This is like how Japanese curry was originally the horribly inaccurate (but still pretty yummy) way the British made Indian curry and how the Japanese people at the time went 👀👀👀 at how the British navy served it to their officers and copied it wholesale. Japan continued making curry this way but in the UK, proper Indian curry completely replaced it. Now people look at a brown sauce curry with beef, potatoes, carrots, and onions thickened with a flour roux on white rice as quintessentially Japanese. I genuinely love how cultural exchange does stuff like this.
Yeah exactly. Well, Japanese curry powder has around 25 ingredients and some spices more in line with Japanese tastes (such as dried mandrin peel.) I think its now very different to the British knockoff first introduced to Japan. Another good example is banana ketchup, the Philippine attempt to copy American ketchup except instead of tomatoes it has bananas.
That's pretty damn interesting, I will say Indian curry hasn't replaced it 100% though as our chip shop curry sauce is still very similar to Japanese style.
No beans on toast are Mexican I'm claiming as part of Mexico because of Mexico the they cut the beans then they make fried beans then they put it on the night slice of toasted bread known as bolillo it's very popular in Mexico
That’s just the classic sibling exchange. We came up with the food, shared it with our brothers, then we hated it and the brothers liked it. Tale as old as time!
@@deojnwedofuWE As an American chef you would be ASTOUNDED how few ppl have ever figured this out. They don't even sell the British ones in most American grocery stores. There's are in a sauce that tastes like Spaghetti O's..which has cheese in it. Ours is served with high fructose corn syrup and maple syrup 😆
@@vnyanforj also this whole this is untrue click bean, no one in usa is eats beans on toast, we eat beans with bbq... this british click baker is making stuff up wholesale for the menu special.
I'm American and I love beans on toast. I dated an American girl who lived in London for 2 years and she made this for me a few times. I've been in love with it ever since
@@ub3rfr3nzy94 You "hate" it haha ok..strong words for freakin beans. What brand did you use? There are many different American beans. They don't all taste the same, not even remotely...
I sometimes have beans on toast for dinner if I'm feeling poorly. I'm American and I love it. BTW, the British version of beans are what we refer to as pork and beans in the tomato sauce.
2 things. 1) Beans on toast is less disgusting when you have the British style baked beans, which are closer to American Spaghetti-Os than they are American baked beans. 2) "Cheap". That same can of Heinz blue can beans costs about $3.79 at the closest (read as only) store that will carry them, which is about 2.98 is British pounds.
Wait wait wait, beans on toast is American, fish and chips is Jewish, shepherds pie is Irish, besides Tika Masala and the full English what did you make?
I'm an American and beans on toast is absolutely delicious. I like the addition of cheese and the sauce. I don't know if I would put the sauce on it but I like it, was a nice touch.
kind of true. heinz and other companies would hire chefs to develop recipes using their product (like the famous green bean casserole). one of the first recipes was barbecue baked beans (an american staple), and was recommended to be consumed with a slice of bread and barbecue. but the concept of eating a single toast with beans and that being a sufficient meal has been developed by the brits
Baked beans was started by Heinz 155 years ago. But couldn't get any sales until they ran into Fortnum & Mason, who purchased "The whole lot". That's how it started.
First marketed doesnt mean where it originated. Eitherway- its definitely a british dish in modern age. Lots of things change during history ya know, like coffee was first discovered in Ethiopia but today we have colombian coffee- or pasta coming from Italy, and today we have every other countries variation of pasta.
@@Model3140digitalalarmclock "as american as apple pie" apple pie is british... hamburgers are from hamburg in germany, the fact you call chips "french fries" gives a hint of them not being american. pretty much the only dishes you could call american are like ... roasted turkey only because europeans didn't have turkeys because they were not on the continents ... so like well done you got the idea to roast another bird when you didn't have a chick available... amazing innovation. xD
Y'know i tried beans on toast for the first time a few weeks ago and thought "well this is tasty and a good way to use up leftover beans i gotta hand it to the brittish." Well i guess i no longer have to hand it to them
It is English actually. The first written apple pie recipe comes from England in 1381. The oldest Dutch apple pie recipe is from 1514... The first Dutch recipe, much like the first English recipe from 133 years earlier, was one where only the filling was intended to be eaten. No sugar was used, and the pastry was not for consumption. However, by the time of the first ever Dutch apple pie recipe. The English had already invented modern apple pies. Later, the English brought apple trees and apple pie with them to the new world, AKA America! Making American Apple pie, well and truly English.@@nicholasneyhart396
If the concept was developed in the 1920’s, then we can all agree, this is a Great Depression dish. Some are good, some are there just to fill your belly. I don’t have an opinion on the taste. Haven’t tried it yet, but plan on it since finding out what a big thing it is in the UK. Funny it didn’t last here if it was so great 🤷♀️
I believe that Americans speak English closer to how traditional English was spoken around the time you gain your independence from the British Empire. I think it's more to do with how parts of some words are said that is how we English use to pronounce them the same way back in the day in the 1700s. At least we English spell words correctly.
@@deadwingjockey7642its almost like different countries spell words differently even when they speak the same language!!! For a european you are awfully close minded
@@avg1005 Yeah if they speak different languages but no you took an already established language and changed some spellings of words to try make it more american because everythings gotta be american
@@piercecowley255 the Brits always give the Americans flack for the brits creation (I.e. imperial system) Now the Americans are giving the Brits flack for the Americans creation (I.e. beans on toast)
I guess it might depend on where you're from in the US but it was a mainstay with my family, though usually not for breakfast. Its more of a lunch thing.
American is a nationality. It legit does not matter what ethnicity people there are. If someone says they are american and live or lived in the United States, then they are american.
As an American from the southwest I don’t care what kind of bean we use and I don’t care what kind of flour we use, beans on wheat or corn product of various cooks is a viable meal for breakfast, lunch, or dinner
Well i don't care what anyone says about them. Nutritionists agree beans on toast can form part of a healthy diet, and that is increased if wholemeal or rustic bread is used. I would eat this rather than a tub of ice cream or a bar of chocolate, or a hot dog. The stuff in hotdogs is pretty horrendous
Created by an American company for an explicitly British market. They were the first to sell American style thinned-cut pork and beans in the U.K.. It was never marketed to the U.S. in the same way, and only ever took off in the U.K.. and this is a very misleading short.
I find it funny how Americans lambast British food they consider bad, but as soon as they find out America made it, they suddenly claim it's a godsend.
Why do us Americans think that beans on toast is gross. It looks so good. What’s wrong with putting some baked beans on bread? We like beans, we like toast, what’s the harm in combining the 2? Especially with cheese, that looks like the best breakfast in the world
As a Brit, I don’t really like beans on toast because it goes soggy after like 2 mins However, I’ll still happily eat it if I can’t think of anything else to have and I want something simple. Cannot go wrong with how convenient it is
I am a Yank, and I thought i came up with the idea of sopping up my canned beans with toast ,because I was poor and i like both foods.I eat this several times a month. Who knew it was a thing, never mind a controversial thing
Same way that tea was brought over by a portuguese queen who married an english king. Our drink of choice used to be beer. Some say still is. We have nothing original bro 😂
Yep, it was a slang word in England back in the 1870s (although foot ball was more commonly used still even before then), the US just adopted it as the main word due to the other type of football lmao
In the early third of the 20th century, American food manufacturers hired people specifically to create recipes using the manufacturers' products, publishing them in popular magazines like Ladies Home Journal, Good Housekeeping, Saturday Evening Post, and the like. The 1920s in particular is when large-circulation magazine publishing began. Advertisements emphasized how products could fulfill emotional desires for status, beauty, and happiness. The Advertising industry boomed during this time, creating consumerism and becoming a central part of the American economy. Alongside page margin ads with doctors recommending cigarettes and how replacing home appliances with new electric-powered ones would free up women's time, there were ads for Heinz, Campbell's, and Jello using unusual ingredients to create unusual dishes. Manufacturers hired celebrity cooks to create recipes using their products to boost sales. Jello pushed putting meats and vegetables into their sweetened gelatin. Campbell's created the Green Bean Casserole, based on canned cream of mushroom soup. A marshmallow company created the marshmallow-topped Sweet Potato Casserole. And Heinz produced Beans on Toast. A century later, it's considered 'traditional', but understand the Brits fell for the advertising, too. You still have Beans on Toast, but I understand multilayered gelatin salads made it to your shores as well. All that being said, this American (who used to go out every summer Sunday dawn to fish the Chesapeake to bring home and eat for brunch) has never had such fine fish as I ate in England. Had Fish and Chips from a corner chip shop and at a mid-level local inland restaurant, and can truthfully say I'd never before or since eaten a fresher-tasting serving of fish!
As another Canadian, I'll say this: Heinz started by selling their entire production to Fortnum & Mason, in Piccadilly, London. 155 years ago. That started the beans craze. In 1951, Fortnums was sold to the Westons, Wittington Investments. That's Canadian.
the main difference is that it was a poverty food for those recovering from ww1, not a present day meal. saying it was made 100 years ago shortly after ww1 does NOT make your case look any better
Make ghormezabzi ( an iranian food ) We call this perfect dish قرمه سبزی And ghormezabzi servers with rice not hard rice or soft an perfect medium and add some oil to your water so rices dont stick together like they're covered with glue There's 2 other dishes called feshenjon ( فسنجون ) and gheime (قیمه ) that rivals ghormezabzi
Am I the only one annoyed that Heinz cans don't stack?
You're not alone
Cans need to stack, it’s a requirement
I stopped buying them purely for this reason 😂
@@thebakeosaurusrex8361then why don’t they
@@brandonluff7992 I don’t know, it’s madness
Yes Inquisitor, this short here is the source of the Heresy
This comment is gonna blow up soon so first
I love this meme
nah your the hertic here plus using 40k terms won't work this that was invented in the uk
The british people are single handedly summoning the chaos god of bad food
@@alfieingrouille1528 Way to ruin a joke man
Mexicans: "People hate beans?"
Some mashed frijoles like legit Mexican style would probably taste good on some buttered toast.
They will once they try those 💩💩💩 canned stuff
Canned beans always taste like 💩 gotta get them legit pinto beans from a packaged bag.@@hominhmai5325
Heinz baked beans are not at all the same as the beans in Mexican food lmao
they suck
This is like how Japanese curry was originally the horribly inaccurate (but still pretty yummy) way the British made Indian curry and how the Japanese people at the time went 👀👀👀 at how the British navy served it to their officers and copied it wholesale. Japan continued making curry this way but in the UK, proper Indian curry completely replaced it. Now people look at a brown sauce curry with beef, potatoes, carrots, and onions thickened with a flour roux on white rice as quintessentially Japanese.
I genuinely love how cultural exchange does stuff like this.
Damn that's actually so interesting, that kind of stuff is so cool
Yeah exactly. Well, Japanese curry powder has around 25 ingredients and some spices more in line with Japanese tastes (such as dried mandrin peel.) I think its now very different to the British knockoff first introduced to Japan.
Another good example is banana ketchup, the Philippine attempt to copy American ketchup except instead of tomatoes it has bananas.
That's pretty damn interesting, I will say Indian curry hasn't replaced it 100% though as our chip shop curry sauce is still very similar to Japanese style.
Same thing with the quintessentially Japanese tempura (which is actually Portugese)
What a great historical fact.
That totally explains why it is navy curry in One Piece, too!
that AI generated art is wild
Fr aye
Disrespectful
????? @@Nikki7664
All my fellas...
Accurate though
This man should be tried for treason, these lies cannot go unpunished.
Yanited are shit
hilarous. never seen that comment before under a bignibbles short.
It's America and British are you happy now
No beans on toast are Mexican I'm claiming
as part of Mexico because of Mexico the they cut the beans then they make fried beans then they put it on the night slice of toasted bread known as bolillo it's very popular in Mexico
Please mass report the video for misinformation lol
And Apple Pie is British. 😂
yeah but apple pies are good especially the ones from mcdonalds
My life is a lie 😭😭😭
I think the first recorded apple pie recipe is actually Dutch.
Don't bet this week's wages on that though
@@imaingan4884nah
And mac and cheese
Beans on toast is older then America itself
Yeah, Flat bread with bean soup is hundreds of thousands of years old.
Thats older than humanity@RaccoonRecluse
@@piercecowley255umm actually they evolved 300,000 to 120,000 years ago
@@piercecowley255 its not
@@ihavenoidea..9308 They? Are you an alien or something?
Sure, Americans invented it. But at least we had the brains to not stick with it 😂
ok kid
if you're not 18 you're not an adult@@mr_grizzlyteeth
you had the brains not to stick with ? then tell me why the americans thought that a 1/3 lbs burger was smaller than a 1/4 lbs burger
@@Razor2142able lead pipes and paint
@@Razor2142ableThose people specifically are stupid.
As an American, I can confirm I am an American
Thanks for clarifying that
Damn,thought yoh were russian at first, thank you
Might be lying, idk.
That’s just the classic sibling exchange. We came up with the food, shared it with our brothers, then we hated it and the brothers liked it. Tale as old as time!
The difference is we season our beans
I dont understand people that say this is gross. Nice hot buttery beans in tomato sause with a piece of toast. Its delicious
Because beans in any form are an acquired taste.
I think American beans are different and served in a much sweeter sauce or something
@@deojnwedofuWE As an American chef you would be ASTOUNDED how few ppl have ever figured this out. They don't even sell the British ones in most American grocery stores. There's are in a sauce that tastes like Spaghetti O's..which has cheese in it. Ours is served with high fructose corn syrup and maple syrup 😆
@@vnyanforj also this whole this is untrue click bean, no one in usa is eats beans on toast, we eat beans with bbq...
this british click baker is making stuff up wholesale for the menu special.
@@ginxxxxx I'm a chef from Boston.
I don't have to look up the fckng etymology of baked beans in America.
I always see the Lurpak butter in your videos thanks for supporting Danish farmers
These videos are full of personality, ive enjoyed watching them. Cheers
Idk why Americans shit on beans on toast it goes hard
I'm American and I love beans on toast. I dated an American girl who lived in London for 2 years and she made this for me a few times. I've been in love with it ever since
I like it but with American style baked beans. I think most of us balk at it because of how those British beans look.
@@vivianloney They look the same. I hate the American ones in the US the only difference is yours taste like BBQ sauce lol.
I use Heinz, 5 Beans can now.
@@ub3rfr3nzy94 You "hate" it haha ok..strong words for freakin beans. What brand did you use? There are many different American beans. They don't all taste the same, not even remotely...
@@brutusvonmanhammer Thats actuslly a typo I meant to say "I ate". They weren't bad, I actually liked them 😂
Exactly, we made it, gifted it to the UK, and moved on to better foods
I sometimes have beans on toast for dinner if I'm feeling poorly. I'm American and I love it. BTW, the British version of beans are what we refer to as pork and beans in the tomato sauce.
No it isn't.
The English style of baked beans is without pork.
Nice try, redcoat
@@garethkalum8297 So is the American pork and beans. The only pork is a little cube of fat that is either coveted or avoided with a passion. 😊
2 things.
1) Beans on toast is less disgusting when you have the British style baked beans, which are closer to American Spaghetti-Os than they are American baked beans.
2) "Cheap". That same can of Heinz blue can beans costs about $3.79 at the closest (read as only) store that will carry them, which is about 2.98 is British pounds.
Wait wait wait, beans on toast is American, fish and chips is Jewish, shepherds pie is Irish, besides Tika Masala and the full English what did you make?
Tikka Masala is Indian, you muppet.
Apple pie
Sticky toffee pudding and black pudding
Jewish is a religion
Botulism
I'm an American and beans on toast is absolutely delicious. I like the addition of cheese and the sauce. I don't know if I would put the sauce on it but I like it, was a nice touch.
Merry Christmas everyone! 🎄🎅🏽❤️
Merry Christmas too
@@Bicky606 Thanks mate!
You too bro ❤
@@ClipsWithLuke Thx bud!
But it's not Xmas
kind of true. heinz and other companies would hire chefs to develop recipes using their product (like the famous green bean casserole). one of the first recipes was barbecue baked beans (an american staple), and was recommended to be consumed with a slice of bread and barbecue. but the concept of eating a single toast with beans and that being a sufficient meal has been developed by the brits
Baked beans was started by Heinz 155 years ago. But couldn't get any sales until they ran into Fortnum & Mason, who purchased "The whole lot". That's how it started.
You didn't need to add "traditionally a lot sweeter" that was just a givin when you said "invented in America"
Ok yeah, even if we did ‘make’ the beans on toast, weren’t you guys the ones who liked it?
Bluds whole channel is just about beans on toast 😂
Fun fact: If you are a pure American then you may be French, Spaniard, Or British.
Yes but america is just our people from hundreds of years ago that travelled over there by boat and repopulated which means it basically is ours
Ooh, bold take. Wrong take, too, but I applaud the bravery to say such a uniquely contentious and inaccurate thing.
@@kianpfannenstielsuch big words for saying absolutely nothing
Using ingredients domesticated by indigenous peoples in america thousands of years ago...
@@johnmorrison2604you're also forgetting that the French helped the Americans kick the Brits out.
@@johnmorrison2604you’re also forgetting that every white American is British French or Spanish.
As an American… this video makes so much sense!! Making something *that* terrible? Of course we have it to the British 😂
First marketed doesnt mean where it originated. Eitherway- its definitely a british dish in modern age. Lots of things change during history ya know, like coffee was first discovered in Ethiopia but today we have colombian coffee- or pasta coming from Italy, and today we have every other countries variation of pasta.
Exactly what I was thinking
Beans fits rice so nicely, can't imagine eating it with something else.
I don't claim that shit give me fried butter
"Beans on toast isn't British, its American" My ass!
Why is everyone so defensive towards beans with juice?
As an American we will laugh heartily and say your food is so lousy you took ours? 😂
Pal it’s not hard to search up British dishes and not be so ignorant
@@carwynwilliams7398tell me some then?
@@carwynwilliams7398ok redcoat bastard
@@Model3140digitalalarmclockmy favorite is gray onion slop with a side of sewer sludge and a drink of my own urine
@@Model3140digitalalarmclock "as american as apple pie" apple pie is british... hamburgers are from hamburg in germany, the fact you call chips "french fries" gives a hint of them not being american. pretty much the only dishes you could call american are like ... roasted turkey only because europeans didn't have turkeys because they were not on the continents ... so like well done you got the idea to roast another bird when you didn't have a chick available... amazing innovation. xD
"Dad, why are you american?"
"What do you mean?"
" *Beans on toast is American, not British.* "
Beans on toast ❌️
Beans in tortilla ✅️
Most definitely. Anything Mexican is better than British people food.
Y'know i tried beans on toast for the first time a few weeks ago and thought "well this is tasty and a good way to use up leftover beans i gotta hand it to the brittish." Well i guess i no longer have to hand it to them
Is this how Americans feel when they realise apple pie is English
Its dutch.
He's not even right.
I am an American (English Mum) and a lot of us actually like beans on toast! Rue Britannia!
It is English actually. The first written apple pie recipe comes from England in 1381.
The oldest Dutch apple pie recipe is from 1514...
The first Dutch recipe, much like the first English recipe from 133 years earlier, was one where only the filling was intended to be eaten. No sugar was used, and the pastry was not for consumption.
However, by the time of the first ever Dutch apple pie recipe. The English had already invented modern apple pies.
Later, the English brought apple trees and apple pie with them to the new world, AKA America! Making American Apple pie, well and truly English.@@nicholasneyhart396
I think so. Love it when they say "American as Apple Pie" bc they're admitting they're not even native lmao.
Scavs.
If the concept was developed in the 1920’s, then we can all agree, this is a Great Depression dish. Some are good, some are there just to fill your belly. I don’t have an opinion on the taste. Haven’t tried it yet, but plan on it since finding out what a big thing it is in the UK. Funny it didn’t last here if it was so great 🤷♀️
Kinda like how most Brits used to use the same terms as us, until they got mad and changed them.
I believe that Americans speak English closer to how traditional English was spoken around the time you gain your independence from the British Empire.
I think it's more to do with how parts of some words are said that is how we English use to pronounce them the same way back in the day in the 1700s. At least we English spell words correctly.
@@deadwingjockey7642its almost like different countries spell words differently even when they speak the same language!!! For a european you are awfully close minded
@@avg1005 Yeah if they speak different languages but no you took an already established language and changed some spellings of words to try make it more american because everythings gotta be american
Crazy how the 'best british snack' is the worst American marketing disaster.
This is something that goes a long with the rest of breakfast not a snack
Crazy how the “best British snack” is a fucking Great Depression meal
I love how he uses a DS game card lol
DS, the console with many fantastic games, but sadly even more shit games.
I'm an American and i LOVE beans on toast. And i prefer it not to be sweet, thank you very much.
Finally, the yanks give the brits flack for their creation, instead of the Brits giving the yanks flack for their creation!
Wdym finally
@@piercecowley255 the Brits always give the Americans flack for the brits creation (I.e. imperial system)
Now the Americans are giving the Brits flack for the Americans creation (I.e. beans on toast)
@@Taalul Brits purchased this creation first, hence creating Heinz the company. Marketed to Brits, it is now all history.
Give them a point, we can spare a few and it'll piss them right off 😂😂
Is there anything actually British at this point? 😂
Their artifacts... oh wait.
Noone looks at the Netherlands or France or Germany or Belgium or Portugal for colonisation, and the UK has stolen no more than the us
Surprisingly apple pie
That's Dutch@@piercecowley255
@@Gallic_Gabagool no it’s isn’t 😂
I guess it might depend on where you're from in the US but it was a mainstay with my family, though usually not for breakfast. Its more of a lunch thing.
Dude there are no americans . They are all immigrants from spain and uk and italy and ireland so yes it is brittish
copium
@@alfieingrouille1528atleast America had the self respect to stop eating it
American is a nationality. It legit does not matter what ethnicity people there are. If someone says they are american and live or lived in the United States, then they are american.
@@Model3140digitalalarmclock-Ice spice fan
@@randombritishperson. I have literally never listened to a single one of her songs, it’s just that this pfp is kinda funny.
As an American from the southwest I don’t care what kind of bean we use and I don’t care what kind of flour we use, beans on wheat or corn product of various cooks is a viable meal for breakfast, lunch, or dinner
except beans in a can across the pond total different animal..this video is a liars lies of pile of lies.
Its kind of like how British people whine at Americans for calling it soccer when they're the ones to blame for it.
We don't claim the upper class though
Well i don't care what anyone says about them. Nutritionists agree beans on toast can form part of a healthy diet, and that is increased if wholemeal or rustic bread is used. I would eat this rather than a tub of ice cream or a bar of chocolate, or a hot dog. The stuff in hotdogs is pretty horrendous
Brits always complain about American cheese but it was made in CANADA
He had an existential crisis making this, he didn’t know if he should praise or roast beans on toast
Created by an American company for an explicitly British market. They were the first to sell American style thinned-cut pork and beans in the U.K.. It was never marketed to the U.S. in the same way, and only ever took off in the U.K.. and this is a very misleading short.
Who are these people in America hating on beans on toast? It looks so good!
Beans on toast are fire ngl
-American living in Washington State, Seattle metro area
Same thing, the British were the one who coined the term “soccer” and flame the US
Now that you've mentioned it, beans on toast sounds exactly what great depression was
In the late 1800s, toast sandwich was created.
Does anybody else get overly enthusiastic when it's beans on toast day?
Tf is beans on toast day
the day you got nothin else to eat apart from beans on toast @@Apathy.Apathy.
@@heindrick_bazaar4446 What like just before your weekly shop
I belive it, as I doubt the British could ever conceive of a dish so savory and delicious
I find it funny how Americans lambast British food they consider bad, but as soon as they find out America made it, they suddenly claim it's a godsend.
Fucking woooshhh@@MikeHunt-zy3cn
@@MikeHunt-zy3cnchecking in 4 months later - have you realised he's taking the piss yet?
@@cassandras8797 I figured after thinking about it a bit more, but said fuck it, and left the comment. If I get lampooned, so be it.
This is honestly a win for the Americans
Why do us Americans think that beans on toast is gross. It looks so good. What’s wrong with putting some baked beans on bread? We like beans, we like toast, what’s the harm in combining the 2? Especially with cheese, that looks like the best breakfast in the world
Beans on toast is a poverty meal. I'm not American and I even think it's gross. They have better beans in America too
Americans think beans on toast is gross, but love mexican bean chilli. It's basically the exact same thing
As a Brit, I don’t really like beans on toast because it goes soggy after like 2 mins
However, I’ll still happily eat it if I can’t think of anything else to have and I want something simple. Cannot go wrong with how convenient it is
"A mans trash is another mans treasure"
The difference being the same as public hangings, it was deemed cruel and a assault on the throat.
I am a Yank, and I thought i came up with the idea of sopping up my canned beans with toast ,because I was poor and i like both foods.I eat this several times a month.
Who knew it was a thing, never mind a controversial thing
Well, then, that means we own their favorite dish
Yup. We took that & bacon to fight the British in the early days of the US. There's an entire song about it.
Same way that tea was brought over by a portuguese queen who married an english king. Our drink of choice used to be beer. Some say still is. We have nothing original bro 😂
Youre right, there's much worse we can berate the brits for
Like marmite
Try again, marmite is german.
I like beans and toast for breakfast, just gets messy when you mix em though, just put the beans in a small bowl
Dude I'm 42,grown up with Heinz and I'm more shocked to learn its an American company than anything else 🤦♂️. I feel like a real HEINZstein now .
This is not American it was made in the Uk and in 1927 it was recognized as a dish and became a staple then
BIGGEST plot twist of the century
the south has been eating beans on bread for longer, ours even has more than tomato sauce and sugar in them
Soccer was an imported word from England
Yep, it was a slang word in England back in the 1870s (although foot ball was more commonly used still even before then), the US just adopted it as the main word due to the other type of football lmao
Americans dont like the UK version of beans. Its so bland and tomato-y. Americans' baked beans are sweet, smoky, and often spicy.
In the early third of the 20th century, American food manufacturers hired people specifically to create recipes using the manufacturers' products, publishing them in popular magazines like Ladies Home Journal, Good Housekeeping, Saturday Evening Post, and the like.
The 1920s in particular is when large-circulation magazine publishing began. Advertisements emphasized how products could fulfill emotional desires for status, beauty, and happiness. The Advertising industry boomed during this time, creating consumerism and becoming a central part of the American economy.
Alongside page margin ads with doctors recommending cigarettes and how replacing home appliances with new electric-powered ones would free up women's time, there were ads for Heinz, Campbell's, and Jello using unusual ingredients to create unusual dishes.
Manufacturers hired celebrity cooks to create recipes using their products to boost sales. Jello pushed putting meats and vegetables into their sweetened gelatin. Campbell's created the Green Bean Casserole, based on canned cream of mushroom soup. A marshmallow company created the marshmallow-topped Sweet Potato Casserole. And Heinz produced Beans on Toast.
A century later, it's considered 'traditional', but understand the Brits fell for the advertising, too. You still have Beans on Toast, but I understand multilayered gelatin salads made it to your shores as well.
All that being said, this American (who used to go out every summer Sunday dawn to fish the Chesapeake to bring home and eat for brunch) has never had such fine fish as I ate in England. Had Fish and Chips from a corner chip shop and at a mid-level local inland restaurant, and can truthfully say I'd never before or since eaten a fresher-tasting serving of fish!
German American, first full inventories of beans purchased by Fortnums, an English company, marketed to the English.
This is like when Hawaiian pizza is associated to USA, it’s actually invented by their neighbour up north: *Canada*
Taiwan claims it as well
Of course it would be sweeter there. Sugar addicts. High fructose corn syrup runs in their veins
It may have been marketed by an American company, but it was the British who actually started eating it
It was London that started Heinz. Fortnums. Look it up.
@BeeRich33 heinz was started In Pittsburgh u.s. by Henry j heinz
U.S. Americans don’t really consider Heinz a U.S. company
It's like Brits not realizing they coined the word soccer, how ironic
yes, Heinz made it but it got no traction in the US. but i still think Beans on toast is a good idea.
I was going to say this doesn't apply to me since I'm Canadian, but Canada was under rule of British Monarchy until 1982...
As another Canadian, I'll say this: Heinz started by selling their entire production to Fortnum & Mason, in Piccadilly, London. 155 years ago. That started the beans craze. In 1951, Fortnums was sold to the Westons, Wittington Investments. That's Canadian.
the main difference is that it was a poverty food for those recovering from ww1, not a present day meal.
saying it was made 100 years ago shortly after ww1 does NOT make your case look any better
Make ghormezabzi ( an iranian food )
We call this perfect dish قرمه سبزی
And ghormezabzi servers with rice not hard rice or soft an perfect medium and add some oil to your water so rices dont stick together like they're covered with glue
There's 2 other dishes called feshenjon ( فسنجون ) and gheime (قیمه ) that rivals ghormezabzi
_I have_ NEVER _heard of beans on toast as an American citizen._
That’s how miserable Britain is they love the dish that was invented in Great Depression time US.
Bro thinks the great depression was a mental health crisis
Sounds like that those across the pond got scammed into believing beans on toast is a good breakfast.
It is. It's a filling meal with decent protein and Fibre content. Better than half the crap the average American eats for breakfast.
I know you go for rage content, but there is not one American that would claim or defend beans on toast.
That short convocation between the two cops is the most sane thing in this entire saga
Saying beans on toast is American is like saying Chicago style pizza is Italian. It was at one point, yeah, but it’s been made into it’s own thing
Unlike Chicago style pizza, beans on toast stayed the same with only minor changes
@@techtheuwumaster9177 fair
Pizza is Italian.
Idc how you style it, it's still pizza.
Heinz ( an american company ) made beans on toast to actually promote their products
Heinz started with beans. Sold first in London 155 years ago.
I already knew this from watching peppe pig. Pedro pony has a cowboy themed sleepover and they eat beans on toast.
But just like a royal family, you kept it way longer than you should have.
I actually really like beans on toast, but usually with my own beans not canned ones
Sure...If I ever say that beans on toast are American in the UK I'll get linched