British Habits I Can't Stop Doing

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024

Комментарии • 807

  • @BritishBeachcomber
    @BritishBeachcomber 2 года назад +29

    The main reason we go to the pub after a funeral is so we can meet family we've not seen for ages. Just to remind ourselves why we've been avoiding them for decades.

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  2 года назад +3

      😂

    • @adamwest8711
      @adamwest8711 2 года назад +2

      Damn t that’s so true

    • @mac_uk5464
      @mac_uk5464 Год назад +1

      WE all promise to get togeather one day Without some dying, but we nether do. (Acvtually, one of my cousins did hold to this, & she hosts a family get togeather once a year now.).

    • @Motherhubbard170
      @Motherhubbard170 Год назад

      @@mac_uk5464 yuk

    • @duncanliath
      @duncanliath 5 месяцев назад +2

      Spot on! 👍 I’m Scottish but moved to England many years ago and married an English lass. The first time she met my extended family was when one of my aunts died and we travelled up to Scotland for the funeral. We arrived at my sister’s house about 10pm the evening before the funeral. Sis had a large pot of broth and chunks of bread waiting for us (to line our stomachs) while brother-in-law had bottles of whisky and vodka on the table. Around 3am, the girls retired to bed but Jimmy and I decided it was so late we might as well stop up (the funeral was early in the morning) and he put another bottle of whisky on the table. After the funeral (as Alanna describes) all the mourners piled into a local hotel. Lots more drink was consumed, there was a lot of banter, humour, fond memories of my late aunt, lots of talk about what a whale of a time we were having, how my aunt would have loved to see the wider family meeting up together and we should do it more often. Then, two of my aunts demonstrated why we don’t meet up more often. They started bickering - apparently an insult from one to the other at a previous family gathering was suddenly remembered. The bickering grew louder and louder and the language more foul. So much so that the hotel manager asked them to be quiet. They told him to ‘f%@k off’ He threatened to call the police so they were quiet for a while. A bit later, one of them went to the loo. The other followed her. Next, one of my cousins who’d gone outside to have a fag burst back into the room to say my two aunts were fighting in the car park. While their husbands went outside to try and pull the two women apart, the police arrived. Suddenly confronted by a common enemy, my two aunts, their differences momentarily forgotten, joined forces and began swinging fists and kicking out at the two cops. More cops arrived. My aunts were restrained and bundled into the back of cop cars. Their husbands returned to the hotel to finish their pints 😁. As we sat in the taxi afterwards going back to my sister’s house, my wife said she’d never enjoyed a funeral so much before and insisted I make sure we attended the next funeral of my Scottish relatives because Scottish funerals were so much more fun than sombre english funerals!

  • @golach420
    @golach420 2 года назад +41

    Regarding funerals... I bought a very expensive bottle of Brora whisky for my Dad as a birthday present. We'd ask him all the time for a dram, but he kept saying to keep it for his wake. Well, he had the last laugh. He passed over 12 years ago. We cracked the wax and poured everyone a nip and it was bloody awful. I'm sure he knew.

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  2 года назад +6

      So sorry for your loss, but what a great lasting memory - sounds like my Dad lol

    • @England91
      @England91 2 года назад +2

      Sounds like it turned into vinegar

    • @charlestaylor9424
      @charlestaylor9424 2 года назад +3

      @@England91 whisky doesn't do that once it's bottled it's static. Brora is a Highland fruity whisky so if you're used to Islay malts it's a very different taste.

    • @jillhobson6128
      @jillhobson6128 2 года назад

      Re funerals, a lot of family and friends like to meet after a funeral, have a buffet and perhaps a drink but their homes are far too small to invite everyone. That's why they sometimes hire a room in a pub, village hall or somewhere everyone can gather.
      We don't all live in big houses.

    • @golach420
      @golach420 2 года назад

      @@England91 an acquired taste lol. I bought it because I went to high school in the neighbouring town. I was on my way home on my first ever overseas business trip and knew Dad would have been asking lots of questions. He was a scholar and a gentleman, brought up in tough circumstances, something our family appreciate to this day.

  • @malcolmross8427
    @malcolmross8427 8 месяцев назад +1

    A “Wake” is a very British thing. They do lighten the mood after a somber ceremony!

  • @davebirch1976
    @davebirch1976 2 года назад +19

    I think the bowl in the sink thing might come from many years ago when kitchen sinks were used for multiple jobs like hand washing clothes and washing other various things, so people might have thought it seemed more hygienic to wash the pots in a bowl to prevent any contamination.

    • @peterdurnien9084
      @peterdurnien9084 2 года назад +3

      I remember mum bathing me in the kitchen sink.

    • @leohickey4953
      @leohickey4953 2 года назад +2

      @@peterdurnien9084 You were lucky! Our mam used to ...

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini 2 года назад

      Takes less water & stays warmer longer.
      I don't know what we did before polythene bowls though???

    • @shellieeyre8758
      @shellieeyre8758 2 года назад +3

      I think bowls for washing up were to protect breakables in porcelain or stone sinks. Before that it was customary to put a tea towel in the bottom of the sink.
      The other advantage is that, in the days before double sinks were everywhere, it's possible to dispose of things down the sink without ruining the washing up water.

  • @dprid
    @dprid 2 года назад +6

    The plastic bowl also reduces the amount of hot water you use, which saves money. Bear in mind that back in the day many people got their hot water by boiling a kettle, or maybe from a small hotwater tank if they actually had a heating system rather than just a fire, but either way hot water was not freely freely available so people used it sparingly. My mum had a combi-boiler for the last 15 years so instant hot water, but she still had a bowl in the sink and used as little as she could, and criticised anyone she regarded as using too much.

  • @lulib6372
    @lulib6372 2 года назад +6

    Yes I use a bowl in the sink. The bowl also gets used for taking water to places where you need a bit of water, it is smaller than a bucket and right there in the sink. We might use the bowl to take water out to water the plants when there is a bit of a shortage, it is useful to have the bowl if you need to clear the sink quickly to do something which is pretty useful for hand washing, if someone needs the sink just take the bowl out. The bowl gets used for things like defrosting the freezer, my mum also uses hers for warming plates in hot water. I only realised how many times the bowl got used when I didn't have one.

  • @lottie2525
    @lottie2525 2 года назад +19

    The shop thing, it's the law for larger shops on Sundays, they can't sell anything before 10am, but they open so people can go around and get their stuff ready to check out at 10am if they want to. I remember when all shops were shut on a Sunday. It was so nice to walk through a deserted city on a Sunday.

    • @TheSpeegy
      @TheSpeegy 2 года назад +2

      Not quite right, shops can only sell for 6 hours on a Sunday. They can decide when to use those 6 hours. In London on a Sunday the shops often don't open until midday..just depends when they get most footfall.

    • @lottie2525
      @lottie2525 2 года назад +1

      @@TheSpeegy Yeah but it has to be only for up to 6 consecutive hours between 10 and 6, not before or after those times.

  • @angelique_cs
    @angelique_cs 2 года назад +17

    We never had the bowl in the sink ever in my experience here in California. Until about 6 years ago, that is. Because water conservation is such a crucial thing here, it helps me save some water and creates a "double sink" for rinsing.
    So, I like it now!
    Excellent video as always 😊

    • @RobbofromCronulla
      @RobbofromCronulla 2 года назад +1

      Down here in Oz we typically have the double sink, but don't use the smaller one.

    • @MARKSTRINGFELLOW1
      @MARKSTRINGFELLOW1 2 года назад +2

      You can can use the water for watering outdoors

    • @sarahclifford2015
      @sarahclifford2015 2 года назад +4

      Being British I have always used a bowl, but for the last few summers it has been even more useful. It collects the water when I wash my fruit/vegetables or hands, which I then use to water the plants. Even the washing up water goes onto the plants, if it is not too dirty. I have heard that aphids do not like washing up liquid, so that is a bonus.

  • @paulknox999
    @paulknox999 2 года назад +4

    a plastic bowl to wash dishes has many advantages but for me the water stays hotter for longer, doesnt make as much noise

  • @martinlaffey328
    @martinlaffey328 2 года назад +6

    Funerals can turn into cracking days because on the whole you can see friends and family who you've not bumped into for years and the catch up can be brilliant...and we get really pissed.

  • @keithwindow4435
    @keithwindow4435 2 года назад +3

    The bowl in the sink served several practical uses
    1. If you had a butler sink or porcelain sink it would protect the sink from frying pans, saucepans and other metal objects which would scratch the finish. If you used aluminium pots and pan they would leave black marks on the sink which could be difficult to remove
    2. In the days before throwaway nappies you would need to wash towelling nappies the sink before you boiled them in a big saucepan on your stove/cooker..remember in the 60s not everyone had washing machines or separate bathrooms.
    3. Gardeners use the washing up water on their roses to kill greenfly easier if you use the bowl.
    4. As I said in 2 you used to wash yourself using a bowl in the kitchen which if necessary you could take to another room to soak your feet in it. You could also bath the baby in it.
    Sunday trading those 6 hours of trading means money being taken during those hours. They can open up earlier and take orders as long as money is not changing hands. Before this change in law, furniture and carpet shops could open on Sundays so people could browse and place an order but would pay later.

  • @davidjones332
    @davidjones332 2 года назад +1

    I think the washing-up bowl goes back to the days when most houses had a "Belfast" sink (which you can still buy). These are huge, and were used for washing clothes, and for bathing children in the days before most houses had bathrooms. Hot water would have to be boiled on a coal fire, or later drawn from a gas-fired geyser, and had to be used sparingly, so because it takes a lot of water to fill a huge Belfast sink, the bowl made a lot of sense. It also protected crockery against being broken through contact with a hard ceramic surface.

    • @karenblackadder1183
      @karenblackadder1183 2 года назад

      Glad I'm not the only one on here old enough to that. It was also the reason most people only had a bath once a week.

    • @karenblackadder1183
      @karenblackadder1183 2 года назад

      *remember

  • @Yo-ItsYo
    @Yo-ItsYo 2 года назад +3

    Sunday is a day to relax. No " go go go " .. so large stores won't open until 10am. And they close early. Just do your shop on any other day 24/7. Sunday is the one day of the week where things are not "go go go" 24/7. It's a nice thing.

  • @janrogers8352
    @janrogers8352 2 года назад +1

    Sunday trading laws only allow the stores to trade (i.e., take money) for 6 hours. However, to maximise sales, customers are able to start filling baskets ready for when the tills open.
    Using a washing up bowl allowed you to use less water in a very large sink, it also meant you could throw the water on the garden. We were saving water back when it wasn't as important as it is now.

  • @primalengland
    @primalengland 2 года назад +1

    I was born in 1954, so remember shops closed on Sunday and also Wednesday afternoon. Yep….. Wednesday afternoon.

  • @richardsinger01
    @richardsinger01 2 года назад +5

    The bowl in the sink saves on hot water, allows rinsing and is kinder on the glass and China. It’s also in the way at all other times. Oddly it also doubles up as a handy receptacle for sick children to vomit into. Next day it’s used to wash the dishes again…

  • @Phiyedough
    @Phiyedough 2 года назад +7

    I have been to too many UK funerals but I've never been to one where people were getting drunk. It is common practice to book a function room at a hotel or pub and there will be buffet food, wine etc but the ones I've been to have been quite civilised. The washing up bowl thing is mostly about not wasting hot water or washing up liquid. A bottle of washing up liquid lasts me for months but I've seen people who use a squirt for each item they wash.

    • @paulm2467
      @paulm2467 Год назад

      The Irish wake is the exception, it’s a celebration of a life and drinking is pretty much obligatory, it’s considered rude to not drink to the deceased and tell the stories of his life.

  • @charlestaylor9424
    @charlestaylor9424 2 года назад +45

    I knew someone with terminal cancer. He decided that 3 weeks before he died that he would hold a wake. He invited friends. his father and his kids. Everybody knew he was dying but we had a great night, telling stories and reminiscing.

    • @garyblower1921
      @garyblower1921 2 года назад

      Love the vlog hope your keeping safe and are well

  • @SteveGouldinSpain
    @SteveGouldinSpain 2 года назад +7

    I'm having trouble saying King Charles without subconciously adding Spaniel. I fear further trouble ahead as his successor is lightly to be King Willy.

  • @Judgles
    @Judgles 2 года назад +11

    When I was a kid we used to have sugar butties - just buttered bread with sugar sprinkled on the butter. Magic! Thanks for another great video, Alanna! x

    • @eze8970
      @eze8970 2 года назад

      Ah yes, the 'sugar sandwich', only brown sugar though.

    • @kieranbarker1902
      @kieranbarker1902 2 года назад

      There's a similar thing in Australia called fairy bread! en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_bread

    • @Elwaves2925
      @Elwaves2925 2 года назад

      Never had that but Jam and crisp butties was a thing in my younger years.
      I seem to remember a milk sandwich as well, possibly started as a joke by Tiswas, but I'm not sure on that one.

    • @steveallen3434
      @steveallen3434 2 года назад

      @@Elwaves2925 There is almost nothing I have not put between two slices of bread at sometime and even tried coco-ice and chips😀

    • @klondikechris
      @klondikechris 2 года назад

      Sprinkles (100's, and 1000's for the Brits) work as well. Even better if you can find the chocolate ones!

  • @normanbrown3833
    @normanbrown3833 2 года назад +12

    The washing up bowl’s principal purpose is to save water and energy. It effectively reduces the size of the sink and therefore you use less water to fill it and less energy to heat that water - something everyone should be doing.

    • @stevehill5071
      @stevehill5071 Год назад

      The washing bowl thing came out much earlier than saving water or energy. Most homes pre 1970 had porcelain sinks and they chipped very easily. By using a bowl it protected the sink from damage.

  • @DaveBartlett
    @DaveBartlett 2 года назад +1

    It's not about having staff working, so even though there are no staff visible, they will be present in the building to open up the store, and even to work behind the scenes in the warehouse, office, etc.
    The 'browsing' hour was brought in by many stores, because shops above a certain size are only allowed by law to TRADE for six hours, but they're not (legally) trading until payment is made, so adopting the browsing hour allows the shop to open for SEVEN hours, but no money changes hands for the first hour, thus getting around the limitations of the Sunday trading laws. So for example, you can shop at your leisure from 9am providing you don't check out until 10am, thus making the store's opening hours 9am until 4pm, though their trading hours are still within the law at 10am until 4pm.

  • @bikesandcats52
    @bikesandcats52 2 года назад +1

    We have a bowl in the sink. I think it comes from people having Belfast sinks which were far too large to fill with water for washing up.

  • @michaelscott7166
    @michaelscott7166 2 года назад +15

    Given your knowledge of how British sandwiches work I am now compelled to suggest you dedicate a whole video to the Wigan Kebab.

    • @fil668
      @fil668 2 года назад

      Good call Michael, just about to bring Wigan Kebab to the attention of Alanna.👍

    • @TheRattyBiker
      @TheRattyBiker 2 года назад

      I'm gonna be controversial and say its a whole Northern thing, I lived in Yorkshire for 14 years about 20 years ago and all the chippys did pie butties or pie butty with bits and extra gravy 😉 {scraps to some people} Wigan kebab is a cute name but IMO it also makes zero sense... the place should be respected for being pie and a rave central... Who doesn't love a pie and a rave??? Not merely for just a pie butty....

    • @michaelscott7166
      @michaelscott7166 2 года назад

      @@TheRattyBiker I'm from Yorkshire, almost on the border with the wrong side of the Pennines and whilst you can get it in Yorkshire chippies it's definitely more a Lancastrian thing. It reminds me of the old joke
      "Why do meat pies have holes in't top of them?"
      "So Wiganers can pick a 6 pack up wi one hand!"

    • @alanloan66
      @alanloan66 Год назад +1

      My late wife worked at a chippy and before the shop closed she would put a mince pie in the fryer for me to bring home ( mmmm nice crispy mince pie delish )

    • @TheRattyBiker
      @TheRattyBiker Год назад

      @@alanloan66 sounds bob on that!

  • @jfergs.3302
    @jfergs.3302 2 года назад +1

    Back bacons best for butties. Streaky bacons really only useful for drapping over your turkey at Christmas, and wrapping around those little sausages.

  • @ianjones3568
    @ianjones3568 2 года назад +8

    I've lived in UK all my life and never knew about 'browsing time'! I'm definitely not a morning person. Mum used to have a bowl in the sink when I was a kid but don't have one now, although I can see the advantages. I thought they were used to tip the water out onto the garden after washing up.

    • @necronom
      @necronom 2 года назад +2

      I've never heard of a browsing hour either.
      We do have a washing up bowl, and I don't think I've ever seen anyone not have one.

    • @ianjones3568
      @ianjones3568 2 года назад

      @@necronom for the uses stated earlier?

    • @necronom
      @necronom 2 года назад +1

      @@ianjones3568 The bowl? So the things don't get damaged against metal, so I can rinse things between the gap or get the water hot in the gap, so I can lift it out if it has things in and use the sink for other things like filling a bucket with hot water. Lots of reasons. It would also just feel really weird to not have it.

    • @saxon-mt5by
      @saxon-mt5by 2 года назад

      'Browsing time' was new to me too; there are three supermarkets local to me and they are all open at 6am on a Sunday.

  • @scottlp2323
    @scottlp2323 2 года назад +21

    The text 'x' has always been a little odd for me too. I'm a Brit, I use it all the time and usually in 'xXx' form but, also, as a Brit, I will avoid it's physical counterpart in real life as much as possible. :) I think it's a pressure release valve of hundreds of years of 'stiff upper lip-ness' that us Brits will throw 'exes' all over typed text to compensate for other Brits kindly staying at a respectable distance in any actual social interactions. Haha! :)

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini 2 года назад

      Telegrams, that's why.

  • @Brookspirit
    @Brookspirit 2 года назад +2

    Lots of people used to have (and many still do) a large ceramic Belfast sink, with those it's much easier to have a plastic bowl. Those types of sinks take too much water to fill and things are easily broken in them.

    • @rosemarielee7775
      @rosemarielee7775 2 года назад

      If you don't have a plastic bowl, where do you tip tea dregs, and other liquid leftovers? You don't want to tip it into the washing water?

    • @Brookspirit
      @Brookspirit 2 года назад

      @@rosemarielee7775 I do have a bowl. lol

  • @mariacurtis9247
    @mariacurtis9247 2 года назад

    A wake after a funeral is to remember the loved on and you raise a glass in their memory

  • @No_Rice_No_Power
    @No_Rice_No_Power 2 года назад +2

    I never questioned the bowl as a kid, and stopped when I moved out and didn't realise it was 'a thing' till you mentioned.

  • @LeedsInAHat
    @LeedsInAHat 2 года назад +1

    “Sunday morning” - does not compute!

    • @LeedsInAHat
      @LeedsInAHat 2 года назад

      Early closing on Sundays is ridiculous, though.

  • @mouseketeery
    @mouseketeery 2 года назад +1

    The shops can't trade on a Sunday until 10am. But some of them will open their doors earlier to allow people to fill their trolleys beforehand. Most people have families, they're not just buying a couple of items. The doors are opened before formerly trading as a courtesy to them.

  • @BennyH11
    @BennyH11 2 года назад +1

    When using the bowl it protect the sink from scratches from cutlery, pans etc. Plus you can still rinse things under the tap without diluting the soap water or overfilling.

  • @DaveBartlett
    @DaveBartlett 2 года назад

    Butties are a big part of life in my house, especially on a Sunday at breakfast time: alternate weeks we'll get up late and have a full English breakfast as a brunch, (thus missing lunch!,) with bacon, sausage, eggs, black pudding, mushrooms, tomatoes & baked beans, but on the other, alternate Sundays we'll have Bacon & Egg butties or Sausage & Egg butties, often with mushrooms or tomatoes in them too. Basically just the full English, split into two, but without the black pudding or baked beans.

  • @kevinparkes417
    @kevinparkes417 2 года назад +10

    Hi Alanna. Another great vid. I remember before 1994 when I was young (er) all shops were closed on Sunday. There was a huge debate at that time with many people wanting them open, but some religious groups said that would destroy the spiritual side of British life, and some labour groups felt it would erode employee's rights. The compromise in the 1994 law was that shops over a certain size like supermarkets could open on a Sunday, but only between 10 am and 4pm. Smaller shops could open normally if they wished. They included a weird rule that larger shops could open earlier than 10am "for browsing" but could not sell anything until 10am. Strangely, most smaller shops still close on a Sunday and most people don't bother going to them. Not sure why. Another British quirk I guess. We all know it's out of date but I don't think we can be bothered to change it. Did you know that in some parts of the UK pubs weren't allowed to open on a Sunday either? I'm sure when I lived in West Wales in the early 1980s Sunday was dry.

    • @mikeh020011
      @mikeh020011 2 года назад

      From Parliament.uk On Sundays, large shops may open for no more than 6 continual hours between the period 10am and 6pm. All large shops must close on Easter Sunday and on Christmas Day. In contrast, there are no opening restrictions for small shops (under 280 square metres or 3,000 square feet).

    • @alexvaraderey
      @alexvaraderey 2 года назад +3

      You can't work out why i, as the owner of a small shop, open Monday to Saturday, aren't open on a Sunday? Because it's my day off.

    • @2ridiculous41
      @2ridiculous41 2 года назад

      @@alexvaraderey why not open Tues-Sun and get the busier Sunday shopping and close on the quiet Monday?

    • @alexvaraderey
      @alexvaraderey 2 года назад +2

      @@2ridiculous41 Not a bad idea, but it would only work if a lot of shops did it and it became a normal thing.
      The other problem would be that on a Sunday, the bank and the Post Office and the suppliers are all closed.

    • @frankbrodie5168
      @frankbrodie5168 2 года назад

      Wow.. I just looked it up.. The afternoon shutdown was introduced during the First World War lol. A ridiculous premise anyway. Because it wasn't at all enforced at national level. And removed in Scotland many years before England. Blackpool certainly totally ignored the afternoon closedown law. And who could prosecute their licensed premises for flouting the law? Only the local council. Which would hardly shoot their own tourism industry in the foot.

  • @hmmslagathor9285
    @hmmslagathor9285 2 года назад

    My mum still uses a bowl, I asked her, she said the plastic bowl is smaller so cheaper to fill with hot water. Plus if she needs to do anything else in the sink she can remove all the ‘still to do washing up’ in one go, use the sink then put it back when she has finished. We don’t use a bowl, but sometime I wish I still did, when I want to wash boots or something else.

  • @Scrumpy00
    @Scrumpy00 2 года назад +7

    Fun video. I especially enjoyed watching you fannying about discussing bum bags and getting all embarrassed, lol. And yes, that's another legit British saying and not rude at all! Context is everything :o) cheers m'dears x

    • @phoebus007
      @phoebus007 2 года назад +1

      Yes, it was amusing to watch Alanna trying to explain the British meaning of "fanny" to a North American audience without using a term that might offend their ears. We Brits know full well that fanny can be a very mild euphemism for female genitalia and are probably much more familiar with far more robust Anglo-Saxon language.

  • @NathanEllisBodi-bf5zo
    @NathanEllisBodi-bf5zo 9 месяцев назад

    As someone who worked for many years in retail, hopefully it will cheer you up to know that whenever someone runs around 'on a misson' on a Sunday, we're all going 'they don't know it's sunday' in our heads.

  • @andymcgarty3099
    @andymcgarty3099 2 года назад +5

    Alanna, more spot on observations. I thought a bowl was used in a sink to save water, especially hot water. But I've never had one.
    Great video x

    • @Phiyedough
      @Phiyedough 2 года назад

      Yes, I've never been to Canada but I've seen plenty of mainland Europeans washing dishes and they nearly all keep the tap running the whole time.

  • @scottyoung2602
    @scottyoung2602 2 года назад +4

    In Scotland the big stores are open 24/7 (ASDA, Tesco), smaller stores are open near normal hours (maybe a couple of hours shorter compared to their week day hours). The only exception is the Outer Hebrides, where all commercial activities stop on a Sunday.

    • @jamesalexander3893
      @jamesalexander3893 2 года назад

      @The reason why the legislation wasn't applied to Scotland was that it was assumed that the Scots would never tolerate Sunday opening. But the Outer Hebrides maintains that traditional position.

  • @Malfie657
    @Malfie657 2 года назад +4

    You started with Bacon butties, so you had me interested from the get go. As it turned out the rest was really great as well and most of it had me smiling , even about funerals!! It'll be interesting to see how you go about covering the Queen's passing too!

  • @grahvis
    @grahvis 2 года назад +1

    A bowl in the sink means the sink can still be used to a degree, while you are washing up.
    I remember the American student where I worked, saying how her British boyfriend told her not to call it a fanny bag.

  • @paulhill1665
    @paulhill1665 2 года назад

    There was an attempt to revoke the Sunday trading laws, in England, it was blocked by the Scottish MP’s, Scotland has no restrictions on Sunday trading. As a child I can remember when no shops were allowed to open on a Sunday, if we had run out of milk, for example then there was one shop where we could go and knock on the door, a face would appear, and we would whisper, “ a pint of milk please” the door would shut and reopen with a pint of milk, money was exchange and we would go home with a pint of mike, often ‘on the turn’.
    Regarding dish washers, when I got married, we had no money, we had to do everything ourselves, including the catering, I spent, what felt like weeks, doing nothing but washing up dishes. The very first major purchase I made, once finance allowed, was a dishwasher, still hate washing up, and still have a dishwasher

  • @scottlarrabee9527
    @scottlarrabee9527 2 года назад

    Certain sized shops cannot legally trade on a Sunday, but will still have all the operational costs of being open. The browsing time essentially allows them to hit the ground running when the tills open instead of effectively losing another chunk of trading time as you collect your shopping.

  • @TheMagicGeekdom
    @TheMagicGeekdom Год назад

    We've had quite a few people recommend your channel and I just watched several videos. You are such a joy to watch. You had me laughing about bowls in the sink. We've come across a few Airbnbs in the UK with them and were quite confused about that situation. 😂

  • @johnwatson5235
    @johnwatson5235 2 года назад +2

    Hey Alanna when I was young my dad used to fill the sink bowl with hot water and steep his feet in after work! Next time you have a bacon sandwich instead of buttering the bread try dipping it in the pan the bacon has been cooked in,delicious😋 great vid. X

    • @Phiyedough
      @Phiyedough 2 года назад

      Yes, I would never use butter on a bacon sandwich.

  • @laura-leeoconnor6298
    @laura-leeoconnor6298 Год назад

    I’m Canadian and have used a dish pan when I have only had a single sink. Very helpful when rinsing :)

  • @naitchb16
    @naitchb16 2 года назад +9

    My mum (who isn’t British) properly detests the bowl in the sink and always tuts if she sees one 😭 I loved a chip butty (with cheap white bread) as a kid, as well as shoving crisps in my sandwich at school 🤤 This was a great list, Alanna. I really enjoyed it

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  2 года назад +2

      You mum knows best! 😂

    • @dave_h_8742
      @dave_h_8742 2 года назад +4

      Chip butty or bacon butty with real butter on cheap white bread, comfort food !

    • @eloisepasteur
      @eloisepasteur 2 года назад +5

      But how are you having a bacon butty without brown sauce?

    • @texbankuk
      @texbankuk 2 года назад +2

      Bacon or sausage butties with brown sauce (HP or Yorkshire Relish ) No butter! That's my fave Alanna.
      Another which makes a good base sandwich is fried onions! Boiled onions are worth a tryout too but they taste best while still on the warm side OK?

    • @lawrenceglaister4364
      @lawrenceglaister4364 2 года назад

      @@AdventuresAndNaps I banned the bowl many years ago as people just put stuff in it and walked away , so when people asked were it was I just said " do what you do when eating out , put any food left on one plate , knifes and forks on another and stack the plates together and leave all on the counter and I'll fill the dishwasher " ( see two problems solved in one go ) lol .
      A long time ago shops were closed on a Sunday and also for half a day during the week , this was to give the workers a rest due to employers over working the staff and not giving them time off , the Sunday was for church like you said , things changed over the years with people working longer hours and not having time to shop plus of course more women working , Morrisons leave you a choice , hang around at home then go shopping after 10 or wait outside another shop until they open at 10 or go early run around and do your weekly shop and be first in the queue , of course just shop local in a small shop .
      My favourite sandwiches are normally toasted bread on both sides with butter ( the butter is to stop any juices making the toast soggy and floppy ) and use back bacon and either have it on its own or with anyone or more of the following -- egg , sausages , chips , tinned tomatoes ( defo with bacon mmmm ) .

  • @madpixie2
    @madpixie2 2 года назад

    Unfortunately i am old enough to remember when shops first started opening on Sundays. There was a mixture of joy & outrage and promises that nobody would have to work Sundays if they didn't want to (that soon got forgotten!).
    Anyway, there were all sorts of tricks used in the early days to try & get around the limited hours rules and this is the only one that remains. I think the idea is that if you need to do a big shop you can get it in the trolley & out the door at 10.10am rather than getting there for a 10am opening and out the door at 11.10am.
    I know it seems odd to the 24/7 'want it now' generation but i quite like it. There's always corner stores for your essentials. x

  • @mac_uk5464
    @mac_uk5464 Год назад

    When large out of town shopping complexes came to England, there was a concern that smaller hight street shops would loose out. So they came up with the large shops can't open before 10am. so as to protect smaller traders. Why we go to the pub after a funeral is, the deceased home is probably to small, or handed back to the council, & it.s cheaper than renting a function room, that costs money, & to have a chat with family you haven't seen for years etc.

  • @AndyFarnham
    @AndyFarnham Год назад

    Regarding shops on Sunday, they were closed in England and Wales because it is the Christian day of rest. In the 90's the DIY store B&Q challenged this and started opening on Sundays. They were fined, but if memory serves it was only something like £50,000 for the whole company, so it was worth their while to just pay the fine. Then someone in their company came up with the idea of selling apples. You see certain things which didn't require work could be sold on Sunday, for instance biscuits could be sold, but not teabags as you had to pour water through the teabag (ie do work). So you would put your items through the checkout, and the price of the goods would be the price you paid for an apple, and you'd get the goods for free. This meant the law wasn't broken so no fine had to be paid. The government responded by introducing Sunday trading legislation, covering workers rights, and the restriction of 6 hours being open, so most shops open 10-4 or 11-5. They can be open outside of these hours, but can't sell anything. Recently the government tried to modernise the rules, but this was blocked by Scottish MPs, despite Scotland not having any laws against Sunday trading. You see, unlike NI, Scotland and Wales, England does not have its own parliament. Traditionally, Scottish MPs would abstain from voting on legislation which didn't affect Scotland, but the current disrespectful bunch chose to take advantage and interfere with England's legislation.

  • @terencecarroll1812
    @terencecarroll1812 Год назад

    The browsing time works if you are getting a trolley full of shopping as there is hardly anyone around to get in the way and shops are usually fully stocked from the night before so you can get everything you need and then not wait in a queue to checkout

  • @enemde3025
    @enemde3025 2 года назад +1

    Chip butties DON'T have French fries in them . They have CHIPS in them !
    Never seen a " browsing time " in my local shops.
    In my youth, I'm 65, shops used to have half day closing on a Wednesday, close at 5pm every day and NEVER open on a Sunday.
    Plastic bowls in the sink prevents you scratching the metal of the sink.
    When my late wife passed away, we had food and drinks, not necessary alcohol, after the funeral, so that relatives and friends could catch up with one another. No getting pissed involved.
    I only use X to my female family members only. Anyone else would be weird.

  • @davebirch1976
    @davebirch1976 2 года назад +2

    I can remember when shops were closed on a Sunday and pubs only opened on a Sunday lunchtime so guys could have a couple of pints while 'er indoors cooked Sunday lunch 😆

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha 2 года назад +1

      When I was a kid we used to go to Scotland quite often, and on Sundays you'd get locals in hotel bars because the pubs were shut.

    • @davebirch1976
      @davebirch1976 2 года назад +1

      @@caw25sha I'm in my 40s and I don't know why but I've always felt buying or even drinking alcohol before midday just seems wrong 😆

  • @rogerwitte
    @rogerwitte 2 года назад +1

    I think the 'wake' started out as an Irish tradition that the Brits adopted.

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha 2 года назад

      I thought it was originally Irish, probably because of Finnegan's Wake.

  • @kahlanwilliams267
    @kahlanwilliams267 2 года назад

    Believe it or not the shops opening for browsing is a profit driven thing. The law states that shops over a certain size cannot sell anything for longer than 6 hours on a Sunday. It was meant to reduce Sunday working hours. However, as a loophole, stores started opening an hour early for browsing. This means that while they cannot sell anything, people can fill their trolly's and be at the checkout at 10. This means that sales are made from 10 rather than waiting for the customers to get around the store.

  • @catherinehaywood7092
    @catherinehaywood7092 2 года назад

    Shops over a certain floor space are not allowed to open by law to sell until 10am. That said you can get your shopping done and check out at 10 so that’s a win.
    They also have to close at a certain time on Sunday’s
    I’m 64 and have never used a bowl in the sink.

  • @andrewcook8093
    @andrewcook8093 2 года назад

    The bowl in the sink, a) uses less water, b) means you don’t need fish around in the water to pull out the plug, c) is something that I don’t use either.

  • @dougreid1951
    @dougreid1951 Год назад

    The Browsing Hour thing is England & Wales - Scotland the shops open whenever they want to....
    The multi-cultural thing for sandwiches is the Pita Bread - try it with Fish Fingers and Cheese.

  • @robyn2791
    @robyn2791 2 года назад

    The bowl in the sink protects the sink as sinks were historically made of ceramic. I don't use a washing up bowl because my sink is stainless steel and doesn't need protecting.

  • @billmayor8567
    @billmayor8567 2 года назад +3

    I think legally supermarkets are not allowed to trade before a certain time. They open earlier so people can shop and then check out at 10am. Strange....I know!!😅
    The funeral thing is very true. To the pub afterwards to gather and swap stories, have a laugh and comfort each other. Nothing wrong with that😊

  • @stephenphillip5656
    @stephenphillip5656 2 года назад +2

    Browsing hour is the shop's way of getting more sales during restricted opening hours. If they opened the doors at 10am, ppl would then spend the first hour browsing & shopping, typically arriving at the checkout at say 11am. If the shop opens at 9am for "browsing" (read "shopping") but can't by law sell anything before 10am they've had an extra hour's "opening time".
    Funerals - the "Wake" at the end of a funeral is a "pressure release" wherein the stress of saying farewell to a loved one can be released with a bit of chat & social interaction over some light refreshments. Getting "hammered" at a wake is a social no-no really. It *does* happen occasionally but no, it shouldn't as it's disrespectful to the grieving family & can cause further stress to all. I've been to a few funeral wakes & I've never seen anyone getting so drunk that they cause distress to others. Maybe I've been lucky.
    Great video again Alanna. Byeee!

  • @colinseeney471
    @colinseeney471 2 года назад

    I have a bowl in the sink. Small flat and no space to have twin sinks to wash and rinse. The browsing hour is a con, the large shops can only open for 6 hours on a Sunday in England. They open early for browsing, then there's carnage at check out when finally the open to take payment. Its old fashioned but try the rest of Europe.

  • @brianwhittington5086
    @brianwhittington5086 2 года назад +1

    My daughter got a nice heavy duty bum bag, with twin pockets from Primark Alanna , think it was around £6. The Washing Up Bowl will make more sense if you're ever in a property that has a water meter where you pay by the cubic metre you use. Yes it really does save water, and allows you to multi task with your sink. Some people go a step further and have a plastic bucket too.

  • @charlesunderwood6334
    @charlesunderwood6334 2 года назад

    Failing going to the pub after a funeral, you clear out the deceased's drinks cabinet. If you are lucky there is some really good whisky hidden at the back.

  • @mrade5321
    @mrade5321 2 года назад +2

    When I was a kid, I had an aunt Fanny. It was the coolest thing ever. You could say things like "stop being a fanny, Fanny". Any excuse to say it twice 😂

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha 2 года назад

      Apparently there was an Aunt Fanny in the Enid Blyton books but in the current editions she's called something else.

  • @stephenlee5929
    @stephenlee5929 2 года назад +1

    On funerals, it used to be common for the funeral to leave and return to the deceased house.
    Mourners would normally be invited back for a 'cup of tea'.
    Some homes are too small to allow this, so the local pub would be used (it is a 'public house') note even when there were restrictions on opening hours, these events were generally seen as private functions. It might also happens when the house would be remote (farm maybe).
    The vicar/priest is normally expected to attend for the 1st 'sherry'.

  • @-j5t-893
    @-j5t-893 Год назад

    The browsing time is to reduce redundancy at the tills in store. They are forced to only 'trade' for 6hrs in the larger Supermarkets on a Sunday but if they opened their doors at 10am on the nose then they would have a period of £0 takings whilst the shoppers made their way around the store. This way they guarantee maximum takings for their 6hrs and it allows shoppers a bit more flexibility in the time they can visit.

  • @Hippyanon
    @Hippyanon 2 года назад

    Bowl in the sink - i always thought it was so you can use the bowl water in your garden after dishes

  • @miaschu8175
    @miaschu8175 4 месяца назад

    I tried to do without the washing up bowl, but found that it takes too much water to fill the sink to a decent depth. Plus, I had to take cups to the bathroom to throw away the dregs of the not quite finished drinks. When you use a bowl, you can tip drinks and cooking water into the sink without overly dirtying the soapy washing water.
    The washing up bowl is back to stay!

  • @scotstrucker127
    @scotstrucker127 2 года назад +3

    Well great vid Allanna I remember when pub's were closed on a sunday you could drink in a hotel but not a pub. In Wales different counties had different drinking law's all you had to do was go to the next county.

  • @devinvanleeuwen1671
    @devinvanleeuwen1671 2 года назад +3

    Dude I live in Canada and have put fries on my sandwiches, chicken nuggets, bacon, even crackers! Its not just a British thing, if it tastes good it can taste better on a sandwich lol

    • @YvonneWilson312
      @YvonneWilson312 2 года назад +1

      Fries in a sandwich are just awesome - guilty pleasure, lol!

    • @devinvanleeuwen1671
      @devinvanleeuwen1671 2 года назад +1

      @@YvonneWilson312 they r so good. Especially on a Mcchicken burger 😏 (very guilty lol)

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 4 месяца назад

      Fries aren't quite the same as chips. Also, it's a very British thing, to the point it has a name - chip butty.

  • @xneurianx
    @xneurianx 2 года назад +1

    None of the shops near me do a "browsing hour". I live in a city, it would just very quickly become "extremely high levels of shoplifting hour".

  • @braces2
    @braces2 2 года назад

    Shops above a certain size are not allowed, by law, to sell anything before 10.00am on Sunday.
    Great video btw.

  • @terrymason8628
    @terrymason8628 5 месяцев назад

    Funerals: some years ago I was invited to be interviewed for a senior role with a US technology company, that was looking to extend it's sales into EMEA - Europe Middle East and Africa and the interview was to be lead on that expansion.I was being interviewed by the CEO, it was that level.
    I was the last person to be interviewed, it was August, and one of those days where London becomes unbearably hot and the offices had no A/C, it had been a long day, and very early on i had developed a good rapport with the CEO, and he suggested that rather than sweating in the cramped office that we could continue the interview in the beer garden of the pub just along the street.
    We got to the pub, got our drinks, and moved out to the beer garden.
    After a while the CEO commented on how busy the pub was for midweek afternoon, and how actually the people in the pub and the garden were all smartly dressed. As it was an interview we were face to face, I was looking out at the garden whilst the CEO was facing the bar. I turned around to see the bar full of men mainly wearing white shirts and black ties, and women wearing dresses. I was being interviewed in the middle of a wake!

  • @jackybraun2705
    @jackybraun2705 2 года назад

    Here in Germany shops are shut on Sundays, full stop. We manage fine.

  • @seasorb
    @seasorb 2 года назад

    Scottish shops have always opened on Sundays and usually same hours as most days.

  • @alexrafe2590
    @alexrafe2590 2 года назад +5

    Hi Alanna, it’s not just bacon. There are so many differences in names for cuts of meat between Americans and Brits. I don’t think I ever heard of the word gammon before I came to the UK. I wonder if there are many differences between American and Canadian vocabulary in this area. Though I’ve been to Canada many times, I’ve never found myself shopping for cuts of meat when I’ve gone to Canadian shops. I love a good chuck roast, but any time I’ve mentioned this cut, I invariably got blank looks in the U.K.. I lived in Britain over 24 years and I still tripped up from time to time on the words for British cuts of meat.
    And on the subject of Xs. I went years before finally discovering what Brits meant by sticking these little Xs when signing off🤔

  • @nigelsmith6077
    @nigelsmith6077 2 года назад

    Chip Butty when I was at School many moons ago! My school friend will go halves on a un cut loaf of bread, Ask the bakers to cut in half this loaf, The pull out the middle white part, Then go to the Fish & Chip shop get a portion of chips, The fill the half loaf with chips, Then eat the whole thing. Yum! 😋😝🤪😜

  • @leematthews6812
    @leematthews6812 2 года назад +2

    Hmmm, I'll have to deduct a point for describing a chip butty as a sandwich with french fries....it's a sandwich with chips!
    However, an extra five points for adding the phrase 'some sort of bread vessel' to my vocabulary.

  • @philiplindley7384
    @philiplindley7384 2 года назад +2

    Personally I was perfectly happy when everything was shut on a Sunday, not that I'm religious but it just made it a different day, distinct from all the others.
    I've never been a fan of being able to do everything all the time.
    I think we all lose something in the long term.

  • @amy_17_
    @amy_17_ 2 года назад +2

    Butter on your bacon sandwich is weird!! We dip our bread in the frying pan in the Midlands

  • @ElliesPets
    @ElliesPets 2 года назад +1

    I believe the whole, open at 9, tills open at 10 is actually to do with trading hours. On Sundays, Im pretty certain you're only meant to trade for 6 hours, as its the more official day of rest. Shops love to open the hour earlier to boost sales! During the week though their able to be 24 hours. Take, Asda, Tescos etc for example - Although after covid there aunt many 24hour shops anymore!

  • @christycheray
    @christycheray Год назад

    This comes from my experience with a self checkout at Sainsburys. I am a foreigner from the United States. I used my bank debit card. The till ran it as credit and I had to sign my receipt after the store manager came over to print out a receipt. I think that if the checkout time is at 10 then it keeps us foreigners on a level basis with the regular British people.

  • @wayne7521
    @wayne7521 5 месяцев назад

    To all the people who said , a wash bowl in the sink , saving how much water you use ....how big is your fricking sink ...or how small is the bowl.... coz most washing up boels are around an inch smaller around the edges ....
    Hmmm maybe so we can recycle water ....like chuck it on plants etc ...or so we can use same bowl ,to say clean cooker down ...better to have the water closer to task ...

  • @adrianmcgrath1984
    @adrianmcgrath1984 2 года назад

    I think the bowl in the sink probably originated in the 'olden days', when water would have to be heated in a kettle, and sinks were huge porcelain things, over sized to accommodate laundry. A smaller plastic bowl requires less water, absorbs less heat from that water.I think it just continued because of the other 'advantages' you mentioned

    • @Phiyedough
      @Phiyedough 2 года назад

      I am a fan of Time Team and they are always examining bits of broken pottery to determine the age of a site. I very rarely break any pottery items but I suppose the Romans, bronze age people etc. didn't have plastic bowls to protect their stuff when it was washed!

  • @kendee4421
    @kendee4421 2 года назад

    Bowl in the sink goes back to days when most houses had outside toilets. Men did not like going out in the cold so took the bowl out and.....😄
    Old enamel sinks were very big so putting a bowl in used a lot less water and filled quicker. You could also remove it with washing up in it to prepare vegetables, bath the baby, etc.

  • @annegenner2220
    @annegenner2220 2 года назад +1

    Hi Alanna, I really enjoyed this video, especially about the bowl in the sink!! I never realised that's a British thing! Regarding the funerals, though, I've never experienced going to the pub afterwards, it's always been a function room in a hotel, booked for the funeral party, and there's usually a buffet and a selection of drinks, usually sherry, whiskey and wine. (Sadly) I've been to funerals in Yorkshire, Lancashire, Essex and Monmouthshire and it's never involved a pub 🙂

  • @brochrock007
    @brochrock007 2 года назад

    A basin saves water & uses less hot water. More eco friendly.

  • @davidmckie7128
    @davidmckie7128 2 года назад

    I use a bowl in the sink. As you said in your video, it leaves room to rinse things out and more importantly it leaves room to pour dregs away (from the bottom of coffee and tea cups for example) otherwise you are pouring them into the washing up water and making it dirty. It's a no brainer really!! (I should say that we have a dishwasher, but not everything can go in it).

  • @alisonhill3941
    @alisonhill3941 2 года назад +1

    Bacon butty with streaky? Nooooooo, you want back bacon for a butty.

  • @patrickholt2270
    @patrickholt2270 2 года назад +1

    I never understood the sink bowl thing either. The sink is self-cleaning. It even has water taps aimed into it. It's good to have a bowl for washing other things, like the floor, or hand washing clothes, or leaving roasting dishes to soak in, though

  • @Mark-he3tl
    @Mark-he3tl 2 года назад

    The Wake is a common tradition in many countries, I believe its a thing in the US, surprises me it not a Canadian thing.
    But its not always a pub and a piss up to be fair. Usually a gathering at someone house, or venue.
    Its basically an opportinuty to remember the deceased, tell funny stories. Have aunt Beryl get into an raging aurgunment with aunt Gladys over what their stan did to our John 20 years ago!
    Always Fun!!! lol
    The x thing on texts, is not something people generally do, unless youre a known friend or family member.

  • @AndrewwarrenAndrew
    @AndrewwarrenAndrew 2 года назад

    Using a bowl you can wash the dishes then water the garden with the dirty water.

  • @jonhewitt3
    @jonhewitt3 2 года назад

    Who spends an hour in a supermarket before the tills open! I arrive about 10 mins before, usually get to the tills when they're open

  • @lesjones471
    @lesjones471 2 года назад

    It's best to have a double sink,I wash in one the rince in the other so you get rid of the soap sudds etc.

  • @openquin1
    @openquin1 2 года назад

    The bowl in the sink in theory saves water, I always take the bowl out and the put it back after washing up.
    I think that it is one of those things that you were brought up with that doesn't really make much sense but you still do it.

  • @robinfereday6562
    @robinfereday6562 2 года назад

    The bowl in the sink stops you dropping a plate on the porcelain and breaking it😊😊👍

  • @1949corek
    @1949corek 2 года назад

    Washing in a bowl means that the water can be saved and used for other things like watering plants in the garden during a hosepipe ban. As for Funerals, of course they are lighthearted, that's why it starts with the word fun.

  • @Psylaine64
    @Psylaine64 Год назад

    I think browsing time is also so shops can offer a full working day to the staff (7-7.5 hrs) while abiding by the 6hr trading time :)