I had NEVER seen these things before MOVING to the UK from the USA!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2022
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Комментарии • 521

  • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
    @GirlGoneLondonofficial  Год назад +6

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  • @michaelwhitcombe7749
    @michaelwhitcombe7749 Год назад +159

    When you move house the first things to be unpacked are the kettle, tea bags and mugs then loo rolls. In other words the essentials.

    • @PedroConejo1939
      @PedroConejo1939 Год назад +11

      Immediately followed by identifying the nearest chippy.

    • @Zooumberg
      @Zooumberg Год назад +6

      @@PedroConejo1939 and the local.

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 Год назад +5

      And Biscuits

    • @Lost_scotsman
      @Lost_scotsman Год назад +7

      Also those are last things to pack to make a movers a brew for half time :)

    • @bobmartin7399
      @bobmartin7399 Год назад +2

      Electric kettle is great for boiling eggs. Useful in hotels.

  • @neilmorrison7356
    @neilmorrison7356 Год назад +46

    The UK 🇬🇧 plug has SO many safety features!

  • @john_smith1471
    @john_smith1471 Год назад +49

    Keep in mind a heated towel rail has a dual purpose as a bathroom-radiator, no shivering when wet from the shower and keeps the bathroom warm, dry and comfortable.
    Stand-alone electric versions are available as well.

    • @stevieinselby
      @stevieinselby Год назад

      I've never quite got the point of a heated towel rail rather than just having a radiator to drape your towel over...
      (Except in my parents' house, which has ducted air instead of radiators, so they have electric heated towel rails, which I _can_ see the point of)

    • @john_smith1471
      @john_smith1471 Год назад +5

      @@stevieinselby Drying damp items directly on top of a standard radiator causes condensation and mould in the property, a towel radiator is used all year round even when turned off as somewhere to neatly hang vertically several towels, bath mats and face cloths, the steel used retains heat longer even after the heating goes off.

    • @Brian3989
      @Brian3989 Год назад

      Your radiators and towel rails should never be so hot that you can burn yourself.

    • @amyw6808
      @amyw6808 Год назад +2

      @@stevieinselbywe can easily fit the towels for a family of 4 on our towel rail. Couldn’t do that on a radiator.

  • @trevorveail
    @trevorveail Год назад +11

    When I first went to Austria in the late 1960's i came across the Duvet. As soon as you could buy one in the UK i got a couple.

  • @thehonestcritic6577
    @thehonestcritic6577 Год назад +22

    Regarding the electric plug , you can also point out that with US sockets a child could easily poke something into the live socket where as in the UK sockets are blocked until the larger prong is inserted thus preventing accidental electric shock . Im aware that US voltage is only 110v were the UK is 240v but i still would'nt poke anything metal into it .

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 Год назад +8

      Also in the UK, most of our electric sockets have an individual 'ON/OFF' switch, so you don't have to unplug anything (just turn off the power when not using a hair dryer, iron or similar appliance).

    • @davidfaraday7963
      @davidfaraday7963 Год назад

      There is a three-pin version of the US plug used for appliances that need an earth (ground) connection. There is also an entirely different design of 3-pin plug used for high-power devices that bridge across both phases of the street supply to provide 220V for these appliances.

    • @davenwin1973
      @davenwin1973 Год назад

      @@davidfaraday7963 regarding the 2 phase 240V appliances, new construction and hones being rewired that use electric stoves and clothes dryers, now require a 4 prong outlets for those appliances. The updated electrical codes at the federal level wanted those appliances to have a neutral, instead of routing the return power to the ground, like typical 240V appliance. Older homes before 1996 (definitely before 2000) will still have 3 prong outlets for those appliances.

    • @davidfaraday7963
      @davidfaraday7963 Год назад +1

      @@davenwin1973 When you say "routing the return power to the ground, like typical 240V appliances" are you talking about Europe or the US? In the UK domestic supply cables have two conductors from the street transformer: a live conductor at 240V from ground and a combined ground and neutral conductor which is connected to ground at the transformer, but in the US and other countries that follow US practice the street transformer secondary is 240V with the centre-tap grounded. Thus either end of the transformer is 120V from ground but an appliance connected across both live conductors will receive 240V. If power is returned to ground, or to neutral, the supply is only 120V.

  • @paul404
    @paul404 Год назад +39

    The no spray on deodorant has surprised me. I would have assumed that was universal around the world.

    • @Julia-uh4li
      @Julia-uh4li Год назад +8

      It is. I lived in Florida briefly, Ohio, Oregon, Akaska, California and Washington state where I'm from. My husband uses spray deodorant and it always was and still is widely available everywhere we lived in the states. I'm incredibly surprised she hadn't heard of this.

    • @fasteddie406
      @fasteddie406 Год назад +1

      I think roll ons are better used more in climates that your gonna sweat a lot in, yep Florida etc.

    • @geosword6
      @geosword6 Год назад

      Don't roll-ons capture pit hair and look like a weird pube collection?

    • @fionagregory9376
      @fionagregory9376 Год назад +2

      I use spray deodorant and so does my son.

    • @fionagregory9376
      @fionagregory9376 Год назад +2

      I am English living in England.

  • @judileeming1589
    @judileeming1589 Год назад +19

    When visiting the UK (my husband’s family) of course we had Yorkshire Pudding and my sister-in-law gave me her recipe (which I lost in my recent move). I was introduced to the “Toasty Bag” which basically is a bag made from a synthetic baking sheet type material that you put your cheese sandwich into and pop the bag into the toaster and you have a toasted sandwich that doesn’t leak melted cheese (or crumbs) into your toaster. You just toast, slip out of the bag onto a plate and wash out the bag and re-use again and again.
    Electric kettles are used by Australians as well and we have a smaller version of the three pin power plug.
    Roundabouts are very common in Australia and our new home is close to an uncontrolled (no traffic lights) roundabout complex consisting of three inter-connected roundabouts that are fed by five very heavily used roads and called “Five Ways” by the locals. What should be a bottle neck is actually very easy to navigate because you just give way to the traffic on your right and enter when the traffic in your right is giving way to the traffic on their right … and so on.
    However, the “Giros” in the UK were terrifying to us because even though they were nearly always controlled by lights, they were feeders on and off for multiple freeways (indicated by Route numbers painted on the surface of the road) and if we found ourselves in the wrong lane, we would have to keep going round and round changing lanes looking for the appropriate Motorway number on the road surface to enter the new road. We nearly caused an accident on an uncontrolled Giro in London changing lanes. They sure do drive fast in those little cars in the UK.

    • @fastyaveit
      @fastyaveit 9 месяцев назад

      Google the BBC recipe to make Yorkshire puds, It is a simple recipe, but it is hard to perfect, the trick is the temperature of the cooking oil and the oven, it needs to be hot

  • @joemorris5288
    @joemorris5288 Год назад +3

    When you move house in the UK last thing on the van is the kettle, first thing off the van is the kettle.

    • @richard6440
      @richard6440 Год назад

      Dont put the kettle on the van. You'll get to your new house first, so take the kettle in the car with you , so you can have a nice cup of tea waiting for the removal men :)

  • @l3v1ckUK
    @l3v1ckUK Год назад +51

    Most people (even in the UK) think Yorkshire puddings are served with the main course, but traditionally they're served as a starter with gravy. The idea is that they come out of the oven at the same time at the roast meat, then you eat them while the meat is resting.

    • @crimsonwizard2560
      @crimsonwizard2560 Год назад +1

      Most people in Scotland can't stand Yorkshire puddings.

    • @l3v1ckUK
      @l3v1ckUK Год назад +3

      @@crimsonwizard2560
      If the ones in restaurants are anything like the ones on the oil rigs, it's because they're over done and bone dry.

    • @amitbasu8159
      @amitbasu8159 Год назад +15

      They were traditionally served as starters in poor farming communities in Yorkshire, the idea being that the stodgy pudding would help fill up the family before the meat course, meaning that the expensive Sunday joint would last longer.

    • @crimsonwizard2560
      @crimsonwizard2560 Год назад +3

      @@l3v1ckUK What? We don't do a sunday roast. And, Yorkshire puddings are shite

    • @Paul-hl8yg
      @Paul-hl8yg Год назад +20

      @@crimsonwizard2560 Your opinion only!

  • @marcuswayman1628
    @marcuswayman1628 Год назад +15

    Yorkshire pudding used to be flat in the bottom of a big tray as it was designed to soak up the weekly meat joint dripping underneath the spit. The idea was that you had it to begin with to satisfy immediate hunger so you eat less meat - the joint of meat would then last several meals across the whole week. Round/circular yorkshires were a modern take on it as lighter and less stogie - but you haven’t had a proper yorkshire until you have the flat one - soooo full of meat flavours 🤪

    • @enkisdaughter4795
      @enkisdaughter4795 Год назад

      I remember reading the Jsmes Herriot books where this was said by a farmer’s wife to her children “Thems as eats the most pudding gets the most meat.” They were given a piece of pudding with gravy on (which is lovely by the way) so by the time they ate their meal, they were full.

    • @deborahwhitney9427
      @deborahwhitney9427 Год назад

      My mums friend is from Yorkshire and she still does her Yorkshire puddings the original way.

    • @marcuswayman1628
      @marcuswayman1628 Год назад

      @@deborahwhitney9427 Fabbi, when am I getting an invite! - Yummeee

    • @elwolf8536
      @elwolf8536 7 месяцев назад

      🤤🤤🤤

    • @fenradast3577
      @fenradast3577 Месяц назад

      If left to go cold then spread some jam on it.

  • @richardhargrave6082
    @richardhargrave6082 Год назад +4

    Kettle, tea pot, tea and mugs are always the first thing when moving house.
    I was supplied by the heated towel rail, they can be heated electrically independent to the central heating and with the CH.
    It means dry towels, easy!

  • @paulcrowley8587
    @paulcrowley8587 Год назад +5

    I had my honeymoon is Orlando. Totally shocked that the hotel room did not have a kettle. What? Even the cheapest motel in Europe has a kettle, tea coffee sugar etc.

    • @hazy33
      @hazy33 Год назад

      It's because their electric system is 120 volts and not the 240 volts we have in the uk

    • @paulcrowley8587
      @paulcrowley8587 Год назад

      @@hazy33 USA electricity just cannot boil water for making tea

    • @jennyk488
      @jennyk488 Год назад

      Even the cheapest motel in the UK has an electric kettle --- not true of Continental Europe.

  • @Psmith-ek5hq
    @Psmith-ek5hq Год назад +19

    I went to a chemist shop once and asked for some deodorant. The woman asked, "Do you mean the ball type?". "No," I said, "it's for under my arms".

    • @AnyoneForToast
      @AnyoneForToast Год назад +9

      Not the nine o'clock news, "Swedish chemist shop" joke? Mel and Griff. It's a classic you can still find here on RUclips. 😁👍

    • @Psmith-ek5hq
      @Psmith-ek5hq Год назад +2

      @@AnyoneForToast I think it was, yes. I'd forgotten all about it until Kaylin mentioned deodorants, then I got a flashback.

    • @AnyoneForToast
      @AnyoneForToast Год назад +3

      @@Psmith-ek5hq 👍 It's worth a quick search, for old time's sake 😁👍

    • @TukikoTroy
      @TukikoTroy Год назад +3

      Ba dum TSH!

    • @snafufubar
      @snafufubar Год назад +2

      Boom boom. The old ones are the best.

  • @archiebald4717
    @archiebald4717 Год назад +5

    As a boy, I used to deliver newspapers to make some pocket money. I have no idea how it would have worked without letterboxes.

    • @anthonyscott4270
      @anthonyscott4270 Год назад

      I too was a paper boy, it was in 1968 to 70. earned 25 Bob a week, £1-25 but I got about £2 in tips. I hated Thursdays because not only the evening paper but there were also the radio and TV times. The bag felt like I was carrying half a ton.

  • @philiprice7875
    @philiprice7875 11 месяцев назад +1

    the reason UK plugs stay in socket is simple. the cord hangs down, so if you catch the cord the force cant pull plug out, the USA plugs the cord comes out of the back meaning any tug and it will pull plug from socket

  • @haeleth7218
    @haeleth7218 Год назад +6

    Welcome to the UK. It made me laugh when you said if you have a fire you make a cup of tea and everything is fine again 😂

  • @simondanson2560
    @simondanson2560 Год назад +3

    When we went to South France there were 'squat' toilets. Didnt know how to use them so didnt in case made a mistake. It looked very old!

  • @Dean-gq5pe
    @Dean-gq5pe Год назад +1

    Great video, when I visited the Florida water beds seemed to be very popular. I had heard of them but never seen one. Hours of fun. Hope your family are ok over there, with the storm.

  • @john_smith1471
    @john_smith1471 Год назад +3

    My relatives in Toronto Canada house built 1926, always had an electric kettle, also a traditional letter box in the front door and proper cast iron radiators.

  • @choccyfan
    @choccyfan Год назад +3

    We have a heated towel rail / rack, and the way our plumbing is set up, it is heated by either the heating part of the system or the hot water part. This means that even with the heating being off in summer, any towels still get warm when the hot water part of the system is running.

  • @applecider7307
    @applecider7307 Год назад +4

    Idiscovered eletric egg boilers in Germany, bought one here on Amazon they are brilliant and fast.

  • @mwsjohn
    @mwsjohn Год назад +4

    When I visited China, there was only one tap in the bathroom wash basin and I could not see how to get water out of it as turning the tap head did nothing. It turned out you have to pull up the tap head before it worked lol.

  • @mikeh020011
    @mikeh020011 Год назад +4

    I worked for a telecoms company and I worked in some very remote locations with no facilities. I all ways had an electric travel kettle with me .As a backup I also had a gas camping stove with me.

  • @johngardiner6800
    @johngardiner6800 Год назад +2

    As a plumber l can tell you that you can get them with an electrical element for summer use or you can plumb it to work from the boiler simply by connecting it to the hot water primaries in the case of a cylinder system or by a separate zone valve in the case of a combination boiler.

  • @trevorhart545
    @trevorhart545 Год назад +2

    Electric Kettle, as a Brit I am not surprised. Many people say the same. I had a friend who went to a Swiss Finishing School where they had NO kettles. When she came to the UK she made Tea/Coffee using the Hot Water Tap! We have an electric travel kettle for Europe since they have a similar issue. Yorkshire pudding, biased as I am from Yorkshire, it can also be a pudding with Jam inside it or as a starter so can be part of all 3 courses of Sunday Roast, also a UK "thing".

  • @wessexexplorer
    @wessexexplorer Год назад +11

    Spray deodorant is the most surprising item in your list. Maybe the Freddo one was the one I didn’t know of in Britain😄 I used to have these blocks of toffee that used to be 10p

    • @firsteerr
      @firsteerr Год назад

      vlue bird toffee , my pal used to work at their west london factory and there was a bloke who lost a leg from molten toffee

  • @Lily-Bravo
    @Lily-Bravo Год назад +4

    That roundabout was just about the scariest one to exist in the UK. It's the "Magic Roundabout" in Swindon. I live fairly close and have managed to avoid it for 35 years, but hit it by accident recently. There wasn't time to study it from above or to look at the signs so I went round the edge one exit at a time. I stopped at a supermarket on one exit and got chatting to a man in the queue who let me in in front of him as I only had one item. I said I had popped in for an energy boost so I could tackle the roundabout. He said he had seen people quivering with fear do the same!

    • @frankhooper7871
      @frankhooper7871 5 месяцев назад

      There's also a "magic roundabout" in Hemel Hempstead 😊

    • @danensis
      @danensis 4 месяца назад

      @@frankhooper7871- which has one more road (and roundabout) than the swindon one.

  • @Jah_Rastafari_ORIG
    @Jah_Rastafari_ORIG Год назад +4

    Spray deodorant used to be about 75% of the market (roll-on the other 25%). I never saw a stick deodorant much prior to the late '70s or early '80s. I think the rise of sticks had more to do with the phase out of aerosols in general because of the hole in the ozone.

  • @davidmitchell1391
    @davidmitchell1391 Год назад +1

    The last time I saw a non-electric kettle, must have been about forty years ago. They were usually made from thin aluminium, with a whistling spout that told you when the water was boiling. They were heated by placing them on either a gas or electric hob.

  • @richt71
    @richt71 Год назад +2

    This year on my travels I discovered outdoor electric pizza ovens in Denmark and self train ticket stamping machines on railway platforms in Italy!

    • @COMEINTOMYWORLD
      @COMEINTOMYWORLD Год назад +1

      Similarly, when I have travelled on mainland Europe I was perplexed by the need to validate your train or tram ticket. Something you don't do in the UK. Having gone through a ticket barrier and THEN have to use a stamp device on your ticket seems odd.

  • @wessexexplorer
    @wessexexplorer Год назад +3

    When I went to America the most unusual thing I heard then saw was the cicada. The noise is incredible but I couldn’t see one until it landed on a file I was carrying - a huge green bug with large eyes and wings.

  • @DirefulT453
    @DirefulT453 Год назад +2

    The list you went through, all can be found in Australia and New Zealand ,even the 3-pin plug (although not quite so heavy duty). Just shows how much the antipodes shares in common with the UK

    • @alwaysfair4991
      @alwaysfair4991 7 месяцев назад

      So many moved there after the second world war, "£10 poms".

    • @alwaysfair4991
      @alwaysfair4991 5 месяцев назад

      @@marydavis5234 For USA there are two associated plug types, types A and B. Plug type A is the plug which has two flat parallel pins and plug type B is the plug which has two flat parallel pins and a grounding pin. USA operates on a 120V supply voltage and 60Hz.

  • @helenamcginty4920
    @helenamcginty4920 Год назад +1

    I left the uk aged 62 and have never lived anywhere that had a heated towel rail. But had a hook over airer on the landing radiator.

  • @clivewilliams3661
    @clivewilliams3661 Год назад

    Heated towel rails operate at the temperature of the central heating i.e. max 65degC (150degF). The best towel rails come with an electric heating element for summertime use when the main heating is off and will have a thermostat and timer.
    Yorkshire Puddings can be served with the main meal e.g. roast beef and therefore gravy but it is also delicious with fruit or jam on top with whipped cream. (salivates!) Cooking good homemade Yorkshires is an art and should not be resigned to the realms of frozen ones from the supermarket

  • @bermudagirl50
    @bermudagirl50 Год назад +1

    I loved the way you called a kettle a contraption! 😂😂😂

  • @Steve14ps
    @Steve14ps 9 месяцев назад

    The top pin on a 3 pin (prong) electric socket is the Earth Pin, the bottom two are the Live (positive) and Neutral (return) pins. Every electrical item should be earthed as a safety feature, each plug also carries a fuse which will blow if overloaded

  • @julia2jules
    @julia2jules Год назад +3

    Try Yorkshire puddings with chocolate pudding or ice cream
    They make a delicious base for sweet treats too!

    • @paulmidsussex3409
      @paulmidsussex3409 Год назад

      Or with strawberry jam.

    • @nigem6611
      @nigem6611 Год назад +1

      An old Yorkshire way of eating Yorkshire puddings is with Raspberry Vinegar (Syrupy Type) gravy and all.
      Thought it was something unique to my Yorkshire mothers side of the family who ate them this way that was until I met
      a total stranger from Yorkshire who told me that in some parts of Yorkshire people ate them this way including herself.
      (Interesting note I remember in the sixties and seventies you could bye Raspberry Vinegar over the counter at a chemist
      as it was considered beneficial to aid recovery from colds and flu.) It's also very easy to make.

  • @darylnelson3026
    @darylnelson3026 7 месяцев назад +1

    The heating towel rack mostly came for the fact UK homes and Flats only had central heating at one time They only heated one room.

  • @edbad85
    @edbad85 Год назад +1

    We wouldn't save an electric kettle from a fire. Yes, they are the most essential item in our kitchens but they are, for that reason, very common and very cheap. Let it burn, you might trip over a new one as you wait for the fire fighters

  • @paulkirkland3263
    @paulkirkland3263 Год назад

    Good video. My sister lives in the USA ( near Pittsburgh ), and on one of my visits, she asked me to bring over a British 3-pin plug and a socket pate to show her friends.

  • @unitedkingdomoffiveeyes9765
    @unitedkingdomoffiveeyes9765 Год назад +1

    I have an American friend who I used to send cadburys chocolate aspecially cream eggs too and plastic tuperwhere boxes....they struggled to get them...

  • @theresaturner1547
    @theresaturner1547 6 месяцев назад

    We have a towel warmer but it's in a barrel type. I love it!!

  • @RonSeymour1
    @RonSeymour1 Год назад +3

    If you can burn your hand on a towell rail the the central heating is too high. Turn the heating down or turn the flow valve on the towell rail towards off if no thermostat is fitted. That will restrict the flow of water and cool it down. Under the cap on the valve is a small slotted valve head. Turn it clockwise, but not all the way.

    • @Julia-uh4li
      @Julia-uh4li Год назад

      Thank you for the instructions as I'm having one installed soon. This has been worrying me. I'd heard another American saying the same thing about getting burned. 😁

    • @RonSeymour1
      @RonSeymour1 Год назад

      @@Julia-uh4li As the radiator is part of the heating system if it is very hot so will all the other radiators in the house be. They should never be that hot and the boiler water temperature setting should be 55 degrees centigrade for heating and 48 degrees for hot water. As it hasn't been installed yet you could ask the installer to add a thermostat to the radiator so that you can adjust the temperature and even turn it off. (You don't need a towel rail to heat all day). They are inexpensive and easy to add.

    • @danensis
      @danensis 4 месяца назад

      @@RonSeymour1- water must be heated to at least 60°C to kill any legionella, and distributed at a minimum of 50°C.

  • @skipper409
    @skipper409 Год назад +2

    Electric kettles are difficult in the US as they demand a lot of electricity to boil one - not really supported by 110v systems

  • @user-hz9mk9um6k
    @user-hz9mk9um6k 7 месяцев назад

    Yorkshire puddings are also really nice on their own with jam as a dessert. I have raspberry jam.

  • @bushchat28d
    @bushchat28d 5 месяцев назад

    Cut your Yorkshire pud in half and lather on some butter and sugar on one half; set it to one side - that's your dessert. When you get back to eating it the butter sill have been absobed into the pud and its just YUMMY!

  • @arlmondgcalcutt6562
    @arlmondgcalcutt6562 8 месяцев назад

    Electric kettles rely on suffucient wattage over a small period of time to boil water effectively - we have 240v the US has 120v - which means they need to double the ampage for equivalent power - ampage is the 'volume' going down the wire - which means the US require twice as thick wire to achieve the same wattage which is impractical (not exactly true but you get the idea) watts=voltsxamps

  • @Nivshin53
    @Nivshin53 Год назад +1

    Not only plugs are different, totally different Electrical Supply systems as well - 110v in the US and 240v in the UK - thankfully many appliances such as hair dryers have a facility to change from one to the other!

    • @ib9rt
      @ib9rt Год назад +1

      *David Guthrie* 120 V in the USA, and also 240 V in most homes if you know where to find it (oven, drier, aircon).

    • @FoulmouthedBob
      @FoulmouthedBob 7 месяцев назад

      UK voltage was "harmonised" in 2003 at 230v although you're allowed to operate slightly above or below that voltage.

  • @maxmoore9955
    @maxmoore9955 Год назад

    I saw Bins in Spain 🇪🇸 that rise out of the Ground , ( obviously they look and Work like Bins we have in Britain above the Ground ) But to see 👀 the bins rise out out of the ground and realise what the capacity was .When the Bin lorry pulled up was astounding, Not only beach and Sun shine in Spain.

  • @589steven
    @589steven Год назад +1

    You do have three pronged plugs in the US, a lot of appliances have to have a ground such as a microwave, hairdryer, laptop, electric cookers, TV etc. Anything that could potentially give you an electric shock or catch fire. I know you have two prongs for mobile phone chargers and various lamps and other small gadgets though where there is very small risk that anything bad could happen.

    • @Julia-uh4li
      @Julia-uh4li Год назад +2

      Steven, yes! We in fact do have 3 pronged plugs in America. Usually for things like washing machines/dryers, even irons and my old laptop. I'm here in England now and can relate to these videos. Everything is SO different here!!

  • @rowdawg2943
    @rowdawg2943 Год назад

    The kettle thing is spot on

  • @philshorten3221
    @philshorten3221 Год назад +1

    Funny the things that don't seem to be exported!
    So now we need your list of everyday things missing here in the UK

  • @alanmills9492
    @alanmills9492 Год назад +3

    The electric kettle seems to be the best value for money item.
    For a few quid, you're now able to boil water in a few minutes each time, when you want to glug tea all day.

  • @ronakio
    @ronakio Год назад

    Really enjoying your videos.

  • @potownrob
    @potownrob Год назад +2

    Spray and roll-on deodorant do still exist here, at least in upstate NY. I don’t think they’re as common as they were back in the 80s and 90s, but they still exist.

  • @exeterjedi6730
    @exeterjedi6730 3 месяца назад

    Another thing with an electric kettle is you get them in hotel rooms, so I could make tea and coffee in my room this weekend.

  • @silvertail7131
    @silvertail7131 Год назад +1

    The kettle surprised me. It's so, basic here. You get them in even cheap hotel rooms, for, hot drinks of any form you care to mention. It's such a fast and convenient way to boil water, I'm, surprised they're not more universal

  • @CazTanto
    @CazTanto Год назад +12

    When I go abroad I have an electric travel kettle I pack. Inside it I store enough tea bags for two cups a day (morning and evening). I don't know if it's just easy to tell the difference or if so many Brits do this that they are used to it, but I've never had my bag checked because of this 😂
    Also, if you want a food that even much of the UK hasn't heard of, you gotta try a Kentish Gypsy Tart 😋

    • @titchs9098
      @titchs9098 Год назад

      I do this too! Travel kettle and teabags are essential.

    • @fatblokeonamotorbike1600
      @fatblokeonamotorbike1600 Год назад

      Or you could go to Skipton and have Curd Tart - beautiful. In fact Skipton has so many cake shops and they all sell the most delicious pastries and fancies.

  • @jackybraun2705
    @jackybraun2705 Год назад +1

    Where to start? On holiday in France in 1964 (my first time abroad) we were impressed by the huge meaty tomatoes. My Mum saved some seeds to grow our own back home in the UK. Then in 1969 I went to France on an exchange and was given a "Petit Suisse" as a snack (with loads of sugar to stir in it). We didn't even know about yoghurt back then so this was an amazing new taste. I moved to Germany in 1973 - I could write a book about the items that were new to me then.

    • @jubeaumont6305
      @jubeaumont6305 Год назад

      you mean we didn't have yogurt here in the 70s? wow that's mad. makes me want one now!

    • @jackybraun2705
      @jackybraun2705 Год назад

      @@jubeaumont6305 in the 70s we did - mainly Ski yoghut, black cherry flavour. But in the 60s it was unknown, as were any sour milk products. I first came to Germany in the early 70s and was baffled by at least 6 different dairy products (e.g. quark, buttermilk, yoghurt in many different forms)

    • @albrussell7184
      @albrussell7184 Год назад

      @@jubeaumont6305 we had yoghurt in the mid 1960s in UK - plain, strawberry and raspberry but I always added sugar to the plain yoghurt.

    • @AnneDowson-vp8lg
      @AnneDowson-vp8lg 8 месяцев назад

      I remember when yoghurt was a strange, exotic thing, but I can't remember whether it was in the 60s or 70s. Must be getting old!

  • @seijika46
    @seijika46 4 месяца назад

    I like Cadburys Twirl - the texture of a Flake contained in a chocolate shell for less messy eating. Also notable with the kettle that it is odd to have a hotel room in the UK that does not have one.

  • @user-oo8xp2rf1k
    @user-oo8xp2rf1k Год назад +1

    I couldn't believe my American friend had no kettle. I was thinking "if you don't have a kettle, what do you use for a kettle?". Blew my mind .
    The only reason the British army spent half defence budget in the challenger tank was so the troops could have a robust all terrain vehicle, fitted with a kettle.

  • @allenwilliams1306
    @allenwilliams1306 Год назад +1

    Wales: edible seaweed (laverbread). It's lovely!

  • @grabtharshammer
    @grabtharshammer Год назад +1

    Yes, I've never seen a Freddo (and I am English) because I rarely visit the sweet counter in the shop, not only that but since being taken over by Cadbury (they were originally made by an Australian Company and mostly only sold over there), it seems they have been on and off sale in the UK for a while. Currently back on the shelves. - One thing I had never seen before staying in a Hotel in Dallas is Grits. Weird stuff. Porridge made from Corn not Oats and actually served on your breakfast plate along with the bacon and eggs. In the UK we eat our Porridge (Oatmeal) in a separate bowl before, after, or just on its own for breakfast :)

    • @annbeth6730
      @annbeth6730 Год назад +1

      Grits are called polenta in the UK. Sold in Holland and Barretts

    • @grabtharshammer
      @grabtharshammer Год назад

      @@annbeth6730 Does it taste as bad? ;)

    • @kooltom4
      @kooltom4 Год назад +1

      Yes they used to be made by MacRobertson's here in Aus, bought out by Cadbury. Not a milk choc fan myself; I loved the old MacRobertson's Cherry Ripes from my childhood, I'm sure they taste different since Cadbury took over. Probably just me idealising the past 🙂

  • @chockmcq6434
    @chockmcq6434 Год назад

    Hi a three prong plug has an additional wire than the American one called an earth wire this protects from surges so all your other tech isn’t affected

  • @terencecarroll1812
    @terencecarroll1812 Год назад

    The plugs are three pronged because the third prong is an earth wire which grounds the current so is a safety measure

  • @sparkyprojects
    @sparkyprojects 2 месяца назад

    If you want an extra experience with Yorkshire puds, try eating them with a bit of strawberry jam
    I used to have yorkshires with dinner, then eat the leftovers with jam
    Another way to enjoy them is to get the large ones (aunt bessies) and fill them with something like a stew, mince, chilie con carne etc.
    Not forgetting that toad in the hole is sausages in yorkshire pudding

  • @peterward1698
    @peterward1698 Год назад

    U.S. definitely has 3 pronged plugs and all sockets are 3 pronged. Anything with a metal case e.g toaster, microwave, fridge etc will have a 3 pin plug. We live in Canada and electrical is the same as U.S. We also have a heated towel bar but it's electric rather than hot water as we have forced air heating. Can be put on a timer so warm at shower time. Spray deodorant/antiperspirant and electric kettles are available in U.S

  • @paulknight5018
    @paulknight5018 Год назад

    The no kettle thing in the US is mainly to do with power draw, the UK has a typical maximum household output to a plug of 220- 240 volts, 13 amps is 2860 - 3000 watts whereas the US has typical 100-120 volts 15-20 amps 1500-2400 watts but most US systems circuits breakers trip below 2000 watts. This means that any electrical device (not directly on the circuit) will have a much lower power than its UK (or European) equivalent. So if a kettle boils in 6 mins (a long time for a kettle) it will take 9 mins in the US. I think this is the reason it has not caught on so much, plus we like our Tea more and you need to have boiling water for Hot Tea and it needs to be slightly under boiling for coffee.

  • @megangreene3955
    @megangreene3955 9 месяцев назад

    That is a genius invention. I want one. I would love to have a heated towel rail in my bathroom so that the towels dry faster.

  • @davidwood5884
    @davidwood5884 Год назад

    haha the roundabout you chose to show is in my home town

  • @Boogledigs
    @Boogledigs Год назад

    Our power plugs are different because our homes operate on a much higher rate wattage. The top pin is the earth pin. If something goes wrong in the plug the current will go to earth and not through you.

  • @steved7961
    @steved7961 Год назад

    You can eat Yorkshire puddings as afters, put some jam on - delicious.

  • @ninettekelly8315
    @ninettekelly8315 8 месяцев назад

    First thing to unpack is the kettle and the tea bags then rush to the shop for milk! 😂❤

  • @potownrob
    @potownrob Год назад +6

    One notable thing I didn’t see in the US but saw everywhere in Spain was a bidet. Not going to get into how great they are, but I don’t get why they never caught on in the states. Also, not a thing per se, but very old people walking all over the streets was a new thing for me. 😂

    • @berty1422
      @berty1422 Год назад +1

      Yup, you see all the multi million dollar mansions and they got nothing that is luxurious.
      No Bidet.
      The showers have No Body jets, they only have rain heads...

    • @potownrob
      @potownrob Год назад +2

      @@berty1422 the uncultured nouveau riche…if only they had studied European lavatorial history and architecture…

  • @punjabimundaUK
    @punjabimundaUK Год назад

    In the US the electric is only 110v, an electric kettle would struggle with such low voltage. UK plugs also have a fuse for safety which is absent in the US

  • @whawkins88
    @whawkins88 Год назад +1

    Try eating Yorkshire pudding with strawberry jam on it. It's to die for!!

  • @bobbuethe1477
    @bobbuethe1477 Год назад +8

    In the US, we bake Yorkshire pudding in muffin tins and call them "popovers." Great for breakfast with butter and jam or honey.

    • @tallmale188
      @tallmale188 Год назад +1

      That sounds disgusting!

    • @trevorhart545
      @trevorhart545 Год назад +1

      That is the pudding after the Sunday Roast despite what Paul Houston, Texas? Lost in Space thinks!

    • @mrsjudetheobscure
      @mrsjudetheobscure Год назад

      @@tallmale188 I'm a Brit and our granny (Scottish) would make extra Yorkshire puds on a Sunday which we'd have as a treat with with a spoon full of custard and jam when we came in from school on a Monday.
      Mind you she was a wee bit...'individual' shall we say 😉

    • @jonathanfinan722
      @jonathanfinan722 Год назад

      @@tallmale188 it does too. 55 years I’ve lived in West and North Yorkshire and I’ve only seen perverts talk about sweet stuff on Yorkshire on the internet. I mean, would you put gravy on a treacle sponge? Of course not.

    • @CMOT101
      @CMOT101 7 месяцев назад

      And you are wrong

  • @coopz1969
    @coopz1969 Год назад

    Yorkie pud with jam Mmmm but they're made with pancake mix as for kettles an electric kettle is far safer to use

  • @frankhooper7871
    @frankhooper7871 5 месяцев назад

    There is an American near-equivalent to a Yorkshire pudding: popovers - my step-mother (from Pennsylvania) used to make them.

  • @mcdo8975
    @mcdo8975 Год назад

    8:20 boiling water in electric kettle would take twice as long as US household outlets use 110V VS 230V in the UK

  • @grahamstubbs4962
    @grahamstubbs4962 Год назад +6

    No, no, no.
    It's not the family and the kettle.
    It's the kettle and then (possibly) the family.

  • @mothmagic1
    @mothmagic1 Год назад

    You had to show the Magic Roundabout in Swindon. Not all roundabouts are that complex but even that one is simple if you use the normal practice

    • @matthewgubbins8515
      @matthewgubbins8515 5 месяцев назад

      Swindon boo😊

    • @danensis
      @danensis 4 месяца назад

      @@matthewgubbins8515- yeah Swindon not a patch on Hemel Hempstead

  • @jonathanbignall1198
    @jonathanbignall1198 Год назад +3

    The electric kettle one reminds me of a friend from Germany who filled an electric kettle with water and put it on the gas stove, whoopsadaisy, that was a melty moment for sure; the house stank of melted plastic for hours! 😂

    • @jubeaumont6305
      @jubeaumont6305 Год назад

      more common story than you'd think

    • @jonathanbignall1198
      @jonathanbignall1198 Год назад

      @@jubeaumont6305 I suppose if someone has never encountered an electric kettle before it's not so surprising, especially in other cultures where tea drinking isn't common etc, but the idea of putting a lightweight plastic thing on a gas hob just seems absent minded even by my standards! 😂

    • @b_bobsch6785
      @b_bobsch6785 Год назад +1

      @@jonathanbignall1198 Strange. Everyone I know in Germany has one. I use it more for instant coffee in the morning, sometimes tea.

  • @davehadley3567
    @davehadley3567 3 месяца назад

    lol the kettle is so important a version known as a boiling vessel is even built into our main battle tanks and many other armoured vehicles. If you don’t believe me check it out there is probably a video on here depicting them.

  • @eggy1962
    @eggy1962 Год назад

    Flakes also good crumbled on top of a nice trifle

  • @ianz9916
    @ianz9916 Год назад

    Electric kettles take too long to boil in the U.S. because the electricity is only 110-120v over there compared to 230-240v over here.

  • @Denathorn
    @Denathorn Год назад

    You cannot beat a yorkshire pudding, and they are the most versatile things, you can have them as a side on a roast dinner, which is generally what they are used for, but you can get giant ones and fill them up with cottage/shephards pie, cook them with sausages (Toad in the hole), you can eat them plain, with sugar or even sprinkled with lemon juice as a quick snack!
    Manna from heaven is a Yorkshire Pudding! ;)

    • @ib9rt
      @ib9rt Год назад +1

      *Michael Denathorn* On the contrary, you probably must beat a Yorkshire pudding, or the batter will be lumpy 🙂

    • @simongleaden2864
      @simongleaden2864 Год назад

      When I was a boy we sometimes had Yorkshire puddings as a hot dessert with golden syrup. Lovely!

  • @barryedwards1336
    @barryedwards1336 3 месяца назад

    Our electric plug is only dangerous if you remove it from the wall socket, and leave it lying about on the floor and you step on it, but we tend to leave them in the wall socket all the time, because the vast majority of wall sockets also have a on/off switch built in, for each plug to isolate power to it, if you need more sockets then you can get an adaptor plug that will alow you to plug in up to three extra plugs and still have the use of the wall switch, or you can get an extension lead some of which you can plug in more than one plug again these can be also switched for each extra plug, so there is no reason to have loose plugs lying about on the floor removing their only danger.

  • @snafufubar
    @snafufubar Год назад

    US 110 volts, UK 240 so using a kettle is faster than microwave for water.

  • @davidfaraday7963
    @davidfaraday7963 Год назад +1

    Until travelling to France in 1960 I had never seen or heard of a Citroen 2CV, but in France they were everywhere. My brother and I played the game of "count the 2CVs" to pass the time while travelling.

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur Год назад

      When I was a student in France they called then a deuch. 2cv stands for deluxe chevaux, because the engine was two horsepower. They always remind me of a gardeners hut, as they look like corrugated iron with a couple of deckchairs inside.

    • @davidfaraday7963
      @davidfaraday7963 Год назад

      @@Joanna-il2ur Surely 2cv simply means "two horsepower" (deux chevaux)? There was absolutely nothing "deluxe" about them, about as basic as a car could get. But in the 1960s they were easily the most common car on French roads

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur Год назад

      I said nothing about deluxe. The word I used, deuche is, as you say, just a contraction of deux chevaux. Blame autocorrect.

    • @davidfaraday7963
      @davidfaraday7963 Год назад

      @@Joanna-il2ur I don't use autocorrect, so tend assume that the words on screen are what the author meant.

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur Год назад

      @@davidfaraday7963 I don’t like autocorrect but I don’t know if we can turn it off. I didn’t spot it, sorry.

  • @12bigredd
    @12bigredd Год назад

    lol yorkshire puddings lol a very english treat... a lot of hot air lol

  • @markellison1707
    @markellison1707 Год назад +2

    There's heated towel racks here in the USA. Mail slots were very common in the 50's and 60's. What part of the USA did you grow up in, the Appalachian Trail?

    • @Julia-uh4li
      @Julia-uh4li Год назад +3

      I know!! I get that she only knows Florida but sheesh, she always talks about things we don't have in the US that we've always had. I'm SO much older than she is so I can understand, for the most part

    • @davenwin1973
      @davenwin1973 Год назад

      She says she's from Florida. She must have grown up in a mostly post WW2 Florida, regarding mailslots. I'm in Gary Indiana, and those were mostly found on homes before 1950 here. Overtime, people sealed their ls off, because some kids would decide to pull pranks, and either slip small critters through them, to being cruel, and stick fireworks through them, and burn people's homes down. So in older neighborhoods, people switched to having their mailbox outside, either hanging on their house, or get the standard street mailbox, and mount it on a pole, near their front door.

  • @jacqpaschoud
    @jacqpaschoud 7 месяцев назад

    When you showed a picture of Yorkshire Pudding it was a picture of American Popovers in a popover pan! I was never any good at makeing Yorkshire puddings till I saw Chef John on RUclips making Popovers and putting them in a cold oven to cook. I couldn't afford a popover pan so bought a jumbo muffin pan and hey presto Popovers which are no different to Yorkshire Puddings! So you weren't wrong with that photo!

  • @JamesTaylor-yh9rl
    @JamesTaylor-yh9rl Год назад

    sprayderodentent also works as a flamethower like hairspray

  • @HubbaHubba64
    @HubbaHubba64 Год назад +1

    Freddo's are actually Australian and still produced in Australia

  • @paulhadfield7909
    @paulhadfield7909 7 месяцев назад

    our bathroom radiatoris on allthe time in witner, even if heatingis off

  • @terencecarroll1812
    @terencecarroll1812 Год назад +4

    I've tried lynx stick deodorant but found it became 'stodgy' for want of a better word, and ended up leaving a white stain on my clothing. I didn't enjoy how it felt so went back to spray

  • @johnbunyan5834
    @johnbunyan5834 Год назад

    I have never heard of a Freddo; but I've only lived in England for 84 years. I also cancelled my TV licence from August 2019, so don't see TV ads.

  • @jonathanfinan722
    @jonathanfinan722 Год назад +1

    As far foreign stuff I’d never seen before, I first went to Portugal about thirty years ago and at a country fair kind of thing they had a kind of beer tent. There were bowls of salted flat, yellowish beans everywhere as a bar snack to make you drink more. You take the skin off and eat the middle. A bloke told us that the Portuguese name translates as “sex bean.” Just yesterday I saw a video about food in Madrid and there were the same beans were being sold in a tapas bar. The Spanish name apparently translates as “little vaginas.”