Al Capone's Soup Kitchen

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  • Опубликовано: 9 янв 2023
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    Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
    #tastinghistory #alcapone

Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory  Год назад +1201

    I just saw the first copies of the Tasting History cookbook and they're beautiful! I can't wait to share it with everyone.
    Pre-order the TASTING HISTORY COOKBOOK: amzn.to/3NKTSaM

  • @lairdcummings9092
    @lairdcummings9092 Год назад +7863

    Capone knew the power of having the masses on his side; if the people like you, they're unlikely to rat on you.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +2082

      But always pay your taxes

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 Год назад +1005

      @@TastingHistory 'Cause the IRS doesn't take soup in lieu of dollars.

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 Год назад +140

      Interesting that you mention Guys and Dolls, which musical features a considerable mention of one of the towns in which I grew up: Havre de Grace, aka 'The Graw' (from the French pronunciation of 'Grace.').
      Meyer Lansky featured heavily in the gambling activities there, and some of the old timers remembered him and his peers. The National Guard Armory is placed on the old race track grounds, and remnants of the racing, gambling, and criminal heyday still linger; the rail line that brought New York City gamblers in and out of town still lies under Juniata Street, and my neighbors across the road had and used one of the race track's old stables - relocated entirely and intact - from after when the track closed. A VERY fine stable it is, too.
      Havre de Grace is a small town, but it's crazy how it connects to a much larger (and criminal) world.

    • @OpalBLeigh
      @OpalBLeigh Год назад +48

      It’s honestly brilliant. That PR campaign tho.

    • @bippy201
      @bippy201 Год назад +72

      Sounds like the Democratic Party today

  • @lilyw.719
    @lilyw.719 Год назад +3716

    Capone had one of the greatest quotes I have ever heard:
    "Do not mistake my kindness for weakness. I am kind to everyone, but when someone is unkind to me, weak is not what you are going to remember about me."

    • @naturalist10000
      @naturalist10000 Год назад +124

      Damn!!!
      Didn't know he coined that term.

    • @domanskikid
      @domanskikid Год назад +64

      @Lucinae
      Spend a little less time off of videogames/comic books, kid.
      Silencing your enemies back then in the real world was a little more
      Complex than “confronting an adversary” in person. You go around getting your hands dirty and next thing you know, you are arrested for murder. It’s called avoiding leaving a trail. You can’t just go around confronting all your enemies in person. >.>

    • @rocknepoovey4381
      @rocknepoovey4381 Год назад +44

      Delete *both of your* comments ^^ - this quote was recreated by historians on recording - to mimic Alphonse Capone’s voice

    • @rocknepoovey4381
      @rocknepoovey4381 Год назад +76

      @@domanskikid stay off the green text kid, Al Capone confronted the back of his adversaries heads with a baseball-bat. Do you learn nothing nowadays?

    • @TheDennys21
      @TheDennys21 Год назад +44

      To me one of the greatest quotes ever is when Zelenskyy said; i need ammo, not a ride.

  • @bluevioletandlilac
    @bluevioletandlilac Год назад +1112

    The saddest takeaway from this video by far is that some guy was at a soup kitchen again 25 years after visiting Capone's. Poor guy, living on the streets (or nearly so) for 25 years.

    • @getawaydreamer2724
      @getawaydreamer2724 9 месяцев назад +53

      Or he had his wife’s mothers horrible cooking and remembered a better soup 🍲

    • @lolihitler4198
      @lolihitler4198 9 месяцев назад +91

      going to a soup kitchen and complaining that you got better soup at a different soup kitchen definitely seems like the kind of attitude that would do that to you

    • @griggorirasputin6555
      @griggorirasputin6555 9 месяцев назад +14

      That still happens to people today

    • @HowieHoward-ti3dx
      @HowieHoward-ti3dx 7 месяцев назад

      That's what I thought too.

    • @javierross7441
      @javierross7441 6 месяцев назад +27

      To be fair most of them probably weren't homeless. They were just broke so looking for a free meal.

  • @XShmoke
    @XShmoke Год назад +924

    Ingredients -
    6 small potatoes
    1 large carrot (optional)
    2 stalks celery (optional)
    1 large onion
    2 cloves garlic
    3 leaves mint
    5 sprigs parsley
    1 sprig rosemary
    2 sprigs of thyme
    Salt &Pepper
    3 tablespoons Olive oil
    1kg beef stew meat (chuck)
    Roman or Parmesan cheese
    2 cans of 500g tomatoes (1kg)
    Rigatoni pasta
    Cooking Instructions -
    Finely chop herbs, garlic and dice onion, mix together.
    Pan fry beef in olive oil and add herbs and onion, season with salt and pepper. 7 mins
    Add 2 cans of tomatoes
    Once simmering cook 10 minutes
    Add 4 cups of water
    *Stew slowly 60 mins~
    Add diced vegetables potatoes, carrot, celery
    Stew for 45 mins~
    Serve over rigatoni pasta and add grated Roman cheese garnish with parsley.
    This was my take, tasted so good and serves about 3-4 adults.
    *May prefer to stew longer, before adding vegetables, for more tender beef

    • @georgehafner7901
      @georgehafner7901 Год назад +40

      Just cooked it today, it was absolutely stupendously bussing

    • @celesteschroeder5924
      @celesteschroeder5924 Год назад +8

      What's the ratio for using dried herbs?

    • @evandeverix8445
      @evandeverix8445 Год назад +14

      You beautiful person, thank you so much

    • @XShmoke
      @XShmoke 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@evandeverix8445 Np, let me know how it went.

    • @XShmoke
      @XShmoke 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@celesteschroeder5924 not too sure, you could google the fresh herbs and convert maybe ? These are all fresh herbs you can grow/find in local supermarket pretty easily, no ?

  • @chaoticklutz3633
    @chaoticklutz3633 Год назад +3449

    One of my favorite stories about Capone was how he was the instigator behind the expiration dates in milk. He would often go to hospitals to tend to his men and often paid for children's stays, but once he heard how a common problem amongst the hospitalized youths was having drank/eaten bad milk, he personally went out of his way to make sure that legislation was passed to make sure milk had expiration dates.

    • @Kaijugan
      @Kaijugan Год назад +330

      Good for him. Drinking milk that you don't know is bad is a way to have terrible indigestion. (I speak from experience)

    • @sarafontanini7051
      @sarafontanini7051 Год назад +544

      "I may have killed a lot of people but I can't STAND the idea of children getting sick by bad milk!"- al capone, probably

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Год назад

      @@sarafontanini7051 I'm convinced Al Capone didn't kill 'a lot of people.'
      Sure, he bumped off other gangsters who became too competitive with his organization but if he had really killed 'a lot of people,' why could they only indite him on tax fraud?
      Meanwhile, legal business, the train companies, hired nazi scum murder guards to shoot and kill hobos.
      Hobos were not just homeless drunks, they were also regular men and women (probably kids also) who hopped on slow moving trains to hitch a free ride because they were too poor to afford a ticket. They must have killed hundreds, thousands even.
      But they had the law on their side. Tresspassing on my trains? A few bullets or buck shot would make sure you never did that again.

    • @WittyOriginalUsername
      @WittyOriginalUsername Год назад +75

      I thought his brother died from bad milk when he was young?

    • @miss.l.1563
      @miss.l.1563 Год назад +36

      I don't like milk, so don't drink it. But you can tell when milk is bad just from smelling it.....
      How did they not know!?
      But, still..... Good on capone for helping with that. 👍👍.

  • @mcomeslast
    @mcomeslast Год назад +5519

    My grandfather and great grandmother survived because of his food kitchens. Grandpa would roam the train tracks looking for bits of coal that fell off the train bins. It was their heat in the Chicago winters. He said the constant cabbage soup was bad enough but he said at least having salt and pepper would have helped. I interviewed Grandpa for a history project. Grandpa pushed broom for one of the guys killed in the Valentine’s Day massacre (it was one of that guys bars). Grandpa swore they wouldn’t have survived without it. Edited to add. We are Native American and European mixed. We ended up in Chicago because one great great grandfather escaped the trail of tears and we were in Chicago for 3 generations before returning home. Imagine being starved out of your land to move and having a mobster provide food so you don’t starve some place else.

    • @allot5530
      @allot5530 Год назад +294

      Even the worst people can sometimes do some good

    • @MrShs812
      @MrShs812 Год назад +120

      Is there anyway to read the interview? I’m enthralled by such a tale

    • @commonberus1
      @commonberus1 Год назад +86

      Was the cabbage soup the soup served in the Al Capone soup kitchens? Not the luxurious soup shown in the video?

    • @LOLOsugoi
      @LOLOsugoi Год назад +47

      I'm glad you're alive and well now

    • @celiashen5490
      @celiashen5490 Год назад +71

      The coal collecting is called "gloaming". John Biggers painted several pieces depicting the act.
      edit: I've recycled the word for collecting bottles and cans for cash.

  • @skipjyc7164
    @skipjyc7164 2 месяца назад +45

    "It was the murders, Al. The murders." DUDE you mad me laughing

  • @benpeters-brown5317
    @benpeters-brown5317 Год назад +156

    Al capone is the embodiment of "your a bad guy, but that doesn't mean your a bad guy"

    • @BudsCartoon
      @BudsCartoon 7 месяцев назад +3

      Tell that to Joe Howard.

    • @amilan409
      @amilan409 Месяц назад +5

      He did own a dairy and said that he wished he got into that earlier, instead of bootlegging booze and crime

    • @krystalreverb
      @krystalreverb Месяц назад +2

      “Zangeif, you are bad guy. But does not mean you are… bad *guy*! Without Zangeif, who would crush men’s head like melon between thighs?”

    • @maozedongaming
      @maozedongaming 23 дня назад +1

      No, he’s… a bad guy and that means he’s a bad guy. He only attached his name to the soup kitchen probably for good press, doubt he actually used any of his money for it. Where do you think they get the money from the shakedowns? The working and middle class.

    • @milesedgeworth132
      @milesedgeworth132 20 дней назад

      ​@@maozedongaming It absolutely worked in his favor with how many comments see him as a Robin hood. For less than 10k per month feeding the homeless, he could get away with making millions stealing and killing because "He gave me 2 dollar soup for free".

  • @MariMiniattL
    @MariMiniattL Год назад +4057

    It wasn't just the soup kitchen. My Sunday school teacher had been a small child when Al Capone was alive. They lived in NW Wisconsin where he had a vacation home. Her mother cleaned his home. One day, they were in town shopping. My teacher stopped in front of a store and started to cry when she saw the new winter coats. Because she knew her family could not afford them. Al Capone comes out of the store and recognizes her. He stops and asks why she is crying. She tells him about the coats. The next day, the entire family had new winter clothing. Hats, coats, mittens, boots, everything. He bought all of it and had it delivered. Because he didn't want anyone that worked for him to worry about things like that.

    • @smellypatel5272
      @smellypatel5272 Год назад +222

      Aww what a sweet murdering gangster! So nice that he bought up those crocodile tears for vanity clothes while people were starving on the street

    • @nicoleb695
      @nicoleb695 Год назад +661

      ​@@smellypatel5272 r/choosingbeggars called, asked to use your comment as content.

    • @smellypatel5272
      @smellypatel5272 Год назад +1

      @@nicoleb695 imagine being so dumb that you're grateful to a murderer, extortionist and overall terrible human being. And all for what? A paltry sum of money or food as he continues to terrorize thousands of people.

    • @NumPad
      @NumPad Год назад +584

      @@smellypatel5272 Well they wouldn’t have starved if they had gone to his soup kitchen.

    • @ryy1704
      @ryy1704 Год назад +65

      @@NumPad 😂😂

  • @NWFLDeaconsWife
    @NWFLDeaconsWife Год назад +2301

    My Grandmother was present at the grade school where Al Capone dumped the crates of milk all over the cafeteria floor because he could smell it was all spoiled even though none of the cartons were open yet. He absolutely hated that smell! He had new milk from a nearby grocery brought in and then began a politcal campaign for milk given to kids in schools to be marked with a "use by date" so no kid ever got spoiled milk at school ever again, even if the adults couldn't smell it was off.

    • @resentfuldragon
      @resentfuldragon Год назад

      what a strange guy, he will happily kill people to make a buck but will turn around and care for the poor and for kids.

    • @Bigrignohio
      @Bigrignohio Год назад +205

      I believe he had a niece or similar almost die from bad milk.

    • @nothanks9503
      @nothanks9503 Год назад +45

      I hated the smell of the school milk shelf

    • @oldironsides4107
      @oldironsides4107 Год назад +52

      This is a myth and some weirdo on RUclips claiming his grandmother was there on something that never happened

    • @herbertdiaz4318
      @herbertdiaz4318 Год назад +16

      So how do you know what is the truth ? Were you there ?

  • @JAG312
    @JAG312 Год назад +72

    Some of my mother's family were associates or knew associates of Tommy Lucchese in NYC. According to my mother, no one had a bad word to say about Al Capone and he was well respected by the families in NYC. Also, all of Al Capone's associates had to "adopt" a homeless, unemployed man and provide him with housing, food, clothing, medical care, and anything else that was needed. Like all of us, Al Capone had his faults and his virtues. I think he should be remembered for his virtues.

    • @shimposter825
      @shimposter825 Месяц назад +6

      I also think my pal Jeffrey Epstein should be remembered by his virtues

    • @gawainethefirst
      @gawainethefirst 11 дней назад

      @@shimposter825is that the same Jeffery Epstein that didn’t kill himself?

  • @jeannamcgregor9967
    @jeannamcgregor9967 Год назад +95

    My husband grew up in Chicago and has stories about Al coming to dinner at his great-grandfather's house. He always brought flowers. He had a reputation for being "a nice guy outside of business hours".
    But they pronounced his last name Caponi...it certainly sounds more classically Italian.

    • @BudsCartoon
      @BudsCartoon 7 месяцев назад

      everyone in Chicago has a fake "my grandpa and Al" story. It's a common fool's lie.

    • @maozedongaming
      @maozedongaming 23 дня назад +2

      Not a nice guy, most likely doing it to retain a certain image that would help his court of public opinion. You don’t realize it, but it’s still doing what he intended it to do. He wasn’t a nice guy, he just knew how to pretend to be a nice guy.

  • @igormoreno3464
    @igormoreno3464 Год назад +1719

    I just love how Max can effortlessly insert a hard tack reference in any situation 🤣

    • @ToddTevlin
      @ToddTevlin Год назад +63

      And I laugh every. single. time.

    • @Chilipopcorn
      @Chilipopcorn Год назад +77

      Clack clack

    • @ethelryan257
      @ethelryan257 Год назад +21

      It was definitely a watershed moment for him. Ever since, he's been less finicky about changing absurd quantities of ingredients or cooking steps in his presentations.

    • @vomitfountain
      @vomitfountain Год назад +11

      It's his superpower.

    • @jonathanbair523
      @jonathanbair523 Год назад +29

      It cracks me up how many times he can slip that clip in...... And it never gets old... Long live the hard tack clip!

  • @hannahpumpkins4359
    @hannahpumpkins4359 Год назад +1258

    My grandmother was friends with Capone (she lived next to him in Cicero). She said he was a very kind gentleman, and would bring groceries over to her house, and help her out with things, and they voted together (he brought her over to the polling site). I lived with my grandmother growing up, and she used to say to me, "we don't talk bad about Mr. Capone in this house - he was saint to a lot of people".

    • @oldasyouromens
      @oldasyouromens Год назад +155

      My grandmother was not friends with Capone, but certainly, talking bad about him was forbidden. He was upstanding, except for all the times he was not.

    • @terminator572
      @terminator572 Год назад +1

      This same line of thought is what has doomed my beloved Mexico. Sure, the narcos fix roads, but the money they used is washed crimson with the blood of many, many innocents.

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 Год назад +120

      Capone was in the league of guys who lived the old code. "Never EVER sh*t where you eat." as one older mentor of mine used to say it.
      Meaning, he knew when to get tough, and other than when he had to... He largely wasn't. He could talk smack with the best og he guys in places where that was appropriate, but outside... in mixed company... He was as fine a gent' as you'd find around town.
      I've known quite a few among his family, descendants, and even a couple old timers who knew him before they passed. Everybody who met him said the same things. You'd never know the "Scarface" Al Capone that the public hears about now is the same guy they knew... It just couldn't be so.
      He was probably in Florida "on purpose"... BUT it's still kind of difficult to fully "buy" the idea that he was committed to the St. Valentine's Day Massacre... and yeah... I know better... BUT to have sat with them and hear THEM talk about him as they knew him... It's not so easy. He wasn't the only one who wanted something to happen... He was just the biggest name on the list of those who wanted something to happen... ;o)

    • @raybod1775
      @raybod1775 Год назад +22

      My dad worked for Al Capone and said he was a goo guy.

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Год назад +17

      Andrew Tate's fans see him as a Saint too.

  • @debrabeeson4673
    @debrabeeson4673 8 месяцев назад +98

    My mom was a volunteer for the Salvation Army in Hot Springs,AR when she was 25 years old. Big Al showed up with his bodyguards to see the pleasant young woman he talked to on the phone. Mom said that his eyes looked to glow in the dark. She saw him coming down the dark hallway that led into the office. She said he was a gentleman. She was impressed. He asked what they needed and by the close of business, it arrived at the office.

  • @Hank..
    @Hank.. Год назад +63

    If you were homeless in Chicago and you got a delicious and filling bowl of soup as a kindness, I don't think you'd care that it came from Capone. He was a brutal, ruthless gangster, but he wasn't completely devoid of humanity. He was a loving father, generous to the people, and even contributed to food being labelled with expiration dates, specifically milk, after someone he knew got sick from out-of-date milk. That doesn't wash away his crimes, but it definitely makes him more understandable than some of the more terrible people in history.

    • @johnpuls6335
      @johnpuls6335 28 дней назад

      The politicians today are worse than Alfonso

  • @oneblacksun
    @oneblacksun Год назад +482

    Think I know why the recipe didn't call for salt or pepper at all - it was already in the canned tomatoes. Homemade canned tomatoes were quite common, and they were usually already seasoned.

    • @kaiserlowa
      @kaiserlowa Год назад +39

      I mean even back then seasoning was a way to preserve perishables (still today), flavor was an extra. Usually recipes would call for other things like herbs, like mint in this soup, not necessarily salt. that's more of a recent thing.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Год назад +16

      Oh yeah right, the Italians made their own canned tomato sauce and it's called "Passata" (?)...

    • @Aurora-qn2dx
      @Aurora-qn2dx Год назад +19

      @@theotherohlourdespadua1131 Yes passata..but never salt or pepper..Just basil.. but in this case he used tomatoes.. the home made tomatoes are called "pelati" and its usually in jars..again not seasoned.

    • @adajanetta1
      @adajanetta1 Год назад +11

      @@theotherohlourdespadua1131 Passata is a puree. Not diced or whole tomatoes. But at the time the can would normally contain both salt and sugar.
      But not pepper or capiscums.

    • @roseblite6449
      @roseblite6449 Год назад +11

      @@theotherohlourdespadua1131 Whenever our family has a garden we always canned our own veggies, and they always used a bit of salt in the tomatoes (and other veggies) to help preserve them. Thus whenever those 'canned' (in glass Mason Jars) tomatoes were used for a recipe, the added salt called for was left out.

  • @johnvanantwerp2791
    @johnvanantwerp2791 Год назад +557

    A "spray" is 2-3 sprigs. If you look at how Rosemary grows there is typically a single branch with1-3 other branches coming off it. That is what my great-grandmother taught me (who lived in Capone's Chicago--she and her sister actually ran a Speak Easy for him) was a spray...

    • @maxlutz3674
      @maxlutz3674 Год назад +36

      Nice addition to the recipe and the history lesson. I learned that the measurement "spray" extists and a viewer actually can contribute an explanation of it. That makes the channel even greater.Thanks for your contribution.

    • @karlajaeger2082
      @karlajaeger2082 Год назад +7

      The right touch of rosemary can totally change dishes

    • @basileerla
      @basileerla Год назад +4

      Sounds familiar to the "mazzetto" used sometime in Italian. Could be of flowers, could be the free handful of fresh spices you ask at the local market along with the paid vegetables ("un mazzetto di odori").

    • @karlajaeger2082
      @karlajaeger2082 Год назад +4

      @@basileerla a breath of dill makes a great taste with the right hot sauce

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +2

      Two sprigs in a spray. That's easy enough to remember.

  • @Malistrix
    @Malistrix 5 месяцев назад +11

    I just made this. I am in awe of how my kitchen took on the smell of my grandma's kitchen. This stew was absolutely delicious!

  • @MariaDeLuca82871
    @MariaDeLuca82871 Год назад +49

    My dad was born in Italy and raised there. The soup you made reminds me of my Nona’s recipe. Although she also uses some pork once in awhile. Depending on the weather and Nono’s mood lol 😂

    • @jeffware87
      @jeffware87 9 месяцев назад +2

      I was going to say I thought at first the meat was going to be Italian pork sausage based!

  • @jonathanwhite8904
    @jonathanwhite8904 Год назад +756

    I'm from Utah, and there is a lot of native Americans here. In particularly a lot of Navajo and I would love to see someone authentic Navajo cooking. I love Navajo tacos and it would be great to have an episode of that, but it would also be great to have an episode of Indian cuisine before the encounters with European colonists. I know that there's probably not much that you could go on with truly authentic native American cuisine but anything would be awesome. If anybody could pull it off you could!
    Edit: just as a warning to you the history of Navajo tacos or fry bread as it is otherwise known is going to be a pretty sad one but also very interesting and an important story to tell.

    • @ChubbyUnicorn
      @ChubbyUnicorn Год назад +54

      There's a native American chef with an authentic restaurant. He gets techniques from elders, but then turned to botanists & biologists for what would have been in the area pre whites & creates from there. Can't remember his name he was on NPR.

    • @medb1996
      @medb1996 Год назад +23

      Ute cuisine would also be neat, the uto-aztecan families of our tribes got some neat foods, parched corns and grasshoppers

    • @onemercilessming1342
      @onemercilessming1342 Год назад +25

      You can always contact the tribal elders with such a request. Recipes are handed down in cultures, from mother to daughter, until somebody writes them down.

    • @azman6568
      @azman6568 Год назад +10

      I agree I'd like to see some navajo food.

    • @petergray7576
      @petergray7576 Год назад +16

      I made a bucket list of native foods a while back. I should add to that list the Jerusalem Artichoke, which despite its name isn't an artichoke or associated in any way with the Holy Land. Rather it is a species of sunflower originally native to the Great Plains, sporting edible root tubers, that were extensively exported to both coasts of North America and widely eaten by precontact nations. It was labeled an artichoke by the French explorer Samuel de Champlain after eating them at a Wampanoag village in Massachusetts Bay, using the closest taste comparison he could think of. The "artichokes" were later exported to Western Europe, where they proliferated widely, and obtained the other half of their name from the corrupting of the Italian word girasole (sunflower).
      Edit: Add to the list Canadian Bannock Bread (so called because it is cooked in a skillet like actual Bannock, but was traditionally made from cornmeal for centuries before European contact), and California Manzanita Berry Cider (soft cider).

  • @MrsPix20
    @MrsPix20 Год назад +827

    "It was the murders, Al, it was the murders" Oh my gosh...I busted out laughing at this. Your delivery is perfect, and your research abilities are truly admirable! ❤

    • @guyver441
      @guyver441 Год назад +6

      Same, best line! 😂

    • @jhawkshaw
      @jhawkshaw Год назад +29

      Reminds me of in Chainsaw Man when Samurai Sword was saying all that "my grandpa was a heroic yakuza. He didn't kill that many women and children" stuff 🤣

    • @JishinimaTidehoshi
      @JishinimaTidehoshi Год назад +5

      I mean, he murdered other gangsters.
      It was bad guys killing each other

    • @ildlyn8966
      @ildlyn8966 Год назад +1

      No you didn't.

    • @tylerp.5004
      @tylerp.5004 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@JishinimaTidehoshiHe also killed a lot of those related to his rivals, and also threatened people and used violence to ensure he got his money, and many of those people were part of the downtrodden and needy communities that turned to crime Nad illegal activity in order to support themselves.
      He and his gang killed other gangsters, but also abused and killed prostitutes, a lot of which were often underage girls, both that were under his gang and that of other gangs. Not to mention that one of the most common sources of income for gangs, protection rackets, are literally schemes designed around threatening people and hurting them so that they give you money to not hurt and threaten them. I also don't think al or any of his underlings were usually sympathetic when someone under them couldn't pay their dues, regardless of their reasoning of it.
      He and his gang did kill other gangsters, but the reason they did that is so they could muscle in on their territory and use it for their rackets to get more money, and those rackets mainly got their money from the poor and downtrodden, since they were the least able to protect themselves or be helped by the government, which was also because Capone threatened, blackmail, and bribed government officials so that they would turn a blind eye and allow him to continue his illegal activity against people that weren't cared for which allowed him to rake in even more blood money and exercise his power as he liked.

  • @jeannehall6546
    @jeannehall6546 10 месяцев назад +9

    My great aunt and great uncle did kitchen work at the old Wawasee Hotel (later a seminary, then a prep school, now condominiums) in northern Indiana in the late ‘20’s-early ‘30’s. Capone, in his trips to and from Chicago, would often stop by the hotel to play a few rounds of Poker in the game room. Great Aunt Jenny and Great Uncle John recalled that Capone was a very good guest, kind of quiet, and quite generous.

  • @Nm_09
    @Nm_09 Год назад +22

    I'm of Italian descent, growing up Ma would make stews like this all the time. The tomato always gave it that distinctive taste and savoryness I love about Italian food. I was suprised at how similar this was to stew growing up, only thing I would add to this recipe are some lentils or peas. Great stuff man.

    • @jeffware87
      @jeffware87 9 месяцев назад

      Did your ma use lentils? I could see peas in there for sure or cannellini beans like in Pasta Fagioli

  • @FulmenosQuiesce
    @FulmenosQuiesce Год назад +373

    Gotta say, Max's impression of the stereotypical newscaster was great. It added a LOT of character to the very interesting history bits.

    • @thatcanuck5670
      @thatcanuck5670 Год назад +4

      It's called a "Transatlantic accent" and was a deliberate affectation of the period. Look it up, it's really interesting!

    • @FulmenosQuiesce
      @FulmenosQuiesce Год назад +2

      @@thatcanuck5670 will do, thanks! I honestly thought it was an accent of the time.

  • @jwwhitmarsh8411
    @jwwhitmarsh8411 Год назад +445

    Story goes that he bought a milk processing plant and lobbied for milk expiration dates after a family member or friend got sick from expired milk. There was a lot of conflict between his milk empire and the Wisconsin dairy industry resulting in "The Milk Wars". Apparently his brother got the nickname "Bottles" after they ran a non alcoholic bottling ordeal, including the milk with dates on them.
    Neat read.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Год назад +7

      That’s kinda cool.

    • @rosezingleman5007
      @rosezingleman5007 Год назад +35

      When I was an undergraduate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the early 1980s I was pleased to learn that it was illegal to use margarine in a restaurant. No matter how basic the meal, the bread was always served with real Wisconsin butter.

    • @donnavorce8856
      @donnavorce8856 Год назад +6

      @@rosezingleman5007 It's an unspoken law even in our house today! Always served with butter. Cheers

    • @bricknolty5478
      @bricknolty5478 Год назад

      @@rosezingleman5007 people with dairy allergies can go to Hell, MI

    • @iseegoodandbad6758
      @iseegoodandbad6758 Год назад +1

      Raw milk is great for a woman's hormones though. Some say it's the best way to increase bust Size without surgery!

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Год назад +44

    Glad you partnered with Babbel! A different language is a different vision of life. Learning another language is not only learning different words for the same things, but learning another way to think about things. Those who know nothing of foreign languages know nothing of their own. The more you speak more languages, the more you understand about yourself. The more doors we open to other cultures by learning these languages, the more we open up ourselves! Thank you for promoting Babbel, Max! Hope it inspires more people to explore the world of linguistics.

  • @jamesrestel
    @jamesrestel Год назад +45

    This recipe is a big hit here. We served it up to friends when they were over - we took the liberty of calling it "Gansta' Soup".
    Looking forward to the cook book!

  • @brendaokuda2158
    @brendaokuda2158 Год назад +1126

    I'm an old woman now, but when I was a young girl (9-12) I used to go with my grandmother to visit the elderly at a nursing home here in TX. They were such wonderful people with amazing stories of their lives when they were young. One man in particular I loved to visit because I loved his accent & he was always dressed like he just walked out of a silent movie. Real classy like.... Anyways, one day we're going through his old photo albums & there he is with AL CAPON!!!! Not just one pictures, but almost an entire album! He idolized Al, claiming that he saved the lives of millions. He didn't just have his soup kitchens, but he handed out blankets, food, etc, to help anyone in need. Now, I'm a young girl, but I started thinking, "What made you leave Chicago for a little ole' hick town down south?" His reply? Turns out he was one of Al's tax attorneys!! & had to go undercover because, well, you know.....bang bang. He swore he wasn't the one who helped get Al arrested, but Al was after them all. Life lesson learned.....Listen to the elderly. They were AMAZING when they were younger.

    • @ChristinaFromYoutube
      @ChristinaFromYoutube Год назад +60

      My story isn't quite as cool but i took care of a Ford Supermodel in a nursing home. She had a ton of photos too.
      It is amazing what you'll learn just talking to our elders

    • @thedullohanvids
      @thedullohanvids Год назад +53

      Not an Al Capone story but my mothers uncle owned a bar in the Boston area that was frequented by a few gangsters. She met Whitey Bulger there in the 60's or 70's and said he was such a nice guy, but I'm sure most of us know how he turned out. She said the bars that the gangsters hung out in where the safest places for girls to go. If they went to other bars they had to be careful to watch their drinks. The gangsters might be bad, they might be killers, but they took care of their neighborhoods. I think we could use some of them today.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk Год назад +15

      @@thedullohanvids My father said something similar, that our Chicago neighborhood was safe because of an alleged gangster down the street. I never asked him how he knew... it's an early memory, so I suppose it's possible he meant his own Depression Boston childhood and I was confused.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 Год назад +16

      @@thedullohanvids
      That’s the difference between white Catholic ones of yesteryear, and the ones we have today. Gotta love diversity! 🙄

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 Год назад +4

      @@mindstalk
      Every city went to shite when it changed colors. It’s really sad to see what became of everything that was once nice and white.

  • @danieltaylor5231
    @danieltaylor5231 Год назад +316

    You know times are tuff when Max is working in a soup kitchen.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +91

      🤣

    • @beepboop204
      @beepboop204 Год назад +30

      as long as he isnt a soup na zi 😂

    • @kenwaid8239
      @kenwaid8239 Год назад

      Today on tasting history -Soup kitchen edition, I’m going to be making Pope Clement V “heretic stew”
      First you’ll need to burn 2 heretics, one male, and one female at the stake. Now from the blackened remains collect from each 2 Heresies of meat 🍖
      Now I’m not sure how much a Heresy is, but given the amount of water and other ingredients I’d estimate it to be 1/2 a kill-o
      Now since we obviously can’t murder somebody for an authentic recipe I’m going to be substituting pork as another name for human meat is “Long pig”…

    • @Tydorstus
      @Tydorstus Год назад +15

      @@beepboop204 no soup for you

    • @mehchocolate1257
      @mehchocolate1257 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@TastingHistory al capones grandmother on his father's side was a amazing chef

  • @Cottagecore_Hippie
    @Cottagecore_Hippie Год назад +39

    I'm eating a bowl of this as I'm writing this. It's really good! Me and my family all agree it tastes like my Granma's soup too. I threw in a couple of zucchini. Thanks Max I love your videos.

  • @nataliepeterman5241
    @nataliepeterman5241 5 месяцев назад +6

    I just made this for dinner! You’re definitely right about the house smelling amazing and it tasted delicious! Husband liked it as well. Definitely will make it again! 👌

  • @mikep9312
    @mikep9312 Год назад +515

    I still can't get over the "cook potatoes until done (delicious)" line, they just really had to express their love of cooked potatoes.

    • @Mythraen
      @Mythraen 8 месяцев назад +31

      I thought it was like a secondary instruction, like, you'll know they're done when they're delicious.

  • @Vincent-rv9il
    @Vincent-rv9il Год назад +184

    My great-grandmother was one of those waitresses that was tipped by AL Capone. She worked in her mother's diner in Elgin, IL and she remembers Capone and his group visiting her diner about once every couple of months. He used to tip her $50 and back then that was alot. He also used to pay for other people's meals she used to say, or buy everyone a round of coffee. She only had good thing to say about him.

    • @CathrynAnn98
      @CathrynAnn98 Год назад +24

      $50 in 1920 was like $740 in today's money!

    • @randomfactsthatdontmatter3466
      @randomfactsthatdontmatter3466 Год назад +8

      @@CathrynAnn98 dear God that inflation

    • @maozedongaming
      @maozedongaming 23 дня назад

      Did she mention the fact that he ran crews that intimidated small business owners into giving up hard earned revenue? Did she mention that he had rival gang members lined against a wall and shot? In cold blood? Did she mention the countless illegal and violent acts his crews committed under his orders? Did that ever come up? No? Then why are we pretending that this guy was a good person? Why?

  • @atmoz214
    @atmoz214 9 месяцев назад +7

    As someone who lived in Chicago their whole life, the history of the Chicago Outfit is fascinating. The violence is never okay, but the fact they could've changed things and done lots of good for the community is astounding.

  • @tossingturnips
    @tossingturnips Год назад +8

    5:00 - he said the line! Max, I love your dedication to this running joke. Never let it drop.

  • @tylerboyce4081
    @tylerboyce4081 Год назад +105

    I am absolutely adding the annotation "Clack Clack" into my copy of your cookbook, Max. 😂

    • @hrodga
      @hrodga Год назад +6

      I wonder if he could make a run of word bubble stickers..

  • @georgsyphers1437
    @georgsyphers1437 Год назад +546

    As an Austrian I would love to see you do the history of schnitzel and find what the oldest recipe available for the very old dish is.

    • @TheKingOfBeans
      @TheKingOfBeans Год назад +18

      Wiener schnitzel is claimed by the people of Milan, it would make a good episode indeed 👍

    • @kaynealexander4993
      @kaynealexander4993 Год назад +19

      Rada rada

    • @jonathanbair523
      @jonathanbair523 Год назад

      schnitzel??? As in hotdog pr sausage?

    • @michellehainze3345
      @michellehainze3345 Год назад +25

      @@jonathanbair523 Its a piece of meat that is pounded thin and pan fried, usually served with lemon or a sauce.

    • @georgsyphers1437
      @georgsyphers1437 Год назад +22

      @@TheKingOfBeans my understanding is that the basic form of pounded breaded fried meat is referenced all the way back in the Roman Empire by Apicius. It's an ancient dish and anyone really trying to claim discovery or the originality of it, rather than a specific form of it, is as silly as someone claiming a specific region invented boats. I'd just be really interested to see what a good historical dive into the history and early recipes of it manage to bring up, like is the Apicius version cookable? What is the earliest published actual Wiener schnitzel recipe? Or for that matter cotoletta alla millianese?

  • @hiddendesire3076
    @hiddendesire3076 Год назад +19

    I think I might know one person who may know Capone’s original soup recipe. It’s his former mechanic. Nice guy. Had feelings for his granddaughter who was my classmate. Could also try tracking down any of the old White House Inn (Quinten Rd and Palatine Rd) workers and see if any of them knew it. Capone would frequent the place while in town.

    • @someperson8984
      @someperson8984 6 месяцев назад +1

      You should try emailing Max Miller instead of leaving a comment, especially if you find the recipe! I'm sure he'd be really interested it's probably just hard to get through all these comments.

    • @amilan409
      @amilan409 Месяц назад

      Did you have any luck getting the original recipe ? i'd love to have it

  • @KSt-nv8eb
    @KSt-nv8eb Год назад +19

    I've just finished binge-watching all of your episodes, Max. So well done, interesting, and funny (I have laughed out loud to almost all of them at least once). Your format was solid right from the beginning. I'm an archival researcher, love cooking, and appreciate all of your work. I've got your book pre-ordered as well. Keep up the great work

  • @pamelamccarthy1412
    @pamelamccarthy1412 Год назад +231

    I have an Italian great aunt that used to put mint in her spaghetti sauce. A lot of people like to distinguish their sauce from others. That's the way she made hers.

    • @zachhoward9099
      @zachhoward9099 Год назад +4

      I’m gonna have to try that, I love mint and Italian food even more!

    • @sotch2271
      @sotch2271 Год назад +2

      Look tasty

    • @cadunkus
      @cadunkus Год назад +3

      I know they're not the same in menthol content but peppermints actually help a lot with getting rid of gas so that actually seems practical as well as unique.

    • @Juliaaa9797
      @Juliaaa9797 Год назад +3

      Here in Spain (or specifically the Canray Islands, Idk if it applies to all of Spain) they put a sprig of mint in their chicken noodle soup. It's a bit weird at first but fits the dish nicely

    • @joshp2542
      @joshp2542 Год назад +4

      I put cinnamon in mine. Just a dash but it really turns out pretty good if making a meat sauce.

  • @annageiger7240
    @annageiger7240 Год назад +205

    In south-east Germany, where I grew up, we have a word for a small bunch of herbs. It is Kräutersträußl, which probably can be translated to spray of herbs. Such a Kräutersträußl would contain a sprig of each herb required. So I think, your amount of herbs was very close to what they had in mind, when they wrote down the recipe. Thank you for another very entertaining lesson in history and cooking.

    • @octochan
      @octochan Год назад +8

      Sounds a lot like a bouquet garni

    • @annageiger7240
      @annageiger7240 Год назад +13

      ​@@octochan Probably it's the same or at least nearly. I think, bouquet garni contains specific herbs. Kräutersträußl can contain any herb.

  • @mesk412
    @mesk412 Месяц назад +1

    New to this channel and i love it. Max is a great host, with eloquent speech, and great comedic timing. I love the concept of tying history and food together. I like to watch while i eat my meals. Thanks for the great content.

  • @katharper655
    @katharper655 Год назад +12

    I LOVE the interplay between cooking shows online. Quite by accident, I came across DYLAN'S vintage recipes; and while his delivery is hilarious, I was very pleased that he referred his viewers to my own longtime
    culinary HERO, "Tasting History With Max Miller".
    It was kind of like dining at a restaurant and having the owner say, "Glad ya liked it. But have ya heard of Max Miller? HE'S great, too." Gave me a quick rush of the Warm 'n' Fuzzies.

  • @eloquentsarcasm
    @eloquentsarcasm Год назад +320

    My grandfather was born in 1898, lived his entire life in and around Chicago and made it to 1990. The stories that man could tell were amazing, WW I, the Great Depression, WW II, the Korean War, Vietnam, the birth of cars/planes/TV, he saw it all. He always ate simple, cheap, hardy food, and the only plate cleaner than his was our dogs, he wasted not a scrap of food...or anything else for that matter. The soup kitchens in Chicago saved I don't know how many people from starvation, and the fact that Mob Bosses ran a bunch of them was no accident. The "old school" Mafia guys always looked out for their neighborhoods, and were considered almost saintly by the people, pretty useful to have all the "little guys" on your side when calls for witnesses went out from the police dept.

    • @BudsCartoon
      @BudsCartoon 7 месяцев назад +7

      LOL, Al did this in the early 30's for PR when on trial. That's it. This is the 2020 = of cooperations posting BLM stuff.

    • @M50A1
      @M50A1 5 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@BudsCartoonhuh

    • @BudsCartoon
      @BudsCartoon 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@M50A1 huh huh

    • @handles_are_a_bit_rubbish
      @handles_are_a_bit_rubbish 5 месяцев назад +26

      @@BudsCartoon Funding and organising a bunch of soup kitchens is a lot more work than having your social media team spout empty platitudes on twitter.

    • @lynntownsend100
      @lynntownsend100 3 месяца назад +8

      ​@@BudsCartoon I'd probably like BLM better if they did soup kitchens tbh...

  • @jansenart0
    @jansenart0 Год назад +270

    My favorite story about Capone wasn't the murders or the racketeering or the bootlegging or his tax evasion or his soup kitchen, it's that he lobbied Chicago for sell-by dates on milk.
    It's a cute story about a terrible person, and though dating wasn't really even a widespread thing until the 50s in Europe, you can find milk bottle caps from 1930s Chicago, which do in fact have stamped on them the days of the week they are to be sold by. This is similar to the ties used for bread, which are different colors based on the day they were baked.

    • @MoctezumaStudios
      @MoctezumaStudios Год назад

      Capone was generally always a sweetheart. Its laws that make a person evil. not the person. Gangs were created to protect themselves from the government and people who tried to kill you cuz, racism. Everyone sells liquor here in Chicago now.

    • @kaiserlowa
      @kaiserlowa Год назад +9

      Was there a reason he did that? I mean milk DEFINTELY needed that considering how fast milk rots. but was it because it was too hard to sell it or something?

    • @elif6908
      @elif6908 Год назад +1

      What’s the reason he lobbied for it do you know? I imagine it’s not just because of his good heart 😂

    • @jacobchang7955
      @jacobchang7955 Год назад +19

      ​@@kaiserlowa His mother died from spoilt milk.

    • @jansenart0
      @jansenart0 Год назад +18

      @@kaiserlowa It's not clear that he actually did; as with much stuff associated with gangsters, there's little evidence regarding it. The legend is that it was a family member or associate that bought or used or perhaps just had spoiled milk around.

  • @julie.daytona
    @julie.daytona 3 месяца назад +3

    I'm feeling under the weather and came across this video. My husband got the ingredients and it's in the instant pot. Can't wait to try it with Maggi Würze! 😋😊

  • @b3astlyify
    @b3astlyify 5 месяцев назад +3

    Zuppa Tuscana, (Tuscan soup) has got to be my favorite Italian (or Mediterranean) soup. Eating some right now!

  • @mercenarygundam1487
    @mercenarygundam1487 Год назад +68

    Max Miller giving us a recipe we can't refuse.

  • @iacopoguidi7871
    @iacopoguidi7871 Год назад +228

    Fun fact: the pasta shapes at 13:17 are pretty much all still used with little variation. The number 42's name, "maruzze", is southern italian dialect for "snails", even though today we call them "conchiglie", literally "shells", or more precisely "seashells".

    • @Seth9809
      @Seth9809 Год назад +5

      I'm just a half Italian American who buys his pasta from the store, but I'm very very familiar with that kind of pasta....
      Granted, half the time it's sold by Kraft... but that's how life is.

    • @watersbey25
      @watersbey25 Год назад

      Not a fun fact

  • @latias9628
    @latias9628 Год назад +3

    Love watching your channel with my mom because we love historical and vintage recipes. We definitely want to get your cook book too!

  • @John_Fugazzi
    @John_Fugazzi Год назад +5

    Barney Balaban, who Max mentions as a contributor to Capone's soup kitchen was the uncle of character actor Bob Balaban who appears regularly in Wes Anderson's films and many other films and TV shows. Max could afford Capone's "suggested" donation as he had sold his chain of theaters in the mid 1920's for ten million dollars (a lot back then). He ended up the president of Paramount Pictures for nearly thirty years.

  • @jodidavis6595
    @jodidavis6595 Год назад +847

    Just the right amount of credit for something he did for the poor without glorifying him for what he really was. A thug. Max you sure do your homework. Always with a little humor too. Love your channel and thank you. Sure beats what’s on tv these days

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +83

      Thanks Jodi

    • @ceu160193
      @ceu160193 Год назад

      Well, technically government is bunch of thugs in charge of certain territory.

    • @James35142
      @James35142 Год назад +7

      This is an underrated comment.

    • @reallyhertv4566
      @reallyhertv4566 Год назад +15

      You'd not be saying that if you were starving in 1930s

    • @reallyhertv4566
      @reallyhertv4566 Год назад

      @Harley Quinn mafia is a criminal organisation, not evil.
      Though they did kill people

  • @infin1ty850
    @infin1ty850 Год назад +68

    My love for rigatoni can never be completely satisfied. My absolute favorite pasta shape of all time. Probably because it's what my Nuni uses, but regardless, I absolutely love it.

    • @valley_robot
      @valley_robot Год назад +2

      It's my favourite as well

    • @Aurora-qn2dx
      @Aurora-qn2dx Год назад +1

      Try tortiglioni or edicoladi..they are good aswell with meat sause..rigatoni are the best with pasta al forno or ragù.

  • @ckhprojectpro777
    @ckhprojectpro777 Год назад +4

    Making this lovely soup right now, while Max keeps me company in my kitchen. Loving it!

  • @barbarachieppo9603
    @barbarachieppo9603 Год назад +1

    I love the ambience with the music of the period playing in the background as you tasted the yummy-looking soup.❤

  • @threestrandsministry6319
    @threestrandsministry6319 Год назад +855

    So I have a cool story about Al Capone! When I was young we lived in a double house and the lady who owned it was born in 1897. Her son came home and saw that my mum was taking care of his mother like her own. He ended up treating us like family, especially when he saw that my mum and dad took care of her out of love and not for anything specific. As it turns out he owned a restaurant where Capone and the 'family' all ate and he was a made man. He bought me a race horse because he wanted it to pay for my college, and he showed off my mum and dad when they brought his mum to visit him. So, if you know me, you are only one step from Capone's food and Capone himself!
    Edit: I didn't think this comment was going to get so much attention so let me give you some information
    Hazel Booth was born 1897 and died in 1986 of a hip fracture. Her son, the made man, Thomas Booth Born 1906 and died Christmas Eve of 1981 in Chicago. He owned/managed the restaurant in Sportmans' Park, Capone's race track. He was a bald and kind man, who treated me like a granddaughter. I was born 1974 and so not as up to tick on details as I would like, but I remember a lot still since they were so important to my life in many ways.
    As for the doubters....Doubt when I get paid millions for my story HAHAH!! Having stage 4 cancer money and clout mean nothing. I do love to share the stories that die with me though! enjoy looking stuff up!

    • @sisterspooky
      @sisterspooky Год назад +21

      @Three Strands Ministry - Any names, dates, or figures you met that anyone would actually know? What about the restaurant, does it still exist? If so, is it under the same ownership?
      Additionally, I noticed you wrote “mum”, you in the UK? That’s not a common term for mother in the US, hence the question. 😜

    • @alexyoungberg5232
      @alexyoungberg5232 Год назад +25

      Yes because in America we all spell mom with a u...

    • @LaDivinaLover
      @LaDivinaLover Год назад

      @@alexyoungberg5232 oh damn you’re right. It’s not like the U.S. is filled with immigrants or anything. Ya clown 🤡

    • @gabriellakadar
      @gabriellakadar Год назад +23

      @@alexyoungberg5232 Good catch! I only ever went to visit Al Capone's house in Cuba. I'm Canadian. It was February 1989 before the end of the Soviet Union so there were lots of fat Russians on the beach at Varedero.

    • @alexyoungberg5232
      @alexyoungberg5232 Год назад +1

      @@LaDivinaLover there are so many ministries and mums in Chicago ya clown! Always believe everything you see! 🤡

  • @mnk9073
    @mnk9073 Год назад +65

    You know it's a proper cook book when they tell you a) exactly which pasta to use and b) exactly which cheese to top it with.

  • @moistexistence3090
    @moistexistence3090 11 месяцев назад +1

    My love for food and history comes alive in your videos. Keep up the phenomenal work.

  • @CrossOfBayonne
    @CrossOfBayonne Год назад +4

    6:55, The Thompson SMG was also heavily used in World War 2, Squad leaders and NCOs in the Army carried them in Europe fighting against the Nazis along with marines in the Pacific theatre. A friend of mine August Caccavone used it when he was in the 7th Army and like Capone was also italian american

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +157

    An underrated moment in ‘Downton Abbey’ is when Robert calls himself a “Chicago bootlegger” and the Dowager Countess says: “I don’t even know what that means.”

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +34

      🤣 love her

    • @barrymalkin4404
      @barrymalkin4404 Год назад +18

      She didn't know what a week-end was and probably never heard of Al Capone; for an "Edwardian" woman going around with French and Russian aristocrats, Lady Olivia had a lot to learn.

    • @PokhrajRoy.
      @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +2

      @@barrymalkin4404 Haha

    • @LBrobie
      @LBrobie Год назад +10

      @@barrymalkin4404 her name was Violet.

  • @Levi_Skardsen
    @Levi_Skardsen Год назад +44

    Imagine coming home on a cold, rainy winter day and this soup is waiting for you. Would make everything better in an instant.

  • @leonardlang3571
    @leonardlang3571 Год назад +2

    Hey Max thank you for sharing this recipe! I've been watching your channel for a long time but this is the first time I actually tried out a recipe on my own. The soup was simple and easy enough for a novice cook such as myself but it really turned out good!

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Год назад +22

    As horrible as it is, the gang history in the US sure is something. Reminds me of the story of why Canal Street in NYC is called Canal Street. If something is called that, it probably was that, as they say in NYC. Want to know why Canal Street is called Canal Street? Ding ding ding, there was once a canal! But there's more than that. The area was once home to Collect Pond, one of the city's few sources of freshwater. It became polluted because of everyone doing their business there, as well as run-off from tanneries. I think you can imagine just how bad it must've smelled.
    So it was drained via a canal so they could eventually put landfill there. This area is where the Irish first moved to in NYC (because it was all they could afford), which eventually became known as the most dangerous neighborhood in the world, Five Points, because of the area's Irish gangs. Nowadays, the area is home to Chinatown and Little Italy.

  • @CrankyBubushka
    @CrankyBubushka Год назад +72

    He was very generous with people who lived near his hideout in northern Wisconsin. My Grandma was a little girl at the time and she knew he liked fishing and would be very generous with money with the local people. No one ever forgot that.

    • @oldironsides4107
      @oldironsides4107 Год назад +2

      Lol thousand of grandmas and grandpas knew al Capone In here.

    • @punishedwaluigi3518
      @punishedwaluigi3518 Год назад +1

      @@oldironsides4107it shows how effective his winning of hearts and minds was, to have such high regard for him longer after his death.

    • @georgiafrye2815
      @georgiafrye2815 4 месяца назад

      Yes this is true as I live in N. WIS. He or staff bought food from local farmers and there was a small lake on the property where a seaplane could bring in liquor from Canada about 6 hours North. There were stone walls with areas for the guards to sit with guns. It used to be open for tours and had a cafe. The Lac Courte Orielles tribe now owns the property now and is exploring what to develop it into such as a camp ground. It is run down. His bookkeeper alledgly was Radio Joe who ran a bar /restaurant in Hayward, WI. He was said to have donated money to a local Priest who walked to his residence but was told that was the last donation so don't return.

  • @robertpowell2225
    @robertpowell2225 3 месяца назад +1

    I absolutely love the way you made yourself sound like an old time radio announcer. You really have a program that's not only interesting but fun!

  • @frzzn1024
    @frzzn1024 6 месяцев назад +1

    wow this channel is like a gold mine. i am gonna keep it for myself

  • @samanthamatuszak1201
    @samanthamatuszak1201 Год назад +367

    I'm not sure if this is possible, but it would be great to have a whole series about gangsters favorite meals.

    • @thedullohanvids
      @thedullohanvids Год назад +15

      I would totally watch that.

    • @gooniez8490
      @gooniez8490 Год назад +20

      I agree! Living in Vegas and worked in a restaurant that’s from Chicago’s old days I both hear stories from the GM and how some recipes came to be “influenced” by mobsters back in the day and still today.

    • @andriealinsangao613
      @andriealinsangao613 Год назад +2

      Hell yes!

    • @h.s.thompsonduke8105
      @h.s.thompsonduke8105 Год назад +4

      Joe Biden loves his pudding cups.

    • @ericwilliams8420
      @ericwilliams8420 7 месяцев назад

      Tony Soprano's gabagool.

  • @eddokter
    @eddokter Год назад +110

    My grandmother used to still do a lot of canning for food preservation from her farm. She referred to the jar sizes as cans of (a specific fruit or vegetable) and the tomato can was the 32oz one. I'm not sure if this is accurate or not, but when you referenced simply "2 cans of tomatoes" that's how she worked recipes.
    They were, as I remember, relish, pickles, tomatoes, and apples. For 16, 24, 32, and 64 oz respectively.

  • @IrvingVargasIVV
    @IrvingVargasIVV 5 месяцев назад +1

    Greetings from Mexico!! Really enjoy how you go all over the world for every episode.

  • @invisiblehearths
    @invisiblehearths Год назад +1

    I enjoy your videos! One thing I've noticed about a lot of Italian recipes is after chopping the aromatics together (easy when using a mezzaluna knife) they actually hit the pan together with the cold olive oil and heat up all at once, giving more time to flavor the oil itself. Keep on keeping on!

  • @Tulkazar
    @Tulkazar Год назад +114

    I'm italian and I'm always curious to what happened to italian recipes once they crossed the ocean. I can say that, taking off the rigatoni, this is a really common "spezzatino" in center Italy, some add some peas and it's usually more "overcooked" (softer potatoes) but it's basically that same thing.

    • @TinyScorpion44
      @TinyScorpion44 Год назад +8

      Well, the bad news is the pasta mostly got overcooked when it crossed the ocean and people forgot to salt the water. A simple cheese sauce was bastardized into weirdly alfredo. The good news is thanks to the internet, Italian recipe sites with actual Italian recipes can be easily found, and ingredients are generally available in most cities. If you speak Spanish which many Americans do, you can read Italian and at least get the basic understanding with how similar the languages are

    • @gatocles99
      @gatocles99 Год назад +10

      @@TinyScorpion44 In other words, Americans made it taste better which is why the best Italian food is found in America.

    • @thedullohanvids
      @thedullohanvids Год назад +17

      @@gatocles99 Sounds like someone who thinks Italian food is Ragu and thinks Olive Garden is fine dining. LOL!

    • @gatocles99
      @gatocles99 Год назад +4

      @@thedullohanvids Yes, verbal abuse and insults are a sign of narcissism.... also a mental illness.

    • @thedullohanvids
      @thedullohanvids Год назад +6

      @@gatocles99 I was just joking around. I'm sorry if you took it as an actual insult

  • @Heritage367
    @Heritage367 Год назад +77

    As a native Chicagoan, it was great to see a bit of our history on your channel. And that soup looks delicious!

  • @nicholasowen7423
    @nicholasowen7423 5 месяцев назад +1

    My God i love cooking AND watch history video, this is a miracle !

  • @BladeUtah
    @BladeUtah Год назад +1

    Good stuff, Max. I enjoyed this recipe and history, and look forward to making this.

  • @arttificcer2324
    @arttificcer2324 Год назад +58

    If you're looking for a culture to cook from, perhaps acadian cuisine. A rich history and food inspired from so many things, like french(obviously) and mi'kmaq cuisine, as well as the experiences from settling in unforgiving land in atlantic canada. It would be interesting to learn more about the connection between acadian food and cajun food, as the cajuns were displaced acadians from the "french and Indian war"

  • @KetchupwithMaxandJose
    @KetchupwithMaxandJose Год назад +32

    Can confirm tasty, and perfect for this rainy/cold season

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад

      When Max said he looked up tomato cans from the 1920s and '30s, I was expecting him to have found a bunch of losing boxers.

    • @DrIgnacious
      @DrIgnacious Год назад

      Its been raining/snowing for the last three days. It is time for soup.

    • @AngelavengerL
      @AngelavengerL Год назад

      Soup is definitely our favorite in this house. Got an instapot a few years ago for christmas and since it's snowing that means soup every other day. Never get tired of it!

  • @hellooutthere8956
    @hellooutthere8956 5 месяцев назад +1

    Italisn soup is soup for the soul. All the veggies snd beef and pasta, beans. Wht all but the taste is the best. Magic.

  • @gracemakeslace
    @gracemakeslace 4 месяца назад +2

    I don't usually comment on ads, but that tea Max served at the beginning of that ad alone is enough to make me consider them when I resume studying Japanese. 👀

  • @DeathMetalDerf
    @DeathMetalDerf Год назад +32

    You really should be doing voiceovers and audiobook narration, dude. You're 1920s news guy is excellent
    Reminds me of grandma's gozinta soup. Whatever is in the kitchen that day gozinta the soup.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +11

      Thanks! I have dabbled a bit in past

    • @Rebecca-dm5ul
      @Rebecca-dm5ul Год назад +2

      I grew up in Chicago. Remember hearing stories about his soup kitchen years after it closed. People remembered going with pots and getting soup to feed their family.

  • @squirrelknight9768
    @squirrelknight9768 Год назад +128

    Hey Max.
    Had a rough few weeks. Just wanted to say that I appreciate your videos that always manage to put a smile on my face.
    I'm glad you're around.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +21

      Hope the next ones are better *crossfingers

    • @machematix
      @machematix Год назад +7

      @@TastingHistory Your friendly, interesting, entertaining videos are a go-to for anyone having no bad day.
      I'm currently exhausted and so stressed I threw up my dinner. Your video, like always, give me a pleasant break. I imagine it's like having a grandma cook you dinner, except I never knew my grandmas.
      You might never see this, but thanks for your work.

    • @japspeedgirl6216
      @japspeedgirl6216 Год назад

      @@machematixSending good vibes. Hope you get through it soon. Lots of love

    • @ChicaneryBear
      @ChicaneryBear Год назад

      Were the next few weeks better bud?

  • @Michigan_Tactical
    @Michigan_Tactical 3 месяца назад

    I love the history you share.

  • @boebender
    @boebender Год назад +1

    My late father would have loved to watch this. Big Capone fan. Thank you!!

  • @trustytrest
    @trustytrest Год назад +11

    "Scarface AKA Snorky" sounds like an amazing title for an Al Capone documentary

  • @FlameHeart3063
    @FlameHeart3063 Год назад +34

    My grandmother once took a tour that went past Al's old house. The tour guide allowed the tourists to grab a rock from the crumbling building. So just like people have chunks of the Berlin Wall, my grandmother still has a chunk of Al Capone's house. Neat!

  • @peacecoyote1592
    @peacecoyote1592 Год назад

    Love your channel! Thanks for the videos

  • @lindanorris2455
    @lindanorris2455 5 месяцев назад +1

    max!! I MADE THIS SOUP! SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO WONDERFUL! THANK YOU!

  • @TheJeevo92
    @TheJeevo92 Год назад +41

    My wife (a sous chef) writes the menus for the local college. I'm going to try to get her to serve this.

  • @midoriya-shonen
    @midoriya-shonen Год назад +75

    I'm loving the vibes this episode. The radio host voice, the jazz music, and of course Max himself. It lightens my heart.

  • @norrsken1828
    @norrsken1828 Год назад

    can't wait to get your book!

  • @anthonys5568
    @anthonys5568 3 месяца назад

    Fun video! Thank you!

  • @zacknight9137
    @zacknight9137 Год назад +15

    The perennial hard tack throwback is priceless 😆

  • @firebert123
    @firebert123 Год назад +21

    Back from a 3 week long vacation with no computer and this is the first video I see! WOO!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +2

      Where was vacation?

    • @firebert123
      @firebert123 Год назад +1

      @@TastingHistory England! not super exciting, I know, but it is in the Fens on the east coast where King John's caravan was famously lost taking a shortcut through the marshes!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +1

      @@firebert123 it’s one of my favorite areas in the world! I think Ely is my favorite cathedral and I love the story of the outlaws who fought William the Conqueror in the Fens.

    • @firebert123
      @firebert123 Год назад +1

      @@TastingHistory I didn't get to this time, but I always try to visit Wales as well. North Wales specifically, the Snowdonia region. Supposedly where King Arthur's legend happened, and the mountains that were the insparation for Tolkien's Misty Mountains, AND the mountains Edmund Hillary practiced on for his Everest trek!

  • @Chenovski00
    @Chenovski00 Год назад

    Very happy i just found this channel!!

  • @justinharvie8126
    @justinharvie8126 Год назад +1

    Every single time he mentions those hard tacks, it makes me smile.

  • @yokai333
    @yokai333 Год назад +46

    Nicely done. Have you thought about an Alaskan dish to try? I highly recommend sisterhood stew, courtesy of the Alaskan Native Sisterhood from Hoonah, Alaska. And yes, pilot bread (hard tack) is a staple of soup. It is delicious and it's from my mom's home village. If you're interested

    • @yokai333
      @yokai333 Год назад +2

      Also I highly recommend you guys come to Hoonah, see the zip line, hear łingit tales, see the greatest place in the icy straits

    • @kellysouter4381
      @kellysouter4381 Год назад +2

      That does sound interesting

  • @Jestersage
    @Jestersage Год назад +36

    Always love the concept of macaroni soup. Now of course being a Hong Konger, the version we refer to is closer to Wedding soup: Light chicken Broth, macaroni, mixed veggie, spam. Feels more like wonton soup. Serving it hot is real good when you have the flu.

    • @lewisjenkins8928
      @lewisjenkins8928 Год назад +2

      My friend made that for me once, when I was an undergrad in England. It's actually incredible when you're ill, should be a more widely published thing!

  • @hissykittycat
    @hissykittycat 3 месяца назад +1

    👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 well done! Charming, funny, informative and interesting! I'm an instant fan!! And a good soup recipe to boot - win win win!!

  • @chaytonhurlow840
    @chaytonhurlow840 6 месяцев назад

    This was a great video, the fluidity of the information presented is impressive.