6 THINGS CONSIDERED A LUXURY IN THE USA BUT NORMAL IN GERMANY

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Little luxuries or just casual normalities..... 🩷 Happy Hump Day!! When I wake up I will see you in the comment section!
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00:00 Things that are considered normal in Germany but a luxury in the USA
00:35 Farmer's Markets
03:10 Paper plates (the bane of my existence)
04:38 Bread from the bakery
05:52 Heated floors
07:35 Work-life balance
09:52 Taking care of yourself
11:00 Thank you for watching! Don't forget to subscribe
How old are you?
As old as the days are long
Where are you from?
Florida
Where do you live?
Germany
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Пікірлер: 1 500

  • @HayleyAlexis
    @HayleyAlexis27 күн бұрын

    Every like helps me afford a trip back to Germany just to eat some bread 😭because.... I would really love a Kürbiskernsemmel with a bissl Butter 🍞🧈 watch my opposite version here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/f5us2dttmbKeZtY.html

  • @Eowyn77

    @Eowyn77

    27 күн бұрын

    I'd love to see you coming back to Germany, but meanwhile, baking your own bread is actually much easier than you think ❤

  • @jasminsafari1915

    @jasminsafari1915

    27 күн бұрын

    Haley, you are more than welcome, to come back to Germany ❤ Remember, I am a nursing teacher and we REALLY need good people in our hospitals, community health care and nursing homes. If you study in our school for three years and pass the examn, you automatically get the permanent living status in Germany. The Ausbildung will be paid from the state. With your knowledge, you will pass the examn like nothing and I could help you with Nachhilfe if necessary. Politics even discuss now, to accept people from abroad without further special studies to be a Erzieher to work in German kindergardens. Every day Kürbiskern- and Kartoffelbrötchen, real porcelan plates, Fußbodenheizung and farmermarkets.....

  • @egonthefish4614

    @egonthefish4614

    27 күн бұрын

    Just to confirm you thoughts, that’s indeed a Handtuchheizung.

  • @JenMaxon

    @JenMaxon

    27 күн бұрын

    Couldn't agree more about the brot Hayley - if I ever leave, I will miss it for sure. I used to make my own bread in the UK - I've only made bread once here. Mind you, it was pretty good but it's also great to be able to go to a bakerei and just get something scrummy for a euro or two

  • @marcbeebee6969

    @marcbeebee6969

    27 күн бұрын

    Wow are you beautiful. Sorry i did not pay attention at all but wow are you charming. Cheers from Germany

  • @Humpelstilzchen
    @Humpelstilzchen28 күн бұрын

    I would be ashamed to death serving food on paper plates to guests in my house 😅

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    I understand some households might require paperplates. I knew someone that had 9 kids and they used paperplates because trying to clean everything up after the fact was way too much work...plus they didnt have a dishwasher. I give some wiggle room for certain scenarios and I also try not to judge people too cruelly because you never know what their living situation is but it just seems excessive to use paper plates and that you don't care about yourself.

  • @Humpelstilzchen

    @Humpelstilzchen

    28 күн бұрын

    @@HayleyAlexis Yep i absolutly understand that scenario and everybody should and can do what they want. I also dont judge that at all 😊. My example i wanted to point out was in wich i have a guest at home and would serve them with paper plates. They would think i hate them 😅. ,,Nur das beste für unsere Gäste,, ,,Only the best for our guest,, my grandmas slogan 🙂

  • @nitka711

    @nitka711

    28 күн бұрын

    I disagree about the „everyone should and can do what they want“. If everyone did that, then the world would be an even worse place than it is now.

  • @jr8627

    @jr8627

    28 күн бұрын

    exept you have 20 or more people as guests and not enought plates. Otherwise always real plates 🙂 especially for guests. Than you pull out the realy good and expensive one not the every day one (if you have two sets).

  • @thebenki

    @thebenki

    28 күн бұрын

    I did never, even in the Bundeswehr/Marine time, eat from paper? plates…

  • @markweaver1012
    @markweaver101223 күн бұрын

    Paper plates are for picnics, kids birthdays, and when you're feeling too lazy to cook and do the dishes (e.g. order a pizza and eat off of paper plates). The idea that 'real plates' are a luxury for Americans is completely absurd.

  • @UserHorologium

    @UserHorologium

    9 күн бұрын

    We always est even pizza off of real dishes. We have paper plates (because Florida and hurricanes), but they are from when we moved back to Florida four years ago. I think we might have used 10 of them (because I baked cookies for my coworkers a couple of times. My mother, who lives with, grew up during the Great Depression, and considers paper plates to be scandalously wasteful. She imparted that same attitude on my sister and me. We have everyday plates (bought on clearance at Macy's) and my Mom's fine china (1966-era Minton Ancestral Gold) which is only used for the big three holidays (Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas). I'm not well-off, but using paper plates for normal meals is mind-blowing.

  • @anastasiabeaverhaus9

    @anastasiabeaverhaus9

    7 күн бұрын

    Exactly. And, farmer's markets are very regional. Some will be very expensive and others won't be. But, you can get great produce at grocery stores, too.

  • @Subgunman

    @Subgunman

    8 сағат бұрын

    Hey when we go camping or staying at my wife’s home we just use the stainless multi compartment military chow trays. No need to wash a bunch of dishes. One for each person and done. Plenty of room for every item.

  • @wendymacilree3228
    @wendymacilree322826 күн бұрын

    No one would use paper plates unless it’s a children’s birthday party in the park.

  • @corn1971

    @corn1971

    23 күн бұрын

    Paper/plastic plates are becoming increasingly more common in everyday use by folks. It’s so absurd.

  • @davidh9844

    @davidh9844

    23 күн бұрын

    Uhm, you would be surprised...

  • @Leftyotism

    @Leftyotism

    22 күн бұрын

    Or for drunks at a BBQ.

  • @sandraankenbrand

    @sandraankenbrand

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@corn1971never experienced it... its also expensive

  • @katrincarstens5125

    @katrincarstens5125

    14 күн бұрын

    The only place where normal plates are not allowed is beside swimming pools. Or where suicidal people live. The ecological aspect is very important to people. Even Ball pens or lighters which cannot be refilled make people angry. And when we take a look on the enormous (a) mount of all this waste they are absolutely right! And someone who has the time for netflix or play station has ten minutes to wash the dishes!

  • @celinepa8246
    @celinepa824627 күн бұрын

    All of this is completely normal in the whole of Europe. Never seen anybody using paper plates in their homes, no matter the country.

  • @nriamond8010

    @nriamond8010

    24 күн бұрын

    Not floor heating, only few people have that.

  • @paulpanter1092

    @paulpanter1092

    24 күн бұрын

    @@nriamond8010since decades its almost standard in new houses, because you need only low temperature

  • @ulrichst7864

    @ulrichst7864

    24 күн бұрын

    Guess it depends where you live in Europe. In the south it’s not standard but in the middle to the north it’s very common. P.s. most Americans are shocked that in germany even most taxi are Mercedes

  • @stiegelzeine2186

    @stiegelzeine2186

    24 күн бұрын

    @@paulpanter1092 is that supposed to be a joke or are you just clueless? there’s no modern homes being built in Germany mate that’s why we have a housing crisis And even if we had modern houses then most people would still live in 50 year old houses

  • @m3rlim349

    @m3rlim349

    23 күн бұрын

    Oh, they come in handy when grilling in the garden or outside. But that's the only useful use the paper plates have.

  • @teachersusan3730
    @teachersusan373027 күн бұрын

    When I was a student in the US I couldn‘t believe that everybody ate from plastic/paper dishes that were thrown away after every meal! What a lot of waste.

  • @solaccursio

    @solaccursio

    26 күн бұрын

    also a waste of money, paper plates ane not for free, and dishwashers are not so terribly expensive, so in the long run you save money by buying a dishwasher machine!

  • @PragerFenster

    @PragerFenster

    25 күн бұрын

    Not to mention the detrimental impact on the environment!

  • @v.r.2834

    @v.r.2834

    24 күн бұрын

    …and disgusting

  • @uweinhamburg

    @uweinhamburg

    23 күн бұрын

    Like Chinese started to use one time chopsticks for each meal after the standard of living grew instead of washing them. Square kilometers of forests in Siberia cut down each year just for the use as material for chopsticks...

  • @ln8116

    @ln8116

    23 күн бұрын

    In Germany macdos are served on China plates

  • @ClintDawg
    @ClintDawg28 күн бұрын

    In Denmark paper plates are only used for informal bbq parties or if you have a picnic in a park. I have honestly never seen (or even heard of) anyone using paper plates for their daily meals at home.

  • @firstclass2222

    @firstclass2222

    24 күн бұрын

    Students.

  • @Justforvisit

    @Justforvisit

    23 күн бұрын

    @@firstclass2222 Nope, even we have porcelain dishes. Might not be Meißner-Porzellan, but some cheap or like in my case parent-inherited stuff.

  • @Eisenhammer78

    @Eisenhammer78

    23 күн бұрын

    Same here in Germany. If you are outside in your own garden we use plates for the BBQ, but if there is a bigger BBQ for lets say at a public BBQ Place, you bring paper plates and plastic cutlery

  • @we73

    @we73

    23 күн бұрын

    What? Daily meals, do they so in USA? OMG

  • @NixHarpinger

    @NixHarpinger

    23 күн бұрын

    Same here (Slovenia). I was a little bit shocked to find out people use them as regular dining plates. Imagine the waste if Billions of people would do that outside the US.

  • @combatduckie
    @combatduckie28 күн бұрын

    i literally have never known one German who d use a paper plate in their private household at home ever! it s considered trailerpark here

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    I don't think I have ever had a German (outside of a birthday party) serve me on a paper plate- ever.

  • @nanasterk4649

    @nanasterk4649

    28 күн бұрын

    Basse classe.. we say

  • @TrekZero

    @TrekZero

    28 күн бұрын

    We use Paperplates only on a BBQ or Birthday Party. Es ist ja auch eigentlich Party Besteck Haily ;) Paperplates in a Hotel ? I would just ask them what for a Bruchbude das hier ist :D

  • @robertczwartek4709

    @robertczwartek4709

    28 күн бұрын

    Germans are world champions in segregating trash for decades and they are very environment conscious as well as everything regarding the waste. After moving to USA directly from Germany I consider the Americans the very opposite. There is a lot of waste and buying too much and using too much energy. Because it's all much much cheaper

  • @OctoberOctopusM

    @OctoberOctopusM

    26 күн бұрын

    Not even at a child's birthday party? No cool Spiderman paper plates at all? That's a bit sad.

  • @annamc3947
    @annamc394726 күн бұрын

    There’s s German lady who opened a bakery near my home in California and she’s tapped into the market for fresh bread here in the US. Lines down the block. All using natural ingredients. She just opened a second location in the next town. More Germans should come here and do the same!

  • @greenleaf8226

    @greenleaf8226

    24 күн бұрын

    Why should more germans go to messed up usa to bake more bread for americans? why can't americans finaly up their low grade cheap lifestyles 1 level, learn and bake quality bread for their family, friends or a business

  • @duczman76

    @duczman76

    23 күн бұрын

    good german bread seems to be in great demand in the usa and could also become a good source of income.🤔 if you want to have good bread you should look for the receipe for natural sourdough and good ingredients for it.then you can bake your own good bread at home and also know what's in it. you only need 2 ingredients,a little bit time 3 days in a row and a glas jar with a lid whit a hole in the lid to make the sourdough for a wholemeal rye bread: wholemeal rye flour,a little water and a jar with a lid that has a hole in it.

  • @LanHikari90

    @LanHikari90

    23 күн бұрын

    While this is nice for your community, I would never want to move to the US. I consider it a big downgrade. Been to the US two times and my best friend lives there and... I didn't really like it.

  • @annamc3947

    @annamc3947

    23 күн бұрын

    @@LanHikari90of course, no one’s forcing you. A lot of Germans come here for jobs in tech. I thought it was interesting that this couple moved here for his job in tech, she missed good bread and taught herself to bake, and now he’s working for her!

  • @steffenrosmus9177

    @steffenrosmus9177

    23 күн бұрын

    Then try the German butcher in Anaheim

  • @AnnetteLudke-je5ll
    @AnnetteLudke-je5ll28 күн бұрын

    Paper plates are only good for camping or a barbecue with lots of people, but in daily life it is a sign of having no culture and not caring about environmental damages caused by this.

  • @svr5423

    @svr5423

    27 күн бұрын

    for camping I use stainless steel plates and my Bundeswehr Feldbesteck. I don't think paper plates are good, as you then need to carry around the waste and they are also susceptible to moisture, which is common outdoors.

  • @RickS.C.137

    @RickS.C.137

    27 күн бұрын

    I use paper plates for myself to cut back on water, sponges, and dish soap costs but I only use the biodegradable stuff

  • @karl-heinzbrohme5890

    @karl-heinzbrohme5890

    27 күн бұрын

    ​@@RickS.C.137You must be kidding

  • @user-wg6fw4ou1b

    @user-wg6fw4ou1b

    26 күн бұрын

    How is this a bad thing for the planet?

  • @karl-heinzbrohme5890

    @karl-heinzbrohme5890

    26 күн бұрын

    @@user-wg6fw4ou1b Because many resources and chemicals are used for the production.

  • @howitworksforme
    @howitworksforme26 күн бұрын

    The heaters are actually designed to heat the room WHILE keeping your towels warm😊

  • @Nikki.Penguin

    @Nikki.Penguin

    24 күн бұрын

    It also dries the towels.

  • @howitworksforme

    @howitworksforme

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Nikki.Penguin yes, they do, but they are not supposed to dry them since that changes the temperature of the heater, resulting in more "work" for the heater and the heating system.

  • @patricktanner60

    @patricktanner60

    24 күн бұрын

    Sorry, but this is not true! A properly calculated heating system doesn‘t rely on a towel heater, as it could be blocked by a wet towel. A towel heater is also not available in different sizes (heating power) and therefore not adjusable regarding the size of your bathroom. It is just a additional comfort thing - not more, not less! ;-)

  • @maxpower4435

    @maxpower4435

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@@patricktanner60it will probably be the only source of heating in a bathroom that has no floor heating, at least in the houses/appartments that I know them from. So it also serves as a heating device for the bathroom

  • @GlenDevan1970

    @GlenDevan1970

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@@patricktanner60 in Germany thousands of houses are built with only a towel heater in the bathroom as heating method, myself lived in such a house, the bathroom was always comfortably warm an the towels quickly dry, heating costs were ridiculously low. But maybe I misunderstood your point.

  • @janetjohnson2749
    @janetjohnson274918 күн бұрын

    I know of no Americans who use paper plates at home. Never even heard of this, and I have lived in the US all my life.

  • @jzero53

    @jzero53

    8 күн бұрын

    My SIL uses paper plates all the time! She even has a dishwasher so that's not a reason not to use the everyday dishes she has. When we visit, we insist on proper plates and bowls, and using the dishwasher.

  • @ritaking8827

    @ritaking8827

    6 күн бұрын

    Never! Paper plates not in my American home! We all here where I live grow our own vegetables, bake our own bread. I’m a bit perplexed.

  • @AnoJanJan

    @AnoJanJan

    4 күн бұрын

    I visited America from Australia & almost every house I was invited to used paper plates, even the wealthy homes

  • @andreahughes1

    @andreahughes1

    5 сағат бұрын

    I know plenty of people that use paper plates here in America. Most often they are used for BBQ’s, kids that just lean to eat from a plate, kids birthday parties and picnics!

  • @norbertpaisen311
    @norbertpaisen31127 күн бұрын

    Selber backen 🙂 Kartoffelbrot mit Kürbiskernen 500 g Kartoffel(n), mehlig kochend, geschält gewogen 1 TL Salz 175 g Weizenmehl Type 405 300 g Weizenmehl Type 1050 2 TL Salz 85 g Wasser, lauwarm 1 Prise(n) Zucker 14 g Hefe 3 EL Olivenöl 130 g Kürbiskerne # # Zuerst die geschälten Kartoffeln mit 1 TL Salz in kochendem Wasser fertig garen. Abgießen und entweder mit einer Kartoffelpresse durchdrücken oder mit einem Stampfer sehr fein stampfen. Anschließend auf Zimmertemperatur abkühlen lassen. Die Mehlsorten mischen und beiseite stellen. Die Hefe in 85 g lauwarmen Wasser auflösen. Die Prise Zucker und 2 EL von der Mehlmischung unterrühren und ca. fünf Minuten stehen lassen. Jetzt zu den Kartoffeln das Hefewasser, das Öl, das Salz, die Kürbiskerne und das Mehl geben. Alles etwa fünf Minuten zu einem glatten Teig verkneten. Ich verwende hierzu meine Küchenmaschine mit Knethaken. Dann zu einer Kugel formen und abgedeckt ca. 40 - 50 Minuten gehen lassen, bis das Volumen gut zugenommen hat. Einen Römertopf oder Alugusstopf mit Backtrennspray einsprühen. Alternativ kann man den Topf auch mit Butter einfetten. Den Teig nochmals kurz durchkneten, dann zu einem Brot formen und mit dem Schluss nach unten in den Topf geben. Ich habe zum Backen einen runden Alugusstopf genommen, deswegen habe ich ein rundes Brot geformt. Wenn man einen ovalen Topf nimmt, muss man entsprechend ein ovales Brot formen. Den Deckel aufsetzen und auf einem Backblech auf die mittlere Schiene in den kalten Backofen geben. Den Ofen nun auf 240 Grad Ober-/Unterhitze stellen und das Brot 50 Minuten backen. Wer mag, kann 10 Minuten vor Backende den Deckel herunternehmen (Vorsicht: heiß) dann bekommt das Brot eine schöne Bräune. Klingt das Brot beim Dagegenklopfen hohl, ist es fertig und kann auf einem Gitter abkühlen.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    Thank you!!!

  • @bfrey9094

    @bfrey9094

    23 күн бұрын

    Danke!

  • @Hans-jl8ml

    @Hans-jl8ml

    23 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂😂😂. HAST du die Dame herausgefordert? Kannst du mir der Unterschied der geliste Weizenmehle erklären ( 450/1050)?

  • @birgitmeyer9073

    @birgitmeyer9073

    23 күн бұрын

    @@Hans-jl8mlJe höher die Typbezeichnung, desto dunkler und gehaltvoller das Mehl. Also von 405 bis Vollkorn.

  • @Hans-jl8ml

    @Hans-jl8ml

    23 күн бұрын

    @@birgitmeyer9073 interessant. Danke.

  • @jensbiederstaedt8022
    @jensbiederstaedt802228 күн бұрын

    We bake our own bread since we moved to Canada. It took us a while but the bread you can buy here has nothing to do with bread. Your German is so lovely!!!

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    I bought some yeast starter packs but have yet to try and bake my own bread.

  • @jensbiederstaedt8022

    @jensbiederstaedt8022

    28 күн бұрын

    @@HayleyAlexis yeast only for some specialty stuff, cake etc. sourdough is where the magic starts.

  • @RolfKni

    @RolfKni

    27 күн бұрын

    8 gr. Hefe, 8 gr. Zucker 12 gr. Mehl 550er und 370 ml. Wasser. Mehr braucht es nicht für sehr gute Brötchen. 😂 Einfach in YT. "so backs du schnelle Brötchen wie ein profi" eingeben 👍

  • @pocho689

    @pocho689

    26 күн бұрын

    Good bread can be found.

  • @hollyhope7227

    @hollyhope7227

    21 күн бұрын

    Wie kann man heute noch als Deutscher nach Canada oder in die States auswandern? Geht doch nur, wenn man viel Geld importiert und Arbeitsplätze schaffen kann, oder? Ich würde sooo gerne in Arizona leben, aber das ist absolut unmöglich, vor allem, weil ich gerade berentet bin. Darauf wartet dort niemand.

  • @rgoonewardene380
    @rgoonewardene38028 күн бұрын

    If I went to a house, and they served me in paper plates, I would think they really hated me. I live in the UK, BTW, where even my employer provides real plates for use by the staff.

  • @juleungewitter7513

    @juleungewitter7513

    27 күн бұрын

    "where even my employer provides real plates for use by the staff" Same in Germany. It would be a bit disrespectful to satisfy the employees with cardboard. 😄 I mean... the toilets, the stairs... the whole house is REAL. And not made of cardboard.

  • @Why-D
    @Why-D28 күн бұрын

    Even in the school, when they come together with the class, with kids and parents, every family takes their own plates, may be reusable from plastic, but even there you try to avoid any waste, like one-use plates. Yeah, with bread, we get everyone!

  • @Bramfly

    @Bramfly

    28 күн бұрын

    No you don’t, most European countries like the one I live in (NL) have fantastic regional breads. 😊

  • @bognagruba7653

    @bognagruba7653

    28 күн бұрын

    How about Polish bread? Is it any worse?

  • @andreamuller9009

    @andreamuller9009

    28 күн бұрын

    @@bognagruba7653 Polish bread is also very good... as a German I can confirm this. In general, the bread in Europe is better in comparison than the spongy white bread that Americans eat every day... when I think about what is made in the Balkans from a simple wheat flour dough, hmmm yummy.......even white bread doesn't have to taste so boring. It's not that there aren't any good bakeries in the US and you can't get good bread, but such bread is more expensive.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    I also found it very interesting that in some schools (even early years) kids were served food in normal "porcelain" dishes. This wasn't always common but I did see it happening a few times which was so baffling.

  • @Why-D

    @Why-D

    27 күн бұрын

    @@Bramfly yes, there are many countries with good bread around. Only in the UK I was happy to have a LIDL with proper bread.

  • @wa2804
    @wa280428 күн бұрын

    The thing with the bread was the reason for us to teach ourselves how to bake it on our own when we left Germany.

  • @wolfgangpreier9160

    @wolfgangpreier9160

    28 күн бұрын

    Depends if you get the right ingredients. What i have learned watching many videos is that most generally available ingredients in the USA are unhealthy or even dangerous for your health.

  • @wa2804

    @wa2804

    28 күн бұрын

    @@wolfgangpreier9160 Support your local farmer or mill.

  • @wolfgangpreier9160

    @wolfgangpreier9160

    28 күн бұрын

    @@wa2804 We have local farmers who sell their produce to the local Raiffeisen, that is the biggest agricultural cooperative in Europe or have long standing contracts with e.g. Agrana a local manufacturer of many agricultural products. Some produce apple juice, pumpkin seeds and pumpkin seed oil which is sold in the local grocery stores. Some sell flowers (cut your own and pay what it is worth to you), strawberries, blackberries, apricot, quince, potatoes, cheese, ham, bacon, spices, paprika, poultry, chicken, eggs. Also all other plants that grow locally and are edible. In any form, raw, marinated, dried, or as flour. They are usually a bit cheaper than grocery stores because they do not have to pay taxes for such small amounts. And nobody will check on them. They are specifically exempt from taxes as long as they stay below the threshold of 20K per year. We do not have zoning for general jobs like farming. But for pigs, ostrich (yes we have some here), many chicken, cows you need a permit and must follow zoning rules. Only if you produce much noise or dust, emissions - you will be scrutinized and possibly forbidden to continue doing the job. One speciality: Our eggs are not stored in the fridge and not cleaned or washed. Our hens and poultry is not desinfacted but only a butchery with the correct permits is allowed to do the job. We do not have a Walmart or Costco, not even a Tesco (next one is in hungary). But we have Lidl, Aldi, Penny which do not sell local products and Spar, Billa, Adeg which all sell local produce as well. There are farmers markets mostly in the bigger cities. Here in the country side there are just not enough customers. In Vienna we have a permanent farmers market that goes back to the 19th century. That was founded in 1820. Some sell venison they shoot locally. But only in autumn when it is the correct time.

  • @Bramfly

    @Bramfly

    28 күн бұрын

    Not only German bakeries but also in my country (NL) and frankly all European countries have fantastic regional breads.

  • @klaus2t703

    @klaus2t703

    28 күн бұрын

    @@wolfgangpreier9160 German here. I regularly bake rolls and pretzels. It is wheat flour, water, yeast, salt. Everything else is optional. Are these 4 ingredients hard to find in the US? Difficult to understand for a German. It's so easy and cheap...and healthy with no chemicals. and delicious. The whole house smells. In fact, I think baking has many benefits. It begins with the meditative preparation of the dough. The smell that makes your mouth water. It naturally prepares the stomach for digestion. Nothing artificial.

  • @enjoystraveling
    @enjoystraveling23 күн бұрын

    I live in the United States and it would never occur to me to use paper plates for my guest or family unless I was on a picnic. It’s wasteful, cost more to buy paper plates and it’s definitely doesn’t take much time even for can dishwashing to just fill the sink with a little bit of dish soap and water. Wipe them and put them to dry.

  • @guillandanthony711
    @guillandanthony71122 күн бұрын

    I was quite stunned about the paper plates. I have been living in Germany since 14 years now and people will always use their best plates and cutlery when they invite you. The only time I was served on a paper plate was at a students‘ party.

  • @DeshanHoward
    @DeshanHoward28 күн бұрын

    It took me to become an injured worker before I really began to focus on my health and well-being. Hayley is right. Value yourself because corporations value money.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    They will replace you in a second and try to screw you over. I had a friend hurt themself on the job and they did not do the proper protocol regarding workmans comp and now is getting screwed left and right with medical bills.

  • @schnetzelschwester

    @schnetzelschwester

    3 күн бұрын

    @@HayleyAlexis If a work accident happens in Germany, the Employer's liability insurance association (Berufsgenossenschaft) pays all medical treatments and rehab. All employers have to pay for this insurance, and if there are many accidents at their site or branch, they have to pay more. If the employer messes up with the protocol, the statutory health insurance takes the costs and charges the employer later.

  • @robertharris7027
    @robertharris702728 күн бұрын

    I'm a German and live here for 60 years but I never had an appartment with heated floor or this towel rack in the bathroom. On the other hand I do not think of cars like BMW 3-series or Mercedes C-Class as luxury cars (like many Americans do). Maybe there we have a kind of a balance.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    I also do not think of certain German branded cars as "luxury" vehicles... Don't get me wrong... If I had a bunch of money, would I get a matte black BMW m8 competition 🫣... yes!

  • @gubsak55

    @gubsak55

    24 күн бұрын

    Fun fact. In 1975 I moved from Denmark to England to work for one year. In Denmark a luxury car was a Rolls Royce or a Bentley. In England they may be luxury cars too, but not something any sane young man or woman would dream of buying. To them a Mercedes was luxury ... and half of the taxis in Denmark were Mercedes then 😂 In 1989, when we bought our first car (a very used VW Polo) which we bought from a mechanic who was about to renovate an older Mecedes 500 for then 250,000 DKR (40,000 $), more than 15 times the money we paid for our Polo.😂

  • @flitsertheo

    @flitsertheo

    22 күн бұрын

    @@HayleyAlexis Together with a BMW you also buy the bad reputation of BMW drivers (m/f).

  • @hollyhope7227

    @hollyhope7227

    21 күн бұрын

    I have a towel rack, but never had a heated floor. I think it is still not common. Yes, the "big" cars. Too expensive and no parking places in cities. And no swimming pools!!

  • @vrenak
    @vrenak28 күн бұрын

    With you Haley, paperplates is for when normal service isn't really an option, like if you're hauling a big picnic, if you're moving and have just packed up the last bits of the kitchen etc...

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    I 1000% agree

  • @tovemagnussen4423
    @tovemagnussen442324 күн бұрын

    As a norwegian, yes, it is not a luxury! A cold country as Norway (and Sweden and Finland (Suomi)), it is a nessessity with heated floors. Though the building code is also different between US and Europe, I am thinking about how to keep the buildings warm during winter, our very loooong winter... I am a single woman, and does NOT use paperplates, ever! (or plastic cups!) Real china, glass and cutlery! The only time used paperplates/cups, is when we are on the beach or hiking. Though ALWAYS bring it back to dispose it properly, NEVER toss anything during hikes!

  • @MWB1961
    @MWB196123 күн бұрын

    I live in Germany and yes, you can buy paper plates and plastic cutlery here. But if anything (at least the people who I know) would never use them for "at home", only for BBQ or parties 😊

  • @heronimousbrapson863

    @heronimousbrapson863

    9 күн бұрын

    Same in USA.

  • @jengsci8268
    @jengsci82689 күн бұрын

    We do use paper plates, but to cover food in the microwave, and then the same one for a sandwich later. It's usually relatively clean. Never for dinner guests. Otherwise just picnics or when regular plates are not an option, like if you're moving and have packed up everything. Also, for the picnics I like to use the ones that are eco-friendly and will break down very quickly. This goes for the "plastic" utensils as well. If I can wash and re-use them I will. I don't have to worry about losing regular silverware. Hubby uses them at job sites where their "lunch room" is a seat on their coolers in the shade in summer. Sometimes they come back, sometimes they don't.

  • @damiannematode5193
    @damiannematode519328 күн бұрын

    You called for it: Ein belegtes Brot mit Schinken (Schinken), ein belegtes Brot mit Ei (Ei)! Proudly presented by the earworm factory.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    💃🏽💃🏽💃🏽

  • @kayholl10

    @kayholl10

    28 күн бұрын

    Das sind zwei belegte Brote, ein's mit Schinken, ein's mit Ei!

  • @jennyh4025

    @jennyh4025

    28 күн бұрын

    Und dazu eisgekühlter Bommerlunder….

  • @eifelwolf1719

    @eifelwolf1719

    28 күн бұрын

    Bommerlunder eisgekühlt...

  • @realpirate

    @realpirate

    26 күн бұрын

    Jetzt nen Bommerlunder, bitte

  • @annkathrinhanamond2982
    @annkathrinhanamond298227 күн бұрын

    I am pretty shocked that people think paper plates would be _cheaper_ than normal plates - I could understand why one would think ordinary plates are time-consuming when you don't own a dishwasher (but then - I had guessed dishwashers are as usual in American homes than in German ones?), but cheaper?! Heated floors are also considered kinda luxurious in Germany, too, because most people live in older houses and heated floors are kind of a Neubau-thing. But of course you are right, they are not only in expensive homes - it is more a "You have heated floors? You're lucky" than a "You have heated floors? You're rich"-thing, I guess 😄

  • @KitsuneHB

    @KitsuneHB

    23 күн бұрын

    True. When the family of a friend of mine moved into a renovated home they got heated floors and they are not rich. I live in a very old house (my great grandfather built it) and I've got only a heated floor in tiny room by 'accident' because a pipe for hot water is under the floor and so that part is heated lol.

  • @zacqueen

    @zacqueen

    22 күн бұрын

    I now live in an old house in Hessen, Germany (relocated from the USA), which is 70 years old, and it already had heated bathroom floors. I've visited even older houses, and they also have heated bathrooms. Seems to be the usual thing here.

  • @AS-np3yq
    @AS-np3yq27 күн бұрын

    Kackwohnung got me :) About the work-life boundaries: In Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France and so on you got laws. Switzerland in special, for me: If your boss wants you to work more then 8.5 hours a day, he has to pay extra or give you free time 1to1. IF he wants you to work after 6 PM (18:00), he has to pay 25% more per Hour. Or give you 25% per hour more free time. (It depends on the industry you working IF he want's you to work on Saturday, he pays 50% more per hour. If he wan'ts you to work on Saturday after 18:00/6 PM he pays 25% additional to the 50% more per hour. If he demands you to work on Sundays (christian free days) he pays up to 85% and additional stuff like after 18:00/6 PM +25% and so on. It is forbidden to crush your workers with more then 45 hours per week and so on. This incentivise the conpanies to M A N A G E and be efficient instead in throwing away peoples lifes. You in the US need really to cultivate your freedom to notwork.

  • @annettefournier9655

    @annettefournier9655

    9 күн бұрын

    Oh the US got more efficient and cut overtime hours. They cut the staff by half and double your workload.😢

  • @janeroth4635

    @janeroth4635

    9 күн бұрын

    I have noticed that millennials are requiring this work-life balance, and I am in favor of their I rarely had difficulties because I was able to be choosey about where I worked and who I worked for. A person shouldn't have to be choosey.

  • @Mamaki1987
    @Mamaki198728 күн бұрын

    Interesting, you brought up so many points that other Americans also bring up when they lived in Europe. When they are asked what they love about it, health care, life-work-balance, food, public transport (granted, Germany is not t he best in that regard) and walkable cities are among the top things. And yes, no German, or person who is germanized or has some close ties to Germany does't love the bread *lol* But what would also be interesting to know: what do you love about being back in the US? And do you plan to live in the US and Germany in the future?

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    I am making a US version of this video as well :) I am also planning on making a video with Mike so he can talk about all the things he loves about the USA!

  • @Mamaki1987

    @Mamaki1987

    27 күн бұрын

    @@HayleyAlexis Oh, this is awesome: I'm looking forward to this

  • @nancyrafnson4780

    @nancyrafnson4780

    27 күн бұрын

    @@Mamaki1987, me too!

  • @TheMAmeph

    @TheMAmeph

    26 күн бұрын

    This is also an interesting point of view for a European or even German, as we probably don't really value the same things or hold them in high regards, because we don't know that it can be worse or because we compare ourselves to different standards. (So for example I wish public transport would be way cheaper, more in time, cleaner etc. and cities could also change a lot to be more accesible and safer for pedestrians.)

  • @Justforvisit

    @Justforvisit

    23 күн бұрын

    Public transport not the best? Well, when we talk about the infamous Deutsche Bahn that's probably pretty true. Local / Regional Bus- and Tram-Companies though are usually pretty reliable...they may have occassionaly a single unit that's 5 - 10 minutes late or so, but in the case of the local companies that's rather the exception while for Deutsche Bahn it's the standard :D Edit: And well, of course the situation in more rural areas is pretty tough too, that's indeed a problem when the bus only drives once a day.

  • @elliotsmith9812
    @elliotsmith981228 күн бұрын

    And the Windows. And the cheap wine. And the neighborhood shops. And the mass transit. And the alte Stadt, which is never more then an hour away.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    Yeah...I miss a decent city being an hour away..... For me to have European flair I have to drive at least 2+ hours.

  • @bognagruba7653

    @bognagruba7653

    28 күн бұрын

    And the electric kettles.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    @bognagruba7653 still don't own an electric kettle but we do have a pot/kettle that you heat up on the stove and it works wonders

  • @TheMAmeph

    @TheMAmeph

    26 күн бұрын

    What's special or different about our windows?

  • @schwarzeVenus

    @schwarzeVenus

    26 күн бұрын

    Wir können unsere Fenster öffnen, ohne sie ganz zu öffnen... es nennt sich " auf Kipp" stellen 😊​@@TheMAmeph

  • @berndwieboldt5097
    @berndwieboldt509728 күн бұрын

    You can expect people to NOT carry firearms ... outside of USA.

  • @juleungewitter7513

    @juleungewitter7513

    27 күн бұрын

    Good point! The idea that there could be any private individuals out there legally running around with guns seems completely absurd to me. I don't think I'd dare leave the house.

  • @frankteunissen6118

    @frankteunissen6118

    27 күн бұрын

    I couldn’t believe it when in the US the supplier I was visiting displayed a sign outside the building saying that I wasn’t allowed to bring my gun inside. Like … what? 🤣🤣🤣

  • @harmseberhardharmseberhard9908

    @harmseberhardharmseberhard9908

    24 күн бұрын

    Like in a good old western movie..😅 . But honestly, the american obsession with running around with firearms all day long 😢is quite unsettling for us europeans. We have the rule, that using forced is the privilege of the state. 'das Gewaltmonopol des Staates'. Nobody has the right to inforce his right with violence. You have the right to defend yourself or others. But you have not the right to run around with firearms all day just in case you have to defend yourself or others. If nobody is allowed to carry arms, there is no need to defend yourself or others with firearms. And that is not luxory, that is simple logic. If your law inforcement and your legal system works well, then there is no need to take your right by in your own hands.

  • @TheBrucepix

    @TheBrucepix

    24 күн бұрын

    @@harmseberhardharmseberhard9908 yeah, because criminals always follow the rules.

  • @rettigo

    @rettigo

    24 күн бұрын

    @@harmseberhardharmseberhard9908 It's a matter of perspective. As a European I see your point and in our reality it works out fine so far. The US has a different history and a different reality as well. Life would be better without weapons, but it's a long way to general disarmament. As long as people live in fear and danger there'll be no change. And there's a huge industry behind it as well (European too).

  • @Danny30011980
    @Danny3001198027 күн бұрын

    In NYC apparently having your own washing machine and tumble dryer is considered a luxury. I follow this property agent fella and he often shows apartments and it always seems special if a unit has its own laundry closet stocked with the appliances. Regarding paper plates - maybe for a barbecue party they would be used over here in Germany or after a party to give people some leftover cake to take home, but what is the advantage of not having to clean them (ever heard of a dishwasher for real dishes?). I think plastic cutlery and straws are slowly being banned in Germany for obvious environmental reasons. Tbh. I's rather be served food on a real plate with real functional cutlery than something disposable that is made so flimsy.

  • @defender4004

    @defender4004

    25 күн бұрын

    I don’t have a dishwasher but even washing dishes manually isn’t a problem. Nobody has dinner parties with lots of guests every day. The few times that there are many dishes I can either suck it up or my friends will help me😉. And in families with many children it’s normal that the children do the dishes.

  • @coolhomeschool2267

    @coolhomeschool2267

    24 күн бұрын

    Also in Switzerland, I moved to Switzerland in 2000, I had all 14 days 1 washingday, feed the machine with 20Rp-pieces, it was forbidden to put the own washing machine in the apartment. Also now, the more expensive apartments have own washing machines, cant affors that

  • @celinepa8246

    @celinepa8246

    24 күн бұрын

    YES! Same for the "full sized fridge" and the star of the show always seems to be the sink sprayer. 😂

  • @airlag
    @airlag28 күн бұрын

    movable shower heads, insulated windows, burglar-resistant doors and windows, affordable golden dental crowns. That' what came in my mind while watching 😎

  • @AKayfabe

    @AKayfabe

    27 күн бұрын

    wait who doesn’t have a moveable shower head in the US? I have never not had one and I’ve lived in 14 different places.

  • @veepotter307

    @veepotter307

    27 күн бұрын

    Don’t forget the fabulous transportation system!!

  • @stiegelzeine2186

    @stiegelzeine2186

    24 күн бұрын

    And concrete walls, in the USA if you got strong windows and doors the thief will just break through your wall using his 200kg body weight

  • @Justforvisit

    @Justforvisit

    23 күн бұрын

    @@AKayfabe Only time I ever came across a shower head that wasn't movable was in our washing room during my Bundeswehr time :D

  • @corn1971

    @corn1971

    23 күн бұрын

    @@AKayfabe Most shower heads in the U.S. are at a fixed height coming out of the wall.

  • @ln8116
    @ln811622 күн бұрын

    I think it depends on who you associate with, most people don’t use paper plates, we all have dishwashers

  • @Baumscheibenkunst
    @Baumscheibenkunst24 күн бұрын

    Regarding the farmers markets and the mixed vegetables box. I live in the south west of Germany and in my area some farmers offer a subscription service for such boxes. Once a week you will get a box with mixed fruit or veg or both delivered to your front door. Just tell them how much stuff you want, ie for a single person or a family etc. Some of them make a point of including stuff you won't easily find in a supermarket and even give a recipe suggestion in case you are not familiar with this specific item.

  • @markweaver1012

    @markweaver1012

    23 күн бұрын

    In the US, that is called a CSA (community supported agriculture). Some CSAs do meat as well.

  • @preachermaid
    @preachermaid25 күн бұрын

    I lived in the US (East Coast) during the eighties, no one ever served me a meal on paper plates except during outdoor events.

  • @marlene9874

    @marlene9874

    24 күн бұрын

    Made the same experience in the late seventies in Atlanta - everyone served food on normal plates. Sad to hear that obviously changed.

  • @ln8116

    @ln8116

    23 күн бұрын

    You probably didn’t live in a trailer park

  • @zacqueen

    @zacqueen

    22 күн бұрын

    It is a normal part of the American culture now in the 2020's, to use paper plates and the standard red plastic cups in the USA. My classmates and colleagues would eat off paper plates all the time, at home, when we were working on projects or work (no party or event). It's either paper plates, aluminum foil or plastic plates, when I visited homes.

  • @chrystal108reading4
    @chrystal108reading424 күн бұрын

    Hi my Dear...German-Aboriginee here ;)...I cannot send you bread...but here is my favourite recipe..for baking BRÖTCHEN at home in almost NO TIME/effortless..NEBENBEI....as you let the dough rise overnight (not even in a fridge ) and bake THE BRÖTCHEN in the morning (for 15-20 min)..they keep fresh for at least a week...(without fridge..just put them in a BROT-Kasten or bag on your kitchen counter ) But usually they are soooo good, that they do not last a week ;) I did this because over here in Germany the really GOOD BRÖTCHEN are somehow slowly being sold like solid Gold in the bakeries and in supermarkets you cannot really find them anymore..and also you do not really know what kind of flower-mixture and artificial ingredients the supermarket stuff contains...(like they put colouring in the dough to make it seem as if it was wholewheat..or rhy or DINKEL...where as it is just cheap quality wheatflower..) ...and I did not want to eat that... Recipe: prepare in the evening: (takes 5 min) YOU NEED for the DOUGH: 500g Mehl (Dinkel, Weizen, Roggen) gemischt is best ;) 1 Päckchen Trockenhefe OR a tiny bit of fresh yeast (höchstens 1/5 Frischhefe-Würfel) 8-12g Salz 8g Zucker / Sugar optionally: 10g Brotgewürz (von Sonnentor)...I mix my Brotgewürz myself...it contains Kümmel, Fenchel , Koriander mainly..but also Anis, Kardamon, Schwarzkümmel, Mohn (according to your taste) 375 ml warm (not hot) water...(for the yeast to rise) Put all dry ingredients in a bowl, mix them...add the 375ml (not more)..of warm Water and KNEAD them (by hand) or with a Knet-handrührer..quickly until the dough is a lump that doesn't stick to the bowl..(doesn't take more than 2 to 3 min) put this dough into a another (greased (I take oliveoil) bowl or glas bowl..that is at least 3 times bigger as the dough as the dough will rise overnight immensely..Put a lid or tea towel over the glasbowl..for the dough to rest over night.. The best result is when the dough is left to rise for 10 to 12 hours...(but you try +/- 2 hours) So..when I want bread...I prepare the dough in the evening..say like..8pm...and I can bake the BRÖTCHEN in the morning at 8am.. Next morning: Preheat oven...Ober-Unterhitze..to 260°C, and ...for baking... get a glas/ovenproof bowl of (200ml) Water (to be put at the bottom of your preheated oven) DO NOT KNEAD the raised Dough again...(as kneading will destroy the fluffiness of the dough); Put flower on your kitchen counter..and then turn the bowl upside down..lifting it up slightly to let the dough simply and slowly fall out of the bowl by itself...have patience there... Cut the dough mass in 8 pieces...(with a sharp knife )..and put them on a Oventray/Backblech (you can use Backpapier, but not necessary), Treat the dough gently, NOT squeezing...touch it gently and caressingly as if it was your lovers cheek (quote from a professional baker ;)) You can sprinkle seeds of your choice on top of it..Sunflowers, poppyseed, Sesam..all optional. IMPORTANT: Before you put the tray in the oven...YOU MUST PUT the Bowl of Water in the preheated oven..the watervapour is needed for the dough to remain its moisture while baking. Bake for 15-20min..or until nice and crispy...(I bake it for 25min..as I like them crusty..) ENJOY...:) with butter and chives and a bit of salt..or honey..or ...Gurke..;) Give it a try...especially with the Brotgewürz and a mixture of your favourite flower-types..you will find..that preparing these Brötchen...is a quick and easy...as brushing your teeth.. it will simply blend into your daily life.. and you will have a little bit of German paradise at your place... and also it saves you a looot of money..just buy good ingredients (like good spices in single..mix them or use them single..and try ..what tastes best for you ...HAVE FUN.. lots of love..and GUTEN APPETIT....Seleina :)

  • @veepotter307

    @veepotter307

    23 күн бұрын

    Can I copy your recipe?

  • @chrystal108reading4

    @chrystal108reading4

    23 күн бұрын

    @@veepotter307 please do..otherwise I wouldn't have shared it...everyone deserves goooooood BRÖTCHEN ;) enjoy...love...Seleina :)

  • @veepotter307

    @veepotter307

    22 күн бұрын

    Thanks. I want to save your text but can’t figure out how to copy and paste it off of your reply.

  • @uncipaws7643
    @uncipaws764328 күн бұрын

    Floor heating hasn't been that common for a long time because it's more costly and difficult to install than radiators. More recently heat pumps and district heating are becoming more widespread and since the temperature is lower than that from oil or gas heatings it requires larger areas to heat up. Nowadays a floor heating is standard in new apartments/houses. As a barefoot person I appreciate that in winter.

  • @timhartherz5652

    @timhartherz5652

    28 күн бұрын

    The Romans already had it, fell out of fashion due to higher install cost, but everything seems to be making a comeback eventually.

  • @svr5423

    @svr5423

    27 күн бұрын

    @@timhartherz5652 never had a german house/apartment that had floor heating. Here in Switzerland, it is de facto standard. What I find funny is that Europeans care more about insulation and proper building materials and then cheap out on any HVAC costs. Even modern houses are often not fitted with air conditioning and ventilation, leaving the need to open windows (with all the pollen, insects, noise pollution coming in) and just walking around in underwear in the summer or everyone stinking up the place with their sweat. Americans are the other way around. No desire for proper insulation, but paying 300 USD per month for electricity is ok.

  • @endlessstudent3512

    @endlessstudent3512

    27 күн бұрын

    Also Floor heating depends on the structure of the building. Older buildings often cannot have floor heating, because it is technically not possible to add them or it would be so expensive, that it would be better to tear down the whole house :D

  • @EditioCastigata
    @EditioCastigata25 күн бұрын

    Last time I ate from paper plates was at a Kindergeburtstag.

  • @mikekelly5869
    @mikekelly586923 күн бұрын

    My local farmer's market is just a shed where produce is dropped off in the morning. You go there and take what you want, read the price from a list on the wall, weigh the stuff yourself, and throw cash into a bucket. Works fine.

  • @Waechter_im_All
    @Waechter_im_All28 күн бұрын

    ...und ich freu mich immer noch wie blöd, wenn Du Deutsch sprichst. Ich kenn's jetzt ja schon ein paar Jahre, aber es ist jedesmal wieder überraschend, wenn dann das breitestmögliche Boarisch dabei rauskommt - oder sowas wie maybe a bissl Schinken... 🙂 Don't ever change!!!

  • @annepoitrineau5650

    @annepoitrineau5650

    28 күн бұрын

    Finde ich auch!

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    Niemals... I am immer the Denglish Hayley 😂

  • @psrfpsrf

    @psrfpsrf

    28 күн бұрын

    ich habe es nicht verstanden, dass man Dir Hayley in Deutschland nicht die Chancen gegeben hat zum Erlangen Deines Traumberufs. Wer schon vor Jahren, erinnere mich an Dein Interview mit den Sender, so schnell die deutsche Sprache konnte, schafft andere Anforderungen mit links.

  • @annepoitrineau5650

    @annepoitrineau5650

    28 күн бұрын

    @@psrfpsrf gleichfalls.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    @@psrfpsrf Vielleicht irgendwann komme ich wieder aber das hat (gerade) nicht so gut gepasst und ich habe mich so "lifeless" gefühlt. Ich finde es nicht so schlimm wieder in den USA zu sein weil Mike dabei ist aber ich weiss nicht wo ich in der Zukunft will be :)

  • @gubsak55
    @gubsak5524 күн бұрын

    Back in the nineties in Denmark we were volunteering for our daughter's swimming club arranging regional and national swimming events. We soon found out that it was much cheaper to rent real plates and cutlery than buy and use paper plates and plastic cutlery. After only 3 meals it was cheaper, and it was most appreciated by the swimmers and staff. Swimmers eat an awful lot and when they fill their plates with hot spaghetti or rice with hot tomato sauce or Indian curry they have great difficulty carrying the overfilled paper plates to their tables. A China plate will last for ever and be a stable base for bigger portions 😊 I have never used a paper plate in a private home in Denmark, not even when I was young or as a student except for kids birthdays.

  • @tronicman1
    @tronicman124 күн бұрын

    It is in fact a towel heater. Never have served or been served food on paper plates at home. They're for picnics or garden parties.

  • @Pirrata123
    @Pirrata12326 күн бұрын

    German markets 🥰, good quality of fruits, vegetables, local honey, olive oil from greece, meat and often fish have a fair price. And on market day in my part of the town, we use it as a meeting point with friends. A fresh, hot coffee and "Brötchen" during shopping is a pleasure. And mostly everything is not in plastic, no waste.

  • @coolhomeschool2267

    @coolhomeschool2267

    24 күн бұрын

    Farmers markets, I love them, but in Switzerland a cant afford them, and I work fulltime. It is too expensive.

  • @myrthe66

    @myrthe66

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@coolhomeschool2267Wie schade.

  • @carinel.1333

    @carinel.1333

    20 күн бұрын

    Affordable healthy food should be a human right

  • @lars5288
    @lars528826 күн бұрын

    Farmer Markets are grotesquely expensive in Germany too, the vast majority doesn't buy there. Those wall hanging heaters are getting popular but they aren't the norm. Floor heating is rare in most places. Those things are found in newly built homes, but most buildings have a much lower standard somewhere in between the standards of 1960 and 1980.

  • @jenniferjennings2856

    @jenniferjennings2856

    24 күн бұрын

    Really? Where do you live? The Viktualienmarkt near Munich’s Marienplatz is quite pricey but others that are farther from the city center are very reasonable.

  • @shadowfox009x

    @shadowfox009x

    23 күн бұрын

    Where do you live? I'm in rural Germany and the prices at farmer's markets are perfectly normal. Okay, they can't compete with discounters, but they are usually a bit cheaper than Edeka. And they often add something on top, like a free salad or one or two apples extra. Plus, their products are fresh and local.

  • @HowIamDriving
    @HowIamDriving27 күн бұрын

    Always a joy listen to you. Love your English-German-mixed language.

  • @GlenHunt
    @GlenHunt28 күн бұрын

    In the USA people will fight to the death over their right to eat crappy "food" from paper plates than for healthcare and human rights. When they go overseas and are forced to eat healthy, they whine about there being no hint of modern civilization, i.e., Taco Bell. Ah, the American Dream: to make the rest of the world be just like America. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @BrokenCurtain

    @BrokenCurtain

    28 күн бұрын

    I'm under the impression that American "rights" and "liberties" mostly consist of freedoms that a sane person wouldn't actually want, like the "right" to get cancer from second-hand smoke, the "right" to go bankrupt from medical bills, the "right" to live in constant fear of violence, the "right" to need a car to get anywhere, the "right" to eat crappy food that makes you sick. They call these "freedoms", but they all seem rather worthless to me. I prefer having enough vacation days so I can spend Christmas with my elderly parents, or being able to call in sick without having to fear losing my job. It's a simple matter of quality over quantity.

  • @thorium222

    @thorium222

    28 күн бұрын

    Yes it is totally baffling to me how different the things are valued in the US.

  • @bernhardneef7996

    @bernhardneef7996

    28 күн бұрын

    but is not in all America, its only in the US! (America is not a country, it's a continent! US citizens don't know that, do not step into the same trap)

  • @Oozaru85

    @Oozaru85

    28 күн бұрын

    @@bernhardneef7996 In Europe, when someone says America, they usually mean the USA. Otherwise we just say North or South America. Which are 2 continents btw. There is no one continent called America. Thats why for us America is just the USA.

  • @claudiakarl7888

    @claudiakarl7888

    28 күн бұрын

    @@Oozaru85Although Mexico and Canada are part of North America too

  • @thebenki
    @thebenki28 күн бұрын

    Sehr interessant! Didn’t know that floor heating or a wallmounted heating is such a luxury in the US…. Thanks for this nice video 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻❤❤🍀✌🏻✌🏻🌭🦅🤣🫡

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    I think someone made a valid point... Dependent on where you live your house could be made completely out of plywood (or something similar) and it might not be the best option to install heated floors. Also a lot of homes have central AC/heating unlike in Germany so it is just a "difference" based on building preferences I suppose.

  • @SaraBlu

    @SaraBlu

    28 күн бұрын

    Actually it’s totally a modern thing to me and not something you regularly have in Germany - that being said, I am used to apartment hunting in Berlin and have seen dazillions of old „Altbau“ places, even with coal ovens and all that stuff.

  • @Laurin1179
    @Laurin117928 күн бұрын

    So as you most likely know: In Germany we most likely use paper plates for events like "Grillparty" and so on, when you simply don't have enough plates for all your guests (or when it gets wetter(alcohol wise) and you don't want to risk to lose your expensive plates to drunk guests... ) [and of course they are broadly used at festivals, concerts and volksfest ect.] I for myself am getting more and more environmental aware and i'm trying to use less and less "one use items" for such occasions. Also towel heaters and heated floors are not standard in Germany and are more common in newly build flats/houses or renovated ones.

  • @ln8116

    @ln8116

    21 күн бұрын

    And they are used at every one of the thousands of Bratwurst stands all over Germany, and don't forget the Döner stands - all served on paper.

  • @TristouMTL
    @TristouMTL28 күн бұрын

    Oh! We were served dinner on paper plates while down in Florida and were perplexed -- here in Canada they're reserved for picnics and children's birthday parties. And don't get me started on the bread. You can hunt down good stuff from bakeries, but from a supermarket? Nope. And sooooo sweeet, it's almost like cake down there. Our sliced bread is sweet, too, but not THAT sweet, and it also comes no sugar added. Even from Aldi. We fell in love with Aldi down there :)

  • @lenechristiansen2663
    @lenechristiansen26633 күн бұрын

    Paper plates are for camping, for picnic, and for making very crispy bacon in the micro wave oven. 😁

  • @anonymusum
    @anonymusum21 күн бұрын

    Good to see you again and good to hear that you´re doing well.

  • @romanbecker6711
    @romanbecker671128 күн бұрын

    😂 today i bought some pumpkinseed pretzels for 79 cents at my local bakery

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    AHHHHHH!! Torture... this comment is torture!

  • @romanbecker6711

    @romanbecker6711

    27 күн бұрын

    And yes i live in Bavaria

  • @juliehillebrand8923
    @juliehillebrand892326 күн бұрын

    Seriously, you're making me homesick. I never felt so truly happy and of my own self as when I studied in Germany. Back to my roots, I grew up hearing my great granny speak German in her beautifully German accented voice. Hayley, wo sind meinem Brotchen mit Butter?

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    26 күн бұрын

    Nicht in Florida 🤣😅 (leider). I hope to visit Germany once I am done with my current school program!!

  • @davesaunders7080
    @davesaunders708028 күн бұрын

    So many good points and well presented! Tschuss from Toronto

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    Oh Toronto sounds like a lot of fun!! Thank you for stopping by :)

  • @TreyDaze
    @TreyDaze28 күн бұрын

    I've unfortunately been back in the States and I am literally counting down the days until I can return to Germany lol. It is a nightmare here.

  • @arnodobler1096

    @arnodobler1096

    28 күн бұрын

    Hi, hope you're back soon. 🍻

  • @TreyDaze

    @TreyDaze

    28 күн бұрын

    @@arnodobler1096 Arno!!!! I miss you brother! I'll be back soon!

  • @McGhinch

    @McGhinch

    28 күн бұрын

    Yeah, it's different over there. It is remarkable if a US American doesn't "feel" at home anymore and wants to go back. Have a save trip back to Germany.

  • @arnodobler1096

    @arnodobler1096

    28 күн бұрын

    @@TreyDaze 🙋‍♂👍

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    Yeah...Once my current school program is over I will have a lot more time to travel back to Germany and visit for a few weeks/months. My next program is completely online so I have a lot of time :)

  • @jule7315
    @jule731528 күн бұрын

    I looove your comment on the Kackwohnung, beautiful! I once lived in a tiny, ugly Kackwohnung, too, in Osnabrück..but it also had a towel heater in the bathroom :D!! Now I live in some kind of a palace (for me) with heated floors, a towel heater, a huge bathtub and a balcony. Living my best life :DDD

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    Oh yes.... I remember when I finally left that apartment I was dancing around but sometimes I think about it and miss it so much. I was so broke but had so much fun in my little Kackwohnung 🥺🥺 may have had the loudest neighbors, the smelliest bathroom, and the tiniest fridge known to mankind BUT I was happy :)

  • @krakentoast
    @krakentoast28 күн бұрын

    The US is like a 3rd World Country it seems lol

  • 28 күн бұрын

    Even worse in some parts. I was shocked over what i saw there.

  • @susanford2388

    @susanford2388

    28 күн бұрын

    I have lived in four different countries & each country has its magic & negative & positives. Comparing sometimes can be distressing. Living in Greece I was baffled that I couldn't get stuff in the supermarket that I could in the UK or buy Indian spices. But I accepted it & learned to cook Greek food.

  • @KomradeKrusher

    @KomradeKrusher

    28 күн бұрын

    But with a Gucci belt.

  • @henningbartels6245

    @henningbartels6245

    28 күн бұрын

    "3rd World" is an outdated expression. There is no hierachy of worlds ... and the "2nd world" even stopped to exist 30 years ago.

  • @JonasReichert1992

    @JonasReichert1992

    27 күн бұрын

    Regarding Food and Health care it’s much worse.

  • @miracoli16
    @miracoli1626 күн бұрын

    Sehr gut, was Du über work-life-balance und das Abgrenzen sagst!!

  • @dgerdi
    @dgerdi24 күн бұрын

    Woah. We in Germany use paper plates as well. If you are going to a local barbecue or a rock concert or just having an open party, you can assume to get your food on a paper plate. But in my HOME? I don’t even own a single one. But is it really a luxury in the States, if normal plates are sold quite cheap? I suppose it’s more like a convenience thing so that you don’t have to do the dishes. And if you miss German bread - there are plenty of recipes to find online. You won’t get a 100% bakery result, but delicious anyway and a lot better than these white leafs you call bread - although I enjoy them from time to time - mostly when I am in the Netherlands. Have a nice day!

  • @mary33909

    @mary33909

    9 күн бұрын

    people in the US do not use paper plates except for occasions like picnics or BBQ’s outdoors.

  • @carollewis5468
    @carollewis54688 күн бұрын

    My parents were German and I lived there for 5 years when I was very young. I live in Canada and there are a few stores that do sell quite a few European breads, mainly Roggenbrot. As for brotchen, those are tough to find so I've started baking my own as well as Streusel kuchen and Ruhrkuchen. I never liked North American cakes (too sweet). We've now moved to another province in Canada and havoe found that there is very little European food to purchase here. People don't realize how good German baking, breads & cakes, really are and they really are missing out.

  • @blondkatze3547
    @blondkatze354728 күн бұрын

    Once I don`t understand dear Hayley, why people eat from paper plates and not from porcelain plates? Because most people probably have a dishwasher to wash their dishes.😉

  • @Humpelstilzchen

    @Humpelstilzchen

    28 күн бұрын

    To much work to put the plates and cuttlerie in and out the dishwasher i could imagine 😅

  • @annepoitrineau5650

    @annepoitrineau5650

    28 күн бұрын

    I do not have a dishwasher (I like vintage and vintage cannot resist dishwashers attacks) and I still do not use disposable crockery/cutlery.

  • @Humpelstilzchen

    @Humpelstilzchen

    28 күн бұрын

    @@annepoitrineau5650 Yes true they can not handle a dishwasher clean. Have some ,,old,, plates too 😊

  • @clivewilliams3661

    @clivewilliams3661

    28 күн бұрын

    Maybe they put the paper plates in the dishwasher before burning them??

  • @blondkatze3547

    @blondkatze3547

    28 күн бұрын

    Funny😅@@Humpelstilzchen

  • @itxofficial8281
    @itxofficial828122 күн бұрын

    Omg Hayley!! How come I haven't discovered your channel earlier?? I really love YT channels focussing on the cultural differences between Europe and the US, because as a European, it helps me to think outside of the box and understand how (and why) things work in the United States. Instant subscription earned for such a well put together video, I love your attitude and you seem to be a really nice person to be around! 🤗

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    22 күн бұрын

    Thank you for being here! I am an interesting case study...I just love Gemany and the USA... and love making videos about both places.

  • @AnnaLee33
    @AnnaLee3327 күн бұрын

    This is so interesting about paperplates! Usually people in Germany get their own set of China once they move out from their parents, or get married. Students might start with very low priced sets, or even fleamarket items, which can be very charming, and a set of porcellaine is usually a part of the "wedding table", where wedding guests can select the cutlery, crockery, glasses etc that the couple selected. And sometimes it's meant to be heirloom, because it comes from famous brands who create table art. I've never seen paper plates at home. We had 2 or 3 sets, one for weekdays, one for Sundays and guests, combined with fine wine glasses.. We also had meals together. To have fine tableware is the pride of many a household.

  • @mary33909

    @mary33909

    9 күн бұрын

    It’s just not true, sorry.

  • @ottmarschafer5713
    @ottmarschafer571323 күн бұрын

    The “German Beer Purity Law “ is worth to mention. A law to brew beer without chemicals and additives

  • @sandrasauerkraut8741

    @sandrasauerkraut8741

    22 күн бұрын

    I find it worth mentioning that we call it reinheitsGEBOT. While laws are made by man, a Gebot comes from god himself. ☝️

  • @flitsertheo

    @flitsertheo

    22 күн бұрын

    That Reinheitsgebot also has a negative impact on innovation, trying out new ideas. In Belgium without such a "Gebot" people try to make beer from anything legal.

  • @caspervanelli6502

    @caspervanelli6502

    22 күн бұрын

    @@sandrasauerkraut8741 How did that happen, did God write a note?

  • @hollyhope7227

    @hollyhope7227

    21 күн бұрын

    Yeahhh, we have sooooo many beers and there is more alcohol in than in the States. I love Schwarzbier and Altbier!

  • @alajatal3089
    @alajatal308923 күн бұрын

    Thanks for Brötchen ❤❤❤

  • @WoutervanWilligen
    @WoutervanWilligen28 күн бұрын

    I really liked the authentic German pictures in your video ... Oh ... nice hotel room you shot this video in. Very inspiring.

  • @harolde.lochleitnerjr.8006
    @harolde.lochleitnerjr.800622 күн бұрын

    Finally, the most important words in Germany: ‚Mahlzeit‘ and ‚Feierabend!‘

  • @joannunemaker6332
    @joannunemaker633228 күн бұрын

    I enjoyed this video. Like you, I miss German bread! It's the best!😊❤

  • @lindagarrido4353
    @lindagarrido43538 күн бұрын

    Re bread, depends on where you live in the states I’m from NYC and we’ve always had fresh baked Italian, German, French breads. I live in Rome now and the bread in NY is just as good because of the quality of the water.

  • @angiet.
    @angiet.20 күн бұрын

    The Gusto you put into saying "Brot", spoke to my german soul.

  • @joeaverage3444
    @joeaverage344428 күн бұрын

    Americans come to accept that their job is crap because all other jobs are crap too. Here in Germany, most people have no illusions either what they can expect from their employment, but there is still more a sense that you have certain rights an employer can't take away from you, and that there is a line in the sand.

  • @evamg21
    @evamg2122 күн бұрын

    To all the people saying we only use paper plate during picnic at parks: We were doing a bbq in the middle of the woods and my mom insisted we use our actual plates as we were inviting guests 🤣. Her reasoning: we would go there by car anyway and have enough space in the trunk. So there we were, in the middle of the woods, dining with porcelain on old wooden benches and tables. And yes, we brought our stainless steel cutlery as well.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    22 күн бұрын

    Your mom sounds like a very fun woman!! I would do the same 🤣🤣🤣

  • @lisajohnson9124

    @lisajohnson9124

    22 күн бұрын

    And a tablecloth

  • @blablavo
    @blablavo21 күн бұрын

    I really enjoy the Denglish, brought a couple of smiles to my face.

  • @daniellehuard5872
    @daniellehuard587210 күн бұрын

    I live in Canada and never served my guests with paper plates. Except for kids party happening outdoor.

  • @drau331
    @drau33127 күн бұрын

    The only time I used paper plates was when I hosted an outdoor birthday party for my kids who were 3 or 4 years old. Any other use would have put me to shame.

  • @annamc3947
    @annamc394726 күн бұрын

    I’ve never met anyone who ate off of paper plates except at a picnic. Must be a Florida thing.

  • @silkebower1977
    @silkebower197726 күн бұрын

    I only ever used paper plates for children's birthday parties. Even at camping we had plastic plates that could be cleaned. At home I use proper ceramic plates and cups. Yes, space saving bathroom heaters have the additional advantage of heating or drying towels. Totally normal.

  • @jr8627
    @jr862728 күн бұрын

    I wholeheartedly agree about at least two points I could never wrap my head around. Serving a meal on paperplates (even when they have enough real plates and a big dishwasher!) and the bread. 35 years ago a lived for one year in Texas. Luckily with a Swiss family who knew a Swiss baker in Houston where they bought their bread. And that was a really decent and delicious bread. Whenever I visited the States afterwards and I was craving for some good bread (luckily I don't eat much anymore, so I don't miss one anymore when I'm on vacation), I was looking for a French bakery (or maybe German). Normally you could get there at least some decent, though not always healthy bread. But since Covid a lot of people started to make their own sourdough bread, which always looked very delicious. And that is good. 😀

  • @lynnsintention5722
    @lynnsintention572227 күн бұрын

    YOu are right about the workers rights...That is one thing I love in Germany

  • @fedupnow61859
    @fedupnow6185928 күн бұрын

    Haley I found that Publix Chicago rolls are similar as they are crispy outside and soft , like our brotchen.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    I will have to try them out!! Thank you for the recommendation

  • @johannah9986
    @johannah998623 күн бұрын

    Having laundry in your apartment/basement - when I tell my fellow New Yorkers about it they're mindblown yet it's so standard for every household in Germany (Same for dishwashers, they use it as a selling point here ...)

  • @breej69
    @breej698 күн бұрын

    Well, the 'bread' in the bakery in Publix is all FROZEN. It's not like it's made there, so it's only considered fresh because it's baked there.

  • @wncjan
    @wncjan27 күн бұрын

    I love local farmers markets in small rural towns in USA

  • @fraglutz
    @fraglutz27 күн бұрын

    Ich liebe Deine eingestreuten deutschen Worte, very funny (weil man sie als Deutscher so gut versteht, Deine Aussprache ist großartig!).

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    Awww danke 🤗😍🥰🥹

  • @christinaweber2511

    @christinaweber2511

    27 күн бұрын

    Your "Nüdels" echo in my ears... 🤭​@@HayleyAlexis

  • @Dragon64646
    @Dragon6464627 күн бұрын

    Nice Video ❤️. Well done.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    26 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much ❤

  • @brainpope6660
    @brainpope666012 күн бұрын

    Warm greetings from Germany! I'm glad to hear that you enjoyed it. I, on the other hand, have missed the USA since I spent my high school exchange year there.))

  • @wolfganghager8321
    @wolfganghager832127 күн бұрын

    excellent insight. Another luxury is public schools that at their worst provide the literacy and numeracy only available in private schools in the US, with very few exceptions.

  • @pfalzgraf7527
    @pfalzgraf752728 күн бұрын

    What I'd like to know: Do you feel (hast Du den Eindruck) that you can maintain (durchsetzen) that boundary vis a vis your employers?

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    Yes... because I am not stereotypical "American" and I will quit a job if I am being mistreated.

  • @robertczwartek4709
    @robertczwartek470928 күн бұрын

    Im most developed countries worldwide the Healthcare accessible to everyone, education, and work-life balance are considered a normal and standard thing. Also safety and low crime. You will never here anyone in Japan, Switzerland, Dubai, Singapore or any other rich country if it is safe to walk around here. USA is the only country that does it different. Unfortunately. Because it's an incredibly beautiful country with a lot of amazing people.

  • @MichelleElsten
    @MichelleElsten9 күн бұрын

    I'm just a regular American, but will never eat grocery store bread. My husband and family don't get it. But, i love good bread 😊

  • @reginas.3491
    @reginas.349128 күн бұрын

    Latest News!! Hayley is on her way to founding a Union. And that is a good twist 🙋‍♀

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    If I were ever a very right woman, owned my own business, and had people working underneath me ...I would make sure they have very similar benefits that Germans have :(

  • @reginas.3491

    @reginas.3491

    28 күн бұрын

    @@HayleyAlexis I hope you didn't get me wrong. I think that your sincere conviction that the situation of workers/employees needs to be improved is the same conviction that led to the foundation of trade unions.

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    28 күн бұрын

    @reginas.3491 thank you! I didn't take it bad at all!!

  • @brunshildaneidottir5173
    @brunshildaneidottir517327 күн бұрын

    Could you please say once more "Kürbiskernbrötchen"? It sounds so lovely. 😘

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    hahaha thank you!

  • @mrslp6726
    @mrslp672622 күн бұрын

    I love the way she says "Kürbiskernkartoffelbrot"! 😂❤❤❤

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    22 күн бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @lakshmi0754
    @lakshmi075419 күн бұрын

    Love your observations, I was an exchange student in the US in 1989 - I missed real bread so much. I tried to bake a German cake - never tasted the same either. Her are two bread recipes: Einfaches helles Brot (geht ganz schnell): 500g Weizenmehl Typ 405 oder Dinkelmehl 2-3 g Trockenhefe oder 5-10 g frische Hefe 10g Salz 400 ml Wasser Verrühren, mindestens eine Stunde, besser länger gehen lassen, bei 250 Grad C mit Deckel backen - fertig. Körnerbrot in Kastenform: Je 250g Weizenmehl 250g Roggenmehl 1 Päckchen Trockenhefe oder 20g Frischhefe 500ml Wasser 1 EL Honig 2 EL Kerne (z.B. Kümmel und Koriander) 10 g Salz Verrühren und gehen lassen Bei 180 Grad C 60-70 min backen

  • @KokkiePiet
    @KokkiePiet26 күн бұрын

    Good Farmers markets in Germany really depends where you live. Just like good bread. Generally, in the South of Germany the basic stapeles like bread, meat at the butchers, or vegetables at the markets are a lot better. I am happy to live in a rural area, so I buy Asparagus, Strawberries etc directly from the people growing them. Going to do my Weekend shopping again tomorrow, will try to get as much quality stuff as I need.

  • @claudiarichter439
    @claudiarichter43927 күн бұрын

    Your mix of english and German is so funny😂

  • @HayleyAlexis

    @HayleyAlexis

    27 күн бұрын

    Thank you!! I love it too

  • @qthedancer4711

    @qthedancer4711

    25 күн бұрын

    Yeah, she is speaking my language!

  • @christianeedel5160
    @christianeedel51609 күн бұрын

    I lived in Japan for a while and started making my own sourdough bread from scratch (needed several tries to get it going at first), as “normal” bread was hard to come by. The smell of freshly baked bread is divine! I’m sure there are lots of resources out there these days. 14 years ago, there was a website by a German baker who developed a great method for home bakers, but unfortunately it’s no longer there.

  • @bavros1998
    @bavros199824 күн бұрын

    Most people over here wouldn’t even think about eating from paper plates themselves, no matter with or without guests! Has something to do with culture.

  • @rora8503
    @rora850327 күн бұрын

    I never use paper plates not even for large parties or outdoor activities. When you plan a big event, just ask everyone to bring thier own plates and cutlery. People will usually bring reusable plastic plates and cutlery (less weight to cary). And mist people have a stack of reusable plastic cups for plenty people at home. My city even has a citywide refunable to go cup in three sizes. You just take it back the next time to refill or return (could be any coffee shop inte city).