ST PATRICK'S DAY 💚☘️ | IRISH VS AMERICAN 🇮🇪🇺🇸

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 161

  • @dylanryan2567
    @dylanryan2567 3 года назад +43

    Can we first acknowledge it’s not “Patty’s day”, it’s Paddy’s day ha

    • @BRIDINC1972
      @BRIDINC1972 3 года назад +4

      Irish for Patrick is Padraig. So Paddy

    • @michelleflood7225
      @michelleflood7225 3 года назад +1

      With you there Dylan I always say paddy’s day in fact that’s the nickname my cousins son gets called because he’s a Patrick just one of the fifteen I’m related to !

    • @michelleflood7225
      @michelleflood7225 3 года назад

      @@BRIDINC1972 knew this but I think it’s regional in pronunciation though

    • @MadailinBurnhope
      @MadailinBurnhope Год назад

      @@michelleflood7225 it isn't

  • @gerardacronin334
    @gerardacronin334 3 года назад +37

    I remember giving up sweets for Lent but being allowed to eat them on St. Patrick’s Day. It was a “day off” from Lent!

  • @paulstromberg3019
    @paulstromberg3019 3 года назад +17

    corned beef and cabbage dinner is an Irish American substitute for their memories of food they ate there (corned beef is the cheapest meat you could get years ago) happy St Patrick's day. we also eat soda bread on Paddy's day

    • @margaretwaite7226
      @margaretwaite7226 3 года назад +2

      Corned beef definitely is not a budget meal these days. It's really delicious tho with green cabbage and creamy mashed potatoes.

  • @LeonVEKH
    @LeonVEKH 3 года назад +5

    The Pagans were suppose to be the snakes as they had snake like tattoos on various parts of their bodies that would wrap around their arms, legs and torso due to their paganism and beliefs so when you hear that St. Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland, in a sense he kind of did. I think that is where the legend derives from and got a little lost in translation over the centuries. Great video, cheers!

  • @magicwandfour
    @magicwandfour 3 года назад +7

    The only other country where St. Patricks` Day is a national holiday is the Caribbean island of Montserrat. The entry stamp also includes a shamrock.

  • @amandagosling7622
    @amandagosling7622 3 года назад +8

    The schools were only closed for Paddys Day this year in Ireland, it was a very strange one this year

  • @TheGrandkarl
    @TheGrandkarl 3 года назад +8

    For St Patrick's Day here in the north of Ireland we used to have cabbage,boiled ribs and "champ",mashed potatoes scattered through with chopped spring onions,scallions as we call them here in Belfast. 😊💚

    • @FreshIceColdBeer
      @FreshIceColdBeer 3 года назад

      West Belfast?

    • @noeleen5250
      @noeleen5250 3 года назад

      Ah scallions, long time since I heard that one. I married an English man so he just doesn't get scallions.. Lol

  • @slynskey333
    @slynskey333 3 года назад +2

    Been watching your videos, you have to be the sweetest couple ever.

  • @tworivers3518
    @tworivers3518 3 года назад +3

    Has Ashton seen a hurling / gaelic football game? You should show him some games from the 90's, when the ball part of the games was more of an afterthought. I remember the 95 Clare vs Tipp games resembling a vaguely organised riot with a scoreboard

  • @bradyandrewsolomon1057
    @bradyandrewsolomon1057 3 года назад +8

    This was a really interesting video there were so many things that I did not know about Ireland and how St. Patrick’s Day works this was a fantastic video can’t wait to the next one 💚🍀☘️🇮🇪

  • @michellehayes5133
    @michellehayes5133 3 года назад +3

    Really interesting Amy. I always learned that St. Patrick used the shamrock to explain the Holy Trinity... Father, Son and Holy Spirit all one being. ☘️ I’m from Dublin BTW.

  • @judebogart
    @judebogart 3 года назад +9

    You forgot the badge. All Irish kids wear the Paddy's Day badge with the plastic gold harp and the tricolour. And the wilting bunch of shamrock pinned to the newsreader's lapel introducing the overview of the day's countrywide parades on the 6 o clock News. 😂☘️😂☘️

    • @A158s
      @A158s 3 года назад +1

      I'm Irish and I've never worn or heard of the badge thing

    • @unagohery-loose6778
      @unagohery-loose6778 3 года назад

      We had the badges in Galway, and my parents used to send me some overseas too. Dad also used to go out and pull shamrocks for us before Mass. Part of the Mass was also in Irish. We had green or green and white ribbons that my mother would put in our hair.

  • @maryannoconnor9347
    @maryannoconnor9347 3 года назад

    When I was young my grandmother lived with us. Then St. Patrick's Day was more of a family day. We went to Church and had a big family meal and then we always watched the Quiet Man movie.

  • @sepsiskills999
    @sepsiskills999 3 года назад +1

    I missed this video as I was really poorly I missed St Patrick's day I was in the hospital as I had to have a new line placed in my chest for dialysis called a portacath. I have a lot of Irish friends my best friend married an Irish guy he was from williamstown Galway, so I have spent many of St Patrick's day with them celebrating. I've also had the meal made by my Irish friends it was lovely. Another great video Amy 💗

  • @edmurphy5636
    @edmurphy5636 Год назад

    I love your videos. You are both very charming. I'm in my 70's from Kilkenny and one point that you might be interested in is that drinking on St. Patrick's Day might stem from when St. Patrick's Day fell during Lent. We had permission to postpone all our Lentin resolutions and go crazy for one day before indulgence austerity kicked in again.
    So on that one night in the middle we drank enough to see us through the 6 weeks of Lent. Hence the reputation of St. Patrick's day as a heavy drinking day.
    Ps. I don't drink. ;)

  • @lucymcshane8464
    @lucymcshane8464 3 года назад +1

    Happy st.paddy's day to you both, love from Ireland ☘🇮🇪🍀

  • @paddermurphy
    @paddermurphy 3 года назад +3

    We understood in the southeast that St. Patrick used the shamrock to explain the Christian holy trinity. That is the three leafs representing the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

    • @AmyMcDonaghGuitar
      @AmyMcDonaghGuitar  3 года назад

      Yes this is true, sorry I probably didn't explain that properly 💚

  • @bobybob8505
    @bobybob8505 2 года назад

    I'm from Ireland aswell never knew blue was the first collour before green great video

  • @MrOffTrail
    @MrOffTrail 2 года назад

    When Irish immigrants came to America during the Famine, in the larger cities they often settled in Jewish neighborhoods. Not being able to get Irish-style bacon, they needed a substitute, and corned beef brisket was a substitute they could get at kosher butchers. “Corned” refers to preserving meat in salt, originally large grain-sized coarse salt…the salt looked like corn in the old sense of generic grain, not Indian corn. Nowadays it is packed in brine with spices like allspice, coriander, mustard seed, bay leaf, etc.
    The pinching if not wearing green is really an Irish diaspora thing, to make sure you represent your heritage. Got picked up by everone else in North America because everyone wants to be Irish on St. Paddy’s Day!

  • @tiernandevine2849
    @tiernandevine2849 3 года назад +1

    The best thing about Saint Patrick’s Day is listening to your home music listening to all music and just having the crack

  • @mandylabia7767
    @mandylabia7767 3 года назад +1

    Hi my son was born on st Patrick’s day ☘️ and my mums maiden name is Fitzpatrick. I have lived in Sheffield all my life. I would love to do this with you. I have a broad Yorkshire accent. It would be interesting to bring my crazy local accent. Love your channel 😁😁

    • @mandylabia7767
      @mandylabia7767 3 года назад

      Like this beauty guess what this mean’s ohh gi,or rewering !!!! Their just being Mardy nah. !!!! Tha knows 🤦🏻‍♀️🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 com on lad thall be O’reyt

  • @shanero8108
    @shanero8108 3 года назад

    People like you make me proud to be Irish your bettering your life over there God bless you and thank you for the smiles

  • @aoifed8913
    @aoifed8913 3 года назад +4

    ☘Happy St Patrick's Day☘ from Dublin Ireland💚
    Can you please do reaction video's with Ashton on Eurovision songs 2021 & teach him about Eurovision. I think they would be really good😊x

  • @Laura.Lou.
    @Laura.Lou. Год назад

    1:29 , cutest moment ever! 💗

  • @ThenameisAntti
    @ThenameisAntti 3 года назад

    18:23 "whatever the FECK..."🤣🤣

  • @australiansister69
    @australiansister69 3 года назад +1

    We celebrate St Patrick's day in Australia very similar to Ireland, it's mainly celebrated in the catholic Church and within the Irish community, it's very low key really, in our house we go to Mass and honour St Patrick that way and it's the one day in lent that we don't do penance and we have sweets and a pint of Guinness 💛💚

  • @margaretwaite7226
    @margaretwaite7226 3 года назад

    Corned beef is a salted joint of beef. After the process is finished the meat is a deep red colour. It's eaten in Ireland all time so I'm sure that you must have eaten it.

  • @unagohery-loose6778
    @unagohery-loose6778 3 года назад

    Did you have Seachtain na Gaeilge at school? We had a week where there was a lot of music, song, dance, art and craic all through Irish, for a week around St. Patrick's Day. I'm from Co. Galway, and my hubby is from Pennsylvania. ;)

  • @littlelivi2468
    @littlelivi2468 3 года назад

    The biggest thing I remember is the parades, it would always be in our home town. Sometimes I would participate in the parades with school, or clubs or scouts. I remember one year, it was my first time in the parade, but I was quite young and too scared to do the whole thing and I still wanted to be able to watch the parade, so I jumped out and joined the crowd when I spotted my mum and I watched the rest of the parade with her. I definitely remember the sweets being thrown out and you'd compete with your friends to get the most sweets. I remember the big loud vans, and the floats made by local communities (there were always competitions for each float, one year my scout group won and I got to carry the best float sign through the parade. And my scout leader had to get up on this stage to talk about it)
    There was one man in my town who would always dress up as St Patrick. All the local shops would put out stalls and it was a big promotional day for them.
    We'd always learn about the history of St Patrick in school and it was always a cheat day for lent.
    Yesterday, because of the pandemic, I watched Flight of the Doves and Dating Amber with my dad, and I went on a date with my girlfriend because it was our anniversary on Monday. There was green everywhere and McDonald's ran out of shamrock shakes

  • @noeleen5250
    @noeleen5250 3 года назад

    My St Patrick's day memory is the weather, it could be snowing with blizzards, or t-shirt weather, oh and walking home from town because the buses were full.

  • @maryannoconnor9347
    @maryannoconnor9347 3 года назад

    I was taught that St. Patrick used the shamrock to explain the "Trinity" representing the Father, Son and Holy Spirit three in one God.

  • @chriswhamilton
    @chriswhamilton 3 года назад +1

    The Cheltenham Horse racing festival usually falls on Paddys Day too and it adds to the drinking and gambling scene on the day in Ireland. Isnt a rasher just the original name for Canadian bacon.

    • @galoglaich3281
      @galoglaich3281 3 года назад

      Absolute Muppet To an extent ,but a good proportion of those that are into cheltenham go to cheltenham

    • @chriswhamilton
      @chriswhamilton 3 года назад

      @@galoglaich3281 some do but every year with work there are people who never gamble that get involved. I go to the pub Paddy's Day and it's just filled with people gambling on Cheltenham during the day. It's what everyone talks about. At least in Dublin anyway.

  • @maryr94
    @maryr94 3 года назад +2

    The name Paddy comes from Pádraig, the Irish for Patrick 😊☘

  • @christinamaldonado9513
    @christinamaldonado9513 3 года назад

    This was s fun & educational video, I have always loved learning about different cultures. Good job Amy & Ashton! 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

  • @ItalianGoddess
    @ItalianGoddess 2 года назад

    Ciao Amy I like hearing you liked eatting lasagna on St. Patrick's Day!

  • @dannypaulread1023
    @dannypaulread1023 3 года назад +2

    Remember the episode when Ashton tried vinegar chips, sorry crisps and you said the best before is st. Patrick's Day so I have been looking forward to this episode! Wearing my shamrock ☘️ at work when this was written. HAPPY ST PATRICKS DAY!

  • @judybage4083
    @judybage4083 3 года назад +1

    I’ve visited Dublin for a short break but I really would like to go to a little country pub for a whole day into the early hours and listen to a local band with your fine Barry’s tea. Not much to ask I reckon.

  • @stephanieclare2457
    @stephanieclare2457 3 года назад

    We always have corn beef and cabbage on St. Patrick's Day.
    😊🇨🇦

  • @bigbirdbigbird
    @bigbirdbigbird 3 года назад +2

    Happy St. Patrick's Day, everyone! 💚🍀

  • @noeljr.7724
    @noeljr.7724 3 года назад

    In Athlone, we have a parade in the afternoon and then it's between the pub and the bookies for the day and night. I don't partake in either really but tagged along with friends.

  • @ConecVisuals
    @ConecVisuals 3 года назад

    well actually.... lol Paddys day is tied to the spring equinox which falls on the days surrounding the 17th of March. The equinox is the 21st usually.

  • @sarahbreen2856
    @sarahbreen2856 3 года назад

    I am an Irish dancer and am from Ireland we have two teachers from river dance and learn dances with teachers we also dance in mass.

  • @shubinternet
    @shubinternet 3 года назад

    In my family, although I don’t think we have any Irish heritage, we celebrated it quite a bit. Especially during the year when my mom ran a daycare center in her home - I think I was just 5 or 6.
    She decided that all the food and drinks that day would be green. Green kool-aid, green cookies, green everything. Lots of green food coloring. The kids loved it! Everything was grand!
    But that night, she got many calls from concerned parents, who were very worried about the green pee and poop that their kids were having. 😱🙀🤦🏻‍♂️
    We never celebrated St. Patrick’s Day again. ☹️

  • @michelleflood7225
    @michelleflood7225 3 года назад

    I know of many paddy’s including my cousins son I’m related to around fifteen Patricks in one way or another !! My nannas cousin was Patrick but known as paddy .

  • @theetruetolkienpatriot7701
    @theetruetolkienpatriot7701 3 года назад +2

    Happy St Patrick's Day

  • @theetruetolkienpatriot7701
    @theetruetolkienpatriot7701 3 года назад +1

    we would wear green on st paddy day and wacth a irish movie

  • @stephanietaylor6154
    @stephanietaylor6154 3 года назад

    I am Irish n live in cork corned beef n cabbage is a thing in Ireland my grandad would always make it for us

  • @dundobheal17
    @dundobheal17 3 года назад +1

    It was my understanding that st Patrick driving the snakes from Ireland was a metaphor for converting the pagan population (snakes) to Catholicism.

    • @mcq1539
      @mcq1539 3 года назад +1

      Absolutely.

    • @malachymckavanagh945
      @malachymckavanagh945 3 года назад

      The snakes representing the druids of the a ancient Celtic Gaelic religion

  • @sarahwass6249
    @sarahwass6249 3 года назад

    Happy St Patricks day Amy, Ashton, pup, all xx

  • @TheMoses9
    @TheMoses9 3 года назад

    You should tell Irish mythology stories like fionn mccúl or oshín and tír na nóag or children of lír

  • @erikaprobst4438
    @erikaprobst4438 3 года назад

    Cornbeef and gabbage is a thing in Sligo and other parts of Ireland its regional thing I think, its similar to bacon but we also eat bacon and cabbage, 4 leaf clover not a thing in ireland,really love these videos by the way 🙂 my other half is English and we have similar craic as ye, as even though you wouldn't think it there are also a lot of differences in culture 😂

  • @mcq1539
    @mcq1539 3 года назад

    The clover is close to the triskelion, which helped explain the holy trinity, whereas the four-leaf clover was able to teach the cross.

  • @catherinehammer8637
    @catherinehammer8637 3 года назад

    YOU TWO ARE SO LOVELY! Absolutely no corned beef and cabbage for this American girl with Irish ancestry (North Munster, East Cork). I usually just make a Dublin Coddle. Mmmmmmmmm!!! I’m still trying to figure out how our Irish surname, Sheridan, got changed to Sheldon when my great grandfather immigrated in the 1800s. Oh, and I’m always correcting people who think a shamrock is a 4 leaf clover. LOL

  • @iuile
    @iuile 3 года назад

    Might there be some 'American reacts to' videos of Irish musicians and singers in the future?

  • @kendon81
    @kendon81 3 года назад

    the corned beef and cabbage is a thing in the US is their equivalent of our bacon and cabbage, its was a cheap filling meal.

  • @irish66
    @irish66 3 года назад +1

    Well, actually ☺, I believe the shamrock meant to indicate the holy trinity ie 3 in one, father, son, and holy spirit/ghost. I wanted to hear about green beer.

  • @StarMonkies
    @StarMonkies 3 года назад

    St Patrick's day is and isn't a religious holiday. Its more so a "national holiday" Ireland never marked its independence because for a long time it didn't consider itself independent so St Patrick's day became a national day of celebration. It's a day to celebrate Irish culture. For a long time much of Ireland's identity was its catholitism so it would make sense that day was chosen and why it had a religious aspect to it. Ireland much less religious these days so the way the day is celebrated has changed. Some of it has been commercialized but I find it is much more about celebrating culture, myths, music etc. What I really love is the parades in Dublin and Cork tend to reflect modern Irish society. So you have your marching bands etc but also celebrates all the cultures that make up Ireland. You see Brazilians, Chinese, Nigerians, Polish and so on all participating and celebrating their culture.

  • @shubinternet
    @shubinternet 3 года назад

    I remember being pinched if I wasn’t wearing green. But that was a long time ago, long before either of you were born.

  • @mcq1539
    @mcq1539 3 года назад

    An Irish-born Catholic nun where I went to school told me the pinching was about confirming that a pinched person was not "dreaming" or "in-the-glimmer," meaning I think not under the spell of the fey?

  • @DeclanOF
    @DeclanOF 3 года назад +6

    Dia dhuit! Is mise Declan. Conas atá tú?
    Bhog mé go Meiriceá ag aois óg, so I'm American while my sister is Irish. But I learned (some) Irish and she didn't, so blblblblblhhh to her!
    Lá fhéile Pádraig sona dhaoibh!

    • @user-we5pd7ds5o
      @user-we5pd7ds5o 3 года назад

      Whaaat?? How can you be an American, while your sister’s Irish and not American herself? That doesn’t make sense that you both have different nationalities.

    • @DeclanOF
      @DeclanOF 3 года назад

      @@user-we5pd7ds5o I have dual-citizenship, moving to the states as a younger man and living there for most of my life. She grew up in Limerick and later moved west ... but not quite as far as I did.

  • @judebogart
    @judebogart 3 года назад +2

    I'm a 51 year old Irish man. I grew up eating corned beef and cabbage as well as bacon and cabbage. It has gone out of fashion quite a bit though.

  • @mcq1539
    @mcq1539 3 года назад

    Fox hound!
    Seen many paintings at a restaurant named Duffy's with your pup!

  • @RyanIrelandPride
    @RyanIrelandPride 3 года назад

    Another Great Video!

  • @fiestyfish88
    @fiestyfish88 3 года назад

    I think every Irish child ever, made that shamrock man at some point in their primary school years. I think my mam still has my one.

  • @musefan12345
    @musefan12345 3 года назад

    I don’t think we ever had a “paddy’s day dinner” growing up. It might be a regional thing? I’m a Louth man and as far as I can remember we just ate whatever my mum was cooking and we were told to be glad of it 😂
    I totally feel you about gigging though. A paddy’s night pub gig is absolute carnage, as a lot of the punters have been drinking all day. I usually always bring two guitars to a gig (a Les Paul and a Telecaster) and one particular night some idiot decided to start dancing in the stage behind me. I was playing my Tele, and the guy fell over, grabbing my 2k Les Paul and smashing it into the floor. Luckily it wasn’t damaged, but I just stopped playing there and then and plugged out. And the rest of the guys in the band followed suit. Some things are just not worth the effort.

  • @abbieq7477.
    @abbieq7477. 3 года назад

    Off topic from this video but congrats on 3k subscribers!! 🥳

  • @mcq1539
    @mcq1539 3 года назад

    Best poteen!
    What about the green vs. orange?
    It's been kind of taken by the Irish-American observations

  • @BRIDINC1972
    @BRIDINC1972 3 года назад

    I know some people think Paddy is a weird contraction of Patrick but it's very Irish. There are alot of Patrick's in Ireland and a lot of them will be called Paddy at some point in their lives. Just as Bridget is a common girls name ( St. Bridget) , I've always been called Bridin ( young Bridget) as my mum is also Bridget she goes by Bried mostly so that people will pronounce it properly

  • @brandonspicer2482
    @brandonspicer2482 3 года назад

    Fun fact, a long time ago Lucky Charms once replaced the leprechaun with a wizard mascot.
    🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀

  • @maryannoconnor9347
    @maryannoconnor9347 3 года назад

    Also the name Patrick in Irish has a "d" in it thus it makes since to say "Paddy"

  • @kennethfrawley
    @kennethfrawley 3 года назад

    Lovely vid guys! Yes, St. Paddy's Day is celebrated everywhere, yet Americans view it as getting sloshed day. In fact, before age 20, I really didn't care for SPD. For, in Waterford, my Gran dragged me to church, which was a four hour trial. My uncle explained that all the drink on SPD was due to needing several pints after having had the wife keep them in church for hours on SPD. That I understood. For as a child, I spent half the day in the church and half in the kitchen helping out. That experience got worse when I announced I was a vegetarian at age 17. Actually, the single most hysterical SPD was in California. I was invited to a Mexican restaurant, which served green beer. Oh, also during my 1 visit to Las Vegas, the same thing, save the beer vessels were 4 feet long, or a plastic America football with straw? Absolute madness! OMG! Shocking! ....I shan't even tackle the parade aspect of the day.

  • @marlynngraham5285
    @marlynngraham5285 3 года назад

    Amy, I can't believe you don't know Corn beef, My favourite, Cornbeef, mash potato's & Cabbage is defiantly a Dublin/irish dish-I don't know why its called Cornbeef, it's not beef is like ham, very salty, when cooked it stringy, you pre soak it then boil it to get rid of the salt, after its boiled you put your cabbage in the same pot of water and boil it-absolutely gorgeous.
    I love the ie vs us, the way the American's pronounce Ireland, it is also weird how they spell things different to others, like cheque vs check, realise vs realize, neighbours vs neighbors, Back Garden vs Yard, chips vs crisps, you should do a video on how different IE vs US in spelling the same thing differently. UK say thing different as well.
    IE pots VS pans, single of chips vs bag of chips, scallion vs spring onions, IE washing dishes vs UK washing pots, IE breakfast, lunch, dinner-UK breakfast, lunch, tea!

    • @tatersprout
      @tatersprout 3 года назад

      You’re a bit confused. The meat is corned beef and it is most definitely not ham. It’s beef brisket that is brined and the “corned” refers to the salt and came from the Jewish deli. All of the word spelling differences you mentioned are accepted spelling for the UK and Ireland. Chips are the same as our fries, crisps are our chips. Sane for garden instead of yard, boot instead of car trunk, bonnet instead of car hood.
      The other differences you mention are actually regional in the US and I have heard all these words used here. You may be speaking of your area, but I assure you that there are different words for the same thing across the US. I am a first generation American, and have visited Ireland numerous times, as well as traveled all over the US.

  • @thomasharkin5063
    @thomasharkin5063 3 года назад

    Probably a lot of people outside Ireland don't know is that the National colour of Ireland is blue, with the carpet in the Dail; Senate; & Stormont Assembly having blue carpet (The Senate & the Stormont Assembly having blue seats). It was use in the flag (blue flag with gold) of Irish parliamentary party. La feile Padraig sona daoibh.

    • @galoglaich3281
      @galoglaich3281 3 года назад +1

      Thomas Harkin I would be a very supposed if many in ireland knew that either

  • @Mark16D
    @Mark16D 3 года назад +1

    1st Ted, now Paddy! can we have nothin? At least we still have Michael Flatly... Wait!? 😉🇮🇪🍀

  • @MrSorted2
    @MrSorted2 3 года назад

    Oh Amy how young you are! You didn't have the luxury of growing up with corned beef and cabbage?! Very traditional in Ireland. As you may guess, I'm in my 50s. Also back in the 80s, pubs in Ireland were shut on St Patrick's Day! We'd watch the world celebrating with booze on the news :)

  • @gastrickbunsen1957
    @gastrickbunsen1957 3 года назад

    Boiling bacon, ham shanks or bacon ribs depended on how much money your parents had when they went to the butchers, but they're all delicious and as a kid I preferred the ribs, which is the cheapest cut.
    I struggled with the cabbage then, but loved the cabbage water.
    PS. In the North we pronounce t as d in some words like party but in other words its a strong t,
    PaTsy is a common shortened version of Patrick, imagine when I started reading "Peanuts"

    • @Birdbike719
      @Birdbike719 3 года назад

      Are bacon ribs the same as pork ribs? We barbeque those in Texas and theyre delicious

    • @gastrickbunsen1957
      @gastrickbunsen1957 3 года назад

      @@Birdbike719 Bacon ribs are pork ribs that have been cured like bacon or ham.
      I love barbecued pork ribs.

    • @Birdbike719
      @Birdbike719 3 года назад

      @@gastrickbunsen1957 those sound wonderful!

    • @gastrickbunsen1957
      @gastrickbunsen1957 3 года назад

      @@Birdbike719 They are but I can't get them in England.

  • @sararyan9396
    @sararyan9396 3 года назад

    The New York parade for st Patrick’s day would pt the Dublin parade to shame 8 hrs solid with all different bands.

  • @johnnytyrrell7060
    @johnnytyrrell7060 2 года назад

    Here in Dublin its a day for getting pissed drunk

  • @theeggtimertictic1136
    @theeggtimertictic1136 3 года назад

    The Shamrock he used to explain the Trinity . Father Son and Holy Spirit. 3 leaves in one leaf.

  • @amishmime
    @amishmime 3 года назад +1

    The Paddy thing? Ever hear of a Paddy Wagon? Named after the contributions the Irish have made here. Believe it or not, not everybody liked the Irish.... So the Paddy thing is considered derogatory and a term meant to be offensive.

  • @jimmyryan5880
    @jimmyryan5880 3 года назад

    Ye should do a reaction video to that news host who couldnt understand why we use euros

  • @BRIDINC1972
    @BRIDINC1972 3 года назад

    Corned beef was a thing in the South cork, kerry area I believe. And Leprechauns as we see them today like Santa Claus was invented by the Americans

  • @Crystal_Palmborg
    @Crystal_Palmborg 3 года назад

    Amy I'm so glad you made this video! I had less knowledge than Ashton about St. Patrick's Day lol I feel terrible to say that, as well as the only thing I knew about St. Patrick's Day was pinching if you did not wear green, how you have to wear green the day of & Lucky Charms! The typical American! xD It's sad that Hollywood & movies teach us incorrectly! I rather learn & embrace the real culture & reason why we are celebrating! Thank you for informing us correctly about this special holiday! I learned a lot watching this video & smiled all the way through because you & Ashton are the cutest & most genuine couple on RUclips! I love you guys so much! Thank you for always giving me a reason to smile! Love you Amy!

  • @joanfrankel7666
    @joanfrankel7666 3 года назад

    That adorable puppy looked like he was long enough for 2 dogs. Maybe 2-1/2.

  • @michelleflood7225
    @michelleflood7225 3 года назад

    My family do celebrate st Patrick’s day but then I’m of Irish descent so natural to celebrate it . Like Amy my Irish family are pretty much tee totallers or maybe social drinkers would be closer to the truth .

  • @dannykidney6692
    @dannykidney6692 3 года назад

    look up Luke Wadding for the origin of the parade/ and saints day. bacon and cabbage is the thing but bacon short back ribs and cabbage are tradition in Waterford. Henry Denny who invented the rasher is buried in waterford also, you are right about the corned beef in America but it's not the same. in my hometown once the parade passed where you were standing you would go to the nearest pub for copious amounts of the black stuff or Green lager with trad bands blasting out diddly music while waiting for your friends to come in after marching in the parade. BTW it's shamrock not clover and Paddy's day not feckin Patty's day, the funniest thing was watching the local army or FCA (Free Clothes Association) who would always be first in the parade with half a sod of shamrock on their chest even though we have never been to war. Feckin hilarious. from the oldest city in Ireland. Waterford where the tricolour first flew and where Thomas Francis Meagher was from. (look him up too)

  • @SanFranFiasco
    @SanFranFiasco 3 года назад

    shamrock was used to explain the trinity.

  • @kohl2080
    @kohl2080 3 года назад

    Cooking cooking cooking...no corned beef. It was a cut of meat for poor new emigrants which included new Irish emigrants.

  • @ericadoss2959
    @ericadoss2959 3 года назад

    I always heard from my uncle that leprechauns were actually considered more sinister than happy and mischivious..so where did this legend come from? Thank you!

    • @chrislawley6801
      @chrislawley6801 3 года назад

      Iron age Celts finding long barrow graves especially covered over/buried with soil were apparently seen as passage ways into the hills & mountains to the heaven or magical land of earlier people who must have been smaller to walk into the low entrances of the long barrow graves - is what I have heard-sounds possible especially as the little people live inside the mountains

  • @oisincrichlow3441
    @oisincrichlow3441 3 года назад

    You should do daily videos about your lives

  • @theetruetolkienpatriot7701
    @theetruetolkienpatriot7701 3 года назад +1

    why is ST PATRICK'S DAY a holiday in Ireland and not America

    • @stevenanderson7461
      @stevenanderson7461 3 года назад +1

      Because it's Irish and not American like we don't get a holiday in England on St paddy day

  • @emmettred
    @emmettred 3 года назад +1

    MAYO FOR SAM

  • @amishmime
    @amishmime 3 года назад +1

    Cute couple. Cuter dog though.

  • @BunnysAreCool
    @BunnysAreCool 2 года назад

    New tittle for this video: Happy St. Patrick's Day. Irish vs English vs Dog language???

  • @zenaidarivera957
    @zenaidarivera957 3 года назад

    Yes I loved it! Most Catholic ceclebrate this important Saint !

    • @colmcorcoran9295
      @colmcorcoran9295 3 года назад +2

      True, although funny enough St. Patrick wasn't Catholic and in fact influenced the creation of Celtic Christianity, a separate branch of Christianity from Catholicism.

    • @zenaidarivera957
      @zenaidarivera957 3 года назад

      Yes we never believe he was Catholic... we made him a Saint because of his commitment life to Christ our lord and his true love for others...it’s a beautiful thing he achieved. I’m honored to celebrate St Patrick’s Day! 🌿🕊🌿🕊🌿

  • @BRIDINC1972
    @BRIDINC1972 3 года назад

    Top of the morning too ya so Hollywood

  • @sararyan9396
    @sararyan9396 3 года назад

    Bacon and cabbage

  • @chancemiller9340
    @chancemiller9340 3 года назад

    La Fheile Padraig sona daoibh go leir!
    🍀🍀 🌈

  • @girlierox09
    @girlierox09 3 года назад

    💚💚💚💚

  • @martindaly8683
    @martindaly8683 3 года назад

    I’m not just Irish. I’m Cotk