American Couple Reacts: Weird Things ONLY British People Do! We Learned Some SURPRISING Things!!

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
    @TheNatashaDebbieShow  2 года назад +72

    Once again we go into a video thinking we will know most of this stuff and find out that we still have A LOT of learning to do!
    This was a very fun episode and we were surprised at most of these British quirks. Of course these are generalizations and we know they don't apply to all British people. Nonetheless we hope you have fun watching. Drop us a comment and please click the Like button. Thanks for watching everyone!

    • @JohnSmith-ki2eq
      @JohnSmith-ki2eq 2 года назад +22

      I was once in a minor car accident and while we waited for the ambulance to come for the driver (he had broken a tiny bone in his foot), a little old lady who lived in the house outside which we crashed, brought us tea and biscuits to "soothe" our nerves, she remained on my Christmas card list for decades until sadly the card came back one year with a note telling us she had passed. Thank you Dorothy for the tea and biscuits, they were lovely and I'm glad you lived to a very good age indeed 😊

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  2 года назад +10

      @John Smith God bless her! And thank you for sharing about Dorothy! ❤️❤️

    • @alistairthorn1122
      @alistairthorn1122 2 года назад +14

      On number 2 - it's equally acceptable to shout "sack the juggler" when somebody drops a glass in a pub.

    • @joannetyndall3625
      @joannetyndall3625 2 года назад +10

      As a former bar worker Sack the Juggler was the bane of my life!

    • @JJ-of1ir
      @JJ-of1ir 2 года назад +9

      I am mortified. My whole life is a wreck. I call it a Scon/and a Scone BUT I have just discovered NO ONE else puts butter on their scon/scone first, before the jam and clotted cream! I cannot be English ....so where did I come from?
      Also, we have tea on every occasion it can be managed. My own, four-year-old daughter, fell over in the playground at school and grazed her knee. She sat on the Headmistress' knee for a moment while she cried. When she stopped, the Headmistress asked if she was alright now. My daughter patted her arm confidingly and said she would be, once she had a cup of hot, sweet, tea for shock!

  • @bunjitsu7046
    @bunjitsu7046 2 года назад +274

    I watched an ambulance pull up to my neighbours house and about half an hour later they came round to explain their father had just died, they were alone and looked very shocked and confused. My initial reaction, get them inside, sit them down, offer a cup of tea and sit with them. The tea is about comfort, its about feeling warm and safe and something very familiar. We offer it for sickness, sadness, shock, pain and comfort. Tea is amazing at calming people

    • @angelamuircroft5181
      @angelamuircroft5181 2 года назад +23

      A cuppa tea and a cuddle is my cure all. X

    • @kategibson380
      @kategibson380 2 года назад +27

      It's also a bonding 'ceremony' and a simple sign of friendship.

    • @paulcharleton3208
      @paulcharleton3208 2 года назад +11

      So true. A few years ago now I worked in the offices of a power distribution company with the electricity engineers/linesmen. We had a massive teapot that was black inside with years of accumulated tannin. It was customary to make a pot at regular intervals and take it round to each desk for a refill. Delivery was usually met by the standard thanks of "oooh lovely". This would sometimes set people up for long outside shifts repairing lines and substations and each van would sport its own teapot and kit for making a mobile pot

    • @PirateTrowel85
      @PirateTrowel85 2 года назад +9

      Had something similar at the wood yard, customer (an army veteran) was having a bad day and a bit of breakdown. So the boss sat him down and stuck the kettle on to prevent him from driving before he had a chance to calm down and collect himself. A good cuppa is like comfort food.
      Whilst not every Brit drinks tea, the majority of us do.

    • @olivehoskin2770
      @olivehoskin2770 2 года назад +13

      It is not about the Tea. it's a reason to start talking about what the real problem is.

  • @natashafletcher600
    @natashafletcher600 2 года назад +74

    I once took my teenage son an unsolicited cup of tea.
    He genuinely thought I was going to give him some bad news!

  • @vickytaylor9155
    @vickytaylor9155 2 года назад +138

    Giving tea to someone who has had a shock is very common. Especially with lots of sugar in.

    • @joannarigby1989
      @joannarigby1989 2 года назад +18

      In my practical exams for becoming a nurse, I had a scenario where I had to console someone after bad news and I offered them tea….so I totally fit in to that stereotype I guess. I would say the generalisation that Brits offer tea in difficult situations is pretty accurate and commonplace.

    • @fayesouthall6604
      @fayesouthall6604 2 года назад +4

      @@joannarigby1989 sweet tea too.

    • @jhnshep
      @jhnshep 2 года назад +6

      The sugar will help the shock stabilise and subside, also having something warm to hold and stare into, sorta has the same effect as a camp or open fire, staring into the flames you forget what you were thinking about and not notice the time passing.

    • @annpartoon5300
      @annpartoon5300 2 года назад +3

      many years ago I gave blood and was given hot sweet tea

  • @anniethefallen2326
    @anniethefallen2326 2 года назад +51

    Omg, the Freddo one is so accurate I was actually talking with my sister about it two days ago!! All of these are spot on, but for the carpeted bathrooms, they're more common in older houses

  • @kelvinprice9603
    @kelvinprice9603 2 года назад +130

    The tea thing is true, but it's not just about the tea. It's a pre cursor for sitting down, having a chat and discussing the problem. The chat is the important thing, the tea (or coffee if they prefer) is just an excuse because being a repressed culture we don't talk about our feelings.

    • @carllockpick6179
      @carllockpick6179 2 года назад +6

      Well said.

    • @mimikurtz2162
      @mimikurtz2162 2 года назад +6

      Indeed. We tend to be far more imperturbable than many other countries, so rather than flying off the handle about a crisis we keep a stiff upper lip while we contemplate and talk through the issue until we relax slightly and it doesn't seem so bad.

    • @Blurbmuz
      @Blurbmuz 2 года назад +6

      Yes, it’s also breathing space to ‘process’ what’s happened and let it sink in. Rather than an immediate and potentially unhelpful knee jerk reaction, the tea diverts enough to think WTF and calm down a little for rational thought to take hold (hopefully, if possible) 😊

    • @nicolakate8496
      @nicolakate8496 2 года назад +5

      The making of the tea gives us a few moments to gather our thoughts. And how to take the situation in hand

    • @dee2251
      @dee2251 Год назад +6

      Not repressed, just stoic.

  • @jenniebeann
    @jenniebeann 2 года назад +29

    I'm British and the tea thing is a generalisation but does happen. My Mum was in intensive care after a brain hemorrhage and the doctors came to tell us there was nothing they could do for her and asked if we'd allow her to be an organ doner. When they came to tell us, they brought a tray with cups of tea for us all. It doesn't make it better but in a strange way it does help.

  • @niftygnouf
    @niftygnouf 2 года назад +115

    I always put the kettle on in awkward situations 😂 Saying sorry is true. I walked into an empty chair once, and apologised to it 😂🤣

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  2 года назад +11

      Hahaha 😆

    • @Iluvantir
      @Iluvantir 2 года назад +12

      The most Britishly British thing I've read for a LONG while. Had to laugh.
      ... then cringe. I've done it too before realising no-one was in the chair I just bumped. We're so British!

    • @niftygnouf
      @niftygnouf 2 года назад +5

      @@Iluvantir 👍😂🇬🇧

    • @watfordjc
      @watfordjc 2 года назад +14

      I bet the chair didn't even apologise. Some inanimate objects are so rude they don't even try to mask their culpability with a sarcastic 'sorry'. Lampposts and postboxes are the worst at deliberately bumping into people.

    • @niftygnouf
      @niftygnouf 2 года назад +6

      @@watfordjc 😂🤣 Very true, they just have no manners at all 🤣

  • @timbirch4999
    @timbirch4999 Год назад +30

    The tea thing is 100% genuine! When there is nothing else you can do that will actually help, you might as well make some tea. It's better than saying "Thoughts and prayers".

    • @mary.e645
      @mary.e645 11 месяцев назад +2

      I agree

    • @paulbrut
      @paulbrut 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@mary.e645 Tea is definitely the thing to drink in a crisis,when my brother tottered in on two stumps from a car crash,by the time Mum had drank her second cup, his left leg had grown back .

  • @kayx1340
    @kayx1340 2 года назад +105

    When glasses or plates are dropped the crowd should also clap and the author of the breakages should either say thank you, take a bow, nod their head or wave a hand to acknowledge the applause.

    • @susananderson7504
      @susananderson7504 2 года назад +36

      Round where I live. West Yorkshire. People will also shout Sack the juggler

    • @RushfanUK
      @RushfanUK 2 года назад +3

      Try being the owner of a restaurant or bar where every breakage costs you money, glassware and crockery aren't free to us.

    • @MmostlyRandom
      @MmostlyRandom 2 года назад +16

      @@RushfanUK accidents happen, I doubt people break them on purpose

    • @bryan7938
      @bryan7938 2 года назад +3

      Yep

    • @pamelaadam9207
      @pamelaadam9207 2 года назад +3

      We shout are you having a smashing time

  • @chrisvernon2269
    @chrisvernon2269 2 года назад +53

    If you watch 'A Bridge Too Far' there is a scene where Sean Connery is offered a mug of tea by one of his paratroopers. Sean questions him on whether the mug of tea will solve all his problems, to which the paratrooper replies "it can't make it any worse, sir", or words to that effect. Thanks for a great series. Keep up the good work.

  • @TommyIsATwat
    @TommyIsATwat 2 года назад +17

    The cup of tea thing definitely works! It interrupts the pattern and gives everyone a base to reframe things.
    It is a shared experience, makes you feel like the cavalry have arrived, helps to calm the situation and gives
    you something to do with your hands!

  • @ShaneWalta
    @ShaneWalta Год назад +15

    The Tesco Meal Deal is an institution. It's also not always sandwiches, depending on how big the store is you can also get wraps, subs, salads or pasta salads

  • @VC-gt8fv
    @VC-gt8fv 2 года назад +22

    The tea thing is real! I wrote my dissertation on the way tea changed social interactions in British society. I don’t even like tea but I’d still accept a cup from someone trying to make me feel better.

  • @MrJocky82
    @MrJocky82 2 года назад +65

    Carpets in bathrooms died out years ago.
    This most definitely is not common place anymore.
    But I do remember both sets of my grandparents had carpets in the bathrooms.
    And "there's always time for tea".
    Cups of tea will always help defuse most situations.

    • @wildwine6400
      @wildwine6400 2 года назад +5

      Closest youd get is the carpet toilet surround or bathroom rug but ive only seen it in old peoples houses

    • @peterjackson4763
      @peterjackson4763 2 года назад +3

      My parents house had carpet in the bathroom. When we moved in (1962) it had no central heating. I believe they are connected. I have been in unheated tiled bathrooms in winter and found them uncomfortable.

    • @julielevinge266
      @julielevinge266 2 года назад +2

      Have a mat that goes in washing machine?

    • @peterjackson4763
      @peterjackson4763 2 года назад +1

      @@julielevinge266 I do at home, but it wasn't practical on Winter holidays

    • @mickyboy7586
      @mickyboy7586 2 года назад +3

      Fortunately no need now as we all have central heating in the bathroom

  • @janehenry3206
    @janehenry3206 2 года назад +4

    We had a Snowballs at Christmas, Advocate and lemonade, we felt posh and grown up, Marks & Sparks was too posh for us, we got an Arctic roll. It was sponge layer wrapped around a roll of ice cream. it was the same shape as the caterpillar, without the face. I give my grand kids Freddo's, but they weren't a thing in my day. I do shop in Marks & Sparks now and they do good sandwiches and good food all round really. In the 80's they did Beef Bourguignon cooked in house. You could buy a massive tub and eat it over days, yum.. Good post.

  • @davidmee1822
    @davidmee1822 2 года назад +28

    We also shout ‘sack the juggler!’ when someone drops a glass.

  • @stellaconway1204
    @stellaconway1204 2 года назад +36

    The freddo thing is actually true! I was discussing the price rise of freddos with a co worker literally the other day in a conversation about the energy crisis we are having 😂😂

  • @sarahealey1780
    @sarahealey1780 2 года назад +14

    Shout out for Bass shandy, that was my grown up drink as a kid 😆

  • @gregralph616
    @gregralph616 2 года назад +24

    I'm 58 & I remember Freddo's being about 3p. The thing about Freddo's is that they're actually a handy index. The recipe is so simple, just milk chocolate & you can't really reduce the size without making it an individual chocolate so the variables are limited so the cost becomes very telling!

    • @iggle6448
      @iggle6448 Год назад +2

      This is a spin off from costing things according to Mars Bars which we'd been doing for decades.

  • @widsof7862
    @widsof7862 Год назад +4

    you know what i think that the ‘it’s ok i’ll put the kettle on’ does is it slows things down and is like a ritual pause that most people just have in their social toolkit. i don’t actually remember ‘real’ coffee being available when i was growing up, there was instant coffee, the granules, and my mum mostly liked that, yet tea was still the preference. a lot of food and drink culture has been transformed whilst still having more traditional dishes or drinks etc

  • @janemcnaughten7275
    @janemcnaughten7275 2 года назад +98

    Hello ladies. Colin the Caterpillar cake has only appeared in England in the late 1970s. When I was a child it was always a Dougal cake. Dougan was the dog from a children's TV program from the late 1960s. The Colin cake is made along the same lines. 1. A chocolate Swiss roll from the supermarket.2. Coverd in chocolate butter icing and decorated to look like Dougals face & fur. I came to New Zealand in 1975 & there was only Dougal. When my girls were little from about 2 to 7 all they wanted for their birthday came was Dougal. Hope thus isn't too long winded. Jane in New Zealand 🇳🇿

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  2 года назад +5

      Thanks Jane! ❤️

    • @ftumschk
      @ftumschk 2 года назад +14

      Ah, Dougal Cakes! Thanks for reminding me :) In fact, Colin the Caterpillar cakes are even more recent than the 1970s, as they were first introduced in 1990.

    • @janemcnaughten7275
      @janemcnaughten7275 2 года назад +3

      @@ftumschk Hello. That's so interesting. All I know is Colin wasn't around when we left England for New Zealand. Keep safe

    • @andyp5899
      @andyp5899 2 года назад +5

      The reason it was renamed Colin was it was to differentiate M&S' cake from everyone else's. M&S are more expensive and claim themselves to provide better quality.

    • @grrfy
      @grrfy 2 года назад +5

      YAY! Dougal cakes!

  • @ammoneggs69
    @ammoneggs69 2 года назад +1

    I maintain that some things are meant to be treats and stay treats forever. I long for the days when the things we take for granted now, were once an occasional treat to be looked forward to.

  • @johnboy2562
    @johnboy2562 2 года назад +70

    Gogglebox is a great show, there was an American version but only using celebrities, not everyday families (though we now have Celebrity Gogglebox as well). Interestingly, the US Ambassador has recently said that they all watch it at the consulate in London, as it gives them a real education into English humour, language, habits, etc. All it tells me is that we eat too much cake and crisps!😆🍰🍿

    • @samsprrr3548
      @samsprrr3548 Год назад +1

      We have celebrity gogglebox too.

  • @noradupdateslive3349
    @noradupdateslive3349 2 года назад +15

    It’s so funny! The apology one is incredibly true! I walked into the door the other day, of course I apologised to it. It’s the same when I dropped my book. We are so polite 😂😅

    • @emmsue1053
      @emmsue1053 Год назад +3

      Dropped a loaf of bread in Tecco the other day & apologised. LOL

  • @lucyhardman2267
    @lucyhardman2267 2 года назад +15

    I've heard a theory that the reason we're considered a more even-tempered (and repressed) nation is because we use tea as a cultural way of "counting backwards from ten". If a conversation gets heated and emotions start running high, it's not uncommon that someone will diffuse the situation by jumping up and offering to make tea. Often people won't carry on the discussion until the teamaker is back (giving everybody time to cool off) or it will be taken as a useful opportunity to change topic.
    I expect it functions similarly when someone is upset. While you're off making the tea, it gives the upset person time to get comfortable and organise their thoughts, and it gives you time to mentally prepare for a difficult conversation. Plus it's an immediate way of offering comfort.
    The J2Os, caterpillar cake and Freddos thing I would say are more specific to millennials, and not even the majority of millennials. J2Os only popped up around the turn of the millennium, for instance. I'm only in my early thirties and even I wouldn't consider J2O my childhood drink of choice in a pub. That honour goes to Britvic Orange, concentrated canned orange juice I could never seem to find outside a pub.

  • @BestFriendsWhoLiveTogether
    @BestFriendsWhoLiveTogether Год назад +9

    The rain thing is so true, lol. I will carry an umbrella around with me at all times and even if it is raining I refuse the put it up unless it’s absolutely chucking it down. My sister (who has lived in Canada for the last 20 years) visited me in England last week and she was like, “it’s raining, use your umbrella”. My response was, “It’s only spitting.”

  • @animalian01
    @animalian01 2 года назад +30

    All British Army Armoured vehicles have a boiler on board to make a cup of tea, that's how important the tea is, and Colin the Caterpillar tastes great

    • @davidalexander8649
      @davidalexander8649 2 года назад +2

      Ah! The old BV. Happy days.

    • @animalian01
      @animalian01 2 года назад

      @@davidalexander8649 I know what you mean David

    • @memkiii
      @memkiii 2 года назад +1

      And for those not in the Armoured Corps - there was the ubiquitous 5 gallon Tea urn in the crewroom. Which may have remnants of coffee in it - in which case it was a Cofftea urn.

  • @stevenr6397
    @stevenr6397 2 года назад +10

    at a recent wedding a disaster happened after the cake decorator FORGOT to make the cake! but they didn't find out until the morning of the wedding, the guys cooking the meal for the guests ran to the shops and bought two colin the catapillar cakes plus several packs of the mini versions (they do individual mini ones 6 in a box) altered the face on the one to include a wedding veil and they served up a Mr &Mrs catapillar cake as a replacement, and this was at the swankiest hotel around, top class!

  • @Banshee665
    @Banshee665 2 года назад +18

    Next week, the intro will be…. “Hi, welcome to The Debbie Show, featuring Natasha”! 🤣

  • @eamonquinn5188
    @eamonquinn5188 Год назад +6

    The sandwich in a box was I think invented by Marks and Sparks in the UK only in the last 20 or 30 years when they had too many sandwiches in a cafe left over after lunch and tried selling them and it worked. M&S traditionally have the best sandwiches but they are always fresh every day at every store.

  • @vaudevillian7
    @vaudevillian7 2 года назад +8

    These are all absolutely true, haven’t seen a carpeted bathroom in about 30 years though

  • @jcbslytherin269
    @jcbslytherin269 Год назад +1

    Yep, very true about not bothering with an umbrella, rains far too much

  • @sarahcarrette2193
    @sarahcarrette2193 Год назад +6

    Love Colin the caterpillar (he's just a brand for Marks & Spencer) it's probably meant for kids but I had one for my 50th : ) The tea making thing is a kind gesture, it can be something to do if you're not sure what to do in a difficult situation and it's also an excuse to sit down and talk about whatever has just happened.

    • @highlyunlikely3698
      @highlyunlikely3698 Год назад

      Most of the supermarkets offer a caterpillar cake these days..maybe not being called Colin but perfectly acceptable.

  • @Elistone
    @Elistone 2 года назад +2

    the pigs in blankets are always sausage wrapped in bacon, but we do have sausage in pasty, there called Sausage rolls

  • @alabama1413
    @alabama1413 2 года назад +36

    You have to love Lucy & her quirks. Such an eloquent & engaging voice & most amusing too. I agree that the ‘Meal Deal’ is a big thing here with so many sandwich varieties available. They are always fresh & I can assure you that food standards generally ensure they’re safe to eat. The ‘pigs in blankets’ can be hand made all year round. Some of us will even have hot dogs in blankets. The British show is called ‘Gogglebox’ btw. Great reaction as always ladies & looking forward to your next posting

    • @vickytaylor9155
      @vickytaylor9155 2 года назад +1

      Nigella Lawson calls the hot dogs in puff pastry pigs in duvets.

    • @1Selous
      @1Selous 2 года назад

      Unfortunately she is generally describing 19-30 year olds as sone of the rubbish she comes out with I haven't ever seen

  • @thedivinemrm5832
    @thedivinemrm5832 Год назад +1

    Having worked in a couple of gay bars in South London, the ONLY correct response to a glass getting smashed is: "Ooooh, somebody dropped an earring!?" in the most theatrical/camp tone possible.

  • @coot1925
    @coot1925 2 года назад +15

    Don't worry about our gas/petrol station sandwiches. I've eaten tons of them and never had a problem. I don't think they're on the shelf long enough to go bad. They're restocked every day and we keep a very close eye on the sell by dates. ✌️♥️🇬🇧

  • @clivewilks1301
    @clivewilks1301 Год назад +1

    When the plates/glasses are dropped, you shout "wayhee, sack the juggler"

  • @starbuckhan
    @starbuckhan 2 года назад +41

    I’m a Aussie who has lived in the UK for the last 10 years I now totally get the Colin the caterpillar cake thing. I now have one every birthday 😂

    • @monkeytennis8861
      @monkeytennis8861 2 года назад +4

      It is not a thing.

    • @davidcox9674
      @davidcox9674 Год назад +1

      I must have had a deprived childhood 🤣 never heard of Colin the caterpillar. Spent the first 50 years of my life in the UK before moving to Australia 10 years ago.

    • @liamblack2574
      @liamblack2574 Год назад

      @@monkeytennis8861it is a thing which is why most shops now do their own versions. Like cuthbert

  • @faithpearlgenied-a5517
    @faithpearlgenied-a5517 2 года назад +14

    Tesco have a great range in their meal deal option. You can choose 1) sandwich/wrap/sub 2) crisps/chocolate/fruit and 3) a drink. 3 items for £3.40. I have a meal deal with my weekly shop and it's always fresh and lovely. Last week I had one of their christmas specials, turkey, cranberry and spinach wrap and this week I'm trying the pulled pork wrap.

    • @littlemy1773
      @littlemy1773 2 года назад +4

      Boots do one too, there’s is similar plus also they do some salads

  • @productjoe4069
    @productjoe4069 2 года назад +16

    I recently finished a project about sandwich supply chains. It’s a proper Thing here. Unlike most countries, our sandwiches have a very short stocking period (usually no more than a day) which allows much more variety in toppings, choice of bread, etc. A sandwich from Tesco, or Pret, or similar is probably the most common lunch for white collar workers.
    A sausage wrapped in puff pastry is called a ‘sausage roll’ here, and they’re eaten all year round (often as a part of a lunch including a pre-packaged sandwich)

  • @elizabeths6261
    @elizabeths6261 2 года назад +12

    Christmas pre-made sandwiches are usually really good! Also, a lot of our gas/petrol stations are attached to mini versions of supermarkets or coffee chains, so the produce is the same quality you'd get in a big supermarket.

  • @what_im_eatin_uk
    @what_im_eatin_uk 2 года назад +4

    Pre made sandwiches are absolutely massively popular here in the UK. They come in form of a meal deal. You get to take any sandwich and drink and any snack for a set price of between £3-£4. A typical city centre supermarket will carry about 50 sandwich types and snacks can be a chocolate bar, packet of crisps, fruit cup, energy bar but even something like a sausage roll or some chicken pieces. It's not just supermarkets that do these. Boots (Walgreens in the US) are one of the biggest sellers of mealdeals because they include a lot of expensive health drinks that often run to £2.50 alone in their deal for about £3.50 so it's incredibly good value and the quality is pritty good too across the board

  • @colinmoore7460
    @colinmoore7460 2 года назад

    The eggs in fridges thing. We keep them in the fridge for "long term storage", then transfer them to a ceramic chicken to keep them at room temp for use.

  • @trishstafford8256
    @trishstafford8256 2 года назад +4

    Putting the kettle on is about listening to the person in shock and loving them

  • @davidC1984
    @davidC1984 2 года назад

    We do have carpet tiles in the bathroom (easy to replace individual tiles) just because it's so cold on the floor underneath

  • @NickSmith-qx7qg
    @NickSmith-qx7qg 2 года назад +9

    I remember when Freddos were 2p.
    I feel so old. 🤣

  • @karengray662
    @karengray662 2 года назад

    At the “cup of tea” bit. As most others have said, it’s not really about the tea, (or coffee), although that is comforting, it’s more about marking a moment, a time to pause before tackling the subject at hand. Yes, it is very common in a crisis for someone to say “I’ll put the kettle on”, or even just after a busy day & you get home.

  • @skipperlos46
    @skipperlos46 Год назад +3

    I have always found pre-packed sandwiches bought from supermarkets very fresh but as a person that doesn't like mayonnaise there is a very limited choice. The flavour that has to be bought early is BLT (bacon lettuce & tomato) so my assumption is they are a very popular choice.

  • @mariamerigold
    @mariamerigold 2 года назад +1

    The weheeeeyyyy also applies to when someone slips and falls at a festival 😂

  • @sunnyshine2215
    @sunnyshine2215 2 года назад +3

    Yes a cup of tea usually saves the day and makes everything better (for a little while at least) especially accompanied by some biscuits!

  • @steverpcb
    @steverpcb Год назад +1

    When someone smashes a glass in a pub, these days you shout "One hundred and eighty", in reference to the Not the Nine O'clock News Darts sketch !

  • @blindarchershaunhenderson3769
    @blindarchershaunhenderson3769 2 года назад +8

    I have at least one meal deal per week, usually either prawn mayonnaise or cheese savoury but I love it when the seasonal flavours hit the shelves the Christmas ones are brilliant I love Turkey and stuffing and cranberry

  • @clareriley
    @clareriley 7 месяцев назад

    I've just found you guys. I'm now going to binge watch your channel from start to end. I love you guys. Tea is a home comforts thing. I'm in recovery and they're is nothing like a cup of tea when I'm trying to sit with my own demons. It really does help. Especially when your sober. Carpet in the bathroom used to be when indoor bathrooms came into horses and they were freezing. Carpet kept them warmer as obviously zero heating back then in the bathroom. Yes I pop in and pop out and pop over all the time. Can I say you guys make me laugh so much. Thank you. You have really helped a lost soul today. Now I'm gonna relax my dogs and cats and have a cup of tea while I watch more of you guys. From scanning your playlist I'm gonna love you guys so please don't hate on me for all my random comments. Peace and love guys xxx

  • @krognak
    @krognak 2 года назад +7

    These are all pretty accurate. Another one is slapping your hands down on your lap (sometimes saying “right!”) that means it’s time for someone to go, either the slapper if they’re a guest, or a guest if the slapper is quite brazen.

    • @kumasenlac5504
      @kumasenlac5504 2 года назад +2

      Not to be confused with a : slapper n.,s.,f. a drab.

  • @faithpearlgenied-a5517
    @faithpearlgenied-a5517 2 года назад

    A cup of tea gives you chance to pause and have a moment of comfort.

  • @TheSilkyelectron
    @TheSilkyelectron 2 года назад +58

    I think the tea thing is, 1. we are told sugar helps with shock, 2, it gives you something to hold and focus on, 3. on hearing someone has had bad news we offer them a drink as a way to say, ok, I'll put the kettle on, it's time to talk through it.

    • @jojeffrie962
      @jojeffrie962 2 года назад +4

      Exactly right

    • @sashacottier9581
      @sashacottier9581 2 года назад +8

      Yup. Warm drink just winds you down like ahhh. Better now. Yup. Can be hot cocoa or coffee. Tea just does it tho. Climate and repressed stress I think.

    • @rogerjenkinson7979
      @rogerjenkinson7979 7 месяцев назад +3

      I used to donate blood. Afterward you are directed to a comfortable area where you can relax have a sweet biscuit and a cup of sweet tea (the sugar gives a short-term boost as does the taiyin in the tea. (same effect as caffeine but milder). That and the short rest while you consume it, means you are much less likely to feel faint or dizzy just after you have lost a pint of your own blood.
      I had to stop giving blood because I began to faint while lying down still in the act!

  • @coltsfoot9926
    @coltsfoot9926 2 года назад +2

    Pigs in blankets only at Christmas?
    No way. It's a year-round food in my house.
    An essential accompaniment to any roast dinner, and there's usually a plate of them in the fridge as snacks!
    🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

  • @davesilkstone6912
    @davesilkstone6912 2 года назад +1

    When someone drops glasses/plates in a pub my family shouts "sack the juggler" :D

  • @nickyverra2175
    @nickyverra2175 2 года назад +3

    The pre-made sandwiches and wraps here are great options. They really do have multitudes of variety in even very small supermarkets. One great one is Hoisin Duck Wrap, which is in a tortilla wrap. The meal deal they mentioned is usually like 3-4 pounds and has a sandwich, a snack like some fruit, crisps or a chocolate bar and a drink.

  • @petervenkman69
    @petervenkman69 Год назад

    I don't think people believe tea will fix anything, but for many tea is comforting, and it is a physical (but not overly intimate) way of showing concern and wanting to help and comfort.
    I don't drink tea, but I keep some around to offer people.

  • @rickb.4168
    @rickb.4168 2 года назад +6

    no 4. I'll make a cuppa. it's a brilliant idea, it's not the drink itself, but taking yourself out of the situation for a minute and concentrating on doing something else, even for a couple of minutes can give you enough time to calm down and de-esculate tense situations.

  • @mikelheron20
    @mikelheron20 7 месяцев назад

    The reason we have certain foods only at Christmas is to help to keep it special. It's like hot cross buns which were only available around Easter but now are available all the year round

  • @flamelily2086
    @flamelily2086 2 года назад +21

    People in my area have been letting off fireworks since the middle of last month.
    I know that a cup of tea fixes everything except broken bones. This wisdom was handed down from generation to generation in my family. I think the act of putting on the kettle, making the tea and then sipping the tea helps you to calm down and relax.
    When I have a scone I put the jam first then a dollop of cream on the top. If you think about it it makes sense. You spread the jam on the scone and then put the cream on, how can you spread the jam if you put the cream on first?
    I've bought storemade sandwiches often the quality is good. We also have options for toasted sandwiches as well.

  • @andym5213
    @andym5213 2 года назад +1

    Waheeeeey - started at school :) Kid dropped a plate when taking it to the cart - standing ovation :)

  • @ajayjackson7727
    @ajayjackson7727 2 года назад +3

    Congrats on 30k subs Natasha and Debbie 😎👍

  • @robertfossey1798
    @robertfossey1798 8 месяцев назад +1

    It’s just called a caterpillar cake.usually cheaper than normal round cakes

  • @angeladavies898
    @angeladavies898 2 года назад +6

    Sausage in puff pastry in the UK is called a sausage roll. Colin the caterpillar cakes are pre-made children’s party cakes from Marks and Spencer, very popular because they are covered in really good quality thick chocolate. The pre-made sandwiches and meal deals are very popular especially with office workers etc, mainly because eating in a restaurant has historically been much more expensive in the UK than the US. I don’t personally drink tea either, but I would guess that around 95% of British people would offer to make you one if something bad had happened to you! 😂😂

  • @Defender200tdi
    @Defender200tdi 2 года назад +2

    Hardly surprising as we invented the sandwich. It was the Third Earl of Sandwich to be exact.

  • @lizp485
    @lizp485 2 года назад +4

    The freddo thing is true lol. Thankyou, this was fun xx

  • @stevekenilworth
    @stevekenilworth 2 года назад

    4 is quite right, a cuppa normally leads to a chat and a good chat can solve most things

  • @lolsaXx
    @lolsaXx 2 года назад +10

    The tea thing is VERY real.

  • @He1sbelles
    @He1sbelles Год назад +1

    When people drop stuff in restaurants I usually yell 'sack the juggler!' And the cup of tea in a crisis thing? Absolutely true.

  • @johnwitt2730
    @johnwitt2730 2 года назад +6

    Hi both, don't just take my word for it, but fact, British Army Tanks are all equipped with a water boiler in the turret for brewing up tea in comfort and relative safety. Tea is the cure all.

  • @ChrisGBusby
    @ChrisGBusby Год назад

    Scones: Jam first is Cornwall (Cornish cream of course). Cream first is Devon (Devonshire cream of course).

  • @kevvywevvywoo
    @kevvywevvywoo 2 года назад +4

    I prefer Debbie with her hair like she has it now, a soft feather cut. Suits her lovely broad smile. (natashas hair is always perfect too). Thanks to both of you for being so polite and diplomatic about the old country. x

  • @hilmaallen1302
    @hilmaallen1302 2 года назад

    When we say gas station sandwich these are rest stopes with all kind of food outlets and chain supermarkets. As such the sandwiches are really good. Also most supermarkets have sandwiches for sale, they are fresh each day and they do sell out.

  • @johncarpenter3008
    @johncarpenter3008 2 года назад +6

    I remember the first time in visited the Tesco Superstore in Coventry and I found a sandwich containing sliced beef and stilton cheese! It was wonderful for a quick lunch.

  • @allywood73
    @allywood73 Год назад +1

    I solved the cream and jam way on a scone by putting cream on one half and jam on the other and eat them separately.

  • @seedhillbruisermusic7939
    @seedhillbruisermusic7939 2 года назад +20

    love you ladies! Greetings from Scotland. I'm not a tea drinker, my parents lived in Italy for 5 years before I was born and they brought me up on coffee, but my scottish peers all drank tea, and it's true, if there's a crisis or some sort of tragedy or accident, the expected cure is a cup of tea.

    • @deniseadams1703
      @deniseadams1703 2 года назад +1

      I’m retired now but I haven’t had a cup of tea since I was 11, which when I had my first taste from my elder brother’s cup of coffee. I can’t stand even the smell of tea!

  • @coolmum47
    @coolmum47 2 года назад +4

    I'm in a small community Choir, most of the members are of 'a certain age', one man, probably in his late '50's had a Birthday and what did he bring in to share? a Colin the Caterpillar cake .... oh yes !! There was a lot of excitement and we couldn't wait for the 'tea break'!!!!

  • @johnavery3941
    @johnavery3941 2 года назад +1

    The "who's round is it" is so true and everyone then looks at the person who's round it is and they always say "oh is it my round" knowing full well it is

    • @paulcharleton3208
      @paulcharleton3208 2 года назад

      Long pockets and short arms eh?

    • @johnavery3941
      @johnavery3941 2 года назад

      Yup, they know who they are but never get away with it

    • @paulcharleton3208
      @paulcharleton3208 2 года назад +1

      @@johnavery3941 in Yorkshire the call used to be "tide's out" and if the suspect wasn't reaching for their wallet fast enough, then all the empty glasses would be stacked under theirs as they held it. Also one time I committed the heinous crime of having a half on my round (it was about pint 7 so I was close to capacity). This is a no-no

  • @JB-vr1vz
    @JB-vr1vz 2 года назад +3

    Yes, a cuppa was always the go to when anything stressful happened in life. Tea was supposed to relieve shock or anxiety - psychologically it works.

  • @kevdoe3360
    @kevdoe3360 2 года назад

    Me & my mates used to shout "sack the juggler" if somebody dropped a glass in a pub! Luv from the UK

  • @racheltomes3227
    @racheltomes3227 2 года назад +4

    Waheyyyyy is used everywhere if someone drops a glass, a china plate etc; almost daily at work in the canteen someone would get a "Waheyyyyy" 😂 they'd either go red with embarrassment or style it out and do a thank you and a bow!!!! Classic!
    Big sandwich market here in UK! Petrol/gas stations are surprisingly high quality.

  • @whattiler5102
    @whattiler5102 2 года назад

    The thing with umbrellas is that they are useful if it you know it is going to rain. but, what if it is also windy and at some point it is going to be turned inside out by the wind and be useless. If you escape that fate you are going to leave it on public transport (they are, by far, the most common lost property item. My last outing with one, I was so intent on not leaving the umbrella that I walked off the bus clutching the brolly but left my backpack behind; instead; I did get it back a few days later.
    Overall I get so wound up with safeguarding a brolly (especially a borrowed one) that I'm happier not having it at all.

  • @natalielang6209
    @natalielang6209 2 года назад +8

    Loved this one!
    Colin the caterpillar is such an icon that Marks & Spencer has (unsuccessfully) sued other supermarkets for doing their own versions.
    I think originally it was just an easy chocolate Swiss roll cake that they found a nice alliteration for, but it became hugely popular due to ease of sharing (as per the video)

    • @adelucas4824
      @adelucas4824 Год назад +2

      And the face is the best part!!

  • @kenirving5240
    @kenirving5240 2 года назад

    Yup, caterpillar cakes are very widely consumed for kids’ birthdays. Very nice chocolate cake and the face is chocolate too.

  • @DraconimLt
    @DraconimLt 2 года назад +4

    The 'caterpillar cake' is generally for children, I think she meant bring one to an *adult's* bday party as a joke and see their reaction, (so there wouldn't be another one) lol.
    The sandwiches can be bought from most supermarkets as well, you wouldn't have to get it at a gas station. 😀

  • @jaynemcdonough3254
    @jaynemcdonough3254 2 года назад

    In the north of England we tend to say Sack the juggler when any good drops a glass in the pub.

  • @susanlane8803
    @susanlane8803 2 года назад +5

    We have carpet in our bathroom, and it’s clean, gets hoovered regularly and the men are trained to aim straight!

  • @ianmarywilliams
    @ianmarywilliams 2 года назад +1

    Sometimes when glasses are dropped there's a cry of "Fire The Juggler" lol

  • @richt71
    @richt71 2 года назад +3

    Hey Ladies,
    Lots of our grocery stores do meal deals which are sandwich, crisps/ cake and a drink for a set amount. The range of sandwiches can be large.

  • @DerekMercerlocksmith
    @DerekMercerlocksmith 2 года назад

    Dropping a glass in the pub usually followed with waaaaay and sack (fire) the juggler

  • @TheRockSlugg
    @TheRockSlugg 2 года назад +17

    pre-made sandwich game here is strong, im sorry you had a poor experience with it in the US, but if/when you come, it is worth going to a major supermarket chain, say Tesco, and getting the meal deal, the price recently went up to £3.40, but you are still getting a sandwich, a bag of crisps and a drink for that ($3.82), the value for money and the overall quality are amazing, and personally, egg cress sandwich, Walkers cheese and onions and a bottle of Oasis for me :D, love your content xoxo.

    • @eileengoehring6080
      @eileengoehring6080 2 года назад

      I heard Tesco are stopping the meai deal !!!!!

    • @julielevinge266
      @julielevinge266 2 года назад

      Best sandwiches in London are on side streets like Angelochise, make it in front of you & you choose fillings that are all in front of you😊

  • @ninacoutinho9513
    @ninacoutinho9513 Год назад +1

    these are sooooooooo accurate omg. the sholer and j20 and collin the caterpillar what a throwback. and yes the freddo is so accurate! soooooo true all of these oh my god. other than the carpet one which is very rare nowadays. and the dog poo one so accurate. all of it haha it's all too true

  • @austinwiththehat
    @austinwiththehat 2 года назад +7

    My wife got me into gogglebox. I don’t like most of the shows they are watching but the families are quite compelling, normally when they say something stupid lol. I imagine a react channel watching gogglebox would be weird 😂. Reacting to people reacting to tv shows. Because the families are spread across the country it’s a good way of hearing the differing accents

  • @petervenkman69
    @petervenkman69 Год назад

    Pre-made sandwiches: When you can get a sandwich, a drink and a snack for around £3-£5 (depending on the shop, and sometimes the sandwiches are more upscale) that is an easy get on the run lunch for work if you were too lazy to make one before leaving, and probably cheaper than going to the work canteen or grab some fast food. Oh yeah, and much better value than buying anything on the train, but you can usually buy tone of these meal deals at or near a station... you don't need to get them from a petrol station, most grocery stores have them, also newsagents and some large chemists (drug stores). I would point out that many of our petrol stations are actually a small version of a big chain grocery shop that sells petrol as well, rather than being a petrol station that sells a few groceries.

  • @Sauron191
    @Sauron191 Год назад +4

    Haha!!! Hilarious!! Being British I can relate to most of these … The ‘Pop’ thing is 2nd nature to all of us!!!