Investigating History’s Food Secrets

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • We are Food Detectives on a quest to uncover the secrets of Hash! Where the heck did it come from? Is it a potato dish? We are looking at recipes spanning over 150 years to find the common threads. Come along as we investigate!
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Комментарии • 493

  • @Havenwyck_Media
    @Havenwyck_Media Месяц назад +140

    It all looked really good to me. My dad, way back in the 1950's to early 1970s use to make a great tasting 'hash' with leftover venison roast, carrots, potato, onion, parsly, lard, plus salt and pepper. He said his dad made it, and his dad was born in 1875.

    • @jamesellsworth9673
      @jamesellsworth9673 Месяц назад +13

      Yup: that is a righteous hash! It would be a fine hunting camp dish.

    • @billcarson6954
      @billcarson6954 Месяц назад +2

      Couldn’t help read this in Keanu Reeves voice 😏

    • @GrimeyGut
      @GrimeyGut Месяц назад

      ​@@billcarson6954lol why?

  • @Lerrinus
    @Lerrinus Месяц назад +121

    So nice to see Michael Dragoo again!

    • @paulvontarsus729
      @paulvontarsus729 Месяц назад +16

      I agree. He has a nice calm and friendly manner.

    • @greatquux
      @greatquux Месяц назад +6

      DRAAAAGGOOOO!!!!

  • @vaylonkenadell
    @vaylonkenadell Месяц назад +148

    Michael Dragoo is correct when he says that "stew" is not understood as a noun meaning a type of cooked dish until later. Per the Online Etymology Dictionary:
    "The meaning 'meat slowly boiled,' generally with vegetables, is recorded by 1756. The colloquial sense of 'state of agitation or worry' is by 1806."
    Thanks again for another wonderful video. Always good to see Michael Dragoo on!

    • @mollygardens6646
      @mollygardens6646 Месяц назад +7

      If you stew on it, a problem, you might make hash of it. Or mincemeat!

    • @PulpParadise
      @PulpParadise Месяц назад +3

      Thank you for that, @vaylonkenadell!

    • @leedoss6905
      @leedoss6905 Месяц назад +2

      @@vaylonkenadell my dad always used the term stewed referring to anything simmered on the stove like okra.
      It was called stewed okra.
      I use the term to this day.
      He was born in 1914.

    • @MrMarket1987
      @MrMarket1987 Месяц назад +2

      That's so weird to me. At 37 I'm not exceptionally old, but I rarely heard stew in any context OTHER than to slowly boil meat.

  • @cjkoehler
    @cjkoehler Месяц назад +200

    300 year old Sloppy Joes. Back when they were known as "untidy Joseph."

    • @marilynmitchell2712
      @marilynmitchell2712 Месяц назад +7

      Haha

    • @hic_tus
      @hic_tus Месяц назад +11

      mind your language

    • @BigboiiTone
      @BigboiiTone Месяц назад +10

      ​@@hic_tusplease do not use such hard talk in the pretense of ladies

    • @Bhargleyargle
      @Bhargleyargle Месяц назад +2

      Keepeth thy unholy language out of min eares

    • @janetprice85
      @janetprice85 Месяц назад +2

      Now you may think I made this up but I had never heard of Sloppy Joe until we moved to Ohio when I was twelve from S.C. We had it once a week at school. We fell in love with them.

  • @brick6347
    @brick6347 Месяц назад +160

    There's an idiom in the UK: make a hash of it. i.e. a mess. Hash being a jumble of mangled fragments. I always assumed hash the food was... well, that. a jumble. Dishes like 'bubble and squeak' comes to mind.

    • @Beryllahawk
      @Beryllahawk Месяц назад +16

      This! My grandmother always talked about "hash" as the stew she made out of the leftovers of Sunday's roast beef. I always assumed the word meant "whatever you have on hand, chopped up and thrown together."

    • @jeenkzk5919
      @jeenkzk5919 Месяц назад +5

      So now I wonder where “hash is out” comes from. Any thoughts? You know, in other words “figure it out”

    • @zoewilkins2896
      @zoewilkins2896 Месяц назад +3

      @@jeenkzk5919I always thought that was “thrash it out”, rather than “hash it out”?

    • @panderson9561
      @panderson9561 Месяц назад +10

      The Amish have something similar they call Scrapple. It's just the left overs...scraps...all mixed together, with cornmeal and spices, molded into a loaf...almost like meatloaf...and they cut and fry it. When I first heard of it it sounded awful, but really isn't that bad.

    • @Beryllahawk
      @Beryllahawk Месяц назад +8

      @@jeenkzk5919 I'm thinking perhaps the chopping part... as in, when you're taking an issue/task/question apart into its constituent pieces. I could always be wrong though!

  • @johnanon6938
    @johnanon6938 Месяц назад +29

    Its great to see Michael again, because he always has so much enthusiasm for the foods that I daresay it rivals Jon's interest in using nutmeg.

  • @ashleighlecount
    @ashleighlecount Месяц назад +103

    When my daughter was little corned beef hash out of the can was one of her favorite foods. She called it cash

  • @robfut9954
    @robfut9954 Месяц назад +42

    Given the fact that the first recipe specified “raw beef” in the title, I will assume most hash in the 1600’s was also done with leftover meat and to use raw meat as unusual enough that the author had to highlight the fact in the title

    • @natebunn9664
      @natebunn9664 Месяц назад +4

      Yes I thought the same. Using the meaty trimmings after a butcher. Like an early ground beef recipe.

  • @madamedex5989
    @madamedex5989 Месяц назад +49

    I think you hit the nail on the head with "clean out the refrigerator." Frugality in the kitchen has always been paramount and this recipe seems to serve the purpose of using things up in a tasty way.

  • @joejackson4202
    @joejackson4202 Месяц назад +27

    One of the most top tier channels on youtube.

  • @TisiphonesShadow
    @TisiphonesShadow Месяц назад +16

    In parts of the South, we have "Hash and Rice". It consists of finely-shredded cooked meat (usually pork) in a thickened mustard-based sauce served over rice.

    • @erad67
      @erad67 Месяц назад +1

      Not in my part of the South, but sounds interesting. I'd like to try that.

    • @kevinbowen8192
      @kevinbowen8192 Месяц назад +1

      Now I preface this with the statement that the following meal was not homemade and kind of a “meal in a can” but Castleberry used to make a product called “Georgia Hash” that was sold in the south that sounds very similar. We also used to pour it over a bed of rice to have a simple, yet very delicious meal. I so wish they still made it.

  • @steveparker8723
    @steveparker8723 Месяц назад +21

    My parents made us kids hamburger hash when growing up.
    Simply, hamburger, onion,celery, potatoes, salt and pepper.
    Easy to make and very filling with a couple slices of buttered bread.
    I still make it now and then. Great memories.

    • @shoshanafox727
      @shoshanafox727 Месяц назад +2

      I made hamburger hash for my son. 😊

    • @jnorth3341
      @jnorth3341 Месяц назад +1

      I remember eating that when I was a kid.

  • @SarahGreen523
    @SarahGreen523 Месяц назад +12

    I can't believe (though, of course, I should have) that I just watched several styles of historical S.O.S being prepared. I've been making a similar dish for years. My mother's hash was a dry and flavorless dish. We called it Harsh.

    • @jamesellsworth9673
      @jamesellsworth9673 Месяц назад +1

      I can see why! I was lucky enough to have grandparents who knew how to put flavor into New England cookery.

  • @CounterNerd
    @CounterNerd Месяц назад +10

    An episode featuring Dragoo is an episode I'm sure to watch.

  • @MrTickleTrunk
    @MrTickleTrunk Месяц назад +6

    Every time I see Michael Dragoo's in a thumbnail I know it's going to be a good one.
    You guys bounce off each other so well.

  • @gailsears2913
    @gailsears2913 Месяц назад +12

    Very interesting. The hash I usually make here in the southern US is leftover ham with potatoes and onions. A dry sort of mixture.

    • @jamesellsworth9673
      @jamesellsworth9673 Месяц назад +1

      That is a fine version! I am uncertain about what 'dry' means. For me, it might be a bit more ham-dripping and cream.

  • @MC-810
    @MC-810 Месяц назад +21

    Happy Sunday everyone.

  • @g33k37
    @g33k37 Месяц назад +8

    For Christmas, my grandparents would fix Vension hash. Which consisted of boiling a version hindquarter with onions and salt for 3 -4hours running it through a hand cranked meat grinder and then frying it super crispy in a large cast iron skillet. The result was this delicious crispy crunchy umami hash that went great on rice.

    • @composthis
      @composthis Месяц назад

      that sounds AMAZING, wow. do you mind if I ask where you grew up?

  • @HyggeState
    @HyggeState Месяц назад +9

    I always love an appearance by Michael!

  • @Candyohh
    @Candyohh Месяц назад +5

    My great grandfather used to make a hash with raccoon backstrap, onions, mushrooms, cooked into a gravy and served over home fries with eggs.

  • @michaeleschner7062
    @michaeleschner7062 Месяц назад +1

    Eatable Chestnuts were used at times when potatoes had not been discovered. After potatoes found their way into cuisine they became a cheap and ready available ingredient. To thicken the broth blanching and chopping the chestnuts was common today minced potatoes or little cubes of potatoes are used instead. Ground potatoes are also helpful for this purpose. Nowadays potato or corn starch are commonly used in the kitchen.
    Bone broth: To my knowledge bone broth is usually made from marrowbones. The are split in half in length or sliced prior to cooking.
    Thanks a lot for this instructive video.

  • @tlg8547
    @tlg8547 Месяц назад +49

    FYI I watched a video a few months ago where a couple from another country made a dish and they chopped raw meat by hand adding some fat then mixed with rice , vegetables , whole CHESTNUT, and I think chopped dry apricot. Then they stuffed it in a large squash and baked in a clay oven. Very interesting. I believe the channel is Far Away Village Family

    • @marilynmitchell2712
      @marilynmitchell2712 Месяц назад +4

      We call that stuffed squash in my house.

    • @yuyunull
      @yuyunull Месяц назад +5

      Chestnut is a versatile nut, it can add texture while also complimenting sweet and savoury flavours, so I've found. That sounds delicious!

    • @DM-kl4em
      @DM-kl4em Месяц назад

      Yep. Hash is basically meat, some vegetables, and a starch to soak up the extra gravy so nothing goes to waste. Potatoes are the obvious choice, but rice also breaks down to a starchy consistency if you boil it long enough. If you grow it, it's also easier to grind rice into flour than to remove the hulls ftom the individual rice kernels.
      It all comes down to meat being expensive/hard to get, and wanting to get the most out of it for your money. It's been that way for centuries, and it will be for centuries more.

  • @katherinegood7509
    @katherinegood7509 28 дней назад +2

    I wasn't aware of the "canned hash" concept until I was well into my adult years. Growing up, we'd make hash with leftover pork roast with gravy made from the drippings. Add in potatoes and then depending what was on hand onions and/or mushrooms and done. It was a way to extend the leftover meat into a filling meal.

  • @davebeat
    @davebeat Месяц назад +2

    I'm from the UK, a small town called Whitehaven with close connections to US history during the 1700s. My grandma used to make corned beef hash, I'm not sure how far her recipe went back, but her has was layered a bit like a shepherds pie. She'd have a layer of tinned corned beef mashed up with some diced onion and then a layer of mashed potatoes on top combed with a fork and then baked. It was very much a working class dinner, only 3 cheap ingredients, but it was delicious especially with a bit of ketchup or some brown sauce (HP).

  • @lesliewells-ig5dl
    @lesliewells-ig5dl Месяц назад +1

    My dad taught me to eat canned corned beef with applesauce and I still eat it that way. So good---the cold sweet applesauce with the hot, salty hash! Yum!!

  • @DM-kl4em
    @DM-kl4em Месяц назад +2

    My grandmother worked at a grocery store back in the 1950s. She had a customer come in, whose husband's favorite meal was hash. He was always comparing his wife's cooking unfavorably to his mother's, asking "Why can't you ever make hash as good as my mom's?" One day, she finally got so angry that she served him canned dog food without telling him. He said, to her shock, that it was the best hash he ever had. She was worried, because NOW she didn't know what she was supposed to do.

  • @ehowiehowie7850
    @ehowiehowie7850 Месяц назад +4

    When I get sick of pasta or chilli with mince I make savoury mince , with onions (sort of like mince in gravy) with some veg & gravy powder with water in frying pan /flavour it with herbs with garlic / paprika sometimes mixed herbs/onion powder & serve it with mash or microwave rice. It is just a different dinner. As mince is cheap ...I didn't know I was doing a hash lol...

  • @mikeskelly2356
    @mikeskelly2356 Месяц назад +1

    My Gran was born in 1900, she had a hand crank meat grinder she used to make ground pork. She fried it in bacon fat and added the crumbled bacon to the mix along with Cumin, Mustard and S&P. It was served with a 'gravy' on Rye toast. She must have had 'secret' ingredients, because I've never been able to replicate those flavors. Maybe I'll try some pickle juice or chestnuts...

  • @danieltaylor5231
    @danieltaylor5231 Месяц назад +3

    Who needs Columbo when you have Dragoo?

  • @shannonolivas9524
    @shannonolivas9524 Месяц назад +1

    Always good to see Michael again. Takes me back to when we first met him and those Scotch eggs.

  • @mrsfolkartist76
    @mrsfolkartist76 Месяц назад +7

    Didn't you notice how much the early recipe resembles Wimpy's / Sloppy Joes? Jon's recipe reminds me of open-faced roast beef sandwiches which they still make today with a side of mashed potatoes .

  • @connyalbers6032
    @connyalbers6032 Месяц назад +2

    The second version I still make it with onions also in it. Served with red cabbage and potatoes. In Holland it's called "hachee". 😁

  • @torchris1
    @torchris1 Месяц назад +6

    Of course, the French for “chopped” is “haché”.

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Месяц назад +2

      And it's my Czech mother would sometimes make "haše" which was basically a beef porridge in her version. Official chefy version being hašé, obviously derived from the French.

  • @michiganmafia
    @michiganmafia Месяц назад +2

    The recipe Jon makes with the roux kinda reminds me of how I like to do my Beef Stroganoff, using pre cooked meat I simmer it in beef broth and worchestershire sauce, in a pan with garlic and onions

  • @belac48621
    @belac48621 Месяц назад +2

    Awsome deep dive. This is one of the reason why I love the channel!

  • @jatpack3
    @jatpack3 Месяц назад +2

    *_The original meaning of the word hash was "to hack, chop into small pieces" from the French hacher, from Old French hache meaning axe. It often had culinary use, a hash being a chopped up mixture of things, most notably the dish hash browns, made of shredded potatoes. The expression to make hash out of sth/sbd, means to ruin sth/sbd and this follows logically from chop into small pieces_*
    From the internet

  • @Objective-Observer
    @Objective-Observer Месяц назад +2

    Oh, I like the sound of Mr. Dragoo's hash, and if he had taken the time, it would have had more of a gravy... but timing is an issue while filming. I'm not crazy about tart flavors with my meat.

  • @Morale_Booster
    @Morale_Booster Месяц назад +6

    That thumbnail is perfect!! Whoever took that photo nailed it

  • @regenwurm5584
    @regenwurm5584 Месяц назад +24

    Hash is a function that converts input data of any size into a fixed-size value, often used in data indexing and retrieval.

  • @FlyTyer1948
    @FlyTyer1948 Месяц назад +4

    Hash is a tasty & thrifty way to use leftovers. Spicy hash is wonderful with lots of ground black pepper mandatory. Although I prefer drier versions, but that gravy version on toast looks really yummy.

    • @jd9119
      @jd9119 Месяц назад

      I don't know about your household, but in mine, when we have a roast (doesn't matter if it's pork or beef), there is never any leftovers.

    • @romaliop
      @romaliop Месяц назад

      @@jd9119 Having more than enough meat in order to have leave some for the next day's meal may actually have been done on purpose, especially in the past when convenient and fast food options weren't as readily available as today.

    • @jd9119
      @jd9119 Месяц назад

      @@romaliop That might be the case, but come on. You have a good roast on the table, everybody is going to grab more slices until that roast is gone.
      Back in the 17th and 18th centuries, most people really didn't eat dinners like we typically have. Their big meal of the day would be at work. And they'd usually eat something pretty light when they got home.

    • @FlyTyer1948
      @FlyTyer1948 Месяц назад

      @@jd9119:-)

  • @DudeAugusto
    @DudeAugusto Месяц назад

    200+ year old recipes for poo on a shingle sounds so fun! this channel i come back to time after time and it just brings such joy. Thank you to all who work to make this. It is much appreciated.

  • @sheilam4964
    @sheilam4964 Месяц назад +1

    Thx guys for filming this and sharing it with us.

  • @AYellowPepper
    @AYellowPepper Месяц назад +24

    Hash is the sticky resinous trichomes and fine plant particulate that is collected and pressed into a mass, often a ball or bar.
    Wait no wrong hash!

    • @Vtarngpb
      @Vtarngpb Месяц назад +3

      No, you are correct 🥸

    • @Burning_Dwarf
      @Burning_Dwarf Месяц назад +4

      That was the one that came to my mind

    • @kmoecub
      @kmoecub Месяц назад

      Ya. That's the "spend the rest of your life in a Turkish prison" type.

    • @Burning_Dwarf
      @Burning_Dwarf Месяц назад

      @@kmoecub what? Hash isnt that dangerous, also legal in a handful of places

  • @user-kn4rf2ly3q
    @user-kn4rf2ly3q Месяц назад +1

    We make a hash here in Virginia where you grind everything that goes into it, meat, vegetables everything. It’s similar tasting to Brunswick stew just really fine. I was always told everything was ground so you couldn’t tell what you were eating

  • @metalnut92
    @metalnut92 Месяц назад +2

    I was surprised that you both expected a hash to have a more gravy-like consistency (like Jon's dish). I'm from northern England, and here a 'hash' would almost always refer to a relatively dry dish of fried chopped meat (corned beef most likely), potatoes and onions. It's the sort of thing you might dress with ketchup or worcestershire sauce on the table, and Michael's earlier recipe looks closer to what I'd expect. Maybe the US/UK hashes have diverged over time?

  • @theabsolutecat915
    @theabsolutecat915 Месяц назад +2

    Well, it depends if it's baked into a brownie, or cookies, or if it's just the oil or...
    Oh, _that_ hash. Right.

  • @chrismeandyou
    @chrismeandyou Месяц назад +5

    Townsends hashes out the secrets of Hash!

  • @JeffBilkins
    @JeffBilkins Месяц назад +2

    Content suggestion: each do a period-valid freestyle with the same random ingredients (Ryan can pick some cool stuff). Then compare the results and why each did it that way.

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Месяц назад

      Interesting idea! Might be really fun.

  • @dmr6640
    @dmr6640 Месяц назад +2

    Wonderful video. Love Michael and his insights to food making.

  • @seano4977
    @seano4977 Месяц назад +5

    Great to see the two of you together. Had that old school Townsends feel.

  • @billcarson6954
    @billcarson6954 Месяц назад +1

    Love your vids, and great to see Michael again! Small note, I wish you’d bring back some ending music. I loved the button at the end of the videos, some B-Roll and nice music, nothing too long; always left me feeling good after watching. Keep up the amazing work! And thank you.

  • @wendyreynolds2261
    @wendyreynolds2261 Месяц назад +3

    I've made A Fine Hash of Beef at Little Expense from one of Townsends calendars at rendezvous and at home. It's easy, and tasty. Now I want the recipe that John demonstrated because it looks divine!

  • @ItsJoKeZ
    @ItsJoKeZ Месяц назад +30

    thought you guys switched up the format for a minute 😂 I'd love to see the real historical hash and a few classic munchies

    • @ryanwilhite
      @ryanwilhite Месяц назад +1

      I would assume there are some references to the medical use of it in writings of the time, especially considering the myriad industrial uses of hemp back then.

    • @TextileGeorge
      @TextileGeorge Месяц назад

      i'll pray for you

  • @Kite403
    @Kite403 Месяц назад +1

    Both versions looked really good! I've been learning to enjoy hash more lately and I would gladly try those versions :D

  • @chewher4171
    @chewher4171 Месяц назад +1

    The videos are soothing. I come to the channel to escape for just a moment and transport myself back in time. It fills my mind with wonder. God Bless America.

  • @anthonyneighbors1932
    @anthonyneighbors1932 Месяц назад +3

    The second one remains me of sos.

  • @David_Kyte
    @David_Kyte Месяц назад

    I love Michael Dragoo and his "John has been exhausting me with Nutmeg one-liners for 3 straight hours" type of Straight-man Delivery. I feel like he hasn't been in any Townsends stuff lately, good to have him back.

  • @MariaMartinez-researcher
    @MariaMartinez-researcher Месяц назад +2

    Are there contemporary sources mentioning people eating hash? Novels, diaries, letters, newspaper articles? Maybe there are descriptions of people using spoons vs. forks, complaining about it being too sloppy, or too dry, details that could help to precise what the recipe meant.

  • @jimkunkle2669
    @jimkunkle2669 2 дня назад

    John's recipe is similar to a meal my parents made when I was growing up. It is simple. Brown some ground beef, throw in condensed mushroom soup as a gravy, and serve it over toast. One of my childhood favorites.

  • @mikeks8181
    @mikeks8181 Месяц назад

    For me growing up?! A Hash was a Nice way of taking the leftovers and Making a Meal! Im 58 now and Still do It!
    Thank You for Sharing This!

  • @cedricathlan9399
    @cedricathlan9399 Месяц назад +1

    In French cooking, both in France and in Quebec where I'm from, "hachis" (our word for "hash") still means everything from a watery stew with a fine dice of vegetables and meat to a thick gravy of minced meat to even a mashed potato-covered spiced minced meat in nothing but it's own juices. You ask five different households and you will get 5 different answers most likely. So still kind of confusing to this day, but in the same essence as 300 years ago: reusing already cooked meat, throw in whatever you have, make a dish out of it and waste nothing, not even the driest of toughest piece of meat.

  • @angelite711
    @angelite711 Месяц назад +1

    Best hash I ever made was leftover venison roast, potato, some onion and garlic, salt and a bit of broth, fried then simmered. Thicken and it goes for gravy, too. I would say blanched chestnuts were put in boiling water and then in cool water, instead of roasted in the coals, but mincing goes with hash. ❤❤

  • @marilynmitchell2712
    @marilynmitchell2712 Месяц назад +3

    In 1960s hash seemed to be a way to use leftovers. I think in a restaurant it would have been called "hash on toast"

  • @mollygardens6646
    @mollygardens6646 Месяц назад +1

    I just think of hash as chopped up leftovers, mainly meat and potatoes plus onions, carrots, and herbs. Add beets get red flannel hash.

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 Месяц назад

    I always looked at it as a "Budget stretcher". Thanks Guys👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
    As I was watching it brought to
    memory the first Townsends video I watched was with Michael. Great introduction. 🤗💕💕

  • @chrishand9324
    @chrishand9324 Месяц назад +1

    Yay! More townsends cooking! I love these videos ! :)

  • @fugu4163
    @fugu4163 Месяц назад +1

    My wife sometimes boils chestnuts in water and they do have a very sweet marsipan like aftertaste so they are definitevly sweet.

  • @1TakoyakiStore
    @1TakoyakiStore Месяц назад

    I really loved this different "comparative culinary archeology" episode! I bet Max Miller wishes he could've joined you both for this one!

  • @anulfadventures
    @anulfadventures Месяц назад

    When I was a kid, the left over bits of the Sunday roast went through a hand-cranked meat grinder near the end of the week. It probably was covered in gravy, I can't remember, and we called it Hash. My wife's Hash from when she grew up is totally different. No meat grinder involved.

  • @sizer99
    @sizer99 Месяц назад +1

    Always nice to see a guest appearance with Michael!

  • @user-lr4tr3zc3q
    @user-lr4tr3zc3q Месяц назад

    Ahhh, an episode with Michael. Live your channel John, but an episode with Michael
    Is always special. The man just ads an extra something to comfort/relaxing cooking. All the best to everyone at Townsend and sons.

  • @cearachonaill8149
    @cearachonaill8149 Месяц назад +1

    I loved this idea of taking a similar receipt from two time periods and comparing them!!
    I am a culinary historian by hobby. My favorite cookery book (Forme of Cury) was written in 1396 for King Richard ll by his cooks. There is a receipt called Commodore, I read it over and over many times and it never made sense. Once I started to translate it to modern English, did it begin to make sense. The darn things are gently fried, not baked….. Fig Newtons!! Delicious.

  • @AnasRecipesofc
    @AnasRecipesofc Месяц назад

    What a fascinating video! The research on hash was super informative and demystified many concepts I had about the dish. I loved the detailed approach and the way you presented the findings. Congratulations on your innovative and educational content! ❤❤

  • @jjpetunia3981
    @jjpetunia3981 Месяц назад

    Great job as always! Love this idea of comparing the recipes this way. Thanks for all of the research, effort, and great videography.

  • @seamusmcbride2832
    @seamusmcbride2832 Месяц назад +1

    always fun when Dragoo is there

  • @pattyfromherz9965
    @pattyfromherz9965 Месяц назад +1

    the later version, makes me think of sloppy joes with cream of mushroom soup and no tomato sauce, the earlier version makes me think of corned beef hash without the taters.

  • @paladin252
    @paladin252 Месяц назад

    what John made is basically what my mom and grandparents in Maine would call Fricassee. after thanksgiving lunch, we would shred the turkey, mix with gravy and put on a sandwich or on a bed of mash potatoes as turkey Fricassee.

  • @Eric998765
    @Eric998765 Месяц назад

    Has means several things to me. Canned corned beef hash like Michael was talking about, a breakfast made from sausage, onion, and sweet potato that I cook often, and one of my favorite foods of all time, "hash".
    That last one is a South Carolina special, where I was born a raised. Unlikely to find it anywhere out of the state, even more North Carolinas don't know about it. You basically take the left over pork from smoking a pig, add some organs, potatoes, and pickles and cook it down to the consistency of a blended up pot roast. Some people add or exchange the pork for ground beef. Pour over rice. If I eat out at a bbq restaurant I normally eat more hash than the bbq itself.
    I was not expecting John's recipe to have pickles, that must be the origin of the SC hash

  • @DaveReece-uh3le
    @DaveReece-uh3le Месяц назад +1

    You guys are making me very hungry! I'll have to attempt these hash recipes.

  • @joannegreco3985
    @joannegreco3985 Месяц назад

    The older hash was one similar to the one my great grandmother made and passed the recipie down to my grandmother and my mother. My great grandmother passed on 40 some years ago at just a couple months before her 100th birthday. We were lucky enough to have 5 generations on my maternal side living until my mom passed a few years ago. We are now down to 4 with me being the great grandmother now.

  • @rickhand8228
    @rickhand8228 Месяц назад

    My grandparents were born in the last decade of the nineteenth century so our family’s hash is probably derived from them and their parents, grandparents,etc. Our hash was eaten on Sunday evening and was prepared from the beef roast that we had after church. The noon meal was beef roast(usually chuck roast), made in the oven in the roaster with potatoes and carrots, seasoned with salt and pepper. Gravy was made after “taking up” the meat and vegetables. In the evening the gravy was reheated while the meat and vegetables were being cubed, then added to the gravy after which Mom ( or Grandma, depending on where we were) would announce that supper was ready!

  • @frenchfriar
    @frenchfriar Месяц назад

    Y'all both definitely made a hash out of this one!
    Both of them actually sound very good, and a lot different to the kind of hash I would make today, with basically cold diced cubes of beef and potatoes, warmed over together.
    Canned hash is something entirely different.
    This was a fun and interesting episode!

  • @HerbertTwack
    @HerbertTwack Месяц назад +2

    Using left over Sunday roast beef (or lamb) warmed up in left over gravy on fried bread, sounds like a perfect accompaniment to a pint of real ale

  • @ashleighlecount
    @ashleighlecount Месяц назад +2

    I call hash meat of some kind with a vegetable or combination of vegetables cut into smaller pieces and cook together.

  • @olddawgdreaming5715
    @olddawgdreaming5715 Месяц назад

    Thanks for sharing with us. It's great to see someone break down the OLD recipes into something that everyone MIGHT be able to understand. Keep up the great work you two have done and write a cookbook that someone can understand with the amounts and temps ( low medium high ect ) that are not hard to figure out and it will make learning to cook alot more enjoyable. Thank you and keep up the great work and videos. Fred.

  • @noordos
    @noordos Месяц назад +1

    I’d like to see a video about how churches made communion bread before gas and electric stoves. Was it made days in advance? Was it made the morning of? Was the baker involved?

  • @Spyder2384
    @Spyder2384 Месяц назад +2

    Michael Dragoo is back! Yay!

  • @BBB_bbb_BBB
    @BBB_bbb_BBB Месяц назад

    The hash Townsend made I've pretty well made before. His description of just take whatever is in the fridge is what I've done when I'm trying to clear out leftovers and past the use by date sauces I have. It's always good, but it's nothing I'd brag about. Just slop that I quickly whip up.

  • @debjordan4399
    @debjordan4399 Месяц назад

    Hash, my mother used to prepare it to use left over roast beef, usually pot roast, with potatoes and onions, maybe some carrots. Of course I did that to when my kids were young. To this day hash is one of my favorite foods. Oh, btw, the potatoes were cut in pretty large chunks, not the tiny little diced potatoes in the can of hash. Stew is almost the same but definitely has large chunks of carrots and tomatoes and it is thickened with flour.

  • @kylemwalker
    @kylemwalker Месяц назад

    The hash I make is almost like a one-tray bake. Maybe diced smaller. 1/2 inch cubes instead of 1 inch cubes. Diced potatoes vegetables and some kind of meat, usually sausage, ham, or leftover steak, and then if it’s breakfast a fried egg on top or scrambled eggs right at the end. But the goal is to use leftovers or cheap ingredients. Usually pepper, onion, potatoes and meat.

  • @denisedaisy3357
    @denisedaisy3357 Месяц назад +2

    I think this is the original SOS from the dustbowl days.

  • @StrandedLifeform
    @StrandedLifeform Месяц назад +1

    The one that Townsend made looks more like a leftover pot roast without the veggies. The other one looks more like I would expect with hash from a can, although I'm sure it tastes ten times better than today's canned hash.

  • @joeyzanne9063
    @joeyzanne9063 27 дней назад

    In Spain they have a soup made with Chestnuts (Punchero de Castanas)
    The chestnuts are gathered peeled dried and stored for winter to be cooked with beans or chickpeas in a punchero or stew

  • @Grandwigg
    @Grandwigg Месяц назад +1

    In my family (South Carolina), we have a beef hash with chives potatoes, minced beef and onion are show cooked over many hours.
    I wish I knew the full recipe.

  • @santamanone
    @santamanone Месяц назад +1

    That second one, the one from 1804, looks basically like a modern hot roast beef sandwich.

  • @gregphillips.1312
    @gregphillips.1312 Месяц назад +1

    Chestnuts can be used for sweet or savoury. I have a Stuffing in front of me made of Breadcrumbs, fresh Sage and Parsley, the Banana shaped Shallots, Garlic and Chestnuts. I'm about to Butterfly two Chicken Breasts which I will roll up with the aforementioned Stuffing inside, wrapped then in Streaky Bacon and you have a Classic Roulade.

    • @kmoecub
      @kmoecub Месяц назад

      Agreed. I tend to think of chestnuts as being floral, neither savory or sweet.

    • @cjohnson4342
      @cjohnson4342 4 дня назад

      We'll be right over to get in on that meal!

  • @SRMC23
    @SRMC23 Месяц назад +1

    "I hash, you hash, she hash, he hash, we hash, they hash.......everybody hash"

  • @baronarcanus9111
    @baronarcanus9111 Месяц назад

    It's good to be a detective. In particular, my approach involves looking for commonalities across many sources, rather than just one or a few. In my view, that which is common from many sources must be regarded as true.

  • @nottarealguy3954
    @nottarealguy3954 Месяц назад

    "Hash is not what we thought!"
    Me: *looks down at pipe with fear and confusion*

  • @zacharymoore9028
    @zacharymoore9028 Месяц назад

    Love the etymology of this episode. Well done.