The Marvellous Shopping Experience Of Victorian England | Turn Back Time | Absolute History
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- A group of modern shopkeepers and their families are on the journey of a lifetime - they're taking over empty shops in a neglected market square in Shepton Mallet to see if they can turn back time for the British High Street. They'll live and trade through six key eras of history and in this episode they begin their journey in the 1870s, when the high street was born.
The shopkeepers make up the key trades; there's the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker and the grocer. Overseeing it all is an expert Chamber of Commerce, headed up by greengrocer and Masterchef judge Gregg Wallace.
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I feel so bad for the baker, she was so excited in the beginning 😭
She made out wonderfully.
The first few episodes of the series was to show how a lot of the potential of Women was ignored in Victorian, Great Britain.
👯♀️👯♂️👯. 🕴🏻🥐🥯🥨🇬🇧
Well she is quite successful outside of this if it helps.
Those old fashioned loaves of bread she was baking (10:28-10:42) looked so much better than the white commercial processed crap most people today buy
the way her husband was like "start working wench" and then proceeded to not heed her advice about measuring any of the ingredients resulting in bad bread that caused them financial losses that week...... sooo unnecessary lmao did not like that guy
They could create a “Victorian experience” in Shepton as a tourist attraction. They could open those shops exactly the way they did for the documentary. People could come to town and live their vacation the way people lived daily lives during Victorian times. I’m sure many would love the experience. And it would create many jobs and awake the town from its sleepiness.
That sounds like a good idea to me. I’m in, if it ever happens!
100% agree
we have this called Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts
@@neverstopz9045... We've been there a few times. It was a great experience every time!
I sure would go there
Customers at those Victorian shops are whining about how long the wait is for orders. They need to slow their lives right the hell down.
I know right? "We've been waiting for 5 min" and???? As if that's a long time to wait. Besides they can see everything's by hand, just wait the fuck off jesus.
You have to remember we are an instant gratification society, not one of those people has ever bought anything that wasn't in a Department store or Supermarket. The whole idea behind this is to make the regular people see what life was like a century and a half ago. And the shopkeepers got an eye opener as well.
@@Rorr59, I regularly wait that long in a grocery, it's not that unusual. Of course, I'm not gen X,Y, or Z.
@@bcaye I was thinking the same thing. Waiting is check out lines takes time
Back away from the ego.
"We're Victorian bakers. We don't have a conscience."
That got me in stitches. The mother must be horrified to sell the goods.
No that's s lie.
She does it everyday. But pretends for the camera.
All you need for bread is flour and water.
fats, sugar, and salt are for flavor.
yeast or soda is for airy bread.
I've made my own bread for years.
Also flour can be make from any grain, pea, or bean. Flour is just turning them into dust.
.
The ironsmith getting choked up by being so valued and proud of his work- loved that! Trades are so undervalued. After the recent winter storms in Texas, people have started to value the trades more (plumbers, utility workers). Same as how grocery workers were more valued after Covid.
After covid? It's not over.. we kept ig away where I live & work for 2 y.. im recovering from covid at this moment.. we have had the same number infected since the start, when omikron got here...
In china they have a huge surge in cases.. numbers not seen since the worst wave, when the epidemic started, almost 2.5 y ago.
Sorry, but it hasen't gone anywhere..
Is it bad that when the Grocer said that the food in Victorian times were purer I burst out laughing because I already knew the lengths they would got to stretch the product they had to the absolute limit by contaminating them. Even if it was at expense to the customer...
Sad that people know a lot of ingredients are carcinogens but still use them anyway even in modern times!
@@oooh19yes and so many food manufacturers are still adding poisonous additives or artificial colors to foods. Times haven't changed as much as we would hope.
Depended on the seller, there were the cheats. But plenty of Victorian food was actually purer. Way before certain ingredients.
Right the crap they used to make bread is crazy
It bugs me so much when the people complain about the general store wait times, "what you're telling me it takes time with no technology to give me my goods? Pfft nooo"
Even with Technology. In Eastern Europe, we still have corner bakeries, and sometimes it would get very busy. Like lines that go up to the end of the street. I guess some people still like fresh baked bread.
We all want it now. Thats our generations fault. We have no patience.
@@aurorajones8481 I have tons of patience, where I live Amazon doesn't even have same day shipping, so if I order something now I wont get it until tomorrow afternoon!
@@aurorajones8481 A very good statement! It also works with information, and we feed on it. Usually they don't care if it's right just as long as it's first and people straight believe it.
One of the problems today is that we eat a more varied diet. So these people are going in looking for a bunch of stuff where as back in the day most people would only buy a few things at a time. Also it was common for people to bring in a list and leave it with the shop keeper and come back later for there order.
The baker's manual said female baker's were rare not that they weren't allowed or didn't exist. What's the point of bringing in a baker and then not letting her do anything useful?
She could do the prep work and limited baking.
Exactly! The baker wife know what she is doing and seeing her husband fail
I thought the same but I assume it's because they're planning on bringing her into more and more involved roles as the episodes progress to reflect women's increasing rights through the decades
To prove a point rofl. You're skilled and capable, but it's a man world so you got to stand by and watch your husband fail because your role in society is elsewhere.
I worked in a bakery which had been founded in the 19th. century. It had been handed down through my uncle’s family. Not very much modern machinery had been introduced. There is a simple reason why it was though not to be a woman’s job. Before large electric mixers, hundreds of pounds of ingredients had to be mixed. One had to handle 100 lb. sacks of sugar and flour. From rolling the vast amounts of dough, the bakers’ arms looked like weight lifters. It was a very physical job.
That baker dude needs to listen to his damn wife. Lol.
He needs to remember these people don't have the oral palates of the past as well. They own modern palates, and desire modern foods made a certain way. Especially if the customers are to give up their grocer for a whole week. I personally couldn't do it due to health reasons
What would happen to you if you didnt have a choiceice
Yeah what's his problem? He has no idea what he's doing, their bakery business outside of this show would be nothing without his wife, the actual baker.
Taste buds are a more appropriate word.
Yeah what he like, really role playing or something?
I enjoyed this, aside from the bakers. What was the point of bringing in an expert only to make her watch her idiot husband mess up every step? I feel so bad for her
It deeply bothered me that they got a fool to replace her and then she wasn't allowed to teach them. That was a 'fuck off' lesson in sexism.
so well said! The producers and Devlin actually sabotaged the show. Deliberate malfeasance, that jackass with the salt container......forcing out the expert...might as well have the grocers be the bakers in this era.....
And I do wonder about the assertion that women weren't bakers, nor helped with baking, as they wouldn't allow them to touch a thing.
They were inconsistent there, the women at the grocers were not allowed to be front of shop (and that would have been true of those times) but they were allowed to be behind the scenes working, weighing, measuring and packing for customers. Whereas at the bakery they had her in the shop but then was not allowed to be behind the scenes involved in preparation and baking of the bread.
@@adiudicium
For the grocery store I think it was only to be the face of the shop, whereas baking is a whole process which mostly men did.
@@thornyback The Victorian Era was actually a sexist era, so fuck off ladies was a thing.
These customers really need to get a grip, what an amazing opportunity and the majority of them were being such brats.
I am just finishing watching The Tudor Farm series and now this, lol.
You are easily the best channel on RUclips.
It's could have been worse. It could have been a bunch of Karens in America.
In past, things went slower than today's fast pace world
the whole BBC historical farm series is great. Edwardian farm Victorian farm the separate Victorian series regarding the apothecary etc also wartime farm is very educational regarding how families and everybody cope during world war II
@@semi-san1736 Hey, although there are Karen's and Daren's in every part of the world----- I'm Mexican American and I totally agree with that 100% of American Karens. American and Australian Karen's are the absolute most ridiculous.
It’s realistic in that many modern people couldn’t handle it
The way the grocer giggled at the sunscreen request cracked me up. Did they not tell the buyer participants that the sellers had to create and package all their products. Also sunscreen would’ve been a pharmacy item back then if it even existed (I’m positive it didn’t)
Yeah that's why they wore bonnets and long sleeves in the summer pretty sure.
Sunscreen = bonnets, hats,scarves,long sleeves, long pants and parasols.
Especially spf 30 🤭 ma'am where do you think you are
I thought she said sourcream.
They were called a chemist back then and they made everything!
The baker's were far more cringy than they needed to be. There was absolutely nothing stopping the husband from taking directions from the actual baker.
Men will be men lol
It’s just for TV.
that wouldn't have been as fun for tv unfortunately
The work was so difficult bakers were expected to die before age 40! The wife would be able to take over soon.
That's the stupidity of this series. Perhaps they thought it would be more entertaining. How ridiculous. This speaks less about the difficult conditions of the Victorians than it does about abysmally incompetent modern people who've lost all basic skills for food making a survival.
Why are they sending people with modern day shopping lists to Victorian shops. The lady asking for sunscreen was ridiculous.
sunscreen? sure have an umbrella lol
yep, fake as ......
You never know.
They did make sunscreen
how are the customers supposed to know what was available in Victorian times unless they're experts?
They should do the whole street in Victorian shops and run it every weekend at least. It would be a tourist destination.
When i try to buy a British vacation, they just kinda laugh, tell me to wait another yr
They should turn neighborhoods into the Victorian era on a daily year round basis.
I'd go to a Victorian theme park where you can eat and buy the eras products.
Blists Hill and Beamish are both excellent.
@@edi9892 maybe not the plaster bread though
That baker has a massive ego. Why not just listen to his wife?
Seriously!
Did they just bring her along to break her spirit? Because you could see that she was dying inside. 😣
Not supposed to.
And he needed lessons from another guy... not his wife XD
He really had some issues!
@@paddyotterness you're not a real smart fella are you Patrick?
It's amazing how these modern kids really worked hard for the families to be successful.
31:00 Ummm... Why is the Baker going to learn from someone else how to bake bread when all he has to do is put his ego aside and actually LISTEN to his own WIFE who is a professional Baker and does this for a living day in day out? If he had listened to her input in the first place, the bread would not have been so salty, burnt on the outside and undercooked on the inside.
She wasn't allowed to intervene. She didn't advise him.
RMF
15:58
16:51
17:03
@@RMF76 Yes she did. She tried to. The narration specifically says he ignored her
The role description said baking was man's work and women had very limited participation. Sales I'd guess?
Ignoring female knowledge about traditional men's work seems to me to be pretty stereotypically Victorian
@@johnyarbrough502 They should of said screw it and just had her do it. They said it was rare in the description.
That little old lady has been so sweet in all the episodes. She is adorable!
Yes, she's a real sweetheart! She's like the lovely grandma all kids would love to have!
The looks of horror from the locals at seeing how meat is butchered, are priceless to someone from a farming background.
When my dad was 4 years old, he and his mother were snowed-in, with no food. She took him out to the barn, handed him the hatchet, held down a chicken. He did what he had to.
it confused me, couldn't understand why they were so shocked and squeamish, guess they'd never seen a dead animal before
It boggles my mind how removed from the basics of life urban dwellers are. I think it’s lent to the misunderstandings between rural/urban dwellers
@@margaretqueenofscots9450 right, yeah, it's like people have no idea how things work.
yes I remember a similar situation, although we don't have a farm so i'm afraid the labrador got it
I can understand the children being a bit put off by the Butcher, but adults who are not Vegetarians being shocked at a butchershop is worse than moronic, if you don't know and understand where your food comes from and what you are eating you shouldn't be allowed to eat at all.
I love watching these shows
Me too
Me too!
sameee
Me three
@@therange4033 0pl
"Can I ask why?"
"Because I haven't."
What on earth did she expect him to say?
Right!? People ate with the seasons. Mushrooms are a Fall thing.
I can't believe ppl aren't swarming the butcher shop! With all the processed meats in stores these days, I wish I could source from a local butcher all the time.
Wet and Dry Market or just Wet Markets?
We have a local butcher where you can even visit the farm. It's just down the road from the shop.
The wife is a master baker. Maybe he should just listen to her.
He cant due to Victoria time women dont have a voice
He can't listen to his wife back then women had no education
@@heathergutierrez8174 Geez, it wasn't that bad. It was Victorian times; only the elites had voices. Most men would still take advice from their wife, especially in a situation like this. Most men wouldn't risk their livelihood just because they didn't want to listen to their wife.
Lol I know right!!! I think it's an ego problem. He just wants to do it his own way considering the fact that he has NO idea what he's doing. 🙄
Woman were expected to do the cooking but I guess that rule only applied to cooking for the family especially the husband. It appearently doesn't apply to cooking in a business. Women back then were treated like slaves and beneath men. ☹️
The way bread was made in those times was one of the main things that lead to the food adulteration act. Sad today it need to be slammed in today.
China is pretty creative in that regard
In the USA it was how filthy the food packing factories were. Led to creation of the FDA.
No one make great historical shows like the British.
I'm trying to imagine stranding a bunch of americans in the middle of the desert and having to re-do the oregon trail and lord they'd all be dead
@@bunniesbunniesbunnie of disenteri
@@paddyotterness Agreed, and that is true for all of North America. But if you want more good historical content, I can recommend a few good youtube channels: Lindybeige, Kraut, Brandon F., History Buffs, and Horrible Histories.
It sounds like you watched shows from lots of other countries, in lots of languages.
@@erynn9968 I've watched shows from Canada, the US, and Australia. So maybe I was comparing it to the Commonwealth, or Anglosphere.
"We're Victorian bakers. We don't have a conscience." Love it! 😂
The Pork Man apparently doesn’t know how a wood fired oven works. You don’t stick the items in with a roaring fire going; you heat the oven bricks with the fire and leave some - not a lot - of residual coals.
Bhaha, when the butcher burnt the pies and the master baker came to take them out “you can’t blame me, I’m a woman, I’m not supposed to be in here 😂”
I laughed so hard 😩😂😂😂
I think the blacksmith should start making kitchen knives demonstrating how sharp they are, especially to the butchers
Ugh! Dear Baker, JUST LISTEN TO CAROLINE!! I want to shake him on Caroline’s behalf 😭😭😭
I think the producers asked him not to, to provide people with “gasp!” Material
He can’t listen to her guys, this is the victorian era she isn’t a baker so she won’t know.
Obviously none of these customers ever had to wait up to 30 minutes at a penny candy counter among a mob of grade schoolers for their turn. lol
Or remembered being children who went shopping with their parents and had to patiently stand in the line and behave in the shop in order to be able to pick a small treat.
Mu FT
MAX MILLERTASTING HISTORY@@N_0968
tasting history
''We're victorian bakers, we dont have a conscience''
lil homie ice cold
I think the trouble with the oven is that the fire is to heat the inside of it. When it's hot enough, you remove the fire, and the radiant heat gently bakes the food. Whereas, cooking with the direct heat of the fire will burn the food.
I'm really happy that in my town small dedicated shops are still a major thing. Supermarkets are popular, but a lot of people still buy at smaller grocer's or butcher's. It gives you the opportunity to do exactly what the customers described, you see people you know, you communicate, mingle and get to buy locally made goods and pick out the stuff you actually want to buy. It's bliss.
Bet those kids never cried "Mom, I'm bored, there's nothing to do" So much work involved in just trying to live in those days. Great show.
Ppl these days are cry babies just because they are 'bored' staying at home to save themselves from corona🐁
During the Victorian era even kids, unless they were from upper class, would find themselves working countless hours after school.
@@mayshusakuhanamurasufferli5438 that all started WELL before Covid.
What a whiny group of shoppers! I can’t believe they weren’t advised of the details of Victorian shopping! The man in the grocers complaining waiting for *gasp* 15 whole minutes!! Just rude people
@Allen, MacKenzie perhaps Covid has some silver linings after all
To be fair though that kind of thing is the reason why tiny victorian shops fell out of favor. Why spend your whole day waiting for some salty bread made by a man who will die before middle age only to find out when you finally get home that it's not edible when you can go to the super market and grab a loaf of always uniform, always the same bread made in a sparkling clean factory with careful regulations, blast through check out, and get on with your life? We look back at these shops now with rose tinted glasses just like we do stores like Blockbuster but at the end of the day there are real economic reasons why they aren't around anymore just like why they don't run wooden four wheel train carriages with no hallways or bathrooms pulled by steam engines on commuter lines anymore.
They should have gone for the Wallmart.
Exactly! And these are the same folks who'll cheerfully wait an hour for a table at their favorite sushi restaurant!!
Honestly I agree. I half feel the lady in the polka-dot shirt (grey short hair) was intentionally told to complain- but asking about modern day sauces?! Learn your history woman
The Devlins seem to be really nice people and good parents - they've evidently taught their kids to be polite, respectful, well - mannered, well - behaved and hard - working.
Amazing how many people don't mind eating meat but at the same time don't want to think where it cam from or what it took to get it to their table.
I love butcher shops. There is a local one 40 min from my house and it is so great to have it.
I certainly don't mind watching someone process the animal. You know you are getting the FRESHEST cuts that way.
Why doesn't the baker just ask his wife how to bake rather than going to a stranger?
Because egotism and stupidity 🙄
Because women weren't real people back then, apparently. /jk
@@yuppers1 no, they were considered chattel... not much better than property.... seriously.
@@yuppers1
Me and Annie Lennox still fighting against that mentality.
@@darthtaiter because he wasn't supposed to.
I'd be happy to pay extra to shop at one of these if they had one in my city. Its not just about the goods but the experience also
Imagine being that IRL baker and realizing that your husband values your knowledge so little that he’ll just ignore you when the time comes. He’s really showing his whole @$$ by ignoring her expertise.
I’d be thinking divorce lol
Since they've been married for some years, I suspect she was already well aware of that fact!
I suspect the directors instructed him to do that to add drama to the video
She can’t be a baker so she can’t give him directions obviously.
@@CassidyStarke
"Female bakers were rare"
I honestly feel like if we had a mix of the Victorian with modern equipment people would flock to it. Fresh butchered meats, fresh baked breads by actual bakers taste so much better than what you can get in grocery stores.
I like the butcher guy, he seems like the one of them who were "made" for it all (not counting his "pies")
In 2nd place would be the blacksmith.
It was a shame that the bakers wife couldn't teach him.
I will say to a certain extent that to be fair, the butcher is the easiest sell. The baker is a bit of an ass but he's also using money-saving techniques that were common but accepted whereas of course today's buyers would NEVER accept it. Do you know what most could easily be convinced into buying though? Pork.
It served the baker right he was getting advice from his wife a master baker and he did what he wanted . It would.have served him right if his children would have gone to the work house . The joke would have been an an awaking. Only his children would have payed the price not him .
“What a fat son of unmarried parentage!” 😂😂
So women bakers were rare but not unheard of! Instead of declaring her to be one of the rarities, they go for the typical tv drama crap. I'm out.
This show want to show "regular" victorian life so they need to stick with what is the norm at the time
I said the same thing..... Very historically INACCURATE... more of a modern political twist rather than what was really going on at the time.
Kinda like all the people sneering at the butchers meat..... As IF that many people actually have a problem with seeing meat being cut up... I think they must have rounded up a handful of the most sheltered, ignorant customers they could possibly find to create the narrative they were after.... I know lots of modern, upper-class people who prefer getting their meats from a butcher rather than a supermarket....but this show makes it seem like its just SUCH an oddity... Lol
@@v.b.4622 so, I'm American. Not British. This is absolutely what I would expect from anybody not raised around farms, and that's the vast majority of people in the US. My mom SCREAMS at the idea of any of my chickens becoming dinner and actually slapped me once for offering to butcher one for her.
as a russian i would expect such a reaction too. most of us live in cities and we dont usually see how the meat on the shelves is prepared. sadly here it s much more profitable either to have a big corporation or to buy a franchise of a big corporation and sell stuff in huge amounts. so sole traders is a quite rare bussiness, and more, some shops even aquiered cashier-free model, so this individual approach, everything hand made and carefully wrapped in crafted paper as well as the show they put on beforehand - has really been an insight for me, and i would react absolutely the same as those customers. would even add a wee of drama cuz it s quite hard for me to watch animals being axed chopped and ripped like that
Agreed.
For those who are shocked by the adding of various substances to food, read "The Good Old Days--they Were Terrible!"
by Otto Bettmann.
That baker guy annoyed the hell out of me. If they aren't going to let the professional baker bake the bread because she's a woman, get a man that can bake in the first place.
They did & he advised them to adulterate the loaves.
I'm sure people back then would be very interested (or shocked) in how we shop online today.
oh yes 100%
and shocked at the death of the british high street
Comparatively, we are now are wizards doing slo mo manifestation (shipping) with a magical wand (smart phone) in our pockets.
I don't like food shopping online b/c I am worried my food wouldn't be as fresh
I mean how could you even try to explain it to them?
"OK, imagine a telegraph, but it can directly show you text and colored illustrations, and everyone has one in their home and another one in their pocket. One of the things you can use it for is reading and ordering from something like the Pryce Jones catalogue."
@@drewgehringer7813 They were not as "stupid", attempts to transmit pictures were done maybe in middle of 19th century, yes, there would be problem with wirles transmission, but in general some electric device which is able to show you pictures and connect you with somebody in different place would not be so foreign to some more educated. The concept of coding of something in form of some binary code was not that foreign to them as the already had looms controlled by punched cards.
I would have ground up the burnt loaves and sold them as breading. Salty breading isn't as bad as salty loaves and the burnt parts won't even show.
"Oh, the poor creatures."
I'll bet she tucks into bacon, beef, chicken etc., without giving it a seconds thought.
A case of "out of sight, out of mind".
I love how excited the blacksmith was when he saw the forge setup
"I could make the gates to Buckingham palace with this"
Would love seeing these shows replicated in the United States.
Oh no you wouldnt hahaha, read Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" to get an idea of what the meat industry was like prior to the creation of the FDA.
Hint: It wasnt nice
I get a giggle out of people whining about having to stand on que for 5-15 mins.
I grew up on a self sufficient farm, we grew ,raised, hunted, fished and foraged 90% of our food....and preserved it for winter.
(Please note everything below is bc I'm a homemaker....it's literally my only job since losing my hearing. )
I still make all my own jellies, jams, marmalade ,I can meat, fruit , vegetables, soups,stews and chilies .
I also can mustards, bbq sauces, ketchup, pickles, spaghetti sauce, I normally make enough mayonnaise to last the week, and salad dressings.
I bake all our bread, and cookies, pies etc , there is a stock pot of soup on the stove at all times (right now it's mushroom soup)
I make kombucha, yogurt ,cheese, apple cider vinegar and fermented vegetables.
I make a good filling supper every day .
Right now I'm planning this year's garden and getting ready to start my seedlings.
We do quite a bit of this ourselves too. Not as much as you do by a long chalk, but there’s a lot of satisfaction in being at least partly self-sufficient.
When you saw how busy that marketplace was in the end was heart warming. I think this was a fabulous experiment... well done guys.
I literally smiled the ENTIRE time, we live in a historical area and LOVE the Victorian events
Adulterated bread was a killer. I could never do it.
There is one modern bread I like and that's Killer Daves' Bread. So much flavor with natural ingredients and the company provides second chances to nonviolent prisoners who made a mistake such as drugs, stealing or other minor crimes. Stealing to feed ones family should not be viewed in the same light as rape, child molestation and murder.
You would have starved, and your children sent to the Workhorse
I could watch a whole season of this, I love it!!!
It's a pity the public weren't given a brief of what to expect from the recreated shops. I'm 68 and remember shops very similar to this in the 1960s in Thirsk.I know that the grocer was different to the greengrocer but the customers even the older ones seemed to be entirely ignorant
Walter Wilsons ( the grocer) weighed coffee, bacon, cheese and other dry goods etc according to how much you wanted. Biscuits were sold from large glass topped tins and and weighed into paper bags. The butcher who kept his own beasts had two shops in the market place. One shop was a pork butchers and the other for everything else including cooked ham and pork pies. The ironmongers sold everything conceivable that rural folk might need from light bulbs and candles to all sorts of substances not allowed these days. The pharmacist sold toiletries and also medicines for humans and farm animals alike
"what a fat son of unmarried parentage" ok, now that was funny....
The little boy at 51:48 is adorable!
This whole experiment was amazing. 💗 I know it’s a ridiculous amount of work, with quite a learning curve, but I think I would enjoy being apart of something like this!
the customers were extremely passive aggressive
It’s Britain. The people aren’t very known for being nice.
People are used to getting everything very quickly nowadays…
As an American, I really enjoy these British history videos. However, it irked me that the baker's wife wasn't allowed to help, and the bread turned out to be an absolute DISASTER. Surely they could have bent the rules and let her help, because I'm sure that even in that era, baker's wives at least knew SOMETHING about baking bread, especially if they had a family to feed, and it's quite possible that some wives would have helped their husbands in the bakery out of necessity, if the need arose. Otherwise, it was an enjoyable episode. I also found it amusing that, in the segment where they were unloading the giant cheese, they were playing "Stars and Stripes Forever," an American tune that is so patriotic that it's often played at Fourth of July fireworks displays -- on a BRITISH TV show!
Why would they hire a female master baker if they were just going to sideline her right off?? 😡
This was infuriating to watch! Especially since her stubborn husband ignored everything about the trade and all of her advice. I wanted to put him in a flour sack and throw him in the river, that would have been a step up for the business.
@Nicholas P You must get a lot of work in the Idea and THOUGHT police.
I mean they do a different time period every episode. She’s not sidelined forever. Geez.
I love this series. It hits home because my uncle was the local baker in my hometown in Connecticut. The large commercial bakeries, which sell via the supermarket chains put him out.
On a positive note, the town where I now live has a privately run butcher. Every time I shop there, he is very busy. I think things are starting to come full circle.
Oh my goodness I have been looking for this show for forever! I saw it when it first came on and then could never find it again. Thank you for adding it to the channel!
Why are these customers acting so entitled? Snobs, honestly.
Cherry picked because it makes for better TV.
Why are the bakers learning from another baker?
His wife is a baker.
Just because he's a man?
Ya. What’s up with that. She’s a master baker and they totally sidelined her.
I'm assuming it was because they were learning specifically about Victorian bread making along with its history. She's a modern baker.
Speaking about packing food... you may know we have in Italy what we call the "packaging valley".
A smart woman, Maria Toschi Corazza, who ran a grocery in the early '50s, asked her husband to build a machine for packing the glutammate, because she was tired of making so many small packages. That machine worked as a charm and it was the beginning of an entire industry which today involves about 200 companies which makes pakaging machines in Emilia Romagna. Something valued a bit less of 50% of the entire world production of packaging machines.
And everything started in a small grocery.
This is great! I am looking forward to watch the Edwardian era episode.
Me too!
Psst.. this isn’t a new series. This channel is reposting old shows. It’s at least 10 years old.lol
This is a really difficult thing to pull off with all the shopkeepers recreating the Victorian era, but the shoppers are modern day. The shopkeepers have been schooled and have to follow rules, but the shoppers don't.
The bread- our family makes bread. The trick is a nice active starter and salt balance. Your bread you’re making tomorrow your rising the day and night before. They didn’t have commercial yeast then.
My region has some pretty weak yeast, the rise takes about two days but the result is delicious
Wouldn't they have a mother dough
sour dough is different from the type of bread they were making.
oh man i wish i grew up with baking in my childhood
It shows how time has changed. Waiting 10 minutes feels like an eternity, but in the Vic. Era it would have been normal to wait quite a while for things and not think of it as a long time.
omg that poor poor soul has been waiting for like 10 - 15 minutes -_-
47:52 Moral: Do NOT leave your pork pies in a far too hot stone oven.
As soon as I saw that roaring fire I thought, "Those things are going up like firestarter logs!"
@@kelath5555 I belive the best would've been waiting for the wood to burn down, untill there's no more flames, just embers, and then place the pies IN/right next to, said embers, pefect warmth for "baking pies".
The real moral of the story is don't go out to drink with your bloody mates while you're in the middle of baking Pies. Christ on the cross who does that right before a deadline. Lol
Incredible episode.
If only the baker would have listened to his wife...
No matter if I do or don’t end up homeschooling, these videos are a very useful teaching tool to teach bits of history in a fun way.
Good idea !!😆
Try "Victorian bakers" serie, "Absolute history" upload them on youtube, there is link: ruclips.net/video/Sa8eWuGZzMc/видео.html . This is good serie, but "Victorian bakers" are in my opinion even better.
Shopping was also a social event.
my grandmother owned a small hotel on the english coast, she had high standards and worked extraordinarily hard expecting her suppliers to do the same, supplies were delivered daily from the local grocer butcher dairy and if anything arrived broken or otherwise not to standard she would return it, it was not unheard of for the delivery boy to cycle three miles and back with one cracked egg!
I feel so much for Caroline. If I was her, I would have walked away after the first 2 days.
I didn't feel bad for Caroline. I thought she was a whiny, spoilt brat. I felt bad for Rafe and Chloe having her as a mother!
A few weeks before my Father passed away, he told me that his Scottish Grandfather was hanged in New South Wales Australia for making adulterated bread with Gypsum. A long time ago it was made Law that Bread was not to be tickled with.
If they did this experiment in America today, these people would all be sued for selling poisonous food when people found out what they were putting in the bread!
Being fair, they used rice instead of actual sawdust, so nothing actually illegal was happening
@@MoondustManwise Then they'll get sued for not being authentic :-p
Only in American cities would you find corporate lawyers making at least $5000 per hour. The average experienced American lawyer is NOT interested in lawsuits valued at $300 per hour.
@@fredashay They did write that it included rice, a lady mentioned it while returning her bread.
Yet modern food producers add all kinds of colorants, preservatives, anti caking & flavor enhancers with barely a whimper from the lawyers or the public!
I am not even from the UK and I got hyped for Market day . XD Really wish I could be there to experience this. I love this channel Thank you please don't ever stop making videos and teaching us History
24:15 "Do you made mayonnaise?" Lady!!! Do you know how hard it is to make mayonnaise by hand?? And also you can't keep it without a freezer because of salmonella 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️
31:32 They've could asked his wife!!!! No need to visit a baker 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️
33:24 "We have lost a lot of money" Because you didn't wanted any advice!!!
As much as I love this series, I'm getting angry
Just so you know every busy restaurant you've ever eaten at has never refrigerated their mayonnaise you don't need to refrigerate real mayonnaise or mustard or ketchup as long as you eat it within a reasonable time. that's why potato salad was always so popular in the past. And all those things were invented and around long before Refrigeration became common.
Just FYI
Making mayonnaise isn‘t that hard or time consuming but I don’t think they ate it back then
People are so spoiled around the process of butchering an animal. The pig doesn't magically arrive in a little plastic tray. Idiots.
Yes, let's shame people because society has progressed.
I am so glad my grandparents and uncles let me watch the butchering.....it was done with respect...tge animals raised well, and killed humanely....tasted WINDERFUL
Using rice in place of flour.
Flourless bread would be marketed as gluten free these days!
Only a bit of rice, it doesn’t replace all of it.
Thank you for uploading this, I have really vivid memories of watching this while my mum was sick and in the final stages of cancer and we loved watching this together
This is to teach folks on how people lived in Victorian age without modern conveniences and how woman were treated and how to survive in e Victorian Ages.
The little girl looking at the pig and saying "that's why I wanna be a vegetarian" had me in stitches!
Victorian headtorch...
continues showing a wax candle strapped to that poor mans head
Brilliant! Very entertaining and eye opening. I loved seeing the ship keepers’ reactions to what they had to sell, where they had to sleep, and the baker’s boy’s reaction to the chamber pit was priceless!! Well done!
"We're Victorian bakers. We don't have a conscience. So just sell it."
What a mood.
Love learning and seeing anything about the past , it’s the most interesting to think our ancestors lived this way , did things this way , and worked so very hard , it’s just so fascinating ,thank you people for doing this project for the world to witness ! Bravo to you all ! 🙏❤️🇨🇦
The wood fired bakery sounds amazing. I can see that staying in business long after this.
Poor baker...in a short amount of time her husband screwed her reputation!
Yes and no She should have given him an earful, that made him step back!
but she is a doormat. Her fault as much as his. If she wants to protect her reputation - it is up to her and only she can do that. (But yes he is awful, never marry awful or accept it from anyone!)
I found her too whiny. I liked the youngest kids Rafe and Chloe though.
I wish they’d do this in my town.
Food wasn’t purer in Victorian times, bread was very adulterated with all kinds of things.
Course our food is also extremely adulterated and for the same reason, money.
Loved this! Newport, Ky tried to help its downtown area in a similar way. By letting people open up "pop up" shops in empty storefronts for a month or so. It seemed to work well.
Customer: oh you're set in victorian age...do you have any 30spf sun cream? 🤦🏻♀️
I'll bet Victorian bakers had their wives and daughters helping with the baking in the dark of night. Especially if letting your wife bake in private would keep you out of the poorhouse.
I have my doubts, unlike shown here bakers were built like brick sh** houses back in the victorian era. People were hardier and pushed themselves further then we can, it's why their life expectancy was 40 and not 80
@@SapphireZukotu The whole living till 40 is a lie. They used the live expectancy calculator based on child mortality rates which was common, but after the age of 7 or 8 people have been known to live in their 60s and even 80s. It was about sanitation conditions, healthy eating and having something to look forward to. Even in modern Cuba seem like 1800s forever. Now with covid 19 people are told to stay at home and when go out they are using bleach as hand sanitizers and cleaning agent for everything. 😣😔I have a cousin whose skin is peeling off due to the bleach used on her. She is the only member strong enough to go to the shops to get food rations and supplies for the house. It is really bad over that country and I will never understand why do people still want to go visit such a backwards, outdated nation like Cuba, especially during a pandemic. Cuban logic makes no fucking sense to me. There is a reason why South Florida has the highest cases and death over covid-19 people are fucking stupid coming back into the US with God only knows what.