The Devilish History of Deviled Eggs

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  • Опубликовано: 30 май 2024
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    Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
    PHOTO CREDITS
    Fried Eggs: Balise42, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    #tastinghistory #deviledeggs

Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @j.d.4697
    @j.d.4697 Год назад +984

    I like how these recipes tell you go "make good sauce" or "mix until nice".
    Helps me not accidentally make bad sauce or mix until disgusting. 👍

    • @thenovicenovelist
      @thenovicenovelist 10 месяцев назад +172

      Take those warnings seriously. I once mixed until evil and now my deviled eggs are plotting to take over West Virginia.

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice 10 месяцев назад +28

      Fuchsia Dunlop's Chinese recipes often say "Add the ginger to the wok and stir-fry until everything smells delicious."

    • @generalrubbish9513
      @generalrubbish9513 9 месяцев назад +25

      I think Max addressed that in one of his older videos. Supposedly, ancient and medieval recipes used to be written primarily by cooks FOR cooks, so when the author says "add enough salt" or "knead until it looks right", they just kinda take it for granted that the reader knows what they mean and assume they don't have to explain. I don't think it was until the invention of the printing press that we actually start seeing recipes meant for anyone and everyone to try, but I could be wrong.

    • @jakecavendish3470
      @jakecavendish3470 9 месяцев назад +8

      Even when they were specific they could wrong. Like Mrs Beeton (who never cooked a meal in her life) telling everyone to boil pasta for 45mins

    • @karoshi2
      @karoshi2 9 месяцев назад +14

      I need thorough instructions and measurements, as I've got no cooking background, no intuition, and am on the autism spectrum.
      Found recipes with delicious looking pictures and 5 star reviews like "take a good amount of flour, add enough water, some eggs and sugar as you like [...] bake until done".
      ---___---
      PS: even worse when they do have precise measurements, but they're wrong. Like those TV cooks. "Take a pinch of salt"

  • @hydangera
    @hydangera Год назад +1302

    I'm not a doctor but have studied immunology at a uni level (and have been to culinary school) and if I had to guess as to why you're fine with thoroughly cooked egg whites, it is because the part of the egg white you're allergic to is a protein which becomes denatured by the cooking process, this changes the shape of the protein and it no longer fits inside the receptor for the particular immune cell that recognises it as something to mount an immune response to (the reason for your allergic reaction is said immune response). 🤷🏻‍♀

    • @eilenepatrick9319
      @eilenepatrick9319 10 месяцев назад +59

      I've studied some immunology too and that makes so much sense. I think you are right.

    • @lemuriacoast
      @lemuriacoast 10 месяцев назад +31

      That’s super interesting!! Do you know anything about allergy to egg yolk? I was told I have a sulfur intolerance but egg yolk gives me the worst reaction

    • @jeremyreid84
      @jeremyreid84 10 месяцев назад +34

      I used to think that bananas were supposed to make the roof of your mouth itchy. The weird thing, similar to Max Miller's issue, is that it only happens with under-ripe bananas. When they're fully ripe, they seem to be fine. I've never found an explanation for this, so I just avoid eating them altogether, even though I really like them.

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 10 месяцев назад +32

      @@jeremyreid84I wish I could pass on my non allergy to you, since I don’t really like bananas. That way you could eat them whenever you like.

    • @nobilesnovushomo58
      @nobilesnovushomo58 10 месяцев назад +16

      This is a very thought out answer. Now how do we bypass it? *stuffs MORE deviled eggs in mouth.

  • @gorilla_with_jetpack4102
    @gorilla_with_jetpack4102 Год назад +379

    Putting the eggs back together keeps them from oxidizing/drying out as quickly. This works with with damned near everything. Cheese, avocados, wounds, 8 bit game code, etc.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад +10

      Hmm - good tip. Can see the utility in pre-fridge days or picnics without coolers after long hikes

    • @TentinQuarantino_
      @TentinQuarantino_ Год назад +16

      I’ve seen a tutorial about cake, where you cut a slice (NOT a wedge) from the very middle, and then push the two halves together to keep the cut edges from getting dried out.

    • @shadowcween7890
      @shadowcween7890 11 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@TentinQuarantino_ a rectangular slice

    • @pz4971
      @pz4971 9 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@TentinQuarantino_ funny - it sounds obvious once you read it, yet never thought of doing it!😄

    • @user-fy9xl9eu8c
      @user-fy9xl9eu8c 9 месяцев назад

      @@shadowcween7890pretty sure they mean a long type of cake

  • @snappylobster3118
    @snappylobster3118 Год назад +295

    I literally was thinking "man I'd like to make this but eggs are like $20 a dozen" and you hit me with the Beauty and the Beast line I nearly passed out

    • @LIZZIE-lizzie
      @LIZZIE-lizzie Год назад +3

      It's too funny - a Market I shop at sells "Organic" Celery for $5.
      A place that's good to shop their sales, most of the time! But they have THE cheapest eggs - $3.98 for a dozen.

    • @Last.Stand.1111
      @Last.Stand.1111 Год назад +4

      might as well get farm eggs locally, incubate a few and have baby chicks as well

    • @hydangera
      @hydangera Год назад +8

      High egg prices are a tale as old as time. 😜

    • @charitywattenburger4550
      @charitywattenburger4550 Год назад +3

      Just curious here, are you buying fresh from the farm eggs? Or is $20/dzn the grocery store price? 🤔

    • @partylikeits1066
      @partylikeits1066 11 месяцев назад +11

      holy moly $20?! where are you from?

  • @Aerie925
    @Aerie925 Год назад +1734

    I first thought, “wait, didn’t he say that he’s allergic to egg whites? Why’s he making Deviled Eggs?!” -I’m glad you acknowledged that so I’m know I’m not crazy 😅

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +284

      Egg protein (and to a certain extent all animal proteins, but eggs do it FAST) denature and then clump when heated. So allergies are because your body is looking for a certain shape, but cooking changes it's shape enough that your immune system gives it a pass. This can happen with milk as well, so my son was allergic to raw cow milk as a baby but cheese and food with cooked milk never gave him any pause. His doctor explained like turning cotton bolls into thread and then cloth, it looks and feels nothing like what it started as.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +190

      @@mwater_moon2865
      There are two common allergens in egg whites, and one of them denatures around 80°C whereas the other is more stable, so if you’re only allergic to ovalbumin you can have eggs that have been cooked to a high enough temperature whereas if you’re allergic to ovomucoid you can’t have any eggs (or at least not from that particular species-other kinds of eggs might or might not trigger an allergic reaction) no matter how cooked they are.

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +90

      @@ragnkja Good to know the specifics, allergies are frankly kinda crazy. Like my son out grew his, but other allergies just get worse as you age. And then there's cross over allergies, like if you become allergic to birch trees then bananas will make you react

    • @s.b200
      @s.b200 Год назад +45

      Everything that humans can be allergic to is in fact a protein. Also in pollen or animal allergies it is the proteins that trigger immune reactions. So when you cook a protein it changes shape (like many others here already mentioned).
      Like many other people I am allergic to pollen. But many are unaware that similar proteins are also found in fruits that grow on trees, thus causing cross-reactions (apples, pears, cherries etc). So, cooked apple pies are completely fine for many people with these allergies (luckily!).
      Plants from the pea and wheat family can also have very potent allergen proteins. For those allergic to pollen cause severe allergies, for example raw peanuts or bean sprouts.

    • @blanchekonieczka9935
      @blanchekonieczka9935 Год назад +42

      Actually he said he was allergic to raw egg whites

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +636

    Happy Belated Birthday to our Resident Hardtack making Hunky Grandson, Max! This is the first video after turning 40. I hope you had a great birthday. Sending all my love to everyone at home. Have a great year ahead ❤

    • @zesky6654
      @zesky6654 Год назад +48

      40? Really, he looks so young.

    • @everfluctuating
      @everfluctuating Год назад +30

      ​@@zesky6654 i know! i wouldnt think hes a day over 35 😊

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +91

      Thank you!

    • @LadyBugIx
      @LadyBugIx Год назад +8

      AWWW!!! 🎉

    • @guyver441
      @guyver441 Год назад +34

      ​@@zesky6654 devilishly young...

  • @em5522
    @em5522 Год назад +105

    I think your reasoning of why it's called "deviled" is most accurate out the bunch. It really is wicked how I can easily eat a whole platter of them but my limit is usually just 2 eggs in any other form 😅

    • @seshenofthenile2363
      @seshenofthenile2363 9 месяцев назад +1

      Hear, hear.. I concur with your accurate analysis! 🥚

    • @tylerhorn3712
      @tylerhorn3712 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, but you gotta remember they are all half eggs. So 4 (normal portion) or 6 (large portion) is only 2-3 eggs.

    • @janNowa
      @janNowa 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@tylerhorn3712 Nobody's eating 6 of these, I regularly pop ten in my mouth in a row without breaking a sweat.

    • @null6634
      @null6634 6 месяцев назад +1

      Cool Hand Luke wouldn't have any problems if he just had the eggs deviled.

    • @taylamuller1811
      @taylamuller1811 4 месяца назад

      @@tylerhorn3712yeah but a tray probably has 10-16 halves, meaning 5-8 eggs, thats way more than the two people usually eat. Not to mention the added fillings make them even more filling to eat.

  • @glemmstengal
    @glemmstengal Год назад +126

    That's why I love this channel. Random mention of "deviled bones" has me thinking "wtf?" then it turns out to be a really interesting quick history lesson about fried chicken of all things. Looking forward to trying some of the recipes myself when the cookbook gets here!

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi Год назад +10

      People were a lot more honest back then. if you're ordering chicken wings, you are getting seasoned bones.

    • @freewilly1193
      @freewilly1193 10 месяцев назад +4

      At first, I thought it might have been a processed bone marrow. I'm glad that it's much simpler than that.

  • @ellenspear50
    @ellenspear50 Год назад +1922

    Don't die, Max. You must never die, but keep presenting historic food in perpetuity.

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Год назад +69

      don't worry he's a vampire

    • @dowsingelf77
      @dowsingelf77 Год назад +42

      I hope he stays safe, where else am I going to learn about cool recipes, learn history and play "Who's That Pokemon?"

    • @JRR0013
      @JRR0013 Год назад +23

      Egg whites ain't gonna to get this boy down.....

    • @JetstreamGW
      @JetstreamGW Год назад +41

      "Today on Tasting History we're making that most ancient of sandwiches, the Double Double, Animal Style, from the ouvre of that most obscure of restaurants from the old North American Empire, Innooout. Now, no one remembers what 'Innooout' means but..."

    • @Lucius1958
      @Lucius1958 Год назад +10

      @R. P. Can't wait to see the nectar & ambrosia recipes...

  • @paulodecarvalho8965
    @paulodecarvalho8965 Год назад +373

    OMG I HATE A LEAF IN A BIBLE AS A KID AND THOUHT IT WAS LETTUCE AND HAVE BEEN SEARCHING FOR THAT TYPE OF LETTUCE EVER SINCE! I never expected that a Tasting History video would help me accomplish one of my childhood dreams. Thank you so much Max!!!

    • @karengerber8390
      @karengerber8390 Год назад +14

      Bless you for your search.
      Bless Max & his researching.

    • @MatConlon
      @MatConlon Год назад +31

      ...you did what?

    • @alexandresobreiramartins9461
      @alexandresobreiramartins9461 Год назад +14

      You ate a book page and then has been searching for it your whole life?!??? And thought it was lettuce?!!!????

    • @kajsan760
      @kajsan760 Год назад +41

      @@alexandresobreiramartins9461 I assume they ate a leaf that was used as a book mark in a bible, since that's what Max is talking about in the video.

    • @Ian-nl9yd
      @Ian-nl9yd Год назад +49

      that's the devil's lettuce 🌿🌳

  • @averylawton5802
    @averylawton5802 Год назад +89

    I'm just posting this before I watch. I bookmarked this video as my reward for getting through my week.
    Yes, your videos are as delicious and devilish as the namesake of this episode. They are one of my own small personal pleasures that make life just a little more bearable.
    From a foodie and a history buff, thank you for all the hard work and adventurous choices you have made to bring this channel to life.
    You represent some of what I imagine is the best of what the internet can be. Truly enriching and wholesome content that would make Mr. Rodgers proud. Never quit Max, never.

  • @timtheconjurer
    @timtheconjurer Год назад +38

    Ive worked as a chef for over 20 years. I absolutely love learning more about the history of food. Its a bit of a relaxing past time for me. Love the channel, would love the time to read through and test some of these historical cook books. I guess ill have to make the time, and make my partner some interesting food.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +11

      Good luck to your partner haha. Thanks for watching Tim

    • @timtheconjurer
      @timtheconjurer Год назад +6

      @Tasting History with Max Miller thank you. She is also a chef. We are adventurous eaters, and both of us love learning more about history, and especially love learning more about food and the history behind food. To me, it is a matter of learning more culture behind what we eat as well as why and how. Just ordered a copy of your book. Im really looking forward to its arrival. Im sure she and i will both have our own modifications to our personal tastes, but you put in the work, and I'm excited to see the recipes.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +645

    I want to be ‘Finishing a platter of Deviled Eggs and still not satisfied’ level of iconic.

    • @jonathanbair523
      @jonathanbair523 Год назад +24

      I always go last when it comes to Devild Eggs, so I can take the left overs or a large batch with out feeling like I am depriving others of it..

    • @mmori673
      @mmori673 Год назад +26

      ​@Jonathan Bair see I just make the deviled eggs. can't feel bad about eating all of them if I'm the one who made them

    • @jonathanbair523
      @jonathanbair523 Год назад +5

      @@mmori673 LOL... That is true

    • @wannaastro4621
      @wannaastro4621 Год назад +1

      you'd just be me during easter

    • @sanguinembwun6475
      @sanguinembwun6475 Год назад +7

      As kids during thanksgiving and Christmas we’d all get chased out of the kitchen and banned from coming back in because we would keep grabbing deviled eggs and stuffing our faces long before everything else was done cooking!

  • @joanpaso4652
    @joanpaso4652 Год назад +271

    You generally upload after my morning classes, so I always get to watch your newest videos after getting my ass handed to me in class, before taking a nap and enduring yet another 4 hours. I salute you, magic food man, for you make my nap time the most pleasurable experience of the week.

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 Год назад +18

      "Magic-food-man"! Meesa like this!

    • @davidmiller9485
      @davidmiller9485 Год назад

      there are one or two traditional dye makers who still make it. They are disappearing though. the pandemic really hit them hard.
      I just went hunting for the video of it. Here it is: ruclips.net/video/iBNySB2jpVg/видео.html
      It's worth the watch.
      Edit: spelling

  • @katielee.8109
    @katielee.8109 Год назад +114

    i think it would be really great if max did a budae jiggae (korean army stew) since there's a lot of history behind it and it's also delicious.

    • @stargirl7646
      @stargirl7646 Год назад +2

      Oooh good idea!

    • @kimmerlee10
      @kimmerlee10 Год назад +5

      I crave this dish whenever I’m sick. I don’t know what magic is in it but it always makes me feel better.

    • @katielee.8109
      @katielee.8109 Год назад +1

      @@kimmerlee10 same, it’s the ultimate hangover cure too

    • @w.reidripley1968
      @w.reidripley1968 9 месяцев назад +7

      Army Stew, Army Base Stew, Military Stew. Spam(tm), frankfurters/hot dogs cut up, a slice of process cheese, ramen noodles, optional egg stewing in the broth.
      It emerged immediately after the Korean War, with hungry Korean families scoring, one way or another, American foodstuffs from working on American bases.

    • @channelkoto4450
      @channelkoto4450 4 месяца назад

      Nah

  • @TheTwinDragonSlayers
    @TheTwinDragonSlayers Год назад +22

    I remember finding a whole bunch of wild mint in a ditch just up the road from my childhood home. I transplanted some and within a few seasons, the front yard was brimming with them! Never incorporated the leaves into deviled eggs but the mojitos were definitely tasty!

  • @kathysargeant602
    @kathysargeant602 Год назад +370

    When we lived in Kentucky, we stopped at a bakery in Danville that not only had awesome baked goods, but “Dressed Eggs”. They were just good old fashioned deviled eggs, but when I asked why they were called dressed, the nice lady behind the counter told me that they’re too delicious to give the devil any credit on. I bought a half dozen and they were simply divine! ❤

    • @TraciPeteyforlife
      @TraciPeteyforlife Год назад +5

      I plan to keep this information in my back pocket if I'm ever in Danville Kentucky.

    • @GeologicalNerd
      @GeologicalNerd Год назад +7

      Dansville is a creepy place. Used to have a lot LG&E managers out of that town. Very strange place lol

    • @elizabetha2601
      @elizabetha2601 Год назад +1

      I love that answer!

    • @I_am_Irisarc
      @I_am_Irisarc Год назад

      My husband's family is from Springfield, which is very near Danville, and they always called them that, too. I was about to post about that when I saw your comment. You beat me to it!
      I'm from Oklahoma and we don't call them that here, so I asked my MIL❤ why they call them "dressed". She said that it's because a lot of people like to bring them to church potlucks and nobody wants to eat food from the Devil, especially in church. She may have been teasing me, but I'm not sure. The Southern Baptist runs really deep in lot of Northern Kentuckians. Either way, the ones she makes are absolutely delightful.

    • @phoebe5114
      @phoebe5114 10 месяцев назад +1

      That's adorable, I love it

  • @charlotteillustration5778
    @charlotteillustration5778 Год назад +183

    In 1976 my mother added an unusual ingredient to her curried eggs (substitute curry powder for chilli). It was the occasion of Queen Elizabeth’s Silver Jubilee and she had offered to make the dish for our street party. 100 eggs boiled, yolks in a big bowl being mashed with the other ingredients, us children helping, when we suddenly noticed that the cigarette she had been holding but not smoking as she was chatting so much, had about an inch and a half of ash, which went straight into the egg mix…. We looked at it with horror, but my mother, rather than buy and boil another 100 eggs, just mashed the ash into the egg mix. They were delicious, and nobody got food poisoning, thank goodness!

    • @leiasleeping1282
      @leiasleeping1282 Год назад +31

      That’s a DEVILed egg for sure😂

    • @adewilliam9047
      @adewilliam9047 Год назад +7

      Thank you for sharing this story! It's interesting.

    • @GirishManjunathMusic
      @GirishManjunathMusic Год назад +15

      Nicotinic eggs

    • @barrymalkin4404
      @barrymalkin4404 Год назад +12

      Egg hAsh.

    • @passionfruitfruit
      @passionfruitfruit Год назад +25

      Wouldn't it just be easier to scrape off as much as you could of that ash from the mashed eggs, instead of mixing it all in???

  • @miradfalco251
    @miradfalco251 Год назад +18

    Thank you, this is giving me all sorts of ideas!
    As for the Costmary, I love working with that herb. The dried leaves were not just used as bookmarks, this was also used as a strewing herb, mixed into rushes on the floor, or later, sprinkled under rugs, or layered in when storing clothing and household linens.
    It's also known as Alecost, and was used in brewing before hops became popular.
    This is a perenniel, and is very easy to grow, so is well worth having in the garden.

  • @scarlethyena2486
    @scarlethyena2486 Год назад +36

    I've noticed a trend with medieval recipes where they often include saffron. Medieval nobles must've really liked that stuff.

    • @butwhataboutdragons7768
      @butwhataboutdragons7768 7 месяцев назад +12

      It was crazy expensive and an unusual color for the time, so mainly it was an excuse to show off how wealthy and elite you were. The foods including it are pretty much always intended for showy special occasions where you had an audience you wanted to impress. Its flavor is kinda incidental.

    • @austenhead5303
      @austenhead5303 6 месяцев назад +6

      Much as I love saffron, I wouldn't want it anywhere near deviled eggs, so yeah, I suspect their overuse of it had more to do with showing off.

    • @NadDew
      @NadDew 4 месяца назад

      @@austenhead5303try it you might like it, but don't overuse it and use premium quality saffron it makes a huge difference

    • @christinelamb1167
      @christinelamb1167 28 дней назад

      ​@@austenhead5303 Saffron has a very distinct, floral-like flavor and aroma, doesn't it? I don't think I'd care for it in deviled eggs, either. But hey, ya never know, right?

  • @mountainmolly2726
    @mountainmolly2726 Год назад +327

    About 25 years ago, my nephew was making deviled eggs and added just the tiniest splash of vinegar. It was amazing what a difference it made and I never skip the vinegar now. Also, if you like just a hint of sweetness, add a small touch of honey mustard along with the regular mustard. If I want to be "fancy", I sometimes mix in some chopped bacon and that takes them to the next level. If you can't tell, I really love deviled eggs. Thanks for another fabulous episode, Max!

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +20

      The acid really does help to brighten it! my mom uses pickle relish (for both sweet at sour). Though she uses powdered mustard, not the liquid bottle kind.

    • @karengerber8390
      @karengerber8390 Год назад +4

      Thank you for sharing this!!

    • @georgiafrye2815
      @georgiafrye2815 Год назад +13

      I bet a dash of dill pickle juice would be good also.

    • @The_Smith
      @The_Smith Год назад +6

      I often make deviled eggs using pickled eggs, try subbing out the regular paprika for smoked paprika sometime.

    • @widowrumstrypze9705
      @widowrumstrypze9705 Год назад +11

      I add a bit of horseradish or wasabi, THAT'S a game changer!!

  • @sonder8310
    @sonder8310 Год назад +807

    Can I say as a German I'm always extra excited when you cover recipes from our culture - and bc I love to hear German words pronounced with an accent.

    • @nicknio9836
      @nicknio9836 Год назад +22

      Seh ich auch so, es ist immer sehr amüsant zu hören wie andere deutsche Wörter aussprechen

    • @JHenryEden
      @JHenryEden Год назад +42

      I think his german is pretty good, sure his pronounciation is a bit stiff because he doesn't know the intonations but he pronounces his german better than most youtubers that want to pretend they know what they are saying.
      Es ist noch kein Meister vom Himmel gefallen.

    • @Mark723
      @Mark723 Год назад +15

      What the Schnitzel...?

    • @TheDeepDiveLLC
      @TheDeepDiveLLC Год назад +8

      Imagine doing a genealogy test and finding out your mostly not German.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +24

      @@TheDeepDiveLLC
      How would that change where OP is from, or what culture they grew up in?

  • @mirandamarble8725
    @mirandamarble8725 Год назад +14

    I hope your traveling is as wonderful as wished. I'm 32 and bed ridden due to health and I love history. I wanted to travel before I got very ill. Watching you n sometimes just listening to you helps me feel like I'm there as well. Thank you sooo much. You truly are amazing.

    • @TentinQuarantino_
      @TentinQuarantino_ Год назад +2

      I hope you are able to recover, but if not, I hope you find joy in the world of RUclips learning.
      I’ve had a crippling depression / agoraphobia that waxes and wanes since a home-invasion attack in 2016. These types of tutorials have made me feel a little better about my confinement.

    • @bigdumb1
      @bigdumb1 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@TentinQuarantino_I know my reply is super late but I am so sorry to both of you for the suffering you're enduring. And as far as the trauma from being attacked, I highly recommend EMDR therapy (and possibly IFS as a supplement to it) if you can find a therapist who specializes in these modalities. I have PTSD and I used to be in constant emotional agony and have frequent panic attacks, but most days I am anxiety free now. I hope you can find comfort and peace eventually.

  • @flashfire157
    @flashfire157 Год назад +13

    Max I hope you read this. Your videos are my absolute favorite and keep me interested in history! Even as a kid visiting a replica Titanic exhibit I remember it coming alive for me not because of the names or narrations in the provided headphones, but looking at the kind of foods they ate, soap they used in the shower, what kind of cigarettes they smoked. It's the very HUMAN things that make history come to life for me and food is the most human thing that connects us all. Thanks for all the research and work you put into these videos! My kids and I wish you all the best ❤️

    • @christinelamb1167
      @christinelamb1167 28 дней назад

      That's so true! It's the everyday things and items that really make history interesting (at least for some of us). Especially food! 😋I love learning about different cultures, and for me learning about the foods and recipes from a culture is so interesting, and food is what draws all people together, no matter where we're from.

  • @Naomi-pq6tv
    @Naomi-pq6tv Год назад +119

    Since my mom was allergic to peppers of all kinds and got worse after her chemo and radiation, I switched out paprika for dill and now my family prefers it with dill even after her passing 2 years ago

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +13

      My mom always uses pickle relish and powdered mustard. So I'll second your dill!

    • @lisahoshowsky4251
      @lisahoshowsky4251 Год назад +6

      I love dill when I make egg salad so that makes sense!

    • @a.katherinesuetterlin3028
      @a.katherinesuetterlin3028 Год назад +4

      ​@@punkinhoot I love saving back the pickling juice from my favorite pickles and using it when I'm in the mood for deviled eggs and/or egg salad. Sooo tasty! 😋😋

    • @ReggieArford
      @ReggieArford Год назад

      @@a.katherinesuetterlin3028 Perhaps "Drinking with Max" could do an episode on switchel, a vinegar-based drink popular in the 18th Century.

  • @AlienGuy16
    @AlienGuy16 Год назад +378

    I would love to see you make "Deviled Bones". Makes me hungry for some wings just imagining what that would be like lol. Please consider it, much like cheeseburgers, hot wings seem to have been around for a very short span of time given how delicious and easy to prepare they are.

    • @kimvibk9242
      @kimvibk9242 Год назад +14

      Considering that the ancient Romans ate hamburgers (of sorts - a fried patty of chopped meat in a bun) and that they loved cheese, I wonder if it is too much of a leap to surmise that one of the sellers might have added a slice of Pecorino to his product...?

    • @martyhammer481
      @martyhammer481 Год назад +11

      @@kimvibk9242 bread rolls with fried meat pattys are quite popular all over europe and the levant since quite some time, but i wouldnt call frikadellenbrötchen or kofta a hamburger

    • @kikihammond5326
      @kikihammond5326 Год назад

      Would be great for Halloween!

    • @irreverentseraph7372
      @irreverentseraph7372 Год назад +3

      Deviled Bones are more often beef or lamb, a natural byproduct of a standing rib roast,at least according to the inimitable Beard....he has several great recipes for them. There's a good series for Max....

    • @debbralehrman5957
      @debbralehrman5957 Год назад

      Agreed👍🏼

  • @HandleG123
    @HandleG123 11 месяцев назад +2

    The subtitles are pretty funny especially at 5:57 .

  • @amaliakelemen9906
    @amaliakelemen9906 Год назад +4

    There are so many things to love about these videos (history and food, two of my favorite things) but the edited in bits ie “that’s too expensive” from Beauty and the Beast after saying you needed 6 eggs never fail to make me laugh.

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja Год назад +13

    If you’re only allergic to ovalbumin and not ovomucoid (the two most common eggwhite proteins to be allergic to), the reason you can tolerate cooked eggs but not raw (and also not soft-boiled) is that ovalbumin decomposes around 80°C, so anything cooked to a higher temperature throughout is safe for you to eat.
    If you can, see if you can get tested for allergies to other kinds of eggs (e.g. quail, duck, goose), because your allergy could be specific to hen eggs or it could be more general.

  • @Diastrefo
    @Diastrefo Год назад +14

    "I can finish a platter of deviled eggs & not be satisfied." Ah. A kindred soul. Good man.

  • @thraellock
    @thraellock Год назад +7

    The deviled eggs with the honey and some of the vinegar sounds wonderful. I always have some deviled eggs when I visit my mom's, its a very common snack she makes for everyone usually when its a holiday or she wants to have family over.

  • @patchizek4716
    @patchizek4716 Год назад +1

    I love the old newspaper clipping at 13:02 . From the $5 an acre land courtesy of the Union Pacific railroad to the $94 tuition at University of Alabama to the various pharmaceutical snake oils, for only 25 cents. What a snapshot of American life at that time.

  • @Dingomush
    @Dingomush Год назад +73

    I had a German Aunt who would make up the normal recipe and put a pinch of both sugar and cayenne on them and then bake them until the sugar crusted. They never lasted very long around my family…….

  • @ibrsc300
    @ibrsc300 Год назад +124

    You mentioned Asafoetida being used as a spice or seasoning. I studied about it in pharmacy school. It's also known as Devil's Dung, and has been called "the smelliest spice in the world." People would wear a small bag of it around their necks to ward off evil spirits. I know of a farmer who drilled depressions in the bottom of his pigs' feeding trough and stuff the holes with asafoetida to keep bugs away from the feed.

    • @doll624
      @doll624 Год назад +16

      My grandmother swore by hanging asafoetida around the neck to ward off spirits and germs. It smelled so bad, that may be why it worked!

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +17

      @@doll624 Hey, enforced social distancing will help keep you healthy.

    • @shalad4961
      @shalad4961 Год назад +15

      It’s also called Hing in Indian cooking. I bought some and my husband came home and said WTF IS THAT SMELL?? 😂 by the time he got home I had put the bottle in 2 ziplocks and shoved it to the back of the pantry and he stood at the front door asking that question 😂 devils dung indeed!!

    • @MegaKat
      @MegaKat Год назад +8

      Topically, I just made Max's Parthian chicken, and my kitchen smelled like ass until the chicken started cooking really good, and now it smells like heaven.

    • @vincenttt8289
      @vincenttt8289 Год назад

      @@MegaKat You got Stockholm syndrome from asafoetida

  • @hottatgirl
    @hottatgirl Год назад +11

    That’s so interesting. There’s a restaurant near me that serves deep fried deviled eggs. It seems to be a pretty standard modern recipe but they deep fry the whites before filling and top with candied bacon bits. I’d never seen it before I had no idea the original deviled eggs were fried. This is making me feel like I want to get creative on Easter 😂

  • @elijahh2220
    @elijahh2220 Год назад +2

    "Make good sauce with this" is one of those absolutely comically non-descriptive recipe instructions that I subscribe for

  • @MagdalenRose
    @MagdalenRose Год назад +12

    I burst out laughing at “that’s too expensive” 😂

  • @TroyPacelli
    @TroyPacelli Год назад +59

    "Deviled Bones" sounds like a recipe I'd like to try for Halloween. Probably served along side modern Buffalo Wings carded, "Deviled Bones (Served in the style of Buffalo)"

    • @karengerber8390
      @karengerber8390 Год назад +4

      Please, list ingredients, since you plan to card identify.

    • @TroyPacelli
      @TroyPacelli Год назад

      @@karengerber8390 "Card identify?" Ingredients for what recipe? I don't understand the request.

    • @annbrookens945
      @annbrookens945 Год назад +2

      @Troy Pacelli: they suggest since you are writing cards identifying the dishes being served, you should include ingredients from the recipe for Buffalo Wings and Fanny Farmer's recipe for Deviled Bones.

  • @piros100
    @piros100 Год назад +35

    My aunt has had once made some extra deviled eggs. When she was at university (in the 70s in Hungary) they did not have private fridges in their dorm rooms, just one for everyone on the corridor and some of their food regularly went missing. So to find out who was stealing their food, she made a batch of deviled eggs that she spiked with laxatives and put it in the fridge. As expected, it disappeared the next day. One of the cleaning ladies was on sick leave for a while after that 😆😈

    • @christinelamb1167
      @christinelamb1167 28 дней назад

      That is HILARIOUS! Ha ha, serves her right (the cleaning lady). 🤣I bet she was more careful about eating other people's food after that!

  • @aeray3581
    @aeray3581 Год назад +4

    1. Older eggs are easier to peel.
    2. Peel under water, which seeps between the egg and its shell, thus facilitating separation.

  • @paulhammer4941
    @paulhammer4941 Год назад +278

    I think the Fannie Farmer proto-Buffalo wings would make for a great episode. There’s all kinds of juicy details about the places that claim to have invented them you could tie in.

    • @mtgemperor
      @mtgemperor Год назад +13

      More Fannie Farmer recipes with a hopeful companion in B. Dylan Hollis for a collaboration! 😁

    • @smpsailor
      @smpsailor Год назад +3

      Claimed to invent them?!? Smh. I bet you use ranch

    • @paulhammer4941
      @paulhammer4941 Год назад

      @@smpsailor get the hell out of here with that disrespect. Blue cheese is the only acceptable dip. And yeah. 3 or 4 places all claim to have invented them but obviously there can only be one

    • @iwontliveinfear
      @iwontliveinfear Год назад +7

      I don't know of any place that claims to have invented the buffalo wing other than the Anchor Bar in Buffalo,NY.

    • @diannelavoie5385
      @diannelavoie5385 Год назад +5

      @@iwontliveinfear Same. It was the Anchor Bar as far as I know.

  • @danihesslinger7968
    @danihesslinger7968 Год назад +7

    From Germany: LOL! Deviled eggs were the party snack of my childhood and youth, in the 50s and 60s of last century. Since the 70s and 80s we started to do so-called Marble Eggs, from Chinese recipes (hard-boiled eggs cooled down, then the shell cracked gently with a spoon, then cooked a second time in a mixture of tea, star aniseed, salt, soy sauce- leave them to soak over night ... When you peel them there is a beautiful marble pattern on the egg white, and they are very savory.😃 The skill lies in the gentle cracking of the shell😃

    • @christinelamb1167
      @christinelamb1167 28 дней назад

      Marble eggs, that sounds lovely, and delicious too!

  • @narayantrex2226
    @narayantrex2226 Год назад +5

    So I don't know how relevant this is, but I'm from Germany and here deviled eggs are called Senfeier (mustard eggs) afaik. They're called that because they kinda smell like sulphur if prepared this way. Maybe that could have something to do with why they're called "devilled", since brimstone/sulphur=devil?

    • @wendylee8654
      @wendylee8654 3 месяца назад +1

      Seems like a reasonable conclusion!

  • @thefisherking78
    @thefisherking78 Год назад +9

    As a real aficionado of deviled eggs, and one who makes them a little differently every time just for the fun of it, I must say I truly appreciated this episode. I had no idea THE roots went back so far.

    • @urbanurchin5930
      @urbanurchin5930 Год назад +1

      But - please tell me......who ? bites a deviled egg in half like he does at the end ?? I always shove the whole thing in my mouth at once !
      I can easily eat 7 or 8 "halves" on my lunch plate ! i would be suspicious of any one biting them daintily - like a little girl.......

    • @christinelamb1167
      @christinelamb1167 28 дней назад

      @@urbanurchin5930 I guess I'm one of those weird freaks who eats a deviled egg half in about 3 bites! 🤣What can I say, I'm a slow (and I guess "dainty") eater.
      Now you're suspicious of me, aren't you? 😁

  • @TheRealDoctorBonkus
    @TheRealDoctorBonkus Год назад +426

    God, I love when you discuss your historiographic methodology with us, Max! It is such a huge part of what seperates a "historian" from a "Historian"! The academic training in questioning sources, fact check the "fact" (that is known in the academic world as a "woozle" or the "woozle effect" from A. A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh) is a huge part of our work! So thank you so much.

    • @melowlw8638
      @melowlw8638 Год назад +15

      haha
      woozle
      im not a native english speaker but knowing a specific field's slang for something is rly fun!!
      reminds me of when i was diggin at an archaeological site and they were talking abt "teg" and they told me it was for tegulae

    • @JackSilver1410
      @JackSilver1410 Год назад +24

      That's a really strong term for it and it makes so much sense!
      "They come in ones or twozles, but if they so choozles,
      before your eyes they start to multiply."
      That's a perfect description of something inaccurate that's recorded in good faith, but then gets spread and repeated so often that it just becomes accepted as fact beyond control.

    • @NODnuke45
      @NODnuke45 Год назад +12

      Socrates was right, no matter how much we know, we never know as much as we think we know.

    • @markmayfield2228
      @markmayfield2228 Год назад +8

      @@NODnuke45 The conundrum, and lodestone we historians all have to bear. And it drives us. When we run out of questions, we know that we are asking the wrong questions.

    • @JackSilver1410
      @JackSilver1410 Год назад +6

      @@NODnuke45 "The first step on the path of wisdom is knowing that you don't know everything. The second is understanding there are things you don't need to know."

  • @eligar7830
    @eligar7830 Год назад +51

    When my daughter was in school, some of her classes would use “food days” to emphasize time periods, cultures, regions, etc they were learning about. One year the class had to bring food that related to Shakespearean England, specifically hand foods that may have been served as snacks outside the Globe theater. I sent Medieval Farsed Eggs from Good Huswife’s Jewell, using farsed stuffing instructions from same source, figuring not much would have changed over the years on the snack food front. The eggs were halved and stuffing made with the yolks and all the other stuffing ingredients, then the halves were put back together, tied with string to hold together, and boiled. Definitely something different 😁

  • @bouncingpaperwad
    @bouncingpaperwad Год назад +4

    Hey! Loved the video ❤ I have a dairy allergy so I feel you. Fun fact allergic reactions are caused by proteins and when you cook food the proteins break down and your body no longer recognizes them as allergens. That's why you can eat cooked egg whites and I can eat cooked butter and milk.

  • @louiselincoln
    @louiselincoln 8 месяцев назад +2

    For those who want a close equivalent to Costmary - the standard little white garden daisy is from the same family and completely edible (both the flowers and the leaves, although I'd recommend leaves for this recipe). If you are foraging for them, best not to get them from places close to traffic and pollution - but other than that, you're good to go. They have a fresh, lemony and slightly bitter taste. If you're new to foraging, please don't dig up the whole plant or pluck all the leaves and flowers: just take a couple from each one you find. Wouldn't need many for this recipe anyway - they have a very strong flavour.

  • @tishw8580
    @tishw8580 Год назад +50

    For a while, I lived in a town called Boone, Iowa. At Christmas time, the butchers at the local gocery store made up a holiday sausage called "Sweedish Potato Sausage." The store had an old fashioned butchers counter, with glass cases displaying all the cuts and there was always a couple of butchers on hand to be of service. The sausage had an unusual favor that my husband didn't like, but, I found interesting. It always sold out quickly. I've always wondered about the history of this dish.

    • @Donderu
      @Donderu Год назад +1

      It sounds like it could be “Potatiskorv” (potato sausage), a traditional dish from Värmland, a province in central Sweden, which is served in christmastime.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potatiskorv

  • @hawkatsea
    @hawkatsea Год назад +31

    Coloring the inside of eggs for (unironic) Easter Deviled Eggs is having a comeback. For several years now, we soak the boiled egg whites with beets (pink), cabbage (blue), tumeric (yellow), or just food dye before drying and then filling them with the seasoned yolks. Depending on whether you slice the eggs first or how long they soak, you can get some cool effects.

  • @heatherb1612
    @heatherb1612 11 месяцев назад +3

    Something about seeing him take the first bite is very wholesome. He just has such a positive expectation to every bite and enthusiasm on his face. Where as I always expect the worse so I look pretty dead inside trying something.

  • @dormantpixi2628
    @dormantpixi2628 Год назад +2

    I laughed out loud with the Beauty and the Beast song, "That's too expensive!", when talking about the eggs.

  • @brandonlebel9211
    @brandonlebel9211 Год назад +112

    You know max, I always think about the time you had to make a decision between doing this or the other job you had. It always hits my mind when I watch your videos and I'm very happy you chose to do this you have brought alot of joy to myself as well as others in this community Not just joy ethier but knowledge and that's the best part. Anyway anough of me being a fan boy. Just wanted to say thanks for everything boss.

  • @dermeistefan
    @dermeistefan Год назад +33

    If you like eggs you could make little "Fliegenpilze" (fly amanita) out of whole cooked eggs, a cap made out of a piece of tomato and little dots of butter for the white spots. You can also add a face by putting cloves in the egg.
    They where a hit at childrens parties back in the GDR.

    • @Meagan-Renee
      @Meagan-Renee Год назад +3

      I had to look it up to get an idea what that could be. Fairy toadstool snacks! Those are so cute!! 💕

  • @lydiathornton1999
    @lydiathornton1999 Год назад +4

    I've made Platina's recipe (except I also left the eggs open for ease of frying) and my husband and I both really liked them. The verjuice cuts that richness, the fresh and aged cheeses (I used parm and chevre) were a nice addition, and all the spices and herbs and the sweet/sour sauce give a really nice complexity. But I did have some issues with burning while pan-frying so I'm definitely going to use your oven technique next time. Brilliant!

  • @spork861
    @spork861 Год назад +5

    All the variations of deviled egg recipes you mentioned from history all sound good in their own regards, and it is very VERY interesting hearing all these variations on them, it's eye opening.

  • @kimvibk9242
    @kimvibk9242 Год назад +154

    A popular Easter dish here in Denmark is 'Skidne Æg' (litterally Dirty Eggs) where hard boiled shelled eggs are placed in a bowl with a peppery-mustardy sauce and served forth. It should be lukewarm and eaten with our dark rye bread (obviously). Beer and aquavit is optional!

    • @brightspacebabe
      @brightspacebabe Год назад +6

      That sounds yummy❤

    • @updownstate
      @updownstate Год назад +3

      No they're not.

    • @alsaunders7805
      @alsaunders7805 Год назад +4

      @@updownstate I assume you mean the OPs last sentence, if so I completely agree. 🤓🥃🍻

    • @LindaBforlorenhare
      @LindaBforlorenhare Год назад +1

      I still have to try that. I thought it was usually done with "smilende æg" (I don't think we have a term for that in English), but could be hard boiled or soft boiled too.

    • @kimvibk9242
      @kimvibk9242 Год назад +1

      @@LindaBforlorenhare I think you are right.

  • @TheMichigami
    @TheMichigami Год назад +16

    a little something extra for you, there's an easter egg hidden in one of the Myst videogames that is a recipe for devilled eggs labeled as "D'nied eggs" after the D'ni people in the game. There was a tradition of a devilled egg day at Cyan, the creators of the game series, so they put their favorite recipe for the eggs into one of the games as a secret to find. It technically has three recipes included for mild, hot, and "oh god where's the bathroom" levels of spicy for the fillings. I've made em just to see how they turn out, and they're not too bad it'll certainly wake you up if you try eating one for lunch, and the one with the jalapeno and serrano peppers chopped up in em certainly lives up to the devilish bit of the name.

  • @mtgAzim
    @mtgAzim Год назад +3

    You only eat two or three fried eggs? You're a better man than I sir. Anything less than four and I'll begin longingly eyeing the .45 on my bedside table...

  • @GuidingSlasher
    @GuidingSlasher Год назад +3

    I like that you specifically picked Togepi as the pluche pokemon for this episode! nice little detail :D

  • @nadinehart8624
    @nadinehart8624 Год назад +16

    Yes to the Lego wildflower bouquet back there! I’m almost done with mine! Also with peeling eggs why not shake them in a cup first? I have hand disabilities but love cooking so I do that as a little hack!

  • @davidwoolsey2135
    @davidwoolsey2135 Год назад +13

    Cochineal was also the dye used for the scarlet found in British officer and Sergeant's regimental coats, before chemical dyes were developed. Madder was used for the coats for the privates and corporals. 😉

  • @jeremysincerbeaux6040
    @jeremysincerbeaux6040 Год назад +8

    I love history, I love cooking. Your show is the best of both worlds! Thanks you so much for these great recipes and all the great history!

  • @austinwilburn1772
    @austinwilburn1772 Месяц назад

    Does anyone else get a spark of joy seeing Fannie Farmer being brought up in different episodes? I’ve eaten some of her recipes and it always feels like a cross over cameo when she gets mentioned.

  • @mwater_moon2865
    @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +80

    A trick for making them easier to peel is to make the water more basic (less acid) than the egg.
    There are two ways to do this: 1. use older eggs, the gas exchange through the shell results in higher carbon dioxide in the egg, making it acidic. Or 2. add a tablespoon of baking soda to the water. Works even with the chicken-laid-'em-this-morning eggs.

    • @baylorsailor
      @baylorsailor Год назад +9

      Or just steam them. The water particles are smaller with steam allowing the water to penetrate the shell and separate the egg from the shell. It's a lot easier than boiling.

    • @rogerclarke7407
      @rogerclarke7407 Год назад +6

      @@baylorsailor or use a pressure cooker, a bit faster and always easy to peel.

    • @jnooney8225
      @jnooney8225 Год назад +7

      I have chickens (hence, very fresh eggs) and although you may be right about the chemistry, I've never had a problem with peeling. I cook them as above, making sure they are immediately plunged into the cold water from the hot, and cooling as Max recommends. I've noticed that sometimes (and you probably have an educated guess about why this occurs) they become more difficult to peel after, say, 3 or 4 days in the fridge. When I learned that eggshells are actually porous, it occurred to me that dryness might be a main factor.
      So now I simply put the eggs in a bowl of water for 30-60 seconds and they peel perfectly.

    • @emmettraymond8058
      @emmettraymond8058 Год назад +8

      I came to the comment section expecting to find thirty conflicting and contradictory ways to make peeling boiled eggs easier, and this thread is a good start. 😅

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 Год назад +3

      @@rogerclarke7407 I’ve pretty much switched completely over to “Hard Boiling” eggs in my instant pot.
      Haven’t had a peeling issue. I think the pressure enters the egg via the pore and forces that membrane off the shell

  • @mikeschinlaub3688
    @mikeschinlaub3688 Год назад +15

    Max, if you see this, someone commented on your egg white allergy in your Titanic First Class Breakfast video.
    ByOwlLight
    Hey Max, for your egg allergy, you may want to give duck or quail eggs a try! I have problems with chicken eggs, but I learned I can have duck eggs. They are heavier and stronger in taste, though (and with a larger yolk), so quail eggs are sometimes a better substitute for some recipes. Also, the baked in factor is actually really common; the proteins undergo a change when slowly cooked throughout with a high enough heat like when done in an oven. Something like a meringue or angel food cake may still give you problems, though, so be careful and good luck!

  • @bunnyfoofoo9695
    @bunnyfoofoo9695 Год назад +1

    Minced onion, pickle relish, miracle whip, small amount of yellow mustard, salt and pepper mash together refill egg white halves sprinkle with smoked paprika.

  • @spacepirates5044
    @spacepirates5044 Год назад +4

    Max, your videos are so entertaining, informative and authentic. I really enjoy every single one and am very grateful for your production of them!

  • @shanearnold7781
    @shanearnold7781 Год назад +22

    Always love the medieval/renaissance episodes! Can't beat a good "serve it forth"

  • @cavalaxis
    @cavalaxis Год назад +86

    You just glossed over the walnut catsup in that recipe! There's one I'd like to see you try. Also, it's KOHshiNEEL. Nocheztli in Nahuatl, meaning blood of the prickly pear. The Aztecs used it as a dye, too!

    • @terriatca1
      @terriatca1 Год назад +5

      I use it when I make lipstick and some soaps. I love the red it gives, but it also can give pink and purple hues depending on where the bugs are harvested.

    • @ThisIsKassia
      @ThisIsKassia Год назад +3

      ​​@@terriatca1 I specifically avoid lipsticks with Cochineal because they are not vegan friendly, because the bug had to die (probably crushed alive) and also the idea of eating a bug is kinds gross to me.

    • @terriatca1
      @terriatca1 Год назад

      @@ThisIsKassia Many foods have a shellac on them, made with bugs. Natural flavouring can be from beaver anal glands. The Cochineal bug is harvested alive, allowed to die and dry out, then crushed. I have jars of them. All of my soaps and makeup that I sell are vegan and ethically sourced, I don't want to alienate anyone. Animal products are for friends and family who do not mind them.

    • @dilapidatedcastillo500
      @dilapidatedcastillo500 Год назад

      I'm very intrigued by the Walnut Catsup. Glad to see others are as well.

    • @jasonslade6259
      @jasonslade6259 Год назад +2

      There was a huge variety of thick, vinegar-based sauces that were referred to as "katsup" during the early history of the term.

  • @tonyclark627
    @tonyclark627 Год назад +3

    Max, watching you take individual "nibbles" out of a food item that I customarily inhale whole, chewing optional, was suffice it to say... adorable😅
    Never change Max!!

  • @lisawallace3124
    @lisawallace3124 2 дня назад

    So glad to see you use the BEST method of boiling eggs! Put COLD eggs into BOILING water, and when time's up, put cooked eggs into ICE water....the thermal shock helps separate the egg from the shell, making them easier to peel ❤ No baking soda, no oil in the water, no vinegar in the water....just cold to hot to cold.

  • @carolbutler6932
    @carolbutler6932 Год назад +313

    In the southern USA you can tell how "Southern" a lady is by how many deviled egg plates she owns.💜

    • @LadySuilenroc
      @LadySuilenroc Год назад +25

      My grandma isn't southern, but her number of deviled egg plates tripled when my brother got to be old enough to eat them!

    • @carolbutler6932
      @carolbutler6932 Год назад +33

      @@LadySuilenroc There are never leftover deviled eggs to take home. 💜

    • @roundsm18
      @roundsm18 Год назад +21

      We gave up on deviled egg plates and went on to full sheet pans.

    • @user-pv2fz6wm2g
      @user-pv2fz6wm2g Год назад +5

      *insert someone using the plates as throwing weapons and still having enough to throw 1 plate a second for 50 years*

    • @webtoedman
      @webtoedman Год назад +5

      "The Devil's frisbee"?

  • @iNeedaBreakdown
    @iNeedaBreakdown Год назад +80

    Awesome video as always. As a german I'd recommend to make Swabian "Maultaschen" sometime. They are up there with the most delicious german food - and they also have a pretty funny history. And since you are really good in german pronunciation, I challenge you to properly pronounce the alternative name for "Maultaschen", which is "Herrgottsbscheißerle". That should make for another glorious episode! :D
    Keep up your great work

    • @Fayeluria
      @Fayeluria Год назад +10

      The reason for the alternative name would also make for a good history part!

    • @iNeedaBreakdown
      @iNeedaBreakdown Год назад +5

      @@Fayeluria Totally. Des wär ä subbr Folge! :D

    • @deborahbranham-taylor6682
      @deborahbranham-taylor6682 Год назад +2

      My family is Swabian, and the alternative name for Maultschen is new to me. Thank you for sharing!

    • @itsmokka44
      @itsmokka44 Год назад

      @@Fayeluria It's probably fake though

  • @MA-mh1vs
    @MA-mh1vs Год назад +7

    I am allergic to paprika so I use chili powder instead. It taste amazing! I have taken them to potlucks and they were a hit, people were shocked at how well the chili powder went with them.

    • @kylespevak6781
      @kylespevak6781 Год назад +1

      I've done this. They're crazy

    • @nonenoneonenonenone
      @nonenoneonenonenone 9 месяцев назад

      Paprika is dried, ground up red peppers, so how can you eat chili powder, which is made from another type of pepper?

    • @MA-mh1vs
      @MA-mh1vs 9 месяцев назад

      @@nonenoneonenonenone I don't know for sure, all I know is if I eat paprika I break out in hives from head to toe but thus far no other pepper does that to me. I did read that one could actually be allergic to the additives in paprika powder rather than the pepper itself and that might be the case with me. In regards to other peppers I can't be around hot peppers when being cut up or cooked they cause me to cough and start wheezing within seconds requiring an inhaler. That is considered an allergic reaction but that does not happen with all peppers either.

  • @ecilaeniarol9863
    @ecilaeniarol9863 Год назад +1

    My Southern grandmother put sweet pickle relish in her deviled eggs. This adds vinegar, spices, and a bit of crunch. Easy and so good.

    • @pibly7784
      @pibly7784 Год назад

      YES- My mom told me to add relish to the deviled eggs I was bringing to the office for a pot luck lunch. They were a big hit. 👍

  • @lrstudio3221
    @lrstudio3221 Год назад +390

    Max, I want to take a moment to sincerely thank Jose for doing a marvelous job with providing the captioning for your channel.
    I don't hear so well anymore and I'd be totally lost without the effort he puts into providing these spot on (and oft times hilarious) captions. Thank you Jose!!
    And thanks for another great video. My wife and I both love your channel! Though I do 90% of the cooking in our household she always gets a good snort o laughter out of your presentation. 😊

    • @fmlAllthetime
      @fmlAllthetime Год назад

      .

    • @Wtfinc
      @Wtfinc Год назад +3

      Max, I want to take a moment to sincerely address the alarming amount of saffron used. I cannot afford to make a single one of these eggs. That was like $50 worth!

    • @yellingintothewind
      @yellingintothewind Год назад +5

      @@Wtfinc Safron can be mail ordered for much less than it is sold locally. Still expensive, at around $6 per gram, but at bulk prices that was an affordable amount. You do have to use it often enough to justify buying 10g at a time to get that price though.

    • @Wtfinc
      @Wtfinc Год назад

      @@yellingintothewind ahh, gotchu

  • @nobodynoone2500
    @nobodynoone2500 Год назад +65

    Deviled eggs were mentioned in print as early as 1786 in the cookbook "The New Art of Cookery" by Richard Briggs. The recipe in this cookbook was very similar to the modern version of deviled eggs, with the addition of anchovies to the yolk mixture.

    • @dolphinbear661
      @dolphinbear661 Год назад +6

      Oooh, a little anchovy paste might be a great addition. Gonna try that this weekend. Thanks!

    • @danielserene4532
      @danielserene4532 Год назад +7

      I'd bet garum/fish sauce would work nicely.

    • @TentinQuarantino_
      @TentinQuarantino_ Год назад +1

      Ooooh. I have a tin of anchovies I was saving, and I have five boiled eggs.
      I was going to use the anchovies for bagna cauda but I think this might steal the show.

  • @taraseguin2026
    @taraseguin2026 11 месяцев назад +1

    I just found you Max and I've been binge watching your videos.
    Now I'm hungry.
    Have to get your cookbook

  • @davidvega7587
    @davidvega7587 Год назад +1

    “That’s too expensive!” I do hope I’m not the only one who found that funny 😂

  • @maladypond
    @maladypond Год назад +185

    "Poppycock, hogwash, and patently false!"
    I think I want this on a shirt!
    Another fascinating walk through culinary history and a fun recipe 💖💖

  • @plihal203
    @plihal203 Год назад +35

    Max putting his life on the line to bring us egg recipes lol
    Happy birthday Max! Love the content

  • @bur_n_t
    @bur_n_t Год назад

    i live for the little emoticons in the subtitles. as someone with an auditory processing disorder im so thankful he puts effort into them lol

  • @catoninetales
    @catoninetales Год назад

    "From eggs to apples" has such a nice cadence to it, we should bring it back.

  • @ruthbennett7563
    @ruthbennett7563 Год назад +30

    As an American Southerner, Easter Luncheon is not complete without Deviled Eggs.
    Thank you for sharing the history of this special dish. ❤

  • @AlucardODeath
    @AlucardODeath Год назад +47

    My favorite dish + history = pure satisfaction.

  • @deborahwoods2361
    @deborahwoods2361 Год назад +2

    I make a deviled egg that is different again. I remove the yolks mix some mayonaise, curry and a little salt then scoop it back into the white halves. It's delicious. It is meant to have mustard but I'm not a big fan of mustard so I use curry instead. They're popular at gatherings! Oh, and btw, I love your videos!

  • @brucetidwell7715
    @brucetidwell7715 Год назад +21

    Candied prosciutto sounds down right heavenly! I'm not sure how to connect it with Italian history but an episode on prosciutto, the best meat on the planet, would be fun.

  • @TrailRat2000
    @TrailRat2000 Год назад +11

    My first experience with "devilled eggs" was a buffet food affair at family functions. But they were way different to this. They were as described in which the eggs were rejoined after stuffing, but they were then wrapped in streaky bacon and quickly deep fried to cook the bacon.
    I remember getting quite ill wolfing down a whole plate of these, but it was so worth it.

  • @nicshu2171
    @nicshu2171 8 месяцев назад +1

    "I'm just wild about Saffron, and Saffron's wild about meeeee"

  • @oracletx
    @oracletx Год назад +7

    I guess I'm lucky, I think I have the uncooked egg white allergy thing, but the reaction never felt like I risked death, just hours on a toilet.
    Please do a video about Deviled Bones and how they became or were reinvented as Buffalo Wings! The Anchor Bar in Buffalo NY claimed to be the inventor of Buffalo WIngs, but I'm curious what you'll find.

  • @creamyonions98
    @creamyonions98 Год назад +8

    I'm right there with you on being able to work through an entire platter of deviled eggs like it was nothing. Though my family's recipe differs somewhat from how I typically see them prepared and it seems like there are some similarities to these much older recipes. We use mayonnaise, just a little yellow mustard, and then the juice from my grandma's homemade "icebox pickles" (which I could and would eat by the bowlful, and I dislike all other pickles). The closest store-bought pickle to hers is Mt. Olive's Bread 'n' Butter pickles. Without that juice, some sugar and apple cider vinegar will do but of course not be quite as good.

    • @nobodysbaby5048
      @nobodysbaby5048 Год назад

      Try a heaping teaspoon of sweet pickle relish for the pickle component.

  • @jarofthoughts
    @jarofthoughts Год назад +11

    As a European viewer I want to thank you for including the metric measurements. :) While I - could - convert them, having them stated as you do makes life a little easier.

  • @wilfbentley6738
    @wilfbentley6738 11 месяцев назад +1

    In my family, devilled eggs are traditionally prepared with a special homemade dressing and a little chopped green onion mixed into the mashed yolks, whites are then stuffed and Cayenne pepper scattered over the top.

  • @bASICMiner
    @bASICMiner Год назад

    the mere mention of candied prosciutto puts a smile on my face.

  • @leehaseley2164
    @leehaseley2164 Год назад +26

    There is a Chinese version of deviled eggs which in Thailand are called "son-in-law's eggs" and the eggs has a double meaning, the second of which being "nuts"😊.
    The boiiled eggs are deep fried whole and served in a thick sweet sauce containing dried chili and caramelised onions or challots.

    • @nobodysbaby5048
      @nobodysbaby5048 Год назад +1

      That sounds kind of tasty.

    • @leehaseley2164
      @leehaseley2164 Год назад

      @@nobodysbaby5048 it really is, especially with hot rice.

    • @danielserene4532
      @danielserene4532 Год назад +1

      I've always seen it with Tamarind sauce. What about, tokneneng, the battered deep-fried eggs from the Philippines?

    • @gwennorthcutt421
      @gwennorthcutt421 Год назад +1

      heh, gotta love a fun name. those sound really good! thanks for sharing

  • @infinymagnus
    @infinymagnus Год назад +10

    Saffron is such a polarizing addition. I don't mind it personally but I find it can overpower a dish very easily. I have the OR6A2 gene expression so anything with aldehydes tastle like soap to me so that plays a very strong role.

  • @Chron-sl4nd
    @Chron-sl4nd 8 месяцев назад +1

    If you poke a hole with a thumbtack in one end and put them into cool water to bring to temperature, the peel comes off in one piece. I taught ATK a few things on staff.

  • @bobcaygeon4533
    @bobcaygeon4533 Месяц назад

    Just stumbled on your channel. Subscribed. Recipes and history…. what a combination.

  • @Fayeluria
    @Fayeluria Год назад +15

    My mother couldn’t cook to save her life, but she always used to make deviled eggs! I actually haven’t had them in at least 15 years and never made them myself, and this might just motivate me to try it!