The Poor Man's Feast

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • Playlist of Poor Feast videos • The Poor Feast
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Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @townsends
    @townsends  10 месяцев назад +22

    If you enjoyed the music in this video check out our new CD! www.townsends.us/products/safe-from-the-cold-cd-by-c-w-lewis

  • @omnacky
    @omnacky Год назад +8017

    The guys that run this channel are so genuine and so humble that they don't even advertise that they have a local (and online) clothing store where they sell the clothes that they wear and the equipment they use. As well, they don't even put paid sponsorships in their videos.

    • @HkSniper
      @HkSniper Год назад +382

      And their business is amazing. I have purchased stuff from them and they have taken care of me every time. Amazing people!

    • @HK-qj4im
      @HK-qj4im Год назад +115

      Those fingerless gloves look great.

    • @ForestDaughtersJournals
      @ForestDaughtersJournals Год назад +91

      so glad they don't have to spend time selling for sponsors.

    • @vsync
      @vsync Год назад

      they just hire people to put comments in the videos stealth-advertising their humble wares

    • @dustcloudfeatherstone8195
      @dustcloudfeatherstone8195 Год назад +57

      I used to buy things from them thru snail mail.. You know.. Stamps & checks...was it 30 or more yrs ago?

  • @maxshrapnel8998
    @maxshrapnel8998 Год назад +1747

    Former homeless just came onto say thank you. Your tips and tricks really worked in the rough. I'm out of being homeless but will be grateful to channels like this. I was able to build shelter. think of clever ways to wash. I even was able to fix my tent with knowledge shared on this channel and others like it. thank you. bless you

    • @randalthor6872
      @randalthor6872 Год назад +59

      You rock Max! :)
      I hope something incredible happens to you tomorrow : )

    • @user-dy2cg3hj6m
      @user-dy2cg3hj6m Год назад +14

      You had a cellphone whilst being homeless?

    • @Trizon
      @Trizon Год назад

      @@user-dy2cg3hj6m probably, yes

    • @kamikazemelon787
      @kamikazemelon787 Год назад

      @@user-dy2cg3hj6m if there is one essential thing to have in the year 2023, would it not be a pocket supercomputer with messaging, phone, entertainment, etc in one? outlets are easy enough to find, and phone plans are not that expensive. I don't know many people who buy their phones in one lump sum anyway. Just think a little. You think a homeless person has no need to communicate with people? Like they have no family or friends or whatever, or need to call for emergency? It doesn't have to be a frickin iPhone 14 or whatever to watch RUclips.

    • @andersonhuynh4059
      @andersonhuynh4059 Год назад +211

      You confused how a home costs more than a phone?

  • @rugvedkulkarni1593
    @rugvedkulkarni1593 Год назад +808

    I like how you used small and beat up looking apples. It's more accurate to what a poor family actually had in that time period.

    • @bilbo_gamers6417
      @bilbo_gamers6417 Год назад +92

      You also should consider that, unless an apple was very fresh or you had an orchard, that's just kind of what apples looked like before modern agriculture. they didn't always look shriveled and horrible but im sure bruises and cuts weren't super uncommon.

    • @lilbench5834
      @lilbench5834 Год назад +12

      makin me feel 18 century poor

    • @user-pm8je4fo7e
      @user-pm8je4fo7e Год назад

      Yes, it was a particulary distasteful touch. In reality it would be a mush.

    • @user-pm8je4fo7e
      @user-pm8je4fo7e Год назад +23

      @@bilbo_gamers6417 This is how natural apples look like after two days even in modern agricultural world. But I mean natural, not some paraphined tasteless murican hybrid.

    • @bilbo_gamers6417
      @bilbo_gamers6417 Год назад +1

      @@user-pm8je4fo7e yep

  • @TheRealDrae
    @TheRealDrae Год назад +393

    As a 20yo who was very near homeless for a while and only picked myself off the ground half a year ago, I... honestly teared up a little towards the end. It's true, half the feast is the people you share it with. To anyone struggling with finances, work, life, keep pushing. Don't ever give up.

    • @charlesscheuring
      @charlesscheuring Год назад +13

      Thank you very much I needed that kind of comment

    • @ferrreira
      @ferrreira Год назад +10

      I hope you're doing fine. Greetings from Brazil

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 Год назад +7

      ​@@ferrreira This is the realest video I've seen in so long. Brings faith back into the internet + social media.

    • @dizo-jp2td
      @dizo-jp2td 11 месяцев назад +2

      If you declare with your mouth, 'Jesus Is Lord' and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. -Romans 10:9

    • @blahblah2779
      @blahblah2779 11 месяцев назад

      You just got lucky. Don’t tell others to “never give up”. Worst advice ever

  • @LordDeathington
    @LordDeathington Год назад +429

    I'm glad that it was pointed out that part of the feast was just the community. Community is something that a lot of people are missing at the moment.

    • @DopaminedotSeek3rcolonthree
      @DopaminedotSeek3rcolonthree Год назад +39

      Quite honestly, I blame taking the businesses out of the neighbourhood and putting them in big shopping plazas. Forcing the people in suburban neighbourhoods to rely on cars rather than being able to walk to their grocery store or hardware store and know the people who run them as someone from the neighbourhood has stunted the American people in both the country's values and the populations ability to get along in simple ways.

    • @Stroggoii
      @Stroggoii Год назад +31

      Suburbia has no community. The pack rats in the city and the handy folks in the country need each other to achieve some form of functional living. The suburbanites can ignore or outright antagonize their neighbors without consequences but their macmansions would fall apart on just one month without access to a car and delivery services.

    • @turdferguson2982
      @turdferguson2982 Год назад +9

      I would very much like to have a meal and a good bullshit session around a fire with the people commenting on here. I grew up in the town that Jas. and sons is based out of and always enjoyed poking around the shop.

    • @seigeengine
      @seigeengine Год назад +8

      @@DopaminedotSeek3rcolonthree The issue is just technology.
      Online shopping now is the an example of this. Of course I don't want to go to a physical store if I can do the same job in a tiny fraction of the time from the comfort of my home.
      Entertainment? I have infinite entertainment at home. Why would I go out for it?
      Almost all social activity and community has occurred as a product of a lack of access to things. You interact with others out of need, and you bond over mutual experience and assistance.
      Well, we've fixed the problem. We no longer need to interact with other people directly almost ever. Congrats, being alone is your reward.
      Even suburbs make complete sense. Cities grew largely as manufacturing and trade hubs. Of course people want to go there to get higher paying jobs, but fast forward until manufacturing jobs were fairly common... Imagine living in a pre-suburb city. They were largely industrial centers, and filthy, awful places to live, as cities have, in general, basically always been. Of course people who had the ability to gtfo and live somewhere without manufacturing and with a bit more personal land and greenery would want to once they could travel to and from there. Yes, there was some top down screwery going on, but the individual had a clear direct quality of life incentive too. Of course, now that that's normalized for the masses, and cities have de-industrialized, now the rich twats move back into cities, and we have "gentrification."

    • @Excalibursin
      @Excalibursin Год назад +5

      +LordDeathington It was a great point, the only quibble I'd make is that while the turkey did not make the feast "better", the fact that Scrooge was willing to appreciate his community and share SOMETHING with the family did actually make it better, which fits in with the overall point they made.

  • @maiqtheliar3502
    @maiqtheliar3502 Год назад +958

    This has to be one of the channel’s best videos. It paints a picture of what poverty looked like while showing how significant a meal like this would be to a poor family

    • @be1tube
      @be1tube Год назад +4

      Yes, this is one of your best. Thank you.

    • @Jason4Star
      @Jason4Star Год назад +24

      And what poverty still is like. I like what he says at 6:05 - when Scrooge brought a huge turkey to their meal, "the feast didn't get any better. It was already as good as it was going to be because of the people who were there."

    • @michaelrosenstock9187
      @michaelrosenstock9187 Год назад +2

      A real chyradillic feast

    • @billiebluesheepie2907
      @billiebluesheepie2907 Год назад +10

      @@sparklesparklesparkle6318 - I love raw potatoes and eat them often, but in all the many varieties I have grown, I never saw any that came out of the ground that clean!

    • @bv3726
      @bv3726 Год назад +5

      whatever you do, dont add jarrin root m'aiq!

  • @RaggedLands
    @RaggedLands Год назад +389

    I want to correct the sentence at 11:00:
    Their feast definitely absolutely got better. But not because of the giant turkey. But because Scrooge joined them.

    • @brucebehner4142
      @brucebehner4142 Год назад +12

      It was a goose.

    • @Gracana
      @Gracana Год назад +42

      @@brucebehner4142 Right, right. It was better because *the goose* joined them.

    • @mingyuhuang8944
      @mingyuhuang8944 Год назад +5

      ​@@brucebehner4142 This is the realest video I've seen in so long. Brings faith back into the internet + social media.

    • @shreddedbagelwabiwabo8342
      @shreddedbagelwabiwabo8342 Год назад +4

      There's nothing at 11:00 ? Is there something I don't get

    • @slippyfruit8538
      @slippyfruit8538 Год назад +4

      ​@@shreddedbagelwabiwabo8342the bit is in 5:45

  • @sociosanch3748
    @sociosanch3748 Год назад +72

    "Our plate started off empty, and now our plate is full".
    Love how you phrased that

  • @reversehatred
    @reversehatred Год назад +1771

    As a young person currently living in a van, working a part time minimum wage job, and unable to afford housing, it’s your videos like these that make me feel like I’m not so alone. I feel oddly connected to these impoverished people from hundreds of years ago and realize times aren’t as different as you would think. Thanks once again for bringing history to life!

    • @thrjfi5360
      @thrjfi5360 Год назад +37

      I hear ya same here

    • @theshyestsasquatch
      @theshyestsasquatch Год назад +32

      Have you watched the RUclipsr Joel Haver’s video - Your friend from high school that’s doing “pretty good”?

    • @mightylaidlow1
      @mightylaidlow1 Год назад +35

      Why are you only working part time when so many places are hiring?

    • @kw2519
      @kw2519 Год назад +17

      Can you not find full time work

    • @j.paul.joseph
      @j.paul.joseph Год назад +51

      Keep hour head up, brother. The small victories each day. We've been there and we are praying for you and pulling for you.
      Message if the van is ever near Detrot and we'll share a meal with you.

  • @ghostgirl6970
    @ghostgirl6970 Год назад +354

    My dad was born in 1937 and my grandma saved every last scrap of leftovers. She was Cajun, and made an amazing gumbo or veggie soup out of those scraps. Simple white vinegar and chili peppers grown in the garden were a marvelous condiment. My dad told me, she's a survivor of the depression era, she couldn't waste a thing if she tried.

    • @danielalbert2691
      @danielalbert2691 Год назад +14

      Just age those peppers in a brine a bit and you got another level of magic!

    • @redmustangredmustang
      @redmustangredmustang Год назад +15

      My grandpa was born during the Depression on a farm picking Cotton. He always clean his plate of everything that was served to him. He always said that's how he was raised not to waste food.

    • @BeesKneesBenjamin
      @BeesKneesBenjamin Год назад +1

      Would complicated vinegar also work?

  • @David0lyle
    @David0lyle Год назад +61

    As an aficionado of crossbows I have a bit of history from someone that I suspect was a relative. He made cross bows for hunting small game. In the latter years of his life he was often assisted by a neighbor that was as known as an otherwise very difficult person. When people around town wondered why this otherwise foul tempered person was so willing to help him it was determined that he, the cross bow maker had gifted a small bow to the neighbors older brother when they were children. She was quite certain that the assorted rabbits and squirrels that her brother managed to hunt had stood between them and certain death. From that she felt a lifelong obligation to aid him. It I suppose is an example of how relationships in a community can outweigh all other factors in a way outsiders might simply not understand.

    • @andrewroberts7428
      @andrewroberts7428 Год назад +1

      that's a great story!! it also sounds like a wes anderson film

  • @faithturk2746
    @faithturk2746 Год назад +37

    Watching this made me very emotional. We experienced bouts homelessness when I was a child but my mom was always able to feed us. Thankfully we lived in boarder town and you can cross over into Mexico where your dollar will go a lot farther. sopitas (little star pasta soup with some lard and tomato paste) with Vienna sausages and the prepackaged jambalaya box mixes with cornbread were our saving grace. Thanks to my mom’s ingenuity when I fell on hard times towards the end of college I knew exactly how to make every dollar count!

  • @catherinewhite2943
    @catherinewhite2943 Год назад +275

    A soup my grandmother's family made was boiling water poured over chunks of stale bread, topped with some gratings of a hard cheese. Even as an older woman, she made it on occasion because for her it was a comfort food.

    • @Exodiq
      @Exodiq Год назад +19

      Have you tried it? It tastes great. Only difference is i like it with tea instead of just hot water and feta cheese. I never figured poor people used to eat this. Makes sence XD! With hot milk minus the cheese it is amazing as well.

    • @laurencedl9729
      @laurencedl9729 Год назад +9

      @@Exodiq Pershesh me caj! We had that back home haha, tea bread soup!

    • @stefankojadinovic6198
      @stefankojadinovic6198 Год назад +5

      Google Popara.

    • @treebeard7298
      @treebeard7298 Год назад +3

      If you do try it, try toasting the chunks of bread first before using them to make the bread soup. Adds a lot of flavor. You can also grind the toasted stale bread into a powder and use it to make porridges and to thicken other soups.

    • @thenarrowroad7908
      @thenarrowroad7908 Год назад +1

      I've got some toe cheese and clipped toenails that we could add into it for some roughage 😋

  • @Peg38542
    @Peg38542 Год назад +123

    living in Northern New Jersey, rent is consuming so much of our income. and we can't afford a house or to even move. I appreciate the very simple food of the cookbook. this video makes me feel like I'm not alone. thank you for sharing!

    • @stevenwagner9912
      @stevenwagner9912 Год назад +7

      We live in the area of the dust bowl. The people that stayed here were those too poor to move to a better place.
      I see now many of the things my mom did were to stretch our food. She would take left over roast beef and grind it to make a beef salad or chicken for chicken salad. She would grind the meat and at the end add a bunch of crackers to the grinder to clean it out. I think it was more that the cracker stretched the meat. Of course we raised beef, hogs, and chickens. Stew always had macaroni in it. She had a huge garden and canned everything we didn't eat. The basement was full every fall. We might have been poor but we didn't go hungry or feel poor.

    • @YamiKisara
      @YamiKisara Год назад +6

      @@stevenwagner9912 the crackers are put in for cleaning purposes, because it's a real pain cleaning a meat grinder that hasn't had that done to it. Everybody does it whenever they grind meat at home. Doesn't matter if you're rich or poor, some things are simply practical.

    • @YamiKisara
      @YamiKisara Год назад +4

      If you own a car, or know someone with a car that would be willing to give you a ride, you have the means to move, even if it might mean leaving many things behind. Rent is a real problem though, and so can be finding a job even if you do move to a different location. Imho the best way to save on food without giving up at least some quality is cooking big batches of hardy soups and stews and eating them with bread - this allows you to use cheap cuts of meat, basic vegetables, legumes, etc. without spending too much time in the kitchen (just leave it to bubble away on the stove while you do other things), the whole family can eat as much as they want, get most of the nutrients they need, and you don't have to cook on a daily basis, I hope you can feel more at ease soon and your situation as a whole improves, good luck!

    • @HLBear
      @HLBear Год назад +9

      Yami, I know you mean well bit "the means to move" is about everything from:
      * How close is the new place to work or will i need a car/bus/etc?
      * How much deposit and security will they require?
      * How much space is there for our family; can we afford space for all?
      It's not just about the physical move.... although hiring a mover or van is another cost.

    • @stevenwagner9912
      @stevenwagner9912 Год назад +3

      @@YamiKisara I do know the crackers help clean. I have mom's grinder. But I think she used way more than needed to clean it. I know so many things point to my parents stretching their money. Mom milked 1 and sometimes 2 cows and sold milk and cream.
      My brother tells the story of he and dad working on a piece of farm equipment. He told dad he didn't know why he used that piece of junk. Dad told him " to feed you kids". Don't get me wrong. I had a great childhood and parents. They were great to us. I am sad because a few of my siblings turned out to be assholes. They couldn't wait for them to die so they could get money and stuff. My parents were married in 1945. Dad died in 2004. After dad died I visited mom a few days later. A piece of paper on the table said " I just lost my best friend".

  • @vickilindberg6336
    @vickilindberg6336 Год назад +43

    I grew up with a lot of seasonal food. The hardest part was finding vitamin C late in the winter, when the sauerkraut was running out. They say most people finally succumbed to starvation in June & July, while waiting for new crops to grow.

    • @vickiamundsen2933
      @vickiamundsen2933 Год назад +19

      i can believe it. When I started gardening i was shocked at how even "early" foods like spring peas didn't really crop until May.

  • @TheMrDrinken
    @TheMrDrinken Год назад +391

    the part where he finds a perfectly cleaned out potato under two cm of soil actually made me laugh out loud!

    • @Ronnoconnor
      @Ronnoconnor Год назад +48

      init. and then takes a crunch out of it

    • @derkeksuchtige3416
      @derkeksuchtige3416 Год назад +7

      do you think that for making a poor person‘s meal he‘s going to handpick potatoes? seriously?

    • @TheTallOne890
      @TheTallOne890 Год назад +31

      @@derkeksuchtige3416 I mean the Townsend channel is fairly dedicated to authenticity

    • @derkeksuchtige3416
      @derkeksuchtige3416 Год назад +4

      @@TheTallOne890 well I guess that seemingly got thrown out of the window here

    • @xxxxxx5868
      @xxxxxx5868 Год назад +83

      ​@@TheTallOne890 It's meant to recreate a scene from history. You don't need to go out in the wild and forage for something to accurately recreate a scene that might have happened lmao.
      Keep picking those nits buddy

  • @Adonis_Quinn
    @Adonis_Quinn Год назад +989

    I've never been more hungry in my entire life than in college living off grants and plasma donations. I would eat a slice of bread and peanut butter for most of my meals. Sauce and noodles or a dollar freezer meal to mix it up. I remember I broke down crying when an elderly lady gave me a loaf of pumpkin bread. I ran out of money that day and was near out of food. I shaved a piece off each day and made it last two weeks. You are right, this meal would have been a feast.

    • @biohazard0482
      @biohazard0482 Год назад +82

      Ah, I feel you man. I still find myself rationing out stuff on pure impulse years later, even though I really don’t need to.

    • @honuswagner9348
      @honuswagner9348 Год назад +28

      But you were poor by choice... you voluntarily attended college instead of working a job. There are plenty of people that work part time and go to school full-time. You just chose not to.

    • @JMsoo
      @JMsoo Год назад +237

      @@honuswagner9348 You don’t know this person story so don’t jump to conclusion!

    • @dabeln1
      @dabeln1 Год назад +165

      @@honuswagner9348 You strike me as out of touch with the cost of living for a student. Most ppl work multiple jobs in order to get ahead of living paycheck to paycheck without going to school. If you have a family, forget about it, someone will shoulder the load while you're in school, all while your kids are severely mistreated at public schools. No one today can choose to live like it's 1960 when one level job could support a family and pay off a house in a couple years.

    • @biohazard0482
      @biohazard0482 Год назад +89

      @@honuswagner9348 man I wasn’t a student. my dad got cancer, couldn’t work for 3-4 years and we pretty much went bankrupt. It wasn’t by choice.

  • @chicagorandy
    @chicagorandy Год назад +88

    As I begin my 74th year on this planet in one of the most fortunate countries on Earth, I appreciate that with age does not come 'wisdom' but rather one powerful 'perspective' on just how good we all have it. Thanks for sharing the historic reference.

    • @FreeManFreeThought
      @FreeManFreeThought Год назад +1

      unfortunately too many of us don't have it good. Most people I know are rountinely having to choose between housing and food. But "my generation" "just doesn't WANT kids" if you believe the newspapers.

    • @chicagorandy
      @chicagorandy Год назад +8

      @@FreeManFreeThought If within a mile walk you have some form of access to reasonably clean drinking water? You ARE better off than a HUGE chunk of Earth's population. If you have the 'possibility' of any kind employment and edible food? Same thing applies. Personal knowledge of life in all 3rd World countries also enhanced my world 'perspective'.

    • @ollie4022
      @ollie4022 Год назад +3

      @@chicagorandy Yes I see many people here comparing themselves to the peasants spoken of in this video, as if the lives we live today are in anyway comparable to the suffering they faced. Even in the poorest neighbourhoods of a third world country, the standard of living is superior to that of the average 18th century peasant. If you make it to 60, you have already outlived almost every single peasant in the 18th century, and most of the upper echelons of society including aristocrats. They lived incredibly rough lives in every aspect, however admittedly there are some sadly that even today have to suffer in certain conditions that are similar, or worse in other ways. Such as those that survive by scavenging copper wire out of landfills, something that has been born out of an industrialised society. But often that does not compare even closely to how short and sad their lives were, in the medieval period if you made it to 35 you had lived a good life. Be grateful for whatever you have, even if it’s incredibly little.

    • @FreeManFreeThought
      @FreeManFreeThought Год назад +3

      @@chicagorandy Clean water is important. But not having access to affordable food, housing, are separate issues. Someone with access to water will still starve to death in the streets.

  • @farid4791
    @farid4791 Год назад +55

    Reminds me when I ate pasta nearly every day between 2012 and 2015. It's nice to see someone tackling that issue while putting it in the historical context of that era. You have a really nice channel Mr Townsends :)

    • @typingcat
      @typingcat Год назад

      .... Would be a shame if someone takes it down.

    • @sharonmiller7213
      @sharonmiller7213 Год назад

      Did the pasta make you fat??
      It's a serious question no shade.

  • @aichu2567
    @aichu2567 Год назад +181

    I am actually so moved by this I have no idea why I just started to cry because it was so wholesome

    • @gravedigga4real781
      @gravedigga4real781 Год назад +8

      Weird...

    • @exaltedalpha2610
      @exaltedalpha2610 Год назад +42

      @@gravedigga4real781 Why do you have to be cringe? Let homie have their moment.

    • @XiaoFury
      @XiaoFury Год назад +30

      I think this video teaches contentment, humbleness, and not to waste what you have.
      No one should live in poverty, but having very little makes you appreciate what little you have.

    • @notpissedenough5623
      @notpissedenough5623 Год назад

      Please touch grass

    • @notpissedenough5623
      @notpissedenough5623 Год назад

      @@exaltedalpha2610 says the cringe manchild.

  • @covishen
    @covishen Год назад +365

    Been there done that. Waiting for the food stamps, mom saying that she wasn't hungry and my sister and I ate. Fast forward to today and even eggs are insanely expensive. Certain factions condemning the poor, it's just a very challenging time we live in.

    • @KainYusanagi
      @KainYusanagi Год назад +52

      The number of things that used to be poor man's food that has been gussied up as haute cuisine so even inexpensive products are expensive is the worst of it.

    • @russguffee6661
      @russguffee6661 Год назад +1

      Well, the dummies that are destroying western society are meeting in Davos. A tactical nuke would benefit all actual humanity and wipe out the self described "gods" like John Kerry and Klaus Schwab....

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi Год назад +19

      the poor should always be condemned, just as they should always be helped. the goal is the same, get them to stop being poor.

    • @vaylonkenadell
      @vaylonkenadell Год назад +82

      @@KairuHakubi It must be nice living in your world, where no one is ever born blind or deaf or simple. Where no one is a victim of random acts of violence. Where nothing bad ever happens to anyone who doesn't deserve it.

    • @JohnSmith-nj9qo
      @JohnSmith-nj9qo Год назад

      @@KairuHakubi Absolutely, it's clearly the poor person's fault that the price of basic grocery staples like eggs, milk, and bread are skyrocketing and the greedy corporation they work for refuses to pay them a wage that will match the insanely high cost of living. It's also clearly the poor person's fault that we have a corrupt government bought and owned by the rich that decimated the social safety net programs that were specifically designed to help them get back on their feet.
      Quit watching Fox News bro.

  • @DHB373
    @DHB373 Год назад +282

    I grew up where a common meal was “goulash” which happened to be a nickname for pasta with whatever thrown in. Your sentiment about the feast being the people is spot on.

    • @zhiracs
      @zhiracs Год назад +40

      Goulash has its origins in Hungarian herdsmen making stew in a massive communal cauldron with whatever meat was available, hot peppers, potatoes, and anything else the locals could contribute. Whatever form it takes now, it's an ideal way to make a lot of food for very little money

    • @JoshuaRWorkman
      @JoshuaRWorkman Год назад +8

      I hate goulash after having had it so many times as a kid because we didn't have money for anything else at the time. And if it wasn't enough to have had to eat it so often, it always had mushrooms in and I was never allowed to pick them out. Now that I've been an adult for years and can decide for myself what to eat, I am never having goulash again.

    • @acsatornad
      @acsatornad Год назад +9

      So interesting. Goulasch (or Gulyás correcly) is a Hungarian dish, and here, in Hungary it was always considered to be a rich and full soup, deffinetely nor a poor men's dish.

    • @nb4749
      @nb4749 Год назад +6

      Hey, I know goulash! To me it was macaroni with tomato sauce mixed in with it. No meat.

    • @acsatornad
      @acsatornad Год назад +14

      @@nb4749 wtf. Goulasch is a meat soup no maccaroni. I am hungarian its our national dish. I domt know what on earth ate you talking about but not goulasch, believe me.

  • @TheWalterHWhite
    @TheWalterHWhite Год назад +4

    Potatoes and onions were our go-to. Super cheap and carb rich. For a few months, we ate tortillas for dinner and ramen for lunch or vice versa. Family of four in rural midwest.

  • @ganjatrooper7193
    @ganjatrooper7193 Год назад +80

    Back when we were poor my mom would put butter on a cooked flour tortilla and sprinkle a little bit of sugar back in our food stamps days that was the first thought I had as this video ended great video that sparked a lost memory and we had a couple of rough Christmas's when we could not even afford a turkey I never remember the food I remember the good times our family had after the food was consumed thanks for putting this out got me teared up.

    • @typingcat
      @typingcat Год назад

      Butter is expensive. Almost as much as beef.

    • @yulfine1688
      @yulfine1688 Год назад +1

      @@typingcat you can make your own butter and butter is very essential to almost everything.
      In fact its actually cheaper to make your own butter if you can its a lot of work though..

    • @reversehatred
      @reversehatred Год назад

      Yes! I loved rolling up flour tortillas with butter, cinnamon and sugar as a kid!

  • @RossStoltz
    @RossStoltz Год назад +88

    My father was raised during the Depression in a very poor home in rural PA. He spoke often of all the different meals they made from stale bread. Even though he raised me and my sister in a fairly middle class home during the 80s/90s, he taught me well how to make something from nothing, especially from leftovers, and also how to appreciate everything in life. Even though I never experienced true poverty, I am glad of all the lessons I learned.

    • @MelancoliaI
      @MelancoliaI Год назад +4

      I bet he ate something called 'coffee soup' or maybe "soakie" growing up. Stale bread or biscuits (whatever was on hand) soaked in coffee with milk, maybe sprinkled with sugar if it was available.

    • @annabelles1622
      @annabelles1622 Год назад +4

      Oh my gosh!!!! I was just going to make a similar comment about my dad who was born in 1922. He used to tell me that my grandma used to make stale bread taste amazing! He used to say that to her so lovingly! I miss them both. I can relate to everything u said, sounds like our life!!! Have a nice day❤
      Edit: my mom grew up poor on a farm in México. They also taught me how to make a meal from almost nothing, my kids and husband are always amazed lol.

    • @derkeksuchtige3416
      @derkeksuchtige3416 Год назад

      LOL 🥶🥶🥶

  • @1972bcain
    @1972bcain Год назад +249

    It should be noted- your craft, your speech, timing, tempo, pace and voice inflection... everything is truly on point. Your passion is admirable and contagious. I enjoy videos like this not just for the subject matter but also due to the master class of your presentation

    • @townsends
      @townsends  Год назад +58

      Thank you for your very kind words!

  • @shoyupacket5572
    @shoyupacket5572 Год назад +8

    When I was a boy scout we learned to make "hobo dinners". It's just ground beef (or any meat really) , choppe potatoes, onions, and whatever else you got around and wrap it in foil. Can be cooked in an oven or straight over coals.

  • @-iIIiiiiiIiiiiIIIiiIi-
    @-iIIiiiiiIiiiiIIIiiIi- Год назад +52

    That is so cool that this dude admitted he ate hotdogs with rice as kid. Big Respect.

    • @prodrt1
      @prodrt1 Год назад +3

      whats so brave about that

    • @the.hard.truth123
      @the.hard.truth123 Год назад +13

      ​@@prodrt1 Because most people won't admit they ever lived in the trenches

    • @danimationd8886
      @danimationd8886 Год назад +11

      Actually, rice with sausages aint so bad afterall. Add sunny side up egg, with a little salt, add a little sweet soy sauce to the sausages. The bread from the hotdog could just be left it for eat later.. or, bake it a little for crispy texture. I aint calling this poor's man feast.. its just asian improvished simple meal 🤣🤣

    • @AY-qy4jn
      @AY-qy4jn Год назад +2

      @@the.hard.truth123 insecure losers maybe but its not to be ashamed

    • @NeilCWCampbell
      @NeilCWCampbell Год назад

      ​@@AY-qy4jnyes as he said most people.
      Well done for signalling your virtue

  • @annetteschmitz646
    @annetteschmitz646 Год назад +68

    Excellent reminder of how lucky we are. My husband still makes spanish rice with hot dogs. I had spanish rice with bacon growing up. We also had what we called "orange spaghetti" onions, tomato sauce garlic salt and pepper over spaghetti. It was perhaps poor peoples food, but it was delicious and I still make it today. My parents came from the farm in the '20s and '30s and so were self sufficient and we didn't turn our noses up at anything!

    • @JediasHertz
      @JediasHertz Год назад +4

      What is Spanish Rice?

    • @annetteschmitz646
      @annetteschmitz646 Год назад +8

      @@JediasHertz rice with tomatoes, peppers, onions, garlic and seasonings (chili powder, cumin) salt and pepper!

    • @rockycvs3
      @rockycvs3 Год назад +7

      Spanish rice is amazing, I still love it and appreciate it even more now.

    • @danielalbert2691
      @danielalbert2691 Год назад +1

      @@JediasHertz Well, there's Spanish rice and there's "Spanish rice." Spanish rice is the stuff you get in a Mexican restaurant the made with chicken stock, paprika or anato, sauteed onions , garlic and spices. "Spanish Rice" is white rice boiled with some cheap tomato product (tomato paste or even ketchup ) and sauteed onions, if you're fancy.

  • @RyanKhoo
    @RyanKhoo Год назад +131

    The production quality on this one has skyrocketed John! Thank you for all that you and your team do, like the new formula, a little more fast paced than what we’re used to but great nonetheless!

    • @ek-nz
      @ek-nz Год назад

      Yep this would still be good if it was three times as long

  • @MichaelROC
    @MichaelROC Год назад +33

    This video reminds me of things I heard from my parents. My grandparents on both side were not actually that poor, but feeding half dozen of children wasn’t easy at that time. My mother said that the most common dinner in her childhood was plain rice with pickles and fried vegetables. There was protein from eggs and tofu but the family had to share a little plate of them. The only time for a child to have a whole fried egg for his/her own was the birthday. The one thing my grandpa has been proud of was his fava beans. He manage to plant some in the yard after hard work, and could even share with neighbors, who referred it as “lifesaving beans”. Raisins was luxurious delights to them because they could get this rare sweet in tiny paper packs from the US up to once a month. Apple? that’s something my parents wouldn’t dare to dream of. It was a myth from the rich kids with parents had business with Americans. God bless my grandparents and parents, for all the hard work the did to feed the family.

  • @JoshIdstein
    @JoshIdstein Год назад +11

    I love the framing of these Feast videos as "giving them one good win", it is so damn wholesome and filled with empathy for those people in the past who had to struggle against insurmountable odds to survive.

  • @jaybennett236
    @jaybennett236 Год назад +133

    My Dad (born in 1930) said his Dad (my grandfather) left home at 14. One of his first jobs was to be a cooks helper on a cattle ranch for all the cowhands. He learned to cook simple stuff really well. Biscuits, cornbread and chili. Dad said that when he was growing up, Grandpa put a pot of beans on to cook all day every Monday. Pinto beans slow cooked with a litttle smoked ham or sausage. And fresh cornbread out of the oven is also one of my favorites!

    • @janetprice85
      @janetprice85 Год назад +10

      My Dad said during the Great Depression that pinto beans and cornbread was a staple.

    • @palindrome2599
      @palindrome2599 Год назад +2

      That sounds divine, big W to your grandfather

    • @sociosanch3748
      @sociosanch3748 Год назад

      😊

  • @michaelshinn162
    @michaelshinn162 Год назад +47

    This one tugged at the heartstrings. Many times growing up we had fried potatoes and beans. It may not have been a great variety, but there was usually plenty for everyone. Great video, you can see the emotion you put into it. You and the crew have gotten so much better at telling the story. Keep it up. Always looking forward to the next one.

    • @ImranZakhaev9
      @ImranZakhaev9 Год назад +2

      One of my favourite meals when I was a kid was “tatie stew”, just pan fried potato slices with onion. Thankfully I didn’t eat this out of necessity like my mother did, to me it is still a nostalgic dish.

    • @cynthiahardin1101
      @cynthiahardin1101 Год назад +1

      Red beans, steam fried potatoes, a bit of onion, sliced tomato, white cornbread. Heaven on a plate.

  • @GavTatu
    @GavTatu Год назад +15

    I live in Jersey, old Jersey, our potatoes are so good they were given a royal title ! And it's every Jerseymans right to glean the fields after the farmer has collected his crop. Even with modern machinery there are still plenty of small potatoes to be had.

  • @ICountFrom0
    @ICountFrom0 Год назад +55

    What is and isn't costly changes with the times. Right now the eggs in this feast are an arm and a leg, but we can easily afford the nutmeg that would have been a rare treat stretched to last as long as possible. Whatever you are eating, may we all make the best of what we have. Thank you for this channel.

    • @yulfine1688
      @yulfine1688 Год назад +5

      back in the time as well eggs were very cheap chickens were very common and most people especially the poor had chickens or birds of some sort. Now a days a duck is expensive or quail and so on that back then was very inexpensive.

  • @wardwind5013
    @wardwind5013 Год назад +351

    I grew up from a family that lost so much so early and had to make do with what was left. While I myself grew up with having so much on my plate, watching this video makes me tear up, because it reminds me of the stories of my grandmothers and what they had to endure just so they and eventually their children would not go hungry.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Год назад +43

      It reminds me also of being a child and having dinner and seeing my mum not eating. I learned at a young age she'd skip meals so we could have food. I'd wish for no child to go through that

    • @onemercilessming1342
      @onemercilessming1342 Год назад +9

      @@Stettafire You're among many who understand. The safety nets that young people take for granted didn't exist until FDR became POTUS.

    • @morrismonet3554
      @morrismonet3554 Год назад

      @@didjitalone9544 FDR was a socialist. All socialist states fail.

    • @bryanrawls4794
      @bryanrawls4794 Год назад +2

      They were living fine if you asked them

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +3

      @@onemercilessming1342 and yet things were much better back then

  • @draco_izanagi
    @draco_izanagi Год назад +83

    Beans and cornbread have always been our go to when times are tight

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 Год назад +8

      For sure, and in my family growing up in the 80's, and 90's if we had not gone hunting for deer, or small game, or caught fish to all be stored in the freezer to be the main meat when times were tough it was for sure beans, thin pan cornbread, and sometimes ham streak, or canned ham.

    • @troynov1965
      @troynov1965 Год назад +6

      LOL us too and I got a pot on now in the slow cooker. I cant make cornbread as good as mom and grandma though.

    • @cristiewentz8586
      @cristiewentz8586 Год назад +4

      Chili soup with pasta in it, peanut butter and honey sandwiches, or home canned vegetable soup with half a grilled cheese: those were our make do food. Chili soup and veg soup were often really thin, but it was hot and filled us up. Mom refused any charity, except one year dad wasn't working much (1970s). She accepted the government surplus handouts. Peanut butter, cheese, and powdered milk. It made a very welcome change from the two eternal soups.

    • @bluephreakr
      @bluephreakr Год назад +4

      @@cristiewentz8586 A big bottle of honey where I am at is $11. _Nope_ no thank you.

    • @wendyeames5758
      @wendyeames5758 Год назад +1

      @@troynov1965 I still prefer the Jiffy I grew up with

  • @ghoulbby
    @ghoulbby Год назад +25

    If I had to compile a list of the best RUclips channels, Townsends would be right up there near the top. Their videos are A+ quality and have been consistently for so many years. Not only is the work itself amazing quality, but the people involved are passionate and great people.

  • @michaelhart5087
    @michaelhart5087 Год назад +38

    I'm a poor man myself and this really hit home for me.

  • @margaretbarclay-laughton2086
    @margaretbarclay-laughton2086 Год назад +44

    Two from Scotland
    St columba was a celtic Saint who established the community on the island of Iona
    St Columbas Broth
    Water/milk or stock as you can get it
    a nevfu(small handful) of oats
    a little salt
    and ransoms(wild garlic( or such wild herbs as could be found)
    Boiled together
    A more afluent version of his broth today is Boyndie Broth
    Melt butter in a large pan over a low heat. Add onions and carrot and cook gently until soft. Add oats to pan and cook for about four minutes, stirring frequently. Add stock and bring to the boil. Simmer for 25 minutes. Add milk and heat through. Season to taste. Add chives or parsley, and a little cream if desired.
    The above makes a thick broth - use less oats and more stock if you prefer a thinner soup. The addition of good undyed smoked haddock or smoked salmon makes a good alternative to Cullen Skink.
    The other soup comes from my mothers childhood just outside Glasgow
    Nettle soup
    Ingredients
    Half a bag of nettles for gran it would have been a basket for us it was a shopping bag
    Water to blanch
    1 onion
    Some wild garlic (ransoms)
    Knob of butter
    1 litre Vegetable or chicken stock
    Some pouring cream
    Method
    1.In a colander, rinse the nettles in batches then put in the pan with some water and blanch for a short while.
    2.In a pan, melt the butter and add the onion and some chopped ransoms. Allow them to soften but do not let it colour. Once this is done then put into a pot with the chopped up nettles and the stock.
    3.Remove from the heat and using a hand stick blender puree and then season to taste.
    4.When serving up, swirl a little cream on top

    • @davidhayes5382
      @davidhayes5382 Год назад +5

      Thank you. Best wishes from Ireland 🇮🇪

    • @martykitson3442
      @martykitson3442 Год назад +4

      god i hope there is a good crop of nettles either where i just moved to or where i moved out of but still have to clean up next spring this year that receipt sounds excellent

    • @noturfather1106
      @noturfather1106 Год назад +1

      Does the type of oat matter? I have rolled oat. I will give the nettle soup a try if they're around this summer

    • @margaretbarclay-laughton2086
      @margaretbarclay-laughton2086 Год назад

      @NoturFather 1 no, it shouldn't make much differenc. Myy gran would probably have used pinhead meal.

    • @garygnagey3569
      @garygnagey3569 Год назад

      Thank you for sharing!

  • @kingdavidapple
    @kingdavidapple Год назад +81

    My Dad's Dad once told me about the Great Depression: "I was so low I had to reach up to touch bottom." I never had it that hard, but had an employment challenge at one point when we lived primarily on rice & beans. It's part of why I am grafting fruit trees & tending some berries, why we grind our own flour & bake bread, why I brew my own ale & mead. Just to have the experience, I made small ale from a stout recipe - steeping the grains another time & fermenting the result. Maybe a third the alcohol, flavor & color. Instructive, passable & reminds me to give thanks to live so well!

    • @keeganowens8949
      @keeganowens8949 Год назад +3

      Rice is seriously good stuff. A bowl of that plain, or with something mixed in for flavor, and you're set.

    • @pr6897
      @pr6897 Год назад

      Should be careful tho with making alcohol urself, so u dont get methanol poisoning

    • @kingdavidapple
      @kingdavidapple Год назад +1

      @@pr6897 Glass a day works wonders. The small ale might have been 3% ABV, probably less. The stout ingredients & yeast used initially might have yielded 6-7%. Quite reasonable - & tasty!

    • @boomburst8031
      @boomburst8031 Год назад +1

      @@pr6897 only with the hard stuff. you normally don't get it when you brew table beer.

    • @janetprice85
      @janetprice85 Год назад +2

      True. People literally starved or became ill from lack of nutritious food. My mother had a little school friend who died along with her mother of TB from living on peas and rice and living in a damp basement apartment. Sadly many men who left to find work just abandoned their families. My great uncle did that. He ran away and left Aunt Anna with five little girls alone and if it wasn't for Catholic Charities they would have literally starved because they were up in Baltimore far from home in Georgia.

  • @cloudcitydigital
    @cloudcitydigital Год назад +11

    This video reminded me to be thankful for the food I have, and to find ways to help reduce hunger and poverty in my area. Thanks for posting, great content as usual.

  • @glenngibson9201
    @glenngibson9201 Год назад +250

    The passage in a Christmas Carol concerning the Cratchit's feast that almost brings me to tears when I read it is, "They were not a handsome family; they were not well dressed; their shoes were far from being water-proof; their clothes were scanty...But, they were happy, grateful, pleased with one another, and contented with the time." You are right it was not the food that made their feast, but the company of each other. Most of us have lost the art and pleasure of eating around a table sans devices and such.

    • @seigeengine
      @seigeengine Год назад +21

      There are few things as enjoyable as eating with good company, or as miserable as eating with bad company.

    • @ramonpizarro
      @ramonpizarro Год назад +16

      @@seigeengine
      Proverbs 17:1-2 New Century Version (NCV)
      It is better to eat a dry crust of bread in peace than to have a feast where there is quarreling.

    • @BerzerkVideos
      @BerzerkVideos Год назад +4

      Couldn't agree more. Last years Thanksgiving (A.K.A 2 months ago) was one of the best I've had in years. And it wasn't because of the food, it was the same as always (Though we DID have steak that time ontop of Turkey, which was nice) it's that everybody got along almost completely. The closest we ever got to politics was insulting Elon Musk, and that was basically universal. And at the time I think I started crying because everything was just so... Peaceful. It was lovely. Everybody made it, everybody enjoyed themselves, everybody was happy, and the conversations were great. It was a lovely night. It really does bring out the meaning of a proper feast; companionship.

  • @donnavorce8856
    @donnavorce8856 Год назад +417

    Heard from some elderly Virginia women:
    "Enough is as good as a feast."
    It's stayed with me for the last 40 years. Words of wisdom for the ages.

    • @sulegonen5612
      @sulegonen5612 Год назад +5

      What a wise phrase. 💓

    • @JohnnyArtPavlou
      @JohnnyArtPavlou Год назад +4

      That’s gratitude. ❤❤❤

    • @gohanr1271
      @gohanr1271 Год назад +8

      reminds me a lot of eastern philosophies of balance and moderation being better than excess. I do think those words apply to every facet of consumption

    • @adedow1333
      @adedow1333 Год назад +2

      I'm now very happily watching Mary Poppins in my head.

    • @dadoody
      @dadoody Год назад +2

      Great advice. We are heavily over consumers now a days. We actually waste a lot of food and resources. And the resources we do consume are often times contaminated with plastics and chemicals, and we over consume things to the point of high obesity rates and high pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes rates.

  • @DominicSantino
    @DominicSantino Год назад +18

    This whole channel is a work of art. An antique painting that one cannot stop contemplating. Greetins from Argentina.

  • @Deivid_C
    @Deivid_C Год назад +2

    we have so much available today. Grocery stores, McDonald's, etc. It is hard to appreciate how far we have come.

  • @S0L12D3
    @S0L12D3 Год назад +188

    The quality of your videos is OUTSTANDING! The creativity and well spoken nature has always been there, but the camera work has gotten so much more theatrical….. I LOVE IT!

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +1

      It encourages plagiarism so probably not something I would recommend for kids.

    • @susanbryant6516
      @susanbryant6516 Год назад +4

      @@reginaldforthright805 ?

    • @Overhill_Farm
      @Overhill_Farm Год назад +3

      @@reginaldforthright805 I'm not sure what you are talking about, but if you mean sharing printed recipes, recipes are one thing that isn't copywritten. (Cookbooks in their entirety are, however. They contain content other than recipes).

  • @artsymarxist
    @artsymarxist Год назад +45

    I absolutely love these videos about the working class and the poor. Often in history we only hear about the wealthy, but I like hearing what regular people were eating and doing.

  • @Langonica
    @Langonica Год назад +14

    Love this! Remember, Fava Beans are extremely high in protein in and of themselves... but this is a feast for the most of us at the time.

  • @rileyjoseph3488
    @rileyjoseph3488 Год назад +9

    I’ve been watching townsends for I feel like 7 years now and it continues to blow my mind with its content. Thank you for everything you do preserving and teaching history, community, and showing there’s more ways to live then the ones we’re used too.

  • @chriskourliourod1651
    @chriskourliourod1651 Год назад +42

    Starvation is one of the things I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy, especially if there are children involved. I can’t imagine any hell worse than having hungry kids crying for food and you are powerless to do anything about it. This is why I try to learn as much as I can to be the best provider that I can be. My grandparents starved themselves to raise their kids; I’m not about to have any kid of mine go through that.

    • @hamburgerhamburgerv2
      @hamburgerhamburgerv2 Год назад +1

      mhm. I would start foraging if I could.

    • @chriskourliourod1651
      @chriskourliourod1651 Год назад +1

      My family has foraged for centuries, and it’s been a major part of my life, along with hunting, fishing, and forestry. It’s not easy at all. Too many people think nature is the easy way out, but it’s truly not.

    • @chriskourliourod1651
      @chriskourliourod1651 Год назад

      My family has foraged for centuries, and it’s been a major part of my life, along with hunting, fishing, and forestry. It’s not easy at all. Too many people think nature is the easy way out, but it’s truly not.

    • @ferrreira
      @ferrreira Год назад

      Props to you mate, it's definitely the way to go.

  • @seraaron
    @seraaron Год назад +49

    It's been a few years since I've seen a Townsend video, and I just wanna say i'm so impressed with the improvements you've made to your filmaking skills. If hollywood or other big studio is ever planning to set a film or tv series in the 18th Century, I hope they reach out to you for consulting :)

  • @TaigaTurf
    @TaigaTurf Год назад +20

    As much as I enjoy the lavish recipes on this channel, seeing what poor/ frontier people really is a great history lesson!

  • @88WhiteRhino
    @88WhiteRhino Год назад +16

    Bless you and all who help you produce such quality content

  • @sangredelic
    @sangredelic Год назад +54

    I really like how we can see your breath when you are inside, it really gives a sense of the environment of a poor household and how most of us take heat for granted.

    • @janetprice85
      @janetprice85 Год назад +5

      Having spent time in my great grandma's big farm house that was heated by fireplaces I can not imagine how cold it must have been for the poor. Granny finally switched to gas heat when I was twelve and got indoor plumbing when I was eight. Before that when we visited her it was an out house or little enamel pots and baths in a huge old galvanized tub on Saturday night to tidy up for church next day.

  • @RandomUser-om4up
    @RandomUser-om4up Год назад +381

    I didn’t expect to get emotional watching this. Thank you townsends for providing wholesome content in a time where wholesome content is hard to find.

    • @notpissedenough5623
      @notpissedenough5623 Год назад +4

      "So heckin pupper wholesome!!" Can you go back to reddit with that flavor of the month buzzword. Make everything sound disingenuous and cringe.

    • @TomyIneXtriCable
      @TomyIneXtriCable Год назад +5

      Same, when he talked about how a feast is not about the food as much as it is about the people, that really hit home... ;(

  • @garshtoshteles
    @garshtoshteles Год назад +3

    Thanks for sharing your wisdom, Townsends!

  • @1998wiwi
    @1998wiwi Год назад +3

    All legumes are rich in protein due to their symbiosis with nitrogen-fixing bacteria, so the broad beans already had them covered on that front :p

  • @colinmartin9797
    @colinmartin9797 Год назад +35

    I actually made that apple dumpling when you featured it years ago. I fancied it up just a tiny bit with a teaspoon of brown sugar and a dash of cinnamon to the dumpling dough, but it was surprisingly delicious with a good Washington apple.
    Its kinda funny how full circle a meal like that has become - that looks like a wonderful hearty breakfast or supper. I wish I could get that at my university instead of pizza and burgers for lunch.

    • @rayf6126
      @rayf6126 Год назад

      I love bread and cream cheese for an occasional dinner but I make my own for both.

  • @jonathanh2010
    @jonathanh2010 Год назад +23

    This is a beautiful video, one of your absolute best. Many of us know what it's like to pull together a meal in trying times, and how important it is to have a feast with family.
    This is definitely one of those videos that anyone can 'get' and realise how fascinating the historic cooking on this channel is.

  • @CacheCanada
    @CacheCanada Год назад +5

    Great episode! As a former reenactor I always wondered what the regular folk ate. Not the rich people but the commoners, the workers, the poor ate. Thanks for this.

  • @Arukorstza
    @Arukorstza Год назад +9

    The cup of shelf stable milk and porridge I had when I was twelve and my family could barely feed itself was and still is somehow the best meal I've ever had (probably because I was so hungry).

  • @westonward735
    @westonward735 Год назад +20

    You guys knocked this one out of the park! I enjoy this style of video so much. It makes me take a good look inward and reassess the direction I'm heading. Thank you so much for all the videos.

  • @KJ-kw7gh
    @KJ-kw7gh Год назад +18

    It’s funny how meals made out of necessity and being frugal when I was a kid are now some of my favorite comfort foods as I get up in years. Big pot of beans with a ham bone, rice and sausages, stews, chicken and dumplings, etc. We raised a big garden, canned, raised hogs and chickens, and sometimes could barter for a side of beef.

  • @biohazard0482
    @biohazard0482 Год назад +31

    The amount of humanity, empathy, and the sharing of pure human experience and emotion in these comments is beautiful to a degree that I do not think I am capable of fully describing. It is just so pure and genuine.

  • @angus3540
    @angus3540 Год назад +5

    This channel is perfect. Authentic, genuine, wholesome, and educational. Hands down, the best channel on youtube. You can tell that everyone involved has a genuine passion for what they are doing which is evident in the lack of advertising/encouraging to like, subscribe, and that sort of thing.

  • @frankhoffman3566
    @frankhoffman3566 Год назад +97

    So much of this is lost to history. In school all we got was kings, wars and battles. Thanks to you guys for doing your best to show the life of regular folks

    • @s0nnyburnett
      @s0nnyburnett Год назад +6

      Never forgot my history teacher mentioned how we don't know as much as we should about the average person for a variety of reasons besides time constraints of the classroom.

  • @RastaMonn
    @RastaMonn Год назад +48

    Spanish rice with hotdogs..whoa... i feel ya cause I had minute rice with milk and sugar... cool video nice to see poor man's feast makes me grateful

    • @Jo-sp5cp
      @Jo-sp5cp Год назад +8

      Rice pudding. Yummy 😋

    • @davidroberson1962
      @davidroberson1962 Год назад +1

      Minute rice is too much $$. lol. I cook for a dozen people and I definitely have adjusted my habits to save money.
      We have cut out most of the red meat. Pork chops are $1.49 a lot and are good on the grill. Pozole, a Mexican stew made from pork butts and a big can of hominy will feed the whole crew for around $1 a piece. That is .06 in 1800 money.:) It is pretty amazing to be honest. It has become our traditional Christmas ever meal.
      It is more for early retirement than necessity though.

    • @ml6158
      @ml6158 Год назад +2

      Minutes is expensive, you are just describing food made by unskilled cook :D

    • @charlesmckinley29
      @charlesmckinley29 Год назад +2

      A dash of cinnamon makes a world of difference.😉

    • @seigeengine
      @seigeengine Год назад +2

      @@davidroberson1962 Honestly, if a meal I make costs much more than $1/person, I consider it expensive.

  • @SanguivorousRevenant
    @SanguivorousRevenant Год назад +6

    I've been a fan for over a decade, and whenever I'm having a rough day, your channel always brings so much comfort to me both as a history nerd and as someone who adores old recipes. I grew up poor, still am, but I will say this: it taught me how to get creative with the food I have, and appreciate the creativity of generations past!

  • @vexingpotato5186
    @vexingpotato5186 Год назад +31

    I would love to sit down and eat at a place that served food like this, prepared in an authentic way. Even if it's just you stop in, and you get whatever is prepared, no menu, just "we have beans, egg, bread, and apple dumpling". would be such a good experience.

  • @BeforeMoviesSucked
    @BeforeMoviesSucked Год назад +25

    Hey, Jon, I only really discovered your channel a couple weeks ago, but have been watching nonstop ever since! I've got 15 years of Colonial-era recipes to catch up on, and I'm loving them all. God bless you and the family, and keep bringing the tastes of American history to life! Lane from Canada

  • @LoveLandforChrist
    @LoveLandforChrist Год назад +22

    Thank you for addressing not only poverty in our history but poverty right now. God Bless You !

  • @BansheeFangBang
    @BansheeFangBang Год назад +2

    Ah yes, I'm always filled with joy when I find a random potato from the ground.

  • @kryniov111
    @kryniov111 Год назад +1

    In Poland we have such markets today. Vendors on the end of the day just put boxes with not sold wegetables on ground after going home. At night special services clean area. You have some time before midnight to get those wegetables for free. Most of them are dehydrated after all day in sun but some such like onions, potatos are in good quality a long time.

  • @homeblankingK
    @homeblankingK Год назад +21

    I've really appreciated these videos about impoverished eating; your interest and timing always feel as though there is a mutual understanding of how quickly to that state we could return.

  • @PJV1990
    @PJV1990 Год назад +21

    Really interesting video. I grew up in a house with no heating and always had to make meals stretch.

  • @nicholausedwardwijaya8822
    @nicholausedwardwijaya8822 Год назад +14

    "It's not what's on the plate, but the people around the table."
    Now that stuck with me. Thank you for the great work, sir.

  • @DarkHandles
    @DarkHandles Год назад +2

    Your videos are sooo calming, really relaxes my mind.

  • @cole9799
    @cole9799 Год назад +54

    Been following this channel for a few years now and i swear i think this is one of the best ones he's ever made.

  • @marthaadams8326
    @marthaadams8326 Год назад +13

    I am going to say this again. This is your best video ever! So relevant. I put up a bunch of the big lima beans that I was not aware I was growing until they got so big (I wanted the babies). I think that bean recipe would work for them. I have them all stored.
    Also, right now, so many are looking at the grocery store for ways to prep on a budget. Unfortunately, our generations right now do NOT know how to prep except from stores where the food is not all that good. This gives people a real view of what they can do. Some salt pork, eggs from the chickens, beans and tomatoes are good for a start. The flour would have to come from buying storage berries or from a store. It is all so doable. I used to make kneaded rising bread every day when my children were young. But, one can make bread on a stick in the fire, or on a stove in an iron pan with no kneading. Recipes are all over the web for bread with no kneading.
    I just love this video and will recommend it to those who keep claiming they can't prep because they are poor.
    Please make more of these!!!
    Pears too are a great food for the GI tract and to put a lot of flavorings (like nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon, etc.) into. So easy to make.

  • @centurion7398
    @centurion7398 22 дня назад

    It's a rare gift to be given a connection to people just living their lives hundreds of years ago. To get a picture of everything we've gained and some things we've lost. As a people, as a species. Thank you.

  • @ferrreira
    @ferrreira Год назад +6

    As a person who admires good cooking and good storytelling, I must say this video was a feast for my soul. Just beautiful. I have tears in my eyes. Congratulations to all involved in it :)

  • @AlHaqimBarrett
    @AlHaqimBarrett Год назад +45

    Thank you so much for this video, it really hit home as many of us are in that very boat. God bless you Mr. Townsends and your whole group of people. Your videos inspire and inform. Again thank you vey much.

  • @tammykenton1188
    @tammykenton1188 Год назад +7

    I know life had to be so hard for our ancestors, but people were more kind and caring it seems back then as compared to now. But it goes to prove Americans had true grit. The humbleness and true grit is what made America great. Plus the FREEDOM! Thank you John for all you do. Always Love your videos!

  • @terrillschneider3778
    @terrillschneider3778 Год назад +2

    We really appreciate your Channel and began watching it bc we had stayed near Townsend TN and thought it applied to there
    However it applies to both our families histories in so many ways and we greatly appreciate it Thank you

  • @robculpepper530
    @robculpepper530 Год назад +1

    I’m so pleased to have found this channel. Your narrative describing a poor man’s feast reminded me of the Kingsbridge novels by Ken Follett set in Middle Age England. He describes in great detail peasant life; the food and drink available to the common people serving under King and church. Humbling.

  • @PrometheusZandski
    @PrometheusZandski Год назад +124

    Small correction: Scrooge brought a Christmas goose for the Cratchit family. Turkey would not have been common or available at the time.
    The fat from a whole goose would have been saved and used to cook for weeks after. A turkey provides almost no fat and wasn't a common animal in England at the time.

    • @JohnNNJ
      @JohnNNJ Год назад +4

      This is what I don't get hearing about food shortages, since if other options were encouraged and facilitated it shouldn't be. In NA there are plenty of animals that thrive which can be farmed/raised/herded. I think people need to expand their palate range and the agriculture-food industry should endeavour in those opportunities.

    • @PrometheusZandski
      @PrometheusZandski Год назад +12

      @@JohnNNJ The thing you have to realize about "food shortages" is that they are regional and political. The world creates more than enough food to sustain all 8 billion people, yet 1 billion are undernourished, and 25K per day die of starvation. Back at the time of Scrooge, if you were caught picking berries on the lord's land (all the land around you) you could be shot, most likely imprisoned. Today, most starvation occurs in urban areas and is very selective about the class of people who suffer.

    • @cianmoriarty7345
      @cianmoriarty7345 Год назад +3

      @@PrometheusZandski yet absolute poverty is the lowest it has ever been, per capita.

    • @GreenBlueWalkthrough
      @GreenBlueWalkthrough Год назад

      @@PrometheusZandski And the our world today has an obisby problem which is much different then before when it was much different.

    • @Klos1neMN
      @Klos1neMN Год назад +3

      That's a good point. Cooking meat in goose fat would allow people to store if for great lengths of time, correct? Kind of like a confit?

  • @CommodoreFan64
    @CommodoreFan64 Год назад +21

    Great video, and I can for sure relate to this growing up when my mother, and step father were between jobs trying to feed me, my sister, 2 step bros, and her best friend who was living with us for a while as her mother was a druggie, and making everything stretch as much as possible, you learn to get creative with what you have, and be thankful for what you have!!

  • @Artsydaisyzui
    @Artsydaisyzui Год назад +2

    The best content on internet . The videos are so wholesome , appreciate elaborated content and efforts required in making such high quality video.❤️

  • @MrWhite-yg6yk
    @MrWhite-yg6yk Год назад +5

    You are a master of your craft Sir, you feed the soul and belly with this feast 😃

  • @SkullCollectorD5
    @SkullCollectorD5 Год назад +5

    I love these. The perspective is grounding. This is something I would enjoy today!
    A little bit of feedback! The cuts to a secondary camera while Jon is talking are exciting, but to me make it feel more like a produced interview. The primary shot with the split lighting, mostly from his short side, the cold light like a window to a winterscape from the cosy comforts of a humble home - that feeling of Jon talking _with_ me is what makes this my happy place. An over-the-shoulder like he'd show me the book, love that, too.
    Thank you for trying new things (at least I hadn't seen it yet!), but I humbly put forward to consider the simpler way.

  • @LoneWolfsVoice
    @LoneWolfsVoice Год назад +7

    Better a small serving of vegetables with love than a fattened calf with hatred. Proverbs 15:17

  • @CrimsonHybrid
    @CrimsonHybrid Год назад +1

    The guitar in the background immediately made me relax... it sounds amazing coupled with this delicious episode.

  • @nikolaithewretched8428
    @nikolaithewretched8428 Год назад +1

    You make some of my favorite content on RUclips, history, food and life. Great stuff, keep up the work :) 👍.

  • @CopperLontra
    @CopperLontra Год назад +47

    This video quality is better than most educational television! Excellent work!

    • @squigwart
      @squigwart Год назад +1

      after finding their channel i have not watched any "mainstream" history programs since i luv the stuff they put out

  • @MakoRuu
    @MakoRuu Год назад +135

    There are times I can remember as a child, my mother would make us boxed mac and cheese and chicken nuggets. I never noticed that she didn't eat dinner with us until I was older. Not because she didn't want to, but because there wasn't enough food for all four kids and herself. She would eat whatever we didn't finish quietly in the kitchen while we were watching television.

    • @jamilajay3310
      @jamilajay3310 Год назад +23

      Heaven is beneath the feet of a mother. Hope God has blessed you well and your mom kept like a queen 🙏🏻

    • @Trumpisgod
      @Trumpisgod Год назад +2

      Not a true story

    • @angelshmoney2487
      @angelshmoney2487 Год назад +3

      @@Trumpisgod wait who ?

    • @Trumpisgod
      @Trumpisgod Год назад +2

      @@kei-5721 what did the woman’s maid/butler eat then? Just sounds made up to me. They usually eat the scraps.

    • @kei-5721
      @kei-5721 Год назад +3

      @@Trumpisgod oh troll

  • @windowsexp12
    @windowsexp12 Год назад +6

    This video touched my heart a little too much than I expected.

  • @MickeyDee420
    @MickeyDee420 Год назад +8

    this is the most wholesome ytber ever, we must protect this man with our lives