They move THE WHOLE KITCHEN?! Kitchens in Germany vs. USA | Feli from Germany

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  • Опубликовано: 13 июн 2024
  • Use my code FELI to get $5 off your delicious, high protein Magic Spoon cereal by clicking this link: sponsr.is/magicspoon_feli
    👉When I visited the US for the first time, I was mindblown by these GIANT American fridges! 🤯 And those aren't the only things that are different between German and American kitchens, so let's talk about it!
    Get your Valentine's gift, beer mug, or Servus t-shirt ▸felifromgermany.com/
    Check out my PODCAST (with Josh)▸ / understandingtrainstation or linktr.ee/Understandingtrains...
    Mentioned videos:
    Germans SLEEP DIFFERENTLY than Americans?! ▸ • Germans SLEEP DIFFEREN...
    POOP SHELVES?! German vs. American Bathroom Differences ▸ • POOP SHELVES?! German ...
    Inside the Home: Germany vs. USA ▸ • Inside the Home: Germa...
    Germans PEE DIFFERENTLY than Americans?! ▸ • Germans PEE DIFFERENTL...
    -------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    1:06 Kitchen Layout
    3:41 Fridge
    9:14 Trash
    10:19 Stove
    12:22 Oven
    14:30 Exhaust Vent
    15:16 Kitchen Devices
    15:54 Garbage Disposal
    16:21 Sink
    16:36 Dishwasher
    17:48 Washing Machine
    18:30 Design
    21:23 Moving
    23:28 Did I forget something?
    24:40 Cat Bloopers
    -------------------------
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    ▸Mailing address:
    PO Box 19521
    Cincinnati, OH 45219
    USA
    -------------------------
    ABOUT ME: Hallo, Servus, and welcome to my channel! My name is Felicia (Feli), I'm 29, and I'm a German living in the USA! I was born and raised in Munich, Germany but have been living in Cincinnati, Ohio off and on since 2016. I first came here for an exchange semester during my undergrad at LMU Munich, then I returned for an internship, and then I got my master's degree in Cincinnati. I was lucky enough to win the Green Card lottery and have been a permanent resident since 2019! In my videos, I talk about cultural differences between America and Germany, things I like and dislike about living here, and other topics I come across in my everyday life in the States. Let me know what YOU would like to hear about in the comments below. DANKE :)

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @FelifromGermany
    @FelifromGermany  4 месяца назад +16

    Use my code FELI to get $5 off your delicious, high protein Magic Spoon cereal by clicking this link: sponsr.is/magicspoon_feli
    ▸Have you noticed any other differences between German and American kitchens? 🤔 Or what's unique about kitchens in YOUR country? :)

    • @BrianKedersha
      @BrianKedersha 4 месяца назад +1

      Love magic spoon

    • @lavluvlov
      @lavluvlov 4 месяца назад +3

      You explain me now why the Germans, when they want to invite friends for "supper" (with a small kitchen), they invite them at a local small restaurant (there's so many...). Maybe that's why they buy eggs by unit, my girlfriend had a restaurant in Koln(Cologne) and never bought more than 2 eggs at a time... And those eggs were not in a refrigerator, even at the store...

    • @Dadadin
      @Dadadin 4 месяца назад

      well, we do have dining rooms, you know? :D @@lavluvlov

    • @Patrick-on2ty
      @Patrick-on2ty 4 месяца назад +3

      Feli , ich glaube ein paar Jahre Europa würden Euch gut tun!

    • @desperadox7565
      @desperadox7565 4 месяца назад +1

      You have never seen a "Speisekammer"? Maybe I'm too old.

  • @TheQibisks
    @TheQibisks 4 месяца назад +333

    Garage fridge is usually just the last iteration of the kitchen fridge. Like we move the old one to the garage

    • @danieparriott265
      @danieparriott265 4 месяца назад +15

      Because the garages are usually not climate controlled, these are a HUGE energy drain in the summer months- the closed up garage is often 10-20 degrees hotter than the ambient outside temp in the shade, and the garage 'fridge just keeps pumping out more heat into the enclosed space, causing it to work harder and harder .... as it's generated heat adds heat to the enclosed space it must pump heat into ....

    • @christineherrmann205
      @christineherrmann205 4 месяца назад +12

      Yup. For a very long time our old fridge was in the garage. But it's also crazy that she's only seen huge fridges with water dispensers, etc. we've never had one, here in NY. Our fridge is still 20 years old. 😂

    • @christineherrmann205
      @christineherrmann205 4 месяца назад +23

      ​@@danieparriott265actually, garages tend to have concrete slabs and no windows, so they stay cool. At least here in the NE.

    • @raylf3141
      @raylf3141 4 месяца назад +6

      my mom has one of those really old death trap fridges out in the garage that has a latch that can't be opened from the inside. it only get any use during the holidays when overflow leftovers and the abundance of drinks get stored in it.

    • @gawainethefirst
      @gawainethefirst 4 месяца назад +24

      It’s the beer fridge, and last sovereign territory as per Man Law.

  • @mikeportell2870
    @mikeportell2870 4 месяца назад +62

    As an American country boy, we always had both the "deep freezer", aka the long, low chest freezer, and a garage fridge. The deep freezer was for storing meats and stuff long-term such as venison from a deer we hunted. The garage fridge was mainly used for beverages like beer or soda as the country garage was used for a lot of cook outs and get togethers and was more convenient then constantly going inside.
    That said, my mother's side were German stock so my Grandmother always had a breadbox and kettle etc. And seeing these things always remind me of her ❤

  • @susanwilliams9220
    @susanwilliams9220 4 месяца назад +26

    “NO KITTIES ON THE COUNTER 😠” Izzy proceeds to jump on counter 😂 like a normal cat that ignores their owner 😭

    • @danieparriott265
      @danieparriott265 4 месяца назад +1

      Cats don't have owners. Cats have Staff. .... and also track around Staph, and E. Coli ... NO cats on the counter.

  • @robertcrabtree8835
    @robertcrabtree8835 4 месяца назад +12

    Elder Millennial here-, we just had a single fridge/freezer combo (no ice dispenser) in my childhood home. When I bought my house, the previous owners were all "Hey, do you want the fridge in the garage too, or should we take that with us?"
    So I do have a 2nd fridge, somewhat careworn, but it is not plugged in very often. I did plug it in to temporarily store all my food from the kitchen fridge when I was having the house's original 90s carpeting replaced with LVP. After that was done, and I transferred the food back to the kitchen, the garage fridge serves as overflow for things that I buy in bulk that I donate to the food pantry, but don't want to leave out in the open in the garage until I have enough of a load to fill my trunk and drop off.

  • @rast
    @rast 4 месяца назад +291

    As a Swiss: It's very weird to move the kitchen. Our Appartments here always come with the kitchen permamently installed

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад +27

      I think this boils down to German perfectionism. Many Germans want to design their apartment exactly how they want to, and having a kitchen that looks exactly how you like it plays a big part in that. Since Germans are long-term renters, just like the Swiss, they want their own kitchen in a place that they're gonna live in for the foreseeable future.
      If the landlord provided the kitchen and you switched it out with a new one at some point, you'd have to hold on to the old kitchen and store it somewhere, since most German rental contracts stipulate that you have to leave the apartment the same way it looked when you moved in, and that includes everything that was in there when you moved in (unless you reach an agreement with your landlord that says otherwise).

    • @vladimirmosimann3807
      @vladimirmosimann3807 4 месяца назад +2

      *quite always, while looking for my first appartment 3 years ago, I saw one without the kitchen but only one, probably none soon

    • @jessicaely2521
      @jessicaely2521 4 месяца назад +8

      ​@leDespicable Swiss are like the Germans in perfectionism. I think more so than Germans. Germans aren't known for their precise perfect watches. Switzerland is known for that.

    • @warrent1490
      @warrent1490 4 месяца назад +11

      As an American that moved to Germany 5 years ago, it was so strange to me how German people take their kitchen and light fixtures. Lightning OK maybe, but kitchens, not every kitchen is the same size so why take a kitchen that is perfect for that kitchen. Gas Stoves are awesome, she's watching to many movies. I also have approximately 5.5 trash cans, paper, plastic, glass, aluminum, and food. Plus a recycle bag for all my deposits. It actually stressed me out when I 1st got here, silly after a few months, because everyone kept telling me if I messed up the German trash company would not take.

    • @Wiseolegranny
      @Wiseolegranny 4 месяца назад +14

      US citizen here and never heard of moving the kitchen

  • @bobjohnson5105
    @bobjohnson5105 4 месяца назад +129

    Growing up in the U.S. the kitchen was where you socialized. Playing games, Coffee clatch, do homework

    • @geneviere199
      @geneviere199 4 месяца назад +4

      Growing up in Germany - it was the same here. We had a separate kitchen with a big table in it and even with guests usually stayed in the kitchen and seldom moved to the living room. Today it is my appartment. It is in the house my grandparents build in the 50s. But in multi-storage-houses with more appartments or standard appartment houses that were built starting in the 60s they often had a kitchen that just had place for a 2,80 m long standardized kitchen block. My first appartment after I left my parents house had a kitchen like this. My table was in one part of the living room and the kitchen was just there to prepare and store food.

    • @kevingray8616
      @kevingray8616 4 месяца назад +13

      In the U.S. we often say that the kitchen is the "heart of the home". It's no wonder why we have so many open concept floor plans that combine the living room and kitchen into one space.

    • @therealCamoron
      @therealCamoron 4 месяца назад

      Coffee what

    • @bobjohnson5105
      @bobjohnson5105 4 месяца назад +2

      @@therealCamoron I found many different spellings for clatch. It's the term my Ma's family and friends used.

    • @Beachgirl1
      @Beachgirl1 4 месяца назад +5

      @@kevingray8616 I HATE open concept homes. They are ugly, lack charm and character and destroy privacy.
      Give me a breathtaking old Victorian home any day. Craftsmanship and character are strictly forbidden in the ugly, cheaply constructed newer builds.
      Open concept homes are also much more dangerous in a fire.

  • @jackieolcott2500
    @jackieolcott2500 4 месяца назад +9

    OMG the way the oven door opens then slides in at 14:19, and the rack slides out! That is so freaking cool! I had to rewatch it several times. I'd love an oven like that!

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 4 месяца назад

      then buy one. they're available here

    • @nitka711
      @nitka711 Месяц назад +1

      The door thing isn‘t that common, but the rack sliding out is standart with newer ovens

    • @DrHouse-zs9eb
      @DrHouse-zs9eb 13 дней назад +2

      Tell me - why have you so Big expensive cars but so simple and old style kitchen devices? I always thought the US could afford more high tech things than we germans can.

  • @eline.de.allerbeste
    @eline.de.allerbeste 4 месяца назад +6

    When I first moved to Austria as a Dutch person and started looking at apartments, I was so confused about all the places that didn’t yet have kitchens. While it’s not everywhere here like it seems to be in Germany, there are definitely quite a number of apartments where you as a tenant have to bring the kitchen. I had never even heard of that being a thing in the Netherlands. What is more common there, when renting cheap apartments or student housing in particular, is having to bring your own appliances (fridge, stove, oven etc). Also, I actually quite like the look of American kitchens, they’re not as sterile as what has been considered modern and trendy here for at least the past 10-20 years.

    • @gerhardma4687
      @gerhardma4687 3 месяца назад +1

      I would always search for an appartement or house without a installed kitchen. I worked for a company which sells kitchen and I saw landlords coming every day to equip their apartments with kitchens. What did they take? Usually the cheapest of the cheap. No thanks, I would like to decide for myself whether I want to stay in rustic oak or white.

  • @carrieswank
    @carrieswank 4 месяца назад +69

    I’m from the Midwest-Kansas City-we prefer to have to a gas stovetop. We have very icy, cold winters. Sometimes the ice will break the power lines; if so, we still have the stove to help to keep warm.

    • @MarshaMooney
      @MarshaMooney 4 месяца назад +4

      I also live in Kansas City and have always had electric. I think it is personal preference

    • @srose1088
      @srose1088 4 месяца назад +5

      Having gas when the power goes out is awesome. It's even better if you have a city water hook up.

    • @torejorgensen5344
      @torejorgensen5344 4 месяца назад +2

      Here in Norway it is common to have a wood stove in the living room. Power outages are not common (at least not in cities/towns, I haven't experienced one in more than ten years), but it is nice to have the wood stove as a backup and it also is very nice on cold days. The winters aren't to bad here in southeast of Norway where the temperature mostly is above 0 Fahrenheit (in January/February it can be below but usually just during night) and we seldom have more than about two feet of snow.

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 4 месяца назад +3

      Many places in Europe don't have a mains gas supply, my town in Ireland only got mains gas 20 years ago, so electric or solid fuel/oil stove. LPG often too expensive.

    • @garycamara9955
      @garycamara9955 4 месяца назад +1

      We have a gas stove for the same reason here in Nor zcal.

  • @lionelhutz4186
    @lionelhutz4186 4 месяца назад +72

    In rural areas in germany the fridge/freezer-situation is quite similar to the US. My parents have 3 freezers, 2 of them are those trunk things and multiple fridges. Not all of them are running all the time. The freezers are necessary if you get a whole pig or half a cow once a year.

    • @jrhackman7414
      @jrhackman7414 4 месяца назад +12

      We usually call them chest freezers in the US. That is the same reason I have one. The cow is actually hanging in the butchers cooler right now. I get half of a cow from my brother every year. My parents get the other half.

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад +1

      In Switzerland I would also crowdfund a quarter pig every now and then. Best pork meat. Then the freezer is full :)

    • @b-genspinster7895
      @b-genspinster7895 4 месяца назад

      Rural areas, really? 83 million people in an area half the size of Texas? It couldn’t be anymore than exurban.

    • @JonasReichert1992
      @JonasReichert1992 4 месяца назад +1

      @@b-genspinster7895there are extremly rural places in germany sometimes you need almost a half hour to get to somewhere😅

    • @jrhackman7414
      @jrhackman7414 4 месяца назад +2

      @@b-genspinster7895 They do have crops and cattle. It’s all relative depending on where you live. if you live somewhere in western USA,you probably think we don’t have rural areas in Pennsylvania either. I do know they don’t have large areas of land where you basically can’t can’t live and nothing grows.

  • @GameMastersWorkshop
    @GameMastersWorkshop 4 месяца назад +7

    American kitchens have an open floor plan thanks to Frank Loyd Wright. In the 50s he wanted to open up the kitchen and bring "Mother" out in the rest of the home so that she would be included in daily life, and not have her shackled away in the kitchen. Unfortunately the opposite result followed.
    Kitchens being notoriously active places with lots of dirty things going on, Mom got stuck in the kitchen most of the day keeping it clean as anyone and everyone could see right into it.

  • @susanharris3092
    @susanharris3092 4 месяца назад +11

    I live in the San Bernardino mountains in Southern California, and we use a gas stove because we have frequent power outages. Some are planned for maintenance, and some occur when we get high winds, snow or heavy rain. With a gas stove I can use a match to light a burner and cook hot food when we have no power. We have a generator, but it is expensive to run so we save that for power outages that run multiple days. We also have a full size large freezer because our mountain roads are dangerous during inclement weather, and so we keep plenty of food on hand. Last winter we were snowed in for almost a month, and because of our freezer we didn’t run out of food.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p 4 месяца назад +1

      Sounds like third world, or emerging country, to have power outages, to a german.
      Germans also used gas, but for a much simpler reason: Is was there before electricity. Gas was available since 1850, electricity started 1890-1900.
      Today it's mainly for camping only. Propane BBQ gained popularity in the last years (as American style copy).
      But not replacing electric ones, it's replacing charcoal.

    • @alexphillips4325
      @alexphillips4325 4 месяца назад +2

      @@holger_pfound the insufferable, holier than thou European. The area of the mountains they live in is fairly remote. Germany doesn’t really have any landscape that compares on the same scale. It’s extremely hard to run power out there. Gas stoves were around before electric ones, but they’re still in more common use because they’re easier to cook on that electric ones and pretty much every home has gas. If you’re not hooked into a city gas line, you will have a large propane tank that you get filled a couple of times a year.

    • @SkeeveTVR
      @SkeeveTVR 4 месяца назад

      @@alexphillips4325 I guess holger_p mean the losing of electricity. Usually in germany you have never seen an outages in your whole life. This is because all the power cables are in the ground, there are just a few over land.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p 4 месяца назад

      @@alexphillips4325 In don't see any dependency between remoteness and electricity. Maybe an earthquake destroys a cable, or the wildlife is destroying it ?
      I think Gas in US is more a matter of heating. In warm parts, you only need small central heating devices, and you can run them on bottled propane if you like.
      This was never an option in Germany, it's way to expensive and incoformatable.
      I grow up with a propane stove in the kitchen, buying bottles once a month, but the demand was so low over time, they stopped selling such stoves.

    • @alexphillips4325
      @alexphillips4325 4 месяца назад

      @@SkeeveTVR the majority of power cables in rural areas of the US are above ground for ease of maintenance and expansion, however this makes them vulnerable to things like fallen trees which happen a lot during ice storms or torrential rain

  • @user-gb9dg6jn2n
    @user-gb9dg6jn2n 4 месяца назад +15

    I always found it easier to adjust the heat with a gas stove, not an electric one.

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd 4 месяца назад

      It’s definitely easier in the sense that any change is instantaneous. That’s why chefs prefer them.
      Though I think modern induction hobs are instantaneous too, I still prefer gas though. Induction hobs have other issues.

    • @DrHouse-zs9eb
      @DrHouse-zs9eb 13 дней назад +1

      You clearly never used a Touch slider induction stove.

    • @zamboughnuts
      @zamboughnuts 4 дня назад

      @@ffotograffydd Modern inductions *can* be good but so much depends on the quality of the cookware that it's not predictable. If you don't have induction cookware it's incredibly difficult to control heat on induction, and it takes FOREVER to heat up.

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd 4 дня назад

      @@zamboughnuts Even with expensive pans specifically designed for them there are issues in my experience. I much prefer gas, and if I can’t have that I’d rather just go with a standard electric hob.

  • @BryanAlaspa
    @BryanAlaspa 4 месяца назад +59

    My brother moved from Chicago to New York. Here in Chicago, we went shopping once a week, stocked up for an entire week. So you'd grab a shopping cart and fill it to the top. In New York, everyone takes public transportation and every neighborhood has a little store within walking distance. My brother and his wife soon found out that New Yorkers shopped almost daily on the way home and used hand baskets instead of shopping carts. So, that does exist here, but it depends on the city.

    • @nancy9478
      @nancy9478 4 месяца назад +4

      In the city, yes that is common. Out in the suburbs of LI and upstate, we have drive. So week or longer is nornal. But stopping at the store in between is done too.

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  4 месяца назад +5

      Yes, cities like NYC are the exception. But even in a city like Cincinnati, that's not the norm.

    • @raylf3141
      @raylf3141 4 месяца назад +6

      @@FelifromGermany Denver is a top 50 market and it kind of depends on the neighborhood. Some you have near enough shops to do several trips a week, usually areas with strong ethnic communities like Latinos and Asians, while others it's big trips to the store. I personally do larger orders for delivery due to disability and being too cheap to pay delivery fees for multiple smaller trips.

    • @TheMVCoho
      @TheMVCoho 4 месяца назад +4

      Daily shopping has a few things as in buying fresh veggies but, its very wastful as it discourages planning but, encourages impulse buying.

    • @solconcordia4315
      @solconcordia4315 4 месяца назад +3

      Having and using a large and a smaller refrigerated storage capacity can greatly reduce the time and energy used in shopping. A dried food storage pantry complements that.
      The longest stretch between shopping I've ever achieved was seven weeks. If my place survives a nuclear war not destroyed and I had to stay indoors to wait for the fallout radioactivity to decay sufficiently, I know that I usually have the capability to wait. I've also been building up my storage supply of fresh drinkable water.

  • @monikatraeger7774
    @monikatraeger7774 4 месяца назад +5

    Also, the moving of the kitchen was news to me. I had no idea. Never heard of that. I see the pros and cons of this, as per the others' comments, but, WOW!
    The large appliances are negotiable here, but fixtures are fixtures; afixed to the structure of the building.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p 4 месяца назад +3

      No, there is hotwater, coldwater, dumpwater, as easy to connect as a hose in the garden. You don't even need tools, or just for the last turn maybe.
      Installing a stove is as complicated as running an iron. You plug it in. For the oven you have extra high voltage sometimes, and you need an electrician for 10minutes, but most moving companies do this aside.

  • @PatrickKalinowski
    @PatrickKalinowski 4 месяца назад +5

    I'm from Belgium. I build a new home in 2019. I have a modern open floor design with kitchen island. Most people these days are more worried with the looks than the practicality of the kitchen design. The open floor design has the benefit that you can cook and watch the kids. But the kitchen mess is visible for everyone. Meaning if you have guests over and prepare food for the guests it's tough keeping a balance between a clean kitchen and good food. If I would have it do it all over again I would go for something in the middle like Feli showed. A counter that is open, but otherwise the kitchen is closed from peaking eyes from the other sides.

    • @mikeenslin8344
      @mikeenslin8344 3 месяца назад

      Your kitchen should always be clean, for hygienic reasons. Regardless if anyone can see it or not.

    • @PatrickKalinowski
      @PatrickKalinowski 3 месяца назад

      @@mikeenslin8344 You should understand that you can have a hygienically clean kitchen, but still leave a visual disarray when serving the food. But I get a feeling you either never prepared food yourself or you're trolling.

    • @mikeenslin8344
      @mikeenslin8344 3 месяца назад

      LMAO, a disarray serving the food, are you under severe stress and have to serve 100 guests in under a minute or what?? Of course using the kitchen will cause some disarray and mess. You're supposed to clean it up afterwards! @@PatrickKalinowski

  • @KatieReadsKoziesAndMore
    @KatieReadsKoziesAndMore 4 месяца назад +40

    I love your kitties! Showing old fashioned kitchens with a table made me flash-back to my Grandmother’s house. Grandma was a widow and when we came over we always ate at her kitchen table. She did have a formal dining room that was used during holiday meals with the entire family. Alas, the kids still ate in the kitchen and the adults in the dining room. That was nearly 70 years ago when our houses were much smaller.
    PS: the one advantage to gas stoves is that we still had heat if the power went out. Of course, we had to crack the window to circulate fresh air. Fortunately, power outages were rare back then!

    • @OkiePeg411
      @OkiePeg411 3 месяца назад

      Yes!!
      When Texas and Oklahoma had that strange Arctic blast that hit a couple of years ago and knocked out power for a week, I had a gas cook stove, so I was ok.

  • @Jojodat123
    @Jojodat123 4 месяца назад +27

    Fun fact:
    Open Kitchens and Kitchens combined with living room and so on is actually a very old concept.
    At least here in Bavaria on rural areas it was very often like that. I think most common name was "Bauernstube" or "Wohnküche"
    So it's like with many US things. - The concepts are actually not modern but from Europe but 100 - 150 and more years ago. When many germans, dutch and so on emigrated to the US. And then both sides of the atlantic developed a bit different.

    • @danieparriott265
      @danieparriott265 4 месяца назад +4

      DDH- American farmhouses design differed greatly over the last 150 years- my grandparents' farmhouse, an early "Foursquare" built in the 1880's, had no kitchen at all-cooking was done on the wood/coal stove in the dining room during the winter or inclement weather, and in a separate shack outside the back door the rest of the year. A kitchen was added onto the north side of the house in the 1920's or 30's. It also had no bathroom, and did not get one until the late 1960's...

    • @robertsitch1415
      @robertsitch1415 4 месяца назад +2

      Historically speaking, most early European settlers built one room cabins on a farm plot.

    • @danieparriott265
      @danieparriott265 4 месяца назад

      And once they "proved up' they either bought out their less committed neighbors, or built a bigger barn, and then a bigger house .....@@robertsitch1415

  • @philippeplouchart8156
    @philippeplouchart8156 3 месяца назад +1

    In France, many older houses usually have a compact water heater (gas-powered) above the sink, for dishwashing, etc.

  • @alainaaugust1932
    @alainaaugust1932 4 месяца назад +18

    The open kitchen area design began in the ‘50s. The early ‘50s house my parents bought had a “cafe door,” a kind of swinging half door, divided. My dad unscrewed it from the wall the first time it swung and hit one of my toddler siblings smack in the face. From there on it was a doorway, not a door, always open to the dining room. Small as the kitchen was, the builders had included not a “breakfast bar” but a “breakfast nook” in the kitchen. The nook was in no way large enough for the never ending stream of incoming boomers, so mom just put the dryer there. That “wall closet” in the kitchen we never called anything but the pantry. Large fridges evolved from one door to two door; at first the second door was a half door freezer. Then it evolved to a full door. But for my parents who grew up with ice boxes a quarter the size of the ‘50s appliance, it was never a fridge but always “the ice box.” The top of the ice box was the land where cereal boxes sprouted. There were never less than six boxes which as my brothers’ appetites exploded, grew to ten to twelve. This was mostly due to one tall, broad shouldered brother with the middle name Gustav who was the spitting image of a Medieval German farmer named Hans. The super-sized grocery store mom shopped in, one of the first before the big chains we now know, actually had a German name. As the family grew, when a newer fridge came, the old one went to the closed-in back porch to use the freezer for storing the half pig or quarter beef dad bought. The fridge section was for Kool-Aid, sometimes sodas for us kids in the summer. We had a bread box, but by the time I had my own apartment bread boxes were kaput. Washer and dryer in the basement or laundry room is a big improvement. Kitchen dryer and oven going at the same time was a recipe for heat stroke. Granite countertops crept in in the ‘80s and were the posh thing to have by the ‘90s. We have so much granite in the US a whole state is named The Granite State. What you missed is that what appliances are or are not in the kitchen depends on where you live in our huge nation. I’ve lived in five states. In the south the fridge comes with the house or apartment. Not so in many places in the north, even apartments. Residence seekers in the northeast know to always ask if the place comes with a fridge. You also didn’t mention much about how the kitchen is used socially. Somewhere in the ‘70s it began to be fashionable to not just use the kitchen for cooking but for socializing. The party’s not just in the living room but in the kitchen. Hence it’s nice to have open space with lots of countertop and “breakfast” stools. I say this so my German cousins don’t think we’re wasting space. We just want to park comfortably, family birthday celebrations being big to-dos that may include cousins, aunts and uncles. God forbid Aunt Meta has no comfortable spot to nurse her Pilsner. Good job, Feli, and thanks to 🇩🇪 for helping 🇺🇦. 🇺🇸& 🇩🇪 allies forever.

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 4 месяца назад

      Real

    • @rm2kmidi
      @rm2kmidi 4 месяца назад

      West Coast, fridges and other large appliances stay with the house

  • @markbrown2640
    @markbrown2640 4 месяца назад +15

    Usually a "garage fridge" which I have never had, is an old refrigerator that used to be in someone's kitchen and it got replaced by a new model.
    As long as the old fridge isn't leaking coolant, it's probably better for the environment than putting it in a dumpster. 7:58

    • @Herzschreiber
      @Herzschreiber 4 месяца назад +2

      well it would not work in Germany. 1) because most Germans are in a rental and do not own a house, and lots of rentals don't have a garage. Some have parking lots and some have carports. And some have nothing so you will park your car simply at the side of the road. 2) because most Germans tend to use their fridges until they completely break down. Only snobs would buy a new fridge though the old one is still working! :D

  • @christophertipton2318
    @christophertipton2318 4 месяца назад +38

    My older brother was a professional chef. In his house, as at his work, he always had a gas stove top and an electric oven. It was a matter of greater control over cooking temperatures. It worked, he was a great cook. He's retired now and has gas everything where he lives in Wisconsin. We grew up in Michigan and had gas everything. I live in Florida now and its electric everything.

    • @uigrad
      @uigrad 4 месяца назад +5

      Yes, Feli says that "When you have a gas range, you also have a gas oven", but I think it's only about 50% of the time.

    • @robertsitch1415
      @robertsitch1415 4 месяца назад +1

      It's sort of common if you have a built in oven for it to be electric convection with possibly a microwave function. Separate stovetops are probably about 50% gas,though. Separate built in ovens and cooktops are way more expensive than a basic 30" stove, so those things are typically only found in larger custom built houses in North America.

    • @suzieseabee
      @suzieseabee 4 месяца назад +1

      Gas stoves are expensive. I would like to have gas but can't afford it.

    • @shadowkissed2370
      @shadowkissed2370 4 месяца назад +2

      @@suzieseabee It depends on where you live. Where I lived in Cali, the electricity was more expensive and the gas was cheaper.

    • @robertsitch1415
      @robertsitch1415 4 месяца назад +2

      @@shadowkissed2370 they do seem to be more popular in the western states than Eastern Canada. A lot of our older homes have or recently had oil or electric heat, so it was more convenient to use an electric stove than install a propane tank for just the stove in the regions that don't have natural gas.

  • @whiteraimentevangelism
    @whiteraimentevangelism 4 месяца назад +1

    many kitchens in the USA especially in modest priced or older homes have the kitchen in a separate room, usually they dont have doors on them

  • @kerstinwallace9854
    @kerstinwallace9854 4 месяца назад

    Speisekammer, Feli!
    I grew up in Germany (all over) grandparents lived in Detmold, NRW. They built a house in 1932, 4 floors including the cellar and attic flat. They had central radiator heating with a boiler in the cellar. They had a big bathroom with running hot and cold water, separate bath and a shower. They had a Wohnküche and a Waschtisch where you boiled water for one bowl and drain in the second. Gas stove.And they definitely had Speisekammer - pantry - internet wall and a bit insulated. They also had 2 cold rooms in the cellar to store potatoes, home made canned fruit and veg and a huge laundry room.
    My grandfather was a teacher, so not rich people, but the house was heaps ahead of American building standards.

  • @curtiscroulet8715
    @curtiscroulet8715 4 месяца назад +26

    My wife died last summer. I live alone now, not counting two dogs and a cat. I'm learning about kitchen things that my wife took care of. I would definitely love the German oven that you showed. It still requires a lot of button-pushing to get the timer to work on my oven.

    • @kevingray8616
      @kevingray8616 4 месяца назад +11

      Sorry for your loss. Given that you're alone, consider buying a countertop oven such as a Breville. Ours has tons of presets and nice digital display; more than the German oven she showed. You can also use it as a toaster too. My wife cooks using our Breville more than our big oven as it's just the two of us.

    • @curtiscroulet8715
      @curtiscroulet8715 4 месяца назад

      Thanks, but I don't have sufficient counterspace for additional appliances.@@kevingray8616

    • @ashextraordinaire
      @ashextraordinaire 4 месяца назад +4

      Seconding what @kevingray8616 said. I use the "big oven" during the winter and for baking at volume, but during the summer, I bust out the countertop oven. It's a really basic model, but it gets the job done without putting off as much heat. Aside from all of that, I hope your wife's memory is a blessing to you.

    • @martina21953
      @martina21953 4 месяца назад

      When my microwave died, I bought a microwave/convection oven. You can do just about anything in it except grill.

  • @papasmurf9146
    @papasmurf9146 4 месяца назад +32

    One of the other videos pointed out the difference in distances in the US vs Germany. This partially explains the large refrigerators in the US in order to cut down on driving.
    For what its worth, I have a fridge/freezer in the kitchen. A full size, upright freezer in the garage. A European sized refrigerator in the garage. A large chest freezer in the basement. If we aren't able to leave the house for 5 weeks, we'll be okay.

    • @windmuser
      @windmuser 4 месяца назад +1

      I have a small cabin (16 x 20) and I have a small chest freezer on the porch. I save a lot of money buying things on sale--plus--it's a long ways to the store.

    • @AHVENAN
      @AHVENAN 4 месяца назад +2

      I would not want to see your electricity bill with all that! 😅

    • @kevingray8616
      @kevingray8616 4 месяца назад +2

      @@AHVENAN Refrigerators and freezers don't cost that much to run if you have modern ones. Energy Star chest freezers (or deep freezes as some call them) cost $30 per year to run while upright freezers cost $60 per year to run. (heat can't rush into a chest freezer when you open it, thus the big difference in cost) An Energy Star refrigerator may run around $35 per year. Compare that to a 1980s refrigerator that would cost $200 per year. (yes, there are probably taxes and other fees that make this numbers a bit larger, but Energy Star appliances use far less power than those from back in the day)

    • @karinland8533
      @karinland8533 4 месяца назад +2

      Yes, everything brakes down to car dependency

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад +2

      US also has more multi-person households than European countries due to the higher birthrate and other socialisation.

  • @danielanelson5346
    @danielanelson5346 4 месяца назад +3

    We do have walk in pantries in Germany, actually, it's the good old "Vorratskammer" :-). The pantry situation in Germany depends on the age of your home, I suppose. We've bought a house from the 1870s and there is a pantry next to the kitchen. Although, back in the 1950s, it was originally adjoining the master bedroom - so no one could just get in and grab some food without the parents noticing, I guess.

  • @fzxjkg
    @fzxjkg 11 дней назад

    We had a tiny kitchen in our apartment in Berschweiler / Baumholder in Germany. Two people could not stand side by side in it. Everything you said, small fridge, small stove, very little storage. We shopped every day and almost never had left-overs. Left overs drive a lot of the US approach to kitchens. You need lots of containers, packaging material, storage and freezer / fridge space when you cook three times as much as you need and then use the left-overs for later meals. Many times people will cook a weeks worth of food and just re-warm things through the week in the US. Never saw that in either Germany or when we lived in the UK. Love the channel!

  • @ctcladdagh2000
    @ctcladdagh2000 4 месяца назад +22

    Gas cooktops are regional. I grew up in the Northeast and since we don't use gas to heat the house, we don't use it for cooking. I now live in the mid-Atlantic and here gas is used for household heating, so also for the cooktop. Bosch is a popular German brand of dishwasher in the US and it works great.

    • @kevingray8616
      @kevingray8616 4 месяца назад

      I don't like the Bosch dishwashers. It's the bottom rack that particularly irritates me. It is wavy and you're supposed to load it just so. It might be great for loading tones of plates, but it doesn't accommodate what we want to load into it. We replaced our Bosch with a Whirlpool. The bottom rack is flat with straight tines. It may not accommodate the most plates and such, but we can throw damn near anything in there. A top rack support did break as you can throw a ton of glasses and such up there. The replacement supports where made of metal and are much beefier and we haven't had a problem since.

    • @therealCamoron
      @therealCamoron 4 месяца назад +1

      I grew up with electric stoves in Michigan (my mom's house still has one). When I moved to Chicago every apartment had a gas stove.

    • @ctcladdagh2000
      @ctcladdagh2000 4 месяца назад

      @@kevingray8616 I don't know what you mean about wavy. I do know there are lots of Bosch models. There is the line across the back for plates and two columns in front.

    • @Herzschreiber
      @Herzschreiber 4 месяца назад

      German here. I don't have a dishwasher, my kitchen doesn't have enough space for it. But all my other appliances are Bosch and I really love them!

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад

      Back in Chicago, we only had gas burners.
      I'm German, where we usually never have gas, thus no gas burners. Here in Switzerland, where I live, we also use electricity to cook. I used to hate it, but with modern burners it goes very quick. No ultra-heavy plates that take forever to heat up before passing the heat to the pot.
      Looking forward to my american style fridge/freezer after I move. Best way to have icecubes and chilled water. One thing I miss in Europe.

  • @frolleinpunkt
    @frolleinpunkt 4 месяца назад +24

    In old Berlin appartments you can sometimes still find a little extra room on one side of the kitchen, normally facing outside walls and without heating (to keep things fresh without the need to cool).

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 4 месяца назад +7

      Speisekammer

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад +8

      Yep, especially in Altbau apartments pantries are pretty common. Though not as much as they used to be, because in many old buildings, the pantry was usually the place that bathrooms got retrofitted into when private bathrooms became popular.

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  4 месяца назад +7

      That's really cool!

    • @TB-qy1et
      @TB-qy1et 4 месяца назад +2

      In old houses in Stuttgart it was common to have a small build in closet on the balcony as a pantry.

    • @r0y4l_r44v3n
      @r0y4l_r44v3n 4 месяца назад +2

      At my grandparents' house (on the Schwäbische Alb) they have also a pantry(Speisekammer) where my grandma stores some food and also some appliances and tools. As a kid I found this room really cool, especially the fact that there was Knäckebrot and some cookies

  • @SiqueScarface
    @SiqueScarface 4 месяца назад +5

    I've seen pantries in Germany, usually under the label "Speisekammer", or in Tyrol, just "Speis". If your house was build before World War I, it probably has a Speisekammer. I've also grown up with double sinks, where the second sink often was occupied by a drying basket for the dishes.
    19:35 As far as I know this is called country house.

    • @eva_1977
      @eva_1977 3 месяца назад

      ditto; we have speisekammer in croatia and italy too....

  • @michaelnorman4476
    @michaelnorman4476 4 месяца назад +1

    Electric water kettles are more regional here in the United States. In the Pacific Northwest a lot of homes have them. We use ours at home. We have several at work that we all use.

  • @NiceIce75
    @NiceIce75 4 месяца назад +50

    When I look at an American stove, I can't help but think of ALF trying to cook a duck à l'orange, forgetting to light the gas and ending up flying through the house to the front door when the kitchen exploded. 😂

    • @libertyman3729
      @libertyman3729 4 месяца назад +4

      Nobody can buy a gas stove that needs a match to light it in the u.s. that was changed many years ago. 🇺🇸

    • @PrimericanIdol
      @PrimericanIdol 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@libertyman3729Not true. You can easily buy a used one.

    • @williamcahill2462
      @williamcahill2462 4 месяца назад +4

      On older stoves, there is a component called a pilot light. This component burns and maintains the gas valve in the open position. It also assures the gas ignites when the valve is turned on. On modern stoves, it's all electronic, and the gas valve will not open until a flame is proven.
      Sorry to burst your bubble, but it's been at least 50 years since I heard of a stove blowing up because of gas failing to ignite.

    • @shadowkissed2370
      @shadowkissed2370 4 месяца назад +2

      @@PrimericanIdol they are not supposed to be sold anymore. So if you are buying a used one it is illegally being sold. The standard prohibited standing pilot lights in gas ranges and ovens that have an electrical supply cord. In a 2009 final rule, DOE extended the "no standing pilot light" requirement to include all gas cooking products whether or not they have an electrical cord.

    • @shadowkissed2370
      @shadowkissed2370 4 месяца назад +2

      @@williamcahill2462 Exactly, my old apartment it took the landlord a year to change the stove because it was leaking gas to the point where I had to turn the gas off if I wasn't using it. It was several months before we figured out it was gas that we were smelling and yet every time we lit the stove nothing blew up. It turned out to be the stove and the line connected to the stove leaking. He was a slumlord...

  • @jaydunno8266
    @jaydunno8266 4 месяца назад +19

    I was stationed in Augsburg Germany in the early 80's. Lived on the economy in two different apartments. The first one was tiny and the kitchen was more like a boat galley (with a 3 burner gas range). The second one was larger, nicer and of course more expensive. That one came with a partial kitchen- stove, sink, and two cabinets. It was large enough to have room for a table, although there was a combined living /dining area in the apartment. The open concept for kitchens is relatively recent in the US. Most of the homes I visited while growing up had a separate kitchen and a dining room or arear adjacent. Prior to WWII, many families had "help" to do some of the household chores including cooking. And in larger, more affluent homes, the kitchen was the cook's domain where the lady of the house did not enter except to speak to the cook. The kitchen was separate to keep the smells away from the rest of the house. The fish may be delicious on your plate, but you may not want to smell it all night in the living room.
    In traveling around Augsburg I noticed that it was a city of neighborhoods, each with a little business district of little shops, baker, butcher, green grocer, etc. On any given day one could see the Hausfraus going shopping with their baskets.
    All in all, I found living in Germany like living in the US during the 50's and early 60's. The shops were mostly closed in the evening, and on on Sunday, so you had to make sure you were stocked up on anything you might need.

    • @EinsteinsHair
      @EinsteinsHair 4 месяца назад +1

      I think kitchens were also kept separate to keep heat out of the rest of the house before air conditioning. My home was built in that era and has two doorways between the kitchen and other rooms. It is a small house, small town, working class, and I don't think they would have hired a cook.

    • @jaydunno8266
      @jaydunno8266 4 месяца назад

      @@EinsteinsHair From what I remember of German weather keeping heat out of the rest of the house would not be a concern. In the southern US it most surely would be. In colonial times, sometimes the kitchen was a separate outside.

    • @kiliipower355
      @kiliipower355 4 месяца назад +1

      The same here in Germany.
      But back then the kitchen was separated because there was no way to remove odours apart from an open window. Today there are good exhaust air systems that were pure science fiction 50 years ago.
      Only when this technology became "affordable" did the walls disappear at the same time.

    • @fedupamerican6534
      @fedupamerican6534 4 месяца назад +1

      I wish in communities here in America would go back to the local butcher and other smaller shops. It would build a sense of community and it would get rid of those mass Chinese money making machines.

    • @TheRagratus
      @TheRagratus 4 месяца назад +1

      @@fedupamerican6534 I live in rural Wisconsin and everyone here shops local.

  • @webwarren
    @webwarren 4 месяца назад

    FWIW, the large American kitchens are only in houses. In older homes and apartments, kitchens can be so small that there's hardly any room to cook in, much less eat in. The "wall closet" is generally called a "pantry" and it can be used to store shelf-stable food, "small appliances" (blenders, mixers, crockpots, etc.), large pots and pans, etc. - depending on what one needs to store.
    Gas and electric stoves (and ovens) cook differently, and people develop different preferences. I love gas stoves as long as the knobs are well calibrated. Growing up (in a house), we had a countertop stove and a wall oven. The bottom part of the oven (where the open flame is) is called a broiler, and it's used mostly for cooking meat.
    I've lived most of my _adult_ life in apartments - one in a medium-sized apartment building (Brits would call it a "block of flats"), and one in a converted boarding house. Apartment kitchens have very little counterspace (enough for maybe a tiny drainboard near the sink) and refrigerators that range in size from something that fits under the countertop to something about the size of the built-in refrigerator you showed us in a German kitchen. Older refrigerators have a small freezer compartment which, when it works, will hold one steak and one tray of ice cubes. (Most of the time these freezers never freeze, or they cause the rest of the refrigerator to become a freezer.) Apartments, by and large, do _not_ have dishwashers. Cabinet space in apartment kitchens is similarly limited. In my current kitchen, I have a few cabinets, but they are so old that I can't fit normal size dinner plates in them nor anything larger than an individual-sized container of food. Much of my food and seasonings are stored in plastic bins beneath a large utility table under my cabinets, which serves as a makeshift counter.
    Your "bread cutter", we would use as a meat slicer.
    Stove ventilation hoods only work if they connect to the outside to actually vent the air. Most of the time they are not properly connected and do absolutely nothing to stop cooking smoke from setting off the smoke alarms. I remember seeing the stove-top ventilation on a Bora commercial which aired during one of the European bicycling feeds (when we were able to get them).
    When you see a "glossy" cabinet, it's probably a cheap metal cabinet in an apartment. Usually these are old, originally white enamel with black trim, are often discolored from age and may even be partly rusted.
    Apartments don't have washing machines; unless there's a coin-operated laundry room in the basement of the building, you need to bring your laundry to a _laundromat_, a store with a whole bunch of coin-operated washers and dryers and a few tables for folding your clean clothes.
    Depending on the area in which you live, your kitchen may come with cabinets and sink, but you may have to supply your own "major appliances" (refrigerator/freezer, dishwasher - if there's space for one, stove/oven combo - if it's freestanding rather than built into the wall). Because so many American kitchens have gas stoves and ovens, they need to be installed by professionals to make sure there aren't any leaks. Also, if your appliances don't have standard wall plugs, you may be required to have an electrician install them to make sure they're properly grounded and there is sufficient power on the circuit to handle the load you are putting on it. (If there isn't, that could be thousands of dollars more as you may need to hire an electrician to upgrade the wiring. This is the landlord's responsibility in an apartment and they usually will say you're not allowed to have a microwave or a stand-alone dishwasher if it will overload the circuit.)

  • @billloutzenheiser5397
    @billloutzenheiser5397 4 месяца назад +8

    I still am impressed with your English, no hint of any accent and your subjects are great

    • @calebblaha7854
      @calebblaha7854 3 месяца назад +1

      There's hints of an accent. Still incredible. I'm a native speaker and have more of an accent.

  • @sbkir
    @sbkir 4 месяца назад +7

    I'm in Tennessee. I have a wall oven separate from the stove. My stove is electric and looks like the induction top. It's glass on the top and conceals the coils. Our garbage can is built in into a kitchen cabinet. It's not sitting out in the open. I have a kettle and boil the water on the stovetop for my tea. I can't believe that Germans have to furnish the kitchen when they rent or buy an apartment. I can't believe washing machines in the kitchen EXCEPT when I moved into an apartment in 2004 here in TN, they had a very small washer and dryer in the kitchen. that was the most weirdest thing to me. But I think it was a space saving issue.

  • @patg2109
    @patg2109 4 месяца назад +10

    Garage beer fridge is pretty common. That's where you put the old one when you buy a new one. Chest freezer in the basement is for the processed elk and Costco haul.

    • @roberts6053
      @roberts6053 4 месяца назад +5

      Here in England I keep my beer in what I call 'the infinite fridge'. Basically, it's so damned cold here, I keep beer outside the back door, which is generally lower than fridge temperature. Give me a Tennessee hug any day over this place. Why was I born in the wrong country?

    • @PoppiMorrison-nk6kw
      @PoppiMorrison-nk6kw 4 месяца назад +1

      I have.lived in Minnesota and am in Arkansas. I have never heard it referred to as a chest! It's a deep freezer!!!! Fridge, freezer, deep freezer.....

    • @OHsopositive
      @OHsopositive 4 месяца назад +6

      @@PoppiMorrison-nk6kwDeep Freezer is one term. OR some people (and stores) distinguish between “upright” or “chest” freezers.

    • @sgtm7
      @sgtm7 4 месяца назад +1

      ​​@@PoppiMorrison-nk6kwI am second generation retired military, and I have lived all over. I have heard them called both. Chest freezer and deep freezer. However, I have lived outside the USA for nearly twenty years, and I see them being called chest freezers more often in the countries I have lived.

  • @robreer5418
    @robreer5418 18 дней назад

    When I went to visit my friend in Germany in 2022. I can totally agree with this assessment of Kitchen. On my visit, I created a dish for dinner for my friend. And I learned my way around the kitchen. I do have pictures, but can’t share here.

  • @JohnCap523
    @JohnCap523 4 месяца назад +1

    The video of the oven fire around 13:20 is, in fact an electric oven.
    Also, not all stoves with gas top burners have gas ovens. Dual fuel ranges are gas cooktops and electric ovens.

  • @Itsabountifullife
    @Itsabountifullife 4 месяца назад +9

    Thanks for sharing. We spent a few weeks in Germany over the summer and we absolutely loved everything about it, everything. Funny thing though, we went to the store and bought icecream, when we got back to our AirbNb, we noticed in our very adorable small fridge that there was no freezer. Needless to say, we all enjoyed icecream right then.

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 4 месяца назад +2

      That's why there are Italian ice cream parlors everywhere.😂
      I'm glad you liked it here.

    • @stephanpopp6210
      @stephanpopp6210 4 месяца назад +2

      Next time check in advance. If it's not mentioned, ask if the fridge has a freezing compartment. Not all Airbnbs will have it as they save on decent fridges, but you'll find one.

  • @koolandblue
    @koolandblue 4 месяца назад +7

    Wow, having a kitchen in its own room sounds fantastic!

    • @user-iw8dj6yw9y
      @user-iw8dj6yw9y 4 месяца назад +1

      Hell, at Grandpa's farm, in Florida, the kitchen was its own building. The elevated porch connected the kitchen to the rest of the house. The outhouse was out in the yard.

  • @passatboi
    @passatboi 4 месяца назад +3

    It really depends on the region. In some regions of the US where there is a lot of hydroelectric power or electricity is cheaper, you'll see electric stoves. In other areas, gas is more common.

  • @RichardinNC1
    @RichardinNC1 4 месяца назад +1

    Being 64 years old and moving around a lot, I’ve seen it all regarding US kitchens. The style has changed dramatically over the decades. From all white metal cabinets and counters to pastel pinks and greens in the 50s to Formica and patterns in the 60s to “harvest yellow” in the 70s to colonial style light woods in the 80s, back to white in the 90s, to granite and stainless in modern kitchens.

  • @hw2508
    @hw2508 4 месяца назад +6

    The walk in wall closet is called a Speisekammer, a small room next to the kitchen for storage. One by one meter or so in size. At least in the north of Germany some homes have that. Maybe more older homes and not new builds.
    Quite funny, I learned in school to use the double sink. But I never came across them in any houses.

    • @SoneaT
      @SoneaT 4 месяца назад

      I do have a double sink and many of my friends as well, but to be fair, the second sink is half as big! Deep south Bavaria.

  • @nonosearching
    @nonosearching 4 месяца назад +6

    I think the sizes of kitchens in Germany vary a lot with how old the building and the apartments are because I've noticed that a lot of kitchens in buildings from pre-war are a lot bigger and usually have a pantry whereas buildings from the 60s-80s usually have way smaller kitchens (but they're a lot less spacious in general). I've also mostly ever seen wooden, framed country-side style kitchens in Germany than the modern sleek ones, so learning that these are more common in Germany was pretty interesting lol

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p 4 месяца назад

      This is, if renters, not owners decide about the kitchen, they decide if they replace the old one or not. People go to IKEA and can only buy what they offer.
      "Country-style" is rather a newer fashion, may from 1990-2010. Before it was with orange-greeny-plastic look from the 70ies.
      My kitchen is 5 years old, it's woulden but in concrete look.

  • @jimjordan2209
    @jimjordan2209 4 месяца назад

    I enjoy your videos very much. I spent two years in Germany, but that was fifty years ago and I spent most of my time on a US Air Force base. I was in one German kitchen, but it was in a large home and looked a lot like kitchens I was used to in the US. I have owned my own home for many years now. When I was renting I never rented a place which came with appliances, but always bought my own. I used to have a farm house which was built in 1920. It had a large kitchen which was connected to a dining room by a swinging door. The dining room was connected to the living room by a large opening with partial walls about three feet high on each side of it. It was also connected to a large porch which wrapped around to the front of the house. We designed and built the house I have now. It has a great room, combination kitchen, dining room, and living room. We had a lot of trouble with new appliances we had bought not long before building the home we are now in. As a of that we went with very high end commercial appliances. We picked out the appliances and designed the kitchen for those appliances. We also built a laundry room with a commercial washer and dryer. We have a large freezer and refrigerator. Each is about three feet wide and twenty inches deep. They sit side by side and are attached to the wall and to each other. We could have used door panels which matched the cabinets, but went with brushed stainless steel. The wall behind them is red. The rest of the walls are a neutral color. The stove sits next to the double sink. It was built to our specifications. It has six gas burners which have more heat control than I have ever seen on another stove. It also has a gas grill and two electric ovens.it has a very large hood above it which moves a lot of air to the outside of the house. The stove and hood are the same red color as the wall with the refrigerator and freezer only it. I also have a small refrigerator which has going to go in the garage, but ended up in the dining room area. There is a breakfast bar next to the stove with stools in the living room area. I also have freezers in my basement. I do buy milk by the gallon and I buy butter at a Amish store. I do not keep eggs in the refrigerator. I have chickens and keep unwashed eggs on the counter. The house that I grew up in didn't have a kitchen originally. Kitchens used to be detached from the house when stoves burned wood. The house that I grew up in had a detached kitchen from another property moved and attached to it before my dad bought the house. It hung off one side of the house like an afterthought.

  • @eaglevision993
    @eaglevision993 4 месяца назад +1

    Actually the direct visual confirmation of the heat output through the flame size is what I really like when cooking. You can perfectly "see" the heat output. This is why I use use gas . (German here btw.)

  • @Mike_Wazowskii7
    @Mike_Wazowskii7 4 месяца назад +17

    Currently moving from Essen and sold my kitchen last week. It's so wild the kitchen don't come with the house. Thank god the new place has everything. Minus a fridge lol

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 4 месяца назад

      that's not everything then, Mike hahaha!

  • @jptv5726
    @jptv5726 4 месяца назад +1

    I think we (household of 2) are unique, we have 3 freezers and 2 fridges. 1 American double door with freezer and fridge(for food), 1 standalone freezer(for meat), and 1 fridge(for drinks) with the freezer(for bread) in the bottom.
    we live in the south east of the Netherlands and actually do our shopping allot in Germany, just because many things are way cheaper there.

  • @darenallisonyoung8568
    @darenallisonyoung8568 4 месяца назад +3

    This may be different now, but some features I remember from living in Germany in the 80s: water heaters mounted on the wall directly above the kitchen and bathroom sinks. Also, we had no laundry facilities available in any of the apartments/apartment buildings I lived in. We washed our clothes by hand in the bathtub. We had a motorized spinner to take the water out of the clothes, then dried the laundry on folding drying racks in the living room. Also, heating oil was so expensive the one time we rented a house that we only heated the kitchen, living room, and the one bathroom with a tub in it. Everything else was closed off and kept cold, sometimes to the point of ice forming on the inside of the windows.

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd 4 месяца назад +1

      Was that the 1880s? I lived in Germany in the 1980s and don’t recognise any of this. Maybe it was specific to where you were staying?

    • @FabulousFa
      @FabulousFa 4 месяца назад +1

      As a german who is born in 1993 i am completely shockt 😮 i've never heard about everything you are describing. Sounds Horrible.

  • @TeamEvil84
    @TeamEvil84 4 месяца назад +11

    A gallon of milk usually doesn't last all that long because we cook with it, drink it, and use it in cereal.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 4 месяца назад

      I think that’s far more common in the elderly and lower socioeconomic areas. In general with the more modern research I only know two families that routinely buy cow milk in the US.

    • @TeamEvil84
      @TeamEvil84 4 месяца назад +2

      @@lijohnyoutube101 Dairy plays a significant role in the American diet: 84 percent of US consumers eat and drink dairy or dairy alternatives, and only 16 percent don't consume either product.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 4 месяца назад +1

      @@TeamEvil84 ‘dairy alternatives’ depending on study read/variables only about 60 percent of US drinks cows milk and its far more common in less educated areas and in older adults.

    • @TeamEvil84
      @TeamEvil84 4 месяца назад +1

      @@lijohnyoutube101 Are you a liberal?

    • @jessicaely2521
      @jessicaely2521 4 месяца назад

      ​@lijohnyoutube101 people buy cows milk for their kids after they stopped drinking breast milk or formula (if they aren't lactose intolerant). Kids drink whole milk until they are 2. Now if toddlers eat cheese, yogurt, ice cream (in moderation), seeds, some leafy greens, etc they don't have to drink milk. Cheese is either crappy for you, or super expensive in the US so most parents don't do this. I'm upper middle class and in a well educated area I still use milk for my protein shakes, coffee, banana pudding, mashed potatoes, some sauces, cobbler, home made Mac and cheese, some homemade hot chocolate recipes, etc. Youre the one thats not educated. Youre making blanket statements. There's definitely nothing like a small glass of milk with a chocolate chip cookie. Some teenagers will chop up their cookie and put it into the milk and have the cookie absorb the milk (yes some teenagers are weird).

  • @steinarbrevikknudsen1546
    @steinarbrevikknudsen1546 4 месяца назад +11

    In Norway, a distinction is made between fixed and not.fixed furnishings. Bathroom furnishings and kitchen are fixed and the home is always sold with it. Sofa and table... are not fixed...

    • @lightning77athiker45
      @lightning77athiker45 4 месяца назад +2

      I bought an entire kitchen with cabinets and everything near Bergen a few years ago. I didn't know what I was getting into 🤯 It took almost 3 days to remove everything.

    • @TheMVCoho
      @TheMVCoho 4 месяца назад +1

      Exactly the same as the as the US

    • @CineSoar
      @CineSoar 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@TheMVCoho "If it is screwed down, it is part of the deal" (Unless you clearly identify what will be removed, during the sales process. Or even better, remove it before showing the home).

    • @dnocturn84
      @dnocturn84 4 месяца назад

      @@CineSoar Kitchen are "screwed down" in the US? They usually aren't in Germany.

    • @dnocturn84
      @dnocturn84 4 месяца назад +2

      In Germany basic apartment standards are: A bathroom with a toilet bowl, a bathroom sink, a shower cubicle and/or bathtub, but no furniture (so no mirror, no furniture, nothing), no furniture anywhere else either, only the required connectors, to install your kitchen (for example). And lamps are also not part of the deal. You have to install your own lights. There will only be elctric wires hanging out of the walls and ceiling.

  • @perolden
    @perolden 4 месяца назад +1

    I live in Norway, and I have bought and rented in Norway and Sweden, all appliances that are fixed, that is to say, all doors, kitchen cabinets, stoves, oventops, floors, lamps and whatever belongs to the dwelling, rented or not. I thappens that people that moves take the ovens and fridges out, but then the renter or buyer by law can buy these tigs and deduct it from the price or rent. Fridges ara often in the same styles as kitchen cabinets as in Germany, but if they are standalone, and only connected by a plug, then it is not fixed, and the owner can take it out, same thing goes for washing machines and diswashers, it all depends how integrated they are. We also use marble and granite countertops. But the kitchens, like Germany are a separate room, but the half open kitchen is becoming more popular, as the kitchen an pantry style is making it's return.
    In the old days , whwn you had staff there was a kitchen downstairs, but they also had a pantry next to the dining room upstairs, so did not have to go up and down for everything.

  • @elainebradley8213
    @elainebradley8213 4 месяца назад +1

    I have known some apartment dwellers to store their apartment stove and fridge and buy their own nicer one. The one that came with the apartment, when they move, goes back into the apartment.

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 4 месяца назад

      they sound creepy - stay away from them. You have been warned.

  • @ericvanvlandren8987
    @ericvanvlandren8987 4 месяца назад +16

    I confess that to me, this is one of the strangest differences between here and Germany. (The fact that you have to move your kitchen)

    • @SoneaT
      @SoneaT 4 месяца назад +1

      This isn't a problem for us 😂. Did it twice myself and I'm a woman. We simply rearrange all the cabinets, stove and b I prefer my own, before one who the previous tenants made very dirty or something is broken.
      I prefer my own rather than one that was damaged or dirtied by the previous tenant. But it's not uncommon anymore to have a good build in kitchen from the Landlord. You simply have to pay a few month of rental deposit against theft or damage.

    • @tnit7554
      @tnit7554 4 месяца назад

      @ericvanvlanderen. German here. Moving your kitchen in germany is totally crazy.

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад

      @@tnit7554 People seem to manage fine, though

  • @donaldwildgrube5544
    @donaldwildgrube5544 4 месяца назад +12

    Gas stoves give you immediate heating and also immediate stopping and therefore better for cooks that want to contgrol their cooking.

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  4 месяца назад +4

      Same with induction, except that it's even quicker in my experience.

    • @danieparriott265
      @danieparriott265 4 месяца назад

      Danie's Dad Here- And if the power goes out (for whatever reason)... what do you do then? I am REALLY interested in your answer .... I have natural gas, which in America, is REALLY CHEAP right now ... but propane gives you some cushion fo price shocks or even total collapse .... @@FelifromGermany

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  4 месяца назад +1

      @@danieparriott265 I mean that's a pretty obvious answer :) In that case, it would definitely be useful to have a gas stove.

    • @jrgptr935
      @jrgptr935 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@FelifromGermanyNa, wenn der böse Bagger 40 Kilometer entfernt die Gasleitung erwischt, hat ja auch das halbe Land kein Gas - wo ist der Unterschied?

    • @leahwithheld783
      @leahwithheld783 4 месяца назад

      @@jrgptr935 That’s very rare, as that is a huge explosion risk. However, electrical lines usually run overhead, so storms often knock them down or otherwise damage equipment. In all my 54 years, I’ve had one gas leak, but too many electrical outages to count. And the gas leak was from degrading pipes, not being accidentally dug up.

  • @JGFowler121
    @JGFowler121 4 месяца назад

    Another gem posting. Thanks for sharing 💎

  • @mosselyn5081
    @mosselyn5081 4 месяца назад +1

    Gas vs. electric is regional in the US, IME. Places with ready access to cheap natural gas, you will see more gas ranges...and vice versa. I am in my 60s and have moved fairly often within the US over my lifetime. Most of the places I've lived had an electric stove.

  • @Jessica_P_Fields
    @Jessica_P_Fields 4 месяца назад +33

    Gas vs. Electric stoves in the US has a strong regional component. I live in the South (Northern Florida) and the majority of the stoves here are electric (or increasingly induction). My family moved to Florida from Southern California, where gas stoves are pretty standard. I mostly learned to cook on electric but my mom learned on gas. She hates cooking on electric but has made it work after all these years!

    • @NecSchel
      @NecSchel 4 месяца назад +8

      It's the same thing in Germany. Here in Berlin gas stoves are very common. But before I moved here (from the southwestern part) I've never seen it before.

    • @lilyz2156
      @lilyz2156 4 месяца назад +7

      I hate gas stoves, I don't trust it. Recently, a home completely exploded to nothing due to a gas leak. I don't trust gas whatsoever. I learned to cook on electric stove and have induction stove at home. Roomie recently shattered the glass top of induction stove, still works though. She is going to have to replace it eventually, yikes!

    • @thorstenjaspert9394
      @thorstenjaspert9394 4 месяца назад +3

      One reason less electric stoves in the US is the electric system. In the US the system voltage for common circuits is 120V and for high performance users it is 240V. For a 4 or 6 plate stove 240 V is not enough. For that case you need thicker cables to transport the higher current. In Germany and Europe we have 3 Phase Current with 230V phase to neutral wire.With it is easy to power 4 and 6 plate stove with oven. Gas stoves are available in Germany but not so common. Professional chefs prefer gas stoves. Gas stoves can have an electrical connection for temperature. But for stat you need a common 230V plug.

    • @desperadox7565
      @desperadox7565 4 месяца назад +7

      I miss cooking with gas. Being able to change the temperature immediately is perfect for good cooking.

    • @sluggo206
      @sluggo206 4 месяца назад +3

      Some parts of the US are banning gas stoves in new construction for climate reasons. My 1950s house had a gas heater and gas jets in the fireplace but the stove, water heater, and dryer were electric. I've never had a gas stove except when I visited Russia.

  • @patg2109
    @patg2109 4 месяца назад +10

    Very interesting. In my experience in the US, gas stoves are preferred by people who are seriously into cooking. Instant on/off and easier to control the temperature. You will find regional differences as well in those areas of the country where most houses have individual natural gas lines that provide fuel for heating, stoves, and even dryers (mostly out west i think). I grew up with this living in town in the Rocky Mountain north. Rural friends and family have a large outdoor propane tank that is refilled when needed by a guy with a truck. I had natural gas in San Diego proper until i moved last year. So bummed that i now have to deal with an electric stove and heat in my new house. I HAVE managed to set electric stoves and ovens on fire, and have learned to check inside for leftover pizza boxes before turning it on. Just my observations having been born and lived all over the US for 63 years (although not in Cincinnati 😊)

    • @gothenmosph5151
      @gothenmosph5151 4 месяца назад +1

      This isn't much of a consideration in Germany as there's aren't serious tornadoes or earthquakes or obviously hurricanes and the summers/winters are pretty mild weather wise compared to most of the Midwest. Flooding is usually the worst Germany has to deal with and at that point, you aren't living in your house anymore anyway.

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад +1

      I used to prefer gas stoves, but the modern electric (ceramic or induction) are equally usable in my view.
      Hated the old ones with heavy protruding burners that take forever to heat up and then stay hot for an hour after you turn it off.

  • @lawrenceedger292
    @lawrenceedger292 4 месяца назад +1

    Now in the US, a gas cooktop may come with an electric oven. I recently read an article stating that garbage disposals are only to used for the food stuck on your dishes. The rest of the food waste goes in the trash can.

  • @pigoff123
    @pigoff123 4 месяца назад +5

    I think of wall ovens as something from the 70s.

    • @LythaWausW
      @LythaWausW 4 месяца назад

      And 2DF Kuechenschlacht!

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад

      I have only ever seen one kitchen from the 70s that has a wall oven here in Germany, and that is the kitchen of our landlady's mother. They only became really popular in the last 20 years

  • @WW-wf8tu
    @WW-wf8tu 4 месяца назад +9

    Very cool content right here. Interesting. The point about gas stoves/ovens that you may or may not have considered is, when the home loses power, people can still cook. That is the only reason I have gas lines to hot water tank for hot showers, gas fire place for heat and then the before mentioned range/oven for food. Gas keeps going even after the power is out. So it is a consideration for convenience and long term indoor survival. And I was glad you gave your opinion on which you liked better, USA or German Kitchens. BTW, your cat is terrific! Loved the interaction there. 🤣

    • @dougbrowning82
      @dougbrowning82 4 месяца назад +2

      A lot of modern gas appliances use electricity to light the burners, no more pilot light.

    • @danieparriott265
      @danieparriott265 4 месяца назад

      That's nothing a match won't fix in 10 seconds or less. @@dougbrowning82

    • @WW-wf8tu
      @WW-wf8tu 4 месяца назад +3

      @@dougbrowning82 Matches still light gas tho. 😝 Fire mixed with gas will ignite it. Tested and proven over and over again.

    • @barbaras5550
      @barbaras5550 4 месяца назад +2

      See, in Germany houses don’t lose power (or very rarely, not for days like in the US) because power lines are underground

    • @WW-wf8tu
      @WW-wf8tu 4 месяца назад +1

      @@barbaras5550 Actually, there are a lot of places in the USA where power is underground as well. It is complicated and various reason factor in. 1 example is the grid is not being updated to handle the growing needs.

  • @patricialertora8407
    @patricialertora8407 4 месяца назад +3

    I never heard of a moving kitchen. My Oma and Opa in Heidelberg had a fairly large permanent kitchen. This was about 50 years ago so they may have changed. 😂

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад

      I mean, you only move the kitchen when you move to a new place, you're not moving it around while you live there lol

  • @Gizathecat2
    @Gizathecat2 4 месяца назад

    A few years ago I visited cousins in Germany. Both families lived in old farm houses that have been updated over the centuries. One family’s house was first built in 1690! The kitchen had all modern appliances including washer and dryer. It also had an informal dining area adjacent to a roomy living room. If the family had a really big gathering they opened up the long and wide “entry hall” for seating. On either side are the bedrooms and bathrooms which were originally designed for the horses and farm equipment. My other cousins live in a farmhouse that was rebuilt after WW2 and has a more modern layout with the long and wide entry hall split in half. The front half was a garage and inside half is a guest room.

  • @larryk731
    @larryk731 4 месяца назад +7

    Gas stoves in the US is very much a regional thing - only 38%ish of stoves are gas. In New Jersey, California, New York and a few other places it's over 65% but very low in other places.

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад

      Didn't know that. Thanks for the information. I have some relatives in Chicago and they all have gas, so I thought it would be like this everywhere.

    • @larryk731
      @larryk731 4 месяца назад

      @@svr5423 I left out Illinois and Nevada where gas is very common

    • @raymondmuench3266
      @raymondmuench3266 4 месяца назад +1

      Grew up in NJ and had a gas stove. Moved to Va: surprise, electric stove. Less control, more shifting of pots to compensate. Oh, for the joys of gas!

  • @martinsenoner8186
    @martinsenoner8186 4 месяца назад +5

    Wir sind Südtiroler und haben eine "deutsche" Wohnküche mit NEFF-Geräten, Ofen auf Augenhöhe, eingebaute Geschirrspühlmaschine, sechs verschiedenen, versteckten Müllkübel (reicht nicht, da wir 8 verscheidene Abfälle sammeln: Papier, Kartone, Glas/Metal, Plastik, Biomüll, Restmüll, Komposit verpackungen (Tetrapck/Evopack); Altbatterien) nur die Mikrowelle ist freistehend und Italienisch (DeLonghi)!

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад +1

      Klingt super. Ofen auf Arbeitshöhe ist echt ein Comfort. Hatten wir früher in Deutschland nicht - da war das immer kombiniert mit dem Herd.
      Ich ziehe bald um und werde einen Teil der Müllcontainer auf dem Balkon aufstellen, dann gibts drinnen keine Insekten.

  • @seikibrian8641
    @seikibrian8641 4 месяца назад +1

    I've never lived in a house or apartment with a gas stove that I can remember; I've always had electric coil tops. That started with a late 1950s "Mid Century Modern" home in the Seattle area, then a mid-1960s home in Florida, and back to the Seattle area in a 1970s house and 1980s and '90s apartments.

  • @randledmadden
    @randledmadden 4 месяца назад +1

    That oven with the door that hides away when open is awesome. I've lived in 7 houses here in the U.S. since I was a kid and every one had a garbage disposal. I just always assumed that all houses had them.

  • @johnvonsauers8867
    @johnvonsauers8867 4 месяца назад +4

    Hi Feli,💗💗 you are the bit of sun shine in my day, that is a great report on the kitchens thank you

    • @Myrtone
      @Myrtone 4 месяца назад

      And at 4:18 she even mentions Canada. Apparently she has relatives in Ontario.

  • @jimgorycki4013
    @jimgorycki4013 4 месяца назад +3

    Had gas stoves in New York. When we moved to Florida, it was electric. Got an induction stove when I renovated one of the houses that I lived in. otherwise, I have the ones with the heating coil. Same thing with the oven They have a special 4-prong plug which I think is 220V. I've had electric oven on fire before. Keep the fire extinguisher - or sand -- handy. The fridge, garbage disposer, microwave, and dishwasher all run on 110V. Oh, and had those accordian doors to hide the washer (110V) and dryer (220V)

  • @TheMcIke
    @TheMcIke 4 месяца назад +1

    We have a combination stove: gas cooktop with electric oven... I've never had to cook with a gas oven, but love using the gas cooktop. For a breadbox, we have a "bread drawer" that has a clear slider lid. And we have a Bosch dishwasher that's lasted much longer than anything we had before...

  • @BroughtonHood95
    @BroughtonHood95 4 месяца назад

    A common kitchen thing in Quebec Canada, but more in old houses an rural areas, We have wood fire oven/stove to cook.
    Thats make sense here because alot of houses are heated up by wood furnace in winter due to harsh temperature (cost less than hydro electric when it's like -10°C to -50°C outside)
    So wood for your furnace and wood for your stove and that heat up your house aswell!

  • @rjsieder
    @rjsieder 4 месяца назад +3

    I grew up in older homes that had the kitchen in its own room. The "open plan" became more popular later, although I believe it was driven by builders not wanting to build a separate room. The logic they used is that the kitchen is the center of activity, with people chatting or helping while a meal is being made, so the larger, open space is allows for that. Personally, I prefer a separate room, but that's just me. As for gas vs. electric, here in parts of California new homes must be all electric. Gas is no longer allowed for environmental reasons. I grew up in the northeast where gas is common and learned to cook with it. Then I moved to Florida where gas wasn't available and had to adjust. I still prefer gas. My current house has gas heat and water heaters and a gas line running through the house to outside where one could hook up a natural gas grill. But for some reason the builder didn't run the gas line to the kitchen, so the range is electric. Those with coils are older. Today only the cheapest models have exposed coils like that. I have a smooth glass top ( which has coils under the glass), and two ovens. One is full sized, the other is half sized and I use that one far more often then the big one. My microwave is separate, not over the stove, but that's because I remodeled the kitchen. The original one was over the stove. The vent didn't work very well, but when I did the remodel, I realized why...the builder never attached the exhaust port from the vent to the pipe going outside! All this was hidden behind a box, which sort of acted as a plenum. Sort of.
    The idea of taking your kitchen with you, so common in Germany, is not something I've ever seen in the US, and it seems weird, as you noted. My friend in Germany recently moved into an apartment that came with a kitchen, as well as flooring. But many she looked at came with neither. She has a tiny dishwasher and clothes washer in the kitchen, which is better than not having them, I guess. Having a separate laundry room is very common in the US.
    Lastly, styles change, especially in the US. Colors, painted cabinets, blacks/grays/whites are more common now. Natural or stained wood is less common, but is my preference. I have to say that I do like the minimalist look of the modern, Euro kitchens though.
    Great video!

  • @nikomangelmann6054
    @nikomangelmann6054 4 месяца назад +4

    moving the kitchen from place to place is not that hard as it sounds. all cabinets have standart sizes that makes rearange everything to the new place easy. most of the time you need only a new coutertop. but the most important thing is, the kitchen is build after your taste and not after the landlords or preowners taste.

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 4 месяца назад

      ugh - not going to happen in my life

  • @user-tg6im6yh6b
    @user-tg6im6yh6b 4 месяца назад +1

    Note what we call exhaust vents do not actually exhaust unless you have custom house construction. They just draw air from the range area and blow it back into the kitchen through a filter. Same with the down-draft blowers in an island range. Those however frequently exhaust to the basement, also through a filter, but in doing so you sacrifice island storage.

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 4 месяца назад

      nonsense - what kinda dope would buy a big exhaust hood and not have it vent outside?? anyone that stooopid doesn't deserve a kitchen

  • @carolc9654
    @carolc9654 4 месяца назад

    Pretty much the same thing in Italy: move with kitchen, small integrated fridges, modern/smooth/laminate cabinet doors, eat in kitchens rather than open kitchens, etc. In smaller cities though, gas stoves are still very popular and double sinks!

  • @steev927
    @steev927 4 месяца назад +4

    Well, I have tile floors, a pull-out trash cabinet, single sink, no island, laminate counters, use a breadbox, and it's a NJ house from the 1910s! It's also pretty small... but it's my kitchen and I love it.

    • @plektosgaming
      @plektosgaming 4 месяца назад

      Most U.S. homes build before WWII are like this. There was a huge drive in the 1950s and 1960s to "modernize" homes to these new norms, as having a home where you could show off to guests was a big thing. ( as opposed to the kitchen being a room over there where you made food ). This was also the era when every "proper" home in the suburbs had a liquor cabinet just in case you had to have someone over or throw a party. :)

  • @electronics-girl
    @electronics-girl 4 месяца назад +4

    My grandmother's house in Texas (built maybe in the 1940s, but I'm not sure) had a washing machine in the kitchen. It's rare in the US, but not unheard of in older homes.

    • @ashextraordinaire
      @ashextraordinaire 4 месяца назад

      Similarly, when I got a stackable washer and dryer in my early-1900s condo, I put them in the kitchen because it was the only room with both the space (barely) and existing water and gas lines. Would have been prohibitively expensive to put them anywhere else. Just part of fitting a modern lifestyle into an old home!

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 4 месяца назад +1

      Of course there are many apartments in the US where there are hookups for washers and dryers in the kitchen, so for flat dwellers, having a washing machine in the kitchen isn't so strange.

    • @terrawolf3802
      @terrawolf3802 4 месяца назад +1

      My American town house was built in the 70s. It's a tiny thing so space is premium. My stacker unit is in my kitchen. My water softener is also in the kitchen and the furnace and water heater is on 2nd floor. I live in the upper midwest so those things are needed to be inside.

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 4 месяца назад

      nasty ... I wouldn't eat at anyone's house who brought their dirty clothes into the kitchen (gag)

    • @ashextraordinaire
      @ashextraordinaire 4 месяца назад

      @@Marcel_Audubon What about dirty dishes? 🤔

  • @timo2571
    @timo2571 4 месяца назад +2

    Is this when I'm supposed to point out that at 13:24 the oven fire is in an electric oven? You can tell by the nichrome resistive heating element running around the perimeter near the floor of the oven which they've lined with aluminum foil presumably to make cleaning easier. Yes, fat will catch fire if it drips on the electric heating elements, no open flame needed. Pro tip - roast a turkey on a roasting rack in a roasting pan which will allow air to circulate around the bird producing that wonderful crispy skin and catch all the delicious fluids that drip off and at the end deglaze the pan with a little red wine to make gravy. Don't have a rack, make a bed of stuffing in the pan and lay the turkey on it so it will absorb the tasty juices that would drip off the turkey although the skin on the bottom will not have that wonderful crispness.
    Typically exhaust hoods that vent the outside are for gas appliances where electric ranges generally have hoods that vent back into the room but there are grease traps that theoretically prevent spreading grease about the room.

  • @jocopowell
    @jocopowell 4 месяца назад

    My house was made in the 70s when compartmentalization was a major influencer in floor plans. I knocked out the wall between my kitchen and living room and put in a floating bar and hanging cabinets. The kids love it to watch TV while they eat their snacks and extra storage is always good.

  • @jennifermichelleswanson3797
    @jennifermichelleswanson3797 4 месяца назад +3

    Mir gefallen deine videos. Mach weiter so. ☺☺ I hope I translated it correctly. 😁😁 When I have moved, the only appliances that I have ever moved with me was the washer and dryer. The kitchen always had the fridge and the stove/oven and the dishwasher, if it had one. The cupboards were already there. But I agree, it would seem strange to me to move the kitchen with you. I also enjoy how open the kitchen is to the rest of the house. I think I would find it strange to have to go through door to go into or out of the kitchen. As for the smell of foods cooking in the kitchen, I think some food makes the house smell nicer. Like if you were baking cookies or something. Again, keep up the good work. Nochmals: Machen Sie weiter so. I hope I translated it correctly.

  • @Allaiya.
    @Allaiya. 4 месяца назад +13

    The fact that the kitchen cabinets, light fixtures, blinds, mirrors etc is all removed or missing when moving in is mind blowing to me. 😯
    Personally I think it just sounds like such a pain to be required to move it or be forced to go purchase it every time one moves.

    • @CineSoar
      @CineSoar 4 месяца назад

      One thing to keep in mind, in many European cities renting is not necessarily viewed as a short term stepping stone to home ownership. Many buy an apartment, or enter into a rental agreement with the mindset of an American buying a condo. If you move into an apartment with the intention of living there for decades (maybe even generations), you see it as more of your own space, even if the financial arrangement leaves the actual ownership in the landlord's hands. In fact, in many jurisdictions here, when you enter into a long term rental agreement, the duration is entirely up to the renter. It is not unusual for an apartment to be listed for sale cheap, because the current renter has no intention of leaving, and they're paying rents that are a decade or more behind the current market. I know of an apartment building that was sold, demolished (except for the façade), rebuilt and sold as individual apartments. Two of the units were occupied by elderly tenants who chose to stay (possibly couldn't afford to move in the current rental market). So, the new building owner had to house them during construction, and then move them back into the newly renovated units, at something like 1/2 - 2/3rds of current comparable rents.

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад +1

      One thing to also keep in mind is that Germans don’t move often. Of course you take everything with you when you move somewhere new, because it only happens a few times in your life, and you want the new apartment to feel like home.

  • @jaredwhite9552
    @jaredwhite9552 4 месяца назад

    That oven with the foldaway door looks really awesome!

  • @wallykramer7566
    @wallykramer7566 4 месяца назад

    Fascinating! There is a hint that some cultures have crossed over the concept of a kitchen in the U.S. and Germany! Thinking back, my U.S. house was built around 1955 and my wife and I gutted the kitchen down to studs and reworked it substantially. We saw that there _used_ to be a (laundry) washer and dryer in the kitchen evidenced by extra plumbing and a dryer vent tube in the wall. Also, our neighbor hinted that the water heater (electric) used to be under or in a kitchen cabinet but had been moved to the garage, as were the washer and dryer.
    From my viewpoint, the electrical was a travesty: there were only two outlets (so four in two places) in the kitchen and two doorways which made it more of a hallway than a place to cook! There were three electrical circuits in the kitchen which weren't adequate (blew the fuses often). My wife decided to replace the yucky electric range with one which used natural gas due to her background as a professional chef in restaurants. We agreed to wall off the extra doorway and made it into a cozy 3-point workflow (sink, stove, refrigerator) with working spaces. I installed about ten new circuits, four of which were for plug strips at the bottom of the cabinets. We added a dishwasher and garbage disposal and a fridge with an icemaker and a range hood which really modernized the kitchen. We had natural gas added and crawled under the house for about two weeks installing it ourselves. The gas company required switching the hot water (from electric) to gas and the electric baseboard heaters to something using gas, for which we installed a gas fireplace insert. After the cabinetry was installed, we added black granite countertops and exotic hardwood stub-wall tops as a rich wooden countertop in one area. The new fridge was a standard 36 inch wide model and probably about the same in depth. We added lots of lighting. The remodeled kitchen has about 35 electrical outlets most of them in available plug strips.

  • @meraluna666
    @meraluna666 4 месяца назад +8

    Greetings from Germany Hamburg! When I moved 3 years ago in a new apartment, I chose one without a kitchen and bought one by myself. There are apartments to rent with a kitchen inside, but usually the rent is double compared to one without a kitchen. So It's just cheeper to pay 80 € a month for a credit than 300 € a month more for an apartment that comes with a kitchen. On top I do have exactly the kitchen I like 😀

    • @TheSlanderousTruth
      @TheSlanderousTruth 4 месяца назад

      You pay double rent for a furnished kitchen in Hamburg? Here in Bavaria in the part I live , it's becoming more of the norm that the landlord may offer to sell you the kit hem that's already installed instead of having to move it out or if you want to just let it stay free of charge . The only thing I've had to pay extra for is the garage that comes with the unit and that's like and extra 30 -60 eur

    • @meraluna666
      @meraluna666 4 месяца назад

      @@TheSlanderousTruth I didn't get to know the one who lived in the apartment. There was no kitchen when I visited it.

  • @bbowerful
    @bbowerful 4 месяца назад +11

    Have a cat just like your gray kitty. His name is Dusty. He gets into trouble just like your kitty does.

  • @bigchevs1
    @bigchevs1 Месяц назад

    Growing up, we had a simple electric stovetop/oven combination with an on/off, temperature knob and a clean switch. My wife and I built a new house (in NC) with high-end appliances in the kitchen. Stove top, separate wall ovens. They have all options as you show. In shopping for these, I noticed most stoves have the complicated setting now at most levels of price. I of course when cooking a frozen pizza, place it in the oven at 350 and check on it. I'm sure it has a pizza setting but too much trouble to figure it out. The disappearing oven door is amazing! Great video and I enjoy your shows!

  • @WiNNiep00h
    @WiNNiep00h 4 месяца назад

    We build a house 5 years ago in germany. Our kitchen, eating room and living room are all together. Our kitchen is very small because we couldnt make it any bigger and it was very expensive. We do have a big side by side fridge but its standing in the next room,next to the washing mashine and dryer, so we can not hear it in the living room.
    Our fridge also has an ice dispenser and i use it every day. I always liked my drinks ice cold my whole life but we never had an ice dispenser. I always had to prepare my ice cubes inside the freezer

  • @jimbob5535
    @jimbob5535 4 месяца назад +4

    Open floor plan saves space and makes people feel like they have a bigger home. In Utah, we have the Utah one step kitchen, smaller but more practical.

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад

      And especially in single person households, you often don't need/want the extra walls.

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад

      Unless you're a person that cooks a lot, then you definitely want the extra walls. My mother cooks a lot, and the few times that I cleaned the top of the kitchen cabinets and the lampshade, I was thankful that all that muck from frying meat wasn't wafting into our living room and sticking to the furniture there lol

  • @FatRace
    @FatRace 4 месяца назад +4

    I wanted to move to Cincinnati. Only know a few words in German. However I really enjoy watching your RUclips videos. Keep up the good work!!! 😊

  • @honeybeastie1
    @honeybeastie1 4 месяца назад +1

    The house I lived in until I was 11 (Milwaukee, WI) was 100 yrs old. The kitchen was in a room by itself but no door. We had a table where we ate our every day meals. The dining room was next to it and we only ate holiday/special meals there. We played games and did our homework on that table.

  • @ashleymartsen9743
    @ashleymartsen9743 3 месяца назад +1

    I just wanted to add a small correction. Feli said that in the US if you have a stove/oven combo, and the stove is gas, then you'll have a gas oven. This is more common, but not necessarily true. My Mom has a Gas Stove and an Electric Oven which is one combination piece. This means when the electricity goes out, she can use the stove, but not the oven. They are called "Duel Fuel"

  • @Bioshyn
    @Bioshyn 4 месяца назад +7

    gas stoves have the advantage that you can turn off the heat and the heat is gone, just like induction. The coil plates stay hot and you have to move the pot/pan to stop it from cooking even though the stove is turned off already.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p 4 месяца назад

      So with invention of induction, every advantage is gone.

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад +1

      Although I'd still move the pot or pan on an induction stove. The stove itself may not get hot, but the bottom of the pots transfer an awful lot of their heat to the stovetop, so they still get awfully hot and retain that heat for some time. Not nearly as bad as with electric stoves of course, but I've almost burned myself wiping our induction stove down after cooking multiple times.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 3 месяца назад

      @@holger_p Not quite. A gas stove can be used as a grill. They also work without electricity. Those are real advantages for cooking. Having said that, those are fairly niche advantages. If I were building a new house I would probably go all-electric. A portable camping stove would be good enough for the rare times an actual flame is desired.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p 3 месяца назад

      @@eDoc2020 a grill is the dirtiest thing you can imagine. Nobody wants this in the kitchen.
      And while a gas often has only bottom heat, electric has top and bottom. That's more often needed.
      Not to forget the danger of open fire, as Feli noticed.
      No wonder you glorify fire fighters, you really need them.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 3 месяца назад +1

      @@holger_p For some reason people like to brown tortillas directly on a gas stove. I don't get why they can't use a pan. And regarding an open flame, it's not that dangerous. I'd argue electric coils are more dangerous because they're less visible. IMO the bigger problem with gas stoves is the lack of proper venting in 99% of installations. Pure natural gas is theoretically 100% clean burning but in practice using gas stoves results in a significant decrease in indoor air quality.

  • @christophertipton2318
    @christophertipton2318 4 месяца назад +3

    Feli, your cats are funny. My oldest and I co-own a house in the Orlando, FL area. She has two cats. They climb on everything. Neither one seems to understand a word of English or Spanish (my ex-wife's native language and my kids know a lot and I speak some). The cats also don't seem to understand any of the other languages I have some knowledge of (mainly German, Japanese, and Italian). The only cat I ever knew who would obey commands like a dog was a cat we had when I was growing up. He obeyed my father instantly. No one else, just dad. The obedience must have resulted from getting punted down the basement stairs when dad caught the cat killing our pet parakeet.

    • @charonstyxferryman
      @charonstyxferryman 4 месяца назад

      Cats doesn't understand punishment for doing something. They just think you don't like it, and not anything else.
      If a cat thinks you did something (which in your opinion is punishment) - the cat's think it's totally unfair that you suddenly didn't like it. A cat could revenge poop at a place you seem to like, if you did that.

    • @christophertipton2318
      @christophertipton2318 4 месяца назад

      Perhaps so, but this cat was terrified of my dad ever after and obeyed instantly like a Marine. 🙂 I don't remember any revenge poops.@@charonstyxferryman

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee8831 4 месяца назад +1

    Hello Feli. I renovated my house in UK, with help from a joiner. My girlfriend's parents bought a house and did not want the brand new glossy style kitchen as they were extending the kitchen to suit someone their age and get rid of a step. I reused the brand new units we removed and added to the apliances with extra Bosch appliances, affordable with the money saved, like that German hob you described. We used extra panels from Ikea "casualty bay" to complete the fit in my house, to a similar design to the US open plan, and create a unit for the double electric oven.
    I used an otherwise wasted corner of the living area, next to the archway entrance, to make a stand for the fridge, so I could get a large US style one if I wanted.
    I worked with the electrician to fit the hood over the cooker, essential to stop smells from the smaller kitchen getting into the living area.
    The slim dishwasher fitted next to the washer by having shifted the fridge space.
    I commented before that I spent time in both your home and adopted country, so I try to pick the best ideas I saw.
    I learned how to fit kitchens because I worked in a laboratory and until we could afford specialist units, we used kitchen ones we maintained ourselves.
    A joiner friend that helped me got a business fitting laboratories and I was able to suggest him to replace the units with professional ones as the business I worked for grew.

  • @jaybrown4753
    @jaybrown4753 4 месяца назад

    '94 visiting my great aunt in Coburg... everyones apartment came with a separate little yard up the street. It was so fun how everyone got together.

  • @captain_context9991
    @captain_context9991 4 месяца назад +6

    Feli. If you go to any RUclips video about these 20-40-80 million dollar mega mansions in the Hollywood hills and stuff, they will ALL have Miele appliances. Just as certain as they will have Italian marble.

    • @plektosgaming
      @plektosgaming 4 месяца назад

      About half of people in the U.S. rent, as so the reason most homes are like that is because the owner will just buy the cheapest appliance and drop it in. Sometimes you have cabinets, sometimes not. Sometimes you have thin windows and linoleum floors, sometimes not - whatever was cheapest to build at the time. U.S. homes build since WWII by and large are like that. Cheap as possible, most space as possible within that budget. And last maybe 30-40 years before they are basically tear-downs.

    • @sgtm7
      @sgtm7 4 месяца назад

      ​@@plektosgamingAs of 2023 only 36% of people in the USA rent. The home ownership rate in the USA has stayed between 61 to 65% since the 1960s. Despite the doom and gloom being reported in the media, that figure hasn't changed, and isn't likely to do so.

    • @svr5423
      @svr5423 4 месяца назад +1

      @@plektosgaming I'm always "shocked" when I see how thin the walls are in many US homes. As kids, we were playfighting and someone was thrown into the wall. He was ok, the wall not so.
      During Corona, when I informed myself about home defense, many americans said to be careful with buckshot and slugs and they may easily penetrate walls and injure other family members. Not so in Switzerland, where walls are usually thick steel reinforced concrete.

    • @petermsiegel573
      @petermsiegel573 4 месяца назад

      @@svr5423sounds like a bizarrely unusual case. I can’t think of a place I’ve ever lived or visited that isn’t as sturdy. You’d need a very large truck to hope to dent the walls in homes where I’ve lived, except Hawaii, which does use single-wall construction, which makes sense for the climate.