The 1853 Dinner in a Dinosaur
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Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
#tastinghistory #victorian
Пікірлер: 1 500
I love that the Crystal Palace Iguanadon is getting recognized in a way that isn't making fun of it. It's easy for us modern folk to look at the Crystal Palace reconstructions and call it silly looking, but these reconstructions, and especially this dinner, actually did a great deal to help popularize paleontology. Besides that, it's just so charming that these people celebrated the sciences in such splendor.
@WabbitHunter68
Жыл бұрын
I think they're now a listed monument.
@bigjohnsbreakfastlog5819
Жыл бұрын
Thing about science is that our understanding of things is always adapting. We thought dinosaurs were slow, bulky, and cumbersome, and then slowly came up with more ideas based on evidence that they were capable of pack mentality, maternal care, could be warm-blooded, and even had feathers as a heating mechanism (which pissed off the people who grew up on Jurassic Park). The key thing is our willingness to admit when we are wrong and our ability to process new evidence while accepting how things were back in the day without viewing it in contempt.
@Ohwhale79
Жыл бұрын
RIGHT??????
@dud3655
Жыл бұрын
@@bigjohnsbreakfastlog5819 I really don't get the people who say feathered dinosaurs aren't scary. Mf, is a bear not scary because it's fluffy? Personally, I think feathered dinosaurs look even scarier, makes them look even bigger. Just imagine, you're in a jungle, rain's pouring over your tent, and you can't even hear the thing approaching, next thing you know, something sticks its head through the front opening of the tent, two eyes stare back into yours, cold, unfeeling, the only thing behind them being murder and gore. And then, he digs in, doesn't even stop to kill you, it just begins eating, mincing your entrails as you scream into the night.
@Zzyzzyzzs
Жыл бұрын
@@dud3655 I've known a couple of people to say they were saddened to see that a Velociraptor as we now know it looks more like a chicken than the ferocious thing we saw on JP, lame weak and pathetic. Those people have clearly never dealt with chickens before.
This is officially the weirdest, yet coolest, cooking video title I have ever seen.
@TastingHistory
Жыл бұрын
I’ll take it!
@erikaviola5134
Жыл бұрын
The atmosphere must have added to the meal significantly 😊
@sapphirejade5029
Жыл бұрын
You're not the only one who thought of that LOL
@DigitalPetrol
Жыл бұрын
...and I can't resist clicking.
@anitanalley2417
Жыл бұрын
Max has been waiting to create this episode since he was a kid! ❤
"I got this copy at a bookstore recently, they did not know what they had" I'm a librarian and I am absolutely SCREAMING. Thank you for taking it home and (you'd absolutely MUST) taking good care of it.
@judyjohnson9610
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'm thinking he scored a good price on it. I am envious.
@ccdaly2561
Жыл бұрын
@Judy Johnson it's such an old copy, it needs protection and preservation! Better the archive or the home caretaker than the bookstore!
@MsLeenite
Жыл бұрын
"I'm a librarian ..." Thank you for your service.
@ccdaly2561
Жыл бұрын
@@MsLeenite you are very sweet.
@melissalambert7615
Жыл бұрын
Max happy to find book Book happy Max found it. Love at first sight.
Max has had so many tangents that have to be “a whole other video” that he’s set on content for the next 5 years
From bird inside of a dinosaur to dino nuggets society has really evolved
@ragnkja
Жыл бұрын
It’s probably a lot easier to convince children to eat poultry if you drop the fact that it’s actually dinosaur meat.
@velazquezarmouries
Жыл бұрын
@@ragnkja indeed and it's technically not lying
@ragnkja
Жыл бұрын
@@velazquezarmouries If it was untrue, it wouldn’t be a fact.
@Ohwhale79
Жыл бұрын
"evolved" 😂
@Ohwhale79
Жыл бұрын
@@ragnkja 😂 I actually tried that when my kid was little and she freaked out because she loved dinosaurs (I had no idea). Took me like 6 months can convince her I was lying and it was really just chicken. OOPS. 😅
Dining inside dinosaurs, mummy parties...gosh, the Victorian Era sounds like a wild party time. 😎
@postcollapse1170
Жыл бұрын
They came up with this nonsense cause it was an uptight and boring time.
@chickenfriedrice2932
Жыл бұрын
It was the 80's of Victoria.
@Kaijugan
Жыл бұрын
Oh those crazy Victorians
@dogcarman
Жыл бұрын
It was a dinnersaur, obviously.
@Ohwhale79
Жыл бұрын
Right?? Victorians were curious and morbid AF LOL
The Crystal Palace was originally built as a temporary structure in Hyde Park for the Great Exhibition of 1851, but it was so popular that a private consortium purchased it and moved it to Penge, then on the outskirts of London, to function as a theme park. The Dinosaur Dinner happened during this relocation, as the dinosaurs were commissioned for the gardens at the new site, and would have been great publicity. The palace burned down in 1936, but the dinosaurs are still there! You can actually see the anachronistic iguanodon where this happened in what is now Crystal Palace park in London today. You can't eat inside it any more, but you can have a picnic nearby if you want.
@MM22966
Жыл бұрын
What was it made of, that it survived the fire?!
@HailHydra27
Жыл бұрын
@MM22966 as you can see in one of the pictures in the video they were well away from the actual building of the crystal palace
@Phreestyle1
Жыл бұрын
@@MM22966 They are made from concrete with brick interiors.
@maneldasnespras9779
Жыл бұрын
They also built a replica in Porto, Portugal in the later half of 19th century which was also tore down in 1951 to build a new sports ground.
@MM22966
Жыл бұрын
@@Phreestyle1 Used to American Disney-type construction with lathe, plastic, and fiberglass, I have nothing but respect for this. It sounds more like a bunker. A dino-shaped bunker.
Fun fact: the town I was born in (Maidstone, England) has an Iguanodon on its official heraldry, added in 1949 in reference to some of the first Iguanodon fossils being found nearby by Gideon Mantell in the 19th Century. It remains one of the only towns in the world that features a dinosaur on its official heraldry.
@hollerinwoman
Жыл бұрын
Now that's cool!! Thanks for sharing. :)
@angela_merkeI
Жыл бұрын
Well, technically birds are dinosaurs, so... But yeah, nonavian dinosaurs are not common.
@SadieAbby
Жыл бұрын
Hello fellow Maidstonian! I came to comment the exact same thing 😂😂
@bobbie7618
Жыл бұрын
You've actually answered a question I've had for a long time! Ages ago I learned that the Chernyshevsky District in eastern Russia has the dinosaur Kulindadromeus on their flag and coat of arms, and I've always wondered whether it was the only non-avian dinosaur in that position. It and Iguanodon are both super significant in the history of paleontology, so it's awesome for them both to be honored that way.
@saintinblack4971
10 ай бұрын
@@angela_merkeIhey fellow anarchist food history lover, what's up ❤ 🖤
One of my favorite anecdotes about plate tectonics is a story one of my teachers had about when she was in school. A purveyor of jigsaw puzzles, she saw a map of the globe and figured "huh, this right angle by Brazil and this right angle by Africa look like they could fit together," and was told off by her teacher for the ridiculous prospect that entire continents could shatter apart and spread across the ocean.
@kathleenhensley5951
Жыл бұрын
I saw that Brazil/Africa connection when in Grammar school and why they looked like they could fit .I never had the nerve to ask an adult,, though.
@AnnabelSmyth
Жыл бұрын
They were just beginning to discover it when I was at school, although I gave up geography before it was really known about.
@aurhiaseelund
Жыл бұрын
It was a rough time for an academically-inclined kid (like me), because so much was changing in so many disciplines at the time. And one year you'd get a teacher who was enthusiastic about making sure we got all the new information and that's what we'd learn, but then the next year (or even the next class period of the day) you'd get an older teacher who was like the one in your comment, who had been teaching exactly the same thing for forty years and wasn't about to change their ways for a bunch of newfangled nonsense, and you either parroted the outdated information for her or you failed her class. I was that know-it-all argumentative kid in class, so I usually did the latter along with a lot of detentions lol
@sherrieludwig508
Жыл бұрын
I think I had the same conversation and the same result as a kid. I was in elementary school during this period: The International Geophysical Year (IGY; French: Année géophysique internationale) was an international scientific project that lasted from 1 July 1957 to 31 December 1958. It marked the end of a long period during the Cold War when scientific interchange between East and West had been seriously interrupted. (Google). This is when plate tectonics really became widely recognized, unfortunately after Alfred Wegener had passed.
@curtismcallister9569
Жыл бұрын
it's wild how things change. i had the same thought as a kid in the 90s, but by that point you'd get teachers who'd then excitedly point you towards dinosaurs and pangea
"An answer will oblige" is great. Many years ago I worked abroad in a diplomatic post, where my boss received about a dozen dinner invitations a week. He would review each and then send them back to me with 'WMP' or 'MRU' scrawled on them. At the end of my first day I had to ask what those meant. Turned out they were intended to tell me how he wanted to RSVP to the invitation: "With much pleasure", or "Many regrets, unable". That same job saw me being ordered to take on the chef of one of Brussels' fanciest restaurants over a matter of 'insufficiently done' (i.e., raw) pigeon. I think I would have preferred to charge a machinegun nest.
I remember hearing about this. And as a geologist myself, I can wholeheartedly attest that an invitation to such a beastly and weird dinner would have been accepted faster than you can scorch milk over a high flame! Heck yeah! 🦖 🍽️ 😂
As someone who has subjected my friends to a "Mrs Beeton Rant", I'm glad you acknowledge the errors in her book, and I'm looking forward to a full video on the book.
@darriendastar3941
Жыл бұрын
Also, Mrs Beeton's lifestory is one of massive tragedy. Subscribers should have a discreet lace hankerchief to hand so they can sob into it at the end of any video.
@mahenonz
5 ай бұрын
So glad to have a Mrs Beeton recipe at last! I’m also looking forward to those Victorian moulded desserts.
When I was a kid (at roughly the same time as Max) the iguanadon dinner was featured in my big, ancient hardcover book about dinosaurs. I used to repeat facts about it to my parents a LOT. So when I saw this video, believe me I was excited! 🤣
@thhseeking
Жыл бұрын
"Oh no!!! Here he comes with that bloody dinner again!!" :P
I grew up near Crystal Palace and the dinosaurs are brilliant - it's great to see the history of palaeontology on display. Also their derpiness is just adorable.
@angietyndall7337
Жыл бұрын
O.k. in Utah, U.S.A, there is an actual park called Dinosaur Park. There is a Dinosaur a few years ago, also named the Utah Raptor.
@clogs4956
Жыл бұрын
The Leicester Museum and Art Gallery holds the remains of a rather flat plesiosaur known as - appropriately for this vid - the Barrow Kipper.
@Justanotherconsumer
Жыл бұрын
The Your Dinosaurs Are Wrong channel is good clean fun.
@elizabethbeierle7464
Жыл бұрын
@@angietyndall7337 in Colorado, there’s a town called Dinosaur, Colorado. They have mildly terrifying Dino sculptures sprinkled throughout town. It’s an experience for sure!
You’re right that Mrs Beeton’s recipes were not tested. She started putting them in The Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine that she and her husband ran when she was barely 21. She grabbed them from anywhere, plagiarising them, and getting them from readers. Sadly she died at 28. I’d be interested in what you might have to say about the Book of Household Management. That’s a lovely edition you have bought. I enjoy all your content, watching it from across the pond, where I too, have seen the dinosaurs at Crystal Palace.
5:24 "So you just have to wing it" The pun was right there! Been watching your videos for a long time now and I'm sure the missed pun will live rent free in your head for a bit. My wife and I thoroughly enjoy every one of your videos.
@describer99
10 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing 😂
As a food and dinosaur aficionado, I never thought both could come together so beautifully. this video is heaven
@infowarriorone
Жыл бұрын
Ditto.
As a bio student considering going into paleontology professionally, what an exciting video! You've absolutely nailed capturing the significance of this particular era in paleontology and showing it in a positive light, despite how utterly silly some of the assertions about dinosaurs from back then seem, at least compared to what we know today. Your instinct to cook a gamebird dish was smart, too- of course one should be eating a dinosaur *inside* a dinosaur, though nobody at the time knew that yet, ironically. Will definitely be trying this recipe, and sharing with some of my other friends who are interested in the field. Also, for other potential videos on early paleontology, perhaps we could get a video on the life of Mary Anning? Few people talk about her, but she was a MAJOR influence on the field- you have her to thank for plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, ammonites, and a whole lot of other things. And it might be interesting to take a look at the seafood of the era, since she lived on the coasr!
@annbrookens945
Жыл бұрын
When my kids were young, in the late 90s- early 2000s, we had a dinosaur video that covered Mary Anning and the dinner in an iguanodon. I just asked my daughter if she remembered this; she does not, but I was so excited because I know about this!
@Genzafel
Жыл бұрын
TOTALLY support a video of the life of Mary Anning she was a Pioneer and such Inspiration
@gailsears2913
Жыл бұрын
So interesting! Thanks Max! Gravies are one of the few things Americans don't add sugar to!
10:25 "Outrageous desserts." Madeira Jelly is gelatin (or agar), and Madeira Wine, with added plain sugar or syrup. Bavaroise is Bavarian Cream, which is made from Creme Anglaise (milk, vanilla, eggs and sugar) thickened in a cold mold with gelatin or isinglass, and served with whipped cream. Charlotte de Russe is a cake that uses ladyfingers as a crust base, and has a filling of Bavaroise or another custard, and whole fruit (usually berries). Nougat de Chantilly are small candies made of pounded sugar and hazelnuts, filled with maraschino or vanilla flavored whipped cream, and strawberries. Boisson de Meringue aux Confitures is milk topped with jam meringue.
@dylanbowlin3646
Жыл бұрын
Sir, the “Outrageous desserts” that you’ve described sound rather interesting to say the least, thank you for describing them, now I will have to find photos of them for visual references, thank you.
@petergray7576
Жыл бұрын
The menu lists a "French Pastry." That's about as specific as going to a military museum that features "a gun." In both cases, there are literally hundreds of varieties, and there's no way to recreate it from the name alone.
@slwrabbits
11 ай бұрын
thank you, now I am hungry
In Louisiana now everyone is into dark rouxs and super thick sauces that are heavy cream based. People don’t realize what a simple light roux and some Beurre Manié can do especially with seafood. Or even taking garlic add some warm stock to it. Add it to a blender or food processor and add olive oil till it thickens. Then fold that into your dish in the last 5-10 minutes. Incredible results!
"An answer will oblige" could be combined with "Serve it forth" in your RSVP. "I oblige you serve your answer forth!" Maybe toss in a "Scallywag!" at the end for artistic flare and a punctual response Max. 12:44 I wish I could have been at this party. Victorian dinosaur rap needs to make a musical comeback. Thanks for the video, the recipe looks delicious!
@LaundryFaerie
Ай бұрын
If Gilbert and Sullivan had been there, they would have on the spot come up with a patter song like "I am the very model of a diner in Iguanodon"
I remember first learning about this from an "Eye Witness: Dinosaurs" VHS tape I used to watch over and over again as a small child. The imagery of the first Iguanadon reconstruction and subsequent dinner party inside of it has never left me.
@bolengerin
Жыл бұрын
Early CGI that looked decent. Also the theme music totally slapped!
@jeaninea5029
Жыл бұрын
My kids watched that vhs every week for years!
@SarahK86
11 ай бұрын
So cool
I love this series! I recently became widowed (June 11, 2023) after 17 years of marriage. One of the first things I bought was the tasting history cookbook and at the memorial service all the dishes will come from that book since the show makes me happy.
@OneTraveller
Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss. Sending love your way.
@LaundryFaerie
Ай бұрын
May your beloved spouse's memory be a blessing.
Pro-tip - if you want to see some of the Crystal Palace dinosaurs without actually going to Crystal Palace park, they briefly feature in Good Omens S1 Ep1. About 40 minutes in Warlock and his mother go for a walk in a park and you can see the dinosaurs in the background.
@AllyCatVidz
Жыл бұрын
I love good omens !!!
@matthewhopson964
4 ай бұрын
And swing by Norwood Cemetary to see Mrs Beatons grave!
I feel like there are new parents in the audience with children who are Dinosaur Aficionados like Max. I’m picturing taking down notes for the next special dinner.
@daddsfasdasd
Жыл бұрын
I knew I was like that when i was little.
@TheBlkKat
Жыл бұрын
Pfft, forget any kids. I'd make this for myself served on my Jurassic Park dining replica set from the film.
@LaundryFaerie
Ай бұрын
Dinosaurs were fascinating to me when I was a kid, but even better were oddities at dinner. I would have adored something like eight-legged roast chicken, a specialty of British-Canadian cook James Barber (he used to buy extra drumsticks and sew them onto the uncooked bird before seasoning and roasting it).
I actually wrote a ten page research paper on the crystal palace dinosaurs so I could not get here fast enough, fantastic stuff!
There’s something very tender and heartwarming about hearing of these scientists honoring their fallen fellow researchers on New Year’s Eve, inside an iguanadon. Drinking, writing ballads, giving speeches. It must’ve been a very cathartic night.
When every recipe site wants to tell you a story before ever getting to the recipe, Max does it right, giving you the dish first so you can then listen to the history while you enjoy the meal.
@keolas6916
11 ай бұрын
A-men!!!!!!
As someone who’s really into the history of paleontology, and as someone who’s heard about this event, I am so happy to finally know what they ate at that… interesting dinner
As a writer who features dinosaurs in my works I can say that this episode is very impressive! You never cease to astonish!
As someone who did a history project about the science of paleontology, this makes me so happy. Big thanks to all the early scientists for their contributions!
I have a facsimile of the first edition of Mrs Beeton’s book, which my mother bought in the Seventies. The recipe that we found most amusing was Collared Pig’s Face, which was identified as a breakfast or luncheon dish. It included an illustration of a whole pig’s head on a platter. My brother’s girlfriend was creeped out by the whole idea, so naturally my mom and I had to point it out to her on more than one occasion. My family had a snarky sense of humor.
I'm from SE London and grew up going to see the dinosaurs in Crystal Palace park! I was there recently, looks like they got a considerable grant to help preserve the statues :) Thanks for the recipe Max!
@alicecain4851
Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad to hear they are taking care of the park!
This is what real innovation looks like. Always good to see the... uniqueness of Victorian cooking on this channel.
@evil1by1
Жыл бұрын
Its not that Victorian cooking is that unique its that modern cooking has become the same method of making the same 4 flavor profiles ad nauseum. Try to convince someone to eat poached chicken...good luck. Everything is browned to death, over salted, over seasoned and over complicated for no reason. Even the church social dump style recipes have gotten unnecessarily complicated. Sometimes more is just more, not better
I love the shout out to their strategic and inviting way of educating the public. It's such a cause for celebration when people think to -- and then successfully achieve -- this goal. This is how we grow as a culture!
"i wish to vent my rage for dining" is my new phrase for hangry
The dinosaurs are still there! When my daughter was little, you could still get up close and personal to them, but these days they are protected by a lake and fences, and they sit in their own little islands in the lake. Great fun to visit, although my grandsons are getting a bit too old for them now. Meanwhile, gravy here in Britain is very different to that served in the USA - ours is much thinner. And a lump of sugar is a teaspoonful, not a tablespoon!
@katherinewilson1853
Жыл бұрын
We also have thin gravy here, it is just the style and to taste often. It also usually depends upon the region of the USA.
@thhseeking
Жыл бұрын
I was wondering about the sugar...naturally, we have sugar lumps here in Australia, too :P Definitely not a tablespoon :P
I really hope we get a “NOT THE MAMA” clip!
@TastingHistory
Жыл бұрын
Darn! Missed opportunity.
@trippsmythoftheaurigancoal8155
Жыл бұрын
NOT THE MOMMA! What, I am 52...
@Lionstar16
Жыл бұрын
@@TastingHistory The fact that you know about Baby Sinclair is enough for forgiveness :)
As someone who's been here since day 2 of the Garum video I remember when you had like 7k subs and then a week or two later you were getting 7k a day and then a week or two after that and you were getting 7k every few hrs and now you are at 1.77 MILLION subs. You and José have done such an amazing job! Congratulations!
I THINK the coolest thing is how well telled these stories are told by Max and his enthusiasm and passion with humor. Hes GREAT 😉
You wouldn't imagine the hunt they had to go on for that snipe.
I wish they brought back dining inside a dinosaur, because it sounds REALLY awesome.
@alanfhall6450
Жыл бұрын
I have drunk cocktails beneath the Diplodocus at the Natural History Museum at an event back in the day 🦕🍸🤠
The Victorian Era has some of the coolest, yet weirdest events/food history lol. I'm glad there's records of it. Thanks for doing this video! Imagine dining in a dinosaur with 8 courses!
I remember reading about this dinner as a kid! My favorite bit was the detail about how the nose "horn" on the iguanodon they ate in was actually a thumb spike. Knife hands!
This meal looks Dino-Mite! 😎
@thhseeking
Жыл бұрын
Hmmm...that reminds me of someone called "JJ" :P
I have never needed any help in loving history, and yet, you persist in helping me! Thanks Max!😊👍
This reminds me of the story where scientists found and tried eating Woolly Mammoth. They discovered a frozen Mammoth in 1901 Siberia near Beresovca River which was so well preserved, its meat was still pink.
Plate Tectonics has always been a favourite subject. When my mother first came to Canada in 1953, she started working with the Geological Survey of Canada. She got her job from John Tuzo Wilson, the geologist and geophysicist whose study and subsequent theories proved the fact of global movement of plates and the continental shifts that made him the Father of Plate Tectonics. She respected him highly. She later became a geography teacher and taught about Plate Tectonics as well as Glaciation, another favourite subject of mine. I was thrilled to meet Tuzo Wilson in the 1970s, when he was the Director of the Science Centre in Toronto (He remembered me as a baby!)
Hi Max! I wanted to thank you for all the awesome content you make. I’m watching this before I leave to head to the airport for study abroad in Kazakhstan!
@steveaustin2686
Жыл бұрын
Have a safe trip.
@Runic182
Жыл бұрын
Indeed
@chloeedmund4350
Жыл бұрын
Have a great trip and good luck with your studies!
As you were talking about how recent some scientific discoveries are I thought “for real, like plate tectonics,” and then that’s exactly what you said, so that was fun and a little strange. Wonderful video, as always!
Ah, so glad to see more people take part in dinosaur appreciation month!
@interruptingPreempt
Жыл бұрын
I didn't know this was a thing! Thank you!
funny enough we ran this dish as a special at a restaurant that i used to work at, except that we used chicken, and lardon, as you mentioned before. we would make demi glace ahead of time and use that along with some extra butter and sherry for the sauce along with the shallots, mushrooms, etc. Far and Away my favorite dish edit: i dont remember us serving croutons with it. but they would be excellent for soaking up any extra sauce left on the plate, and very tasty. another edit: sorry, it's all coming back to me now. instead of a whole bird like a cornish game hen, we used airline chicken breasts. just in case people felt like trying a variation of the dish in the video.
Sherry is probably the key in that sauce. It bumps up a lot of sauces into "restaurant quality" that people cant make at home.
The Victorian Era was like the precursor to modern (and some insufferable) STEM nerds. Imagine eating inside a dinosaur like what event management course do you have to do to pull that off?
I Love the little invites written on a pterodactyl wing. That’s just so extra and I need that energy in my life!
I get so much joy from seeing Max’s reaction to tasting the food. When he lights up you know it’s good!
When you think max finally succumbed to a click bait title… Nope, they actually dined inside a dinosaur. Where do you find these topics? Absolutely Brilliant!
Love your vids! Happy dinosaur month Max!
I'm only slightly older than you, and didn't learn about plate tectonics until a "rocks for jocks" geography class in college in the early 90s. The professor couldn't stress enough how this discovery would change the world. We all thought, "yeah, yeah." But he was right! Shows to listen to your professors, even in the "easy" classes. Learn something new everyday.
I didn't think that I was possible to top the combination of two of my favorite things (food and history if course), but, you've done it by adding another favorite in the form of dinosaurs!! All that's missing is music and baby animals and you would have covered them all!!
Locally, our zoo offers a fundraising dinner and a sleepover held in the primate house, it smells amazing. I can't wait to see what direction this dino dinner goes 😬
@davidwright7193
Жыл бұрын
Well where would a primate sleep in a zoo if not in the primate house?
Your channel always satiates my dinosaur 🦖🦖🦕🦕 sized fascination for food, history and this time cool dinasours! Youre the best max!🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@TastingHistory
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🤗
@danielsantiagourtado3430
Жыл бұрын
@@TastingHistory Always max love You! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
"Reduce the sauce for 15 minutes" is clearly the Victorian version of "sautée onions until caramelized, 10-15 minutes"
Thank you so much for this episode! As a tiny child I had memorized the name of every dinosaur that had been discovered up to that point (in the early 70s). When we went to the Field Museum when I was 3 I was over the moon. I cannot believe between MY love of dinosaurs and my kid's love of dinos (and the accompanying trips to the Field for them, and the endless books we'd read together) that I've never heard this story! 💚 PS: I LOVE your shirt, I'd bought a very similar one for my kiddo when they were tiny
You know, out of all the fossil Pokémon, I wasn’t expecting the bird.
Reptile repast is amazing. The food and word play keep me here just as much as the history!
Maybe I'm just too much of a nerd for Victorian morbidity, but this made me wonder how many Victorians sat in a sarcophagus to consume their powdered mummy supplements. It had to happen, right? You could do a whole shorts series on Regency/Victorian Inedibles to cover the many things they ate that it's just not safe for you to recreate. Antimony is one of my favorites to explain to people because it's just so buckwild.
Least insane Victorian dinner party.
I'm heartbroken. At around 5:00 you had the perfect chance to describe cooking a bird up to three thirds and you had a pause and i whole heartedly expected a "you kinda have to wing it" for the perfect pun, and yet.... O how the mighty have fallen
@janetora
Жыл бұрын
I thought the same thing!!😂
Am I the only one who first read the title as Eating the Dinosaurs instead of Dinner in a Dinosaur?
@ragnkja
Жыл бұрын
It’s not untrue though 😂
@itwasagoodideaatthetime7980
Жыл бұрын
@@ragnkja Touché!
Long time fan first time caller. How many book reports did you deliver as a kid that were impeccably organized but contained a floor show. Grats as always for the empire you have created.
I literally screamed aloud when I saw the title! Thank you, Max, for covering one of my favorite stories from science history!
Birds aren't just "descendants of dinosaurs", they ARE dinosaurs!
@trustytrest
Жыл бұрын
But they're also descendants of dinosaurs.
@hcn6708
Жыл бұрын
@@trustytrest Same way humans are the descendants of mammals
Such a cool story! I totally understand their fascination with dinosaurs. I've never tasted game chicken, but the stew sounds awesome.
@RangerMan-yv7rl
3 ай бұрын
I am reminded of Scubes' THINGS YOU WISH WERE MADE UP IN RESTOS where a Customer asked 'Wots a hen?'when waiter introduced "Cornish Hen".
No idea how you come up with the topics but they are always brilliant! The Crystal palace dinosaurs are such an interesting bunch, maybe it's time to visit them again.
I would *REALLY* love to see that video on the cooking book's many errors and foibles, that is so directly up my alley.
The synchronicity of this coming out just when I needed it most! Love you, man, I always enjoy the videos
I have long been a fan of this channel and I must say you do an excellent job of describing this sauce. It really is the invention at the core of this dish.
“It tastes expensive” is my new favorite tasting note
I remember reading about this dino dinner in a kid's book called Mr Fossil's Dinosaur Lessons! Super cool to hear Max discuss it in more detail!
Nice to see this historic moment in paleontological history get some attention.
Max, I do wish you'd covet the history of gingerbread, and how it evolved from a confection that was basically licorice, to the gingerbread we knew today (likely from Dutch & German influence in the USA) I'd like to see you try your hand at making decorative/molded gingerbread confections ❤
@susanscott8653
Жыл бұрын
Yes please!🤤
I recently discovered your channel, and you really are one of the best on KZread IMO. It's been a multi day binge, and I'm learning so much. Never stop!
Wow, I'm so stoked to see a video about this! I was very, very, into dinosaurs as a kid, and very into the Victorian era as a teen/young adult, so this event is like the perfect combination of both haha. I remember having the picture of the Iguanadon dinner, as well as a photo of the Crystal Palace dinosaurs, in one or more dinosaur books as a kid. I always longs to go see the Crystal Palace dinosaurs myself, and finally got my wish a few years ago. It's remarkable how they're still standing over 150 years later!
Hey Max, be careful with that book in 1:45 . Sometimes in the 19th century they used arsenic to make green colors for book cover. In fact, the only books I need to wear gloves in the archive are bright colored 19th century books because they can be literal poison. Not saying that book is dangerous, just telling you just in case!! great work anyways
@ragnkja
Жыл бұрын
1880 is well past the height of arsenic dyes, but sadly the synthetic dyes that followed weren’t non-toxic either, so it’s probably best to be careful.
@enochliu8316
Жыл бұрын
He should take his own advise. He talked about bad green dye in one of his videos.
One of the best videos you've done, and that's saying something because you are BRILLIANT! As a fellow dinosaur lovely, this is so up my alley. And I was recently thinking the same myself, it's incredible how recent so many integral discoveries, concepts and inventions in today's age are. Something about the concept of a dining in a recently discovered group of giant creatures for New Year's Eve is tickling me. The Victorians once again proving why they're one of the most brilliant time periods in history. Thanks for sharing as always ❤
that was so much fun Max, thank you~ the light-hearted subject, the parallels drawn to your channel (that I didn't realise until you pointed it out by the way!), the deliciousness of the dish I could almost taste, and most of all, your beautiful smile and lively manner -- were all absolute treats :') they raised my spirits, and I can't thank you enough. thank you so much for creating Tasting History; it's a gift that keeps on giving. please know that you've brought immeasurable joy to people's lives ..and I hope you receive just as much, if not more, than we do -- always
Food and history always go hand in hand for me. I learn more about cooking in a wonderful way while also learning the history of the the time period. Great job Max!!!!
That looked amazing! And you looked like you thoroughly enjoyed it. Not that I think you've tasted everything, but for you to say that the sauce is unlike anything you've tasted before, is quite interesting. Thank you for bringing us new recipes, even if they do come from antiquity.
This would have made such an awesome birthday party (regardless of age) and it's also very interesting information.
Omg I've always been fascinated with the dinner on the Iguanodon at the Cristal Palace and now you make a video about it!
Your comments on science are fabulous. I took an introductory geology course in college in 1964. There was no mention of plate tectonics in the textbook or in the class. I heard about that earth movement over the next few years, and of course it has become well-known even to the general public. Thank you for this great video, and all of the others I have seen.
I absolute love watching Max geek over dinosaurs. It's so adorable.
I loved dinosaurs as a kid and I actually remember having a book with this scene in it. Also want to add that the model they ate inside was incorrect in that they thought one of the toes was a nose horn.
I was so excited to see this come across my subscription box because I just defended a dissertation with a portion relating to the Crystal Palace at Sydenham, and have delivered a talk that discussed this very dinner! Very cool seeing stuff I've studied and researched (including in the 1850s Birmingham Journal!) featured on this channel. Also, if anyone is interested in reading more about how Victorian scientists like Richard Owen (tried) reconstructed dinosaurs from small bone fossils, I'd highly recommend Show Me the Bone by Gowan Dawson!
I love your enthusiasm about this dinner! I love watching your videos. I had to chuckle when you said that the food tasted expensive.
Eating dinosaur inside a dinosaur gotta feel weird
Another great episode! I didn’t even realize it was Tuesday until I saw the video pop up! Best part of the week!
Waaaay back in the day I had a book giving details about this in a side note. So cool, so much detail they left out.
The illustration of them all sitting in the dinosaur brought back an old memory of me and my brother as kids making up stories and he came up with a character called iguanodonatron, so I looked up iguanodon and saw that image and for years that was just what iguanodon meant to me. Great video, loved learning the history behind this.