American Reacts to British Things that are Impossible to Explain to Non Brits

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Tyler Rumple

Tyler Rumple

Жыл бұрын

Check out me and my twin brother reacting TOGETHER here:
/ @ryanandtyler
As an American I am sure that there are a lot of things I don't understand about Britain, but I have never had the opportunity to enjoy a video that is completely dedicated to explaining those things that are impossible to explain. That is why I am very interested in reacting to this video today. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!

Пікірлер: 474
@speleokeir
@speleokeir Жыл бұрын
British baked beans are different to US ones. Ours come in a sweet tomato sauce, not a BBQ one. Beans on hot, buttered, toast can be eaten for breakfast, lunch or tea and with a variety of other foods. Traditionally they were a very cheap, easy and filling meal to give the kids, so we've all grown up with them.
@RoyCousins
@RoyCousins Жыл бұрын
I've heard (from Americans) that the tomato or barbecue sauce used for baked beans (haricot beans) in the US is not as good as the sauce usually used in the UK. The recipe was changed (improved) for the tastes of British consumers when first cans were imported.
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
@@RoyCousins - I love baked beans and have for many years travelled to the US. Heinz beans in America are nothing like UK made (Heinz) beans... Baked beans generally in the US are molasses based (sickly sweet), NOT tomato sauce based. They are NOTHING like the tinned baked beans in Britain! Which is why #1/ Americans cannot understand why we Brits would put them on toast, eat at breakfast or even 'EAT THEM' as a meal !!! #2/ So many 'ex-pat British' shops IMPORT Heinz Baked Beans from the UK into America... It's a funny old world - LOL!
@scarba
@scarba Жыл бұрын
how do they eat their baked beans then? Taste of sugar???
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
@@scarba - Mostly (and I am generalising), Americans consider 'baked beans' just an optional 'take it or leave it' side dish (like putting a dash/spoonful of Piccalilli onto a cheese board) - often with a barbeque.
@scarba
@scarba Жыл бұрын
@@stewedfishproductions7959 thx for replying. I had no idea. In the cowboy movies they ate beans out a can so I thought it was like our beans.
@crazycatlover1885
@crazycatlover1885 Жыл бұрын
Asking what the flavour of marmite is is like asking the flavour of chocolate. It's marmite flavour, and that's the only way you can really explain it.
@Beastlydo
@Beastlydo Жыл бұрын
like twiglets lol
@isobelswan
@isobelswan Жыл бұрын
@@Beastlydo I love Marmite but don't like Twiglets.
@Beastlydo
@Beastlydo Жыл бұрын
@@isobelswan I like both but recently the price of Marmite as shot right up near me.
@malcomflibbleghast8140
@malcomflibbleghast8140 Жыл бұрын
bollox...its salty with overtones of badger excrament......is pretty close discription
@robertpetre9378
@robertpetre9378 Жыл бұрын
Beer yeast extract doesn’t sound particularly appetising but I suppose it’s a very marmite flavour sorry mind the pun😂😂😂😂
@sampeeps3371
@sampeeps3371 Жыл бұрын
Buttery toast with a THIN layer of Marmite is delish. Its good to add to any meat sauce.
@alanshepherd4304
@alanshepherd4304 Жыл бұрын
Had a slice of buttered toast and Marmite this morning!! Delicious, as always😂😂
@valeriedavidson2785
@valeriedavidson2785 Жыл бұрын
@@alanshepherd4304 To me, Marmite is disgusting. I cannot understand how anyone could stomach it.
@budd2nd
@budd2nd Жыл бұрын
I had marmite on my hot buttered crumpets for breakfast this morning. And yes I always add it to my meat sauces. As for tea, I started having weak milky tea in a sippy cup as a toddler.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
You can make a soothing drink if you're poorly and off work, by dissolving a teaspoon of Marmite in a cup of hot water.
@alanshepherd4304
@alanshepherd4304 Жыл бұрын
@@valeriedavidson2785 I'm 70 next March and I've been eating Marmite since I was 18 months old, as was my son! We found him in his high chair with his first in the jar of Marmite, licking his fingers!!😂😂😂
@johnhazelgrove1616
@johnhazelgrove1616 Жыл бұрын
Australia here - again drawing on our great British traditions .. I recall drinking tea from my earliest memories of childhood .. in fact, I remember my Mother briging a cup of tea with slice of hot buttered toast sitting on top of the cup (to keep it warm !) to my brother and I in bed on winter's mornings... I didn't ever think we were spoilt, but we obviously were .. looking back, it was probably her way of having a few quiet extra minutes to herself in the morning.. but my mother did always make coffee after Sunday lunch, and Sunday lunch was always the full baked spectacular - summer and winter - without fail... And baked bean sandwiches (on buttered fresh white bread) were a favourite school lunch in primary school.. andthey still are today, decades later...
@jackdshellback3819
@jackdshellback3819 Жыл бұрын
Marmite or Vegimite?
@dawnc1419
@dawnc1419 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget mushy pea sandwiches 😋
@darthwiizius
@darthwiizius Жыл бұрын
Let's be honest, our teaoholicsm started in the womb.
@dawnc1419
@dawnc1419 Жыл бұрын
Put it this way Tyler, during lockdown people stocked up on teabags before anything else 😁🥰
@t.a.k.palfrey3882
@t.a.k.palfrey3882 Жыл бұрын
If you enjoy a great laugh, look at the KZfaq compilation of Marmite tv ads. They really use satire to play on the "love it or hate it" theme. They're amongst the funniest series of commercials ever. Btw, I am on the hate it wing, as I am with the very similar Aussie spread called Vegemite. As for when British kids first begin taking tea, families vary of course, but my schoolmates had started drinking it before beginning school - just as I had at home in East Africa. So, by the time I joined them at junior prep (aged eight), we were all experienced in preparing it ourselves.
@catherinehaywood7092
@catherinehaywood7092 Жыл бұрын
Marmite is the best. grew up on it and brought my own children up on it. Now I’m off to have some on toast.
@unclegreybeard3969
@unclegreybeard3969 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like child abuse to me. 😂😂
@rogerhass6227
@rogerhass6227 Жыл бұрын
If you are curious about marmite you can purchase it through Amazon. I know this for sure because I actually have a jar of it in my home here in Salem Oregon. And yes when you do spread it it's a very thin layer you don't want to put it on thick and I usually like it on buttered toast yeah you spread the butter on first and then Marmite on top of that.
@dallassukerkin6878
@dallassukerkin6878 Жыл бұрын
:grins: Like any addictively lovely substance you will find yourself putting more and more on as the years go by :D
@davidwallin7518
@davidwallin7518 Жыл бұрын
@@dallassukerkin6878 I don't even bother with the bread - I just have a spoonful of it
@benlee3071
@benlee3071 Жыл бұрын
You defiantly know if someone’s at your house if they’ll stay long or not based on if they decline or say yes to a cup of tea lol and we always drink tea when something goes wrong because it’s something to have in your hand it’s nice and relaxing and warm to comfort you.
@The.Best.Collector
@The.Best.Collector Жыл бұрын
For us boys there's 👦 something better to hold in your hand for comfort 🤣
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
"Defiantly" -- ♡ LOL
@The.Android
@The.Android Жыл бұрын
Al Murray does a funny stand-up piece on the metric vs imperial systems which can be found on YT if you haven't already seen it. The UK uses both systems.
@anta3612
@anta3612 Жыл бұрын
My parents began giving me tea to drink when I was 4 years old. To begin with it was more milk than tea and as I got older it became more tea than milk.
@angelavara4097
@angelavara4097 Жыл бұрын
I remember my mom giving me a bottle of tea while I lay on the sofa,I was about 2.
@taylorpower3862
@taylorpower3862 Жыл бұрын
Had it as long as I can remember from tea and biscuits as a very young child at my grandparents every weekend
@anta3612
@anta3612 Жыл бұрын
@@taylorpower3862 My mother told me that the first full sentence I ever said as a child (2 years old) was: "may I have a cup of tea please?" 🤣
@Vortiporius_
@Vortiporius_ Жыл бұрын
A tin of baked beans has 7.8G of your 30G daily fibre. They are incredible for making sure you get your daily intake without tons of fruit. It would take 3 bananas to have the same fibre intake. Price/g of fibre.
@crimsonwizard2560
@crimsonwizard2560 Жыл бұрын
yeah, but it can be a wee bit windy.
@Paul-hl8yg
@Paul-hl8yg Жыл бұрын
Good for protein too 🇬🇧
@Vortiporius_
@Vortiporius_ Жыл бұрын
@@crimsonwizard2560 If you hit your fibre intake daily, gas becomes less of a problem. If you find they make you fart a lot, you may need to take a closer look at your daily fibre intake. It's the most important thing to look at for healthy bowel movements alongside exercise.
@crimsonwizard2560
@crimsonwizard2560 Жыл бұрын
@@Vortiporius_ Jeez, lighten up man, it was a joke. FFS.
@MrBonners
@MrBonners Жыл бұрын
" A tin of ... " a phrase only used in the UK. Occasionally heard here in western Canada.
@cireenasimcox1081
@cireenasimcox1081 Жыл бұрын
"So people in Britain used to have "Imperial"? Mate - the clue is in the name!😂🤣
@jonathangoll2918
@jonathangoll2918 Жыл бұрын
I do have Marmite occasionally. To start out getting used to it, you need to spread it thinly on buttered toast. But you can get addicted; a friend of mine used to get through large catering tins of the stuff. It's nutritious, being particularly good for Vitamin B12. It's called after the French word for a small stewpot. 'Public Schools' is an ancient phrase dating back to the time when many nobles' sons were educated at home; public schools were accessible to anybody who could pay.
@johnchallener
@johnchallener Жыл бұрын
Marmite is nice with just a tiny bit spread over hot buttered toast, the reason why a lot of people might not like it because they put too much on, tastes a bit salty and savoury
@valeriedavidson2785
@valeriedavidson2785 Жыл бұрын
Even a tiny fraction of it is disgusting.
@jackdshellback3819
@jackdshellback3819 Жыл бұрын
@@valeriedavidson2785 to you maybe, but to many others it's delicious. Probably a genetic thing.
@catherinewilkins2760
@catherinewilkins2760 Жыл бұрын
We use both metric and imperial measurements, no problems. I believe our imperial measurements can vary with the USA. We also used 24 hours and 12 hours on our clocks, no problems.
@c0wbag49
@c0wbag49 Жыл бұрын
A gallon and a ton are different. Apparently the French n English used different things to measure a gallon and the US chose the French style to follow... so the Brits get more for the gallon 😎
@primalengland
@primalengland Жыл бұрын
I was one of those who joined the protests when the metric system came in. Pounds, shillings and pence were beautiful and poetic. And our beans aren’t like your beans. Ours aren’t bbq sweet, they are in a thick tomato sauce and are phenomenal. Lots of KZfaq videos of Americans trying Heinz beans on toast, and they all love it.
@robcrossgrove7927
@robcrossgrove7927 Жыл бұрын
I often eat Heinz baked beans straight out of the tin. Any time of the day.
@neppihc5488
@neppihc5488 Жыл бұрын
Tea as a measurement of time... "Go on, I'll stay for a cuppa." I'm British English, and I leave my teabag in my milky tea almost to the end. Don't report me 🤫😂
@Sol3UK
@Sol3UK Жыл бұрын
Our pints are bigger than the US pints, more beer 😁 by about 20%
@fergy1442
@fergy1442 Жыл бұрын
and of cause more petrol in a gallon better mpg in UK
@cpmahon
@cpmahon Жыл бұрын
The best way to have Marmite is to take the jar from the cupboard, then make some toast and butter it. Finally eat the toast and throw the Marmite in the bin!
@Holly-Kate
@Holly-Kate Жыл бұрын
Yup 👍🏻
@TechnoMan82
@TechnoMan82 Жыл бұрын
Sacrilege!!
@atorthefightingeagle9813
@atorthefightingeagle9813 Жыл бұрын
Wimp. You need to man up.
@rosalynadams3758
@rosalynadams3758 Жыл бұрын
Of course
@dib000
@dib000 Жыл бұрын
Must be such a sad life 🤣
@brian9731
@brian9731 Жыл бұрын
British "public schools" - an explanation: way back in the day before schooling was compulsory for all and paid for by the government (pre-1880s approx), all schools charged a fee to attend. Those which were set up as open to anyone who could pay were "Public Schools". Other schools were established by professional bodies and associations and other organisations to exclusively educate the children of members of each of those professions or organisations - those were also fee paying establishments and would have been "private schools". Many of these schools exist to this day and the statuses of some have changed over the years, while others have kept the same status. A few of them have been absorbed into the state sector too and are now free.
@t.a.k.palfrey3882
@t.a.k.palfrey3882 Жыл бұрын
Yes, you're perfectly correct, sir. Though the very earliest schools weren't run by professions, but by the Church, either for novices or (as in schools such as today's Ely and Wells schools, and Kings at Canterbury) for cathedral choristers.
@MrPaulMorris
@MrPaulMorris Жыл бұрын
I started drinking tea at around 3-4 years old and that was quite usual. Quite milky and sweet at first then moving towards more 'normal' adult ratios as the years go by. I am something of an outlier in that I actually drink my tea black (ie no milk) as I find it much more refreshing. I like coffee and spend unreasonable amounts of money in my local coffee shops but tea is the staple from breakfast through to bedtime. Tea with breakfast, a cuppa with a biscuit (cookie!) midmorning then a nice mug of tea at lunchtime. Another quick cuppa midafternoon with a slice of cake, just time for a quick one while preparing for dinner and, of course, a nice cup after dinner. Maybe a cup with a chocolate or two while relaxing in front of the TV then it's off to bed with a good book, a couple of biscuits and a good mug of tea. A pretty average day...
@RWBHere
@RWBHere 6 ай бұрын
The mixer tap has definitely been a thing for decades in Britain, but it makes good sense for separate taps to be available in a kitchen, especially if you want drinking water. When we had our kitchen rebuilt a few years ago, we had to ask specifically for separate hot and cold taps. The default is a mixer tap.
@matshjalmarsson3008
@matshjalmarsson3008 Жыл бұрын
He forgot the plumbing put outside, the carpets in the bathrooms, the washing machine in the kitchen, the pub culture, the heavy and thick curtains and fireplaces...
@MrPW2009
@MrPW2009 Жыл бұрын
Oh yes, we use imperial (ie from the Empire - meaning British Empire!). For example, we buy petrol (gas) I'm litres, but we determine the efficiency of a car by how many miles per gallon. Roads and Motorways are signposted in miles, though nearly everything else is measured in metres. We definitely use both, still.
@grahvis
@grahvis Жыл бұрын
Mixer taps are quite common where the hot water comes from a combination boiler. Separate taps where the hot water comes from a tank, are to avoid any possibly contaminated water being siphoned into the fresh cold water system. I worked in a laboratory in the UK back in the late 50s where of course, the metric system was used. Beans on toast are surprisingly nice, particularly with some cheese or an egg.
@settleluna7692
@settleluna7692 Жыл бұрын
I have separate taps for my bath and bathroom sinks but have a single tap for my kitchen. My house was only built 4 years ago so it's still very common place😂
@cheryla7480
@cheryla7480 Жыл бұрын
You looked a little confused when they mentioned the Imperial system of weight, and referred to stone. Even though Canada adopted a lot of ( all things British ) ; we did not adopt stone in Canada. Like the U.S. we weighed in pounds. For example if you weighed 147 pounds here, in the UK it would be ten stone, seven. A stone is the equivalent of fourteen pounds.. So ten stone would be 140 pounds + 7 pounds = 147 pounds.
@JL16061980
@JL16061980 Жыл бұрын
Metric and imperial measurements are pretty much interchangeable for people who are aged 35 + in the UK, we would have learnt both at school and at home. Despite being technically a metric country... we still use miles for travel, land is still defined in acres, if we go to a pub we still buy a 'pint' of beer... so some things never changed over to metric. But hubs and I freely switch between mm, cm, inches and feet when taking measurements. My weight and height I would use imperial; stone and lbs, feet and inches respectively. Hubs is an engineer so he freely switches between metric and imperial because of their American customers I.e. Boeing, American military who use things like 10/32unf which is closest to saying 8mm in metric but they are actually not the same measurement, plus hubs uses another type of British standard imperial measurement called Whitworth. Clear as mud right?? 😂😂😂
@Thurgosh_OG
@Thurgosh_OG Жыл бұрын
The US Military has been metric for twenty years or so. Is your hubby working on older aircraft?
@JL16061980
@JL16061980 Жыл бұрын
@@Thurgosh_OG no, you clearly don't know your own countries military very well. But thank you for trying to be 'clever'.
@Rhianalanthula
@Rhianalanthula Жыл бұрын
In the days before free education, there were often caveats or requirements on who could attend certain schools. They might be associated with a guild such as Stationers Guild, or just for those living in a certain area, or a minimum grade. If the school had no entry requirements at all, it was public as anyone from anywhere could go. As schooling became free, the older schools formed a sort of group, and being able to join the group is more restricted.
@barneylaurance1865
@barneylaurance1865 Жыл бұрын
Yep. So now public schools tend to be the most long-established prestigious out of all the private schools. From wikipedia it seems the term is slightly vague, but generally public schools are the ones affiliated to an organisation called the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.
@dannyhoughton74
@dannyhoughton74 Жыл бұрын
I'm an avid tea drinker... I'm the description of a British tea drinker... Always drunk it from being about 3 years old... From becoming an adult and moving into my own place I'm now an addict... English Breakfast Tea (Black tea as some call it) is drunk with or without milk and with or without sugar.. Personally I'm little milk no sugar.. I'd guesstimate on average I drink 10 - 12 mugs of tea a day
@davewilliams3800
@davewilliams3800 Жыл бұрын
Putting baked beans in the frying pan ? Never !
@johnp8131
@johnp8131 Жыл бұрын
With Marmite, think of a highly concentrated salty beef flavour, with the consistency of a 'set' honey? Personally, I love it.
@gillianrimmer7733
@gillianrimmer7733 Жыл бұрын
All my 4 children had milky tea in their sippy cups as toddlers.
@susieq9801
@susieq9801 Жыл бұрын
I suggest you watch the ads for "Marmite, love it or hate it". They are hilarious, especially the one of the mom feeding her baby.
@anitaherbert1037
@anitaherbert1037 Жыл бұрын
The trick to marmite is alot of butter and very tiny bit of marmite. I mix it into butter first then spread. I hardly dip the tip of the knife into the jar before mixing into a container of butter then use it on my toast every morning. Great source of B vits. It tastes like the little crusty caramely bits on a joint of beef.
@carolineskipper6976
@carolineskipper6976 Жыл бұрын
Whenever anyone sets foot in our homes - be it friends, family, or workmen - the first thing you do is ask them if they want cup of tea. Not to do so would be considered rude. (Many people don't drink tea- so this question is then followed up with "Or coffee or a cold drink?"). Distances of any length are ALWAYS measured in miles and speeds in mph. Heights and weights are usually also in imperial- though this is a more mixed picture.
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys Жыл бұрын
What happened when in England was that some place names were named 1000-2000 years ago. Our language has changed, but the pronunciation hasn’t. So a local village here is called Wybunbury, but it’s pronounced wim-bree. Which means derived from Wigbeorn’s bury. Bury (pronounced bree) was an Anglo-Saxon/ old English word means fortified place, a stronghold/ fort. Any place name ending in ton, is Anglo-Saxon for settlement or town. The village of Acton mean oak town, ac (pronounced ack) being the old English word for oak. My hometown of Nantwich. Is derived from a Celtic word for sacred spring. While wich (pronounced witch) is the Roman word for for where they collected salt from the ground. We have salt springs here. That’s why the pronunciation is hard. Unless your a used to it.
@susanhanstock6879
@susanhanstock6879 Жыл бұрын
Marmite toasted sandwich: 2 slices of buttered toast. Spread one slice with some marmite. Sprinkle over some grated carrot. Place other slice of buttered toast on top. Slice in half, and enjoy with your favourite cuppa. 🤗
@damiblade1349
@damiblade1349 Жыл бұрын
Beans are great source of fibre and protein. Feels you up and warms you up.
@colingregory7464
@colingregory7464 Жыл бұрын
Black tea (English breakfast etc) is usually relatively low in caffeine and consequently less of an issue for giving to kids and its great warming up in cold weather even if you are a kid
@Thurgosh_OG
@Thurgosh_OG Жыл бұрын
I also say that English Breakfast is not the tea of choice for many households. So many varieties and of course those made for the different water types like Scottish Blend (blended specifically for Scotland's soft water) is obviously not 'english breakfast tea'. Black teas yes, English breakfast not so much.
@colingregory7464
@colingregory7464 Жыл бұрын
@@Thurgosh_OG I apologise for the offense, but English breakfast was just intended as an example, my personal favourite is Russian Caravan, because I like it not for any technical reasons
@angelavara4097
@angelavara4097 Жыл бұрын
Don't Diss beans on toast until you try it.
@Well-in-the-garden
@Well-in-the-garden Жыл бұрын
Ahhhh Marmite yes I love it, two of my daughters also love it and one hates it. My eldest daughter loves it so much it was actually the first word she ever said, and you would think she would go on to say Mama next because it's so similar - but no - she said dada next. Marmite she continued to ask me for constantly for months LOL
@psychosoma5049
@psychosoma5049 Жыл бұрын
Marmite should be used like soy sauce, as an ingredient to give depth, people try to spread it on toast thick like peanut butter or Nutella and it is very strong
@primalengland
@primalengland Жыл бұрын
Over here, the better the friend the more abrasive the insult. It’s called banter, and the world is a better place for it.
@rogerraynsford5737
@rogerraynsford5737 Жыл бұрын
Tea is good for everything from the common cold to the plague , one cup of Tea and it works wonders .
@adanianking
@adanianking Жыл бұрын
Marmite was the basis for Australia’s Vegemite, which you tried and seemed to enjoy on your brothers livestream.
@Britishgeohistorian
@Britishgeohistorian Жыл бұрын
What is his brothers channel called
@jackdshellback3819
@jackdshellback3819 Жыл бұрын
I find Vegimite rather wishy washy compared to Marmite. It's definitely not as good, although the Australians would disagree.
@jamiehammell1
@jamiehammell1 Жыл бұрын
@@Britishgeohistorian it's ryan wuzer/ryan was
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
It's strange. Marmite is King, but I prefer its younger brother Vegemite. Similar to how single malt whisky is canonically superior, but blent whisky is nicer.
@MrBonners
@MrBonners Жыл бұрын
Vegemite. Famous for being terrible even to half the population of Aussie.
@MrPW2009
@MrPW2009 Жыл бұрын
It's AWSOME, especially if you grew up with it as a child. When you first come to it, you need an open mind as the flavour is totally unique. In the US, do you have "Twiglets" that are marmite flavoured. At least, they are in the UK
@judithrowe8065
@judithrowe8065 Жыл бұрын
Twiglets used to be much better quality. Nowadays, I'd rather eat a twig.
@speleokeir
@speleokeir Жыл бұрын
Twiglets are Bovril flavoured which is a similar, but a beef extract rather than a yeast extract.
@The.Best.Collector
@The.Best.Collector Жыл бұрын
You can drink different flavour and strengths of tea Assam is strong and barky Earl Grey is mild and pale and there are numerous other teas. Working class tea like PG tips (teabags) to upper class tea (Leaves) etc., so tea is not a unique one flavour drink. I drink Earl Grey tea (Leaves) with milk first
@Thurgosh_OG
@Thurgosh_OG Жыл бұрын
@@speleokeir That's right, I like twiglets but hate Marmite.
@Thurgosh_OG
@Thurgosh_OG Жыл бұрын
@@The.Best.Collector I like Earl Grey and Lady Grey teas but strong with a little milk.
@Well-in-the-garden
@Well-in-the-garden Жыл бұрын
Now I'm nearly 50 - but I do actually remember that my Mum used to give me milky sweet tea in my baby bottle when I was about 2 years old and then shortly after I went to a cup of tea in the morning with my Mum - she had a teas-maid machine by her bed and the noise of it starting to percolate used to wake me up and I would go in and sit with my Mum in her bed for a cup of tea before we got up to get ready for the day. It is a fond memory as we would also have a nice chat too.
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys Жыл бұрын
You’ll find that baked beans in the US contain 3x the amount of sugar as what we have in the UK. What you’re thinking of beans in a sweet sauce, is actually savoury in the UK. Which is why it goes well with savoury fried breakfast items like bacon and sausages. It’s basically beans in a tomato sauce, and tomato is a part of a full English.
@RWBHere
@RWBHere 6 ай бұрын
The Metric system is more accurately described as the Decimal system, because it revolves around units of 10. But its official name is Systeme Internationale, or SI. Furthermore, all seven of the fundamental units all relate to one another directly, so no awkward fractions are involved when using mixed units.
@ltsecomedy2985
@ltsecomedy2985 Жыл бұрын
I`ve always loved Baked Beans especially on toast, but I`ve never ever wanted it for breakfast. As for Tea, English Breakfast is one of the more expensive versions, that I never buy. I`m also happier with my separate taps & won`t change them.
@johncrofts4393
@johncrofts4393 Жыл бұрын
Mixer taps are everywhere. Separate taps are only found in old houses that haven't been updated.
@adrianallsopp8979
@adrianallsopp8979 Жыл бұрын
Believe me, Tea in the UK is a big thing. we will argue over how it is made. how it should look, how much milk you put in it, which type of tea bag you use. some will not use a tea bag and use leaves as the tea is not pproperunless it has been brewed (Up north they say Mashed ) in a tteapot its Big!!!!!!!!!!! and for every event be it good or bad, we have a cuppa tea!
@johanassumner5468
@johanassumner5468 Жыл бұрын
more more more please Tyler.... a great relaxed and easail;y understood vlog.... keep it up hero
@jemsjemski533
@jemsjemski533 Жыл бұрын
Really buttery toast, a little spread of marmite mixed into the butter on the toast… delicious 😋 nom nom nom ❤❤❤
@PortmanRd
@PortmanRd Жыл бұрын
Hot buttered toast and spread very thinly/sparsely on toast. Not half a jar on one slice like our American cousins.
@stephenveldhoen
@stephenveldhoen Жыл бұрын
Canada adopted the metric system on April 1st 1975. The US, Cuba, Puerto Rico are still using Imperial system
@bblair2627
@bblair2627 Жыл бұрын
In the UK if something is marmite it means its something you either love or hate so its wound up in our vocab too - like this comedian is marmite or that comedy show is very marmite..etc
@angelaharris6577
@angelaharris6577 Жыл бұрын
Love marmite🤪 Beans on toast as a snack now and then (not brekkie) There is also the very old fashioned way of making tea which is tea 🍃, loose tea in a teapot add boiling water leave to brew for a couple of minutes or to whatever strength of flavour you like then you use a sieve to strain the tea through as you pour into your cup,it tasted much better but everyone uses teabags these days as much quicker.
@darthwiizius
@darthwiizius Жыл бұрын
Loose leaf tea can stand up to whole milk but with tea bags you have to use semi-skimmed or the tea becomes over powered.
@angelaharris6577
@angelaharris6577 Жыл бұрын
@@darthwiizius Not necessarily...I use full fat milk. Personal preference as everyone's taste is different 😊
@darthwiizius
@darthwiizius Жыл бұрын
@@angelaharris6577 True that.
@niknoks6387
@niknoks6387 Жыл бұрын
I think my kids were about 1 when I gave them tea in their bottles. My son is an engineer and they use imperial system, yet at school he was taught in metric.
@stephenveldhoen
@stephenveldhoen Жыл бұрын
Beans are good for you. Here in Canada 🇨🇦 you will get pork and beans with your breakfast order including 4 eggs, 2 pancakes, 6 slices of turkey bacon, 6 breakfast sausages, and 2 slices of ham and 4 slices of toast with baked beans.
@BlueRoseHelen252
@BlueRoseHelen252 2 ай бұрын
We have had a single mixer tap on every bathroom and kitchen sink since we bought our first flat, when we moved to our house we changed the sink and taps to a single tap as well. They are popular in the south east of the UK for sure I don't think people are necessarily that bothered about hot and cold taps I was brought up with separate taps at my mum's house.
@ralphm6901
@ralphm6901 Жыл бұрын
My parents were not hugely wealthy, but they still managed to send me to a public school. It was a fairly expensive, exclusive place, around 450 boys altogether. And they're wrong about "nobody under the age of 70 grew up under the Imperial system". I did, and I'm under 70. I remember pennies, shillings, sixpences, thruppenny bits, florins, crowns, etc.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
"Pity Me" is a northern English mis-hearing of an Anglo-Norman name, "Petit Mer", meaning "Little Lake". But there are many other unintentionally humorous names, like Pratt's Bottom, Turnham Green, and Matching Tye.
@AAMARTCLUB
@AAMARTCLUB Жыл бұрын
No toasted cheese sandwich should lack marmite… a little smear makes a huge difference
@andrewcrisp4495
@andrewcrisp4495 Жыл бұрын
My farther was a carpenter = he always said working in imperial was better than metric - 12 can be devided by 2, 3, 4, 6 (still whole numbers) while 10 can only be divided by 2 or 5 - divide 10 in three and see what you have to use of a mesuring tape.
@DoomsdayR3sistance
@DoomsdayR3sistance Жыл бұрын
Accents, the reason why Arnold Schwarzenegger wasn't allowed to dubbed his own voice into German for the Terminator Franchise and it was instead dubbed by Thomas Dannaberg, Since Arnold sounds like a Farmer when talking in German due to being from Rural Austria. Even USA has accents but I think due to mass migration the accents were homogenized; give it a few hundred years more and I suspect even more distinguishable accents will emerge. I think I started drinking tea as a teenager really, if you're out and about in the late-autumn to early-spring period, it is nice to have a hot drink and tea is not bitter like coffee is, it is much more mellow so easier to drink as a hot drink.
@christinestromberg4057
@christinestromberg4057 Жыл бұрын
Marmaite is savoury and salty but can only be taken in very smal doses. Do not attempt to eat it by the spoonful. It can be make into a hot drink I suppose but is used to flovour savoury dishes, It is very rich in B vitamins being derived from yeasty residue from the brewing industry.
@johnnyuk3365
@johnnyuk3365 Жыл бұрын
Hi Ryan , thanks for the KZfaq vlog. I happen to love Marmite but it does polarise people. I have had the misfortune of witnessing Americans spreading Marmite as if it was peanut butter and, on biting it, and going into immediate cardiac arrest. So spread very thin. As for metric/imperial measurements, I am an engineer of 30 years experience, metric makes just so much sense as all metric measurement are interrelated. So if I was working out the pressure at the bottom of a 10 metre dam wall I could do it in my head because the weight of water is 1 g per cm3 (it is the very definition of weight). Imperial is so disjointed, weight of water is 62.4 lb/ft3 - deal with that in your head. And yet a nurse asked me my height last week and I instantly said 5ft 10 inch, so in the UK we are having problems letting go of imperial. I spend some time in Canada, your northern neighbours seem to be much better than we in the UK.
@Sharon-bo2se
@Sharon-bo2se Жыл бұрын
Canuck here. We tend to mix and match our measurements. Will admit doing rapid conversions between metric/Imperial/American and tossing in currency conversions is a delightful way to mess with Americans at conventions or other gatherings. Great fun to watch their eyes glaze over. Almost a national sport.
@JBW27
@JBW27 Жыл бұрын
I started drinking tea when I was 2. Coffee was a later addition, being 4 or 5 if I remember correctly. I know some people who don't like tea at all, but I love it. I used to have 10-15 cups a day, but I'm down to perhaps 3-4 on average per day. Of course, I've added in 3-4 coffees at a minimum per day too. I have the vast majority decaffeinated, otherwise I'd never sleep 😂 And with the taps, our current house only has mixer taps. However, several of our previous homes have had only separate taps, and I often go to people's houses or to places in public which still only have separate taps.
@brandonerson8581
@brandonerson8581 Жыл бұрын
I didn't choose the tea life, tea life chose me.
@bookwoman53
@bookwoman53 Жыл бұрын
Hi, Tyler. You should look at some videos from the YT channel Lost in the Pond. Laurence Brown is a British man who married a women from the American Midwest and moved to Indiana about 14 years ago. Now he lives in Illinois. His videos cover British expressions and terms. They also compare weather, food, daily living, holidays and other cultural differences. I highly recommend it.
@joanweightman2275
@joanweightman2275 Жыл бұрын
I'm a love it! Thin spread of Marmite on buttered toast topped with poached egg...amazing blend of flavours. Regarding the accents most British people don't easily understand each others accents. Beans...odd...I make what I call cowboy beans and thought Americans would eat it: Heat beans with beef oxo cube and smokey paprika...delicious!
@sampeeps3371
@sampeeps3371 Жыл бұрын
I get a spoonful of Marmite and just eat it while I'm watching TV.
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
Marmite (the original), 'invented', made and sold in Britain. Vegemite (the copy), 'stolen', made and sold in Australia. Both are a 'yeast based extract' and slightly different in taste, but both are either loved or hated in their countries. I personally LOVE either, with NO bias. But the expression "LESS IS MORE" could not be more fitting, either way... The secret is to touch a slice of hot, buttered toast with a 'smidgen' of Marmite or Vegemite (until your body becomes accustomed to the taste and can accept a stronger 'hit' of the salty, black gunge). An acquired taste? YES! But like any drug, once 'hooked' - you crave more. But 'Less is More' I hear you say... What a quandary to be in... 👍🤣🤣🤣🇬🇧
@emmahowells8334
@emmahowells8334 Жыл бұрын
With accents, it's like all over the UK, a north Welsh person will sound different to south, same in England, Scotland, northern Ireland too. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 The separate taps is more common than you think, but we also have mixer taps too. I have a mixer tap in my kitchen, but separate in my bathroom lol. Brits love tea a lot more than coffee. I had my First tea in my bottle as a baby lol, I now drink around 5 to 7 cups a day, a hot chocolate before bed lol. . I don't like baked beans either & I'm from the UK lol.😂 Beans beans good for your heart, the more you eat the more you fart 😂🏃💨
@joeking5310
@joeking5310 Жыл бұрын
Marmite is the greatest thing ever invented. Absolutely delicious. In Australia they have vegimite, a poor copy.
@stuartfitch7093
@stuartfitch7093 Жыл бұрын
My partner and myself argue about how to make tea quite often. When brewing the tea directly in the mug, she puts milk in the cup first and then adds the boiling water on top. I find this disgusting as the milk destroys the brewing process and it is then hard to make a really strong mug of tea which is the way I like it. I do the opposite. I pour the water over the tea bag and sugar, give it a stir to make sure the sugar is mixed in, then I leave it a couple of minutes to brew properly, then I add the milk last. This in my experience makes the finished mug of tea stronger and darker in colour which is the way I like it.
@Dean256
@Dean256 Жыл бұрын
Imperial units are more commonly used in Britain than metric part from temperature. We still officially use Miles but everything else is officially metric even though most people still use imperial.
@bjorreb7487
@bjorreb7487 Жыл бұрын
Here is another thing to explain. This is something to remember wich one is from wich country. In the Americas, a gallon is equivalent to 128 fluid ounces or 3.785 liters (American spelling). But in the UK, it's 160 fluid ounces or 4.546 litres (British spelling). That's quite a difference, with the British contenders having to potentially guzzle down 20% more milk than their American counterparts.
@gkkes
@gkkes Жыл бұрын
I'm joining many Brits on here who definitely don't consider you a "normal" American 😉 Just to add a few things: Marmite is a vegetarian spread. It is often described as meaty. It's salty and strong. Often added to boiling water and drunk as a broth. Often added by the teaspoon to stews and sauces. Very tasty spread thinly on toast (small pea size blob maximum), or on a hot buttered crumpet with a slice of mature cheddar (not plastic slices!). Yes, a large jar might last 5 years! Tea. Most people drink a cup of tea. These days for convenience teabags are used. There are say 6 major suppliers. Flavour varies by brand and hard/softness of your tap water. Every house has a kettle. My family always include a bowlful for the dogs. There are tea connoisseurs who brew real leaves in a teapot and can enjoy hundreds of flavours. Many, like Earl Grey are best without milk and have a flowery bouquet , at the other end of the spectrum is Gunpowder tea, immensely strong and dark. High tea is a celebration which includes finger sandwiches cakes and fancy baked goods, experienced on average these days maybe once every 5 years. Beans: The images shown in the video are more likely an American attempt. No-one would have a wiener over a sausage, and no-one cooks a teaspoon of beans in a frying pan (re-fried beans method). There will be a whole tin in a saucepan. Brits will always have the fork turned down and load it with a little of everything to enjoy the flavour combination, rather than the US way of scooping a single item, swapping hands and popping it in!
@valeriedavidson2785
@valeriedavidson2785 Жыл бұрын
High tea is NOT sandwiches and cake. That is afternoon tea. High tea is a hot snack. Something like beans on toast or a soup. It is associated with the working classes. Something a workman would have after work around 5 or 6 o'clock. Afternoon tea was originally associated with the aristocracy although nowadays anyone would partake in afternoon tea.
@ukdnbmarsh
@ukdnbmarsh Жыл бұрын
Marmite is deeeeeeeeelicious, there is a trick to spreading it, firstly when the toast is still hot, spread the butter on, then quickly thinly spread the marmite on so that it mixes with the warm butter, this ensures nice coverage, aaaaand enjoy.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
Marmite is like if Salty and Umame got together and had a love child.
@judithhope8970
@judithhope8970 Жыл бұрын
The imperial system was created here. I use metric for small measurements but go back to imperial for everything else. Our baked beans are so tasty, and put on toast they are very satisfying.
@zaphodbeeblebrox6627
@zaphodbeeblebrox6627 Жыл бұрын
If you ever get the chance to get hold of a tin of British HEINZ baked beans( say in a Trader Joe’s or a small speciality store), I think you would be very surprised how good they are. They are nothing like the BBQ beans you buy in America, they have a great tomato sauce and taste sweeter than American beans. They usually come in a 420g ( just under a lb) tin. Empty the tin into a PYREX jug and heat them in a microwave on full power for five minutes and pour them over hot buttered toast and enjoy. I’ve seen loads of sceptical Americans ( tourists to the uk and back in the US) try them on toast and they are generally staggered at how good they are. Go on… I dare you.🤔
@Thurgosh_OG
@Thurgosh_OG Жыл бұрын
5 minutes might be too long, depends on the power of the microwave but they tend to say 2-3 minutes cooking time. And the toast should be buttered.
@speleokeir
@speleokeir Жыл бұрын
Metric and Imperial:We're Imperial by tradition and metric for trade purposes. Because the rest of Europe and most of the world uses metric it makes sense to have standard weight and measures for trade. i.e. Components made in different countries are compatible, if they're not it causes problems. It's also safer for instance you don't want to mix up measurements of drugs, temperatures, etc. However stuff where this is less crucial remained imperial, because that's what the general population was used to e.g. milk and beer in pints, peoples height and weight. With road signs cost was also a factor as changing them all would not only confuse people but cost a fortune. When new road signs are put up though they often have the distance in km too.
@liammcfarlane13
@liammcfarlane13 Жыл бұрын
I feel like you and Ryan need to set up a PO Box so us brits can send you some treats to try for a video
@BarryBerryBarry
@BarryBerryBarry Жыл бұрын
Or he can buy them himself and stop trying for a free lunch. I do not care that some silly American finds food confusing
@liammcfarlane13
@liammcfarlane13 Жыл бұрын
@@BarryBerryBarry Or you can stop being bitter and watching content you don’t enjoy. He’s not trying for a free lunch if someone who does enjoy the content is offering to send things that are difficult if not impossible to find in his country.
@BarryBerryBarry
@BarryBerryBarry Жыл бұрын
@@liammcfarlane13 Respect my pronouns or I'll have you cancelled
@liammcfarlane13
@liammcfarlane13 Жыл бұрын
@@BarryBerryBarry I didn’t use any pronouns when referring to you but go off I guess, have your pronouns, love that for you.
@BarryBerryBarry
@BarryBerryBarry Жыл бұрын
@liammcfarlane13 I am registering my details on Twitter right now... You're gonna get it!
@shirleyjenkins11
@shirleyjenkins11 Жыл бұрын
Australia has Vegemite which is similar. You can add it to your siup recipe to add can't and flavor too.
@stuartmcivor2276
@stuartmcivor2276 Жыл бұрын
Pity Me is more of an suburban village on the North side of Durham, rather than a town - my stepson used to live there. No-one is quite sure where the name comes from, one theory is that it's a contraction of Pithead Mere relating to the coal mine that was there.
@dianerodgers3130
@dianerodgers3130 Жыл бұрын
Love marmite love it. On crumpets with cheese😄
@Dr_KAP
@Dr_KAP Жыл бұрын
It’s basically almost the same flavour as Vegemite you tasted when you were over at your brother Ryan’s house the other day. Texture is slightly different but definitely taste similar.
@keithweelands5822
@keithweelands5822 Жыл бұрын
I live next to the village of Pity ME, close by is the village of No Place and right now I'm looking at the village of Snods Edge.
@lewisisdaman
@lewisisdaman Жыл бұрын
I'll try my best to explain the private schools technically being 'registered charities' instead of just education institutes. I went to a private school in Glasgow so I'll try to explain it for you if i can. Basically, the UK government takes all the money towards schooling from taxes and only uses it on state/social/public schools (the ones you don't 'pay for'). The parents who send their children to private schools not only take a MASSIVE weight off the public school sector, allowing those left in it to recieve a better education, but the parents who send their kids to private schools STILL have to pay the full taxation for everything (including normal schooling which does not get used by their kids). So on one side you have families (hopefully) paying tax which pays for their childrens schooling and then on the other you have families paying over 10k a year per child (extra!) to send them to a private school while also paying into everyone elses education. Yes ofcourse the people who can afford such things probably don't have too much to complain about but still! The REAL truth as to why they insist they are 'charities' and not just schools is to avoid a ridiculous amount of costs, fees and input from the government. It is also to be able to maintain their indepence from the government's bullshit. They cannot control the private schools because of this and we recieve a fucking brilliant education because of it. If you can remove the government from a system then it almost immediately becomes more functional and workable. So, freedom of teaching is the real case and reason. But these schools cannot realistically admit that. SO, how do they get away with being a registered charity and avoid excess taxes and extra hoops to jump through? The same way any real charity would; by meeting the definition of a charity by law. This means that they cannot operate for profit, and must show that they are creating public benefit in one way or another. To do this my school would have to be extremely transparent about the spending/allocation of funds, ensuring there was no profit being officially maintained or built by the school. So even though it was a kick ass big sandstone building with pillars and shit (it looks like it belongs in ancient rome!) and was always pristine and well kept, it technically is not a 'rich' institution. In terms of them showing they create public benefit by all the brilliant things the school does around the local area and how respected the School is by the locals because of that. They also create a public benefit by training us all from age 15 onwards (it was compulsory) to be capable and safe in stategic armed combat, stealth, looking after our own rifles, how to safely check in and out of an armory including explosives etc. We were all trained quite intensely from age 15 (alot of ex-forces men including ex special foces worked alongside us). Every Thursday after school we would have to stay for a few hours for our weekly training! Alot of us ended up going directly into either the British Army, RAF or Royal Navy after school even though we were all very high achievers in the main. The school i went to is not the only private school in Glasgow to proffesionally train their teenagers in military tactics and armed combat but the schools that do it keep it quite 'hush hush' haha. It is not funded by the government as such but the MOD (ministry of defence). They know how vauable our school forces are in the UK so they heavily fund them. It is not seen as educational funding from the government so it doesn't count. It is an investment from the MOD in scottish Schools since they know what they get in return! For example a huge chunk of people who make it into the special forces are from these sorts of schools. It's a worthwhile investment on their behalf. It's a strange system in the UK but it works! If those private schools were not allowed to call themselves charities then they would all be shut within 10 years, the Scottish education system would not be able to keep up and it would collapse. I know that people love to talk alot about things they don't understand but the country would literally be in ruins if it wasn't for the parents who are willing to pay those exremely highschool fees. That's the sad truth. They should let some kids from public schools swap with some kids from a private school for a week or two just to let them both understand each others side of the fence better. Kids are really all the same. It's just differing levels of opportunity that's the problem in the main! lol essay over! 😅
@stuartfaulds1580
@stuartfaulds1580 Жыл бұрын
In the Uk the accents change between towns, ie Liverpool, Manchester, Glasgow, Aberdeen, Dundee, Cardiff all have their own accents to name a few cities.
@greetjeb7030
@greetjeb7030 Жыл бұрын
I love Marmite, always have. I'm from the Netherlands 😁
@paulknox999
@paulknox999 Жыл бұрын
we use both Imperial and metric. when the UK started to switch to metric in 1965 and we are still switching. Buy my petrol in litres but work out my fuel ecomomy in miles per gallon. road signs still use miles and mph. when you purchase goods in stores they are in grams but many older brits still weigh themselves in pounds/stones and height in feet and inches but younger brits will use Kg and metres.
@Mugtree
@Mugtree Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video 👍. Tea is life. Separate taps are just better and I only use imperial in the pub, buying milk and driving. However I’ve never been taught the imperial system and have absolutely no idea what any of it means 🤷‍♂️. Be glad when we go full metric 👍
@real_lostinthefogofwar
@real_lostinthefogofwar Жыл бұрын
As soon as you get off the baby bottle, you're on to the teacup
@angelavara4097
@angelavara4097 Жыл бұрын
Marmite is nice if it's used very sparingly otherwise it's quite nasty.
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