4 Things EXTREMELY Popular in Germany, Americans Have NEVER Heard Of! 🇩🇪

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июн 2024
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    After moving to Germany and living in Germany, we quickly learned a few things that are wildly popular in Germany but basically completely unknown in the US! Check out my American reaction to these 4 things and how I learned about these cultural differences 😊
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    ❤️Aubrey was a Speech-Language Pathologist and Donnie was a graphic designer, but we both had a dream to #travel the world and experience cultures. After three years of being married and dreaming about if something like this great adventure would be possible, we decided to quit the rat race and take on the world. We sold everything we had, quit our jobs, and took off! After 9 months of aimless and nonstop travel, we now get to fulfill our dreams of #LivingAbroad as #expats as we move to #Germany!
    00:00 - Intro
    1:34 - Thing 1
    4:18 - Thing 2
    9:24 - Thing 3
    12:35 - Thing 4
    14:40 - Bloopers

Комментарии • 695

  • @PassportTwo
    @PassportTwo  Год назад +15

    Thanks so much for watching, guys! I hope that you enjoyed this one and will catch you in the next!
    Don't forget to get Surfshark VPN at surfshark.deals/passport2 - Enter promo code passport2 for 85% off and 3 extra months FREE

    • @wallacem41atgmail
      @wallacem41atgmail Год назад

      The game you're speaking of is "field" handball. The ball game which I've known as "handball" [It's correct name is squash.] is popular in American cities, such as New York, where exercise space is very limited. It is played against a wall where one can play by one's self but it can be quite thrilling when their's an opponent. It can even be played as a four-some with two against two. It is especially popular with business travelers as the required equipment (a ball and a pair of gloves) is easily carried on board an airplane with little, if any, inconvenience or questioning.
      For men, sitting while urinating is way more common in the US than is realized. You've mistakenly assumed that the sitter is facing away from the water-closet (the tank of water perched on the back of the bowel which is used to flush the bowel). One prepares for urination in the usual fashion but then takes an additional step of sitting on the front rim of the bowel while continuing to face the tank. It's really quite simple. Removal of the pants is not required. [German husbands usually take on the responsibility of policing the family bathroom facilities and don't wish to create any additional work for themselves than is necessary.] [Aside: Does this mean German men are more considerate of their wives than American men?]

    • @kiliipower355
      @kiliipower355 Год назад +1

      When I was a child, in the 70s, handball was a popular sport for girls.
      Back then, most "Fußballvereine" didn't accept girls. And that was the alternative.

    • @carstenschlick1682
      @carstenschlick1682 Год назад

      Great Tip for the Stick Bread.... mix some Bacon and Cheese in and it will become even better

    • @jeffharper9703
      @jeffharper9703 Год назад

      TRY SCHNABELFLEISCHKLÖSE AUF GRÜNKERN.MIT SCHUPFNUDELN.

    • @jeffharper9703
      @jeffharper9703 Год назад

      BEBBAESHD ODD MUNCHABLES DADDY'O ! ! !

  • @steemlenn8797
    @steemlenn8797 Год назад +325

    Stick Bread is one of the biggest food mysteries. It should not taste good, but hell it does.

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +48

      That was exactly my thought!! There for sure has to be some elements to the experience that makes it taste so good. I'm not a huge fan of smoking cigars by myself, but I love to smoke cigars around a fire with a group of friends as we have deep talks. Same with the stick bread! We made some of my left over dough in the oven, and it was pretty bland and boring. Of course, the fire and smoke add some flavor to it, but most of the enjoyment for sure was in the process of making it!

    • @user-sm3xq5ob5d
      @user-sm3xq5ob5d Год назад +13

      @@PassportTwo I would say the same goes for Marshmellows. Hadn't they a lot of sugar content it would be rather nothing.
      BTW: You know the feeling when you wake up in the morning after having a dream where you ate the largest marshmellow in the world? And can't find your pillow!

    • @joedoe5079
      @joedoe5079 Год назад +5

      Also known as snakebread! Schlangenbrot

    • @karlwiklund2108
      @karlwiklund2108 Год назад +2

      It seems kind of like bannock. Which does taste good, but is hardly popular.

    • @joachimschwabe3301
      @joachimschwabe3301 Год назад +6

      @@PassportTwo Most people add some amount of sugar, so it basically tastes like a crispy smoky hot dog roll. In Slovakia, Czech Republic and Hungary there is something similar called "Trdelnik" (tree striezel, or tree cake), made on wooden cones.

  • @kathrintaraba3274
    @kathrintaraba3274 Год назад +13

    Some hints for baking stick bread:
    Don't bake it over the flame, it will burn. You need to baje it over the "Glut". If you want to make it more fancy, you can slice cheese like Gauda and roll it with the bread around the stick. I personally prefer the sweet dough, where you just add sugar. You can also roll the dough into sugar, when it's on the stick, so it will be caramelised on the outside. Or you eat it with Nutella or jam, when it's ready. There are so many nice options. 🤩

  • @Pewtah
    @Pewtah Год назад +88

    Donnie, do you know the Belgian comic series of Lucky Luke, "the man who shoots faster than his shadow"? It is very popular in Europe, translated into over 20 languages, a parody of the Wild West era, also embedding some historical persons like Calamity Jane, Billy the kid, the Daltons, Sitting Bull and others. We loved to read the funny stories.

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +16

      Had never heard of him until we moved over here actually 😅 But now I have seen Lucky Luke in many comic book and book stores around Europe 😊

    • @j.wagner1633
      @j.wagner1633 Год назад +12

      @@PassportTwo I think why most Americans never heard of Winnetou is, because Karl May wrote the books in a time, claiming that he himself lived through all of what he wrote in his books, where the era of American colonisation and "Wild West" was almost non existent anymore. There's a recent short documentary by the MDR in German about Karl May, asking the question if he really believed what he wrote was true or if he was just a really talented scammer.

    • @hessin3027
      @hessin3027 Год назад +2

      Terence Hill has Made a US-film als Lucky Luke.

    • @diarmuidkuhle8181
      @diarmuidkuhle8181 Год назад +1

      @@PassportTwo Check it out, it's really funny. So is Asterix, probably the best-known comic series in Europe.

  • @danilopapais1464
    @danilopapais1464 Год назад +76

    Random question: As a son of a German mother and an Italian father I don't see really a difference between German ice-cream and Italian gelato, and always believed they are the same because even when I learned Italian in school (had to go once a week to an Italian Catholic school for that), gelato und Eis (here in Hamburg we say "Eis" for ice-cream, which is just short for "Speiseeis") were just seen as the same and translated into each other. Loved Winnetou growing up, played it even with friends. Haven't had Stockbrot for 31 years, but when we did we also threw potatoes wrapped in aluminium foil into the same fire (like a baked potato). Never ever heard anyone refer to making "Stockbrot" as grilling it. It was either "Stockbrot machen" or "Stockbrot rösten".

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Год назад +11

      Pretty sure it is largely the same, with the biggest differences being preferred flavours. To the point that many ice cream parlors use Italian names.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p Год назад +10

      It's like German wine and Italian wine. IT's the same thing, made the same way, you tell different stories around it, have little different tradition, another amount of sunshine, other varieties. You still pronounce the origin. And people talk like Pinot Grigio would be different from Grauburgunder. But it's not.

    • @picobello99
      @picobello99 Год назад +8

      He probably meant American ice cream. In Europe ice cream = gelato, but American ice cream uses a different recipe.

    • @BalduinTube
      @BalduinTube Год назад +5

      Most of german icecream is made by Italians that live in Germany, so how should there be any significant difference?

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p Год назад +1

      @@BalduinTube The receipe is from Italy, but of course there was icecream before 1960, before some Italians moved to Germany.

  • @Krokostad
    @Krokostad Год назад +26

    My random question: What is the difference between icecream and gelato?
    Ant to the topic of the video: Until a few years ago I thought Karl May is known everywhere...

    • @KaiHenningsen
      @KaiHenningsen Год назад +1

      Internationally, Karl May actually seems somewhat less popular than Perry Rhodan, another extremely popular German literary product.

    • @marenq4138
      @marenq4138 Год назад +3

      I googled it and apparently (American) ice cream contains more far than gelato. What we consider Speiseeis from the Eisdiele in Germany is usually gelato, but some of the Eis you can buy in the supermarket is American ice cream, like Ben& Jerry's.

  • @Fred_L.
    @Fred_L. Год назад +94

    Winnetou was an awesome part of my childhood. The films, the books, the audio dramas (on vinyl), all so incredibly interesting. Also went to the festival and play at Bad Segeberg several times. Maybe you should give the first Winnetou movie (Winnetou I / Apache Gold) a try, don´t know if the available English dubbing is worth it though.

    • @HalfEye79
      @HalfEye79 Год назад +15

      When there wasn't Winnetou, very few Germans would even know about Native Americans. Or at least they would know much lesser.

    • @bjssjb9874
      @bjssjb9874 Год назад +14

      @AZBYCX Have you read Winnetou? Perhaps some of the traditions and descriptions that Karl May makes in his books are not 100% correct. Maybe even wrong, but what he definitely conveys in his books is a great respect for other cultures. In his books he conveys that one should not only make an effort to learn and study other cultures but also to move appropriately in their culture in order to show them respect. So I think that's a big goal and actually only leads to really getting to know the actual facts. So, yes, to really learn, mistakes are part of it. You only learn from mistakes. The Karl May books are novels, not scientific elaborations. A made-up story doesn't have to be based entirely on fact. It's made up now. Nobody expects this to be based on facts, but it makes you want to find out facts. Is that so wrong?

    • @bjssjb9874
      @bjssjb9874 Год назад +9

      @AZBYCX I entirely agree with you that it was wrong of him that he pretended to have really experienced these adventures.
      But it's not true that he didn't know anything at all.
      His stories are based on research at the time. As far as I know, he even copied some of the texts one-to-one from factual reports (that's also a bit questionable, of course). That's why some people are even amazed at how his descriptions of the environment match real places.
      I don't understand how you can claim that Karl May taught the Germans to see the Native Americans as a very primitive people. His stories are about the fact that these natives are not primitive, but just as capable as the whites. His books also show that there were not only the natives, but many different tribes, peoples, cultures and languages. He also conveys that not everyone always lived in tents and poor huts, but that they too had a high culture.
      I think the problem you see is the image that the media portrayed then and now of the indigenous people. You blame Karl May to a certain extent. But it's not his fault. On the contrary, if more weight had been given to his books, they might have been shown more respect sooner.

    • @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233
      @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233 10 месяцев назад

      @@bjssjb9874 I did my Uncle had all the Books and I read them cover to cover. It was amazing.

  • @TrangleC
    @TrangleC Год назад +12

    Weaving the ad into the stick bread segment was well done.

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +1

      Thanks! Hoped it would make it a little more enjoyable than just a big block segment 😅

  • @Cornu341
    @Cornu341 Год назад +24

    Winnetou: My father had the complete Karl May collection and I read them all. Technically the stories revolve around a German traveler (Old Shatterhand) as the point of view, not Winnetou. There is also a version of this traveler in the Middle East and Balkans. We also visited Bad Segeberg once and the live actions films were part of my childhood. There was even a board game, but I think that got lost over time with different location changes of our family.
    And Gelato every time, when I want to enjoy the experience. Ice cream is for cooling down, not as pleasure :)

  • @joannajaworska0000
    @joannajaworska0000 Год назад +40

    I live in Germany, but stem from Poland and handball is very popular there as well. My elementary and secondary schools had their own teams and championships.
    As far as Stockbrot is concerned, I first tried it in Denmark in 1993 and it was also new to me, since in Poland "camp fire potatoes" ( potatoes baked in a piece of tin foil in hot ashes) are more popular.

    • @dnocturn84
      @dnocturn84 Год назад +5

      I'm German and also grew up with multiple versions of potatoes in foil in hot ash or glowing firewood. Very delicious. But I also did know about Stockbrot as well, while potatoes usually were quite a bit more common for me.

    • @isabellabihy8631
      @isabellabihy8631 Год назад +1

      Yep, potatoes wrapped in tin foil and baked in the campfire. It has a lovely smoky flavor.

    • @uli1956
      @uli1956 Год назад +3

      Sixty-something years old German here: Never in my life I have seen somebody preparing Stockbrot except on TV or in RUclips, and only during the recent 20 or 30 years, but never before. But I loved the flavor of potatoes roasted in the embers of the camp fire, without aluminium foil. The blackened outer regions of the potatoes were the most delicious part.

    • @isabellabihy8631
      @isabellabihy8631 Год назад +1

      @@uli1956 Yes, me too being a sixty-something German. When I was an elementary school kid, we didn't use the tin foil either, but later we did.

  • @petersmiling9494
    @petersmiling9494 Год назад +28

    A German tries to explain handball to an American: "Handball is like water polo, - only without water." 😅

  • @AntjeKristensen
    @AntjeKristensen Год назад +7

    The stick bread made me so happy! We are living in the North of Germany right at the border to Denmark. And stick bread is so popular here that they even do it with the children in kindergarten. Yes, with kids 4-6 years old. And everybody loves it. To make your stick bread more exciting: you can add grated cheese and bacon in the dough, yumm! Or you fill it after cooking with a chocolate bar like kinderriegel or duplo (in this case make sure, that you close the dough on top of the stick, so that nothing can run out).

  • @jehib8533
    @jehib8533 Год назад +42

    As a German, I have difficulties defining the difference between ice cream and gelato. For me, gelato is simply the Italian word for ice cream.So: I like both, but unfortunately I shouldn't eat either.
    I made Stockbrot when I was young, but I never really had the patience. It's good when it's done, but it takes far too long.
    I grew up with my father's Karl May books that he grew up with, and I read most of them several times back then. A few years ago, when I inherited them, I simply couldn't see why I devoured them as a child. I found the storytelling rather boring, and the representation of countries and cultures other than German(y) embarrassing at best.
    It seems to me that Schorle has become far more popular in recent years (well I say recent, but I mean the past 25 or 30 years. When I was young, I knew Schorle existed, but to me it was always something you did when you wanted to make your fruit juice last longer (or have enough to go round for a whole family from a single pack or bottle). It might just be my own perception, though. I'm pretty sure though that it wasn't regularly sold pre-mixed back in the day like it is now.

    • @MrFrozenFrost
      @MrFrozenFrost Год назад +2

      Maybe Stockbrot is a way to teach german children patience.

    • @SchmulKrieger
      @SchmulKrieger Год назад

      That's because you became a Wokeist!

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Год назад +2

      @@SchmulKrieger It's quite common to read and love Karl May growing up, getting the fire started to read other authors, getting the passion to travel and experience other cultures, and when you come back some day to read Karl May again you realize that he isn't such a good story-teller, and didn't experience other cultures himself.

  • @suekellner4736
    @suekellner4736 Год назад +22

    Oh, I can't remember how many times I cried over Winnetou's death. I inherited all the audiobooks on vinyl from my older brothers and Winnetou was quite popular with them. Winnetou's friend Old Shatterhand, portraied by Lex Barker, was Karl May's alter ego. The other one was Kara Ben Nemsi, who rode through the orient. I guess no kid born till the 1980s grew up without knowing any Karl May book. I even was lucky enough to see Pierre Briece, who played Winnetou in the famous movies, in the live action plays in Elspe.
    And about Schorle... I don't drink juice because it is way too sweet. But I love Schorle, especially with passion fruits juice. It almost tastes like lemonade but as less calories. I mix every juice with carbonated water and it is really good.
    What is the difference between ice cream and gelato, please?

  • @alicemilne1444
    @alicemilne1444 Год назад +18

    "Stockbrot". I wasn't born in Germany, but coming to Germany in 1971 as a 15yo for the first time, I didn't find this unusual. When I was a chlld in the UK back in the 1960s we did this when we went camping with the Scouts or Guides or Boys or Girls Brigades in the summer. We called it campfire bread. But we also used to do this at home in wintertime simply by mixing flour, water and a pinch of salt into a dough and spearing it on a toasting fork (that was an antique even back then!) to cook the dough by holding it over the open coal fire. It had a unique taste, either woodfire smoky in summer or coalfire smoky in winter. In the winter we also roasted chestnuts over the fire as well, wedging a long-handled cast-iron pan into the coals. The chestnuts had to be pierced open first with a pin or a knife tip, though, otherwise the rising pressure inside would cause them to explode. You do not want to be hit by very hot bits of exploding chestnut that burn like hell if they manage to drop down the neck of your shirt or go up your sleeves or trouser legs! From some German friends I heard they did similar things in winter, roasting chestnuts on top of the cast-iron stove in their house.
    As a Brit, I first encountered Winnetou as a summer exchange student in Germany back in the 1970s when the films were were shown in the local cinemas and on TV. I had also grown up reading books by James Fenimore Cooper in English, and (since my mother was French) I got plenty of input about the French in North America as well. To me, Winnetou was based more on the JFC books and French accounts of trappers, scouts and frontiersmen and - though fiction - was therefore far more believable than any of the Hollywood Westerns I ever saw during my childhood. I can understand the controversy today because Winnetou is an unrealistic Westernised figure, but at least Winnetou was protrayed as a main character and a figure to be admired. The fact that he was played by Pierre Brice (a Frenchman) who certainly grew up with a French view on North America that was characterised perhaps a smidgin more by cooperation with the Native American peoples than the "Trail of Tears" southern view probably helped.
    Winnetou is definitely perceived as the hero in the Karl May books.

  • @LetumFalcis
    @LetumFalcis Год назад +10

    Sitting at a campfire making stick breads is a really precious childhood memory of mine. It was always a social event for every class trip that included a "Jugendherberge". And it is still nice sitting with your friends at nice warm campfire, chatting, drinking beer and trying to be the winner of stickbread making (means it isn't burned).
    And: Definitely Ice cream!

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Год назад +1

      Well, you had to get palatable food at least once on the trip after all...

  • @suzetteospi
    @suzetteospi Год назад +5

    A good friend at school played handball and I often went to his games to cheer him on.
    Yes, Winnetou and also Karl May's other stories were definitely part of my childhood, the books as well as the movies. My brother is dyslexic and the desire to read "Winnetou" made him put in the effort to finally learn how to read. So our parents gave him Karl May's books as presents for every Christmas and birthday. The movies were typically shown on Sunday afternoons and it was always a family event to watch them together.

  • @dw8931
    @dw8931 Год назад +2

    That was the most clever way to integrate an ad into a YT video I have ever seen. Well done!

  • @TrineBiene24
    @TrineBiene24 Год назад +20

    I've been playing handball for almost 22 years. It's such a beautiful dynamic full contact sport. I wouldn't say that handball is more popular in our area than football, but our 1st ladies played in the 2nd Bundesliga and the sports hall was always full.
    But I also have to admit that this sport is very popular in the north, especially in Schleswig-Holsten. With the top teams like THW Kiel or SG Flensburg, we all have handball in our blood.

    • @kirstenjakobsen1651
      @kirstenjakobsen1651 Год назад +1

      Just like us in Denmark! We love Handball!

    • @pilotlars
      @pilotlars Год назад +1

      My father played for HSV before we moved to the US. Then he refereed handball and soccer for local, national and international events.

  • @j.b.5422
    @j.b.5422 Год назад +16

    I guess the appeal of stickbread is the sentiment "You know, I'm something of a baker myself"

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +4

      Lol, it certainly is more impressive to do than just holding a marshmallow over a fire and watching it roast 😅

    • @klamin_original
      @klamin_original Год назад +1

      @@PassportTwo Marshmallows on the other hand aren't particularly popular in Germany. Everyone knows the taste cause they've probably tasted it once but were immediately disappointed by the extreme sweetness and texture of it.

    • @TrangleC
      @TrangleC Год назад +1

      But at least the stick bread I had as a child also tasted differently than regular bread. It is hard to put into words, especially since I was a child when I last had it back in the late 80s, but it tasted sweeter than normal bread, a bit like a croissant, but with this really crunchy, caramelized crust.

    • @j.b.5422
      @j.b.5422 Год назад

      @@TrangleC It's also quite literally the frehest bread as it's right out of the "oven"

    • @TrangleC
      @TrangleC Год назад +1

      @@j.b.5422 Yes, but you could also eat regular bread right out of the oven and it still doesn't taste the same.

  • @joshina4497
    @joshina4497 Год назад +2

    Winnetou is definitely a childhood classic and something my family loved (we used to watch the movies on TV together)

  • @peterzerfass4609
    @peterzerfass4609 Год назад +3

    Stockbrot...yes, definitely. Generally: freshly baked bread is delicious.
    I heard a baker describe quality bread once: It's "when you eat an entire roll without any toppings..and you want another one"...and Stockbrot does that for me every time.

  • @RoxRikSor
    @RoxRikSor Год назад +7

    That random question caught me rly off guard as a German and I had o google what the difference is hahaha
    since Gelato is just ITALIAN for ... Ice Cream
    and here in Germany all of that is just called Ice Cream
    "so you want to know what's better... Ice cream or .... ICE CREAM?" hahaha

    • @Cornu341
      @Cornu341 Год назад +1

      The meant difference is: Gelato is, what you can find in a nice ice caffee here in Germany. Ice cream is what you can buy in the supermarkets. The more densly packed, frozen version instead of the softer gelato.
      EDIT: typo

    • @RoxRikSor
      @RoxRikSor Год назад

      @@Cornu341 yea
      I kinda figured that after googling xD
      It just left me so confused at first

  • @Trollportphosphat
    @Trollportphosphat Год назад +24

    Just have to say, yozu really nailed the pronouciation of the german states.
    Ane yea, stickbread needs other people to talk about stuff while the bread is baking.
    Winnetou was a big part of my child hood and i can't understand what that culutural apropriation stuff is about. Winnetou was basically one of my child hood heroes with stable morales and fighting for the good.

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +1

      Hey, thanks so much for that! I definitely struggle with pronunciation but I am always trying to improve!! 😊

    • @sylviarohge4204
      @sylviarohge4204 Год назад +5

      @@PassportTwo
      Bread on a stick is also great fun for kids.
      Children are generally enthusiastic about fire, so instead of forbidding them everything, it is better to direct their interest towards harmless ones.
      Giving them a stick and a piece of dough is ideal, and that keeps the little ones busy for a while.

    • @hypatian9093
      @hypatian9093 Год назад +2

      @@sylviarohge4204 And a stick length away from the fire ;)

    • @red_dolphin468
      @red_dolphin468 Год назад +5

      there is actually a american native-cartoon show which I watched much more raising up in Cologne, Germany. - " Yakari " - the serie or charackter of Winnetou is only known from my father´s DVD collection to me :)

    • @solar0wind
      @solar0wind Год назад +2

      @@red_dolphin468 Oh, yes, I watched only Yakari as well. I'm not interested in Winnetou tbh.

  • @ronnie3561
    @ronnie3561 Год назад +7

    I`m German and I`m 61 but NEVER heard of stick bread!!!

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад

      Haha, there are always exceptions for sure!

    • @TrangleC
      @TrangleC Год назад +2

      Really? I didn't have it often, but every time we had some school picnic or hiking trip (Schullandheim) in the 80s, stick bread was just a mandatory, given thing and everyone, especially the teachers acted as if it were the most natural thing in the world. When you have a fire, of course you make stick bread, was the rule.

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Год назад +2

      really omg my childhood Stockbrot, Äpfel und Kartoffeln in Alufolie und ab in die Kohle damit
      (so ab 14 ein parr Bierchen dazu)

    • @all_in_for_JESUS
      @all_in_for_JESUS Год назад +2

      We have stickbread at least once a year. And I love it.

  • @JanBlank
    @JanBlank Год назад +3

    "Stockbrot" is a simple grilling strategy and mostly for the cids. When you are on a Grill Party, from a certain age on, there are kids running and playing around. To give them a certain entertainment instead of bugging their parents this is a very good strategy. it take time, is healthy and fire is alöways fascinating for the little ones.
    Besides the grown ups can drinks a beer and chat.
    as working in a kindergarten myself once in a while we go out with the kids and make Stockbrot. its always fun.
    greetings from germany

  • @michaelmedlinger6399
    @michaelmedlinger6399 Год назад +17

    Another phenomenon besides Winnetou that I had never heard of in the States was Astérix and the village in Gaul that continued to resist the Romans and Caesar. Was that just my corner of the country, are the characters generally unknown in the States, or has it perhaps changed?

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +4

      You're absolutely right! That is a character we didn't know about it until we moved over to Europe. Maybe some Americans have heard of this comic because there are English versions available, but we certainly hadn't! 😅

    • @conniebruckner8190
      @conniebruckner8190 Год назад

      @@PassportTwo My Dad bought me a French version of Asterix when I was about 15 or so... I had never seen that character before.

    • @Fred_L.
      @Fred_L. Год назад +1

      Not the only French creation in that regards. Blueberry, a long-running Franco-Belgian comic series, is quite weird in that aspect as it is set in the Wild West (for the most part). Pretty awesome, too.

    • @chrisk5651
      @chrisk5651 Год назад +1

      I first saw Asterix in high school when I was learning French.

    • @all_in_for_JESUS
      @all_in_for_JESUS Год назад +1

      Also Lucky Luke

  • @maximstepinac6716
    @maximstepinac6716 10 месяцев назад +1

    Croatian here, we also love our handball, thanks for representing our small country. Winnetou film was also filmed in our country.

  • @crazyfrog773
    @crazyfrog773 Год назад +16

    I played Handball for around 8 years. And in the area where I grew up Handball was also more popular to play than soccer. So it was also part of our school sport.

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +2

      That's so interesting! It honestly looks like a sport I would be really into playing if I would have just been given the opportunity like you had!

    • @crazyfrog773
      @crazyfrog773 Год назад +1

      Yes, I still really like to watch the games because it's faster, more action and in my opinion more emotions than on soccer games.
      In a lot of areas there are some sport groups where they play just for fun, maybe you find one for you :)

  • @shimone6116
    @shimone6116 Год назад +4

    I think you drink "Apfelschorle" not because you like lsparkling water so much that you would mix it with everything, but rather because it is a very refreshing drink - especially in the summer or doing sports.
    As for stick bread: If you thing it somewhat boring like I do try mixing some dried tomatoes into the dough and sprinkle it with some salt before putting it onto the fire

  • @Jeyshara
    @Jeyshara Год назад +8

    Karl May is a phenomenon - you should really take a closer look at his stories. Basically, he wrote a lot of stories about places he never was before. His knowledge came from traveller guides, written documentations about those places and so on. He was really imaginative. He also wrote some books about laurence of arabia, a story set in the orient. And he never was there or spoke any kind of language from there.

    • @bibliopolist
      @bibliopolist Год назад

      Actually, I have always thought of him as the German Joseph Smith (author of the Book of Mormon), without most of the malice. A talented scammer who was great in making people believe his made-up stuff that he got from maps and traveller guides.

  • @twinmama42
    @twinmama42 Год назад +6

    1. Handball: we regularly played at school and I was also in my youth in a club. Whereas the women played Bundesliga we youngsters played Bezirksliga. A classmate of my later husband played as an adult for a Bundesliga club.
    2. Never even heard of this, but it sounds fun.
    3. Winnetou: read some of the books, listened to radio plays, and watched all the 1960ies movies multiple times. I didn't know about the animated series though.
    4. Schorle: it's more refreshing than and not so sickly sweet as plain juice. With wine, you can have a "Saure Schorle" (carbonated water) or a "Süße Schorle" (with "Limonade"). Esp. on hot days a Schorle will quench your thirst way better than the plain beverage. And with a Weinschorle you'll get less drunk.
    5. As Germany mostly consumes what Americans call gelato I once follow the trend. Gelato it is.

  • @o.b.7217
    @o.b.7217 Год назад +4

    German here: I never ate stick bread.
    What we did when I was young, was to roast potatoes directly in the fire _(could be done either wrapped into tin foil, or "bare naked")._
    Since you live in Rhineland-Palatinate, simply watch out for "Kartoffelfeuer" in your region. _(May sometimes be called something like "Grumbeerfeschd", or similar, and usually takes place around the German Thanksgiving (first Sunday of October))._
    To give you an idea: using the fire pit in your video, you'd simply put some potatoes directly into the embers and let them become cooked even.
    And yes: that means the skin gets all black and charred. Doesn't matter - the potatoes underneath taste delicious.
    A dip with it, made out of curd, seasoned with some herbs, salt and pepper...mmh.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад

      Oh, potatoes are also great. Could go even further and pack up a fish and add that to the coals as well.

  • @miridroge6043
    @miridroge6043 Год назад +4

    "stickbread" tastes great to eat plain, but to make it more interesting, many try to get it off the stick whole and fill the resulting hole with nutella (=hazelnut-chocolate spread). Or you can vary the recipe to include herbs, dried tomatoes or olives in the dough!

  • @MrTjonke
    @MrTjonke Год назад +13

    I used to play handball from age 7-10 while in Germany, glad I was able to continue it after moving to Sweden where it's also popular. Kept playing handball for another 20 years or so in Sweden. Don't usually go watch handball matches though

  • @chezratte1357
    @chezratte1357 Год назад +3

    you could explain Schorle to nongerman people with a kind of lemonade/ soda pop, but with actual juice.
    Stockbrot is more something to keep children entertained, similar to marshmallows, but probably healthier (because less sugar). You can still dip it in ketchup or other dip to add some more flavor.
    What the woman in that clip did, i would consider a sacrilege. Only way to make a Stockbrot is on open fire/ flames, not a barbecue grill.

  • @friarhill
    @friarhill Год назад +1

    German scout leader tips on upping your Stockbrot game:
    - More embers, less flame!, so that your bread gets less of that grey sooty covering that's bitter and not quite healthy
    - cover the tip! It's usually where you get most of the heat, so you don't want your stick taking the brunt of it and turning to ash or even burning your bread
    -spice up the dough with herbs and seeds, linseeds and sesame give a nutty tint and a little oil to the mix
    - make the best hot dog bun ever! by trusting and sliding the whole baked Stockbrot of your stick filling the whole with a sausage: Wiener, Kabanossi, cheesey Krainer, or grilled Nürnberger/Merguez - there's a lot to choose from in the German 'sausage department' 😉

  • @martind.5257
    @martind.5257 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for being an ambassador for our country and culture 😇

  • @RammsteinXFan
    @RammsteinXFan Год назад +2

    I really liked the outdoor section. I'd definitely watch more of you trying out stuff in your garden :D

  • @schmidtikovsky2825
    @schmidtikovsky2825 Год назад +4

    In some regions of germany Stockbrot (Stick bread) is called Knüppelkuchen (club cake) and it is extremely popular to do as a child during barbeque or in summer camp because you could prepare your own food and add contiments or eat it as it is. I't is really fun to do and tastes great

    • @joshina4497
      @joshina4497 Год назад +1

      We always called it Knüppelteig

  • @Cynthia-ql9lw
    @Cynthia-ql9lw Год назад +2

    some advices for a better stick bread experience ;)
    1. use a longer and thinner stock (also remove the bark where the dough is)
    2. hold the stick bread over the embers and avoid the flames
    3. the dough should be a little bit thinner on your stick
    4. eat is with something like jam or Nutella (if you use a sweet dough)

  • @marcelli1990
    @marcelli1990 Год назад +5

    Thank you for trying out „Stockbrot“. I really enjoy when the video has another location.
    All of your videos are good, but testing something in real life is a nice variety :)

  • @kreativuntermdach7351
    @kreativuntermdach7351 Год назад +2

    I like the stickbread the most when its crispy outside, but doughy inside. A little bit of sugar in the dough (just a sprinkle) also helps.

  • @Pokeminator
    @Pokeminator Год назад +2

    I actually don't like carbonated drinks, so I usually order a "Stille Apfelschorle" which means they usually just mix apple juice with tap water. "Stille Schorle" usually costs less than the juice alone and isn't as sweet as pure juice, which I prefer.

  • @tobiasgund8048
    @tobiasgund8048 Год назад +1

    We went multiple times to the Karl May Festspiele in Bad Segeberg when we went on holidays in Northern Germany.

  • @utej.k.bemsel4777
    @utej.k.bemsel4777 Год назад +3

    Karl Mays fictional Winnetou is the reason why we Germans appreciate American Natives so much.

  • @LythaWausW
    @LythaWausW Год назад

    Thanks for making the stick bread, it looks amazing. I'd have a bucket of melted butter to dip it in: )

  • @aerosoul12345
    @aerosoul12345 Год назад +1

    An original "Schorle" or more specific a "Schorle sauer" is exactly the same as a sprizzer - white wine with carbonated water. it's even called Spritzer or Gespritzter in some regions.
    a "Schorle süß" is white wine with lemonade
    Red wine with Cola is what we call "Korea".
    Juices with carbonated water are "Saftschorle".
    So don't be suprised if you got wine instead of juice if your order just "a Schorle".

  • @calise8783
    @calise8783 Год назад +3

    I’m an adult leader for our local church youth. We have an annual 5 day retreat with the youth. Not being native German, I was like Stock what? Now I’m the master Stockbrotteig maker at our annual retreat. 😂The kids love it!
    Ice cream AND gelato.

  • @TrangleC
    @TrangleC Год назад +12

    I'm usually almost always on the American side when it comes to food (for example, being on "Team Doughnut", not "Team Berliner"), but the Gelato vs American Ice Cream controversy is a exception.
    I decisively prefer gelato. Frankly, stuff like Ben & Jerry's or Hagen Dasz tastes like frozen, sugary deep fryer lard to me. I especially don't like the heavy, dense consistency and prefer the more airy, light, melty consistency of gelato.

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +1

      Fair enough! haha, In the US, I would RARELY pick up a Ben & Jerry's or Hagen Dasz, so it is a little unfortunate that is pretty much all you can get around here, but I still prefer American-style ice cream 😊

    • @TrangleC
      @TrangleC Год назад +1

      @@PassportTwo Not blaming you or saying one side is objectively right. It is just about what one grew up with and has positive childhood associations with.
      To be fair, when I think of gelato, I don't really think of just the gelato, but I think of elaborate sundaes with whipped cream and chopped fruits and chocolate sauce and a candy cherry on top and the gelato just being part of that bigger thing.
      I do think that American Ice Cream, due to its dense and harder consistency, lends itself less well to being part of a sundae. You'll surely disagree, but to me the thought of scooping through the whipped cream and hitting this hard, clay-like ball underneath and having to really dig into that with the spoon, crushing the banana pieces or what else is underneath, is weird.
      😁

  • @petersmiling9494
    @petersmiling9494 Год назад +2

    The great period of Karl May movies was from 1962-1968, during which 17 very successful movies were made, starring Pierre Brice and Lex Barker. Pierre Brice is French and Lex Barker is US-American, their voices had to be dubbed. Very famous was the theme song of the films made by film composer Martin Böttcher

  • @ferdinandbauer8147
    @ferdinandbauer8147 Месяц назад +1

    Stick bread is made from simple yeast dough and can be savoury or sweet. I personally prefer sweet stick bread, but that depends on your preference. Sweet stick bread is usually more popular with children. The experience of making stick bread as a child is of course also very exciting but also very exhausting because you have to wait so long until the bread is ready. It is simply exciting to look for the right sticks (as straight and long as possible), roll up the dough, sit around the campfire with parents, siblings or friends and wait for it to be ready, mostly because children like to poke around in the fire with the sticks and then eat the long-awaited reward for all the waiting.
    Edit: I forgot to say YES sweet stick bread is definitely authentic and delicious, also yes there are the rotate and one place at a time stick breads (Im on team rotate).

  • @birgerhansen1532
    @birgerhansen1532 Год назад +4

    Handball was invented in Danmark at spread to some countries 🙂

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад +1

      Interesting! I didn't know the roots of the sport honestly.

    • @DontPanick
      @DontPanick Год назад

      That's actually not accurate. Handball like games already existed in ancient Greece and predecessors of modern handball developed differently in a couple of European countries in the 19th century.
      The first ruleset in modern times is actually from Denmark, but is lacking a lot of basic concepts of modern handball. Denmark had the leading role in the development of indoor handball. But the core concepts are the same as in outdoor handball.
      The basic principles for the modern handball were actually developed in the 1910's in Germany. The first German ruleset was a sport for girls without contact, because things like football were not suited for them. But just a few years later the rules were adapted for boys, contact was allowed, dribbling was inventend (like in basketball but 3 steps instead of 2 are allowed) and the ballsize was reduced (it was like a football before), so throwing became more important. Also the rule of throwing the ball from outside the crease (the zone around the goal) was invented. But the field size and team size was the same as in football and thus it was played outdoors.
      So saying that Denmark invented it, is definetly not appropriate.

  • @wandilismus8726
    @wandilismus8726 Год назад +1

    I live in Kiel , where THW Kiel plays, and in my twenties when I still lived im Northern Frisia, I played Football im Flensburg. In that year our Winter Training was in the same Gym as Flensburg-Handewitt. Both are better Teams in the HBL (Handball Bundesliga).
    Stockbrot is awesome.
    Karl May Spiele are in Bad Segeberg Schleswig-Holstein. There you still see actors as Winnetou and Old Shatterhand

  • @christopherandresen9790
    @christopherandresen9790 2 месяца назад

    to me stick bread is always a thing connected to Maifeuer or Osterfeuer where we make a huge fire often burning the old christmas trees while celebrating easter/spring. A huge thing for kids as they get to get pretty close to such a huge fire. Also for the adults: making fresh stick bread while drinking beer is just great.

  • @dawnrodgers1170
    @dawnrodgers1170 Год назад +1

    As a Girl Scout in the US we made stick bread, and ate it with jelly when it was done

  • @Jan_Seidel
    @Jan_Seidel Год назад +1

    For stick bread you rinse the branch by removing all the bark and let the stick dry (eg. by time or over the fire).
    You also place the doug on the tip so the wood won't get scorched or catches fire.
    The stick is normally thinner than your pinky at the tip.
    Kids *loooove* making stick bread.

  • @Sekire1
    @Sekire1 Год назад

    Kudos for trying Stickbread!

  • @chaplainkelley8251
    @chaplainkelley8251 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the videos… they have been extremely helpful. I am moving to Germany soon in the K-town area and your videos have been a blessing to learn the culture.

    • @currykingwurst6393
      @currykingwurst6393 Год назад

      Kaiserslautern? That's funny because they live in Ramstein.

  • @KindGottes92
    @KindGottes92 Год назад +2

    I grew up in Franconia and there it is called "Stockbrot" meaning stick bread. It was made out of an slightly salty dough like pizza dough. Now I live in Saxony and here everybody calls it "Knüppelkuchen" what is more like stick cake. Most people make a sweet dough here. However I prefer to make a dough with roasted onions and spices.

  • @madTitanja
    @madTitanja Год назад

    Stickbread we cook in our childhood in easterfire ,stickbread & folienkartoffeln top, folienkartoffeln we put inside the Glut of the easterfire .
    (For Folienkartoffeln you just need a raw potato put it in a Aluminiumfolie & pur it into the glowing Kohle of the (easter)fire, when its so Soft enough cooked to eat its time for Peeling & eating it for examplebwith Butter or with sourcream as topping.)^^

  • @SABRINA.ARMY.BTS.
    @SABRINA.ARMY.BTS. Год назад

    We’ve played handball in school , and we even had a tournament against other schools every year !

  • @SaridenChan
    @SaridenChan Год назад +1

    Your description from the Stockbrot tasting is korrekt, the bread is just yeastdough like pizzadough. Some People even make it with "Italian herbs" :)

  • @an3pic174
    @an3pic174 Год назад +3

    Most of the time if you make Stockbrot you normaly pull it from a stick and use it as a "hot dog bun" but with a real sausage

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  Год назад

      Ahhhh...so insert a sausage in the middle where the stick was after words?

    • @lyricsmind
      @lyricsmind Год назад +1

      Oh really? Never heard of that. Where are you from? Sounds kinda good🙂

    • @ReisskIaue
      @ReisskIaue Год назад

      @@PassportTwo At least it is something you can do with it. Or use some dips to add more flavors. Of course you can eat it just directly as you did.

    • @ReisskIaue
      @ReisskIaue Год назад

      @@lyricsmind It sounds a little like a "Ketwurst" (combined word of Ketchup and Wurst). Kind of GDR's answer to the hotdog, where you have a long, hollowed out wheat bread (like this stick bread) and put ketchup and a "Wiener" in the hole after baking - of course you might add further sauces or replace the ketchup with mayonnaise or "Remulade".

  • @s.b.7924
    @s.b.7924 Год назад +1

    FYI. I just Googled German Stick Bread and several recipes popped up. I'll have to try it sometime here in New Hampshire.

  • @henningbartels6245
    @henningbartels6245 Год назад

    Going to handball game is really a blast, at least in the 1st league it is loud, fast and great atmosphere.

  • @samu6874
    @samu6874 Год назад

    You have to put bacon cubes into the break Stick dough. Amazing!!

  • @Yamaazarashi
    @Yamaazarashi Год назад

    Thanks for your very interesting contents that contain what I have never ever heard/seen since I moved to Germany from Japan (in 1997)!!

  • @furzkram
    @furzkram Год назад +1

    Never heard of Stockbrot in Hesse county. Sounds like a thing from farther north.

  • @chrisbaertl5708
    @chrisbaertl5708 Год назад

    Wine with soda is also called Schorle here so "spritzer" would be the most fitting description

  • @pascalh.3535
    @pascalh.3535 Год назад

    Adding cheese and bacon to the stick bread dough was also a gamechanger

  • @maylinde986
    @maylinde986 Год назад +1

    Stockbrot is especially something for little kids. Mine had it in kindergarden, at kids birthday parties or at other fests, so the kids have also what to Do.

  • @misanthropicmusings4596
    @misanthropicmusings4596 Год назад

    Stick bread sounds like a great idea!

  • @stevefish3124
    @stevefish3124 6 месяцев назад

    Handball was originally an outdoor sport. Over the years the indoor variant became more popular.
    Also, field hockey is still played in Germany.

  • @roswithatausiani9283
    @roswithatausiani9283 Год назад

    Played Handball when I was in Highschool (not a “school team”, but in Verein )

  • @Sennahoj_DE_RLP
    @Sennahoj_DE_RLP Год назад +1

    If you want to visit a handball game, you can go to either Ludwigshafen or Mannheim, these should be the closest from where you live

  • @morgenstern1234
    @morgenstern1234 Год назад +1

    My younger sister loves "Stockbrot". When we meet during the summer we still make it regularly. She eats it usually with strawberry jam and I like it with marshmallows.

  • @gerdforster883
    @gerdforster883 Год назад +1

    The thing about handball is that when football became professionalised, it very quickly became very expensive to field a top tier team. So if you wanted one, you needed big sponsors. Handball was cheaper (less international competition for the top players, smaller team sizes once they shifted to playing indoors and so on).
    So a town or region that didn't quite have the industrial power to support a Bundesliga football side could easily support a Bundesliga handball team. Which is why it kind of became the sport of small and medium towns. The regions that are most prominent in german handball are not the classic industrial centres, but regions that have a bunch of medium sized companies (the famous Mittelstand).
    For example Ostwestfalen-Lippe is full with these kinds of companies, as is Württemberg.
    And yes, you read that correctly, handball used to be played outside. It was basically football, but played with your hands. It only became this very fast paced game with high scores once they moved it inside.

  • @GoodOldErin
    @GoodOldErin Год назад +1

    I read all Winnetou books several times in my youth. I really liked them much. Everytime there's a Winnetou movie on TV I can't stop myself from watching ist although the good old times are gone.
    Handball is indeed a big player in Germany. It is in a constant fight with basketball and icehockey of which sport is number 2 behind football. There are kind of waves in this fight. Perhaps biathlon plays a big roll in this fight as well but it is not really a team sport and it's only done in winter.
    I have never played handball myself: I loved table-tennis and basketball when I was young. 😊

  • @94music94
    @94music94 Год назад +1

    Stick bread is cool in a group when sitting around the fure. You can add spices or herbs to the dough to make it even tastier. Rosemary is very nice in the bread :)

  • @MythosHB
    @MythosHB Год назад +5

    As a german, I've never had stick bread either. There were always fellow kids in a handball team, during my time in school. And I didnt't know that gelato was an english word, thought it was italian for ice cream. So I don't know what's the difference.

    • @bigamateur9055
      @bigamateur9055 Год назад

      It is

    • @pilotlars
      @pilotlars Год назад

      I've never heard of Stockbrot either.

    • @fgregerfeaxcwfeffece
      @fgregerfeaxcwfeffece Год назад

      Might be rural thing where you can actually make fire outside without having it be a big event. Because near the Luxembourg border that was absolutely a thing.

  • @londrai2625
    @londrai2625 Год назад

    In the Summer i Always went to Segeberg with my Grandpa and Father because there is a big Theater for Winnetou and i Always Loved IT!

  • @clawravenscroft1788
    @clawravenscroft1788 Год назад

    I have a board game "Winnetou". Loved to play it a lot as child. Learned many Native American Words through Winnetou.

  • @aenwynsnow2828
    @aenwynsnow2828 Год назад +4

    In this one aspect, I guess I am typical German in loving Italian food, and especially gelato. And Winnetou was one of my childhood heroes, too.

    • @friedhelmmunker7284
      @friedhelmmunker7284 Год назад

      Karl May is a much better liar then Trump.
      His Books with great stories, never visit america or the east.

  • @idnwiw
    @idnwiw Год назад +1

    When I grew up, you couldn't surf through the channels on a Sunday afternoon without hitting a Winnetou movie - but to us (kid of the 80ties in Austria) they were old fashioned film we weren't interested in. The generation born in the 50ties was hyped about Karl Mays Adventure stories - books or movies, Winnetou as well as the ones playing in Arabia.
    Handball was something we played in PE - this or volleyball or basketball, more then watch professionals do it.
    About your question of the week: Sounds like the same thing in 2 different languages, so no preference.

  • @user-wx3wu7tx8h
    @user-wx3wu7tx8h Год назад

    If you are more interested in Winnetou you should try to see the Winnetou Plays in Bad Segeberg in Schleswig-Holstein. There is a whole western village and they have an open air play in the summer. I have been there three times already and it was always very good. The festival is called Karl May Spiele.

  • @HappyBeezerStudios
    @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад

    Stick bread is more than just making bread. It's about the experience of sitting on the fire together, having conversations, maybe someone brings a guitar. You enjoy the evening. And at some point the bread is done. It's not simply getting a snack, but the experience of making it yourself. Fairly popular to do it with kids.
    And not putting it too far down or it burns on the outside and is still raw in the middle.

  • @annwyche5471
    @annwyche5471 Год назад

    My dad lived close to Radebeul where Karl may was from and there is a museum and also a outdoor theater where they have winnetou plays

  • @paelzerbuh
    @paelzerbuh Год назад

    Thump Up for the Stick Bread! With good spices in the dough it can be a 10 out of 10.

  • @seldakaya0414
    @seldakaya0414 Год назад

    Salted butter goes amazingly with stick bread!

  • @o.b.7217
    @o.b.7217 Год назад +16

    Winnetou was a huge part of my childhood.
    I watched all the movies, I read all (?) the books _(my grandmother gifted me a collection of 36 of Karl May's books, when I was 10),_ and of course - as kids we played "Cowboy and Indians"...and I always wanted to be the Indian - because of how May portrayed them: brave, nobel, with cool abilities, like sneaking unseen through the grass, using bow and arrows, and of course throwing a tomahawk.
    Way cooler than the cowboys.
    What happened recently was one of the worst examples of the so called "woke-culture".
    These people think they are so progressive, while attempting to rewrite history to make it "nicer looking".
    "Geschichtsrevisionismus" is the term for that, I believe. And under most other circumstances, the same people would be against it.
    It's the same what happened to "Pippi Longstocking", etc. Rewriting things that they wish, wouldn't exist.
    It's a shame, really.

  • @inkytv09
    @inkytv09 6 месяцев назад

    My grandma always makes stickbread on a grill and I love it

  • @charlottebghandersen4195
    @charlottebghandersen4195 11 месяцев назад

    In Denmark we call stick bread "snobrød" (twisted bread) and when cooked we fill it with our favorite marmelade.

  • @ald00I
    @ald00I Год назад +1

    stockbrot dough can also be eaten raw so theres no need to cook it all the way through if youre impatient - still tastes great! :)

  • @martinstubs6203
    @martinstubs6203 Год назад +2

    I've lived (almost) my entire fairly long life in Germany and have never heard of "Stockbrot" until this very moment. Fun fact: Karl May never actually visited the U.S. He literally made up all of his Winnetou stories at his home in Radebeul in Saxony.

  • @nikomangelmann6054
    @nikomangelmann6054 Год назад

    i played ca 20 years handball. met my back then idol stefan kretzschmar at a game. if you wanna know everything about winnetou you have to visit starigrad (paklenica) in croatia were a lot of the movies were made (paklenica national park). there is also a winnetou museum and you can also do some beachy vacation.

  • @karlwiklund2108
    @karlwiklund2108 Год назад

    Stick bread reminds me of bannock on a stick. Definitely something I remember from camping as a kid. Not as popular as hot dogs or 'smores though

  • @yekaterinahawkins-vf7lf
    @yekaterinahawkins-vf7lf 3 месяца назад

    Read all the Karl May books. One of my most wonderful friends going through childhood were my Karl May books . Wonderful hours spent reading them

  • @jonas39328
    @jonas39328 Год назад

    We always put some kinderschokolade on the bread. Its delicious 😍

  • @michaelkloters3454
    @michaelkloters3454 Год назад +2

    1st: yes i played Handball in school! 2nd: of course did i stockbrot, very often it goes together with the first campfire experiences for little boys and girls. 3rd.inmy generation reading karl may was kinda mandatory. very often it became a collection cause a karl mai book was the evry year birthday present fom grandma ( at the end me and my brother had 62 of his 88 books) and 4th: is Donnie 4 crawling now? best wishes to your family Michael/Hannover