How Steam Trains Revolutionised Britain's Cuisine | Full Steam Ahead
This time, the team find out how the railways transformed the British diet, rescuing a nation that was struggling to feed itself.
Putting theory into practice, Alex and Peter load a flock of sheep onto a train, discovering how the mass transportation of livestock by rail transformed the quality and quantity of meat available to Victorian consumers. This new capability gave birth to the traditional British roast.
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Ruth is truly a delight to watch! I love that they don't simply tell us about history, they actually put themselves right in the thick of it. They really make you feel as though you're right there next to them.
Wouldn't it have been marvelous to have Ruth as your History teacher in school? She is just wonderful, I watch anything she is in.
@kellyreilly-robinson2130
4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely agree😀
@9inchpp
4 жыл бұрын
Maybe not in porn but yeah I get what you're saying
@kasperbruunkristensen9522
4 жыл бұрын
Completely agree!
@stanlindert6332
4 жыл бұрын
Ruth and I could work a farm.
@NathanChisholm041
3 жыл бұрын
The boys are far more interesting!
Ruth is in a constant state of enthusiasm.
@Muck006
14 күн бұрын
She is WRONG about the internet though ... which will "ruin humanity" globally, because we humans arent learning fast enough how to deal with it in a sensible way.
Excelent! This kind of videos are a delicious way of learning history. I am a Portuguese mechanical engineer, who worked/lived in Somerset for ~2.5 years (and enjoyed it). These videos remind us about the impressive societal changes that the industrial revolution brought to Britain, and to the world. (Similar in scale to the changes brought from the intercontinental trade resulting from the "age of discoveries") I'm still not a big fan of fish and chips, but now I see it "with different eyes"... But I did became a fan some (crispy fruity) types of Somerset cider!
I am old enough to have eaten fish (halibut) and chips cooked in beef tallow. Gives the best flavour, nothing else comes close. And the saturated fat doesn't oxidise and break down when heated, unlike the vegetable oils we use now.
@julesroy
3 жыл бұрын
And the joke of it is that those vegetable oils now appear to be worse for us than the beef fat.
@TheBandana1969
3 жыл бұрын
My dad lived and worked in Worcestershire in the 1950s. He used to talk of eating fish and chips fried in lard. It seems the newspaper in which the stuff was wrapped gave it a special flavour😃😃
@highlandwinterwolf8589
3 жыл бұрын
do you have any recipes available for that time period? I'm game to try and that would be something different to try
@pinkyvdt
3 жыл бұрын
@@highlandwinterwolf8589 any recipe for a Breaded, deep fried fish will do. Then just fry it in lard, which is basically beef tallow.
@susanmiller7472
3 жыл бұрын
@@pinkyvdt Lard is pork fat.
Google and it's algorithms. Was craving for some fish and chips and did a yelp search. 2 hours later, this is on my suggestion list.
@francespowell6923
3 жыл бұрын
How'd it go?
I moved from England and what I miss most is full English breakfast Cornish pasty lunch and battered cod and cheesy chips for dinner. Shout out to my boys roast dinner and shepherds pie n sausage rolls keep it real 👌🏻
@ello7222
4 жыл бұрын
LittIe Whiskey vinegar chips, love them
@yvellebradley2502
4 жыл бұрын
Stop it! You’re both making me hungry!
@richardseddon2946
3 жыл бұрын
I live in the Philippines now (originally from Scotland).I know what you mean Little Whiskey.One of my ex pat friends gave me a jar of Branston Pickle the other day.I could've cried with joy !
@TheBandana1969
3 жыл бұрын
We Indians have preserved many British quirks, including fish and chips.
@rayshowsay1749
3 жыл бұрын
Full plate for Sunday breakfast alright, but rest of the week Marmite on toast or fried bread! While skimming the leaves that preferred to swim rather than sink ...
I had a very good friend of mine who along with her husband in Wales, collected and restored steamrollers and trains from the Victorian Era. They recently passed away due to Cancer.
@yvellebradley2502
4 жыл бұрын
Alex S I am so very sorry for your loss. I hate cancer, it’s so insidiously vile.
@biggayal4149
3 жыл бұрын
Sorry for your loss, cancer is insidious.
Yes yes, The trio is great, especially Ruth and overfishing is a problem that that vendor seems to misunderstand, but has no one noticed that Fish'n'chips lad? He's adorable! I want a cooking show with him!
One of the things I really appreciate about Ruth is that she's so knowledgeable and seems to have so many skills collected from many eras of history, but as I'm watching her try to prepare herring, she's so willing to be bad at something and so humble about it too. I suppose that's how we get good at things though.
@DavidSmith-ss1cg
3 жыл бұрын
Most people balk at the prospect of having to gut fish. The scene was to be a re-creation of a fish cleaner in a shop, who would get a bucket of fish, and expected to hurry; most people would find a bucket of fish going CLANK on the bench a bit daunting. Ruth and her cheerful enthusiasm for these formerly important jobs brings history to life in this series. This series of documentaries is a great example of what TV should be.
@marilynwoolford-chandler1161
3 жыл бұрын
The two archeologists are pretty willing too. Good on all three
@timmah7874
3 жыл бұрын
@@marilynwoolford-chandler1161 I completely agree. I'm watching Peter and Alex right now on the Cherry episode and their willingness to scramble up ancient technology to go pick cherries. Those guys have some guts.
@girlnextdoorgrooming
3 жыл бұрын
She has a well honed gift for flattery. It has gotten her far.
@marleahstout2395
3 жыл бұрын
As my successful Sister says "Don't let not knowing, prevent you from doing".
I am having such a flashback to my childhood in Lancaster, Pennsylvania where at my house it was rhubarb sauce everyday for at least two months in the Spring, watercress and cream cheese sandwiches packed for school lunch, kippers, and Welsh Rarebit at Christmas. Haven't been to England since 1999, but my late Husband and I owned a 1991 Lotus type 82 Esprit, Jim Clark Edition. We traveled to Hethel in 1999 to do an Elise driving experience for my Husband's 50th Birthday. Rode Brit Rail, ate bangers and mash, me everyday and drank a bit of Blackthorns Dry every evening. I love Britain and miss the food very much. I ordered British bangers from RJ Balson and Sons this year for St. Patrick's Day and they are delicious and made me wish I could still be in England. Maiden name is Bell, and my Mother's maiden name was Cox. Great video, I throughly enjoyed learning about the farming and missing Britain and my friends who live there. FYI, I am from the same county where Robert Fulton, who invented the steam engine and the first steamboat was born and my late Mother-in-Law was a Budding and her Great Grandfather held a patent from Queen Victoria for the lawn mower.
@Abyssinian121
2 жыл бұрын
I grow a raised bed of rhubarb plants, on the sunlight-baked plains of Eastern Colorado. I'd heard about growing rhubarb in the dark, to retain the red coloring in the stalk and keep it from becoming woody ans stringy as the stalks grew in circumference. This would explain the outrageous price of rhubarb stalks at the local grocery, which are always a deep red compared to the green and pinkish-green stalks of the plants I grow. So much goes into the 'ideal' commercial production of the stuff that wouldn't make a great deal of economical sense for the average home gardener. it still tastes fantastic when baked into a crisp or muffins, or turned into preserves with April and May's strawberries (also something that we have issues growing in our climate).
I love this. I was born in the wrong country. I love trains. This is so beautiful. The first time I rode a train was in France after flying there from the US in 1990. Thank you.
This video makes me crave for fish and chips.
@armchairrocketscientist4934
4 жыл бұрын
I just had it for the first time when I visited Washington. Obviously not the British variety, but it was still really good.
@connormclernon26
4 жыл бұрын
Yup
@angryoldman9140
4 жыл бұрын
This is exactly why I clicked on it Lol
@FeedScrn
3 жыл бұрын
They have it where I am... but it's very expensive as entrees go. They want $30.00 for two pieces of fish and fries. I'm thinking about it.... the price gives me second thoughts though.
@cristinarnold
3 жыл бұрын
@@FeedScrn wow $30 for fish n chips!😳 where r u located?? I live in the Florida Keys and any entree with fish is usually $15-$18 depending on type of fish. Dolphin,Yellowtail, grouper, heck its all yummy as long as you add key lime juice! Now I'm craving it!!🤤 No way I'm buying it today, but tomorrow most definitely!(the Cuban place that sells it is closed till Wednesdays, so sad!🥺) Vinager on fish n chips is awesome too! 👍💚😋✌
This was a great episode from end to end in terms of the depth of information covered, the elements and the history.
It is interesting to see the variations of that phrase. In the US military they say "hurry up and wait". Even Augustus Caeser used to say Festina Lente which roughly translates to "make haste slowly".
@aoeuable
3 жыл бұрын
The German equivalent is "Eile mit Weile", roughly "hurry by tarrying". "Weile" has the same root as "while" as in "to stay for a while". To give enough time to make sure shit's done properly before moving on so it doesn't have to get revisited.
@Angus1966
3 жыл бұрын
contradiction is very Italian
@dorianphilotheates3769
3 жыл бұрын
Brian Spenst -The saying is one of the Pythagorean ‘dicta’ originally attributed to the philosopher Chilon the Lakedaemonian, one of the Seven Sages of Archaic Greece. The Romans were very fond of these Greek maxims and translated them into Latin. In the original Pythagorean dictum, “Festina lente” is given as, “ΣΠΕΥΔΕ ΒΡΑΔΕΩΣ” (“Speude Bradeos”) - “Make haste slowly”.
@brianspenst1374
3 жыл бұрын
Not surprising that the Romans even stole that phrase from the Greeks. They seem to have taken everything else. The use by Caesar was the earliest that I knew.
@dorianphilotheates3769
3 жыл бұрын
Brian Spenst - “Stealing” is such an ugly word - the Romans merely borrowed things from the Greeks indefinitely...
Good fish and chips are one thing that we don't have enough of here in America. I am serious. It is so hard to find a nice crispy piece of fish and chips. Oh sure, you can find hamburgers all over the place, but not any good fish and chips. Good video. Thank you. 💓
@quatamaecrumble392
3 жыл бұрын
Cheesecake Factory
@_sheebie
3 жыл бұрын
@Big Bill O'Reilly I have never had fish tacos! I will try them.
@_sheebie
3 жыл бұрын
@Big Bill O'Reilly 😉 Yes it probably all depends on the cook. TRUE!
@thomaslgrice
3 жыл бұрын
I highly recommend The Australian Bakery Cafe in Marietta, GA australianbakerycafe.com/ Their fish is incredible and they have meat pies as well.
@JHNielson4851
3 жыл бұрын
Go to any bar or restaurant in Wisconsin on a Friday night. It's tradition.
I just love Ruth's knowledge and enthusiasm, she makes these shows for me
I could never understand why my uncle loved herring so much until watching this, he was stationed in England during ww2 then married an English lass and brought her home to America, my aunt Vera
Absolutely fantastic programme I ran into by mistake an' have been hooked and canna wait for the next episode.
LOL 24:20 Peter "Did you say Cider?" "NO. Maybe on the way."
This is so fantastic! Thank you, Absolute History :)
I've never been to England but I would love to have a proper fish n chips at least once
@jakedotnet
4 жыл бұрын
I've had nice fish n chips all over the world, Dublin, Malta, Cyprus, even in Sweden - I don't think you need to go to England specifically :)
@Cadwaladr
4 жыл бұрын
I've had fish and chips in England, Scotland and the Isle of Man. Plenty of places in the States do it just as well, though the chips are usually a bit smaller.
@--enyo--
4 жыл бұрын
New Zealand & Australia do it as well.
@christineclancy5801
4 жыл бұрын
And good luck, trying to find deeelicious mushy peas with your fish n chips at any restaurant here in the States! 😋🥰🇬🇧
@randallhoskins6243
4 жыл бұрын
My wife and I were there for 2 weeks last year and had them all over they served them with mashed peas first I thought yuck but they were very good
That chippy lad is lush :) what a sweetie
@thonktank1239
3 жыл бұрын
Finally a comment about that lad. I was beginning to think I halucianted him, since noone else was mentioning him. He's so darn adorable!
Thank you for posting these shows. They are so great and got me through the past year.
@ 21:16 Alex: "Look at that one. I mean, THAT is a MONSTER." Breeder: "It's a big lad, innit he." Me: Huh. It's ok. Just a sheep----OHHH [I see the testicles] That's what they mean. lol I was surprised to learn fish and chips gained popularity in this era. I thought it was a much more older food tradition than that. Rhubarb farming is pretty. Didn't realize that they could live and grow in such cave-like conditions. I'm sure it is more than that but I really liked seeing the rhubarb farm.
@KPen3750
4 жыл бұрын
Jeremy Clarkson voice: Look at the sheep, MASSIVE TESTICLES!!!!!
@hillaryclinton2415
3 жыл бұрын
You want rhubarb.. get to Alaska
@myonekawa230
3 жыл бұрын
@@hillaryclinton2415 When this virus has a vaccine I'll go there. Any suggestions which city has the best ?
@hillaryclinton2415
3 жыл бұрын
@@myonekawa230 skagway.. has a festival and everything
@myonekawa230
3 жыл бұрын
@@hillaryclinton2415 Awesome !! Thank you :)
Thank You. Liked, and Shared. I really enjoy your channel. The thing is, after I watch your videos it makes me feel better about my day. I know suck up right? No, I just appreciate history, and the hard work you folks put into your documentaries. The resource today kids have is extraordinary but they seem to be more interested in taking selfies. If only I had this resource when I was kid.
Peter is really special and makes the program special
Hey, that kippers shop is the same one that the 2 Fat Ladies visited in the "Breakfast" episode!
@yvellebradley2502
4 жыл бұрын
Dan Buchan I remember that! They needed fresh sardines, I believe. Was it for Sky Gazey pie?
@joshschneider9766
3 жыл бұрын
Pro ably the only kipper shop left lol
@lionharehart
3 жыл бұрын
@@yvellebradley2502 No, she made Kedgeree in that episode.
@leighellington21
3 жыл бұрын
Same fellow in the shop there too. Though aged. He was a real handsome fella in his younger days!
@terrythekittieful
3 жыл бұрын
Basil Fawlty also got his kippers from there apparently. He had one stuck in his cardigan when one of his guests died during the night.
we enjoyed this program , it was excellent . thank you for loading it.
I remember as a young lad growing up in Yorkshire riding in the steam train cab shunting the goods around the yard. Great memories
The two steam engine seesaw plow blew my mind. That's way more complex then what I would have thought one of the first steam powered plows would look like.
I love watching Ruth, Peter, and Alex! They work well together. The programs they present are fantastic!
Always a fun and informative documentary!
I was in England in 2018; it was the very first time I had fish and chips.The restaurant owner knew I was a foreigner, he proudly gave me a brief history of this national dish.
@theboyisnotright6312
Жыл бұрын
Pretty good eh, I'm American and in 1988 I went there. Vinegar on my fries (chips) yummy😋
I love red rubies, they're so gentle and cute I also love all the experts and guests they bring along for every episode, I always learn so much and it's just a joy to see them working
I absolutely love all of your videos. Thank you so much for all of the knowledge!!!
@marycanary86
3 жыл бұрын
thank the bbc...
@Swalker_01
3 жыл бұрын
@@marycanary86 of course it wouldn't be possible without the BBC? Thank you?
i don't know when dood came back to the show but im glad he's back. he brings so much joy.
Maybe the best episode of the series. Except that it makes me hungry every time I watch it.
Brilliant. No other word is necessary. History brought to life........
Jumping sheep at 5:30, so cute!
It's so interesting how all of Britain's most famous national foods are not actually truly from the Isles but came to exist as a cultural mashup. Also her in the US In-N-Out burger still uses those "chip" presses to make their french fries. The grid is more narrow but the mechanism is exactly the same. You can watch them do that while you wait in line. It's neat.
look up "Early 1900s Fish & Chip Shop" on youtube, its a video of how they build the old fish and chip shop that ruth works in at 27:50
...and let’s not forget Alex and Peter. Let it be said however that I absolutely looove Ruth’s hat!
12:47 is where the documentary starts to discuss fish and chips.
43:25 The Guiness brewery is chock-a-block with narrow gauge railway tracks, none of them used today.
At 13 years old, my first job i was a spuddy, on a rumbler 2 hours after school. 3 days a week, cutting out eyes and making awsome fresh double fryed chips. I used to let the rumbler run a bit long at that age.... my pay, $5 ph..... and i was happy to do it... 1988? or so.
@GundamReviver
3 жыл бұрын
What did 5p get you back then?
When i visited England, i wanted to have fish and chips literally every single meal! It is out of this world!
great as always!
The battered fish idea was from Portuguese traders, who also took it to Japan - hence tempura. As others have pointed out, the idea of chips is from WW1 and Wallonia, the French-speaking part of Belgium.
@martinmargerrison2300
3 жыл бұрын
Yep. Look up codfish Braga style. I had it in Porto once. Absolutely fantastic. 👍
@markscott554
3 жыл бұрын
@@martinmargerrison2300 I might have the town wrong (might be Lisbon) but my hometown has a connection as there's a street named after Dunfermline; double-reason to check it out. Thanks for the tip.
@martinmargerrison2300
3 жыл бұрын
@@markscott554 You're welcome Mark. I had it in a local restaurant there. Interestingly enough it was a cod steak rather than a fillet which was what made it so memorable. Best wishes from Slovenija btw. I was watching Chewin The Fat last week. 😂😂👍
@martinmargerrison2300
3 жыл бұрын
That'll be the one then. Ironically I have a similar situation Mark in the sense that I was born and raised in Newark. If only people would stop trying to find me in connection with Newark, New Jersey (although that is why Newark, New Jersey is called Newark obviously) we might be able to get some decent fish and chips on the menu. My mate from Bathgate is a jakey btw
@markscott554
3 жыл бұрын
@@martinmargerrison2300 You said it: Fish & Chips. I was too stony-broke last time I was in the UK to treat myself. Now I've been in my new job for a few months and have some cash to burn (I work abroad) on the rare occasion I see somewhere serving it, it's usually a pale imitation. I think the last decent attempt was an Irish bar in Beijing.
I passed thru England a few times. I always got a meal of Fish and Chips, wrapped in newspaper. That British plow was amazing.
I would have loved a living history class with her
I imagine that originally, farms near London got good prices for their meat since there were no alternatives, while farmers further away, say in Dorset, earned lower prices. With the railways, distant farmers were able to find better prices for their produce, but those near the city would have suffered from the competition.
Love those kippers. Absolutely beautiful.
The American railroads transferred oysters from a rare delicacy to cheap common food in the 1800’s. Oyster Point, near Norfolk, VA was served by 3 railroads that daily took trainloads to the North East. Now Chesapeake Bay oysters are difficult to source. It’s hard to imagine a time when oysters were food for the poor. Oyster Shells were used for roads marking that you had entered a poor area.
@marilynwoolford-chandler1161
3 жыл бұрын
@ Lem Apperson how things change yet there are poor people still. Living on " the wrong side of the tracks"... Enjoyed your information thanks
@bluewolf993
Жыл бұрын
Out with the oysters and in with the naval bases
I love riding trains. Too bad Amtrak is so severely limited in the continental US. This is especially so, when you get further away from the Eastern Seaboard. I got to do a little train travel when I was in England literally a year ago. I was mainly up in Redditch and Birmingham. I even did an overnight visit to Nottingham. Just seeing the English countryside from the train window has a calming effect.
Great episode, as all have been !
Amazing, Sir James Watt!
Seeing those kippers made my mouth water. Regarding seafood as fertilizer, I read that early American farmers in New England actually used whole lobsters as fertilizer for their fields as people thought that they were big spiders. When I was a lad in London in the 1950s a good fish and chips lunch cost 1/-; 3d. worth of chips and 9d for a piece of rock salmon (dogfish, a relation to shark) The last time I bought that in UK it was 18 pounds for three people and wrapped in specially made faux newspaper too!h Seeing that open-air plough dragged across that field reminded me of a man I knew in Northants. who had a ploughing tractor which had a totally enclosed weatherproof cab with air-conditioning and a stereo music player. Even in the 1950s we'd occasionally see a steam truck on the roads with a speed of 12 mph still on solid rubber tyres. Just after WW2 when my family lived in the Suffolk fishing port of Lowestoft, fresh fish was very hard to find in local shops as it was all hauled by train to London. Ironically what fish that was available came from London! One very British dietary item is the pork pie which is always specifically attached to the Midlands town of Melton Mowbray. Also seeing that railway pedestrian footbridge reminds me that we train-spotters would try to spit into the engine's chimney as it sped by below us.
I've heard of Grimsby. That erudite gentleman from Across the Pond Lawrence Brown is from there. It's amazing how all this seemingly chaotic random stuff is actually tied together.
Fish and chips. The staple for me to pair with a nice pint of Guinness at a pub. Mmmm! 😊
French fries were from Belgium, not France...at least according to Paul Hollywoods City Bakes
@BertGrink
4 жыл бұрын
So I've heard too, but is it possible that it was a frenchman who brought the idea to Britain? I don't find that thought entirely improbable. And if that was indeed the case, it's easy to see how they'd be named 'French Fries' in english.
@danielgarrett979
3 жыл бұрын
I heard that American soldiers during WWI tried the fried potatoes in France and called them "french fries" and brought the name and love of the food back home.
@BertGrink
3 жыл бұрын
@@danielgarrett979 That sounds entirely plausible.
Fascinating history
Hey sheep! Don't get on that rail car! Do you have any idea where it's taking you to?
this trio vibe with each other so well, digging it.
I ate before watching this Now i'm hungry again.
I used to see Stevenson's "Rocket," supposed to be the first steam engine, in the lobby of the Science Museum in South Kensington -- every Wednesday, because that was a half-day at the French School, just across the bombed-site from the Museum.
Superb documentary.
“They think tonnage like that isn’t feasible....but it was”..........well no, it WASN’T feasible, nor was it sustainable which is WHY you now have weeks withOUT herring.
@martinsaunders7925
3 жыл бұрын
Fish from the sea wasn't used until all the river and lake fish disappeared. This was so all over Europe
@Noone-rt6pw
3 жыл бұрын
Yep, the industrial revolution fed WWI & WWII, where so many Europeans were killed, but the worse are those that went home crippled. Then today, so many resources have to be managed, which costs so much money. Like where I'm at, it's said there used to be a couple hundred shrimp boats, now a couple dozen where they cried about competition from recreational shrimpers. But, I guess GMO foods can replace natural foods, where industry definitely allows God to be challenged in people's minds.
@prepperjonpnw6482
3 жыл бұрын
@@Noone-rt6pw Greed plain and simple Greed. Greed is driving species after species extinct. Humans are very much like locusts probably pretty close on the evolutionary scale lol
Fantastic serial on history👍👍
I love Ruth Goodman! So glad I found this.
Just awesome!
I am an American and like so many of us, I'm a direct descendant of Great Britain. I love these videos !
I never knew so many people starved just because they couldn't get agriculture into the big cities.
I've read a book called The Impact of Railways on Farming in Britain. So there most definitely are books about the link. And that was a book I found in a book shop not that long ago, first published in the 60s and the edition I bought was published in 2003. And I live in South Africa and found it in my local (not second hand) bookshop...
I enjoy Ruth and the boys they really do bring history alive and she does look very lovely with her hair with the big braids on top and red is definitely her color
This channel is quality.
I once had a patient, who served during WWII in England he told me that he never ate fish and chips again after seeing fish and chips cooked in motor oil due to the shortages in that area at the time. He also lost the love of his life due to the war and never married. RIP Bert.
Now I want Fish'n'Chips, damn it!🌈😉
@brandysigmon9066
3 жыл бұрын
I always want it
i thought i had a basic knowledge on everything about modern British history-last 2000years] well to an extent but i feel like I'm watching an alternative universe, so much I've never seen on any other history show, and the castle and farm series are some of my favorite, this series is another stand-alone history show, who knew these time warpy farms exsist
Did no body notice the random ass lamb trying to photobomb the herds scene at 5:30
@missy3240
3 жыл бұрын
🤣 🐑 ... the bounciest!
27:50 Wow! I would go buy fish&chips every hour of the day there, if I could hear him say that "Well, hello! Fish and chips, is it?" with that pleasant voice and such a relaxing smile and posture, even the mustache is perfect! What kind of accent is it he have? English with some Irish in it?
Same old story with the fishing out the stocks in Britain. Very sad since fishing done properly is a renewable source of food..
@Janettemay64
3 жыл бұрын
Need t keep the EU out of British waters. Careful management should bring the fish stocks back.
@1337flite
3 жыл бұрын
@@Janettemay64 because fish just swim around in circles and respect national territorial limits?
@edwardoleyba3075
3 жыл бұрын
@@1337flite . No, they migrate.I expect that some time a mega rich twat with too much money will find some way of tagging/barcoding them, then we’ll all be paying a fortune for a fish.
"don't put your thumb around the steering wheel" "alright, I need my thumbs" 39:00 ...
I just really feel the need to say thank you, to the creators of fish and chips! Love ‘em in Australia ! But the best fish is, IMO, battered blue cod, in Southland NZ 💓
@lgeubs
3 жыл бұрын
Cod is my favorite fish nosh.
@nodigBKMiche
3 жыл бұрын
Lol! So funny! I love cod, so tried the Battered blue cod in Southland N.Z. & it was the only awful meal I had in N.Z. Totally different fish, sort of like shark? Sorry, I am sure lots of ppl love it, but compared to Scottish Fish n chips, no😕. Canadian fish n chips, for the most part, suck☹️
why can't i stop watching these.
I'm American, and this is putting me in the mood for British fish and chips.
the UK rail and before that the canal systems blows me away. Refinements came almost every month. the Victorians innovated incredibly. I really think UK was likely one of the most advanced countries in the world the 18th, 19th and 20th cents. I really believe the old railbeds may well be resurrected and reused someday. Maybe oil-fired steam or smaller diesel units but the rails truly made the country change so much and facilitated change. This trio of historians have a phenomenal vibe together and are knowledgeable. People ought to see them helping here and there to build a mediaeval castle in rural France - phenomenal insights into our ancestors daily lives, their food, clothing, technology, trades. And in The USA we have The History Channel and American Pickers...
I could listen to that guy in the fish and chip place talk all day! What an interesting accent!!! Lollllll
About to play a game of Anno 1800. Makes me want to make some tractors and stuff at some point.
Yum! Nothing like a nice crip n fish!
And with steamship from Denmark: Bacon and Lurpak butter
@BertGrink
4 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: a few years ago I came across a Brit here on youtube who said that Tulip was an english company; when i told him it was danish he refused to believe me so i had to find a link to the company's website where its history was told, complete with an account of how it became one of the biggest bacon companies in the UK. I'm not even sure he believed me after that, he simply refrained from responding! lol Greetings from Sy'fyn.
I don't know why I'm watching this but I now need fish and chips
"He's gonna be on those legs quite a bit." Oh, me!
7:15 I wonder if the producers went thru the flock and picked out the most docile, well behaved sheep they had!
I just adore Ruth.
You closed a missing link of mine. So from now on I ea fish & chips with added historic knowledge :-) Every time we stayed in GB, one meal with fish & chips was a personal tradition. :-)
At 37:00... you should NOT stand close to a tensioned cable. If it were to snap, you could be cut in half.
The fact that Ruth isn’t even grossed out to touch fish guts straight from the fish….
I recently bought asparagus in Brooklyn NY at a vegetable store for $1 a bunch. The label said it was from Peru. OK, not as romantic as the steam train revolution in Britain, but more of the same thing. Also far less charming, but the container ship revolution has globalized industrial production in similar ways also.
Ruth is pretty awesome but she acts so humble