XD meaning "I'll scramble some eggs" while sounding very happy about the prospect.
It was good, but lacked that GIR energy.
When my sister-in-law got married they did a waffle bar for the reception instead of the little cups of mints and nuts, and slices of cake everyone else was doing. We had like 8 waffle irons going and bottles of chocolate sauce, homemade caramel sauce, homemade syrups, ground nuts, chocolate chips, sprinkles, cans of whipped cream ... it was crazy!!! And EVERYONE loved it! There were guests arriving, walking the reception line, making their plate of waffles, sitting and talking while they ate, for hours! And everyone felt like family.
Sounds amazing!!!
OMG, that sounds like a fabulous feast and I wish I had been invited!
That sounds lovely!
Now I want to get married again just to have a waffle bar 😭🧇 That sounds incredible!!
My brother did apple pies... It's your wedding make it what u love
Fun fact: the waffle also helped pave the way for Nike sporting goods. Saw this on a show called Mysteries at the Museum: one day a teacher (forget his name) wanted to make better running shoes for his athletes (at this time, the shoe bottoms were just flat pieces with metal spikes on them, and often got stuck in the ground), and so at breakfast one day, upon being served waffles by his wife, he was struck by inspiration. Taking the waffle iron to his workshed, he poured in a rubber mixture, pressed it down and then applied the resulting product to some custom-made shoes. Upon presenting them to his athletes, they worked even better than before, and thus the shoe as we know it today, and Nike, were born.
I used to work for a small Franciscan University, and we found the old communion wafer iron that they used in the earliest days of the university. It was really cool.
Fun fact, in Dutch we still use the same word for flower and flour (bloem).
I'm guessing about the common etymology here, but it might be because it was considered the best what came out of the grain after milling, like in French fine fleur.
British English still uses the phrase "flowers of sulphur" to describe finely powdered sulphur. (It's used by gardeners to adjust soil pH.) It's sulphur flour, but the old name and spelling have persisted.
Bloem
We also use the same word for waffle and wafer (wafel).
Good thing we used the ground grain meal; my Mom didn’t like me going through her garden for “one pound of Flower” :P
"I like waffles. Waffles are like pancakes with syrup traps. A waffle says to the syrup, “Hold on now. You ain’t going anywhere. Don’t even be trying to creep down the side. Just rest in these squares. If one square is full, move on to the next one. When you hear the butter, split up.” 🧇
-Mitch Hedberg
Yo, this is hilarious
Mitch was truly one of a kind-but he's absolutely right about waffles 🧇
I miss him❤
Years ago as a young father of a young family, I was diagnosed with severe food allergies...my food became incredibly expensive. So, I did a lot of research and calculations on how to feed myself adequately in the morning for the least cost possible. After much work, the math proved a homemade waffle each morning would be cheapest, even cheaper than regular food. I have been eating homemade gluten free waffles each morning for over 10 years. Thank you for going over the history of waffles. Best breakfast a celiac could wish for.
We enjoy a pea protein powder mixed with golden flax meal, cocoa and spice. Bob's Red Mill observes immaculate gluten free practices.
My partner bought two crates of Kinnickinick waffle and pancake mix. It was the most cost effective 😂 good ol’ expensive
celiac life
Recipe please? Very impecunious gluten-sensitive person here...
(By which I mean that, through experimentation, I have determined that gluten does appear to be the cause of the constant wind and mild but definite abdominal pain, plus daily emergency toilet trips, which I'd been suffering for over two years. Worth being hungry a lot of the time to at least be free of pain and not constantly farting.)
Gluten allergies are a fad. They will go away when you stop blaming food for your problems.
Oh my. I'm also a cœliac sufferer. Can't even eat honey, I think maybe from the whole current fake honey thing and fake honey situation?
Usually has glucose syrup, usually from wheat and yea anything with wheat glucose usually makes me sick as a dog, sometimes just gas and mild cramps.
Actually that's even true if I straight up eat a regular hamburger or something, which I might do once a year. Usually regret it sometimes I get off easy. Then I remember I'm putting myself at risk from lymphoma, etc🤣😬
Anyway, would you please share the recipe?
You remind me so much of my brother, Will. Your mannerisms, so much of the way you look, so many of the faces you make...my brother died of cancer 3 years ago at the age of 32.
I love your channel for the content but I can't help but love it even more because you remind me of him. I'm sure you're nothing alike in reality. But it's so nice to see my brother in your face and eyes even though he's not here.
Thanks for your videos and hard work. I appreciate all you do on this channel. You can't do much about looking like a perfect stranger, but thanks for that, too. ❤️😭❤️
What a sweet message. It's nice to run in to people who remind you of those we've lost.
@@jeretielinen6482 ❤️ it really is ❤️
🫂
He reminds me of my late brother gone too soon and unexpectedly, too. Such a comfort really 💜
I hosted my first proper adult dinner party at my own place yesterday. While doing the food prep I had tasting history playing - the 15ish minute videos made pretty reliable time gauges for one video per task. By the time the titanic sinks - the salad should be done, and by the time Napoleon has a tummy ache, by god the chicken better be in the oven. Thank you for the company ;)
I actually found a cast iron waffle iron in my grandparents' attic last summer. Completely covered in rust, but once I got it cleaned it made some really nice waffles.
Those are great
Cast iron waffle irons still make the best waffles. Electric ones can't get the crust right, and I like mine very crusty
@@brokenglassshimmerlikestar3407 Waffles made with an electric waffle maker also have an unpleasant smell to them. Like electricity. I'd guess the resistors generate small amounts of ozone that then get trapped in the waffle. Anyway no such problem with a cast iron iron, they just smell like batter.
@@i.b.640 Tell me about it. Just heavy as hell, and they have a bit of a learning curve.
@noob19087 perhaps but perhaps the mineral oil and plastics and crap on the hot plate?
I find myself wondering if heavily tinning the cast iron ones would make them more nonstick and serviceable 🤔
I remember when I was wiring my first house, my father insisted I make sure there was an outlet in the dinning room close to the table so you could put a waffle iron on the table to make them at the table.
What a great idea!
Smart man.
Not just useful for waffles, but also other appliances too! (And handy for phone charging)
At that point just put the outlet in the floor under the table so nobody walks through the cord.
The Norwegian iron you held up is actually a "Groro" iron, which makes a popular wafer cookie for Christmas. The name is a contraction of "god raad" (good advice), which were sayings or Bible verses. Modern irons are sections of scroll patterns. The Norwegian waffle iron is also stovetop, producing round waffles with heart-shaped sections fron a sour cream batter.
As a Norwegian, you're adding an 'r' too much there, but otherwise spot on! Its name is simply "Goro".
Funny to see how similar Germanic languages can be. In Dutch 'god raad' is: 'goede raad'. Which is probably pronounced similarly.
And Guter Rat in German
No it isn’t
Wait, cardamom in waffles isn't normal??
I'm used to two main types of waffle here in Norway; the sweet one with cardamom and the "sour" ones made with sour cream. The latter is a good way to use milk or cream that is about to go sour.
In Poland we call waffles gofry and they are a dessert. not a breakfast, usually served with lots of whipped cream, caramel or chocolate and fresh fruit. They are a very popular street food, and you can find them in every tourist spot.
I'm delighted that you mentioned Våffeldagen and its (possible) linguistic origin. "Vår Fru" means "Our Lady", a common term for the virgin Mary as seen in the Notre Dame church. I can't help but think that us Swedes will come up with any excuse to devote a holiday to a pastry of some sort.
Our Lady - Vär Fru Waffle~ 🧇
Waffles for Mama ❤.
Methinks it's fitting. Delicious yet relatively simple. If something similar existed in first-century Galilee, I could picture her making it for Jesus and Joseph - and then, in her later years after Joseph passed on but before the public ministry, Jesus paying it back by making some for her. 😊
Just in time for Swedish waffle day next week!
The reason we eat waffles on March 25th is because of a mishearing. The Feast of the Annunciation in Swedish is called among other things vårfrudagen (day of our lady), which when pronounced a little sloppily or by children, often turns to våffeldagen (waffle day). Somehow we collectively decided to roll with it and have been eating waffles in late March since at least the 1800s.
That is absolutely adorable and the best reason to have waffles that I’ve ever heard of.
Like Pi Day where we all eat pie
I was told many years ago våffeldagen was also a cheat day from lent, where you were allowed to use the eggs your hens had started laying after winter. But then I was newly told that eggs actually were eaten most days during lent, here in protestant Sweden. Does anyone here have an opinion or knowledge about this?
I don’t blame you! 0:36
Sounds like you could have used a little better enunciation when talking about the annunciation
Springtime is breeding season for pikes, so those "luce wombes" would probably have been full of eggs for a dish made around lent! Wafers with fish roe and cheese is not a dish I'm familiar with, but it doesn't sound bad at all on paper.
Sounds like it would have the fats that they weren't getting from butter, eggs, or cream
We have crab cakes and salmon cakes, so I don't know why Max is so surprised with fish roe cakes. In Mexico shrimp cakes in tomato sauce are very popular during Lent
Thinking of a savory waffle with caviar and sour cream.
So basically waffled blini with cream cheese and caviar?
It was a caviar waffle. I assume something like a cod roe lump.
My favorite topping for waffles, Kerry Gold butter, sour cream, brown sugar and strawberry jam.
I need to break out my mom's 1955 electric waffle iron and whip up a batch of waffles! As a kid, the object of dressing our waffles involved filling EVERY divot with butter and then syrup. My favorite syrup was Knott's Berry Farm Boysenberry! 😋
As a kid, I liked half boysenberry and half maple syrup.
Same, my grandmother got us a Mickey Mouse waffle maker and we loved tracing the indents with syrup. The best part was the ears, they could hold a lot! And I miss the Knotts Berry Farm boysenberry syrup, it was my mom's favorite
@@hazelpixie56it's the best❤
Boysenberry is truly an awesome syrup, the best fruit syrup I've ever had. Sadly no restaurant has it here anymore.
You talked me into the waffles then talked me out of the waffles, which gives a tasty meaning to waffling.
😂😂😂 well done
In France, when waffles have yeast, we call them "gaufres de lièges". They have pearl sugar in them. And it’s one of the most delicious desserts you can have. You should try them and see for yourself.
Btw, i freaking love your work. I’m glad i speak english because i was looking for this kind of channel and there is none in french.
And we still have "oublies" where i live. They are thin and crispy waffles.
Flashback to my vacation in Bruges when I ate a lieges waffle each day and had stomach problems afterwards
Hi from Australia 🇦🇺 did you know that TH-cam has a translation function in the settings? I use it regularly for foreign presenters.
@@fionapaterson-wiebe3108- for some reason, the translation option disappeared on my iPhone.
In the US we have liege waffles in our frozen section and while they’re surely not on par with what you have there, they’re still soooo good ❤
Stroopwafel's are my favourite waffle variant, they're perfect with tea or coffee. The proper Dutch way to eat it is to sit it on top of a cup of tea or coffee and let the heat from it melt the syrup. Also, the steam makes them nice and soft.
It's the most addictive cookie in the world
I guess that would be a wafer rather than a waffle.
I just learned this recently - it is so fun and tastes amazing!
My kids enjoy these with their hot chocolate
My kids enjoy these with their hot chocolate
As a child preparing for my first Communion, I watched a Maltese Nun prepare Communion Wafers. A specialised electric wafer iron was used, apparently with a starch slurry. The small, white, round hosts popped easily out of the cooked sheet. The class tasted the scraps, and it was a fascinating excursion for small people. Nowadays our local parishes order the Communion wafers in boxes.
I loved the use of the Bayeux Tapestry cloth to cover your batter at the beginning. It made me smile.
Now you've reminded me of the antique Westinghouse waffle iron we bought the year we got married, 1965. It was the most elegant little thing, with Queen Anne legs, and an arching handle that opened the lid when you pulled it down toward you. IIRC, it was dated 1918.
I saw one like that on EBay the other day! 🥰
My family is Catholic, and my dad would tell me stories if when he was an alter service in Mexico. It was up to them to make the communion wafers with presses like the ones you talked about at the start. He would also talk about times that they would make the batter a bit thicker so when they would pop the wafers out of the iron they would eat the left over cooked wafer
Altar, not alter.
when a baker tells you that you don't need to grease it..and when a baker tells you that BUTTER made a grease fire....YOU KNOW IT'S SEIROUS. Also my Catholic heart was all aglow. Love how Max is so respectful
In Germany, in the Bergisches Land region, waffles are part of the traditional„Bergische Kaffeetafel“(Bergisch Coffeetable) which include several dishes in a certain order. Waffles here are served with cold whipped cream and hot cherrysauce on top. A delight!
Dear Max,
I bought your cook book and can't wait to dive in. My current kitchen is not a good space to cook in - most of my meals come out of the microwave. But I'll be moving soon to a house with an actual kitchen that I don't have to store my pots, pans and baking sheets in the oven. I've always been interested in historical cooking and will be trying my hand at most of the recipes, save the fish pudding 😅 - Also I want to thank you for providing me with the one anti-anxiety remedy that doesn't involve pharmaceuticals. I have severe PTSD from a brutal attack and your calm, informative dmeanor relaxs me and sertle me down without drugs. You've found your calling and I wish you nothing but the best. Congrats on you marriage to Jose, you make a wonderful couple.
Sincerely,
TC Williams
It was so fun to hear about the etymology of these terms as a native Polish speaker. Here we have opłatek - communion wafer (we even have a Christmas Eve tradition here, where we share a bigger, rectangular opłatek with family wishing the best for each other right before the dinner), wafel - which is a thin, crispy wafer, wafelek - wafers layered with flavoured filling in a form of a bar, sometimes coated with chocolate, gofr - a fluffy waffle, our traditional treat during hot summer days, often topped with whipped cream, jam, fruits or powdered sugar and let's not forget about our Silesian specialty oblat which is similar to a communion wafer, but sized up
The communion wafer in Denmark is also called "Oblat" which was funny to hear in french!
@@NGCAnderopolis oh, that's so cool!
We used to receive an oplatek from our Polish relatives every year in the US and my father would break it and we all got a piece. As a child I was actually under the impression that it was a consecrated communion wafer sent to us from Poland for Christmas.
Oblaten is the communion wafer in German as well. And I love Karlsbader Oblaten ;) which are a czech speciality
@@lisapolanski9379 Actually, lots of people in Poland do get consecrated opłatki (=plural for opłatek) from their local parish!
German actually uses both of those word roots to describe wafers (Oblaten) and waffles (Waffeln).
The most common waffle shape are six-sided with petal-like sections. They are commonly eaten with hot fruit sauces (cherry, raspberry or blueberry) and whipped cream, sometimes icecream, too.
Oblaten are generally only used for communion or as a basis for sweet baked goods.
But there are these plate-sized ones with intricate patterns and a nut filling named Karlsbader Oblaten. Which, given that town is in modern Czechia, has led to come dispute over naming rights.
Wait, six-petaled? I've only ever had five-petaled ones, and I'm very certain about that, as I hate how annoying they are for sharing.
Oblaten is also used as a base for Lebkuchen that is traditionally eaten at Christmas time. They are a kind of ginger cookie/cake, generally using honey, cinnamon, ginger, cloves. You can get them plain, glazed and chocolate dipped.
My husband introduced me to a Mexican candy called Obleas, which you usually get with Dulce de Leche (cajeta) inside. We’ve always said the texture reminds us of communion wafers. This totally explains why!! I love it
Germans called it Olates. Maybe Maximilian introduced it.
It does remind me of communion wafers. Also edible rice paper
My grandma would have loved those cheese-filled waffles! She usually ate waffles with thin slices of sharp cheddar on them vs syrup.
My grandpa, her husband, made the BEST waffles! They practically melted in your mouth. He made them from scratch, but sadly never wrote down the recipe. Since Grandpa died, my brother has tried and tried to recreate those waffles with no success. He's tried everything he can think of.
And, yes, they did taste pretty good with a slice of sharp cheddar cheese. 😊
My friends and I in college used to have waffle parties where we all brought a different type of cake mix to make different kinds of waffles. I had no idea we were tapping into a centuries-long tradition!
MAX POSTED OH BLESSED DAY i just got my finals results and this is the perfect way to celebrate! my friends and i are all history/anthropology majors and thought it would be funny to make a batch of hardtack as “finals rations,” but they were surprisingly good with hot coffee and cocoa. maybe wenll make waffles today. we love your channel! i’ve heard like five history undergrads in my class namedrop you 😂😂😂
*we’ll
Oh wow, Max has become an unofficial part of the history major. 😆
My friends and I have a continuation of that waffel party tradition where "everyone helps" but in the form of sushi or dumpling parties where everyone helps construct the dishes and then we all eat them together.
That's great! Me and the better half used to do the very same thing! Many happy gatherings like that.
The womb of a pike seems possibly referring to pike caviar, in which case caviar with waffles is still quite common in England.
Just don't confuse gar with pike (both are fiercely carnivorous, elongated fish). Gar eggs are quite toxic.
@@Erewhon2024 I’ve never had Gar- they’re a southern fish, aren’t they?
@@alanhindle3149 Yeah, probably not relevant to the UK. Southern USA and probably Mexico. Flesh is edible but eggs aren't, and seemingly mostly used for its almost armored leather, and perhaps the sport of fighting a fish that can cause serious damage if allowed to fight back. Sort of the freshwater equivalent of hunting barracuda.
I was wondering about that because most fish don't really have wombs. They don't gestate babies inside their bodies so they don't need a womb.
@@lestranged I think what the original text is referring to is the space where roe is produced and stored. These were guys making waffles with fish eggs. They weren’t exactly scientists...
Max, your content is so heart-warming and wholesome. It has gotten me through some tough times. Thank you for that 🫶🏼
when i was a young boy, many decades ago, my favorite syrup was Knot's Berry Farm Blueberry... i know ... and when we didn't have that, Log Cabin. i think we always had either bacon or spam when we had waffles. Thank you so much for your story telling skill which keeps me engaged and curious all the while having a good time!
I love this channel, I have learned so much about food and history. I'm 62 and I still love to learn about everything and this guy makes it so much fun. I would love to give him a big hug 🤗. Take care and see you next time.
Glad you enjoy it!
@@TastingHistory thank you 😊. I look forward to all your videos. I don't do much cooking anymore because of my bad back, but I've got my daughter interested in some of your recipes you have tested, she loves to cook. Thanks for responding, take care and have a wonderful day.
I like the vids too, but I'll offer only a hearty handshake ... not a hug ;-)
@@josephgaviota Southern old women like to hug good looking younger men 😉, especially nice ones like Max. Have a great day 😊.
@@pattyepperson3908 _Southern old women like to hug good looking younger men_
Please, don't take me the wrong way, I 100% agree !!
I work at a historic site, and we had a waffle frolic for one of our events. I made the invite you described using silk satin, sewing it, and scorching it with the waffle iron. It was delightful!
That sounds super fun❤
We still put cardamom in our waffles (and most other baked goods) in the Nordics. It's really nice, you should give it a try.
Mmmmmm, Cardamom... Subtle and warm and uplifting!
@@BSWVI Absolutely. One of my biggest culinary surprises was that using cardamom in sweets was... apparently a weird thing? Aside from being used in blends like in gingerbread and pumpkin pie.
I have cardamom in my pantry. *makes note* It's also very good on eggnog.
Afghani chai is black tea with green cardamom pods added, and it’s soooo good for how simple it is.
@@catc8927 Oh yeah I've made that and I love it! Another good one is tonka bean coffee. Oh wait tea? I thought you were talking about cardamom coffee. Cardamom tea is actually a new one for me. Thanks for the idea!
I'm always happy when non Dutch speaking youtubers do their best to pronounce Dutch words. Your "Antwerps kookboek" was done very well.
Also it is always funny to hear people get excited about Belgian waffles. I never know which one they mean. The Liège one is great, especially in winter fresh from the iron.
Great video again
You’re research is top notch. To find all those old paintings with waffles or waffle irons is great (I don’t care if there is some easy way to do it, it’s more than I’d do and I’m impressed either way.) I especially liked the one with the little girl holding the big platter and whom I presume to be her grandfather helping hold it up while her presumed mother tending the iron. It made me smile and warmed this cold cold heart. Thanks Max! Always look forward to Tuesdays because of you.
Your*
@ As a fellow pedant, thank you calling out that unfortunate auto-correct. I can’t believe I missed it.
My Dad’s waffles: Standard modern waffle batter, and shredded cheddar 1-2 cup. While that’s rising, cut a pack of bacon in half width ways and cook until firm but not crispy. Once that’s done, heat waffle iron and add crushed walnuts, toasting them briefly before adding a slice of bacon; pour batter over and cook as usual. Good with maple or fruit syrup.
That sounds like a fine breakfast.
For that to work for me it would have to be an unsweetened batter.
I'm saving this
Kinda reminds me of okonomiyaki.
In Switzerland, we bake these thin, crispy wafers for Christmas called Bräzeli/Bricelets. The batter is either so thick that it can be shaped into balls to produce flat wafers or it can be thin and pourable to make wafers than can be rolled. The classical ones have a rich, buttery taste with a hint of lemon.
Before this video, I never thought about the historical connection, but now I see that waffles are basically just big leavened wafers.
And then, you have the savoury ones with either cheese or caraway seeds...absolutely delicious.
In the Netherlands, we make thin, rolled up wafers for new years! My mom makes them with cinnamon, but I also know people who go for vanilla flavour. The batter is pourable, and they're served filled with whipped cream. They're called nieuwjaarsrolletjes, knijpkoekjes or kniepertjes.
I don't know if you've ever looked into the history of baking powder and soda, but it's an interesting subject because it democratized so much food that had been reserved for rich people. In particular, cakes became cheaper and easier to make, where before they were a temperamental baked good.
You are Literally Tied As One of the Best Three Cooking Shows That I Watch! ALL of You Are So Genuine and Honest about how you Relate! None of you Never Cover your Mistakes and Admit Them to Us! IT is Amazing how Easy it is to Learn History and How to a Cook a dish with You!
The Original Grilled Cheese Was a Waffle!!? Let's ADD BACON and Maple Syrup!!! PERFECT!!!!
Through meditation and by giving full attention to one thing at a time, we can learn to direct attention where we choose.
You should make a video about crêpes, they were first made for French travellers in the papal states and those travellers then brought the recipe back to France
I suspect the "womb of the pike" would actually be the unfertilized eggs, we eat something similar in Denmark today called "Rogn" often from Cod. It is similar to caviar in taste.
Roe in English.
In sweden, waffles are very thin and shaped like 5 hearts stuck together. I either have just sugar or raspberry jam and whipped cream on them. It's such a nostalgic childhood treat that reminds me of spring/summer
Sweden here too, but i dont have any waffle iron, so i make Krabbelurer in stead
Also in Norway! What he called the Norwegian waffle maker is actually a goro maker - very different!
@karimarie2401 oh interesting! Never heard of it but googled it and my first thought was "that kind of looks like a cannoli"
I'm so used to the thin ones I forget that they're not that thin anywhere else than Norway/Sweden, so when he said stack, I tried to depict a stack of waffles like that and really made me sad for how cold they'd be. -_-
@M.Datura me too. Maybe put the oven on its lowest setting and keep them on a tray in there 🤔
So Greek person here, "ovelos" is a spit for cooking meat over coals. There was a type of bread that was made by wrapping dough around a smaller spit that was also named "ovelias". That is probably how the "obelos" thing came about. The word "ovelias" survives in modern Greek but only used to describe lamb or goat cooked over coals on a spit.
If more people cared about baking/cooking then this channel would be even more populated. Alas, the fast food industry and modern convenience has led to a departure from truly interesting and sound content.
Keep on striving for excellence in learning food history.
I just discovered this channel yesterday and it has become my favorite. 🙂
Awww thanks ☺️
Ooh, you lucky person, you can binge-watch all the old episodes as if they’re were new!
Welcome to the community. May I suggest the hard tack (clack clack) as one of your first to watch.
@@ericwilliams1659 The first one I watched was What Did Medieval Peasants eat? I watched Hardtack and Hellfire Stew.
Welcome!
In the Netherlands we still make the thin waffle type, we eat on new years day (especially in the north of the Netherlands) we call them kniepertjes. Also: the stroopwafel is a thin waffle cut in half filled with syrup.
the thicker version we bake in heart shaped rounds we eat them a lot during carnaval with some cinnamon sugar on them. The squares are more from Belgium.
Not really, the thicker square versions are traditionally made for New Year's Eve in Limburg. I believe 'waffele' are even more popular than oliebollen there.
My family's waffle-maker was a cast Iron one, made to be used over a heat source. It had a cast iron ring for the base, and the two sides of the waffle iron proper connected to the base in a ball joint. You poured the batter in, closed it, let it rest on the base, then to flip it you just lifted it up, rotated the iron around on the ball joint, then set it back down. Really effective and efficient, and I guarantee at some point in its time with our family, it was used over a wood-burning kitchen stove.
My family also had such a waffle iron which became an item of dispute. Each of the six children wanted to inherit it. When I saw such an iron in an antique store I snapped it up and took myself out of the running. Cast iron is wonderful for cooking.
@@sundrawhitham5089 It is! It takes a bit of care with cleaning and re-seasoning, but cast iron is really great.
Love this episode. Oh! My wife had ordered an Autographed copy of your book in December. I was given it as my Birthday present yesterday. What an amazing present. It is incredible. Thank for putting in the work and effort Max.
So many fascinating comments! Here's mine: First, LOVED the episode! Also, my Italian grandmother and her sisters always made a pizzelle-like cookie for special occasions, but they called them "schuldinis". I have no idea why. They were made on top of the stove with a long-handled iron with a grid pattern. In the center was the year my grandparents married, so it must have been a wedding present. Finally, the batter contained a bit of red wine, as well as sugar, eggs, flour, anise seed and some other ingredients I did not commit to memory. We would always have great fun making them together. They had to cook about 30 seconds on each side and we would all count out loud during the process, yelling "TURN!" when it was time to flip them over. They were so delicious, best with a cup of my grandmother's favorite spearmint hot tea with sugar and lemon.
I also love "Le Ménagier de Paris"! I get a kick out of thinking about how this busy (lawyer?) could have picked up all that household knowledge. My sister and refer to him as the Lady Catherine de Bourgh of medieval France.
Leggo my eggo
Time to waffle
And dine
A great American breakfast
Dessert or snack with wine
Spoonfuls of yeast
Rise a golden shine
Put to a plate
For a much cherished mealtime
Amazing history. The etymological link between wafers and waffles, the long history of baked goods with ornate patterning, the link between those and waffle irons and the way those patterns currently manifest in cookies like Oreos internationally and custard creams here in the UK. Also, the strange way waffles have gone from being as international as sausages to being almost exclusively associated with Belgium and the US, though not explained here, is just fascinating to note.
Can confirm Liege waffles are incredible.
I was amazed when you talked about the French "Oblie"! In Mexico and Central America we have something called "Oblea" which are thin wafers similar to the communion wafers and are eated with "Dulce de Leche" 😋 they also usually have a grid pattern on them! I did not think they had such an origin and that they are related to waffles.
Obleas are lovely! 😋 I wish they were more popular.
I remember a very long time ago when I first got into Tasting History, I went on a short research tangent into the history of waffles, and I figured it would be a perfect subject for an episode. It's nice to see you finally got around to it! It'd be really cool to see if you could get that oldschool waffle iron cleaned up from the rust to make a wafer with it.
In Norway, my family eat cold waffles with jam, sour cream and brown goat cheese. In Sweden, we eat them warm with jam and whipped cream, or vanilla ice cream and warm cloud berries boiled with sugar.
18:00 As a non native english speaker I´m delighted to hear such intonation kkkk
Fun fact: To dedicate a product to an upper class and sell it to common people it´s an old marketing trick.
I think the "womb of a pike" may refer to caviar/roe. Apparently in some Scandinavian countries and Russia, sour cream and fish roe on thin crepes are still popular!
As a Belgian from Antwerp, we still use those cast iron waffle irons (but with deeper holes, as you say, for yeasted doughs)! But we use them on a gas stove 🤭
We have a family recipe and it's by the bucket. Literally. We don't do waffles if we're going to make less than a bucket of dough 😅 and then we start baking, and tell all our friends and family that we're having a "wafelenbak" (waffle bake). So they can drop by whenever they like that day to eat lots of waffles and have a natter with whoever has also turned up 😅
The Norwegian iron would presumably be for making Goro (short for 'good advice'), which are slightly thicker than Krumkake (curved cake, literally). Both Goro and Krumkake are mainly considered Christmas cookies nowadays, don't know if that was always the case though.
When I was a child (about 4 or 5) my granma used to make mildly sweet waffles, that we ate with keschmier (a german-ish salty sourcream, popular here in southern Brazil) and molasses. Sometimes we had them with a strong cheese and goiabada.
She had those big round waffle irons, that made them in a 4 leaf clover shape, and we called those "vaffel", from the old Rhineland dialect most of the older people spoke.
Sweet+Savoury flavours go toghether better than most people believe.
Fish flavored wafers reminds me of the prawn crackers you can find in street stalls in Southeast and East Asia! Very medieval looking press to squeeze the batter and meat into a crisp form
Same!
Are those the ones that somehow transform a whole squid or prawn into a crisp cracker? Those things are epic.
There are still thick waffle batters made with yeast today. One of the most delicious are Lütticher (as in a town in Belgian) Waffeln. You make a very thick batter with yeast. After rising, right before you put it in the waffle iron, you add pearl sugar, so the waffel carmalizes. So, so, so wonderful. Thank you vor your content.
Lüttich/Liège/Luis, it is all the same city but in each of the 3 languages we speak,.
In the state of Yucatán here in Mexico there's a dessert that's sold in street carts call Marquesitas. The traditional ones are thin waffers filled with Edam cheese. Now they are filled with other things like Nutella or strawberries and other things.
Back when I was a kid, say the very early 2000s, and I used to go look for stuff at the Goodwill, and Saint Vinnie's.
For a long run, there was a crazy amount of waffle irons that kept being dontated.
Lived in suburbs of Tacoma, and I'm still unsure where a never ended load of donated waffle irons came from.
About a year in, and I stopped seeing them, like ever again.
Lots of waffle irons.
*Edit: I forgot to say that the irons where really big, like the size of a stovetop, or a very big fireplace. That's what made the memory remain after decades, not just one but many that kept showing up.
That's so random but fascinating! Were they electric? Is there a large European population? Waffle House closures? 😊
@@BSWVI Nothing but metal, big metal irons. My older sister said they must have been family crests, but an older kid is still a kid.
We settled on family crest waffles, because for a glorious moment in time, my big sister played the part of the smart phone, and I just went with it.
Tacoma was a logging town way beforehand, though it was the amount of big waffle irons that made me say anything about it.
I'm thinking a collector passed
@@jbaby362 That sounds like a reasonable enough explanation.
People collect anything and everything, and if no arrangements have been made for after one's passing, the contents can end up going wherever next of kin figure they can get rid of them, if they don't have a good idea of the value or where to sell. Assuming there is value.
Even your cat was interested! Cute.
Cats are always interested in everything, at least mine are.
Max, as a Dutch-speaking Belgian, I must say that I very much approve of your Dutch pronunciation (Don't ever try Flemish, though, for your own sake). Also, I highly recommend Belgian waffles to anyone who hasn't had the pleasure of having one.
Yes, it sounded really good! Not perfect, but better than most tries I've heard.
The same in germam
My mum's family is from Norway so the recipe we have creates circular, heart shaped waffles with an iron. They have sugar, eggs, flour, cardamom, milk and butter in it. Magnificent, but definitely a desert.
Thanks
Thank you so much!
Waffles & Wine sounds like an 18th-century version of Gin & Juice
😂
Off topic on topic: Gin and Juice was likely a thing in the 1700s - Gin was first created in the 1300s.
It could also be a great brunch joint
A good pairing, as is attested to in the writings of the famous 15th century outlaw bard Snoope Dogge!
Waffles and wine sounds like “Sunday Brunch,” they might have Champagne on Sundays where those waffles also had fruit, sausage and even chicken, because the Day of the Lord should be celebrated 😂
I’d love to see you tackle lutefisk. A fermented whitefish from Scandinavian countries, still popular in parts of MN. It’s certainly, um, an acquired experience.
Maybe do a double episode with Hakarl,then he can scratch off those two and move to good preserved fish like bacalhau.
As a Swede, I don't find lutfisk particularly strange. I would say it's rather bland and boring. It's not fermented though. It's cured in lye. Which is interesting, as lye is of course completely inedible. So you need to soak it for almost a week before you cook it. If you're ever served lutfisk that smells odd, or has a strange gelatinous texture, it's probably because it hasn't been soaked sufficiently.
It's meant to give room for the taste of the other sides, like mashed peas, mustard, bacon etc.
Upvoted for the Bayeux Tapestry tea towel. Well, not just for that, but that's a big plus.
12:43 - This reminded me of a samosa vendor that would always set up shop at our local Farmer's Market back when I was a kid. Their samosas were insanely popular (I have yet to find any that match them to this day) and created such huge lines that they were blocking access to other vendors. The vendors complained and, rather than move their location as the people in charge of the market suggested, they just stopped going. You could only get them from their family-owned convenience store.
When I was in college I studied medieval history. I also loved to cook. My mom was a smart woman -- she found me the books Fabulous Feasts and To The King's Taste with their translated medieval recipes. Unlike many of my colleagues, for whom history began and pretty much ended with chronicles and cartularies, I was fascinated by the whole package -- what music did they play? what books did they read? what clothes did they wear ... and, of course, what foods did they eat? I ran across several wafer recipes over time (including a pepper and cardamom one that was ... interesting). Thank you for reminding me so much of my love of putting a fuller picture back into history, a vision of people living real lives, not just names and dates. 🙂
An excellent thing about scandinavian waffle day is that it occurs right around the time it is reasonable to keep your windows open to ventilate the cooking fumes that inevitably come from proper waffles...
For me, waffles are also closely associated with small, local heritage houses on the countryside. The batter is easy to prepare and the waffles are easy to serve warm as a heavier snack so it fits perfectly for roadtrip flea markets and stops along hiking trails (: My mum's husbands family ran a "waffle cottage" in the mountains and he maintains that the ONLY correct waffle recipe is two parts heavy cream whipped, into which you mix one part flour and one part water, as well as some salt. Makes for very crispy waffles. Delicious with hjortron or queensberry jam.
You could make waffle patterned hard tack. That would be a unique form of waffle. Plus it goes *clack clack* .
Hahaha omg he has to do this now
My grandmother used to use a chocolate cake batter in her waffle iron, and serve them with whipped cream for dessert.
I cannot WAIT for the new cookbook with the recipes and histories!! I don’t know which is better, the recipes or the history! Kudos to you for all the research you do for us. Love ya, man!! ❤️❤️
5:38 That's specifically an iron for making "goro", which I just learned googling it is a shortened form of "gode raad" (antiquated spelling of "gode råd" meaning "good advice"). It's one of the 7 kinds of traditional cookies that is considered "mandatory" to have for Christmas. There's not a definite list of which ones are the correct 7; and almost all of them are basically various ways to combine flour, sugar and butter and/or cream and sometimes egg, and often not much else, so my family isn't too bothered about having all of them, because most of them are actually kind of boring.
But goro is very often considered one of the 7 kinds, and it's one of the better ones in my opinion despite being one of the butter, eggs, flour, cream kinds.
We wouldn't call goro a "vaffel" (lit. waffle) though, even though it's obviously a related recipe; our waffles are almost always a ring of 5 heart shaped waffles that form a rough circle, and they are fairly thick and soft (unless you overcook it until crispy). We generally serve our waffles with jam (traditionally strawberry or raspberry jam) and sourcream and sugar.
There's also an interesting tradition in some parts of Norway where use waffles (the whole circle) as a tortilla to wrap sausages for hot dogs. The traditional hotdogs here are sausages wrapped in "lompe" which is a sort of a soft potato and flour tortilla (lompe is very similar to "lefse" which I understand is still a thing in the regions of USA with a lot of Scandinavian heritage; except lompe always has potatoes and flour, while lefse is often just made of flour)
(I just realised I have not taken my ADHD meds... I forgot where my comment was going, lol)
Hi Max, A Swede here. In my home we have always eaten waffles in the style of blini, (smetana(but in our case sour cream), union and fish roe).
Swede here too, I make Krabbelurer instead, i dont have any waffle iron
"....and I think that's best left in the past."
Yes, I totally agree! Let old dead pike womb waffles be a thing of the past!
In Norway when it comes to waffles, we usually have it with Jam, Brown whey cheese and\or butter.
To clarify a bit more; sack was a very popular fortified (with brandy) wine, mainly produced in Spain. Regular sack was also (somewhat to very) sweet, and used as a sweetening ingredient in recipes. Dry sack was less sweet and used differently in recipes - adding more citrussy notes, and it was usually called out as such (dry sack). Port and sherry are now used as direct replacements, and you can get dry and sweet versions of both, depending upon which type of sack you want to replace. Another fantastic video! I will try this recipe asap.
How lovely! I’ve actually just finished baking prosphora, a bread used for communion in orthodox Christianity that is stamped with the sign of the cross and other symbols. It’s so interesting to see that tradition in other denominations
I bought a cast iron waffle maker years ago and it's great. Heavy as sin but makes great waffles. I bought it after being completely frustrated in finding an electric waffle maker that wasn't for Belgian waffles after the ancient one my mother gave me finally died. Those huge holes are great as a desert base but I want the smaller holes for the proper butter/syrup/waffle ratio.