i totally agree i don't know why this news channel had to figure out what we do in Minnesota we don't question anyone else's state so why question our state?!
I've never heard of putting fish in hot dish. Sounds gross, especially smelly fish. I have heard of putting tater tots in hot dish, but most hot dishes don't have them. Why did she say that hot dish always has tater tots? My favorite hot dish is the one my mom makes, which is in a tomato meat sauce, not mushroom. I also like tuna casserole style.
Gene Tierney I was born and raised in southern Minnesota. And we never put fish in hot dishes. And hot dish is just what a meal with meat and other stuff cooked in a baking dish is called. Hot dish is any verity of ingredients. Tater tot hotdish is beef, cream soup and tarter tots. I never heard Duck Duck Goose EVER called duck duck gray goose.
The game duck duck gray duck originated in Norway, as a way to teach children to avoid the gray ducks. They didn't realize that geese and ducks were different, so they just called them gray ducks. So all the normal ducks you just ignore, but the gray ducks you run away from.
Sam Johnson I was cringing hard at that. No One pronounces those words like that. Not even my Grandpa who grew up in Norway. But yes he did have a THICK Norwegian accent.
I know this is years old but uhhhhhh dude. The Minnesota accent is 100% Scandinavian. Like that's where it's from - the Norwegian, Swedish, and Finnish immigrants that settled and formed much of MN culture. The MN accent is how Nordic people sound speaking English. "Too much Scandinavian" smh it IS Scandinavian.
As a Minnesotan its "duck, duck, grey duck" because the swedish brought the game over as " anka, anka, graa anka" The translation is literally "duck, duck, grey duck".
My family has been in Minnesota since 1882 and I never heard of that game under either name. Hot dish is called a casserole in other parts of the country and does not require tater tots. These reporters are to silly.
I'm from the Twin Cities and played Duck Duck Grey Duck as a kid (not my favorite game because it requires running) and then as a teen my peers from Wisconsin called it Duck Duck Goose.
we actually do we drop certain letters of each word when we speak, but it also depends on the area of Minnesota you grew up in on how thick the said "accent" is.
I am a Minnesotan that has lived for a little while CO... you have an accent, you claim you don't, but you do even so slight. just Own it! and Say fun Minnesota crap. be proud you aren't from a more horrible place. People know you're generally honest and have weathered -25 degrees many times.
I've been to LA, NYC, Philly etc (ND/SD too and WI of course) and at least to me my accent doesn't stand out all that much. If I were to go south or perhaps to Boston it might.
Nick Vowels well we still eat lutefisk. And there’s no way this chick is from Minnesota. Probably lives no where close to northern Minnesota cause that’s where the accents come from Canadians 😂
I live in Northern Minnesota and we say duck duck grey duck. It actually wasn't until middle school that I found out duck duck goose is a thing in other places. But where I'm from everyone has swedish ancestry
Anywhere North of the cities you'll hear all of that. Just drive 1 hour North to Chisago and everyone knows what they are. Skol is only said at vikings games
That was partly fun but also weird regarding the hot dish. As Shirley says below, a hot dish is just a casserole, like a pasta dish you might get at Applebee's anywhere in the country. And hot dish only has Tater Tots on it when it's specifically Tater Tot hot dish (typically, a hot dish has pasta, meat and a sauce ... like pasta, tuna and cream of mushroom or chicken soup; or pasta, hamburger, and pasta sauce; or pasta, chicken, and Alfredo sauce ... and some of these will also have onions, garlic and/or or other produce). I imagine Minnesotans eat these dishes more than most of the rest of the country because it's comfort food that keeps you warm when the weather is cold. ;) She's fine on the Skol, lutefisk and duck, duck, gray duck (although here in northern Minnesota we just called it gray duck when I was growing up). Anyway, this whole things sounds like a fun little gimmick for the sports connection. At least she didn't put on a stereotypical Minnesota accent.
Simplest Hotdish, brown ground beef, boil macaroni, mix together with a can of tomato soup season well. Basically Hotdish is Minnesotan for casserole or ghoulash.
Goulash is totally different. It is onions and meat cubes, beef usually but can be beef and pork, season with paprika, salt and pepper. It is like a stew.
The 'Duck, Duck....' game originated in Sweden where it was called (spelling aside) Danka, Danka, Gris Danka, which translated is duck duck grey duck. So, we say it correctly and everyone else us wrong 😊
Oh you betcha we love hot dish in MN. No but seriously I'm a Minnesotan and hot dish can be a mixture of anything really. Noodles with ground beef and mushrooms or tater tots or veggies as well. Minnesota is known for 10,000 lakes, Mall Of America and Paul Bunyan.
It's pretty easy to figure out. Anyone who doesn't say pop says soda, because we all know what soda pop is but nobody says both words together anymore. Hotdish was the one I didn't know though.
I love eating that, with cream of chicken and of celery, and mushroom for happy matter, I now know how to call that dish closer to dreams. had it last week lovely#, my sister made it good with fried chicken back in the day.
A full belly of the best homemade dish possible on nice snowy day or a rainy spring n then when the thunderstorm hits we will go out and watch it on the porch while repeatedly say "wow shes really goin tonight"
For all you guys saying that we’re not like this, the majority of the population lives in the cities. Culture tends to blend where large people mix, and the stereotypes of Minnesota are already associated with the small town/north woods, which might cover more area but hold less population. And yeah, that accent is really bad. We don’t sound like Scandinavians, more like softer Canadians
Agreed. People from the cities do not get to talk about if a Minnesota stereotype does or does not apply to them because they are very different from the rest of the small towns in Minnesota, even Duluth.
Kay Faith Say what???? Huh???? What does that even mean???? With exception to people with dark shades of skin. You will find every hair and eye color imaginable in every county. People of Scandinavian and German descents aren’t all blonde hair blue eyed, Irish and Scottish people aren’t all red heads and green eyed, Greeks and Italians aren’t all olive complexed with dark hair and eyes.
I'm randomly watching some videos online about minnesota accents and start to think the woman in the purple dress reminds me of Meisha from 90 Day Fiance. I skip back to him introducing her the woman REALLY IS Meisha from 90 Day Fiance, just watched a episode today feels like a full-circle moment. lol
1 Not Everyone likes tatertot hotdish, 2 there are multiple types of hotdish (Tatertot, funeral, hobo, tuna etc.) Anything you can throw in a pot can be a hotdish. In northwest Minnesota bringing a main meal like hotdish to a SUPPER is generally considered taboo (bring a fruit salad or something, lt the host cook make the main dish) 3, Not saying you don't like Tatertot hotdish is extremely taboo. If your with your close family its ok to admit it but if you are in public and your served some, just shut up, eat it and call it good. So yea No one where I live says duck duck gray duck
I moved from Nebraska to Minnesota when I was 7 (I’m 30 now) and I remember the first time I played duck duck grey duck and being so confused because I grew up with goose.
The original game is Swedish and is called "Anka Anka Grå Anka" which translates to Duck Duck Grey Duck. The Vikings were literally named for the Swedish population in Minnesota. As others have stated, this broad doesn't look (or act) Minnesotan. We're predominantly blonde.
JOHNSON IS A ENGLISH NAME AND MEISHA IS A RUSSIAN NAME USUALLY SPELLED MISHA WHICH IS A MANS NICKNAME FOR MICHAEL SHES NOT SCANDINAVIAN SHES JUST A BROAD WHO LIVED THERE PROBABLY ENGLISH OR IRISH
I was born and raise in Minnesota and 1) I’ve always played it as duck duck goose and I always thought everyone else played it as duck duck grey duck 2) besides the hot dish I’ve never heard or eaten anything else they did 3) seriously there are very few people I have meet that have the “Minnesota accent”
St. Paul checking in, duck duck, grey duck. We also used the term 'hookey-bob' for grabbing the bumper of a passing car and sliding on the snow covered streets. I moved to Montana for uni and there they called it skitching. Using the word 'pop' for soda was amusing to a guy from New York I knew. That has gone out of use thankfully. A girl from California could not get over we had a Snelling Avenue I did find it an odd name after she mentioned it.
Hot dish can be just about anything in a baking pan. It is duck duck grey duck. Lutefisk is a long gone tradition from the swedes. We say pop, oh yah and “cold enough for yah”. I’m from MN I would know.
I Have Lived In Minnesota My Entire Life And Everything About This Is Wrong •SKOL is the Vikings chant, not just a random Norwegian word •A Hot Dish (Casserole) has many different types, not just one •I Have Never Heard Or Seen Lutefisk In My Entire Life •Duck Duck Grey Duck/Goose Is Just An Opinionated Thing Just Like Soda/Pop
@@jellyfish5017 I come from a long line of proud Minnesotans. My dad enjoys some pickled herring at Christmas. I won't touch the stuff, granted it doesn't have the rancid smell I've heard Lutefisk is notorious for.
Metro Concerts Lutefisk is mainly a Norwegian and Scandinavian dish it is white fish. I grew up in the low southern part of the state. Go to a Scandinavian or Norwegian dinner at most churches or organizations and you’ll find Lutefisk. It smells horrible and is a slimy and it is very much a acquired taste. One thing she got right. People love it or hate it. And it is mostly served by older people because younger people just don’t enjoy the long process to prep and cook something that smells that strong. My Grandma and Mom made it every year and taught my sisters and sister in laws how to make it. And I taught my daughters.
@@maryallison0509 Are you not confusing Lutfisk with Surströmming (Sour Herring) which is really smelly. Lutfisk (Swedish spelling) is actually quite tasteless and with no smell at all. You need white sauce and spices to get it tasteful.
I love how this comment section is all us Minnesotans... Goes to show how much we try to search weird shit about our state lmao Hurts but hey, we got a way of speaking !
In MN duck duck gray duck is also a game about creativity and colors. Teal duck, polka dot duck, pink duck. And also psychological warfare when you get the kid who says grrrrrrrrrreen duck 😂
I have to say despite the loss in the NFC championship game, I rather enjoyed the Eagles fans who came to Minneapolis. They very much enjoyed my wolf hat!
Lol, they need to watch Grumpy old men, at least. Not enough Os and As in dair, ya knOw. I remember a couple stories about Christmas time the great grand parents had Lutefisk usually, stinky, my dad said. I caught onto pickled herring myself around 1st grade, you betcha! Born and raised Minnesotan, miss it each day I am away.
I’m from MN and this physically hurts
oooooh dude right?
Phoebe Joan Worse than the freezing cold in February.
soooooo true
I Hate Those Reporters They Give My State a Bad Name
i totally agree i don't know why this news channel had to figure out what we do in Minnesota we don't question anyone else's state so why question our state?!
do not make a fish hot dish. Minnesotan native signing out
Gene Tierney seriously they just googled all this shit and she ain't know nothing
Max Taggart you betcha
It's tater tot hot fish and it da best
I've never heard of putting fish in hot dish. Sounds gross, especially smelly fish.
I have heard of putting tater tots in hot dish, but most hot dishes don't have them. Why did she say that hot dish always has tater tots?
My favorite hot dish is the one my mom makes, which is in a tomato meat sauce, not mushroom. I also like tuna casserole style.
Gene Tierney
I was born and raised in southern Minnesota. And we never put fish in hot dishes. And hot dish is just what a meal with meat and other stuff cooked in a baking dish is called. Hot dish is any verity of ingredients. Tater tot hotdish is beef, cream soup and tarter tots. I never heard Duck Duck Goose EVER called duck duck gray goose.
This lady is giving horrible examples of Minnesota!!
When you don’t have any news so you make fun of a states accent
What it feels like being anywhere but Los Angeles and watching the news LOL
A hot dish is a casserole and you do not bring it to every party I’ve lived here my entire *fricking* life.
Literally the same thing as a casserole, and the best comfort food during the winter.
I live in Minnesota. And, uh.
McKenzie P
SAME!!!!!
McKenzie P same
and what?
tgphilly100 you really need an explanation?!?! SMH Philadelphia pssht
Same!
Hotdish is just the word people in Minnesota use for "casserole". A hotdish is a casserole. They're synonyms.
I’m from Minnesota and this hurts to watch.
The game duck duck gray duck originated in Norway, as a way to teach children to avoid the gray ducks. They didn't realize that geese and ducks were different, so they just called them gray ducks. So all the normal ducks you just ignore, but the gray ducks you run away from.
In UK we call it duck duck goose
THERE IS NO WAY THAT IS ACCURATE ORIGIN STORIES ARE NEVER THAT SILLY
@@sunmod1529 as a person from North Carolina we do that to.
you are putting way too much Scandinavian accent in it.
Sam Johnson
I was cringing hard at that. No One pronounces those words like that. Not even my Grandpa who grew up in Norway. But yes he did have a THICK Norwegian accent.
Im from Norway lol
I know this is years old but uhhhhhh dude. The Minnesota accent is 100% Scandinavian. Like that's where it's from - the Norwegian, Swedish, and Finnish immigrants that settled and formed much of MN culture. The MN accent is how Nordic people sound speaking English. "Too much Scandinavian" smh it IS Scandinavian.
HOW DO THEY NOT KNOW WHAT HOTDISH IS
Jennifer Secor Nelson WHY DO YOU TYPE IN CAPS
Jennifer Secor Nelson
And that they are DELICIOUS
@@rickweiss2793 come again
@@Jesuschristitsjasonbourne3 because its a big deal
@@rickweiss2793 i cant believe you just said that to my face. Where you at?
These anchors are terrible.
Why you flag upside down bruh?
They forgot pop
+Joaquin G I'm from WV and I say pop instead of soda.
No it's soda i hate it when people say pop and I'm from MN
Dylan Salerno
Its pop
@@dylansalerno8511 I Say Soda As Well And I'm From MN
I call it soda but I dated a girl from California for a long time. Most of us call it pop though.
As a Minnesotan its "duck, duck, grey duck" because the swedish brought the game over as " anka, anka, graa anka" The translation is literally "duck, duck, grey duck".
You know it's all Minnesotans watching this anyway, so it doesn't matter if they're accurate or not :)
This guy is so arrogant .
I don't know why you guys are complaining about this segment. She actually spoke swedish at the end so that's a thumbs up.
As someone from Minnesota... 😭 bruh this hurts. Duck Duck Grey Duck is the original game. Also who doesn't know what a hotdish is???
Because everyone knows it as casserole!
Hotdish is actually pretty delicious as I Minnesotan I love it ❤️
Cartier231 Me too. There are literally a hundred different hot dishes.
would agree.
My family has been in Minnesota since 1882 and I never heard of that game under either name. Hot dish is called a casserole in other parts of the country and does not require tater tots. These reporters are to silly.
Same My Family Has Been Minnesota Ever since the Irish Potato Famine
I don't remember fish in hotdish, tuna maybe. Salmon loaf we make.
I grew up in a Swedish native town north of the twin cities and it was always called duck duck grey duck.
I'm from the Twin Cities and played Duck Duck Grey Duck as a kid (not my favorite game because it requires running) and then as a teen my peers from Wisconsin called it Duck Duck Goose.
Shirley Senkler your clearly not from Minnesota then because it’s always been duck duck grey duck, also it tator tot hot dish and everybody has ot
I cringed when he tried pronouncing things, and when he didn’t know what Duck, Duck, Gray Duck was. 🤦♀️😂
Why does everyone think Minneosta has a accent WTF where did they come up with this?!
we actually do we drop certain letters of each word when we speak, but it also depends on the area of Minnesota you grew up in on how thick the said "accent" is.
I am a Minnesotan that has lived for a little while CO... you have an accent, you claim you don't, but you do even so slight. just Own it! and Say fun Minnesota crap. be proud you aren't from a more horrible place. People know you're generally honest and have weathered -25 degrees many times.
We have an accent get used to it. Everyone everywhere has an accent to outsiders.
Yea, I've lived here forever and I have no accent what's so ever
I moved here from Texas and y'all DO have an accent.
As a Minnesotan, you don’t understand that you have an accent till you leave the state.
This doesn't even make sense... There's no original English that is the one all accents come from so...
I've been to LA, NYC, Philly etc (ND/SD too and WI of course) and at least to me my accent doesn't stand out all that much. If I were to go south or perhaps to Boston it might.
I’ve lived in MN my whole life and besides Skol and Hotdish, we don’t eat/say anything else in the video
Nick Vowels well we still eat lutefisk. And there’s no way this chick is from Minnesota. Probably lives no where close to northern Minnesota cause that’s where the accents come from Canadians 😂
I grew up in deer river. (Tiny town 4 hours north of the cities) and this is me
@@carter4038 The Accents Come From The Swedish
Or Its Just I'm Part Swedish
I live in Northern Minnesota and we say duck duck grey duck. It actually wasn't until middle school that I found out duck duck goose is a thing in other places. But where I'm from everyone has swedish ancestry
I never say Skol with that accent, I never cook hotdish with fish, I don’t eat lutefisk, but I do like a mean game of duck duck grey duck.
ya'll talk so funny in Minnesota. I lived In Burnsville for two years and didn't even notice it at the time. I could listen to ya'll all day long.
lol. born and raised here in MN.
East and west Central Minnesota has the thickest accents.
ive lived in mn for almost 30 yrs and ive nvr heard any of those things other than hot dish lmfao
You must live south of St Cloud then
Nictator i live in St. Paul hun
Meme Thao that's basically in Wisconsin HUN
Anywhere North of the cities you'll hear all of that. Just drive 1 hour North to Chisago and everyone knows what they are. Skol is only said at vikings games
You’re still the new person. Hold tight; they’ll let you in eventually.
I’ve always called it Duck Duck Goose. It was easy for me as a kid, and also that’s how I heard it being called most of the time.
That was partly fun but also weird regarding the hot dish. As Shirley says below, a hot dish is just a casserole, like a pasta dish you might get at Applebee's anywhere in the country. And hot dish only has Tater Tots on it when it's specifically Tater Tot hot dish (typically, a hot dish has pasta, meat and a sauce ... like pasta, tuna and cream of mushroom or chicken soup; or pasta, hamburger, and pasta sauce; or pasta, chicken, and Alfredo sauce ... and some of these will also have onions, garlic and/or or other produce). I imagine Minnesotans eat these dishes more than most of the rest of the country because it's comfort food that keeps you warm when the weather is cold. ;) She's fine on the Skol, lutefisk and duck, duck, gray duck (although here in northern Minnesota we just called it gray duck when I was growing up). Anyway, this whole things sounds like a fun little gimmick for the sports connection. At least she didn't put on a stereotypical Minnesota accent.
Simplest Hotdish, brown ground beef, boil macaroni, mix together with a can of tomato soup season well. Basically Hotdish is Minnesotan for casserole or ghoulash.
Goulash is totally different. It is onions and meat cubes, beef usually but can be beef and pork, season with paprika, salt and pepper. It is like a stew.
This hurts 😂 we don’t sound like that
And don’t sound Scottish... who else is offended
Hot dish is a meal in one. Most hot dishes do NOT have tator tots in it. Tuna hot dish is my favorite.😉
CPL, MP, C/O, CPT CL Isn't HOTDISH just a casserole? I just want to confirm that.
Coco Taveras Correct.
I always say “you bet”. Only time I’ve ever heard “you betcha” is when someone says it as a joke.
Oh you betcha
The 'Duck, Duck....' game originated in Sweden where it was called (spelling aside) Danka, Danka, Gris Danka, which translated is duck duck grey duck. So, we say it correctly and everyone else us wrong 😊
Ahern Stephan 😂😂😂 EXACTLY!
duck is anka and gray is grå lmao
A fellow Minnesotan who speaks Swedish! Jättebra!
Oh you betcha we love hot dish in MN. No but seriously I'm a Minnesotan and hot dish can be a mixture of anything really. Noodles with ground beef and mushrooms or tater tots or veggies as well. Minnesota is known for 10,000 lakes, Mall Of America and Paul Bunyan.
Were not fuckin canadian were just cool ass people that will give you the best home hospitality that you CANNOT find in any other state
They forgot pop😭 if your not from Minnesota you won’t know what pop means unless you do
It's pretty easy to figure out. Anyone who doesn't say pop says soda, because we all know what soda pop is but nobody says both words together anymore. Hotdish was the one I didn't know though.
Hotdish Is AMAZING
I love eating that, with cream of chicken and of celery, and mushroom for happy matter, I now know how to call that dish closer to dreams. had it last week lovely#, my sister made it good with fried chicken back in the day.
if any of this is said in MN/my town (which is in MN) it’s literally all said ironically except skol and eating hot fish
A full belly of the best homemade dish possible on nice snowy day or a rainy spring n then when the thunderstorm hits we will go out and watch it on the porch while repeatedly say "wow shes really goin tonight"
For all you guys saying that we’re not like this, the majority of the population lives in the cities. Culture tends to blend where large people mix, and the stereotypes of Minnesota are already associated with the small town/north woods, which might cover more area but hold less population.
And yeah, that accent is really bad. We don’t sound like Scandinavians, more like softer Canadians
Agreed. People from the cities do not get to talk about if a Minnesota stereotype does or does not apply to them because they are very different from the rest of the small towns in Minnesota, even Duluth.
She doesn’t look Minnesotan
Kay Faith 😂😂😂 How does someone look Minnesotan?
Kay Faith
Say what???? Huh???? What does that even mean????
With exception to people with dark shades of skin. You will find every hair and eye color imaginable in every county. People of Scandinavian and German descents aren’t all blonde hair blue eyed, Irish and Scottish people aren’t all red heads and green eyed, Greeks and Italians aren’t all olive complexed with dark hair and eyes.
She looks like she's from Wisconsin or Michigan, not Minnesota.
Fun fact: people can be raised everywhere, regardless of what they look like.
She looks too good and not frumpy enough ;) hehehe
Minnesota vs Canadian Raising would make a fun trivia game.
I'M FROM BRASIL I LIKE ACCENT THIS CITY I learning accent
“you betcha jim”
I'm randomly watching some videos online about minnesota accents and start to think the woman in the purple dress reminds me of Meisha from 90 Day Fiance. I skip back to him introducing her the woman REALLY IS Meisha from 90 Day Fiance, just watched a episode today feels like a full-circle moment. lol
My favorite childhood game in Minnesota was "Jarts".
Did he say “What they might hear in the Minnesotan?”
1 Not Everyone likes tatertot hotdish, 2 there are multiple types of hotdish (Tatertot, funeral, hobo, tuna etc.) Anything you can throw in a pot can be a hotdish. In northwest Minnesota bringing a main meal like hotdish to a SUPPER is generally considered taboo (bring a fruit salad or something, lt the host cook make the main dish) 3, Not saying you don't like Tatertot hotdish is extremely taboo. If your with your close family its ok to admit it but if you are in public and your served some, just shut up, eat it and call it good. So yea
No one where I live says duck duck gray duck
am i the only one who in school, never called it "duck duck gray duck"? we always did "duck duck goose". im from minnesota btw.
I moved from Nebraska to Minnesota when I was 7 (I’m 30 now) and I remember the first time I played duck duck grey duck and being so confused because I grew up with goose.
Voice and accent of an Angel. Definitely from MN
-Minnesotan.
The original game is Swedish and is called "Anka Anka Grå Anka" which translates to Duck Duck Grey Duck. The Vikings were literally named for the Swedish population in Minnesota.
As others have stated, this broad doesn't look (or act) Minnesotan. We're predominantly blonde.
JOHNSON IS A ENGLISH NAME AND MEISHA IS A RUSSIAN NAME USUALLY SPELLED MISHA WHICH IS A MANS NICKNAME FOR MICHAEL SHES NOT SCANDINAVIAN SHES JUST A BROAD WHO LIVED THERE PROBABLY ENGLISH OR IRISH
I was born and raise in Minnesota and 1) I’ve always played it as duck duck goose and I always thought everyone else played it as duck duck grey duck 2) besides the hot dish I’ve never heard or eaten anything else they did 3) seriously there are very few people I have meet that have the “Minnesota accent”
Emily Trunk You must of been raised in a small town. I’ve ONLY heard of Duck Duck grey Duck. I was raised in Mpls.
@@cplmpcocptcl6306 brooklyn park here. Duck duck goose ONLY
down here in AL. only used duck duck grey duck.
St. Paul checking in, duck duck, grey duck.
We also used the term 'hookey-bob' for grabbing the bumper of a passing car and sliding on the snow covered streets. I moved to Montana for uni and there they called it skitching.
Using the word 'pop' for soda was amusing to a guy from New York I knew.
That has gone out of use thankfully.
A girl from California could not get over we had a Snelling Avenue
I did find it an odd name after she mentioned it.
as a minnesotan i got offended when he said “SKAL?”🤣
He said Lutfisk corectly the first time thats how we say it here in Sweden
In norway we say lutefisk
I now live in MN and everyone here thinks it’s “gray duck”. Everywhere else it’s goose. It is a State that LOVES Mountain Dew and McGolden Light Beer.
Jim Tomlinson Yes, we do.😉
What happened to Hamms 🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻?
you betcha.
Hot dish can be just about anything in a baking pan. It is duck duck grey duck. Lutefisk is a long gone tradition from the swedes. We say pop, oh yah and “cold enough for yah”. I’m from MN I would know.
Eric Hovatt You are dead on. I could smell The lutefisk cooking a block away. I’d turn around & go to my friends house.
I Have Lived In Minnesota My Entire Life And Everything About This Is Wrong
•SKOL is the Vikings chant, not just a random Norwegian word
•A Hot Dish (Casserole) has many different types, not just one
•I Have Never Heard Or Seen Lutefisk In My Entire Life
•Duck Duck Grey Duck/Goose Is Just An Opinionated Thing Just Like Soda/Pop
@@jellyfish5017 I come from a long line of proud Minnesotans. My dad enjoys some pickled herring at Christmas. I won't touch the stuff, granted it doesn't have the rancid smell I've heard Lutefisk is notorious for.
Metro Concerts My Grandparents ate lutefisk. 🤢🤢 I’ve never heard the word Skol. It is Duck Duck grey Duck, & pop.
Metro Concerts
Lutefisk is mainly a Norwegian and Scandinavian dish it is white fish. I grew up in the low southern part of the state. Go to a Scandinavian or Norwegian dinner at most churches or organizations and you’ll find Lutefisk. It smells horrible and is a slimy and it is very much a acquired taste. One thing she got right. People love it or hate it. And it is mostly served by older people because younger people just don’t enjoy the long process to prep and cook something that smells that strong. My Grandma and Mom made it every year and taught my sisters and sister in laws how to make it. And I taught my daughters.
@@maryallison0509 Are you not confusing Lutfisk with Surströmming (Sour Herring) which is really smelly. Lutfisk (Swedish spelling) is actually quite tasteless and with no smell at all. You need white sauce and spices to get it tasteful.
🍻 Skål 🍻
I love her swedish!!
I love how this comment section is all us Minnesotans... Goes to show how much we try to search weird shit about our state lmao Hurts but hey, we got a way of speaking !
I grew up on hot dish, truly my comfort food!
Hotdish is any minnesotan take on caserole. It ranges from tatortor to goulash.
I literally moved here from Hawaii...been in Minnesota for three years..and this hurts my ears.
I’m from Minnesota and I was like how do people not know! Like I’m so use and their not
WHAT A RIDICULOUS SEGMENT, MY HEAD HURTS
She was really enunciating those words with a try hard accent. Also, I've never heard of duck duck grey duck until the Vikings did it.
In MN duck duck gray duck is also a game about creativity and colors. Teal duck, polka dot duck, pink duck. And also psychological warfare when you get the kid who says grrrrrrrrrreen duck 😂
It's duck,duck,gray duck
i was so confused when she was doing the thing with her arm when she said skol
I have to say despite the loss in the NFC championship game, I rather enjoyed the Eagles fans who came to Minneapolis. They very much enjoyed my wolf hat!
Duck Duck....Talk to me Goose....Cue the Theme song ..
People acting defensive in the comments when this woman definitely has the accent
A guy could say it's a nice little video don't you know. Not even too shabby
Just because you are from MN doesn't mean you eat or say of that stuff
I'm sick of people thinking us in WI sound like this too!
The Philly accent sounds like California to me. The way they
say home and hoagie.
I live in Minnesota and I have never heard anyone say “hot dish”.
You're probably in Iowa
The hot dish part is correct but never heard of gray duck
The beautiful Meisha almost sounded like Lawrence Welk accent.
both lutefisk and skål?? why so much scandinavia in minnesota?
Valorous Kid a lot of norwegians specifically settled there way back when
I second that. Half of Minnesota's population has roots in Scandinavia. Personally, I am a good bit Finnish, Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian.
@@zzz.Pluto. I kind of wish they could translate Lutefisk. Saying Lutefisk in english sounds insanely cringy in my view.
cool, shes a real one. the duck duck grey duck thing. 👍🏻
I live in Minnesota and I cringed so hard...
As a Minnesotan this is very offensive... we don’t have an accent😂
Lol, they need to watch Grumpy old men, at least. Not enough Os and As in dair, ya knOw. I remember a couple stories about Christmas time the great grand parents had Lutefisk usually, stinky, my dad said. I caught onto pickled herring myself around 1st grade, you betcha! Born and raised Minnesotan, miss it each day I am away.
I live in in MN, and I have never met anyone who eats lutefusk
The comment section is basically just a bunch of angry minnesotans. And im one of them. I didnt realize we were so unrecognized
"Revenge!" -Ghandi
BORN N RAISED IN NW MN AND I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT THAT DUCK DUCK GRAY DUCK THING IS...
I grew up in the Northeast part and am with you. I think its a cities thing.
So MN slang is Swedish. Cool
excuse me tater tot hot dish is glorious
2:11 hate him
So I was at a softball tournament in Kansas and they baseball players made fun of our accents. We can’t hear our own accents but other people can.
Dude, Lutefisk is just a Norwegian dish eaten in other places in the country than Minnesota
spelling skål with an O hurts my eyes
I’m watching Fargo now. 😂
MN born and raised
why do people think lutefisk is something common in MN ew (MN native)