@Anonymous25012 what do you mean? You want the video of americans saying that or you want to know where hamburgers are actually from? If its the latter, hamburg in Germany.
@@mannygenetics374The majority of tea drinkers in the UK add milk and there is strong opinion on whether milk goes in first or last. Personally, I prefer last
My sister drinks black tea because she's vegan, i drink it with milk, just depends how you like it, but i think most drink with milk. Mince pies you can have cold or heated up either as it is or with cream or ice cream, usually at Christmas 😊👍
Defo. We've all been consuming American TV, movies and music our whole lives so it makes sense. Even most Brits sing in a more American accent than they do british, Elton John being a very obvs example. Generally speaking tho, unless you are a stand up comedian, we all suck at doing "proper" regional accents. I'm sure it's the same in the US as the UK where most people can do a good rendition of an accent but would prob not fool any locals. I find in general Americans struggle with the way we drop our T's, and brits struggle with that "a" sound in words like, path, last, half, etc. It's often close but never quite right.
Look at every English actor that plays an American....... The Americans are shocked that they are English. Hugh Laurie in house and that fella from homeland who also played winters in band of brothers. Half the car off hand if brothers was nearly English....... Ok maybe not half but at least five.
I have no idea why watching 3 american blokes drinking tea and dunking biscuits is so entertaining but it is. We built an empire on these things 😂 👍 suet....it's pronounced su..it. Its winter food to keep you warm in our cold weather.
From being three all American jocks, to resembling three old British geezers putting the world to rights in the time it takes to grab a cuppa and casually dunking a digestive biscuit was most impressive. You've arrived lads 🫖👌
Giving your friends black tea with no milk or sugar is mad 😮, hardly anyone in Britain drinks it that way so you’re not really giving them the “British” experience doing it that way
He did WHAT? Tea without milk you say! Someone takeaway his honorary British passport. It’s just not cricket. I have skimmed milk in mine and it has to be strong, but no milk at all. Dirty, simply dirty. 🤢🤮🤭🤭😂🤣😂🤣😂👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🫶🏻🫶🏻🫶🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
Drinking tea without milk is more the continental European way. Before the brew-it-in-the-cup method took over almost completely in the interests of speed and conveience,it was brewed in a teapot,remembering to warm the pot before use and keep it warm inside a tea cosy. My dad and stepmum still did it that way throughout the 80s,so there'd always be tea and biscuits or cake ready for us when we arrived home from school/college/work,plus a cat or two waiting to jump on your lap. Chinese green tea is served in teapots and drunk neat,without milk or sugar.
Nahhhhhhh I’m not having itttttttt. Tea... with no milk? What you made was tea flavoured hot water. No milk = not a British cup of tea. I demand a retake!! 😂
OMG you guys start on the top. But to myself personally. You can’t eat anything with chocolate. I don’t have milk or sugar in my coffee, which good grief makes the coffee better. With Tea, well anything goes. Good Look 👀 lads. Enjoy. Oh but one thing, I forgot too mention. My coffee is black no sugar. My tea is white and no sugar. Good luck lads. 😂😂😂😂❤❤❤
PS gentlemen. Depending on the biscuit your dipping, if you dip too long it’s end up at the bottom of your biscuit. You need too know the best biscuit too dip. Hobnobs. Top dipping biscuits of all time. Some biscuits you kinda get a very quick , dip before it’s in the bottom of your mug. So it’ll take research too your personal dipping biscuits. Lads, it’s an English staple. Too find your personal dipping biscuit. HaHaHa. Have fun Boys. ❤️🇬🇧❤️🙏🇬🇧🇬🇧🇺🇸
from what i've seen he seems to only mention stuff he's actually been in direct contact at some point, while others rely on google and other people's experiences.
It's amazing how Americans struggle with beans on toast .... make some toast, butter it, put it on a plate, pour hot beans on it, eat it with a knife and fork ! .... how difficult can it be !
Melting the Cheese on the Beans on Toast makes it a little different. British actors who do American Accents: 1 Tom Holland. 2 Millie Bobby Brown. ...3 Hugh Laurie. ..4 Idris Elba. ... 5 Andrew Lincoln. ... 6 Kate Winslet. ... 7 Henry Cavill. ... Do not get me started on Aussies who do American Accents, you can look those up yourself.
Mincemeat was originally made with meat in it during the Tudor /Elizabethan (medieval times). Today it is fruit and spices with maybe some Brandy thrown in.
I’m a Yorkshire man and I never drink black tea, always need a slight drop of milk to soften the flavour. Beans on toast is usually something we have as a breakfast or lunch snack, eaten with a knife and fork. If you’re wanting to try Crisps get hold of a brand called Seabrook, also Yorkshire made and have loads of flavours. Finally beers, another Yorkshire brand to try is Timothy Taylor, fantastic beers to have. Great steam and much respect from the UK 👍🏻
You should get Stefan and Arturo to try tea with milk and sugar in it, like us Brits. Not so sure on eating the beans on toast without a knife and fork.
Absolutely... Tea should have milk and sugar. YES! Why are they eating 'beans on toast' with NO knife and fork? - Although I think we ALL know that American's can't use them properly and they would just get roasted in the comments about their lack of ability. That's the real reason Joel didn't provide any... 😅 😂 🤣
😊 I drink Yorkshire Tea black - no milk and no sugar. Crisps flavours: I cannot abide prawn cocktail but love _roast_chicken_ crisps, also salt_'n' _vinegar_crisps, but_not_ cheese and onion though !!😊 Always these types of taste videos come into view on my screen when it's a little too early (it late !) to eat a meal - or maybe that's just me ?! 😊 Re beans on toast - In don't like butter so have 'Flora' on my toast / sandwiches. ❤️🏴😊🇺🇸❤
The only difference in how we have our tea is sugar or no sugar (or sweetener). At least 90% of us have milk. Usually if you're drinking tea without milk it wouldn't be breakfast, it would be a flavoured tea etc.
I loved watching 3 American guys drinking a cup of tea, dunking biscuits and chatting. This is what a cuppa is about. It’s about taking a moment to relax/gather yourself/chat. That’s why some like to do it multiple times a day.
Walkers is way older than Lays. Walkers were bought out by Frito lay a few years ago during the recession in the uk. They also own Lays. When you wash eggs, Americans remember the shell is porous so whatever the eggs are washed in goes into the egg. In the uk, our accent changes every five miles or so.
Nah, the original Fritos company in the states began in the 1930s, whilst Walkers is technically a much older company, originally formed in the 1880s as a butcher's shop, they didn't start producing crisps until after the end of the war in 1945. Walkers was bought by the Standard company from the US in the 70s and was sold on a couple of times before Frito-Lays(owned by PepsiCo) eventually bought them out in the late 90s, keeping the name for the UK market due to it's brand recognition here.
@@Obi-Jactually,the reason they kept lays instead of using the name walkers internationally is because some people have problems saying walkers due to the difficult letters it contains 🤦
Good video, i have not had beans on toast for years, its just a quick easy snack, i like the curry or bbq beans, but i used to add either HP sauce or Worcestershire sauce to normal beans. I can't drink tea without milk! Apple pie is originally from England it dates back to the 14th century. I have always thought the Brits do a better American accent than Americans trying to do a British accent! most Americans end up sounding like Dick Van Dyke lol. There are quite a few British actors who have played American roles. Walkers crisps were made in Leicester England in the 1940s by Henry Walker.
❤😊 I'm glad you specified "the majority" re tea with milk and sugar because, like Joel, (as a minority tea-drinker, I guess)I drink Yorkshire Tea _without_ milk _or_ sugar. 😊❤ I do like mincepies but am not "allowed" to have many, nor unfortunately, rich fruit cakes, or dry roast peanuts, or bananas (etc) due to the fact foods which contain potassium are 'bad for my kidneys' 😢 'suet' (pronounced "sue-et"!) is the 'hard fat' that Joel was referring to in mincepies (& it's in 'spotted dick', too !!) "Round Two" ... I can't wait to find out what Joel has in store ...Oooh "beans on toast" ...?!! Joel (good luck everyone .. fingers crossed !!) Please _don't_ diss our beans on toast by saying "don't expect too much" 😮!!!!
@@allow-itman9749you will find black tea refers to the tea itself, the blend of different types tea in the tea bag. You have tea leafs for flavour & colour. So you can have breakfast tea, earl grey, Darjeeling Tea, there are lots of different types. How you drink it is upto you. 👍🏻👍🏻😉😉🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
I'm British, but I lived in America for a year. I went to school in America from 1990 to 1991. Everyone loved my accent. I had a great time there. I liked the food too. The food I remember the most was Dairy Queen (blizzards and breezes), tatter tots, Cool Whip, pumpkin pie, sweet potato and marshmallow casserole at Thanksgiving, bacon and maple syrup, an aubergine (eggplant) dish I ate in New York, burritos, taffy and popcorn balls. So healthy, mmmmmmm. I gained 2 stone.
The suet in a mince pie is pronounced sue-ett. I'm British but not a tea lover. I have to really be in the mood. My dad made the best tea....he used the same pot for decades, loose tea, not bags....I dont think he ever made a cup of tea with a tea bag, straight into the cup.....I'd recommend you investing in a tea pot if you like tea. It's next level
I’m a Brit living in London and have 4 son and it amuses me seeing you 3 trying your tea and biscuits 😂 my boys are 26,24 ,22 and 12 and love their tea and biscuits and snacks. I only eat warm Mince pies with cold cream
A really good thing for you to check out is how many of your favourite actors are actually British doing an American accent, the one that comes to mind first is House, very popular in America and they are so surprised to find out the star of show is English. Same thing for bands and groups that Americans assume are American but are actually British, Led Zepplin, Black Sabbath etc. Interesting to react to. 😁🇬🇧
Joel,when prawn cocktail crisps first came out a lad @ work called them fanny flavoured crisps.i didn't know what he was talking about till I bought some & tried them.lol.
If there’s anyone from the uk in the comments can yous remember years ago like back in the 90s early noughties when salt and vinegar walkers were in the blue bag and cheese and onion were in the green bags
FYI: Smiths Crisps actually first introduced the separate blue bag of salt to the UK in the 1920's... They were called 'Salt & Shake' and they have been reintroduced periodically since then. I remember them being a 'big thing' in the 1970's. 😂
Suet is pronounced sue-et, it's animal fats used to make the pastry. You can also get vegetable suet for vegetarians and its called mince meat pies because it used to actually contain real meat.
Another good easy meal would be a chip (french-fry) butty. A sandwich, buttered bread with a chip filling. You can add catchup or even better brown (HP) sauce. Although remember US bread is cake here because of the sugar content, it's just wrong, so you'd have to find real bread.
TOAST.....CRISPY TOAST, what your eating looks like soggy un toasted bread, just not the same.....CRISPY. AHHHHHH you left the toast to go soggy, AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH xxx
Yes... when "Thunderbirds" first came to our small screens way back in 1965, Americans thought it was made in the U.S. because the marionettes' characters had American voices (a few were actually American but the rest were mainly English with a few Aussies thrown in). And also because of the fantastic quality of the production. It was very slick and could have been mistaken for a U.S. made show. "Thunderbirds" is a landmark of British TV history. Sidebar..... I find a cup with a white interior makes the beverage more appetizing..... personal view.
I only eat mince pies Christmas warm with single or double cream I actually eat to many in December 😀 beans on toast with cheese my family call cheese beanos enjoyed you video thanks for sharing much love MoMo in uk xx🇬🇧 xx
The idea that Americans do British accents better than British people do American accents is incredible. How many American actors are as convincing as Hugh Laurie, Matthew Rhys, Christian Bale, Idris Elba, Tom Holland, Daniel Day Lewis, Andrew Lincoln etc?
I'm Northern Irish (technically British, but not a Briton), and find it easier to maintain an American accent (I've fooled American voice actors with it) than a southern English one. The major reason is the rhoticity (pronouncing R no matter where it is in the word). Very few American actors nail authentic British accents because they are extremely regional. You often end up with what I call the Doubtfire Effect, where like Mrs. Doubtfire, the accent takes a tour of the British Isles.
I was brought up to have beans on toast without cheese and using a knife and fork. The reason you don't use an electric kettle in US is because our electric has double the power therefore you have to wait so long for it to boil.
We actually have outlets in the US with different voltages. In the living room ,bedrooms and bathrooms ,the outlets are 110 volts, in laundry room, the outlets are 240 volts for the washing machine and clothe dyer and in the kitchen, there are both 110 and 240 volts, the 110volts are for coffee makers, toasters and the 240 volts are electric ranges.
When Americans try to do a British accent, it’s always one from the victorian era. I’m Scottish, and I see Americans as our little cousins…🤣🤷🏻♂️🏴
I used to love eating beans on toast for dinner when I was a child. Never tried it with cheese on top though. Prawn cocktail flavour, I think is more of a ketchup and mayo mix which is often served with prawns (shrimp) in England and it’s called Marie Rose sauce 😋😋😋😋
Love the channel, fun to watch. On the accent thing, it seems that Americans think if London as the British accent, but accents change over here every 10-15 miles.
Warm the mince pies...10 - 15s in a microwave will do. Have them with cream (whipped or double just poured on) or a nice vanilla ice cream or custard (creme anglais)
Shut up, shut up. I want a nice home made mince pie with an apple pie warmed up with ice-cream. 😡 Now I can’t stop thinking about. 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬 why did you mention it. Damn you! 🥺😫😭😭 🤣😂🤣😂
With the tea consumption, you're right, it's mad. I genuinely think I have an addiction, I have maybe 6 cups a day 😭😭 And you're right with beans on toast, the times I have beans on toast are because sometimes I simply cannot be bothered to cook😂 or because I need a quick easy meal. Great video! Very interesting to see your reactions...Also, my meal deal is a pasta pot, fruit pot and a dr pepper 👌🏼
It depends on how much beans you put on. If you can fold it over, then using your hands can be forgiven. If it's a full fry-up though, then definitely knife and fork.
As for imitating accents - even among professionals, British actors seem to do a better job at putting on an American accent than vice versa. Meryl Streep aside, I can't think of an American actor who played a British role and nailed the accent. Conversely, many British actors have played American roles and have flawlessly switched to an American accent.
Also, mince pies don't contain suet, anymore. They are either vegetarian or vegan! It is a tradition for children to leave out a mince pie for Santa on Xmas eve and a carrot for Rudolph!
Sorry Joel most brits drink tea with Milk and may more than half add sugar, so don't take Joel's word for it lads, and there are certain things you never dunk in your TEA like Mince Pies or even Jaffa Cakes 😱 oh and Beans on Toast will never ever taste like Beans on Toast over here as Toast in the US tastes to sweet (Been there done it 🤮) as it has too much Sugar in it, all bread in the US is classed as a Cake product over in Europe. And boys we don't eat Beans On Toast like Pizza lolol especially not with cheese on top unless it's a special occasion. You use a Knife and Fork lol but Mericans don't know how Knife And Forks work lol 😉
The after taste not liked in the mince pies is caused by the candied mixed peel. Have been making my own mincemeat minus the peel for years. Tastes sooo much better. We tend to eat mince pies mainly during the festive season. You can find them everywhere in the UK then. 😊
10 cups is normal. Nearly everyone has milk. Alot have sugar. Traditionally mince pies are MEAT LOL Minced meat literally means meat thats been minced. They then add other stuff.
@@iluvbluify Look up Gervase Markham's recipe, dating from 1615. To make minceed pyes Take a neats tounge parboyle it and mince it very small put to it a pound of beefe suit and 2 pound of reasons of the son stoned and minceed very small a quaarter of a pound of sugar the peal 2 lemmons cut small a little cloves & mace and nutmeg a quarter of clarret a little salt mix all this together with 6 or 8 pipings smally shred and two pouund of currants or as many as you see feet for your past take a pound and quarter of flower a pound and a half of butter and put it into water and seet it on the fire & let it boyle make the past & put in half a pound of lofe sugar finely beaten & mix it in the flower put in the yolks of 4 eggs & the whites of 2 so worke it up and as you fill them put in canded orange & green sittorn finely cut such as you eate hot when they come out of the oven put in sume butter & white wine A "neats tounge" is a calf's tongue.
A remarkable survival of the old style of English mince pie is to be found at Pézenas, in the south of France. The recipe was leaked by Sir Robert Clive's Indian cook in the 18th century: "les petits pâtés de Pézenas". It contains sugar, lemon peel and mutton. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petit_p%C3%A2t%C3%A9_de_P%C3%A9zenas
tea, you usually boil kettle, put 2 to 4 tea bags in tea pot add boiled water from kettle, place tea pot on cooker ring and simmer until you get you perfered strength of tea flavour. You can add milk and sugar to your tea if you want, everyone makes it different. mince pies are usually eaten around Christmas time. you can eat them cold or warm with ice cream and fresh cream
It was an enjoyable watch with you three guys. I am with you 100%, I don't need mince pies in my life. They are overrated and are part of the Christmas madness. The biscuits you tried are excellent. I personally like Yorkshire tea with a small dash of milk and two sugars (like Stefan). I agree with Arturo that Prawn Cocktail are fire! Joel did good with the beans/cheese on toast. I make my toast much darker and it needs to be eaten piping hot for the best enjoyment. What cheese did you use?
You should get them to try other British crisps, chocolate and biscuits, if you can get them, Fox's range of biscuits! proper UK Cadbury chocolate bars like double decker, flake, wispa, boost, crunchie, caramel etc. Hotel Chocolat, Thorntons chocolates, then also bars like mint aero, lion bars etc, Walkers sensations and max strong range of crisps, Mccoys crisps, also frazzles, wotsits and niknaks.
Fun fact: they stopped producing the Scampi and Lemon flavour NikNaks for a short while because nobody wanted to work that production line at the factory because of the fishy smell. They were brought back by public demand but they had to change to flavour formula so they weren't as stinky.
You three are funny, love how you laugh at food etc, we have a local shop that stocks American sweets and the kids love them though they are way more expensive. You are very humble and respectable .
LOL - fun fact - the earliest known recipe for Apple Pie comes from England. It is most definitely NOT American 😊
I've seen americans call pizza and hamburgers american food too 😅
@@AndeePandeeSource for the Hamburger one if you have it please, and not the Hamburg Steak, since that was made by an American
@Anonymous25012 what do you mean? You want the video of americans saying that or you want to know where hamburgers are actually from?
If its the latter, hamburg in Germany.
hamburgers come from the cityof hamburg, germany ahah@@Anonymous25012
Donuts and baseball also came from the UK 😂
Arturo “what’s the norm with or without milk”
Joel: there is no norm
WRONG!! I’m British from England and the norm is WITH MILK!!
You are wrong sir. I am sorry to say but the norm is just black tea. milk and sugar are just extra's
@@mannygenetics374 must be regional mate bc everywhere where I am from takes milk no sugar
@@mannygenetics374The majority of tea drinkers in the UK add milk and there is strong opinion on whether milk goes in first or last. Personally, I prefer last
Totaly agree. !😅
My sister drinks black tea because she's vegan, i drink it with milk, just depends how you like it, but i think most drink with milk. Mince pies you can have cold or heated up either as it is or with cream or ice cream, usually at Christmas 😊👍
Brits do a way better American accent than the other way around. Joel you have grown in confidence over the years, happy to see it
His first beans on toast attempt was probably the funniest thing I saw that year.
Defo. We've all been consuming American TV, movies and music our whole lives so it makes sense. Even most Brits sing in a more American accent than they do british, Elton John being a very obvs example. Generally speaking tho, unless you are a stand up comedian, we all suck at doing "proper" regional accents. I'm sure it's the same in the US as the UK where most people can do a good rendition of an accent but would prob not fool any locals. I find in general Americans struggle with the way we drop our T's, and brits struggle with that "a" sound in words like, path, last, half, etc. It's often close but never quite right.
It was bad
Look at every English actor that plays an American....... The Americans are shocked that they are English. Hugh Laurie in house and that fella from homeland who also played winters in band of brothers. Half the car off hand if brothers was nearly English....... Ok maybe not half but at least five.
Check out Renee Zellwegger in Bridget Jones's Diary and Gwyneth Paltrow in Sliding Doors, both do excellent English accents.
Hope you introduce them to the idea of putting crisps in a sandwich 👍
Elite
Aww these boys are so sweet! They're respectful , it's so nice there's no attitude 💝
I have no idea why watching 3 american blokes drinking tea and dunking biscuits is so entertaining but it is. We built an empire on these things 😂 👍 suet....it's pronounced su..it. Its winter food to keep you warm in our cold weather.
Had to laugh, swate
From being three all American jocks, to resembling three old British geezers putting the world to rights in the time it takes to grab a cuppa and casually dunking a digestive biscuit was most impressive. You've arrived lads 🫖👌
Giving your friends black tea with no milk or sugar is mad 😮, hardly anyone in Britain drinks it that way so you’re not really giving them the “British” experience doing it that way
He did WHAT? Tea without milk you say! Someone takeaway his honorary British passport. It’s just not cricket. I have skimmed milk in mine and it has to be strong, but no milk at all. Dirty, simply dirty. 🤢🤮🤭🤭😂🤣😂🤣😂👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🫶🏻🫶🏻🫶🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
@@TeamGB-Divingit has to be semi-skimmed milk, skimmed milk is just water, you might ad well just put a slush of cold water in your cup of teas lol
Drinking tea without milk is more the continental European way. Before the brew-it-in-the-cup method took over almost completely in the interests of speed and conveience,it was brewed in a teapot,remembering to warm the pot before use and keep it warm inside a tea cosy. My dad and stepmum still did it that way throughout the 80s,so there'd always be tea and biscuits or cake ready for us when we arrived home from school/college/work,plus a cat or two waiting to jump on your lap. Chinese green tea is served in teapots and drunk neat,without milk or sugar.
Nahhhhhhh I’m not having itttttttt. Tea... with no milk? What you made was tea flavoured hot water. No milk = not a British cup of tea. I demand a retake!! 😂
I drink my tea black I used to drink it with milk and sugar but over time cut them out
Apple pie is actually a British invention and then went over to America.
Like baseball.
@@tonyreid8244 Rounders. You didn’t have apples even until we brought them over.
OMG you guys start on the top. But to myself personally. You can’t eat anything with chocolate. I don’t have milk or sugar in my coffee, which good grief makes the coffee better. With Tea, well anything goes. Good Look 👀 lads. Enjoy. Oh but one thing, I forgot too mention. My coffee is black no sugar. My tea is white and no sugar. Good luck lads. 😂😂😂😂❤❤❤
PS gentlemen. Depending on the biscuit your dipping, if you dip too long it’s end up at the bottom of your biscuit. You need too know the best biscuit too dip. Hobnobs. Top dipping biscuits of all time. Some biscuits you kinda get a very quick , dip before it’s in the bottom of your mug. So it’ll take research too your personal dipping biscuits. Lads, it’s an English staple. Too find your personal dipping biscuit. HaHaHa. Have fun Boys. ❤️🇬🇧❤️🙏🇬🇧🇬🇧🇺🇸
Most Brits have milk in their tea. Why are you all eating the chocolate digestives upside down ? 😂
Beans on toast is eaten with a knife and fork. Toast the bread well and it’s eaten with or without grated cheese. I prefer milk in tea with no sugar.
Beans on toast with a knife and fork? That's why you have fingers!
as a british person, we are very judgemental of how tea is made. you are right lol. i love mine with milk! :D
milk, 2 sugars is my perfect cuppa
@@liamloxley1222 why does having sugar in tea trigger you so much 🤣
@@liamloxley1222 Saying "Stupidly" introduced shows you are triggered about it.
@@liamloxley1222 loving the taste of your tears right now
@@liamloxley1222 Agreed. Sugar just ruins the taste of tea and overpowers it.
Mince pies warmed in the oven and served with a dollop of thick cream is my idea of heaven. One of the things i look forward to at Christmas.
I like mine with custard, it tones that strong tangy tastes down
Yes this is the one
Or some ice cream👍🏽
As a brit, i'm actually so happy when I watch these guys because most of the facts he says are pretty spot on compared to other people...
from what i've seen he seems to only mention stuff he's actually been in direct contact at some point, while others rely on google and other people's experiences.
Beans on toast is a comfort dish. It's also popular with students. Also, try eating it with a knife a fork next time!!
It's amazing how Americans struggle with beans on toast .... make some toast, butter it, put it on a plate, pour hot beans on it, eat it with a knife and fork ! .... how difficult can it be !
@@markthomas2577 in America even the cheese has to have cheese on it
hmm, never heard about it but I should try it!!
Melting the Cheese on the Beans on Toast makes it a little different. British actors who do American Accents: 1 Tom Holland. 2 Millie Bobby Brown. ...3 Hugh Laurie. ..4 Idris Elba. ...
5 Andrew Lincoln. ... 6 Kate Winslet. ... 7 Henry Cavill. ... Do not get me started on Aussies who do American Accents, you can look those up yourself.
Freddie Highmore.
Another is Christian Bale
The only actor I have seen do a good British accent who is American is Oscar Isacc
Hugh Laurie as the doctor, but I've never seen it.
Why has my earlier comment disappeared?
Mincemeat was originally made with meat in it during the Tudor /Elizabethan (medieval times).
Today it is fruit and spices with maybe some Brandy thrown in.
Indeed, 'mince' actually means to cut or slice something up, It doesn't have to mean 'meat'
@@FreethoughtsOnlineI know that but as how "mince" sounds I like to think someone mixed stuff together
Almost everyone has milk in their tea even if its just a drop, herbal tea you have black :)
I’m a Yorkshire man and I never drink black tea, always need a slight drop of milk to soften the flavour.
Beans on toast is usually something we have as a breakfast or lunch snack, eaten with a knife and fork.
If you’re wanting to try Crisps get hold of a brand called Seabrook, also Yorkshire made and have loads of flavours.
Finally beers, another Yorkshire brand to try is Timothy Taylor, fantastic beers to have.
Great steam and much respect from the UK 👍🏻
Seabrooks ok but i dont think anything will ever top walkers or mcoys
You should get Stefan and Arturo to try tea with milk and sugar in it, like us Brits. Not so sure on eating the beans on toast without a knife and fork.
Absolutely... Tea should have milk and sugar. YES! Why are they eating 'beans on toast' with NO knife and fork? - Although I think we ALL know that American's can't use them properly and they would just get roasted in the comments about their lack of ability. That's the real reason Joel didn't provide any... 😅 😂 🤣
Americans don't usually use a knife properly anyway and there is nothing wrong with not using cutlery lol
😊 I drink Yorkshire Tea black - no milk and no sugar.
Crisps flavours: I cannot abide prawn cocktail but love _roast_chicken_ crisps, also salt_'n' _vinegar_crisps, but_not_ cheese and onion though !!😊
Always these types of taste videos come into view on my screen when it's a little too early (it late !) to eat a meal - or maybe that's just me ?! 😊 Re beans on toast - In don't like butter so have 'Flora' on my toast / sandwiches. ❤️🏴😊🇺🇸❤
Haha. I was thinking this. As soon as I saw them eating it without a knife a fork, all I could think was "barbarians..."
😅🤣@@stewedfishproductions7959
It’s very endearing to see you gents sample English brevity and humour 😊
The only difference in how we have our tea is sugar or no sugar (or sweetener). At least 90% of us have milk. Usually if you're drinking tea without milk it wouldn't be breakfast, it would be a flavoured tea etc.
99% I'd say. I mean, I don't think I've ever known anyone British who drinks their tea black.
I drink tea without milk, done it for years
@@DavidShinn-g9o you're a danger to society 😂
I loved watching 3 American guys drinking a cup of tea, dunking biscuits and chatting. This is what a cuppa is about. It’s about taking a moment to relax/gather yourself/chat. That’s why some like to do it multiple times a day.
Walkers is way older than Lays. Walkers were bought out by Frito lay a few years ago during the recession in the uk. They also own Lays. When you wash eggs, Americans remember the shell is porous so whatever the eggs are washed in goes into the egg. In the uk, our accent changes every five miles or so.
Nah, the original Fritos company in the states began in the 1930s, whilst Walkers is technically a much older company, originally formed in the 1880s as a butcher's shop, they didn't start producing crisps until after the end of the war in 1945. Walkers was bought by the Standard company from the US in the 70s and was sold on a couple of times before Frito-Lays(owned by PepsiCo) eventually bought them out in the late 90s, keeping the name for the UK market due to it's brand recognition here.
@@Obi-Jactually,the reason they kept lays instead of using the name walkers internationally is because some people have problems saying walkers due to the difficult letters it contains 🤦
@@Trebor74 Not to mention Worcestershire sauce flavour.
Lays is actually older than walkers. I thought the same as you and checked a while ago, which surprised me. Lays in part of pepsi co.
I love how JP looks real proud when his lovely friends like something you like x
Beans on toast …KNIFE AND FORK !!!!!!!!
You guys are fabulous. You’ve grown in confidence and it’s lovely listening to you all.
Good video, i have not had beans on toast for years, its just a quick easy snack, i like the curry or bbq beans, but i used to add either HP sauce or Worcestershire sauce to normal beans. I can't drink tea without milk! Apple pie is originally from England it dates back to the 14th century. I have always thought the Brits do a better American accent than Americans trying to do a British accent! most Americans end up sounding like Dick Van Dyke lol. There are quite a few British actors who have played American roles.
Walkers crisps were made in Leicester England in the 1940s by Henry Walker.
I was a trucker in UK n I delivered Walkers to the depot in Leicester lol
I live in Leicester and have worked in the walkers factory
Bryce Hall, Sneako and Light Cenat
ALWAYS milk and sugar with tea in the UK for the majority.
❤😊 I'm glad you specified "the majority" re tea with milk and sugar because, like Joel, (as a minority tea-drinker, I guess)I drink Yorkshire Tea _without_ milk _or_ sugar. 😊❤
I do like mincepies but am not "allowed" to have many, nor unfortunately, rich fruit cakes, or dry roast peanuts, or bananas (etc) due to the fact foods which contain potassium are 'bad for my kidneys' 😢 'suet' (pronounced "sue-et"!) is the 'hard fat' that Joel was referring to in mincepies (& it's in 'spotted dick', too !!)
"Round Two" ... I can't wait to find out what Joel has in store
...Oooh "beans on toast" ...?!! Joel (good luck everyone .. fingers crossed !!) Please _don't_ diss our beans on toast by saying "don't expect too much" 😮!!!!
❤I'm hungry for beans on toast now !❤
A cup is FAR better without sugar .
The only difference in tea is either with sugar or without! And yes we always use milk (with black english tea)
Then it's not a black tea if you're using milk silly
@@allow-itman9749you will find black tea refers to the tea itself, the blend of different types tea in the tea bag. You have tea leafs for flavour & colour. So you can have breakfast tea, earl grey, Darjeeling Tea, there are lots of different types. How you drink it is upto you. 👍🏻👍🏻😉😉🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
Yorkshire tea for me, without milk or sugar
@@paulski2004 I was with you at Yorkshire tea, then the second part was unreadable. 🤣😂🤣😂
We eat our beans on toast with a knife and fork not our hands gents. Never forget the butter.
Not me, just pick it up
I'm British, but I lived in America for a year. I went to school in America from 1990 to 1991. Everyone loved my accent. I had a great time there. I liked the food too. The food I remember the most was Dairy Queen (blizzards and breezes), tatter tots, Cool Whip, pumpkin pie, sweet potato and marshmallow casserole at Thanksgiving, bacon and maple syrup, an aubergine (eggplant) dish I ate in New York, burritos, taffy and popcorn balls. So healthy, mmmmmmm. I gained 2 stone.
The suet in a mince pie is pronounced sue-ett.
I'm British but not a tea lover. I have to really be in the mood. My dad made the best tea....he used the same pot for decades, loose tea, not bags....I dont think he ever made a cup of tea with a tea bag, straight into the cup.....I'd recommend you investing in a tea pot if you like tea. It's next level
Everyone has milk in their tea I drink around 10- 15 cups a day x
We use a knife and fork for beans on toast!
I’m a Brit living in London and have 4 son and it amuses me seeing you 3 trying your tea and biscuits 😂 my boys are 26,24 ,22 and 12 and love their tea and biscuits and snacks. I only eat warm
Mince pies with cold cream
I love you guys and I love the slurping noises, that's proper British tea drinking 😂❤
I'm in York drinking a cup of Yorkshire tea while watching this!
Beans on toast is good for breakfast and also good for a snack lunch. It is a good comfort food on a cold wet day.
Beans on toast with bacon and sausage. 🤤🤤🤤🤤🤤 I could eat a scabby hoss. 😂🤣😂
A really good thing for you to check out is how many of your favourite actors are actually British doing an American accent, the one that comes to mind first is House, very popular in America and they are so surprised to find out the star of show is English. Same thing for bands and groups that Americans assume are American but are actually British, Led Zepplin, Black Sabbath etc. Interesting to react to. 😁🇬🇧
Idris Elba
Best baltimore accent. The Americans couldn't believe it when he spoke at pressers. They genuinely thought he was one of theirs.
@@nicscott1984 bangin dj too
Everyone is from America apparently
@@evangingerson1271 Aw but they are mostly lovely lol.
Joel,when prawn cocktail crisps first came out a lad @ work called them fanny flavoured crisps.i didn't know what he was talking about till I bought some & tried them.lol.
Love how the combination of tea and biscuits brings pure happiness to all three faces 😂
You guys should look into American bread vs British - OMG it a shocker!
I’m quite surprised how much you know about our little ways and sayings 👌🏻😁
First time having tea and you gave it to them with no milk! what's going on 😁
Most Americans drink tea with no milk or sugar.
I rest my case @@marydavis5234
If there’s anyone from the uk in the comments can yous remember years ago like back in the 90s early noughties when salt and vinegar walkers were in the blue bag and cheese and onion were in the green bags
FYI: Smiths Crisps actually first introduced the separate blue bag of salt to the UK in the 1920's... They were called 'Salt & Shake' and they have been reintroduced periodically since then. I remember them being a 'big thing' in the 1970's. 😂
I live in Carlisle Cumbria England where they make those biscuits, you can smell in the air when they are making chocolate biscuits it's lovely
Good old Mcvities .
I remember walking around Carlisle when I was newly pregnant and ended up eating 3 packets of biscuits in one go!
@@DC-vj5kt where do you live at
North of England 👍
Suet is pronounced sue-et, it's animal fats used to make the pastry. You can also get vegetable suet for vegetarians and its called mince meat pies because it used to actually contain real meat.
Just a few lads enjoying their tea and biscuits!
Another good easy meal would be a chip (french-fry) butty. A sandwich, buttered bread with a chip filling. You can add catchup or even better brown (HP) sauce. Although remember US bread is cake here because of the sugar content, it's just wrong, so you'd have to find real bread.
TOAST.....CRISPY TOAST, what your eating looks like soggy un toasted bread, just not the same.....CRISPY. AHHHHHH you left the toast to go soggy, AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH xxx
95% of people in Britain own a electric kettle it pretty much the norm
Put Worcester sauce in the beans
Yes... when "Thunderbirds" first came to our small screens way back in 1965, Americans thought it was made in the U.S. because the marionettes' characters had American voices (a few were actually American but the rest were mainly English with a few Aussies thrown in). And also because of the fantastic quality of the production. It was very slick and could have been mistaken for a U.S. made show.
"Thunderbirds" is a landmark of British TV history.
Sidebar..... I find a cup with a white interior makes the beverage more appetizing..... personal view.
I only eat mince pies Christmas warm with single or double cream I actually eat to many in December 😀 beans on toast with cheese my family call cheese beanos enjoyed you video thanks for sharing much love MoMo in uk xx🇬🇧 xx
The idea that Americans do British accents better than British people do American accents is incredible. How many American actors are as convincing as Hugh Laurie, Matthew Rhys, Christian Bale, Idris Elba, Tom Holland, Daniel Day Lewis, Andrew Lincoln etc?
You dont do a british accent when you are British, you just talk.Everyone mentioned are all British actors
@@charpost62they mean brits doing american accents
@@charpost62 Eh? I'm talking about British actors doing American accents.
I'm Northern Irish (technically British, but not a Briton), and find it easier to maintain an American accent (I've fooled American voice actors with it) than a southern English one. The major reason is the rhoticity (pronouncing R no matter where it is in the word).
Very few American actors nail authentic British accents because they are extremely regional. You often end up with what I call the Doubtfire Effect, where like Mrs. Doubtfire, the accent takes a tour of the British Isles.
Beans on toast with brown sauce on no cheese,i love
I was brought up to have beans on toast without cheese and using a knife and fork. The reason you don't use an electric kettle in US is because our electric has double the power therefore you have to wait so long for it to boil.
We actually have outlets in the US with different voltages. In the living room ,bedrooms and bathrooms ,the outlets are 110 volts, in laundry room, the outlets are 240 volts for the washing machine and clothe dyer and in the kitchen, there are both 110 and 240 volts, the 110volts are for coffee makers, toasters and the 240 volts are electric ranges.
Always add milk to your tea, fellas. Sugar is optional.... but always milk! 👍
Tea and chocolate biscuits - can't beat it
When Americans try to do a British accent, it’s always one from the victorian era. I’m Scottish, and I see Americans as our little cousins…🤣🤷🏻♂️🏴
To ItsJps ... Show more fun at it guys !... let go a bit at being so guarded while trying new food + ur feedback ❤🇬🇧🇫🇷
Warm mince pies with fresh pouring cream...yum 😍
having the tea with no milk is a CRIME
I live in England and i love mince pies and Christmas cake
I love your positive attitude towards British food
You made a good looking beans on toast, the only thing wrong is you need to eat it with a knife and fork 😂
I used to love eating beans on toast for dinner when I was a child. Never tried it with cheese on top though. Prawn cocktail flavour, I think is more of a ketchup and mayo mix which is often served with prawns (shrimp) in England and it’s called Marie Rose sauce 😋😋😋😋
Love the channel, fun to watch. On the accent thing, it seems that Americans think if London as the British accent, but accents change over here every 10-15 miles.
Warm the mince pies...10 - 15s in a microwave will do. Have them with cream (whipped or double just poured on) or a nice vanilla ice cream or custard (creme anglais)
Take them outta the tin first 🤣😂👍
Shut up, shut up. I want a nice home made mince pie with an apple pie warmed up with ice-cream. 😡 Now I can’t stop thinking about. 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬 why did you mention it. Damn you! 🥺😫😭😭
🤣😂🤣😂
@@cookiemonster2299 it’s foil not tin, you will confuse the yanks. 🤣😂🤣
@@TeamGB-Diving 🤣😂👍
So happy to see Snacks Discourse on the channel again! 👏🏽
Also, only in this video is Joel the British etiquette teacher 🔥
95% of us put a dash of milk in Tea, its definitely the norm.
True, but I'm not sure what US milk tastes like.
Given how poorly French milk goes with tea, it might not be the best.
Get double cream, drop a tablespoon of rum in it and serve with a hot mince pie, delicious! That is how we serve them in UK
Not everyone does.
Oooh! Can I come to your house? Sounds amazing! I just checked we have rum,we have to buy some cream and hubby is making mince pies soon so yum!
With the tea consumption, you're right, it's mad. I genuinely think I have an addiction, I have maybe 6 cups a day 😭😭 And you're right with beans on toast, the times I have beans on toast are because sometimes I simply cannot be bothered to cook😂 or because I need a quick easy meal. Great video! Very interesting to see your reactions...Also, my meal deal is a pasta pot, fruit pot and a dr pepper 👌🏼
Tea brewed in a teapot and warm apple pie with cream for me.
I'm from England I drink Yorkshire tea with milk and 2 sugar's. I also love beans on toast with poached egg on top👌
Love this Joel your friends will be fine in the uk they like Tea and biscuits. I love seeing you 3 together 😊
Everyone I know eats beans on toast with a knife and fork. 😂 A sprinkle of black pepper on top is also a winner
It depends on how much beans you put on.
If you can fold it over, then using your hands can be forgiven.
If it's a full fry-up though, then definitely knife and fork.
Or a dash of curry powder, or garlic flakes.
Or with some grated cheese on top.
People argue about whether to put milk in before the tea is poured or after, don’t know why, I don’t drink tea, but it’s highly controversial!😊
When tea was drunk from China Clay cups, the cups might shatter if you poured boiling water in first. That is why milk went in first
Rubarb Pie all day long with custard 😂
I'm sat here, in the UK watching 3 American guys eating crisps - I need to get out more
I don’t know why but watching you guys enjoying your tea and biscuits really made me this Brit smile. Nice video guys!
Me too❤
As for imitating accents - even among professionals, British actors seem to do a better job at putting on an American accent than vice versa. Meryl Streep aside, I can't think of an American actor who played a British role and nailed the accent. Conversely, many British actors have played American roles and have flawlessly switched to an American accent.
A UK prawn is what you would call a shrimp. A shrimp is smaller, maybe ½-¾ inch long. There's a technical difference to do with their gill structure.
They are Americans they say 🍤 not prawn.
I like my mince pies hot with cold fresh cream. Try it. Heat up in the oven.
Hey Arturo, how about leading a video on Peru? That would be super interesting bro.
If you didnt know, apple pie was invented in England in 1381
Love these videos, always great seeing Americans enjoying our food/drink!
bring the lads with you next time you come to the UK ☺
Also, mince pies don't contain suet, anymore. They are either vegetarian or vegan! It is a tradition for children to leave out a mince pie for Santa on Xmas eve and a carrot for Rudolph!
Sorry Joel most brits drink tea with Milk and may more than half add sugar, so don't take Joel's word for it lads, and there are certain things you never dunk in your TEA like Mince Pies or even Jaffa Cakes 😱 oh and Beans on Toast will never ever taste like Beans on Toast over here as Toast in the US tastes to sweet (Been there done it 🤮) as it has too much Sugar in it, all bread in the US is classed as a Cake product over in Europe. And boys we don't eat Beans On Toast like Pizza lolol especially not with cheese on top unless it's a special occasion. You use a Knife and Fork lol but Mericans don't know how Knife And Forks work lol 😉
The after taste not liked in the mince pies is caused by the candied mixed peel. Have been making my own mincemeat minus the peel for years. Tastes sooo much better. We tend to eat mince pies mainly during the festive season. You can find them everywhere in the UK then. 😊
Cheese and onion crisps in a ham and cucumber sammich is a simple joy
The Tea & biscuit dunking was spot on British 🤣. We literally do this 3 times a day (not always with biscuits)
3 builders springs to mind lol
10 cups is normal. Nearly everyone has milk. Alot have sugar. Traditionally mince pies are MEAT LOL Minced meat literally means meat thats been minced. They then add other stuff.
What 😂 mince pies aren’t meat
@@iluvbluify Traditionally Lamb. Is lamb not meat?
@@iluvbluify Look up Gervase Markham's recipe, dating from 1615. To make minceed pyes
Take a neats tounge parboyle it and mince it very small
put to it a pound of beefe suit and 2 pound of reasons
of the son stoned and minceed very small a quaarter of
a pound of sugar the peal 2 lemmons cut small a little
cloves & mace and nutmeg a quarter of clarret a little
salt mix all this together with 6 or 8 pipings smally shred
and two pouund of currants or as many as you see feet
for your past take a pound and quarter of flower a pound
and a half of butter and put it into water and seet it on
the fire & let it boyle make the past & put in half a pound
of lofe sugar finely beaten & mix it in the flower put in the
yolks of 4 eggs & the whites of 2 so worke it up and
as you fill them put in canded orange & green sittorn
finely cut such as you eate hot when they come out of the
oven put in sume butter & white wine
A "neats tounge" is a calf's tongue.
A remarkable survival of the old style of English mince pie is to be found at Pézenas, in the south of France. The recipe was leaked by Sir Robert Clive's Indian cook in the 18th century: "les petits pâtés de Pézenas". It contains sugar, lemon peel and mutton. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petit_p%C3%A2t%C3%A9_de_P%C3%A9zenas
tea, you usually boil kettle, put 2 to 4 tea bags in tea pot add boiled water from kettle, place tea pot on cooker ring and simmer until you get you perfered strength of tea flavour. You can add milk and sugar to your tea if you want, everyone makes it different.
mince pies are usually eaten around Christmas time. you can eat them cold or warm with ice cream and fresh cream
It was an enjoyable watch with you three guys. I am with you 100%, I don't need mince pies in my life. They are overrated and are part of the Christmas madness. The biscuits you tried are excellent. I personally like Yorkshire tea with a small dash of milk and two sugars (like Stefan). I agree with Arturo that Prawn Cocktail are fire! Joel did good with the beans/cheese on toast. I make my toast much darker and it needs to be eaten piping hot for the best enjoyment. What cheese did you use?
In a mug i have 1 sugar and a very small amount of milk, its nickname is builders tea taken like that.
I would have had the beans before the biscuits, and although, I dont drink tea, think its best with some milk and sugar.
You should get them to try other British crisps, chocolate and biscuits, if you can get them, Fox's range of biscuits! proper UK Cadbury chocolate bars like double decker, flake, wispa, boost, crunchie, caramel etc. Hotel Chocolat, Thorntons chocolates, then also bars like mint aero, lion bars etc, Walkers sensations and max strong range of crisps, Mccoys crisps, also frazzles, wotsits and niknaks.
Mint aero is the best for mint lovers, its so good!
Would kinda like to see their reactions to Scampi and Lemon niknaks, or even better Scampi Fries.
Both an acquired taste. Best with beer.
Fun fact: they stopped producing the Scampi and Lemon flavour NikNaks for a short while because nobody wanted to work that production line at the factory because of the fishy smell. They were brought back by public demand but they had to change to flavour formula so they weren't as stinky.
the flavour formula
They did a video like this but if they try it all they’d get diabetes
You three are funny, love how you laugh at food etc, we have a local shop that stocks American sweets and the kids love them though they are way more expensive. You are very humble and respectable .