British Couple Reacts to Brits try REAL Southern Fried Chicken for the first time!

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  • Опубликовано: 27 апр 2024
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Комментарии • 266

  • @user-sp6jk3zz5b
    @user-sp6jk3zz5b Месяц назад +7

    Collard greens are not traditionally prepared the way this lady makes them
    They are a green leafy vegetable that are boiled with hamhocks ,bacon bits.The grease and salty ham give them a vary pleasing taste,not sour

    • @BlueDebut
      @BlueDebut Месяц назад +1

      I've had them salty, sour and pleasant all in 1 and it was pretty good. Had it near Pleasant Point in Charleston.

    • @user-sp6jk3zz5b
      @user-sp6jk3zz5b Месяц назад +1

      @@BlueDebut
      My maternal grandparents came from the Ozarks(Missouri) and my paternal grandparents had roots in Oklahoma and Arkansas. I grew up eating them with hamhocks or bacon cooked in. Must be regional differences

  • @noonecallsmeaj
    @noonecallsmeaj Месяц назад +37

    That “Fix your face” went RIGHT over the heads. They clearly don’t know much about the South and its Southerners. It gives me flashbacks hearing that lol! It’s considered impolite and having bad manners if you make a disgusted face when eating a Southerner’s food. When you’re over someone‘s house, and you’re having dinner there, you don’t really like how it tastes BUT you have a Southern mama, you’ll most definitely get a “Fix your face” quietly but sternly, or you’ll get a “Fix your face” look- no words need to be said to understand 😂

    • @AC-ni4gt
      @AC-ni4gt Месяц назад +5

      Sounds like how I grew up in an Asian household. If anyone showed disgust, we'd get told off.

    • @pointlessmanatee
      @pointlessmanatee 21 день назад

      these rules were invented by bad lazy cooks with an over inflated ego. you cant get offended if not every person on earth likes every single thing you cook

    • @buckeyegirl16
      @buckeyegirl16 18 дней назад +1

      Yeah, but the point of their videos that they're reacting to food and giving their honest first impressions and opinions. If they fake pretend to like it, that wouldn't be an authentic reaction. So I think this is kind of a different scenario versus going to someone's house to eat.

  • @RogCBrand
    @RogCBrand Месяц назад +6

    These are the type of places people need to go to when they visit, rather than the usual going to all the various fast food restaurants. A biscuit or fried chicken at a place like this is vastly superior to even the best fast food restaurant.

    • @catherinelw9365
      @catherinelw9365 16 дней назад +1

      This is partly why Jolly is so successful. Yes, they go to chains. But they mix it up by going to great mom and pop restaurants.

  • @TheRealdal
    @TheRealdal Месяц назад +92

    Collards are fantastic! But you cook them with a ham hock or turkey leg or bacon and garlic, a little sugar, and spices and a touch of vinegar to take the bitter away. I swear you would eat a whole bowl with corn bread. 🤌. That cook there made them so eclectic that it would be hard for non southerners who didn’t grow up on them to enjoy.

    • @HappyValleyDreamin
      @HappyValleyDreamin Месяц назад +6

      My grandmother made them with bacon and garlic. She was from W Virginia.

    • @tyreedillard
      @tyreedillard Месяц назад

      I never eat collard greens by themselves...cooking them right, and eating them either with vinegar, or chow chow (a Southern relish) cuts the bitterness. I personally prefer kale greens to collard greens. Kale isn't nearly as bitter, and can be cooked like collards. With chow chow, kale is Devine.

    • @emily_stewart
      @emily_stewart Месяц назад +4

      I always add a bit of hot sauce to mine, they're delicious.

    • @jeffferguson4637
      @jeffferguson4637 Месяц назад

      Sounds lovely but not the sugar

    • @pulsatingsausageboy2076
      @pulsatingsausageboy2076 Месяц назад

      Ugh… No, they’re not. They taste like lawn clippings.

  • @warrenbfeagins
    @warrenbfeagins Месяц назад +28

    Grits are stone ground corn. Greens are like kale or Swiss Chard. I eat them EVERYDAY. They are no more of an acquired taste than spinach, broccoli or any other vegetable. They are also a nutritional powerhouse. I also blend them in my smoothies.

    • @gmunden1
      @gmunden1 Месяц назад +3

      Some people have greens topped with chopped onion and hot cherry peppers.

    • @gmunden1
      @gmunden1 Месяц назад +3

      Grits are a type of large-kernel corn called hominy. It is an Indigenous food item used throughout Southern North America, Central and South America.

    • @gmunden1
      @gmunden1 Месяц назад +1

      Peanuts are not nuts but legumes. Pecans are tree nuts from North America.

    • @Thom1212
      @Thom1212 Месяц назад

      Grits with real butter, maple syrup and a dash of salt is the best way to start breakfast (followed by eggs, corned beef hash (with tobasco!) or bacon or sausage and some hash browns. A large OJ and then a cup of coffee rounds it out)

    • @TruthIsNotTemporary
      @TruthIsNotTemporary Месяц назад

      🤢 BLECH…😊
      I can do spinach, but brussel sprouts and collards 😳😳😳🤮

  • @carlklaus8580
    @carlklaus8580 28 дней назад +8

    seeing brits and Europeans love southern cuisine warms my heart. please come to the south. we will love on you

  • @25arkie
    @25arkie Месяц назад +17

    I'm mostly British but I grew up in the South. After visiting Britain and trying their food, I'm so glad my family immigrated 400 years ago in search of flavor! lol

    • @user-vw1ow7mk1c
      @user-vw1ow7mk1c 9 дней назад

      Same
      I'm " old Savannah" my families came here to savannah when the colony was being formed

  • @brandyanderson3522
    @brandyanderson3522 Месяц назад +28

    I think it's important to know / remember that there is a certain level of customer service that is expected in the United States. Yes, are people in the service industry whose livelihood relies on tips, so the better their customer service is, the better their tips can be. But there is also a lot of customer service positions that are not tipped. If you go into a store, the expectation is to be greeted and asked if you need any assistance.
    Santana seems like the type of person who would have Supply that level of customer service whether she was in a tipped profession or not. She has what appears to be a naturally warm, outgoing, and naturally social personality. And I would not be surprised if her personality influences her profession, rather than her profession influencing her personality.

    • @pacmon5285
      @pacmon5285 Месяц назад +6

      Yeah. I can tell from the way she talks, that's just her natural demeanor. She's not just being nice for tips. These types always make THE best waiters/waitresses.
      But even the ones that aren't this overtly friendly are going to provide good service. Just not above and beyond like she's going to.

  • @waltermaples3998
    @waltermaples3998 Месяц назад +17

    I'm borne and raised in the South and I Love collard greens 🥗 and don't cook them with lemons I add a little sugar to cut the bitterness you would like mine and Maze is what the American Native Indians called corn. Can't wait to see you guys in America 🇺🇸 is please visit the South.

    • @jimglasco
      @jimglasco Месяц назад +7

      Cooked with a ham hock and a little vinegar and sugar, salt and pepper....

    • @IceKnight81
      @IceKnight81 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@jimglascoYeah, I cook them with a hambone.

    • @jimglasco
      @jimglasco Месяц назад

      @@IceKnight81 We eat polk salad as well....gotta be safe when preparing polk as it's poisonous.

  • @michaelwolf7840
    @michaelwolf7840 Месяц назад +27

    Collard greens are in the same family as mustard greens

  • @TheMtVernonKid
    @TheMtVernonKid Месяц назад +5

    Yes, I can tell you as someone who has family from the South. My family originated from South Carolina. Though I grew up in the North in New York. Yeah, that southern hospitality is legit

  • @justinhowell8873
    @justinhowell8873 Месяц назад +4

    Family owned restaurants from Texas to West Virginia are just the BEST of the South!!!

  • @lhuntley4577
    @lhuntley4577 Месяц назад +4

    Just so you know when you come to see us in the south, there is a Buccee's in Florence, SC, which is not too far from Myrtle Beach, SC. This restaurant in Savannah is very close to Hilton Head Island SC and the Golden Isles on the coast of GA. Beautiful country, beautiful beaches, beautiful food, beautiful people and hospitality. Y'all come on down.

  • @robinmullins2454
    @robinmullins2454 16 дней назад +2

    That dude turned straight American when he ate the sweet potato and said arrrrr baby!!! Lol!!

  • @CHICHI-hi2pn
    @CHICHI-hi2pn Месяц назад +4

    Most people in the south do not put lemon in their collard greens. They usually cook them with something like ham hock, bacon, etc.. They are really good if they are fixed that way.
    You need to do a reaction regarding southern cooking or soul food. Alvin and Jolly have been to several of these places in the south.

  • @lavernekane5174
    @lavernekane5174 Месяц назад +4

    Coffee cake does not usually have coffee in it.. it is just a good sweet to serve with Coffee.

  • @newdave1107
    @newdave1107 Месяц назад +6

    Usually the best foods are family owned and off the beaten path away from everything.
    Stay away from tourist or busy areas for food and fun.
    I'm an old man and the best food and fun I've found is always in the middle of nowhere.

  • @BowlingGreenTampaMan
    @BowlingGreenTampaMan Месяц назад +12

    Remember to pace yourselves when eating in the U.S. The greatest thing about our food is the variety . I live in a college town in Kentucky and can choose from 4 different Asian cuisines , 3 different Latin American , Indian , Greek , Italian , eastern Euro or just down home Southern Country Style. All are within a 15 minute drive , just take your pick.

    • @ericsierra-franco7802
      @ericsierra-franco7802 Месяц назад

      London isn't exactly a backwater. You can find all types of cuisine in Britain too.

    • @catherinelw9365
      @catherinelw9365 16 дней назад

      @@ericsierra-franco7802 College town in Kentucky is. Which is why it’s more impactful that you can get all those types of cuisine there.

  • @JustMe-dc6ks
    @JustMe-dc6ks Месяц назад +4

    This restaurant and the breakfast place where they tried Biscuits and gravy are both in Savannah Georgia.

  • @catherinelw9365
    @catherinelw9365 Месяц назад +19

    I waitressed when I was in college and I prefer being tipped. With tips and hourly wage, I made over $20/hr. and that was over 20 years ago.

    • @shag139
      @shag139 Месяц назад +1

      Exactly.

    • @jakesanchez7235
      @jakesanchez7235 Месяц назад +1

      $20 an hour over 20 years ago goes further than $20 an hour now a days. Just remember that!

    • @tvc1848
      @tvc1848 Месяц назад

      @@jakesanchez7235
      Just remember, a waiter/waitress who made $20 an hour 20 years ago, will probably be making $30 or more an hour now.

    • @tyreedillard
      @tyreedillard Месяц назад +1

      ​@jakesanchez7235 Don't forget meals, goods, and services are more expensive, thus the potential tips are larger than 20 years ago. A server with great customer service skills can make more than the salaried manager from tips. If the business has a great local or national brand, I always prefer jobs with tips or commissions plus small base salary because the earnings potential is greater.

    • @pacmon5285
      @pacmon5285 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@tyreedillardI don't like commission sales (from either side - buying or selling) because there's incentive to sell people things they don't need, which is obnoxious. Tips are different.

  • @brandonaston301
    @brandonaston301 Месяц назад +12

    I hate regular pickles but I love the sweet and spicy pickles you get in bbq restaurants.
    They don’t taste like regular pickles. They sit in a sweet and spicy liquid so they aquire that flavor.

    • @AC-ni4gt
      @AC-ni4gt Месяц назад +1

      I love a tart pickle. A nice tart and flavorful pickle.

    • @catherinelw9365
      @catherinelw9365 16 дней назад

      I believe I’ve never met a pickle I didn’t like.

  • @AvoBravado
    @AvoBravado Месяц назад +6

    More jolly food reactions

  • @shag139
    @shag139 Месяц назад +20

    One thing to remember in the US is that restaurants have tipped and non-tipped employees. Non-tipped are paid whatever the prevailing wage is (cooks busboys etc). Tipped employees are paid a much lower hourly wage plus tips. Bartenders and servers are tipped employees so they count on tips. The standard is 15-20%. Less if something sucked and more if it was great. Most tipped employees make far more with tips than they would if paid even $20 an hour. Friend is a server at a mid-range seafood chain and his avg is $35-45 an hour when tips included.
    Also you do NOT need to tip at counter service places like Starbucks, fast food, or takeout (usually). Employees at those places are NOT classified as tipped employees and are paid prevailing wage which here is $12-$17 an hour to start. So do not feel shamed into tipping at those places unless you feel somebody just went above and beyond.
    Drivers/delivery drivers yes a few bucks (3-$5).

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Месяц назад +1

      there are uneducated waitresses who make more than british doctors lol. if you work at a high end resturant you are getting at least 25-50 per table. with at least 10-20 tables a shift.

    • @rdramos13
      @rdramos13 Месяц назад +1

      Tipping is NOT a requirement. There's no government, state, county, or city law in place stating you have to tip. So there is no "standard" 15-20%. Could say average is 10-20% but depending on service, could be higher or lower.

    • @shag139
      @shag139 Месяц назад +3

      @@rdramos13 if you go to a restaurant in the US and you know about tipped employees and barring something egregious and you don’t tip, you’re just a Jack a$s.

    • @rdramos13
      @rdramos13 Месяц назад +3

      @shag139 Could be a jackhole, or every other cuss word in the book, but you still DON'T HAVE TO TIP. Tipping is a bonus for good service, not a requirement. Service is what gets as much attention as food. Place associated with poor service, won't have much return customers. So who cares if a tip is not left, you won't be going back to that restaurant/business again anyways.

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Месяц назад

      @@rdramos13 if you cant afford to tip, you shouldnt be eating out. if a place is so bad the service is consistently terrible, why are you eating there? An able person isnt legally obligated to give up a seat for a pregnant woman but we are all going to think youre a selfish scumbag if you dont.

  • @colerossiter5121
    @colerossiter5121 Месяц назад +2

    This is in my hometown of Savannah! Always cool to see someone else celebrate your city.

  • @FourFish47
    @FourFish47 Месяц назад +2

    Baked sweet potatoes are so good!! I eat the peel and everything. They're also fantastic cut in bite sized pieces, tossed in olive oil and baked. 😋

  • @jason42080
    @jason42080 29 дней назад +2

    Collard Greens is a bit of a semi bitter tasting vegetable but to take away and cutdown that Semi Bitter taste it's best to cook the Collard Greens in a tall soup pot with Chicken Broth/Stock with pieces of Bacon or Ham and 1 whole stick of Butter and after cooking season it with Pepper and Garlic Salt....then you have Collard Greens that one cannot stop eating until it's all gone. 🤤🤤😋😋

  • @brendahowell6796
    @brendahowell6796 Месяц назад +2

    South really does have amazing food.

  • @pacmon5285
    @pacmon5285 Месяц назад +2

    There's great fried chicken ALL over the US. As a fried chicken lover myself, you will enjoy yourself here.

  • @user-up3ux9jx7c
    @user-up3ux9jx7c Месяц назад +4

    I never smile so much as when I watch your reactions; you have a great variety of videos and always have interesting insights.

  • @courtneyperry82
    @courtneyperry82 Месяц назад +1

    Collards greens are my absolute favorite. It's best cooked with fat back meat (pork) or if you want to go healthy smoked turkey is the best meat. It's best with vinegar, salt for seasoning, and crushed red pepper. Other veggies that are in the family include turnip greens, cabbage, kale, and mustard greens. They are cooked the same way and they are all bitter in taste but so good.

  • @MrNakedweasel
    @MrNakedweasel Месяц назад +2

    The secret to good grits is to make sure they've been cooked long enough. It's like pasta, it is easier to eat when it's fully cooked. 😁

  • @angielandry6357
    @angielandry6357 24 дня назад +1

    I live in Alabama usa. If you soak your chicken in buttermilk or sour milk. Season the milk with whatever spices. Soak for an hour. Flour and fry. Perfect fried chicken.

  • @JustMe-dc6ks
    @JustMe-dc6ks Месяц назад +2

    Grits is short for hominy grits because it’s made from dried and ground hominy corn which is corn that’s been treated in a way that makes it more digestible. Grits as eaten is a sort of porridge. Porridge though is a word that only exists in nursery rhymes here though. Oatmeal is oatmeal. Cream of wheat is cream of wheat. Grits is grits. Polenta or cream of wheat would be the closest things to grits.

    • @JustMe-dc6ks
      @JustMe-dc6ks Месяц назад +1

      Also, “homely” is not a compliment here.

  • @user-wn8mg2jh1d
    @user-wn8mg2jh1d Месяц назад +6

    GREAT Reaction Guys

  • @maeckknox6535
    @maeckknox6535 Месяц назад +2

    Collard greens are extremely varied by region even in the same state for example they had Savannah style i am from the Piedmont region of Georgia and we prepare it completely differently no lemon with bits of country style bacon and ham in a bit of vinegar sometimes a drop of bourbon.

  • @eze9057
    @eze9057 24 дня назад +1

    Collard Greens are not bitter. We cook it down in olive oil, garlic, salt & pepper.

  • @toriblue
    @toriblue Месяц назад +1

    When traveling from Ohio to Florida to visit my relatives, I stopped in South Carolina to try this restaurant. The food and service was amazing! The banana pudding was excellent but I fell in love with their coconut cake. 😍😍😍
    Needless to say, I had to hit the gym extra hard (for a couple of weeks) to work off that trip. 😆

  • @dalemoore8582
    @dalemoore8582 Месяц назад +4

    I am from the American south and I don’t like collards. I love sweet potato any way you cook it. Corn pudding is delicious

  • @sweetlorre
    @sweetlorre 23 дня назад

    Omg.. This vid popped up on my feed and I was smiling becase I love Jolly so much. The "couple" in the caption got me 😂 And Josh does looks like Jim Carrey, it's an on going joke/tease with him.. Olly is just so genuine and cannot hide his opinion and feelings even to save his life and we love him for it! ❤

  • @adventuresinmusic2487
    @adventuresinmusic2487 Месяц назад +1

    The "best" food is not just in the south. There is food like this all over the US. Small country cafe to big food cities like New York, Chicago, Portland OR.
    You may not find sweet potato pie in the north but we have pumpkin pie.
    No alligator meat up north but we have Bison steaks in Montana, and reindeer sausage in Alaska. Fresh Salmon and King Crab in Anchorage and Seattle. Fresh lobster in Maine and New England states. It goes on and on.

  • @jimmybobsap8729
    @jimmybobsap8729 29 дней назад +1

    I like grits with butter sugar and fried shrimp lol
    @8:49 its hilarious how they dint even catch her joke, I grew up with that accent so got it immediately , and by other culture she meant Native American for maize lol

  • @bambamnj
    @bambamnj Месяц назад +1

    You might have been thinking of broccoli rabe{also called Rapini} is a veg that a lot of Italians like and it is similar to Collard Greens in that they both have a bitter taste which is why you usually eat them with lemon or garlic and olive oil, which help to balance the bitterness

  • @staceybert1975
    @staceybert1975 Месяц назад +3

    Banana pudding is a religious experience

  • @WJones-jf8mf
    @WJones-jf8mf Месяц назад +1

    This is soul food, collard greens, yams, fried chicken. African American cultural cuisine

  • @JEREMY99218
    @JEREMY99218 Месяц назад

    Grits are most commonly prepared for breakfast with butter and salt/pepper. Some people prepare it with maple syrup/brown sugar or honey/butter or a fruit syrup. Shrimp and grits is served usually for lunch or dinner. The shrimp is cooked with butter and/or oil (sometimes bacon grease), garlic, onion, sometimes bell pepper, and various herbs and spices such as basil, oregano, chili powder. It varies throughout the South.

  • @tgriffin8179
    @tgriffin8179 Месяц назад +2

    You all are fun to watch… remember in your planning to factor in distances…Austin Texas (Terry Black’s BBQ) to Savanah Georgia (this video) is 17 hours /1,129 miles. You may want to focus on one area to avoid spending all your time in transit.

    • @karlsmith2570
      @karlsmith2570 7 дней назад

      Oh, yeah, absolutely factor in the distance between the different places in the US, considering that the US is a huge country in comparison to other countries, especially since we have some states that the entirety of some countries, such as England, could fit inside them 😊

  • @mattbumgardner8770
    @mattbumgardner8770 17 дней назад +1

    Fried Chicken is a popular food throughout the entire Southeast United States.

  • @brandonsimmons1695
    @brandonsimmons1695 Месяц назад +2

    Nothing better than some fried catfish and greens

  • @bobmathis-friedman6742
    @bobmathis-friedman6742 4 дня назад

    Grits are ground hominy, which is a type of white corn.

  • @phaethonprime3790
    @phaethonprime3790 Месяц назад +1

    You guys would absolutely love NY or Philly. - Every food done well that you can think of.

  • @lindah5910
    @lindah5910 Месяц назад +1

    The pickles sounded a lot like "bread and butter" pickles which is a combination sweet and dill or in the middle between a sweet pickle and dill pickle.

  • @FourFish47
    @FourFish47 Месяц назад +1

    I never heard of collards being cooked with lemon. I think it's more traditional to use a little vinegar and they're delicious.

  • @carolynkovacs5412
    @carolynkovacs5412 28 дней назад +1

    Collards are not sour, it is like cabbage, but greener, I put sugar in mind

  • @TheRealdal
    @TheRealdal Месяц назад +16

    Grits are chopped up Hominey which is a type of Maze corn. Hominey is sold in cans also. It’s also the main ingredient in Menudo, Mexican soup.

  • @laynecox3992
    @laynecox3992 Месяц назад +1

    Every southern state is great. Those are known as sweet pickles.

  • @Paul-vj8gr
    @Paul-vj8gr 8 дней назад +1

    They love it hands down 😂😂😂😂🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @bleachedbrother
    @bleachedbrother Месяц назад +15

    They were eating "Country Fried STEAK", sometimes called "Chicken Fried STEAK".
    It's a BEEF steak that's battered and fried like fried chicken.

    • @RogCBrand
      @RogCBrand Месяц назад +3

      I notice a lot of Brits assume if it's breaded and fried like that it must be chicken, if something has chunks in it, like sausage gravy, they assume the chunks are "veg", and a creamy gravy or sauce must be cheese!

    • @SidewaysTA
      @SidewaysTA Месяц назад +1

      No that was "Country Fried CHICKEN", sometimes called "Chicken Fried CHICKEN".
      She clearly says it is chicken and you can clearly see it is chicken when they cut into it.

    • @AzulApe
      @AzulApe 27 дней назад

      @@SidewaysTAno, it was a chicken fried steak. You dunno what you’re talking about.

    • @SidewaysTA
      @SidewaysTA 26 дней назад +1

      @@AzulApe Nope, it was Country Fried Chicken. They LITERALLY DO NOT have Chicken Fried Steak on the menu. You need to learn what chicken looks like versus steak my friend.

    • @AzulApe
      @AzulApe 26 дней назад

      @@SidewaysTA lmao, you are clueless. You dunno cubed steak vs chicken. 🤣

  • @raelv504
    @raelv504 16 дней назад

    Jolly is my favorite channel ever!! Thanks for reacting

  • @tenngirl4trump
    @tenngirl4trump 2 дня назад

    Collared are not supposed to be bitter. I cook mine with bacon drippins, onions and a bit of garlic, salt, and fresh peppercorn pepper.

  • @ScottieRC
    @ScottieRC 28 дней назад +1

    A good southern cook knows that if the collard greens are still bitter, you didn’t do it right. Ducky doesn’t know what he’s talking about. And as a someone who has been to this restaurant, their greens and fried chicken, and cornbread are jokes.

  • @coleensakamoto6844
    @coleensakamoto6844 Месяц назад +1

    When you want great Mexican food, be sure to have it in a "boarder State". California, Texas, Arizona, or New Mexico. The closer you are to the boarder (of Mexico), the better the Mexican good will be.
    I've lived in Nashville, Tennessee for 19 years. Southern comfort food is pretty wonderful. I love Peach Cobbler (served warm is best). Fried pickles are much better than you'll think they are.
    Looking gorward to your travel blogs near the end of the year. Cheers!

  • @Ira88881
    @Ira88881 Месяц назад +1

    In the event I HAD to compare collard greens to another vegetable, it would be spinach.
    And I concur with other comments here that they’re awesome when prepared certain ways.
    In addition, fried ochra is ALWAYS awesome. It has a fairly neutral flavor, and what doesn’t taste great when it’s battered and deep-fried? Hell…
    We even eat bull testicles prepared like that here in the states! (Tenderly sliced, though. Not the COMPLETE ball!)

  • @dibutler9151
    @dibutler9151 11 дней назад +1

    Collards are not bitter or sour if you get young ones and cook them correctly. Those cooked with lemon look terrible to be honest. Grits are dried corn ground up and boiled. They are great if cooked correctly.
    Here's a tip- pronounce it as PUH KHAN instead of PEE KIN.

  • @LadyofFe
    @LadyofFe 13 дней назад

    Vinegar, that might be what they added. My family is from the south, I love greens, collards, mustard, kale.

  • @FUBAR1986
    @FUBAR1986 24 дня назад +1

    You can’t go wrong on a food tour of the states

  • @trudieconroy4167
    @trudieconroy4167 20 дней назад

    Collard greens are best cooked with smoked Turkey leg of ham hocks bacon shot of vinegar yummy! Texture kinda like spinach

  • @bambamnj
    @bambamnj Месяц назад +1

    Grits = ground up corn meal.. just like we have oat meal, but it's made with corn and it has a more gravely like texture. I personally don't really care for grits but if you mix in a lot of butter or something else to give it taste. it's not that bad.

  • @johnspartan5515
    @johnspartan5515 Месяц назад

    I live in North Florida. My wife and I decided to spend a weekend in Savannah to eat at Sweet Potatoes restaurant after watching this episode from Jolly. Totally legit! Added bonus, was staying in a historic hotel on the river downtown. History, beautiful buildings from the 1700s, views, restaurants, river cruises, just a brilliant place to visit. We can't wait to get back! Oh, and I'm NOT a fan of banana pudding, but their's is to die for! Best I've ever had.

  • @mscharlie
    @mscharlie Месяц назад

    everyone cooks their collards differently; in the south they use more vinegar.. i do not put vinegar in mine neither did mom who was from Georgia.. just some salted water, smoked pork hock or smoked neckbone or turkey butt and boil until tender,, add pepper or some bacon fat at the end.. yummmmmm

  • @bsixtwelve9799
    @bsixtwelve9799 Месяц назад

    We do fried chicken well here. You wouldn’t think a single style of preparing chicken would be so versatile, but there are so many meals involving fried chicken you really have to come and see what your favorite is (not to mention the variety of sauces and gravies).

  • @jimmybobsap8729
    @jimmybobsap8729 29 дней назад

    When I make sweet potatoes I use cinnamon, brown sugar and butter, wrap it in aluminum foil with butter to cook too
    and it isn't hard to make a banana pudding lol, not once had any taste different unless someone used too rotten bananas lol
    the sweet potato with pecans and marshmallows easy and classic too

  • @peteK70
    @peteK70 Месяц назад

    That little bottle with the green chillies and vinegar goes on the collards ✌️

  • @devinslaten7006
    @devinslaten7006 Месяц назад

    Collard Greens are usually doused with some vinegar. Its kind of like steamed spinach. and yes acquired taste

  • @davidtcpa1
    @davidtcpa1 Месяц назад +1

    Love me some collards! Cook with a ham hock and sprinkle on some pepper vinegar and you got a meal!

  • @sherryarflin726
    @sherryarflin726 Месяц назад

    I have lived in South Carolina my entire life and wouldn’t dream of moving. You have to visit Savanah Ga. and Charleston, SC. The food is ridiculously good and the people are friendly and welcoming. Not to mention they are beautiful cities steeped in history. We’d love to have you visit.

  • @nateclark2731
    @nateclark2731 Месяц назад +1

    The collards greens aren't supposed to be sour. I cook mine with smoked turkey and chicken broth. More often than not collard greens are delicious, it depends on who makes them. Most black people (including me) cook them with smoked pork or turkey. I like mine a little spicy so I put crushed red pepper in them.

  • @kevinharlan3711
    @kevinharlan3711 Месяц назад

    There was no mention of it in the video, but the left of Josh was a narrow bottle of pepper sauce. My favorite brand is Trappey’s. I use it on a LOT of things, but especially on collrd greens and spinach. MMM MMM GOOD! 🇺🇸

  • @tgatewood13
    @tgatewood13 Месяц назад

    Savannah, GA is my home town and Sweet Potatoes has amazing food. Also so much to see in Savannah, very historical and the food is so good.

  • @LadyofFe
    @LadyofFe 13 дней назад

    Sounds like bread and butter pickles. You can get them with or without hot peppers.

  • @MsKenijo
    @MsKenijo Месяц назад

    Nothing like a good fish fry - homemade biscuits, cheese grits, and fried catfish caught that very day - nothing better!

  • @brianbrooks-in5yy
    @brianbrooks-in5yy Месяц назад

    The South or/and the South East where I live has the nicest people and the best food in America.

  • @nolame100
    @nolame100 Месяц назад

    Collard greens are delicous when cooked well, and you have to add a pepper sauce!

  • @SarahBroad-kw7fj
    @SarahBroad-kw7fj Месяц назад

    Both the southern states and Midwestern states love multi generational, ma and pa restaurants some restaurants are over 100 years old and still delicious. 🤤 ❤ I love sweet potato casserole and butternut squash and dill pickles yummy. Always ask the local people where to go for food and for shopping and stuff.

  • @tvdroid22
    @tvdroid22 Месяц назад

    We do our collards with bacon, not lemon. Grits are ground hominy corn. Our local catfish house makes biscuits so good they'll make a puppy pull a freight train.

  • @braddaves242
    @braddaves242 26 дней назад

    The spices put in the breading is what makes it taste so good

  • @SAM-dg3vd
    @SAM-dg3vd 17 дней назад

    I didn't like collards growing up because the traditional onion, ham hock, vinegar style was too sour for me: we eat them on New Year's Day along with black eyed peas for money and luck in the coming year, it I could only choke down a spoonful of the greens part. No wonder I was broke as a young adult 🤣 Then I went to a potluck where someone had stewed them with tomatoes, garlic, brown sugar, and a little kick of cayenne, and fell in love with them! Zero fat, only a little sugar, and all those nutrients. Wow!

  • @russellfisher2853
    @russellfisher2853 22 дня назад

    Guys There. Are A. Lot of these In The North also.
    If you go just to the South you're really missing out on a lot of great food. And service.

  • @jeffreyjacobs390
    @jeffreyjacobs390 Месяц назад

    Collards are made several ways in the south ... BACON Grease, Salt & Pepper, boiled in water - drained and served with or without sauces of different styles. GREAT!

    • @tvc1848
      @tvc1848 Месяц назад +1

      That’s the way I cook collards.
      I am in my 60s and have never heard of lemons in collard greens but to each his own.

  • @user-ke3ur5ej8t
    @user-ke3ur5ej8t 26 дней назад

    That's Josh Carrot and he can speak fluent Korean and married to a Korean who grew up in the different part of the world like USA, Spain and France. She's a chef and good cook. Please also subscribed to Josh other RUclips channel Korean englishman and he also with Olly

  • @miterlassiter
    @miterlassiter Месяц назад

    Yes go to Savannah! I use to live there and Sweet Potato’s is great. Savannah has sooo many amazing restaurants. Plus there’s also a lot to see and do.

  • @JDoors
    @JDoors 28 дней назад

    Myth: Waitstaff are friendly because they are hoping to get larger tips. Americans are friendly by nature. I know a lot of people from other countries don't understand how this is possible, and are even skeptical, often claiming we're being fake, but, no, we're being friendly. Unfriendly service is the outlier, in my opinion. Why are you in customer service if you don't enjoy serving customers? I was in customer service and I loved my job, my customers, and my fellow employees, why wouldn't I be happy? One customer, he was from a European country (which shall go unspecified) yelled at me, "WHY ARE YOU ALWAYS SMILING!?" When the shock of the direct "accusation" wore off I simply repeated what I just said, it's a great job and so are my customers and my fellow employees, and, to cap it all off, I'm just a happy guy!

  • @sissybushnell7959
    @sissybushnell7959 Месяц назад

    Collard greens are delicious if cooked correctly. I don’t add lemon but will add hot sauce

  • @MrNakedweasel
    @MrNakedweasel Месяц назад

    Sweet potatoes are very common in Texas, and you'll be able to find that with your BBQ.

  • @misscdy
    @misscdy Месяц назад +3

    Yummy 😋

  • @carlajenkins1990
    @carlajenkins1990 Месяц назад

    Try brined pork chops with sweet potatoes. My personal favorite. Thanks for straightening out my Fish and Chips. I have leveled up!

  • @tinahairston6383
    @tinahairston6383 Месяц назад +1

    NOOOOO!!! Collard greens are NOT cooked with lemon and should not be bitter or sour. They do have a bite to them but the best collards are made with a ham hock, bacon or a piece of ham cooked with it. Some add a splash of vinegar or red pepper flakes along with the salt and pepper but if they were made properly I know you'd actually like them.
    Catfish is a mild flavor so it tastes what you season it with and it's fabulous!

  • @the-superbike-squad
    @the-superbike-squad Месяц назад

    Southern soul food is so good.

  • @tddnenc
    @tddnenc 21 день назад

    collards with some fat back is fing amazing then add some vinegar at the end when u eat OMG

  • @infernalweasal5670
    @infernalweasal5670 28 дней назад

    Try the Banana Puddin'! And correct there is no "G" on the end in the South

  • @tigerjonn
    @tigerjonn 29 дней назад

    Almost every server ive ever met prefers the tipping method over getting a good hourly wage... Cause the tipping depends on the service your provide and if you are a great server, you have no reason to take $20/hr when tips can be upwards to $50/hr... in some cases even higher depending on the quality of the restuaraunt