What Did the Georgians Eat at a Dinner Party?

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 231

  • @therevolutionwillbecaffeinated
    @therevolutionwillbecaffeinated Год назад +114

    I'd be very interested to see another version of this describing what the lower classes were eating

    • @therevolutionwillbecaffeinated
      @therevolutionwillbecaffeinated Год назад +6

      (this was a really interesting video though 😅)

    • @kelrogers8480
      @kelrogers8480 Год назад +4

      It's easily looked up, no secrets here. Potatoes. They were lucky if there was a single piece of bacon for the father of the household - who likely worked down the mine - once a week!

    • @T3t4nu5
      @T3t4nu5 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'd be interested in a version with someone who isn't so squeamish about food.

  • @configuremakeinstall
    @configuremakeinstall Год назад +17

    Where’s max miller and tasting history. White soup episode please! 3:12

  • @BrahmaDBA
    @BrahmaDBA Год назад +135

    Make no mistake even in our day and age fruits are still a status symbol. My friend who worked in Japan told me that giving people a basket of fruits, especially imported fruits, is considered a very high praise. Because off season and imported fruits in Japan can fetch up to hundreds of USD.

    • @maciejtomkiewicz6733
      @maciejtomkiewicz6733 Год назад +6

      An example? Red sweet Watermellons of Cherson, just received back by Brothers & Sisters of Ukraine!

    • @andrewmountford3608
      @andrewmountford3608 Год назад +2

      In HKG & China also bought from Japanese suppliers. These are specially selected & packaged fruits; absolutely perfect. A single peach might cost GBP100 or more

    • @Matatabi6
      @Matatabi6 Год назад +2

      Some of this has to do with Japanese fruit growing practices with the prestige fruits. The one fruit one tree method. And also the historic culture of Japanese class systems and gift giving

    • @evalevy2909
      @evalevy2909 Год назад +4

      It's more than that
      In Japan only fruits of the most uniform beauty and highest sugar content will make it to market. They are designer fruits. Not meant to be snacked on lightly. Luckily in most other countries we have boring fruit available

    • @ollyravenhill7341
      @ollyravenhill7341 Год назад

      Also because fresh fruit goes bad so quickly for a fair few people it’s just not something worth spending the money on as you either need to absolutely demolish a whole carton/box of fruit in one sitting or if you even look at the wrong way it’ll start going bad. Like berries only really last a couple days, and this is in the us where stuff isn’t like so warm that the life cycles are being shortened by climate.

  • @Victoriacariad
    @Victoriacariad Год назад +18

    Bridgerton is a fantasy drama. I'm not sure we learned much about history from it...
    Compared with Jane Austen who lived at the time.

    • @Satu-zs7gm
      @Satu-zs7gm 9 месяцев назад +2

      it's just a reference for those people who never opened a history book, and they are the majority sadly

  • @jmc7034
    @jmc7034 Год назад +33

    I do enjoy watching Dan’s face as he tries all this food

    • @margo3367
      @margo3367 Год назад +1

      He’s adorable.

    • @Satu-zs7gm
      @Satu-zs7gm 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@margo3367 he is hot

  • @Crytica.
    @Crytica. Год назад +5

    The pineapple information was so entertainingly interesting! Especially thanks to the pictures that showed great examples! I've seen those shapes here and there and now I know what they represent and from what century they come or are inspired from. Thanks for that!

  • @anaterka13
    @anaterka13 Год назад +23

    I have an idea why offal was a thing: when an animal is butchered, meat could be preserved somewhat, by salting, brining or smoking, offal on the other hand had to be eaten pretty much immediately. So i imagine good quality offal was a bit harder to come by (and pricier) especialy in cities or towns, therefore a suitable flex to your diner guests.

    • @marksimons8861
      @marksimons8861 10 месяцев назад

      I thought offal was the basis of most sausages eaten today.

  • @elizabethcornwell4156
    @elizabethcornwell4156 Год назад +14

    Claret should be served from a claret jug,not a flat bottomed ship’s decanter.Additionally ice cream was even more a symbol of status at this time.In an era before electricity it provedyou had access to an ice house as well as servants who could sit & churn cream in a pot of ice to produce ice cream.It would then be served in elaborate dishes of ice with an inner to contain the ice cream,or moulded into fancy shapes.

  • @vickywitton1008
    @vickywitton1008 Год назад +9

    Just remembering Sue Perkins and Coren eating a Georgian dinner party meal.and getting absolutely peed out of their heads!

  • @jillwanlin9558
    @jillwanlin9558 Год назад +16

    I always get a kick out of Dan taking one for the team. Thanks for the laugh HH. 😊

    • @margo3367
      @margo3367 Год назад +2

      I got a kick out of it too and the bonus was reading excerpts from Pride & Prejudice. ❤

  • @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs.
    @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs. Год назад +101

    Bridgerton is not a Georgian period drama, it's an alternate universe one if anything. Hence the astonishing historical inaccuracy.

    • @justinbradfield1489
      @justinbradfield1489 Год назад +17

      Wokedom.

    • @CATTYNESS1
      @CATTYNESS1 11 месяцев назад +20

      It's annoying that people are referencing it like this. You might as well say Hogwarts is a true representation of English schools and magic is real.

    • @jityavallabhaneni5774
      @jityavallabhaneni5774 11 месяцев назад +3

      But George was King during this era, yes technically it was Regency period as well but surely that would also cause this era to be a Georgian era

    • @Satu-zs7gm
      @Satu-zs7gm 11 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@jityavallabhaneni5774Bridgerton is fantasyland for black American and appropriated the regency timeline with real life Georgian King.
      anyhow all those Georgian people grow up and live into the regency, Daphne was born during late Georgian period

    • @Ari-polo
      @Ari-polo 10 месяцев назад

      Wow you can't even tolerate black people when the talk is about food!

  • @KokkiePiet
    @KokkiePiet Год назад +19

    I don’t know how your sweetbreads where prepared but you are wrong. Veal Sweetbreads are very nice to eat. Cleaned, salt and pepper, flour and then fried in butter, very tender in structure and mild in taste. I would eat them a lot more but they are quite expensive here (Germany, Netherlands)

    • @goodputin4324
      @goodputin4324 Год назад

      where prepared? 😂

    • @darthos6257
      @darthos6257 Год назад

      How can he be wrong? It's a matter of taste.

    • @KokkiePiet
      @KokkiePiet Год назад +7

      @@darthos6257
      He is Talking about a strong gamey taste, sweetbreads taste rather mild.

  • @patrickpowell5430
    @patrickpowell5430 Год назад +4

    I would have been a little more impressed with this video if they hadn't resorted to using processed items for the cild meats. Both the ham and especially the 'other one' - I think that is pressed turkey breast - look to be straighnt from Asda. And the pork pies also look like shop-bought.

  • @joeclark2104
    @joeclark2104 Год назад +10

    sweet breads are thymus glands and can be fantastic if prepared correctly.

    • @Informed21
      @Informed21 5 месяцев назад

      Yes, they can be great. I have never had a bad one. I don't know why Dan thinks that sweetbreads included testicles, the stomach, etc. Those are offal. I have never heard sweetbreads referred to as offal, although I suppose technically they are such. They are just too good to be included in that category, in my opinion.

  • @bigtex4058
    @bigtex4058 Год назад +31

    Guests in the Antebellum South were welcomed by being presented with a pineapple. One who overstayed his welcome would wake up one morning to find a pineapple at the foot of his bed. That meant it was time to go.

    • @adamhauskins6407
      @adamhauskins6407 Год назад

      Man southerners sure do now how to tell people to go away

    • @DJL78
      @DJL78 Год назад +7

      They had a slave labor surplus for pineapple presents? Or was this something the children of slaves were forced to do?

    • @edennis8578
      @edennis8578 Год назад +3

      ​@@DJL78In the Confederacy, fewer than 6% of the free population owned slaves. Do you force your slave children to give pineapples to your guests?

    • @DJL78
      @DJL78 Год назад

      @@edennis8578 Where do you get you facts from? A pop-up book in David Duke’s basement? The proportion of Southern white families that owned slaves in 1860 was 25-30 percent. According to the Census of 1860 30.8 percent of the free families in the contederacy owned slaves. That means that every third white person in those states had a direct commitment to slavery. Facts are facts.

    • @nomdeguerre247
      @nomdeguerre247 Год назад +4

      ​@@edennis8578My my so defensive of slave holders, dennis

  • @LornaBall
    @LornaBall Месяц назад +1

    Tremendous 🧐🧡🌸

  • @paddyf24_17
    @paddyf24_17 Год назад +9

    Cheers Dan, one of those things I find strangely entertaining. Please keep eating for me.

  • @giraffesinc.2193
    @giraffesinc.2193 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is such a delightful series! More, please!

  • @ageingviking5587
    @ageingviking5587 Год назад +10

    Another great one H H . How much will Dan need to be paid to eat peasant foods. 🙂 . Thank you for posting.

  • @kimberlypatton205
    @kimberlypatton205 Год назад +5

    Dan is wonderful!

  • @hmq9052
    @hmq9052 Год назад +16

    Chicken slices from Tesco
    Pork pies Tesco
    That ham. Tesco.
    Props department phoning it in a bit here

    • @eliotreader8220
      @eliotreader8220 Год назад +1

      that Ham looks tasty. thought they invented the Sandwich

    • @TheWitchfinderGenral
      @TheWitchfinderGenral Год назад +3

      Yeah, I'm pretty sure the Georgians didn't eat Pukka Pies

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Год назад

      ​@@TheWitchfinderGenralThat wasn't a pukka pie it was far too big.

  • @aubs400
    @aubs400 Год назад +5

    Isn't Bridgerton infamously innacurate?

  • @michaelgray2279
    @michaelgray2279 Год назад +11

    Sweetbreads are the THYMUS glands which are situated in the neck of spring lambs....Absolutely delicious fried in olive oil and with
    a squirt of lemon juice

  • @Maybeabandaid9
    @Maybeabandaid9 Год назад +8

    "A drink with you sir."
    Indubitably.

  • @sam7687-i9b
    @sam7687-i9b Год назад +18

    Pineapple was so exspensive roughly about £500 of todays money. They often bought them or rented them but they often didn't eat them as they were to exspensive they were just to show off.

  • @DARK_NRG
    @DARK_NRG Год назад +7

    I wonder if the Pineapple on top of the Wimbledon Men's singles trophy is due to the fruit being a status symbol of the past.

  • @apsetiadi
    @apsetiadi 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was mesmerised by him catching the pineapple 07:56

  • @acerrubrum5749
    @acerrubrum5749 Год назад +22

    Recipe: 1 food Historian, 1 Cook, + quality ingredients, care and attention.
    This video is lacking in all accounts.

    • @ThomasD66
      @ThomasD66 Год назад +8

      Agreed, the only possible way for white soup to taste gamey would be to start from a gamey meat stock.

    • @PS-vy6ln
      @PS-vy6ln Год назад +7

      Did you notice that the cold meats and pork pies were just ripped from a packet? It looks like something from a kids birthday party.

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 7 месяцев назад

      @@PS-vy6ln Yes. And that was soooooo disappointing.

  • @marksimons8861
    @marksimons8861 10 месяцев назад +2

    If I am not mistaken, Georgian wine glasses were rather small compared to what we use today. My guess is they could not have been too concerned about the bouquet.

  • @nicolad8822
    @nicolad8822 Год назад +22

    Bridgerton isn’t a period drama though? It’s a bit of enjoyable fluff.

  • @richardrutter9605
    @richardrutter9605 11 месяцев назад +2

    Why are we pretending Sub-saharan Africans were a part of the british upper class in the 1700's?

  • @Kimmy-pw8tm
    @Kimmy-pw8tm Год назад +1

    I loved watching such shows as Bridgeton and Pride and the Prejudiced.

  • @Liyana333
    @Liyana333 Год назад +24

    I really wish this foody section of the channel would have been hosted by someone who has an adventurous palate and isn’t just constantly saying everything is terrible then leaving it at that. He was the same in the one about the monks who abstained from meat and considered pickled herring (actually a nice food, as well as almost everything else they ate to be hideous.) It would be nice to have good descriptions so even if something isn’t to his taste, we still get some interesting information that compares to things we all know and do understand. That would give a real bit of history 😅lesson substance.

  • @anya93918
    @anya93918 Год назад +2

    The ending: how ungainly King George the fourth's corpse was 🤣

  • @ChrisOliver4307
    @ChrisOliver4307 Год назад +4

    As Jane Austen said, Georgians only moved their bowels once a season.

  • @RataStuey
    @RataStuey Год назад +2

    The sweetbread is the thymus gland of a lamb usually. 6:00

  • @jonatmelbourne7239
    @jonatmelbourne7239 4 месяца назад

    Thank you! Great video!

  • @RogerMoore-gq7ck
    @RogerMoore-gq7ck 10 месяцев назад

    That was a great catch. Impressive.

  • @neilfleming2787
    @neilfleming2787 Год назад +15

    no idea what he was eating as 'sweetbreads' - they were NOT sweetbreads in their correct form they are defined as "Sweetbreads are an organ meat from the thymus gland and pancreas"...they do NOT include testicles as he said

    • @andrasszabo1570
      @andrasszabo1570 Год назад +5

      He didn't say there were. He said these sweetbreads were glands from the stomach (like the pancreas).
      He just said it was funny that in Jane Austen's books the characters were having nice, polite conversations while munching on testicles or ovaries.

    • @maryjackson1194
      @maryjackson1194 Год назад +2

      @@andrasszabo1570 The pancreas is not in the stomach, nor is the thymus. And, properly prepared, sweetbreads are delicious.

    • @jo-vf8jx
      @jo-vf8jx Год назад +1

      @@maryjackson1194Dan Snow didn’t say they were from the stomach, but drawn from it. Imagine a stomach as a tree trunk and drawn as the branches. That’s what he’s trying to say.

  • @colonial6452
    @colonial6452 Год назад +3

    Years ago, I saw an episode of "The Galloping Gourmet", featuring sweetbreads. Nasty delicacy.

  • @autumncortez6254
    @autumncortez6254 Год назад +2

    That white soup, the way he practically choked it down, it did not look appetizing.

  • @Nerathul1
    @Nerathul1 Год назад +3

    A quick google search tells me a pineapple during the time was 60£, which translates to somewhere around 5000£ in today's money.

  • @katherinecollins4685
    @katherinecollins4685 Год назад

    Enjoyed this

  • @Chapdadddy
    @Chapdadddy Год назад +17

    So I’m curious how this diet translated to colonial America during this period - perhaps you could cover that as well? Loved this episode!

    • @stoker1931jane
      @stoker1931jane Год назад +5

      I know that there was a real crossover when it came to Pineapples during this time period, between 🇬🇧 and "The Colonies". If you look at the "Christmas" decorations in 'Colonial Williamsburg' Pens. the Pineapple together with Pomegranates seem to be everywhere - when people were really affluent, ofcourse✌🏻😊.

    • @BlaBla-pf8mf
      @BlaBla-pf8mf Год назад +6

      The Townsends channel has many videos of the food of the georgian era both in Britain and in North America.

    • @EK14MeV
      @EK14MeV Год назад +1

      Meanwhile French high society fops urinated in Versailles Palace stairways.

  • @GullibleTarget
    @GullibleTarget 9 месяцев назад

    What a dish!
    Food looks good, too.

  • @PolymurExcel
    @PolymurExcel Год назад +1

    Hey it came back!

  • @TheoneandonlyJobis
    @TheoneandonlyJobis Год назад

    love these because I despise Dan Snow's advertisements at the beginning of videos. Suffer Dan as you have made us suffer!

  • @maxshiraz3447
    @maxshiraz3447 Год назад +5

    Oddly, the Wimbledon trophy has a pineapple on its top

  • @yieeeeeeeeeeeeee
    @yieeeeeeeeeeeeee Год назад

    every struggling "aAaUgh" 😩 felt in my bones
    also why did that pie sounded so crunchy af

  • @xXScissorHandsXx
    @xXScissorHandsXx Год назад +4

    22k to build a greenhouse and facilities to grow pineapples and selling for £150/unit. Sheesh 😅

  • @guzurchan
    @guzurchan Год назад

    Nice catch

  • @phill2065
    @phill2065 Год назад +4

    Is this a re upload? Why do I remember watching this before

    • @bktfrank
      @bktfrank Год назад +1

      Same, i thought i was going mad

  • @elizabethclaiborne6461
    @elizabethclaiborne6461 Год назад

    Sweetbreads are still eaten today, Anthony Bourdain loved them.

  • @HFC786
    @HFC786 Год назад +3

    Should be fascinating

  • @ooglyboogly6258
    @ooglyboogly6258 Год назад +1

    I thought they already posted this video???

  • @ThomasD66
    @ThomasD66 Год назад +5

    In the American State of South Carolina the image of the pineapple persists, carried over from the Georgians. But it has been ever so genteelly rebranded as a "symbol of hospitality" rather than one of wealth or status.

    • @elizabethcornwell4156
      @elizabethcornwell4156 Год назад +1

      In England it was also considered a symbol of hospitality as well

    • @Informed21
      @Informed21 5 месяцев назад

      Same in Virginia. Same in New England in the seafaring towns like Salem, MA.

  • @blvp2145
    @blvp2145 Год назад +1

    Most of these pictures are historically in accurate

  • @pheart2381
    @pheart2381 Год назад +2

    Why the ship's decanter?

  • @jprehberger
    @jprehberger Год назад +4

    I see Dan eating with his fingers occasionally. Is that period authentic?

    • @pheart2381
      @pheart2381 Год назад +5

      Yes,there were finger bowls down the table to rinse your fingers in.

  • @Fa1con87
    @Fa1con87 Год назад +5

    Ah how I miss those parties

  • @michaelpage4199
    @michaelpage4199 Год назад

    That looked great. Well other than the sweet bread. Cheers

  • @craigmignone2863
    @craigmignone2863 Год назад +2

    A little cultural and historical appreciation..... typical of the BBC as Ministry of Truth

  • @D4n1t0o
    @D4n1t0o Год назад

    Dude really just caught that spiky pineapple 😂

  • @amarullahanam5825
    @amarullahanam5825 Год назад

    next episode should be "Fitness throughout history of civilisation"...Dan Snow needs to talk about the first bench press and the first protein powder

  • @rogerhenderson8617
    @rogerhenderson8617 Год назад

    How do you get a slice of pineapple?

  • @RataStuey
    @RataStuey Год назад

    Sweetbreads are delicious when cooked properly.

  • @Fruduz
    @Fruduz Год назад

    What form of drink is Buçellus?

  • @dalestreeter341
    @dalestreeter341 Год назад +1

    What happened to William IV?

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Год назад +1

    Hey Dan. Love your work 👍

  • @michaelwest8471
    @michaelwest8471 10 месяцев назад +1

    If only he had Georgian table manners.

    • @anosluz
      @anosluz 9 месяцев назад

      Eats like a pig

  • @Katmando376
    @Katmando376 Год назад +1

    Georgian Era included William IV 1830-1837.

  • @johndyson4109
    @johndyson4109 2 месяца назад

    I've known people to put images of pineapples on their homes in America as a symbol of others being welcome to their homes... It was not used as a symbol of financial status...

  • @davidnewell3232
    @davidnewell3232 3 месяца назад

    Time Bandits dropped in on a Georgian pineapple party this week.

  • @Your.Uncle.AngMoh
    @Your.Uncle.AngMoh Год назад

    George IV weighed nearly half again what I do- and I'm nearly 6'6.

  • @MrPh30
    @MrPh30 Год назад

    Sweetbreads became more of status as we now know it as during late Victorian ,early Edwardian . And most known recent years Marco Pierre White and others took them forward again into the levels.

  • @StinkyPeteThePirate
    @StinkyPeteThePirate Год назад +2

    Most of the Georgians (Atlanta) I know like barbecue....

  • @matthewestep6071
    @matthewestep6071 Год назад +1

    Sweetbreads are calf brains not testicles and ovaries.

  • @mikeplatts2603
    @mikeplatts2603 Год назад +1

    Did not like the finger clicking for a spoon.

  • @stoker1931jane
    @stoker1931jane Год назад +1

    Still a cute video, even if it's a "re-upload".
    BUT at 08:25 you show a famous painting that is thought to have been painted around 1675.
    So still quite some time away from the 'Georgian'
    (1714-1830) or let alone 'Regency' (1811-1820) Period!!
    The painting shows your 'Restoration' King Charles II. Who is presented with a Pineapple. And where to the left of the King, a man, possibly John Rose, the Royal gardener, kneels before the King, and presents him with what is said to have been the first pineapple grown in England. (Although it is thought that at this date it is more likely that the pineapple had been imported). ✌🏻

  • @MoonChild-yg3nw
    @MoonChild-yg3nw Год назад

    He's table manners 😮

  • @MlTCH
    @MlTCH Год назад

    I would have been jailed back then. I just today discovered that I accidentally let a pineapple go overripe in the back of my fridge.

  • @SandraWambold
    @SandraWambold Год назад +1

    Why is he eating out of serving pieces?

  • @MissBlueEyeliner
    @MissBlueEyeliner Год назад

    My impression of this food is that you’d feel like you’d swallowed an anvil after eating.

  • @janebooth3751
    @janebooth3751 Год назад +1

    What a ridiculous fuss about eating sweetbreads. They're still eaten today and are delicious.

  • @georgerobartes2008
    @georgerobartes2008 Год назад

    Sweetbreads are the pancreas of the beast. Gamey , soft and tender . Even the French and Chinese dont eat testicles and they rule nothing out ( almost ).... The pineapple was first grown in the 17th C for Charles 2nd .

  • @williamrobinson7435
    @williamrobinson7435 Год назад +1

    Well this diet is such that it seems entirely appropriate that the video is a repeat 🤣OOPS! Forgive me. Plink plink fizz, Alka Seltzer anyone? White soup always seems delicious but dodgy to me, I think I'd want to be able to trust the chef. In the other edit I seem to remember a Gilray cartoon with "cholera soup" mentioned.. Bon appetite! 🌟👍

  • @scootergoat98
    @scootergoat98 Год назад +3

    you're a braver man than me, Dan

  • @jlshel42
    @jlshel42 Год назад +2

    Guess you needed to be romantic to get someone in an age before mints

  • @sharonkaczorowski8690
    @sharonkaczorowski8690 Год назад +1

    I refuse to watch anything this man presents. His attitude toward what people historically ate, especially the lower classes is generally offensive, judgmental and arrogant. Hardly characteristics conducive to good historical study.

  • @setituptoblowitup
    @setituptoblowitup Год назад +2

    Which 1 the state or the contray?we be eating turnup greens fried chicken and watermelon down here ✌️🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲

  • @Arkantos117
    @Arkantos117 Год назад +4

    A history channel should not be using stills from incredibly historically inacccurate media.

    • @nomdeguerre247
      @nomdeguerre247 Год назад

      Cry about it until you can't whine some more.

  • @johankotze42
    @johankotze42 Год назад +1

    Wait... let me fill my pinotage! 😀

  • @simon-oy6um
    @simon-oy6um Год назад +1

    Sweetbreads = sheeps balls 😂😂😂

  • @BobSmith-fx9sz
    @BobSmith-fx9sz Год назад +4

    The relatives are getting pineapples for Christmas now

  • @giacogiaco5540
    @giacogiaco5540 Год назад

    Yes didn't they have Great Grub!... while the peasants were starving...

  • @Heresheis0818
    @Heresheis0818 Год назад

    6:15 Jane awesome

  • @lavenderflowersfall280
    @lavenderflowersfall280 Месяц назад

    So what you're saying is I need to go to Walmart with my homemade time machine, hook up my time machine to the pineapples and teleport them along with me back to 1815 so I can strike it rich?.
    Ok

  • @ardotte
    @ardotte Год назад

    all that food looks cold - which I suppose is authentic

  • @RETROSATAN
    @RETROSATAN Год назад +2

    Black people in dresses during during the Gregorian era? keep debasing yourself "History Hit" .......... ridiculous

  • @nicolad8822
    @nicolad8822 Год назад +3

    These food things are a bit lame.