Feeding a Medieval Outlaw

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory  Год назад +48

    Check out these other interesting Medieval recipes:
    Medieval Tournaments: ruclips.net/video/wxypUB5K0KE/видео.html
    Peasant Food: ruclips.net/video/zKa5GRu4LwE/видео.html
    Medieval Saint Diet: ruclips.net/video/jBRVvMm3xv0/видео.html
    Medieval Monks: ruclips.net/video/zz0y1d6IIpY/видео.html

    • @augustuswayne9676
      @augustuswayne9676 9 месяцев назад

      You should remove that silver skin from your venison tenderloin . It will be more tender.

    • @delaineu7340
      @delaineu7340 8 месяцев назад

      Have you tried atta flour from India? Completely different beast than American whole wheat flour, stone ground. Not stiff and tough, more as if you've mixed whole and white flours.
      I'm thinking it's more like old world whole wheat.

  • @theeddorian
    @theeddorian Год назад +1113

    One of my friends, a descendant of Cornish miners who came to California and worked in Nevada County, told me once that the thick rim of crust around a pasty was actually a handle. Miners frequently had no means of washing their hands for lunch, so food with a built-in handle was a good thing. The rim could be discarded if your hands were really dirty. He also remarked that the only proper "sauce" was mustard pickle.

    • @its_clean
      @its_clean Год назад +137

      That makes sense. A lot of old recipes for pasties and pies regarded the crust as a container and cooking vessel first, and an edible component of the dish second. I believe that's why you rarely see any effort put into making the crust itself more flavorful or pleasant- the sturdy, tasteless hot water crust was intended to be functional, not delicious. Even still today, the denser parts of the crust, like the edges and crimped areas, are so dense and flavorless that some people don't bother to eat them.

    • @ImInLoveWithBulla
      @ImInLoveWithBulla Год назад +79

      Beyond that, a lot of mining was extremely toxic work, so their hands wouldn’t just be dirty. They’d be dangerous. The handle served as a safety net.

    • @striker1553
      @striker1553 Год назад +20

      Gravy or Ketchup now. haha The UP has the best pasties now!

    • @annalisette5897
      @annalisette5897 Год назад +36

      Adding to what someone said below, the thick edge of the Cornish pastie was indeed a handle, intended to be discarded because of the toxic minerals on the miners' hands.

    • @AmazinglyAwkward
      @AmazinglyAwkward Год назад +14

      100% true! I'm just surprised us Brits have such an affinity for pastry as I've always considered pastry a French thing...

  • @TheSpartan451
    @TheSpartan451 Год назад +531

    "Real Outlaws of Medieval England" sounds like an amazing reality TV show.

    • @Slippery-Hand
      @Slippery-Hand Год назад +2

      Sounds like the The real bros of Simi Valley

    • @Euripides_Panz
      @Euripides_Panz Год назад +5

      Not as amazing as the soundtrack.

  • @hollyevolving
    @hollyevolving Год назад +697

    I'm a medieval re-enactor and I have helped cook an entire haunch of venison that turned out well...but we absolutely threw period cooking out the window on that one. Coated in a mix of butter, herbs, wine, and barbecue sauce, wrapped in foil (yes, we wrapped a whole venison haunch in foil. it was indeed ridiculous, except that it worked), and grilled over a low flame, turning frequently until it came out tender and juicy. My group was working a small, local renaissance faire and we cooked that for ourselves after hours.

    • @KnitsHooksandNeedle
      @KnitsHooksandNeedle Год назад +36

      I bet it's fun doing reenactments. I've gone to a festival. I could live there forever, I swear. A good friend of mine basically made it a job to travel with one. I wish I could. How did you get into it?

    • @jacobshelt01
      @jacobshelt01 Год назад +11

      @@KnitsHooksandNeedle good question 🙋‍♂️

    • @melskunk
      @melskunk Год назад +15

      I was going to say it didn’t seem THAT bad until you got to bbq sauce and foil. Leeeetle anachronistic 🤏

    • @emmythemac
      @emmythemac Год назад +3

      that sounds delicious tbh

    • @ShinKyuubi
      @ShinKyuubi Год назад +2

      That sounds delicious...and makes me wanna go to the local Ren Fair...haven't been in a couple years as I don't like to go to stuff like that with less than $1000 for buying stuff...that's not including ticket and gas costs btw, that's just what I wanna use while I'm there. I might be able to swing going in 2024...2025 at the latest, it happens EARLY in the year though...it's actually coming up next month, it last from April to June on the weekends.

  • @navybill1984
    @navybill1984 Год назад +424

    I laughed way too hard at "Maid Marion was a fox!" so thank you for that. Definitely needed it

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +58

      Glad I could make you laugh 😁

    • @bretabel1642
      @bretabel1642 Год назад +4

      I had to pause the video and go take a walk after a pun like that

    • @lordbiscuitthetossable5352
      @lordbiscuitthetossable5352 11 месяцев назад +3

      Likewise, that pun made me snort at work I do love those random laugh.

    • @Baccatube79
      @Baccatube79 5 месяцев назад +1

      She was a vixen. Even the credits to the movie say so.

    • @T.E.S.S.
      @T.E.S.S. 5 месяцев назад

      @@Baccatube79 Vixens are still foxes, you dingleberry

  • @MrCombatmedic00
    @MrCombatmedic00 6 месяцев назад +24

    The first time I had heard of pasties in relation to Robin Hood, was from a separate tale involving little John. He had snuck into a castles kitchen, and as he was ransacking the pantry and larder, the mountainous cook arrived and they had a melee. In the end, Little John won the brawl and sat upon the beaten cooks body as he helped himself to the roasts and pasties, but seeing how numerous the food was, and how delicious the food the cook had made, Little John got up, dusted the cook off, sat him down, poured him a mug of ale, and they both sat and ate the meal together, having met an equal in conquering strength and an equal in conquering an appetite.

    • @Eloraurora
      @Eloraurora 6 месяцев назад +6

      It's hilarious how many of the individual Robin Hood stories boil down to 'dudes meet, get mad, fight, become friends.'

  • @dwaynezilla
    @dwaynezilla Год назад +506

    I like how everyone's always smiling while some gruesome acts are going on in this medieval art. Even the guy getting a sword plunged into his head, and the dudes doing it. IT'S JUST A PRANK BRO

  • @snerdie1997
    @snerdie1997 Год назад +438

    13:47 I like how poor Roger is smiling as a sword is driven into his skull. In fact, everyone looks like they're having a grand time!

    • @maudline
      @maudline Год назад +44

      Old timey acupuncture

    • @alexwilson3812
      @alexwilson3812 Год назад +4

      Yes everyone do

    • @polyquaternium7
      @polyquaternium7 Год назад +31

      Tis but a scratch!

    • @IllyDragonfly
      @IllyDragonfly Год назад +9

      Yeah, even when the outlaws get blinded, everybody seems enjoying like yaaaaay! Mutilation! What the hell???

    • @alexwilson3812
      @alexwilson3812 Год назад +1

      @@IllyDragonfly what do you think about it then

  • @TheBreadthatcausedLesMis
    @TheBreadthatcausedLesMis Год назад +673

    I worked as part of the learning team at Nottingham Castle prior to its liquidation. One of the main people mentioned in the Robin Hood Experience at the castle for Robin Hoods inspiration is William of Cassingham (Kensham) who raised a gueriila force of archers in the forest during the first Barons war. Albeit in support of King John. During the cave tour of King Davids dungeon that we offered, in the Romylowe's cave part of the tour we also mention how Stephen Romylowe Constable of Nottingham Castle during the time of Edward III when the first Robin Hood tales were being spread could be the original Sheriff of Nottingham.

    • @RazorO2Productions
      @RazorO2Productions Год назад +12

      Wait, what happened to the castle? 😭

    • @xessenceofinsanityx
      @xessenceofinsanityx Год назад +57

      @@RazorO2Productions Went bankrupt because of low visitor numbers
      (It's also not the original... my mum calls it 'a georgian office block')

    • @dansharpe2364
      @dansharpe2364 Год назад +27

      I used to take my two young daughters to the castle on rainy weekends. The rather quirky museum over several floors was endlessly fascinating to two inquisitive young girls, and when they were very small the occasionally changing childrens room was a delight.

    • @RazorO2Productions
      @RazorO2Productions Год назад +2

      @@xessenceofinsanityx Was it demolished??

    • @SuperBrutalCabbage
      @SuperBrutalCabbage Год назад +32

      @@RazorO2Productions it’s still there think whoever owns it is just deciding what to do with it. The surrounding area is full of touristy Robin Hood themed shops so it’s sad that they also might go out of business due to lack of footfall in the area.
      I love Nottingham so it’s sad to see one of the big iconic areas of the city in such a bad state.

  • @joshuakirkham9593
    @joshuakirkham9593 Год назад +145

    "Robin Hood was a fan of pretty things, I mean look at Maid Marian; she was a fox." 😀 Deadpan delivery too.

    • @davidm9612
      @davidm9612 Год назад +4

      My mind went straight to Mel Brooks' Maid Marian when I heard him say that, then I turned and looked at the image Max put on the screen 😂
      (I've never seen the Disney Robin Hood)

  • @ThePawsOfDeception
    @ThePawsOfDeception Год назад +44

    To be fair (speaking as an ex-archaeologist who grew up around it) the New Forest was a royal hunting ground in Saxon times, before William came along. However, he did extend it and introduced much more draconian laws concerning poaching.
    Brilliant as ever Max, thanks! I hope you always manage to find more interesting old recipes and never lose your passion for making them and presenting them, with their historical context, so well.

    • @AmazinglyAwkward
      @AmazinglyAwkward Месяц назад +1

      The real life High Sheriff of Nottingham actually had jurisdiction over Derbyshire and the Royal Forest in the area (much of which has been cut down, but pockets of the Forest of the High Peak remain, such as the village of Peak Forest)

  • @marmotarchivist
    @marmotarchivist Год назад +366

    Very nice video. In university, I wrote a thesis on historical poaching as a social crime, as the hunting laws were so restrictive for all except a small elite, that many poor people had to resort to poaching in order to feed their families. There were even some regions, where the nobles wanted to have an insane amount of deer to hunt for pleasure, so the woods were overflowing with animals and they would eat the wheat on the fields. But the peasants would go to jail or worse if they killed the deer, so all they could do was to guard their fields all night and make a lot of noise to keep the dear away. It’s quite a fascinating topic in my opinion.

    • @Otakupatriot117
      @Otakupatriot117 Год назад +72

      It's not like my poaching is hurting anyone. The Jarl can hardly eat every deer himself now can he?

    • @SplatterInker
      @SplatterInker Год назад +12

      Not the point though is it, when status gets involved.

    • @joebenzz
      @joebenzz Год назад +12

      @@Otakupatriot117 😄👍

    • @Swedishmafia101MemeCorporation
      @Swedishmafia101MemeCorporation Год назад +21

      @@Otakupatriot117 "Never should've come here!"

    • @mccleod6235
      @mccleod6235 Год назад +14

      It wasn't all species that were forbidden. Rabbits, hares, hedgehogs, pheasants, etc etc were all permitted to be hunted.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +2484

    I’m going to sound cheesy but Max and Jose are Merry Men who steal all our hearts.

    • @RoseOfTexas5881
      @RoseOfTexas5881 Год назад +59

      And what about Jamie?

    • @PokhrajRoy.
      @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +63

      @@RoseOfTexas5881 Yes, Jaime too.

    • @zerowolf0006
      @zerowolf0006 Год назад +41

      They stole our hearts get them!!!

    • @jamesfracasse8178
      @jamesfracasse8178 Год назад +20

      Ohh I thought he was still on the market but good health and fortune to him and Jose and Jamie the cat 🐈😺.

    • @odinfromcentr2
      @odinfromcentr2 Год назад +10

      ​@@PokhrajRoy. I must pet those cats. 🐱🐱

  • @TheMirazor
    @TheMirazor Год назад +224

    Living in Nottinghamshire being only a few minutes drive from Sherwood Forest, it's great to learn something I eat everyday is so closely related to the history here!

    • @noobbotgaming2173
      @noobbotgaming2173 Год назад +11

      Damn when I visit England this year I want to visit Sherwood Forest and chill with some food there.

    • @ThornbackHag
      @ThornbackHag Год назад +2

      High five from Meden Vale

    • @jimg9820
      @jimg9820 Год назад +12

      @@noobbotgaming2173 Much of the forest has gone over the years, but around Edwinstowe there are still some pretty old oaks in the woods, which give a good idea of what the forest was like. I've seen quite a few deer around Nottinghamshire so we do still have them!

    • @Avarren
      @Avarren Год назад +4

      You eat venison pasties every day? I’m a bit jealous.

  • @nanettegauthier8239
    @nanettegauthier8239 Год назад +43

    Maid Marion is a fox, and her nurse is a chicken the size of a linebacker. Thank you so much 😍 That's my favorite reference ever

  • @gigitastic90
    @gigitastic90 Год назад +55

    I live in Michigan and Pasties are very popular here particularly in our Upper Peninsula (also called the U.P). They came over from Cornwall in the 1840s with miners originally and became very popular because we had a large amount of copper miners and lumberjacks and work perfectly as a easy hand held food with the crust doing double duty as a handle because their hands were often filthy (many times covered in dangerous things like arsenic ) and could then be thrown away. They have become quite possible one of the most iconic foods of the Upper Peninsula (maybe second only to Mackinac Island fudge) if not the entire state.

    • @donnabenda2682
      @donnabenda2682 Год назад +3

      Yes I lived in the U.P. For almost 30 years! The pasty is indeed a mainstay of yooper cuisine! But boiling a venison tenderloin is almost sacrilege!! And the pasty needs potatoes and onions added! 😃😋

    • @gigitastic90
      @gigitastic90 Год назад +3

      @@donnabenda2682 It's not a real U.P pasty without potato's and onions and I agree! I think I have only ever had a beef Pasty I don't even know if they make other kinds of meat versions to be honest.

    • @stargirl7646
      @stargirl7646 Год назад +4

      Yay more Michiganders! Yeah this needs some rutabaga 😂

    • @abhersch
      @abhersch 8 месяцев назад +3

      Talk about timing- I just finished baking a batch of Michigan Pasties right before I came out and saw this video. They are the best- my recipe has top round steak, potatoes, onion, and either turnips or rutabagas. I love them!

    • @tor5623
      @tor5623 7 месяцев назад +1

      Yup! Born and raised yooper and I remember doing pastie fundraisers where we’d all get together at the school and hand make pasties for sale

  • @lillithcollins5192
    @lillithcollins5192 Год назад +1149

    "She was a fox..." The groan I let out was so long and loud it scared the cat. Well done sir, a dad-joke for the ages.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Год назад +3

      @Lillith Collins - Fathers are most definitely not the only persons to tell bad jokes. ^_^

    • @yokai333
      @yokai333 Год назад +3

      The lack of Roger Rees or Mel brooks made me feel sad

    • @KGKSkull
      @KGKSkull Год назад +16

      @@MossyMozart well, good bad jokes, if you want just bad jokes, go look at Amy Schumer

    • @j.d.4697
      @j.d.4697 Год назад +1

      Why, that was a good one. 😁

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Год назад +13

      Well, if "Yo Mama" jokes can date all the way back to Shakespeare, then "dad jokes" can be just as old, if not older.

  • @JCHB322
    @JCHB322 Год назад +257

    Lol at 6:36... "Look at Maid Marian! She was a fox!"
    Yes, she was... quite literally!
    (Disney's Robin Hood will always be my favorite telling of the tale!)
    Love your videos, Max! They always make me smile (and hungry!) Can't wait to get your cookbook! 🤤 🥰

    • @swatb2719
      @swatb2719 Год назад +3

      Yes my favorite as well. Grew up with that movie.

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 Год назад +6

      Disney's Robin Hood?! Don't you mean Disney's The Jungle Book 2: We Don't Want To Pay More Animators Or Compromise On Deadlines?

    • @susanscott8653
      @susanscott8653 Год назад +1

      My favourite version is from the 80s - Robin of Sherwood (AKA Robin the Hooded Man).🏹😁

    • @Bernandez4139
      @Bernandez4139 Год назад +2

      Internet veterans: ~hello darkness my old friend~

    • @patriciaaturner289
      @patriciaaturner289 Год назад

      I adored Peter Ustinov’s Prince John❤. And his King Richard was pretty good, too.

  • @Roguefem76
    @Roguefem76 Год назад +159

    Lol, I love you for not only including my favorite version of RH but also making the "Maid Marion was a fox" joke.
    This recipe actually sounds pretty good, I might have to try making it or something similar as lunches for work!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +55

      I made myself giggle with that one 😅

    • @anndownsouth5070
      @anndownsouth5070 Год назад +10

      So glad to see and hear others also love that cartoon version of RH. Saw it as a kid and loved it.

    • @aridragonbeard745
      @aridragonbeard745 Год назад +15

      @@TastingHistory I suspect you got a lot of us with that 😆

    • @katarjin
      @katarjin Год назад +1

      @@anndownsouth5070 I blame it for making me a Furry

    • @anndownsouth5070
      @anndownsouth5070 Год назад +1

      @katarjin lol. Who do you associate with Maid Marion, Friar Tuck, or Sir Hiss. 😜🤪

  • @mimic1176
    @mimic1176 Год назад +20

    In my senior undergrad year, I took a class with one of the foremost Robin Hood scholars in the US. We got to read a LOT of the original stories, plenty of scholarly essays, and even watched a few movies. She mostly covered the legend, so I really enjoyed hearing about the candidates for the original outlaw. Thanks for another rousing history lesson!

  • @sbsaez2432
    @sbsaez2432 Год назад +111

    hi max, for the show have you ever looked into making nicuatole? it’s a prehispanic mexican dessert with both a contemporary recipe and some documented ancient ones. it’s a really unique bit of food history that would be a great fit for the channel 😊

    • @deniaridley
      @deniaridley Год назад +9

      Yes, more pre-Columbian vittles please!

  • @Firegen1
    @Firegen1 Год назад +833

    Merrily Gentleman Max rode on
    Hooray hooray
    He sought the food of an outlaw
    Hooray hooray
    He cut a fine figure in front of an stove
    Building out a story from those on the rove
    Riding into a tastible history
    Every Tuesday like today

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +192

      I like this one ☝️

    • @Firegen1
      @Firegen1 Год назад +30

      ​@@TastingHistory Thanks Boss!

    • @adedow1333
      @adedow1333 Год назад +33

      Well written! I even have a melody going through my head to match it! (No, it's not "Brave, Brave Sir Robin")

    • @kurtsteiner901
      @kurtsteiner901 Год назад +24

      Encore bard, encore.

    • @sarahwatts7152
      @sarahwatts7152 Год назад +9

      I love this! (Maybe could be used in another medieval episode??)

  • @alexisgrunden1556
    @alexisgrunden1556 Год назад +71

    An Olde English woodsman would likely also know how to forage for things like three-cornered leeks, wild spring onions (scallions), wild garlic and vetch (free-range, wild-growing "weed" peas), nettle leaf, wood sorrel or sheep's sorrel, and wild carrots (Queen Anne's Lace).
    A little knowledge can go a long way~

    • @thaddeuszukowski4633
      @thaddeuszukowski4633 3 месяца назад +3

      Recipes of the time usually are focused on the unusual; the normal wasn't worth writing down, vellum was expensive as it only came from sheep. Sheep are much more valuable when alive as they are your source of wool!

    • @alexisgrunden1556
      @alexisgrunden1556 3 месяца назад

      @@thaddeuszukowski4633 Not to mention, the literacy rate of Ye Olde times? Not so great, so most lists, instructions and education were all verbal and memorized.

  • @EPICFAILKING1
    @EPICFAILKING1 Год назад +77

    My friend lives a two minute drive away from the church in which Robin Hood got married, in Yorkshire. Now Robin Hood is renowned for being from Nottingham but that just goes to show how vast the Sherwood Forest once was, it stretched hundreds of miles over many counties. Sadly only remnants remain, like much of Britain's ancient forests and woodlands.

    • @FireflyOnTheMoon
      @FireflyOnTheMoon Год назад +5

      R Hood is a fictional character

    • @Lightice1
      @Lightice1 Год назад +14

      @@FireflyOnTheMoon Better to say that Robin Hood is a fictionalised character. He has at least one, but quite possibly several real life inspirations. For instance Robert or Robyn Hode who was outlawed, pardoned and employed by King Edward II. The earliest Robin Hood ballads seem to take inspiration from his life. The name Robin Hood is much older than that, though, and apparently was a general alias for outlaws for centuries.

    • @danielbeck9191
      @danielbeck9191 Год назад +3

      Some of trees were cut just to clear the land, but most were harvested for use. The trees supplied wood for many uses---construction lumber, furniture making, hand tools, etc. But also remember that wood was also the principal FUEL until COAL mining became more productive. The transition to coal as a fuel enabled the industrial revolution, but also prevented the complete deforestation of Europe.

    • @madtabby66
      @madtabby66 Год назад +2

      @@FireflyOnTheMoon true but Whitehorse Yukon has a Robert Service “graveyard”
      Some people claim it’s haunted. Not sure how it’s haunted by fictional characters. Especially Sam McGee who was cremated.

  • @manmaje3596
    @manmaje3596 Год назад +19

    I’m so thrilled you mentioned the new forest. I live just 40 minutes away from it and nowadays it’s one of England’s most treasured national parks. It really is a magical place steeped in the history of witchcraft and magic and there are also ancient tribal kings of Britain buried across it. The local produce is fantastic aswell. Preserves, creams, cakes, fudge, scones all utterly delicious. There are also quite a few pretty villages scattered across all displaying their own unique variety of new forest charm. 😊

  • @DSlyde
    @DSlyde Год назад +64

    I really want a collab between Max and the Townsends. Wholesome historical cooking youtube unite.

    • @tabithamashburn8786
      @tabithamashburn8786 Год назад +3

      I want to see Max on Good Mythical Morning!

    • @davidm9612
      @davidm9612 Год назад +3

      Overly Sarcastic Productions did a really good video on the legend of Robin Hood a few years back, and honestly, I reckon a collab between them and Max would be amazing (Not least for the joy of seeing Red animate a little caricature of Max)

    • @TheGypsyVanners
      @TheGypsyVanners 11 месяцев назад +3

      Um pretty sure there have been I believe it's how I found Max.

    • @DSlyde
      @DSlyde 11 месяцев назад

      @@TheGypsyVanners please link it if I missed it.

  • @pdcushman
    @pdcushman Год назад +66

    A note on numbles: Offal is usually the first thing that a predator eats after it kills a prey species like deer. Lots of concentrated vitamens. Most modern hunters will leave the offal in the field for the wild scavangers because offal spoils so quickly. However, if you can get it back to camp without spoilage, offal makes a very tasty campfire meal. Looking forward to that humble pie recipie...

    • @silverwolfe3636
      @silverwolfe3636 Год назад +11

      My grandpa would always bring ziploc baggies for organs while hunting and he made the most delicious spicy pickled deer heart (If the bullet/arrowhead hadn't destroyed it)! He also would fry up the livers with potatoes. Such things seem so weird and foreign to my friends who were raised in the city lol. But we would definitely leave the digestive and sex organs for scavengers.

    • @sharayejenkins5743
      @sharayejenkins5743 Год назад +4

      I watch a lot of homestead shows and naked and afraid and the "real" hunters who use the whole animal usually take the heart and liver and anything else that they can use. They've also used the other organs to make meds or salves they can use. At least in all the shows I watch. I watch a lot of shows that are filmed in Alaska where they live off of the land and depend on themselves. I find it fascinating!

    • @slwrabbits
      @slwrabbits Год назад

      Just need to stay away from offal from predator species, since you may well end up with vitamin toxicity.

  • @ismellstatic
    @ismellstatic Год назад +80

    I’d really love to see you do a video on the food of the kingdom of Ethiopia; you’re super engaging and thorough while not being stuffy, I’m curious to see what dish you’d choose and what about the culture you’d highlight.

  • @hellspawn22001
    @hellspawn22001 Год назад +86

    Terry Jones did a spectacular episode of his Medieval Lives series on the outlaw, it definitely deserves a watch. I would like to think Terry would love Max.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +28

      Oh yes! I love his stuff.

    • @CAP198462
      @CAP198462 Год назад +9

      Yeah, it’s good but have you seen Sir Tony Robinson’s documentary about Robin Hood. He does a good turn at identifying an historical basis for the character.

  • @PassTheMarmalade1957
    @PassTheMarmalade1957 Год назад +26

    Seeing clips of Disney's Prince John always makes me smile. My husband does a wonderful impression of him.
    "Hiss!!! You're never around when I need you!"

  • @jodieg6318
    @jodieg6318 Год назад +170

    Max you have stolen my heart on this; my thesis in college was all on the history of Robin Hood, the legends, folklore and who the real life candidates for Robin may have been. Long story short Robin is most likely an amalgamation of many people plus the folklore and social anxieties of the given period he’s being written in.

    • @humblesparrow
      @humblesparrow Год назад +8

      I've often thought that the name is an allegory, like Debbie Downer or Chatty Kathy. Naming like that was definitely a thing in Medieval literature.

    • @jodieg6318
      @jodieg6318 Год назад +18

      @@humblesparrow Rough Ralf and Welsh Will are some of my personal favorites. Lol. In Robin’s story Will Scarlet seems to have started as Scathlock or Scattlelock which means ‘lock smasher’ so we could reasonable assume that Will’s speciality was breaking and entering.

    • @oscarlove4394
      @oscarlove4394 Год назад +2

      @@humblesparrow its not much of a stretch to say his name might have been a pun.
      'robber in a hood' becomes 'robbing hood' becomes 'robin hood'.

    • @nadjasunflower1387
      @nadjasunflower1387 Год назад

      yup...ever time Max said ' not a real person ' I cringed. Knowing he was like King Arthur an amalgamation of different people. There was ( not sure if it was History Hit ) a video that went into the tracking down of who Robin was. Though that special was trying to find his grave. As the tale goes ( if i remember it right ) Robin shot an arrow out of a window, and where that arrow landed he was to be buried.

  • @scorch33
    @scorch33 Год назад +38

    My Dad's side of the family has lived in Nottingham since time of eld. I've been there, and to Sherwood Forest, and let me tell you, they absolutely love the Disney version of Robin Hood. Those posters, along with others, are all over the walls of the Tourist Center.

    • @jillparks
      @jillparks Год назад +13

      For some reason, as an American who adored the Disney version of Robin Hood, this makes me so happy that it's embraced by the real locals of Sherwood Forest.

  • @reptile_3335
    @reptile_3335 Год назад +539

    Well at this point my boss understands that I sometimes show up late because of your videos. Worth it.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +179

      😂 don’t get in trouble on my account!

    • @gokce9521
      @gokce9521 Год назад

      Leave your job, rob people and eat pie in the forest.

    • @shadibeidas1
      @shadibeidas1 Год назад +18

      ​@@TastingHistory nor from your account. :-p

    • @lootownica
      @lootownica Год назад +25

      Bring him some historical snacks, and you'll be forgiven 🥨🍖🥟

    • @missvidabom
      @missvidabom Год назад +15

      @@lootownica Perhaps hermit cookies?

  • @Crispi1260
    @Crispi1260 Год назад +7

    One of the highlights of the week is when a new Tasting History video is released. This is one of those channels that is my favourite to recommend to people when they are looking for something to watch.

  • @GypsyHunter232UK
    @GypsyHunter232UK 7 месяцев назад +2

    One of the very best cooking channels on RUclips..

  • @googleuser9009
    @googleuser9009 Год назад +101

    That Maid Marian thing about being a fox nearly made me spit out my beer. Hilarious

  • @LishB1011
    @LishB1011 Год назад +95

    I love that the Pokemon in the background is always thematic for the episode 🤩 it also shows just how massive you and your husband's Pokemon collection is!

    • @blackdragon7979
      @blackdragon7979 Год назад +8

      My frustration is "I should know the Pokemon but I don't and do I need to turn in my nerd card..."

    • @LichLordFortissimo
      @LichLordFortissimo Год назад +3

      @@blackdragon7979 I've identified every one of them. Once he starts on gen 9 though I may struggle

    • @Szandrie
      @Szandrie Год назад +1

      Yes I love the Pokémon in the background 🙌🙌😄

    • @arifhossain9751
      @arifhossain9751 Год назад +4

      Decidueye is most definitely the Robin Hood Pokémon.

    • @partylikeits1066
      @partylikeits1066 Год назад

      I thought I recognised that little figure!

  • @rickhobson3211
    @rickhobson3211 Год назад +116

    I can always count on you for Disney references! Also, I love how you have this community of friends and acquaintances building around you. Thanks for creating this channel!

  • @nicoskefalas
    @nicoskefalas Год назад +17

    I am extremely glad that you and your show exist! Makes me feel a little less lonely as a history and food nerd. This video makes me miss pasties I used to eat when I lived in the UK. Thank you Max for producing this kind of content 😊

  • @tricksfollies9549
    @tricksfollies9549 Год назад +8

    I’d love to see the larding technique for the venison leg someday! It sounds very interesting.

  • @maddie6589
    @maddie6589 Год назад +258

    You, sir, have sparked my love for history again. I appreciate you for that. Watching your videos also makes cooking more fun and feel not as lonely. Keep up the awesome work!

  • @douglasfur3808
    @douglasfur3808 Год назад +8

    The pasty staying warm is one of their advantages as portable food. Staked out on an ambush in cold rainy English weather, and having a warm pie tucked in your shirt would be deluxe.

  • @FrikInCasualMode
    @FrikInCasualMode Год назад +89

    As a kid, I loved Robin Hood stories. Along with Zorro he was the hero of my childhood. I'm glad you've shown us a little bit of how Robin's life could look... if he was real, of course.

    • @maudline
      @maudline Год назад +5

      Omg I loved anything Robin Hood and Zorro too!

    • @dawnmichelle4403
      @dawnmichelle4403 Год назад +3

      Now we need Max to do a Zorro recipe!

  • @herzetty
    @herzetty Год назад +8

    I'd love to watch you do an episode on hasty pudding! It's described in "Little House in the Big Woods" along with descriptions of maple syrup harvesting and I'm curious what it's like.

  • @ViktoriousDead
    @ViktoriousDead Год назад +1

    Max, I can get you any future deer products you need for future shoes

  • @julietsmith5925
    @julietsmith5925 Год назад +72

    Becomes more hilarious when you recall that the term "merry" means "drunk".

    • @julietsmith5925
      @julietsmith5925 3 месяца назад

      @@17DollazCuh It definitely does. LOL.

  • @Degner
    @Degner Год назад +26

    I wish I could remember which author it was, but there is a Medieval German Fencing Treatise that instructs how to be a Robber Knight without actually killing the peasants. Stuff like "Take a pinch of their neck and pull it, then put the point of your dagger through the useless bit of flesh. They will feel the pain and the spilling blood, and will surrender all to you." And yes, these are illustrated!

    • @joannshupe9333
      @joannshupe9333 Год назад +2

      Sooo, a stiletto, not a Bowie knife!

    • @DH-xw6jp
      @DH-xw6jp Год назад +3

      Ouch.
      Yeah, if someone jabbed a rondel dagger through my scruff i would definitely surrender to the iron clad scoundrel without any more resistance.

  • @Rosedawn321
    @Rosedawn321 Год назад +28

    I love that you included Mel Brookes’ “Men in Tights”!

    • @davidm9612
      @davidm9612 Год назад

      "Forgive me, sire...but...wasn't your mole on the... other... side?"
      "I have a mole!?"

  • @rosescott9299
    @rosescott9299 Год назад +30

    Max miller, I think you are excellent and I love you. This was your true calling. I remember when you said you weren’t sure if you should leave your job to do this. I hope you are happy with your decision. I really think this is your calling. You are truly entertaining, filled with information, an excellent storyteller, and just beautiful to look at. You are a beautiful soul sir. I hope life is kind to you.

  • @jwilli7434
    @jwilli7434 Год назад +7

    You know, it's so interesting. The historical part of this video was so engaging that I absolutely forgot you were making the meat pies!

  • @sheenachristina2385
    @sheenachristina2385 Год назад +40

    I love pastes!! It’s like Proto-hot pocket!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +16

      They really are 😂

    • @adedow1333
      @adedow1333 Год назад +6

      Every culture in the world has one. It's a beautiful thing

    • @marcusfridh8489
      @marcusfridh8489 Год назад +2

      ​@@adedow1333 just look at the famous calzonepizza, that is basically a giant hot pocket or pirouge

    • @gabriellakadar
      @gabriellakadar Год назад +2

      @@marcusfridh8489 or Jamaican patties! YUM!

    • @lautreamontg
      @lautreamontg Год назад +1

      And considering how the meat was got, it truly was a "hot" pocket.

  • @AGMundy
    @AGMundy Год назад +38

    I look forward to one of these videos every week. It has been a joy to watch the channel grow and to become ever more familiar with both Max and Jose. As I have said before, the success of this channel is fully deserved.
    As a long-term watcher (I think there were about 22k subscribers when I joined) let me be one of the first to wish Max an early happy 40th Birthday which is coming up all too soon. He remains surely one of the handsomest dishes of the day.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +11

      Hey good memory haha

    • @IMeMineWho
      @IMeMineWho Год назад +1

      Happy early bday Max! 💜 you and TH! Merry meet!

  • @theortheo2401
    @theortheo2401 Год назад +13

    that Decidueye plush in the back :chef's kiss:. Also this recipe makes me think alot of people ate some kind of portable pie on the road.

    • @adedow1333
      @adedow1333 Год назад +1

      Oh that's why that was! I couldn't quite tell.

  • @Ragdollsandroses
    @Ragdollsandroses 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve no desire to run into a celebrity, but the idea of bumping into Max at a wine tasting and spit balling historical food/stories ideas…. 😍

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  6 месяцев назад

      I'm no celebrity, so you're safe 😂

  • @blightedstar80
    @blightedstar80 Год назад +1

    I live in the New Forest, and a lot of the pubs and roads incorporate hard or hind into their names. I haven’t seen much deer, but we have lots of horses and ponies that roam freely through the forests near where I am. 😊

  • @MsMotoko2
    @MsMotoko2 Год назад +15

    Man I would've loved to have Max as my History teacher. He makes everything sound exciting.

  • @TelynEthuil
    @TelynEthuil Год назад +8

    I live about 30 minutes away from Sherwood, and I loved seeing the image of Major Oaks (The massive tree in the painting that looked like it was missing the main trunk) in this one. I actually learned how to use the traditional English longbow in Sherwood forest, right beside Major Oaks. As someone who was born and raised in the states, you can imagine just how giddy that made me.

  • @Mat_Rural
    @Mat_Rural Год назад +79

    I have eaten venison pies at Market Fairs in Nottingham. I'm not overly fond of game, but the one I ate was so full of just the most wonderful and thick gravy that I didn't mind it. Good stuff, Max 👍

    • @adedow1333
      @adedow1333 Год назад +3

      That sounds delectable!

  • @KSt-nv8eb
    @KSt-nv8eb Год назад +3

    I was so surprised that the meat was not dry on the inside! I always learn something new from you, Max. Thank you! (again!)

  • @LePetitErik
    @LePetitErik Год назад

    You could say add the water into the dough "'Till it be enough". This looks so good!

  • @limeparticle
    @limeparticle Год назад +54

    Robin Hood was my childhood hero. Many were the trees I felled with my trusty knife in the woods next to my home to make bows and arrows. Still have a couple scars on my fingers from back then. Ah the golden days of a GenX childhood when we roamed the woods unsupervised at age 7, wielding knives 😂

    • @adedow1333
      @adedow1333 Год назад +6

      Millennial me wished for this. I was never allowed a knife though. More's the pity.

    • @Lionstar16
      @Lionstar16 Год назад +6

      I honestly don't know whether to be impressed or horrified at the idea of an unsupervised 7 year old wielding a knife 😆

    • @limeparticle
      @limeparticle Год назад +6

      @@Lionstar16I mean I did learn about knife safety from my Girl Guides troupe and my dad, but accidents happened 😅

    • @joannshupe9333
      @joannshupe9333 Год назад

      @@limeparticle They sure do! And that always provides you with some great stories to tell.

    • @glotree
      @glotree Год назад +1

      That’s how boys learn. (Speaking as a someone with five brothers, and two sons of my own…)

  • @mollybeee
    @mollybeee Год назад +8

    To get rid of a lot of the gamey taste of the venison you can put a small amount of vinegar in the cooking water, works for moose and bear as well.

  • @pheart2381
    @pheart2381 Год назад +7

    Props for the medieval tea towel!

  • @annalorree
    @annalorree Год назад

    1. Nice Bayeux Tapestry towel.
    2. The proper term for a small piece of meat is “a fair gobbet”.
    3. I love these videos!

  • @TheElectroboy
    @TheElectroboy Год назад +1

    love the subtle robinhood reference with the decidueye in the back

  • @lausdeo4944
    @lausdeo4944 Год назад +27

    Regarding Robin Hood's historical inspiration--
    It is possible the story's oldest roots comes from over two centuries before the King John's time. The name Robin is similar to the Welsh phrase Rhi Bran (King Raven--a mythological figure). This similarity could have allowed for an easy confusion between the two. There were many stories of Welsh rebels resisting the initial Norman invasion. They fought the early Normans to a standstill with their long-bows, before joining with the Normans as a client state and supplying the very long-bow-men used to hammer the French at Agincourt.
    This time-period and setting makes more sense. The wilds of Wales were still very much deep wilderness at the time of the Conqueror and his close progeny, and a focus on archery and rebellion is shared by the Welsh guerrillas and the Robin Hood's gang. Conversely, Sherwood was a nearly a manicured park by the time of John, and population density of the region was not likely large enough to shelter a rebellion as described in the tales.
    The exploits of the Welsh marauders could very easily have been conflated with the outlaws of later periods, and it even seems at the time of King John "Robin" was already a generic name given to outlaws and bandits. Interesting, to say the least.
    There is a historical fiction trilogy with this premise ( _King Raven_ by author Stephen Lawhead). It is from a Christian perspective, but that doesn't impact the quality of the story, but rather eccentuates the cultural accuracy. I would recommend it to anyone interested.

    • @dinolil1474
      @dinolil1474 Год назад +1

      I know there's a Welsh figure often likened to Robin Hood: Twm Sion Cati, perhaps?

    • @CookieDoh
      @CookieDoh Год назад +1

      I heartily second your book recommendation!

    • @lausdeo4944
      @lausdeo4944 Год назад +1

      @@CookieDoh Excellent to find a man with good taste in books, let alone RUclips channels.

    • @Locksley108
      @Locksley108 Год назад

      "The name Robin is related to the Welsh phrase Rhi Bran"
      No it isn't
      "This time-period and setting makes more sense. The wilds of Wales were still very much deep wilderness at the time of the Conqueror and his close progeny, and a focus on archery and rebellion is shared by the Welsh guerrillas and the Robin Hood's gang. Conversely, Sherwood was a nearly a manicured park by the time of John, and population density of the region was not likely large enough to shelter a rebellion as described in the tales."
      Stop making shit up mate, Robin hood isn't welsh, you can celebrate being welsh without claiming Robin hood as a welshman

    • @lausdeo4944
      @lausdeo4944 Год назад +1

      @@Locksley108 ...I'm not Welsh. Or even English. I'm a Texan of Polish/Scandinavian descent who happens to have an interest in the legend of Robin Hood. I am presenting a historical argument as it was presented to me.
      The first point is simply saying the names are phonetically similar, showing an ease of tale transmission.
      The second point is ENTIRELY true. I suggest you do your research before assuming I am making things up to celebrate a fictional ancestry.

  • @oleksiyprotas6376
    @oleksiyprotas6376 Год назад +5

    That 5:33 Bayeux Tapestry towel :3
    So love these little thematic details in your vids

  • @happygrandma5637
    @happygrandma5637 Год назад +7

    I always have closed captioning on, even though Max articulates very well. I love the fact that when he takes his 1st bite cc shows CHOMP. Thanks Max. I did know that it was illegal to hunt in Royal forests but not the timeline. Very interesting.

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Год назад +2

      The closed captions are a product of Jose's hard work!

    • @happygrandma5637
      @happygrandma5637 Год назад +3

      @@ThinWhiteAxe And his hard work is much appreciated.

  • @katiez4207
    @katiez4207 Год назад +5

    No matter what is going on in the world, you make things better, even if it's only 20 minutes at a time. Thank you, sir! 😊

  • @danregularo6455
    @danregularo6455 Год назад

    I don’t know Pokémon very well and idk how long it’s been there but I’m loving the little dude in the background.

  • @jacquespoulemer3577
    @jacquespoulemer3577 Год назад +11

    Max, Jose, and those of us who just mill about, back in the 1970s i did the lardon trick ONCE (one of Julia Child's recipes). It was fun but there are easier ways to make meat moist. A neighbor of mine asked me once if i wanted some venison and I said yes, enthusiastically. I got some ground venison and some leg meat. After some research I learned that if you marinate the venison in wine or some other booze and herbs and spices it both flavors the meat and tenderizes it. As I was already marinating ALL meats (1-5 days, chicken, beef, pork, lamb etc) this was easy enough. the very tough cut came out tender and delicious. When i first retired to Mexico I had money to buy a stove or a fridge....since marinating meat is a way of conserving it, I opted for the stove. Thanks guys great video hugs Jim Oaxaca Mexico

  • @Harbinger1776
    @Harbinger1776 Год назад +22

    I love your Middle Ages cooking videos. But you’ve also introduced me to some cultural foods I’ve grown to love. I recently went to a Moroccan restaurant based off your videos and loved it immensely.
    So yeah Max, I owe you for making me more worldly in a culinary sense. So thank you.
    Please keep up the good work, can’t wait to buy your cookbook!

  • @RossOriginals
    @RossOriginals Год назад +17

    I love that you've got Robin *HOOT* behind you for this one (one of the best starter final evos)
    "Look at Maid Marian, she was a fox!" - HA! Nice.

  • @kathleensutherland6593
    @kathleensutherland6593 Год назад +1

    Max is such a great presenter that I don't even mind the adverts. It all blends nicely together.

  • @TucsonHippy
    @TucsonHippy Год назад

    Was stationed in Huntingdonshire at RAF Alconbury, and lived in Godmanchester across the river Ouse from Huntingdon proper. Not much wooded area left.

  • @timeworntraveler3644
    @timeworntraveler3644 Год назад +15

    It's so cool how Max (or Jose?) always respond to comments in the first hour or so. Makes me wanna watch every Tuesday lol

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +13

      A little of both :) More me at first post, then Jose through the week

  • @sevensongs
    @sevensongs Год назад +7

    "She was a fox" should not have made me laugh as hard as it did, but I love it!

  • @LoverofHistory
    @LoverofHistory Год назад +9

    When I was a child, the Disney Robin Hood movie was my favourite and I used to dress up as him all of the time. Thank you for another excellent video Max! I'll have to try that recipe sometime

  • @kimberlym5988
    @kimberlym5988 6 месяцев назад

    When we had deer roast back when I was younger, we always used to put strips of bacon (rashers for the Britians) on top of the roast to give it moisture and flavor.

  • @tiraXpyrrha
    @tiraXpyrrha Год назад

    I love the Decidueye plush in the background. It's one of my favorite gen 7 pokemon.

  • @DeathMetalDerf
    @DeathMetalDerf Год назад +7

    Fun Fact: Disney's Robin Hood is still one of my favorite Disney movies, one of the nicknames for one of my cats is "Prince Turbo the Phoney King of South Buffalo, NY" and another cat gets called Madame Hiss because that's all she ever does is hiss loudly at her siblings. Great job as usual, Mr. Miller! I really do look forward to seeing you at least twice a week! I hope you are well and having a great day!!

  • @Matt-eq5ft
    @Matt-eq5ft Год назад +37

    Always a good day when you catch Max's videos right when he uploads!

  • @chasegilmond5637
    @chasegilmond5637 Год назад +5

    Pasties were really popular in the mineshafts of Butte, MT back in the day. The miners could get a filling meal without getting it dirty by holding it by the crimp. After finishing, they'd throw the crust into the darkness for the tommy knockers.

    • @melissalambert7615
      @melissalambert7615 Год назад +2

      I did not know that. Know Welsh miners did the same. Maybe they brought the idea to Butte.

    • @ellenahs5911
      @ellenahs5911 Год назад +1

      what is a tommy knocker

  • @captainthorrek262
    @captainthorrek262 Год назад +1

    Not a fan of venison, but doing this with beef, chicken, and chourico. Thank you for the pasty dough recipe; I've been waiting for this!!!

    • @captainthorrek262
      @captainthorrek262 Год назад

      These came out great! A little dry, but not too dry (went for ground beef pasties). They went great with barbecue sauce and thousand island dressing to dip in, and I can't wait to try them alongside a bowl of loaded baked potato soup!

  • @shaolinotter
    @shaolinotter Год назад +2

    the pasty is a revered food in northern michigan since it has a long history of mining

  • @helenpenn2
    @helenpenn2 Год назад +13

    Dear Max, I've just come out of hospital and I've been passing my time watching all your wonderful videos. I love your style.

  • @angm1334
    @angm1334 Год назад +13

    you are the absolute KING of segues. you don’t get nearly enough love for that talent alone. every time you pull it off, which is always, i smile and enjoy it more than i should. love your vids. thanks for your wonderful work!

  • @stephaniebequeath9812
    @stephaniebequeath9812 Год назад +11

    Would love to see an episode on Cumin and how it got into so many different cultures food.

    • @Hallows4
      @Hallows4 Год назад +1

      Cumin is basically my miracle spice; I put it in most things I cook.

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Год назад

      Yes! I love it and my mom hates it. I would love to know the history of it.

    • @Hallows4
      @Hallows4 Год назад +1

      @@ThinWhiteAxe As far as I know, it likely originated somewhere in the Mediterranean, and was prized by both the Egyptians and the Greeks. It probably traveled along the Silk Road to reach India, where it's still widely used today.

  • @rachelfeala4963
    @rachelfeala4963 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for using the Disney Robin Hood. I grew up on it, and I don't often see it referenced in popular culture. It doesn't get enough love.

  • @mgregg85
    @mgregg85 Год назад +3

    I love all these videos that give us a little history lesson and recipes to try, great work.

  • @seronymus
    @seronymus Год назад +9

    I love Robin Hood for that period of history. I wish you had mentioned one root of the legend probably being related to the "Norman Yoke" concept and "wild men" Saxon rebels who would ambush the new order's knights for a while after 1066. I enjoyed learning about the Folvilles though and one of the knight's portraits (the guy getting head stabbed) is a meme actually! And delicious venison to top it off nice.

  • @DankRedditMemes
    @DankRedditMemes Год назад +25

    Little fun fact: Most if not all of your meal kit delivery services, including Hello Fresh, have their recipes available freely on their website, although they may or may not have proprietary and/or vague ingredients or measurements (e.g. the One-Pan Santa Fe Pork Tacos asks for 'one unit' of 'Tex-Mex Paste').

    • @Konpekikaminari
      @Konpekikaminari Год назад +4

      That's interesting, and does kinda make sense

    • @scaper8
      @scaper8 Год назад +1

      That's actually good to know. Thanks!

  • @lisacraze1
    @lisacraze1 Год назад +18

    I really appreciate the little text emojis you take the time to include in the captions! Also, would dried ginger powder be more common than fresh ginger? Love your videos!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +13

      That's all Jose who cleans up the subtitles and adds other languages

    • @alexwilson3812
      @alexwilson3812 Год назад +3

      Me as a chef 👩‍🍳 I use a fresh ginger to a dried ginger all the same there taste the same 😅

    • @namedrop721
      @namedrop721 Год назад +3

      Ginger root candied, powdered or dry would be more common as shipping time was long and ginger does not grow well in England

  • @michaausleipzig
    @michaausleipzig Год назад

    Quite ingenious actually to prepare your food like that. Baking it into a dough makes it easy to transport. You can easily have a couple of those in your saddle bag (or whatever) and have them whenever you get a moment of rest.

  • @nephicus339
    @nephicus339 Год назад +1

    17:36 - Funny you say it's more utilitarian; back in the middle ages, you would make the pastry as simple as possible as it was just a container for the food; kind of like a take-out box or bag today. Most people would discard it after eating the filling, unless they were really that hungry or poor.

  • @jmcscore
    @jmcscore Год назад +6

    Hey, have you ever watched Terry Jones' Medieval Lives? The Outlaw episode covers much more on why there were so many medieval outlaws.

    • @marcusfridh8489
      @marcusfridh8489 Год назад

      I loved that series, it was here on youtube, but they removed it when Jones passed away, may he rest in peace.

  • @mateofernandez4398
    @mateofernandez4398 Год назад +5

    As an archer and a Home Cook myself I gotta say. I love this video. Keep up the good work it is amazing.

  • @JaneAustenAteMyCat
    @JaneAustenAteMyCat Год назад +14

    I was always told the origin of the pasty was in Cornwall for tin miners. The wives would bake thick, inedible pastry filled with essentially a thick stew and the miners would eat just the insides because tin is poisonous and they would have it all over their hands. I guess that was part true, part old wives tale. Such a fascinating video!

    • @ajrwilde14
      @ajrwilde14 Год назад +5

      pasties are eaten all over Britain, the Cornish style is native to Cornwall though

  • @ashe1317
    @ashe1317 Год назад +13

    "and that's also where we get the term 'pasta'," Max says casually, like he didn't just blow my freakin' mind 😂

  • @victoriahoward8244
    @victoriahoward8244 Год назад +1

    I never get tired of the hard tack gif!! I may try the sweet potato/rye tea. Looks pretty, nice for Fall!