What the heck is Wassail?

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  • Опубликовано: 15 дек 2022
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    Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
    PHOTO CREDITS
    Mari Lwyd: By R. fiend - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Apple Wassail in Devon, England: By Brian Marks - www.flickr.com/photos/beanmun..., CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Twelfth Night Tradition: Glyn Baker and licenced for reuse under cc-by-sa/2.0
    Bridport Community Orchard Wassail 2022: Stephen and Helen Jones via Flickr
    #tastinghistory #wassail #christmas

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory  Год назад +253

    Watch me read mean comments on our other channel - ruclips.net/video/Glw5OTrHxQk/видео.html

    • @James35142
      @James35142 Год назад +17

      Merry Christmas, Max!

    • @carolleenkelmann4751
      @carolleenkelmann4751 Год назад +8

      Allow me a question: when does the first day of Christmas begin?

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +38

      @@carolleenkelmann4751 on December 25th. The twelfth night is January 5th.

    • @PokhrajRoy.
      @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +13

      I loved the video. We want more compliments read on the other channel, you hunky grandson 😂

    • @jessinthegarden
      @jessinthegarden Год назад +17

      Saw that one-and I just want to say: we love when you talk! It’s why we watch you!
      I mean, the history is great too, and you pick such fun foods to try. But it’s you talking, being funny, being authentic… that’s what we love.

  • @cristiaolson7327
    @cristiaolson7327 Год назад +1590

    A few years ago, the last holiday before my father passed away, I decided to make wassail, just for fun. I steeped sliced apples and pears in a mix of wine and cider with cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger. I served it up at the family gathering at my sister's house. My dad asked what the drink was, and I told him it was wassail and what was in it. He got a cup, took a sip, and his face lit up. He told me my grandmother had made a hot Christmas punch every year when he was younger, and he hadn't been able to recall what it actually was, but I had made the same kind of Christmas punch. She was making wassail all those years. I now make it at Christmas in her and my dad's, memory.

    • @MrAngryJarvey
      @MrAngryJarvey Год назад +77

      That’s beautiful.

    • @dragonfell5078
      @dragonfell5078 Год назад +116

      That is the most touching thing I've heard all month
      Your dad deadass had a memory flashback like Anton Ego in Ratatouille

    • @terri200
      @terri200 Год назад +27

      So wonderful that you did that and it bring your dad such joy!!💖💖

    • @katate13
      @katate13 Год назад +10

      That’s so nice, thanks for sharing!

    • @zxyatiywariii8
      @zxyatiywariii8 Год назад +9

      Thank you, what a beautiful memory!

  • @NaughtyAelf
    @NaughtyAelf Год назад +728

    Quick note - medieval bread was considerably denser than modern, and holds up better to being soaked after toasting. The grains used would have been einkorn, emmer, spelt, rye, oats, or a combination of them. Lower in gluten and really dense as well as being tasty.

    • @OdinOfficialEmcee
      @OdinOfficialEmcee Год назад +66

      Don't forget barley! Of which an excellent bread can be made. I absolutely love the stuff

    • @vickisnemeth7474
      @vickisnemeth7474 Год назад

      Would they have been like fire cakes or hoe cakes?

    • @Naturallystated
      @Naturallystated Год назад +25

      And perhaps it was made like bagels so it could have a skin and float.

    • @azraelvrykolakas157
      @azraelvrykolakas157 Год назад +14

      I was wondering if he uses sliced bread to get the toast cause that can't possibly resemble closely what our ancestors had.

    • @naerwyn239
      @naerwyn239 Год назад +5

      Also, you can use cake, as in the song!

  • @davidwoolsey2135
    @davidwoolsey2135 Год назад +251

    Went to our annual Ugly Sweater Christmas Party last night. The host made this, and I brought a dozen half-wine- bottles of Smoking Bishop as take-home gifts for guests, which I'd made the day before. The Wassail was a hit, and the Smoking Bishop (from an episode of Tasting History with Max Miller) was also a triumph. When the Wassail was done the guests chose not to wait until Christmas Day and opened the Smoking Bishop, heating it up in mugs. Thanks Max

    • @brianaschmidt910
      @brianaschmidt910 Год назад +6

      That either means the drinks were really tasty, or there was THAT person in attendance. I'm guessing it was the former.

  • @waddlespire
    @waddlespire Год назад +58

    My family's wassil is a mix of apple cider, orange juice, cranberry juice, and lemonade. We cook it in a percolating coffee pot with allspice, cloves, and cinnamon sticks in the basket. My dad says he got it from a church group he used to go to, so that probably explains the lack of ale.

    • @seasea12
      @seasea12 Год назад +3

      Thanks for sharing this!! I was looking for a kidsafe version.

    • @Rick-cx1yr
      @Rick-cx1yr 7 месяцев назад +2

      This was pretty much the same recipe my mother made when I was a kid. She cooked it in a slow cooker and served hot.

  • @seldomplayed6279
    @seldomplayed6279 Год назад +625

    I feel like the hard tack would’ve been a better thing to soak the wassail in because sitting in the bottom of a bowl of wassail probably would’ve been enough to soften those things.

    • @fugithegreat
      @fugithegreat Год назад +104

      right, I think a very hard piece of extra stale bread would have been better. Also, many store-bought breads contain dough conditioners that become really gloopy when exposed to liquid, so that's a real nope from me.

    • @mcnutty8037
      @mcnutty8037 Год назад +162

      "Hard tack"
      *Click click*

    • @lilpsyche6971
      @lilpsyche6971 Год назад +40

      I was thinking at least a dryer, smaller bubbles, firm, crispy crust bread like baguette or ciabatta

    • @aprilhelms6141
      @aprilhelms6141 Год назад +25

      I had a similar thought. Store-bought bread is really light and porous. A homemade bread is a lot more dense (having made a few loaves myself).

    • @sarahgilliss3503
      @sarahgilliss3503 Год назад +44

      CLACK CLACK

  • @craigsurette3438
    @craigsurette3438 Год назад +665

    Thankyou for doing this!
    I am a cider brewer, from a long long line of cider brewers of English and Acadian descent, and every 12thnight I will always go out to our trees and make Wassail offerings and sing to them to thank them and my Ancestors for our bountiful harvest.
    Thankfully, I havent been arrested for public drunk and disorderly ...yet...

    • @MichaelOKC
      @MichaelOKC Год назад +25

      What is funny is that my Grandfather had an apple orchard and he did indeed brew extremely good cider... but as far as I know, he never made Wassail offerings!
      But then again, I was a child , so maybe he did and I just never heard about it! Lol

    • @chuckwilliams6261
      @chuckwilliams6261 Год назад +11

      Can I assume your wassail is made from your cider? (hold the chunks)

    • @QophSilrahq
      @QophSilrahq Год назад +15

      I don't see myself singing to a tree, but I appreciate that someone out there is carrying on this tradition.

    • @craigsurette3438
      @craigsurette3438 Год назад +61

      @@chuckwilliams6261 Yes, i make my Wassail with my own cider, pressed from apples from those trees. I have a couple of recipes that I use, and I tend to spike it with applejack brandy instead of just beer or wine.
      I see the whole process as a way of "closing the loop" of acknowledging where my food comes from, and giving reverence where reverence is due
      "Thankyou , trees for giving us these apples we make these tasty things with. Have some of this goodness back, so we can keep doing this another year !"

    • @Druklet
      @Druklet Год назад +16

      Treebeard approves of this!

  • @lucasmcinnis5045
    @lucasmcinnis5045 Год назад +319

    I'm proud that my family has kept up our Wassail tradition, even if they forgot where it came from, it's one of the few things that connect our family to our historic past
    Our Wassail is cider, cranberry juice, orange slices, and spices

    • @naturalist10000
      @naturalist10000 Год назад +12

      Sounds like a virgin smoking bishop, gonna have to try it.

    • @darnstewart
      @darnstewart Год назад +19

      @@naturalist10000 it's not virgin, British Cider is always hard Cider anything else is apple juice. I'm assuming you mean alcohol free by virgin.

    • @naturalist10000
      @naturalist10000 Год назад +6

      @@darnstewart yes I did, American so I l'm use to Hard-Cider = Alcoholic Cider

    • @Julie-xo9et
      @Julie-xo9et Год назад +2

      Do you heat that up.

    • @lucasmcinnis5045
      @lucasmcinnis5045 Год назад +9

      @@Julie-xo9et Yeah we do it in a crockpot for convenience

  • @patrickbroome5427
    @patrickbroome5427 Год назад +41

    Interesting fact re:crab apple availability, they are actually frequently used in my region in commercial parking lots as tree cover in medians, and you will often find people gathering the crab apples for use cooking later, so they are around at times

  • @sabelsmith9757
    @sabelsmith9757 Год назад +1291

    When I was in highschool, I was in a group called the Madrigals. It was only 6 of us, but we sang historical holiday songs, and my favorite was called Wassail! In that song the line went, "Our toast it is white and our ale it is brown, our bowl it is made of the white maple tree, to the wassailing bowl we'll drink to thee!" I've been trying to find a recipe for Wassail since then. I'm so glad that now I have one, and it's from my favorite cooking show on RUclips. Wassail!

    • @akaripinex7531
      @akaripinex7531 Год назад +65

      Welcome to the family madrigal 😄

    • @bridgetanne8242
      @bridgetanne8242 Год назад +13

      I love that carol!

    • @tyrant-den884
      @tyrant-den884 Год назад +24

      Encanto must have been a mind blower for you.

    • @3mberrose588
      @3mberrose588 Год назад +15

      I know that one! Im in a similar group called the Polyfoniks (yes thats how its spelled) and its called glouchestershire wassail. We have a trip diring this time of year where we go to “dickens ok the strand” im glaveston, texas (think renessaince festival but a Christmas story)

    • @SPLuvr
      @SPLuvr Год назад +7

      @@3mberrose588 We have the Dickens Christmas Fair here in the California Bay Area! A bunch of my friends perform there (I also did, once or twice) and the Wassail song is one of their staples! I was singing it in my head as Max read the lyrics 😁

  • @writerinrwanda
    @writerinrwanda Год назад +123

    I've been wassailing in the Cotswolds ☺ We poured libations on the trees, smacked pots to frighten away mischievous spirits, and hung slices of bread from the branches. It's supposed to ensure a good crop in the coming year, but it also feeds the birds, I guess 🤷‍♀ Then we got very drunk. Five stars - would recommend.

    • @lulumoon6942
      @lulumoon6942 Год назад +1

      Super!

    • @joewellfair8238
      @joewellfair8238 Год назад +2

      Where abouts in the Cotswolds? That sounds great

    • @writerinrwanda
      @writerinrwanda Год назад +1

      ​@@joewellfair8238 I'm really sorry. It was years ago. Somewhere on a farm near Bath. I think there's a few public wassailing events in the area that get advertised.

    • @benberlin57
      @benberlin57 7 месяцев назад +2

      If I save enough money to travel across the pond again I'd love to check out a Wassail.

  • @missvidabom
    @missvidabom Год назад +127

    “It’s strong toast,” made me burst out laughing. Merry Christmas, Max, Jose, Cersei, and Jaime!

    • @josephlance1198
      @josephlance1198 Год назад +2

      My family does Wassail almost every year, although since we don’t drink alcohol we usually just use regular old apple cider.

    • @nenben8759
      @nenben8759 Год назад +3

      @@josephlance1198 I've made it from apple cider and cranberry juice

    • @luxitos2867
      @luxitos2867 Год назад +2

      First thing came to mind was Moira Rose: "Oh John there's no booze in that. Ew. Ewwwww..."

  • @Fairfax40DaysforLife
    @Fairfax40DaysforLife Год назад +14

    I love how you always follow the recipe even if you think it's weird and not very promising. That kind of historic dedication is appreciated. And the guy below is right, Medieval bread was probably denser and would come out more like a spiced cake instead of just mush.

  • @earthiswatching
    @earthiswatching Год назад +445

    My understanding of Mari Lwyd is it's basically a rap battle with a skeletal horse for beer and cheese.

    • @hogwashmcturnip8930
      @hogwashmcturnip8930 Год назад +78

      I have never though of it like that, but it is a very apt description. I think it is something often overlooked by historians, but European history is full of these verbal battles, riddles and insults. the Saxons would have contests at their boozy feasts to see who could come up with the best insults, and Shakespeare is bursting with verbal duels. I think the Mari Lywd goes back to Pagan times when the heroes and heroines, even gods, had to 'outwit 'beings of the Otherworld to gain access to places of privilege, or wisdom. It makes perfect sense that in a totally vocal l world, verbal dexterity and the 'gift of the gab' would be much prized

    • @MrThinktank84
      @MrThinktank84 Год назад +4

      Your not wrong

    • @ZankaZe1
      @ZankaZe1 Год назад +4

      Sounds pretty great to me.

    • @fefniir
      @fefniir Год назад +6

      Epic Rap Battle!!

    • @toastman1992
      @toastman1992 Год назад +5

      And with that, I hereby decree this the best holiday tradition.

  • @carolynallisee2463
    @carolynallisee2463 Год назад +91

    The practice of Wassailing apple trees still happens in the cider producing counties here in England. As Max described, it is a winter ritual, with rhymes spoken, bits of bread or toast soaked in cider left in the branches of the trees, and guns fired through the branches of the trees to scare off the malignant spirits rather than singing, though that happens too.

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +25

      Interestingly enough, pouring alcohol on the trees directly may actually help them.
      See ethanol and menthol (which can occur in high quantities in home fermented cider, which is why a bad batch can make folks "crazy") will stunt the growth of plants and shrubs, making them more compact. That's why if you're forcing bulbs in a vase or pot you're supposed to add a tich of vodka when the leaves are a good length, to keep them from getting to leggy and tipping the vase over. A tree spending less effort on growing wood is going to have more energy for fruit, the branches will be thicker and sturdier to bear it's weight better even if it gets stormy, and that fruit will be closer to the ground for picking.

    • @djdissi
      @djdissi Год назад +2

      @@mwater_moon2865 that is super interesting!

    • @Cooe.
      @Cooe. Год назад

      Lol what guns? This is the modern UK we're talking about here. Personal firearm ownership is practically non-existent. Your wassail stories seem about 100 years out of date from back when people still had at least some actual freedom instead of the ridiculous anti-freedom, pro-censorship nanny state that Britain is today.

    • @rundeep1969
      @rundeep1969 Год назад +1

      Spent some college years in Somerset and remember the wassailling ceremonies well, very very fond (slightly drunken 😁) memories

  • @ewhitmo1
    @ewhitmo1 Год назад +38

    Our elementary school teacher taught us the wassailing song and gave us a little lesson on what going wassailing was. I still remember it ☺️ "here we come a'wassailing among the leaves so green! Here we come a'wandering so fair to be seen! Love and joy come to you! And to you glad Christmas too! And God bless you and send you a happy new year! And God send you a happy new year"

  • @owellafehr5191
    @owellafehr5191 Год назад +19

    I have apple crisp baking in the oven while I'm watching this, so at 12:47ish when Max says "it smells really good," my instinctive thought was "yeah, it does!" before I remembered you can't smell something through a computer screen. 😆

  • @mandalorfortytwo4557
    @mandalorfortytwo4557 Год назад +441

    Thanks for taking the "punishment"... Here's your reward! 🤗 Happy Holidays to you and yours!!! We look forward to many more Tastings of History!!!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +91

      Wow! Thank you so much Mandalor. Also, love the screen name.

  • @Getpojke
    @Getpojke Год назад +39

    I used to take part & join in the Wassailing when I lived down in Southern England. More often than not it was made with local pressed cider in the places I lived. I have had lambs wool too though. They used to joke it got its fame as you'd wake up feeling distictlt fuzzy the next day; like lambs wool.
    The little yeasted cakes had been given a glaze of egg yolk while cooking. So they floated & didn't get too soggy.

    • @hawkatsea
      @hawkatsea Год назад +7

      do the yeasted cakes have a name or recipe? We always just float apple and orange slices, but I'd like to try to sneak in some yeast cakes for a change

  • @kellyradtke4885
    @kellyradtke4885 Год назад +36

    I attended a tiny rural school in Montana that was for k-12. One year our music teacher got really creative and we (the highschool students) hosted a traditional wassail Christmas program. We set up tables and decorated the gym then sang and served (non-alcoholic, non chunky) wassail to our parents and the community. I remember it being really cool but we never did it again so maybe it wasn't well received anyway thanks for the fun memory 🙂

    • @susandickerson2663
      @susandickerson2663 Год назад +2

      Probably well received but a lot of work!! I had the same experience w a church choir. Apparently I sang in it the last year they did it. Was so much work that (I believe it was the women's group) stopped doing it. We even had a bore's head on a platter brought in whilst we sang about it☺️

    • @someonehere7846
      @someonehere7846 Год назад

      Well, if it´s non alcoholic then it´s not wassail or traditional. It´s nice for children and I appreciate all the work you put into it but you should not invite grown ups if you only prepare drinks for children. Most likely that´s why it wasn´t well received as you put it.

    • @LadyBeyondTheWall
      @LadyBeyondTheWall Год назад +3

      @@someonehere7846 Considering you can't legally have alcohol at all on school property, if it were up to you no adults would go to fund raisers or school functions at all since literally everything would be "drinks for children", lol.

    • @rachelcech2233
      @rachelcech2233 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@someonehere7846 What about people who suffer anaphylactic shock when drinking alcohol?

    • @someonehere7846
      @someonehere7846 7 месяцев назад

      @@rachelcech2233 These people normally don´t drink alcohol anyway. There are alternatives without alcohol.

  • @ladygrey9455
    @ladygrey9455 Год назад +79

    We've had a version of the drink in my family for generations. For Thanksgiving my niece who is 13 made it for her dad's family. When she told me I was like "our sacred family recipe?! Shame!" I honestly thought she knew I was teasing her. Apparently she went to bed crying thinking she had made this huge mistake for sharing our hot punch recipe. I felt terrible for days. I made it earlier this month because it was comforting and I was ill, she made this huge show of covering my eyes for the "sake of tradition".

    • @marilynrowland5197
      @marilynrowland5197 10 месяцев назад +5

      An apology was in order! You made your niece cry! You should have said, "Just kidding!" immediately after the words came out of your mouth. Why didn't you commend her instead? How old was she? How old are you?

    • @ladygrey9455
      @ladygrey9455 10 месяцев назад +11

      You are correct, I did owe her an apology. She did great honestly, it was delicious. She's 14 now and I'm 36. I think she was just nervous. She does not get to spend a lot of time with that side of her family because they live all over the country and she wanted to do something special for them. Again I must stress I really was just teasing her and I had no idea she was even upset at all until her mom told me the next day. I forget how hard it is being a teen. Her and I are pretty close, so I think that's why she took it so hard. We made a pumpkin pie together next day which is her favorite. We've also made this punch a few more times since then and she covers my eyes every time to protect the 'secret'. It's joke now and I'm glad for that but I do wish I handled it differently. Thank you sincerely for being upset on her behalf.

  • @IPutThisUsernameHere
    @IPutThisUsernameHere Год назад +38

    Modern store bread in the US tends to be very soft and spongy, so any liquid turns it to mush. It's why it's perfect for making sorta souffle. A heavier or heartier country style loaf or homemade wheat bread would probably work better. Or you could use cider donuts!

    • @alexisgrunden1556
      @alexisgrunden1556 Год назад +3

      A couple slices of French baguette left out for a day or three to toughen up would soften nicely in some wassail~

  • @gwenchadwick780
    @gwenchadwick780 Год назад +27

    I think part of the problem with the toast is you used a modern sliced bread. Which tend to go mushy very quickly and then fall apart. If you used a traditional sourdough or rye you might have had less sog.

  • @VaveeDances
    @VaveeDances Год назад +51

    Thanks for another remarkable year of content! Wassail to you and José…and the kitties 🐱

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +16

      Thank you, Val! The kitties appreciate you 😁

  • @thekaratekid02
    @thekaratekid02 Год назад +172

    In my opinion, this sort of content is exactly what RUclips is meant for. Your videos are so unique, but also extremely polished. Love the channel.

  • @hellspawn22001
    @hellspawn22001 Год назад +73

    Very glad Max used Ale. It’s nice for those of us who don’t care for wine to have an alternative holiday drink.

    • @ConniJo
      @ConniJo Год назад +14

      If you don't like mulled wine (Glühwein in Germany), maybe try what I do (since I don't like wine either): Kinderpunsch (children's punch) consisting of fruit juice (I use cherry, apple and grape) heated with the usual mulled wine spices like cinnamon, sliced orange and such, and then when it's done just put in your preferred liquor ( I like Cointreau or Liquor 43, but I think also Rum and stuff would work), plus, if there are kids (or recovering alcoholics), you can mix the alcohol in the cups in so you don't need an extra pot for the alcohol free version ☺️

    • @AnniCarlsson
      @AnniCarlsson Год назад +3

      ​@@ConniJo black currant is really good qs well

    • @ConniJo
      @ConniJo Год назад +2

      @@AnniCarlsson yes! Thank you, I forgot the English word for that so I left it out xD

    • @grimdarhk
      @grimdarhk Год назад

      I mean butter beer works

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod Год назад

      What about cider or cherry wine?

  • @trisharaichatterjee2578
    @trisharaichatterjee2578 Год назад +11

    When I was young, I had a really good friend. His name is Jonathan I forget his last name but he was a classmate of mine. He had to Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy and finally passed away in 2014. His mom would make this every Christmas and it was the go to drink for, our classroom Christmas party I do terribly missed particular memory, and I remember being obsessed with saying the word wassail repetitively so every time a sept it, I said the word because it seemed quite the interesting word to roll out of my mouth I remember writing it as a greeting and then remembering to myself wait, why are they using the word as a greeting isn’t just a drink Jonathan’s mom just to make every Christmas party I also used to have this at a Tutoring Center, Costco tutoring center if I remember properly or am I perhaps confused with the location it’s been quite a few years 20 to be precise. I thank you for covering the subject. It brings me a great bit of festivities 🥳

  • @herewardfeldwick8230
    @herewardfeldwick8230 Год назад +31

    I live in Somerset, England, and can confirm my parents have a few apple trees and they go and wassail them every winter.
    And Mulled Cider is a popular winter drink across the UK, which is hard cider served hot and spiced, so it's basically that 18th century wassail cup.
    These traditions are alive today!

  • @cmschmidt
    @cmschmidt Год назад +73

    I have to believe that by the time you make it to the bottom of a wassail vessel you don’t really care what the toast tastes like because you’re toasted too! Blessed Yuletide Max, Jose, Jamie, and Cerci! 🥂🍷🍺

    • @lisaspikes4291
      @lisaspikes4291 Год назад +6

      I suspect the term toasted may also have come from wassail traditions!

    • @LilA-zl6tf
      @LilA-zl6tf Год назад +1

      @@lisaspikes4291 Now, when you say that.... 😄

  • @nobbie01
    @nobbie01 Год назад +9

    Back home in Guatemala there's a tradition of making christmas punch, which is just a bunch of fruits both fresh (apples, pears, pineapples, quinces) and dried (apricots, prunes, raisins), a tiny bit of sugar, spices (cinnamon, allspice, clove, cardamom) and rum, all steeped together for about an hour or so. It's quite lovely and a hit whenever I bring it to potlucks here in the States, when I'd describe what it was to people, they'd always mention "oh it's like wassail!", now I know what they meant :D

  • @194californiagirl
    @194californiagirl 10 месяцев назад +8

    I grew up in Utah so alcoholic Christmas drinks unfortunately aren't a family tradition of mine but my family always bought the Stephen's Wassil mix which is extremely sweet! This version sounds a lot better because you can actually taste the spices and not just the sugar.
    Maybe I'll make a non-alcoholic homemade wassil for my family this Christmas 😊

  • @gigitastic90
    @gigitastic90 Год назад +7

    two of my favorite authors Seanan Mcguire and and Ursula Vernon did a virtual Mari Lwyd rhyme off on twitter last year with Seanan playing the part of Mari Lwyd begging to be let in for a bit of cheese. a Mari Lywd also is a part of the second book in a delightful middle grade book series Greenglass House. (also the title of the first book). The first two stories take place at Christmas time in a smugglers inn in a fictional town and feature a group of strangers telling stories each night while the son of the inn keepers Milo and his new friend (in the first book at least) unravel strange goings on. Both are delightful reads for this time of year even if they are technically for middle school age kids. My local librarian recommended them to me and I loved them.

    • @Min-ke6zc
      @Min-ke6zc Год назад

      Oh, I love that tradition of theirs! Iirc, they do it every year, and Ursula and Seanan's writing is always such a treat to read.

  • @peabody1976
    @peabody1976 Год назад +77

    Toast? That's traditional.
    But I'm going to bring it up: I wonder how this would taste if you put hardtack **clack clack** in it instead. :)
    Thank you for a great Christmas episode and Merry Christmas, Max (and Jose, and Jaime)!

    • @prcervi
      @prcervi Год назад +3

      i don't know if hardtack would be the right thing but certainly a tougher loaf then that, maybe a nice crusted pumpernickel?

  • @bcd113
    @bcd113 Год назад +8

    O they used to make this at the museum charismas party! I always wondered why the adults where so merry... like the time my grandmother mistook teaspoons for cups of rum in her rum cake.

  • @jldisme
    @jldisme 7 месяцев назад +1

    Max - I made Wassail this Christmas, based on your recipe. I couldn't get ale in rural West Virginia, so I used 2 bottles of Bundaberg Ginger Beer (non-alcoholic) and 2 bottles of Angry Orchard hard cider. I used 3 granny smith apples, 1/4 c. brown sugar (the ginger beer is sweet), 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 1/2 teaspoon fresh ginger from a tube, 1/8 teaspoon of mace for a more medieval flavor, I tossed a cinnamon stick in the pot before heating. I made my applesauce in a high-speed blender (added enough ginger beer to get a good puree). It was AMAZING! My family loved it.

  • @chrism7969
    @chrism7969 Год назад +6

    It's interesting that the word hael survives into modern English as a hale, for example as used in the phrase "hale and hearty*, meaning healthy and strong. Given that hael was used as a greeting it's also likely the case that the modern word hail, meaning to greet was derived from it.

    • @michaelhall8981
      @michaelhall8981 Год назад

      hail

    • @chrism7969
      @chrism7969 Год назад

      @@michaelhall8981 I'm not sure what you're saying. In the phrase Hale and hearty it's spelt h a l e and in the greeting it's spelt h a i l. However they are pronounced identically, which rather implies they are derived from the same Anglo Saxon word. On the other hand if you were merely sending me greetings with the word hail, please ignore the above and accept my hail in return!

  • @coltdecult3148
    @coltdecult3148 Год назад +54

    I think its just so interesting just how many Victorian holiday traditions stem in paganism. It would be awesome to have an episode just do a deep dive into how that sort of thing happened.

    • @lisakilmer2667
      @lisakilmer2667 Год назад +4

      You might try to find works by Ronald Hutton, a professor at Bristol who deals with exactly that kind of thing. He's a guest on a lot of BBC documentaries.

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Год назад +24

      Mostly the Victorians got it from the folks in the middle ages who tried to Christianize all the pagan practices so people wouldn't mind switching to Christianity as much. And then the Victorians just ret-coned what they were doing to clean it up.
      What's interesting to ME is how many of the pagan traditions actually worked/made sense. Like, interestingly enough, pouring alcohol on the trees may have actually helped them. See ethanol and menthol (both in high quantities in the tag ends of cider, which is likely what was poured out) will stunt the growth of plants and shrubs, making them more compact. That's why if you're forcing bulbs in a vase or pot you're supposed to add a tich of vodka when the leaves are a good length, to keep them from getting to leggy and tipping the vase over. A tree spending less effort on growing wood is going to have more energy for fruit, the branches will be thicker and sturdier to bear it's weight better even if it gets stormy, and that fruit will be closer to the ground for picking.

    • @hogwashmcturnip8930
      @hogwashmcturnip8930 Год назад +10

      ​@@lisakilmer2667 I would not recommend Hutton to anyone. There are much better sources available. As for Victorian traditions stemming from Paganism, they mostly Don't. They invented them. You need to dig around in old villages and existing traditions around Europe to find out how far they Really go back. The Mari Lywd Appears to be 'genuine' but it was first recorded in 1800.Which doesn't mean much, because the 'elite' weren't too bothered about what their peasants got up to, as long as they made Them money, and as they were illiterate, it had to wait for some curious clergyman or 'wealthy person' to record it.

    • @hogwashmcturnip8930
      @hogwashmcturnip8930 Год назад +3

      ​@@mwater_moon2865 That's really interesting, I did not know that, thanks. I do know that our rural ancestors did not waste time or energy on doing things that did not work, but I sort of assumed they were giving the lifeblood back to the tree, if that makes sense. .I did not know that scientifically it is sound.

    • @hogwashmcturnip8930
      @hogwashmcturnip8930 Год назад

      @@gwennorthcutt421 I know? But you are correct.

  • @TauAlphaVu
    @TauAlphaVu Год назад +11

    This brings back memories. Back in High School I was in a Madrigal group that would sing the Gloucestershire Wassail while caroling and our Christmas concert would be a sitdown dinner which naturally served wassail, non-alcoholic but otherwise similar to the recipe used here.

  • @jaydoggy9043
    @jaydoggy9043 Год назад +3

    "It's strong toast" ... what a unique sentence that could only be used on this sort of channel. Thank you for taking one for the team, Mr. Miller. I think I will follow your advice and give this a try with cider, spice it up with ginger, maybe make some ginger cakes to serve alongside.

  • @mmccolley83
    @mmccolley83 Год назад +9

    I want to thank you for giving me something to look forward to every Tuesday.
    You're the only channel I subscribe to, and have turned on the notifications for.
    Love the history talk and the dedication to trying to maintain as much historical accuracy as someone can (at least not without the million dollar budget). I wish you and Jose every success.

  • @rachelwitherspoon4394
    @rachelwitherspoon4394 Год назад +127

    Bless you Max, the face you made when eating the toast was EVERYTHING I expected 😂. That looked pure nasty, and you're a brave lad for trying it!!!!

    • @cdey8512
      @cdey8512 Год назад +9

      "It's *strong* toast" is my favorite line this time! I wouldn't have tried it.

    • @catherinebormann2992
      @catherinebormann2992 Год назад +6

      That is probably the best use for hard tack yet

    • @mary-janereallynotsarah684
      @mary-janereallynotsarah684 Год назад

      Looked good to me.

    • @asmith8692
      @asmith8692 Год назад +6

      One of my maternal grandmother's favorite things to serve while someone was sick was toast soaked in hot milk aka milktoast. I am fairly certain my mom made the exact same face that Max did every time she was served that.
      Gave me a really good idea of why being considered milktoast was an insult when I saw how the wassail toast glooped back into the bowl.

  • @dogmeat7486
    @dogmeat7486 Год назад +14

    I think you are supposed to cut the toast into little squares. Here in australia our "hot totties" have little cut crutons, sometimes. So i imagine you cut them small enough to be scooped with a regular sized spoon and that stops them from breaking apart so easily.

  • @megumichan400
    @megumichan400 Год назад +2

    God this brings back memories. When I was in Highschool our choir would hold a "Madrigal Dinner" around Christmas time. We would sing medieval holiday songs to our guest including the on about wassail.

  • @mcfarvo
    @mcfarvo 7 месяцев назад +1

    Will Vinton circa 1987 asked and answered this very question in the best Claymation Christmas Special made-for-TV ever

  • @stonefox2546
    @stonefox2546 Год назад +19

    Friends made lamb's wool with apples and hot cider one year and the texture of fluffy baked apple was definitely a bonus for the drink for me.

  • @h.b.4058
    @h.b.4058 Год назад +53

    I can imagine the "toast" might have been like 10 day old baguette type bread, were the soak might change it from a brick to merely chewable, versus a yucky slop mess. I laughed so hard when you took a drink. Something about the plaid shirt (which I love) made it look like your arm was foreshortened. T-rex wassailing.

    • @sunwiitch
      @sunwiitch Год назад +2

      this is the impression i got too, there's definitely a missing piece in this bit about the toast. maybe it could also have been a hard biscuit or something to that effect that would be intended by a "cake"

    • @WyattRyeSway
      @WyattRyeSway Год назад

      Wow HB, your comment made me literally laugh out loud. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

    • @MatthewSpencerKociol
      @MatthewSpencerKociol Год назад +2

      Definitely agree. I imagine, that you would have to use the heel of a very crusty bit of stale bread, something that could handle being in the bottom of a punch bowl for a good hour or so. you say baguette but I imagine the hard bottom of a round boule would be more fun, since it would probably fill the bottom of the bowl perfectly.

  • @honeycaffena4897
    @honeycaffena4897 Год назад +13

    Idea suggestion for the new year celebrations- PLEASE do a “bloopers” collaboration of the last year videos!!! 🤣 would enjoy the laughs

  • @MythicFool
    @MythicFool Год назад +7

    My wassail is predominantly a cider-based version with some brandy and fortified with eggs, and the roasted apples floating in the bowl. Always a big hit with the family and friends when I show up with the slow cooker full of booze.
    Another wintery/Christmas-y drink would be gluhwein; the recipe of which I used was my great-great grandmother's from when she came over to the states from Germany. A wonderful spiced red wine that really warms your soul on cold winter nights.

    • @susandickerson2663
      @susandickerson2663 Год назад

      Could you share your recipe please? I had Gluhwein in Germany and buy it already made in bottles (from Germany) when I can find it. Would prefer to make my own. Thanks!

    • @MythicFool
      @MythicFool Год назад +2

      @@susandickerson2663 Pretty simple, honestly. Not sure how special it is compared to others, but this is the one I've always used with minor tweeking.
      1 bottle red wine (doesn't need to be special, the spices will dominate any subtle notes)
      1 orange, halved
      ~15 whole cloves spiked into the orange
      3 cinnamon sticks
      ~8-10 allspice berries
      Peel of 1 lemon
      ~4 anise pods
      ~1/4 cup sugar (can adjust to taste)
      Keep the cinnamon, anise and allspice in a mesh bag while they steep. Do not let the wine boil. I'm classy and drink out of a coffee mug, but you can use the proper little mulled wine glasses if you like/have them.

  • @PowerChordEPS
    @PowerChordEPS Год назад +18

    I remember first tasting wassail at one of my church's Christmas Eve services not knowing what it was, it's since become my favorite holiday drink and imbues me with the Christmas spirit. I guess it helps I naturally love apple cider around this time of year too.

  • @seande1855
    @seande1855 Год назад +2

    Just a mention to the Farmers wassailing in their orchards; While they did indeed give cider to the roots of the trees, after the good fellows had a few pints down them , there were other "offerings" made that provided important nutrients for the tree .

  • @robinbuser565
    @robinbuser565 Год назад +66

    I absolutely love your channel. I watch episodes while eating lunch at my desk! Makes my diet food more exciting. What I appreciate the most is the history and all the great research that you put into it. As a librarian, I am in awe with how you put together what you discover and make it entertaining.😀❤🍵

  • @AGMundy
    @AGMundy Год назад +3

    Thank you to Max (and Jose behind the scenes) for another year of entertaining and informative videos. As a Brit I was puzzled by the pronunciation of wassail as I have always known it as wass-sail meaning good health.

  • @alexandraabraham6698
    @alexandraabraham6698 Год назад +30

    As a hardened, true Brit (with a hefty dose of Italian thrown into the mix) I always understood this word to be pronounced Wass-say-el... not 'Wassle'.... But then, Americans and the British have always been "Two English nations divided by a common language"... XD Merry Christmas Max, Jose - and everyone who's a die-hard fan of yours, as am I!

  • @WolfysEyes
    @WolfysEyes Год назад +7

    I have a strong feeling that the toast at the bottom of a wassail bowl is less a reward and more of a dare to the person being honored. It just *feels* like one of those drunken "hold my beer" kind of challenges.

  • @battra92
    @battra92 Год назад +7

    According to Mystery Science Theater failure to provide wassail can result in the loss of your debit card and PIN number [sic]. I always keep some in cans just in case.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +2

      Love that show.

    • @filcdar
      @filcdar Год назад

      @@TastingHistory And now I love you even more!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +3

      @@filcdar I remember my mother laughed so hard at Manos Hands of Fate, that to this day, she’ll start laughing if you even say the title. 😂

    • @13strigoi69
      @13strigoi69 Год назад

      Don't forget to check the freshness date on your cans of wassail.

  • @thexalon
    @thexalon Год назад +4

    Wassailing songs are a real treasure trove of English folk music style. Well worth a listen, especially if you have The Watersons singing them.

  • @exidy-yt
    @exidy-yt Год назад +2

    It's funny: I had the most visual and audiable dream I've ever had in years about 2 days before this video, in which I was skating across icy fields while a Christmas carol I've never heard before loudly sang a song in a deep baritone about 'Wassailing weasels' and 'fourty weasel tracks' repeated before I finally, sadly woke up with a bursting bladder. This video made me remember it. So a happy Wassailing Weasel season to all of you!

  • @dimitritallnova6509
    @dimitritallnova6509 Год назад +72

    I am SO glad you're doing an episode on Wassail!! It's so delicious and one of my favorite things to make in the holiday season!

    • @dl2725
      @dl2725 Год назад +1

      Do you make it in the same style? If not, please tell how you do it!

  • @marymugge1523
    @marymugge1523 Год назад +17

    I love the linguistic deep dive. I'm always curious how certain things get their odd sounding names. And thank you for your sacrifice with the toast. XD

  • @cynthiaaiken2424
    @cynthiaaiken2424 3 месяца назад

    A friend of mine‘s church (Methodist) put on a Wassel during Christmas time. It involved a cockentrice or 2, a big bowl of whatever was in it, a parade around the tables, chanting and singing. Don’t recall what they sang, but what a feast!

  • @margaretmcallister5422
    @margaretmcallister5422 2 месяца назад

    Old country traditions of visiting a house e.g. to wassail, was also a way of courteously visiting remote houses - possibly where poor or lonely people lived - to check they were ok in the darkest days of the year. If a family was found unable to provide even minor good cheer, then the community knew that family needed a helping hand, either by just leaving gifts of food or drink, or by arriving for the "wassail" cheer and leaving some extras to help see the house through the tough season.

  • @gracesiegel7849
    @gracesiegel7849 Год назад +74

    I love your videos! They are so much fun and I love learning. I’ve had Covid for 2 weeks and am finally (knock on wood) over it, your videos kept me entertained while I was sick and are the perfect balance between entertaining and stimulating, definitely helped ease my recovery. Thank you, Josè, Cersi, Jaimie and everyone on the Tasting History team!! Stay amazing and happy holidays

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +13

      Thank you! And glad you’re feeling better.

    • @gracesiegel7849
      @gracesiegel7849 Год назад +6

      @@TastingHistory definitely glad I’m feeling better! Thanks so much

  • @CaptHollister
    @CaptHollister Год назад +17

    Speaking of wassail: "A Christmas Carol" is my favourite Christmas story and movie. At the end a transformed Scrooge tells Cratchit that they will discuss taking care of his family after a bowl of "smoking bishop" which is another type of wassail. Perhaps for a future holiday episode ?

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +28

      I did Smoking Bishop last Christmas 😁

    • @CaptHollister
      @CaptHollister Год назад +1

      @@TastingHistory And so you did. I even watched and liked at the time. Oh well, "la mémoire est une faculté qui oublie".

  • @rainydaylady6596
    @rainydaylady6596 Год назад +6

    Merry Christmas to everyone watching Max! It always tickles my fancy when one video host talks about another like Max and Jimmy, the Welsh Viking. Merry Christmas Max, Jose, and the cats. 🤗👍🎄🥳🎉🥂🍾💕💕💕💕💕💕

  • @jinxcat90
    @jinxcat90 7 месяцев назад

    I enjoyed this whole video. Videos about the Mari Lwyd are always popping up on my social media pages this time of year so this was an absolute delight.
    Also, the way you folded your hands and the expression you made when you said "strong toast" gave me a severe case of the giggles.

  • @pseudonamed
    @pseudonamed Год назад +10

    Thanks for sharing these practices.. I lived in the UK for a few years and loved all the quirky folk practices still around. It’s a shame much of these have been lost to many in North America.

  • @tweetthang96
    @tweetthang96 Год назад +21

    Love this! One of my favorite things, a series of shows where historian Ruth Goodman, and two archaeologists, recreate life on historic farms in their heydays - Victorian, Edwardian, and WW2 - they wassail the trees and livestock in the Victorian and Edwardian shows. So now I have a recipe to join in on rewatches!

    • @MGsupergirl
      @MGsupergirl Год назад

      Do you have a link please?

    • @jillparks
      @jillparks Год назад +4

      ​​@@MGsupergirl Just do a search on "historical farm series" on RUclips. The specific titles are Tudor Monastery Farm, Tales from the Green Valley, Victorian Farm, Edwardian Farm, and Wartime Farm. Absolutely fascinating stuff.
      In Tales from the Green Valley, they definitely use the "Wassail!" "Drink hale!" toasting.

    • @sreggird60
      @sreggird60 Год назад

      Love those shows. A shame they have not done any recently.

    • @strawberrycream2974
      @strawberrycream2974 Год назад

      If you can't find them on yt, they are available on Tubi in the US. Except for Green Valley

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Год назад +1

      @tweethang96 - Lucy Worsley also covers that wassail & apple trees tradition. I believe it appears in her "Christmas Carols with Lucy Worsley" documentary.

  • @chelled.4622
    @chelled.4622 Год назад +1

    I love every minute of your videos! From the alternate ingredient suggestions, to the you tube shout outs to the honest taste test, to the history of modern day lore ... every extra detail is just brilliant. I am honored to be in your company every week even if its just through the inter-webs.

  • @loritaylor422
    @loritaylor422 Год назад +2

    Thanks for this--I love the history--we held 12th Night feasts for a few years. I had run across a Lambs Wool recipe adapted from the 1600s that is cider-based but uses tempered cream and egg whites to adjust the texture; it is amazing--like apple pie a la mode in a cup. Thanks for bringing back these memories. I love your combination of recipe and history; the experience of tasting food from different eras really does connect us to those times and the people who lived them.

  • @Sgt_Potato_1
    @Sgt_Potato_1 Год назад +3

    Finally a recipe that I've got a family version of to speak of. Our version is strange, having come through the alsace lorraine region of then Germany (currently France) , across the pond during the founding of Pennsylvania.
    Our version uses cider and Meade and is otherwise dependent upon whatever is at hand from lemons to star anise. Wassail is a truly diverse recipe.

  • @RijackiTorment
    @RijackiTorment Год назад +7

    The expressions on your face while tasting is priceless! You're so expressive. I'm not a fan of beer (anything made with beer yeast tastes sour/bitter to me and not in a good way) but I love the history. I might look for a hard cider version 'cause we have lovely cider in BC (and I can tell in one sip if if was made with beer yeast).

  • @sandrajames7961
    @sandrajames7961 Год назад +3

    Great episode! I love love love this type of history so thank you for all the effort it takes to share your amazing videos with us.

  • @ThePayneFamilyFarm2013
    @ThePayneFamilyFarm2013 7 месяцев назад

    Since my children were toddlers, the oldest now 33, we have kept Wassell as a centerpiece to family Christmas traditions. We make it on the 13th and continue adding to it until Christmas morning (12 Days of Christmas). Only difference, I did not add alcohol to it until they were older, our favorite being Rum. Over the past 3 decades, this drink has been a request of friends and family for our parties and get together. On Christmas day, being from the South, we will add it to our Sweet Tea, making a wonderful fruity concoction thar is served over ice. The older it is, the better it is!! I love what you have shared in its history and the many different recipes. I used one I found from historical research I did waaaaaaay before Google, in a library! I hope everyone will give it a try! Its absolutely wonderful and in our home we say, it's "Christmas in a cup!" Merry Christmas to all!! ❤❤

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Год назад +20

    That wassail is just as warm and inviting as you Max! Thanks for such amazing content!

  • @matthewharter6134
    @matthewharter6134 Год назад +3

    I heard that Johnny Appleseed was more likely spreading crab apple seeds so that they could be made into alcohol. That and to encourage new land owners to invest in their property by taking pride in owning it with trees they planted and took care off.

  • @EmilyJelassi
    @EmilyJelassi Год назад +1

    I’ve always loved your videos. The recipes are great but the history behind them is just fascinating! I know how much work the research can be, so I’m in awe of your outstanding attention to detail 👏🏻💯🙌🏻
    I’ve been incredibly sick lately (not Covid, thank goodness!). Watching your videos has kept me entertained and distracted and for that, I can’t thank you enough! I hope you and your family have a safe and very happy Christmas Max! 😊🎄☃️🎉

  • @c1ph3rpunk
    @c1ph3rpunk Год назад

    Growing up my grandparents made cider every autumn, lots of it, they had a large orchard and sold it locally. There was a large walk-in cooler in one of the barns, grandpa would set a dozen of those cider bottles aside and let it harden. Come Xmas, that was the start of his adult punch. No idea what else he added to it, but everyone came to their house for one thing: THE PUNCH.
    As far as I know, that went back many generations in the family, perhaps even back to those that were in Germany in the 16th & 17th centuries. That side of the family arrived in America around 1750 and seem to have brought a bunch of those traditions with them.

  • @carolleenkelmann4751
    @carolleenkelmann4751 Год назад +13

    I never ceased to be delighted by your topic of choice and most of all, the excellence in presentation of the content.

  • @DLFH
    @DLFH Год назад +10

    "And were here for your alcohol" 🤣 Thanks for your full commitment to authenticity, and felt for you eating the bread. Hope you'll be doing something around New Year's Eve.

  • @AngelavengerL
    @AngelavengerL Год назад +4

    We loved this! I did make some non alcoholic cider one year and it was so sweet i was like no wonder this is Christmas tradition! Dessert in a cup!

  • @hotspidicey
    @hotspidicey Год назад

    so glad you mentioned mari lywd! it's such an interesting christmas tradition and i'm definitely going to check out that video so i can learn more :)
    keep up the great work! your videos are so informative and entertaining!

  • @joepollardmagic
    @joepollardmagic Год назад +3

    I come from the west country in England and Wassail is still a thing there. Its still big in places like Cornwall.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Год назад +1

      Do you hang toast on trees in Cornwall?

    • @theoriginaldylangreene
      @theoriginaldylangreene Год назад

      @@TastingHistory No toast on the trees anymore.
      On new years eve at the stroke of 12 we drink wassail. We make it with mulled scrumpy (strong cloudy alcoholic cider) warm in a large wassail bowl. Then it's passed from person to person, before taking a drink you shout "wassail!" ( pronounced "whas-ale", not "whasel") Everyone shouts "Drink ale!" back at you, you take a drink before passing it anti-clockwise (as not to wind up the piskies).
      Then we go outside and beat the spirits out of the apple trees.

  • @thatcactusboi
    @thatcactusboi Год назад +9

    I was hoping so much you'd mention Jimmy's video and squealed when you did. His videos are so fun and ya'lls two channels have been my absolute faves in the past couple years. Nerdiness wins!

  • @sethguest781
    @sethguest781 7 месяцев назад

    There's an old song called "Mirie It Is While Sumer Ilast" (Merry It is While Summer Lasts), it's about how terrifying medieval Winters were, I can see why they would make this beverage, not only to warm up but also get plastered and forget about the horrific Winter!

  • @ShallowApple22
    @ShallowApple22 Год назад

    Thank you for providing us, with a year full of food, history and many, many laughs along the way wishing you happiness and. Health over the festive season

  • @emilycown4126
    @emilycown4126 Год назад +3

    I’d never heard of Wassail until last weekend, when I came across a jug at Trader Joe’s. I’m not sure how it lines up traditionally, but there were bits of peel and spice in it. I’ve really been enjoying it, thanks for making this!

  • @VNoche
    @VNoche Год назад +19

    It is always such a delight to watch your videos. Have a splendid holiday season!

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon Год назад

    when I was in college, I sang in the choir at one of the Episcopal churches in town. A couple who was also in the choir lived just a block from the church, so after the early Christmas Eve service, we would all adjourn for a between service party where much wassail and mulled wine and cheese and cookies were enjoyed by all. Then we would walk back to the church for the late services (which were always a lot more fun).

  • @paulahillier1390
    @paulahillier1390 Год назад +3

    Love me some Christmas tasting history. MERRY CHRISTMAS MAX AND JOSE! 🎄

  • @TairoruXRyuu
    @TairoruXRyuu Год назад +8

    I'm so happy you did this video! My family drinks wassail through the holidays (but a non alcoholic version) and always wondered where it came from. Thanks for your content, my days are always made better when you post :)

    • @toneddef
      @toneddef Год назад

      What do you put in your non-alcoholic version? That would be interesting for a family get-together.

    • @TairoruXRyuu
      @TairoruXRyuu Год назад +1

      @@toneddef We use apple juice, nutmeg, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and strangely a dash of orange tang 😂

    • @toneddef
      @toneddef Год назад

      @@TairoruXRyuu Thank you! And, strangely enough, I have Tang. I like to drink hot "Russian Tea" (also known as "Friendship Tea") during the winter.

  • @Irisheyesd1
    @Irisheyesd1 Год назад +8

    Thanks again Max for two episodes in one week. Love the show, the history and the recipes. You’re great. 🎄

  • @paulwagner688
    @paulwagner688 Год назад +1

    I once made a recipe that was 3 parts cider, 1 part brandy, with clove studded oranges as well. I also used allspice, cinnamon and a whole nutmeg and heated it. It was, as I recall, delicious, but a little too much clove. I also used both powdered ginger and crystallized ginger as well.

  • @godssaltychild8575
    @godssaltychild8575 8 месяцев назад

    The town I live in ( new braunfels Texas) has a wassle fest every year where the town has a contest to determine who makes the best wassel. It's a great time.

  • @DrIgnacious
    @DrIgnacious Год назад +4

    Welcome to the family, Sprigatito!

  • @stevejohnson3357
    @stevejohnson3357 Год назад +3

    You can get crab apples. They make good spiced jams and the trees are a very pretty landscape element. The wood is attractive too. It has a pinkish color.

  • @taylorashlock6309
    @taylorashlock6309 8 месяцев назад

    My college choir sang the Vaughan Williams wassail song at the end of all our holiday performances and then after our Christmas concert there was a wassail party. I love the historical context and it brought a lot of happy memories 🎄🍊

  • @CarlosGarcia-le9ll
    @CarlosGarcia-le9ll Год назад

    Your singing bust me up! Lol love watching and learning recipes from you! Love the history as well!! Merry Christmas and may the new year bring you much happiness and success!!!

  • @BeansonsBeans
    @BeansonsBeans Год назад +12

    YAY I've been wanting to make some of this and now I have an authentic recipe to try! Thanks, Max

  • @ValkyrieTiara
    @ValkyrieTiara Год назад +7

    I think that the toast at that time may have been a bit different from what you used. Stronger, denser bread that maybe was even stale to begin with. For something like you've got there, I definitely think a more thorough toasting would help improve it, as well as floating it on the top of the wassail rather than having it poured over.
    Alternate, modern interpretation: strain the wassail, and spread the resultant "applesauce" on the toast and eat directly 👀

  • @brianchristian7293
    @brianchristian7293 Год назад +1

    When I was growing up, neighbors and dear friends would host a Wassail party on Christmas night. They heated apple cider in one of those church basement coffee percolators, and place a bowl of clear rum next to it. The kids were just supposed to have glasses of the cider, but some rum might have been snuck (or so I'm told). This was wonderful. Haven't been able to tune in in awhile, but this was a fun return.