The Unbelievable History of Strawberries

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025
  • In this video, we take a look at the unbelievable story behind one of the world's favorite fruits - The strawberry.
    The following music performed by Kevin Macleod Available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.
    Download available at incompetech.com
    Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in G, Movement I (Allegro), BWV 1049 [orig. by JS Bach]
    Accralate
    Heavy Heart
    Yonder Hill and Dale
    Eine Kleine NachtMusik
    Sources and further reading
    [1] Darrow, George M. "The Strawberry: History, Breeding, and Physiology." Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., 1966.
    [2] Welsh, Martin. "Strawberries." National Vegetable Society. Archived by Wayback Machine. web.archive.or...
    [3] Grubinger, Vern. "History of the Strawberry." The University of Vermont, 2012. www.uvm.edu/vt...
    [4] "Strawberry: A Brief History." Integrated Pest Management, University of Missouri, 2012. ipm.missouri.e...
    [5] "Strawberry." Encyclopedia Britannica. www.britannica...
    [6] Driscoll-Woodford, Heather. "Wimbledon's Strawberries and Cream Has Tudor Roots." BBC News, 23, June, 2010. news.bbc.co.uk/...
    [7] Bilton, Sam. A Berry Old Tradition: The History of English Strawberries." EnglishHeritage.org, 29 June, 2017. www.english-he...
    [8] Bailey, L. H. “Whence Came the Cultivated Strawberry.” The American Naturalist, vol. 28, no. 328, 1894, pp. 293-306. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/s....
    [9] Geggel, Laura. "Why Are Bananas Berries, But Strawberries Aren't?" LiveScience, 12 Jan, 2017.
    www.livescienc...
    [10] Hancock, James & Sjulin, T.M. & Lobos, Gustavo. (2008). Strawberries. 10.1007/978-1-4020-6907-9-13.
    [11] "Strawberry Shortcake." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia.
    en.wikipedia.o...
    [12] "Strawberry." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia.
    en.wikipedia.o...
    Picture Attributions
    By Ivar Leidus - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Dietmar Rabich, commons.wikime...
    By Ivar Leidus - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Björn S... - Wild Strawberry - Fragaria vesca, commons.wikime...
    By Reinhold Möller, commons.wikime...
    By Ivar Leidus - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By User:Midnightblueowl, commons.wikime...
    By flemming christiansen - originally posted to Flickr as Strawberry flower and guest, commons.wikime...
    By Alpsdake - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Jonathunder - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Wendell Smith - wild strawberries and ground ivy, commons.wikime...
    By Andreas Tille - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Micolo J from Shrewsbury, England - Strawberries and cream, commons.wikime...
    By Large open field, Haddon Fields by Andrew Hill, commons.wikime...
    By Llez - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Forest & Kim Starr, commons.wikime...
    By Irvinetustin - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By JVRKPRASAD - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Walter Siegmund (talk) - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Krzysztof Ziarnek, Kenraiz - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Franco Folini - originally posted to Flickr as Beach Strawberry (Fragaria chiloensis), commons.wikime...
    By Jamain - Own work, commons.wikime...
    By Maksym Kozlenko - commons.wikime...
    By © Tomas Castelazo, www.tomascastelazo.com / Wikimedia Commons, commons.wikime...
    commons.wikime...
    By BKP - commons.wikime...
    By Kritzolina - commons.wikime...
    By Marc-Lautenbacher - commons.wikime...
    By Kyle McDonald - Strawberries, commons.wikime...
    By NIraj Suryawanshi - commons.wikime...

Комментарии •

  • @Fireoflearning
    @Fireoflearning  2 года назад +576

    1. I'd like to reiterate - The strawberry is not a berry only by scientific definition. In common use, which came first and is more important, it certainly is a berry, and it is not incorrect to call it one.
    2. In the opinions of many, it seems I was wrong! Wild strawberries are considered much more flavorful than their modern domesticated counterparts.
    3. If you'd like to know more about why strawberries are called "straw berries", check out this video: ruclips.net/video/TfAetZRHCfI/видео.html

    • @williambowling8211
      @williambowling8211 2 года назад +31

      The culinary definition of a vegetable is anything you wouldn't put in a fruit salad; everything else is a fruit.

    • @ibrahimmohamed8601
      @ibrahimmohamed8601 2 года назад +8

      The word 'berry' is an Arabic word meaning wild... how could that be Anglo-saxon or Germanic?

    • @Fireoflearning
      @Fireoflearning  2 года назад +34

      @@ibrahimmohamed8601 Probably false cognates

    • @williambowling8211
      @williambowling8211 2 года назад +52

      @@ibrahimmohamed8601 The English word berry is derived from Old English berie meaning grape. The Arabic word barr, meaning open land, countryside or wild, was used in Moorish Spain to describe the area outside cities and comes into English, via Spanish, as barrio, meaning suburb or neighborhood.

    • @nesterukivan
      @nesterukivan 2 года назад +2

      This would blown my Botany teacher

  • @UncleBildo
    @UncleBildo 2 года назад +791

    In my childhood, Dad was big on native edibles. Our camping trips involved us learning the edibles around us and we'd gather salad for dinner. Among the faves was the wild strawberry. Little, puckery, strong flavored, but so awesome. Watercress, wild onions, various greens, berries and whatever else ended up as salad. Wasn't a bad way to be raised.

    • @kingpest13
      @kingpest13 2 года назад +25

      My dad taught me a lot about foraging too. Really good growing up like that. Too bad it was in Michigan and I live in VA now because I can't hand as much of it down to mine. Some but it doesn't all translate.

    • @DereliqueMahBAWLS
      @DereliqueMahBAWLS 2 года назад +9

      Whereabouts were you that you found all of these in the same area? Sounds amazing

    • @duncanself5111
      @duncanself5111 2 года назад +20

      Wild strawberries are delicious. I once picked them in the south of France and they're so much sweeter than farm grown

    • @UncleBildo
      @UncleBildo 2 года назад +17

      high desert side of Washington State.... Colville Indian Reservation. We are "Reznecks"

    • @UncleBildo
      @UncleBildo 2 года назад +27

      Yeah, we were po' folk. We gathered berries of all sorts in the fall, mushrooms a couple times a year, hunted, dug roots, ate greens from dandelion to mustard greens and nettles. Mom made 7 kinds of wild berry jams and jellies in the Fall that sold like crazy come Xmas. Wasn't glamorous, but we learned all sorts of fall back foods in case of emergencies.

  • @peachmelba1000
    @peachmelba1000 2 года назад +321

    When I was a little kid, my family moved into a house whose entire back yard was carpeted with wild strawberries, and also had a raspberry briar. It was like having a candy store right outside. They seemed to be nearly endless in quantity, and were quite delicious.
    Further, not far from the house, about 10 minutes walk, were huge patches of low bush blueberries. I hated picking them, but they were so so good.

    • @LA_HA
      @LA_HA 2 года назад +13

      Lucky

    • @purpl3grape
      @purpl3grape 2 года назад +19

      I spent some of my childhood in a village which also had something similar. Except they were black berries, and lots and lots of stinging nettles everywhere. We had to beat down a path using sticks to make a pretty cool secret passage around the village. We never got hungry playing, with the endless supply of berries along the way.

    • @mediocreman2
      @mediocreman2 2 года назад +5

      Probably not wild if you had raspberries, strawberries, and blueberries near to each other. Someone probably planted them.

    • @jjboswell5043
      @jjboswell5043 2 года назад +3

      Sounds like the country I grew up in

    • @peachmelba1000
      @peachmelba1000 2 года назад +6

      @@mediocreman2 The raspberries may have been planted but the strawberries were very very small, so definitely wild. The blueberries were in a clearing in a wooded area, and were also tiny, not the larger high bush kind.

  • @bluebowser3121
    @bluebowser3121 2 года назад +420

    I once crossbred a strawberry that had hideously shaped fruit, but a brilliant taste. I propagated it through runners as the seeds were always infertile. It was a truly remarkable cultivar that I grew for many years, up until we had a very cold winter which reached -30. The whole population of plants didn't survive and i've never tasted a better large strawberry since.

    • @spider3755
      @spider3755 2 года назад +53

      Did you try to use spells to bring it back from the dead?

    • @nanonymous9139
      @nanonymous9139 2 года назад +53

      So sorry for your loss 😭

    • @bri0013
      @bri0013 2 года назад +17

      I'm curious but are you saying that just the seeds were infertile on your "Franken-berry" which would make it a ever bearing if it had runners or am I wrong..?!

    • @bluebowser3121
      @bluebowser3121 2 года назад +22

      @@bri0013 you are correct, but the cold killed them all :(

    • @jjboswell5043
      @jjboswell5043 2 года назад +11

      Did you try freezing the seeds before germinating them?

  • @oldras
    @oldras 2 года назад +2320

    I would definitely say that wild ”woodland strawberries” are far better tasting than cultivated strawberries. Just as with raspberries the wild ones are smaller but so much more flavorful.

    • @Emil-Antonowsky
      @Emil-Antonowsky 2 года назад +159

      That is certainly the case here it Scotland. The wee wild strawberries are intense! And the raspberries don't compare at all! Whilst they don't get to the gargantuan proportions of engineered fruit, they do still get fairly large. Both have so much more flavour than the cultivated fruit. Especially if they've had plenty sunshine.

    • @yyuammie
      @yyuammie 2 года назад +156

      Once you've tasted wild berries, store-bought taste so flavourless in comparison. Love finding patches of those little guys.

    • @ixoraroxi
      @ixoraroxi 2 года назад +22

      I do agree!

    • @00Hendrik00
      @00Hendrik00 2 года назад +118

      Nothing will ever beat the Woodland Strawberry!!!! I was kinda heartbroken when he said they're less sweet? The cultivated ones don't taste like anything in comparison

    • @EGOCOGITOSUM
      @EGOCOGITOSUM 2 года назад +33

      @@Emil-Antonowsky came here to say the same, in Italy both wild raspberries and wd strawberries are so much better, altho I heard in Schotland are insane

  • @Battlemage15
    @Battlemage15 2 года назад +87

    I love these 'History of Food' videos. I'm always happy when one comes across my feed.

    • @Fireoflearning
      @Fireoflearning  2 года назад +45

      Is this a donation? I did not know that was possible through the comments section. Thank you! I could mention you as a patron if you'd like.

    • @Juan-lf6qo
      @Juan-lf6qo 2 года назад

      D
      Jesus said:"Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons.." -Matthew 7 How did that "man" know that more than 2 thousand years AFTER HE DIED; ALL THAT WILL HAPPEN, There are so "Many" christian religions today, doing exactly what He prophesied more than 2000 years ago.
      "Remember the former things, those of long ago;
      I am God, and there is no other;
      I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning" -Isaiah 46 ruclips.net/video/U7Eh3hkF_YU/видео.html

    • @Battlemage15
      @Battlemage15 2 года назад +15

      @@Fireoflearning I leave that up to you. I'm just happy to put a few dollars in the jar of someone who makes content I enjoy.
      Also, this one caught my attention considering I live in South Texas, and a small town down here called Poteet just recently had their Strawberry Festival. I don't know if you were aware of that annual event, but the timing was near perfect.
      Keep up the great content.

    • @Kuuko
      @Kuuko 2 года назад +29

      hail the yellow comment

    • @TheHardys01
      @TheHardys01 2 года назад +3

      @@Fireoflearning
      I Love This So Much.
      Thank You🍓

  • @Darren51283
    @Darren51283 Год назад +133

    As a child some 50 years ago, and while exploring a hilly pasture, I came across a lone strawberry plant growing on the banks of a creek, and on it was a single small strawberry, so of course I popped it into my mouth and can still remember the intense flavor. Unfortunately, the strawberries sold in stores today are the size of golf balls but have practically no flavor. It was as if the flavor of 100 of today's golf ball sized strawberries had been crammed into that one small strawberry.

    • @zarahofshiloh7537
      @zarahofshiloh7537 Год назад

      That is GMO's for you. God did not even want you to mess with genetics in the animal and plant world. GMO's do not have the nutritional value either. The Bible teaches not to cross breed cows or plant two different kinds of plants of the same species in the same field. One example was given, such as the grape in the Bible. Why? To prevent cross pollination from the pollinators, such as bees, to prevent the hybrids. The A1A2 milk that comes from the Holstein cow that is predominately sold, came about by dairy farmers crossbreeding over 2000 years ago in Northern Europe. It is not healthy for our bodies. The A2A2 is what is healthy. Southern Europe have cows that produce and in the USA we have the Guernsey which 90% of them are A2-A2 and Jerseys (which have Guernsey in them) are 60% A2-A2. I also found out that the Highland cow is predominately A2-A2. It is believed that the early Scottish used them for both milk and meat.

    • @ragereset2795
      @ragereset2795 Год назад +16

      I recently quit my construction job of 20 years to become a kitchen gardener for a boutique hotel. I grew some strawberries from seed out of curiosity, a simple process. I used cheap strawberry seeds from a hardware shop. The flavour was astonishingly intense. The issue with supermarket strawberries is that they’re picked whilst light green to withstand transport and warehousing. Let them ripen on the plant and they’re incredible, but you have maybe 36 hours to eat them before they’re over-ripe. Presumably there’s a sweet spot when you can harvest and perhaps refrigerate them and you’d get perhaps three days; still completely incompatible with modern logistics.

    • @retiefgregorovich810
      @retiefgregorovich810 Год назад +5

      Store strawberries not picked early. For almost any berry or fruit, if you want great taste, grow it yourself, or maybe buy from a farmer's market where they pick and sell the same day.

    • @ragereset2795
      @ragereset2795 Год назад +4

      @@retiefgregorovich810 I do grow my own. I grow herbs, fruits and edible flowers for a 5-star hotel. And store ones most certainly are picked earlier, for the reasons l gave. The other factor is water. If you water strawberries more, they grow faster but lack taste and don’t turn a vibrant red. Since they’re sold by weight, big watery ones grown faster make more economic sense from a farmer’s point of view. The ones l grow taste like candy and look like nail polish, because they’re grown indoors (where l can control the water) in a mix of thermophilic compost, manure, seaweed pellets and worm castings. Most are necessarily grown outdoors at the mercy of the rain, and they’re drenched constantly with pesticides (nerve toxin) because they’re just bags of sugars, and everything from single- celled bacteria up to insects love sugar. 🍓

    • @j.artiste8596
      @j.artiste8596 Год назад +3

      You can find those sweet, wonderful wild strawberries in north europe. July-August. We call them Smultron.

  • @JacubWhite38
    @JacubWhite38 2 года назад +234

    Food history is so interesting. It's incredible how much history there is behind something as simple as the strawberry.

    • @diane9247
      @diane9247 2 года назад +6

      We should thank the first people who had the nerve to try all of the fruits and vegetables we eat, now!

    • @simongross3122
      @simongross3122 2 года назад +3

      @@diane9247 For me, cheese is the big mystery. I thank whoever it was that first tried it.

    • @92RKID
      @92RKID Год назад +1

      ​@@simongross3122I heartily agree and second that!

  • @treeoflife91
    @treeoflife91 2 года назад +449

    Hey! I'm from Finland and we have wild forest strawberries here, and I'd argue they're far sweeter than cultivated ones, you can smell them from a mile away, man I love wild strawbs 🥲 I also wonder if they're called strawberries because of the way people pick(/ed) them. While foraging we put all other berries in buckets and baskets except wild strawberries because they get mushed so easily, and thread them on... well, a straw. That's what I was taught to do as a kid by grandma and it's been like that for basically forever AFAIK. 😊

    • @toneenorman2135
      @toneenorman2135 2 года назад +9

      Really? That’s interesting. I can not picture how you can do that? How do you thread them on a straw? Thank you.

    • @treeoflife91
      @treeoflife91 2 года назад +27

      @@toneenorman2135 Hey! They're so soft and little you can usually just poke a slightly stiffer straw/grass thingy through them :)

    • @kevinhendricksen1277
      @kevinhendricksen1277 2 года назад +12

      Yep. I saw the same thing in Sweden.

    • @AldousHuxley7
      @AldousHuxley7 2 года назад +1

      Crazy! Now I know.

    • @DonChillum
      @DonChillum 2 года назад +10

      You're talking about Smultron right? Because at first I thought of Cloudberries(Hjortron) when you described how soft they are haha. I learned the same thing about straws from watching Alla vi barn i Bullerbyn as a kid. it's the tastiest wild treat to find here in Sweden by far. There's so much to eat but when I find some smultron that's not in a ditch where everyone's walking with dogs or cars are throwing all kinds of dirts on them, truly wild ones, I instantly become a child for a moment again.

  • @beeer421
    @beeer421 2 года назад +188

    I remember when I was a kid I was served "wild strawberries" and they were tiny compared to normal ones you get at the store. The odd thing is, you said the original varieties weren't as flavorful, but I swear these things, while small, packed soooo much more flavor. I wish I knew where to get whatever it was I was served.

    • @EhCanadian316
      @EhCanadian316 2 года назад +17

      Because of hydroponics and size manipulation.. My garden ones are smaller and taste better than market ones too :)

    • @beeer421
      @beeer421 2 года назад +4

      @@EhCanadian316 ahhhh ok. Gimme!!

    • @sylbaster2658
      @sylbaster2658 2 года назад +10

      wander around the forests of Oregon/Idaho and you'll find plenty

    • @rodanzig
      @rodanzig 2 года назад +4

      i had the same experience in vt. a few years ago tiny but really strong flavor .

    • @larryscarr3897
      @larryscarr3897 2 года назад +8

      Go to wild places in Ontario in mid to late June look for red tinged triangle leaves close to the ground, tinny little wild strawberry everywhere.. it will take you a long time to pick a jar of jam.. but it's worth it!! . I got 9 jars this year.. took about 3days to pick.. cost me 33 dolars a jar in labour. So it's hard to buy.. I think some Mennonite markets here in Ontario may have some.. but it's the last two weeks in June and that's it. for the year.

  • @mglamarmd1
    @mglamarmd1 2 года назад +429

    My wife is from Sweden. When we'd go for walks in the forests there, she'd snap off a piece of straw, and slide a wild strawberry onto it to save for later. She'd have 10" of berries on a single straw! Her father taught her thus. Many old Swedes confirmed learning it from their parents. She thinks this is what Vikings did when they came to the UK and that is how the "straw-berry" got its name.

    • @johnmontgomery3471
      @johnmontgomery3471 2 года назад +46

      That sounds reasonable. The Vikings certainly had a big impact on the English language.

    • @JakeWitmer
      @JakeWitmer 2 года назад +9

      You can't go leaving those berry straws strewn about, or you'll be wasting your not-real-berries!

    • @noora1142
      @noora1142 2 года назад +45

      I'm finnish and I've done that my whole life. I think it's probably a Nordic thing

    • @arriagatwo777
      @arriagatwo777 2 года назад +23

      They are very large in Sweden, they are called "jordgubbe" which means "land's little old man"

    • @Hrafnasil
      @Hrafnasil 2 года назад +31

      @@arriagatwo777 Jordgubbe is the name for the domesticated berries, the small wild berries are called Smultron in Swedish.

  • @TesserId
    @TesserId 2 года назад +461

    A friend once gave me what she claimed was a wild strawberry from her back yard. It was so packed with the most wonderful strawberry flavor that it was like candy. I instantly developed a deep hatred of all commercial strawberry.

    • @amymoriyama6616
      @amymoriyama6616 2 года назад +5

      I want a few of those plants (if you still have them lol).

    • @tachiebillano6244
      @tachiebillano6244 2 года назад +15

      I'm a Southeast Asian and I could never understand the Western love of commercial strawberries. (Like, the "sweetness" and intensity of flavor often don't live up to their marketing hype.) The only strawberries I considered sweet and flavorful were the wild ones I got to eat on a visit to an Italian chef's home in Rome.

    • @TesserId
      @TesserId 2 года назад +1

      @@tachiebillano6244 Thank you. Very informative. Those of us in the west would do well to realize how much our so-called free markets are controlled by those who control our minds.

    • @TesserId
      @TesserId 2 года назад +2

      Would be nice to see a do-it-yourself on this topic. Somebody's got to know how to grow these things.

    • @tokarukora7272
      @tokarukora7272 2 года назад +4

      We call those "Walderdbeeren" which translates to "Wood Strawberries" and they grow wild in the woods.

  • @maxwiz71
    @maxwiz71 Год назад +43

    I had always believed that that strawberry got it's English name from the way it was grown. The plants are grown in rows and straw is banked up either side of the row so that the fruit is kept off the dirt and away from slugs. It gives the appearance of fruit growing from the straw.
    Interesting to hear an alternative etymology.

    • @j.artiste8596
      @j.artiste8596 Год назад +1

      In sweden we carry them while picking, by treading them onto a straw. That's what we learn that the name is from.🤷‍♀️

    • @johnstarks7759
      @johnstarks7759 6 месяцев назад +1

      I felt that the explanation given in the video was paper thin. I've heard Yours before and it holds up to scrutiny much better.

    • @Mercury-Wells
      @Mercury-Wells 3 месяца назад

      I think you mean entomology 🐝

    • @maxwiz71
      @maxwiz71 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Mercury-Wells 😆

  • @Bre0n
    @Bre0n 2 года назад +100

    I didn't know Mexico was the world's 3rd producer of strawberries but it makes sense, whenever my family goes on a roadtrip we always stop to buy strawberries directly from the farmers

    • @ForageGardener
      @ForageGardener 2 года назад +11

      Mexico and california took all the strawberry production from Oregon and Washington when Drip irrigation and certain heat resistant varieties were became a thing. By the late 80s Oregons export strawberry industry was gone!

    • @vanellopemint
      @vanellopemint 2 года назад +5

      @@ForageGardener Well, that makes me sad. I grew up in Salem OR and left in 1983. I remember picking strawberries in the summer.

    • @gratefulguy4130
      @gratefulguy4130 2 года назад +4

      I miss the oranges & the big bottles of honey

    • @jamesrav
      @jamesrav 2 года назад +1

      I live in Northern Mexico and certain times of year the street markets get inundated with strawberries and they can be quite cheap. It's hard to eat 2 pounds of strawberries in a couple days :) I need to learn to bake a strawberry pie.

    • @ArthurDentZaphodBeeb
      @ArthurDentZaphodBeeb 2 месяца назад

      Then you're a fool - those strawberries are loaded with pesticides.

  • @davidgusquiloor2665
    @davidgusquiloor2665 2 года назад +94

    I didn't knew i wanted to know about this but you got me hooked in less than a minute.
    I had wondered about certain fruits and vegetables being introduced to different continents through trade (like potatos and coffee).
    But never the strawberry itself.

    • @Juan-lf6qo
      @Juan-lf6qo 2 года назад

      R
      Jesus said:"Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons.." -Matthew 7 How did that "man" know that more than 2 thousand years AFTER HE DIED; ALL THAT WILL HAPPEN, There are so "Many" christian religions today, doing exactly what He prophesied more than 2000 years ago.
      "Remember the former things, those of long ago;
      I am God, and there is no other;
      I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning" -Isaiah 46 ruclips.net/video/U7Eh3hkF_YU/видео.html

  • @truxton1000
    @truxton1000 2 года назад +54

    When I was little in Norway many years ago we used to pick wild strawberries, take a straw, picked many small berries and thread them onto straws = strawberries. I think that might be how they got their name as the wild strawberries were much smaller than the farmed strawberries so putting them on a straw was a good way of collecting them.

  • @jproche1374
    @jproche1374 2 года назад +458

    Im curious about the history of Mangos. They are huge in India and South America so Im dying to learn more. Loved Strawberries History

    • @DereliqueMahBAWLS
      @DereliqueMahBAWLS 2 года назад +13

      I second this!

    • @randomyoutuber8227
      @randomyoutuber8227 2 года назад +4

      Mangoes?

    • @williamwallace9944
      @williamwallace9944 2 года назад +35

      @@randomyoutuber8227 Mangos. It's borrowed from another language, so it doesn't need to be anglicised with an e, just like how we spell bongos and not bongoes.

    • @TheHardys01
      @TheHardys01 2 года назад +3

      🥭

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 2 года назад +9

      Domesticated from plants that were fibrous and taste like turpentine.

  • @pointsnorth3924
    @pointsnorth3924 2 года назад +59

    I am growing the wild strawberries which are native to my home in South East Scotland. By feeding them, I get big wild strawberries. They are very sweet and packed with flavour. I have sent runners by post to friends.

    • @maiaallman4635
      @maiaallman4635 2 года назад +3

      What do you feed them?

    • @jfrancobelge
      @jfrancobelge 2 года назад +3

      I also grow wild strawberries in my garden in Belgium - from one plant that I took from the forest near my home years ago. Though I also grow "regular" strawberries, they just can't beat the taste and flavour of the wild ones. Also I just ignore strawberries outside season; the ones we can buy all year round, artificially grown in greenhouses, are just as tasteful as a glass of tap water, just not worth spending my money.

  • @nickschneider774
    @nickschneider774 2 года назад +7

    My grandpa, who passed away earlier this year at the age of 97, Grew acres of strawberries when I was a kid. People often traveled more than 100 miles for his strawberries. They were absolutely delicious. Store-bought strawberries just don't hold a candle to Fresh grown. Great video!

  • @hamslicemcdooogle8080
    @hamslicemcdooogle8080 2 года назад +511

    Eggplant is berries and tomato is berries so eggplant parmesan is just berries and cream

    • @Juan-lf6qo
      @Juan-lf6qo 2 года назад

      Z
      Jesus said:"Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons.." -Matthew 7 How did that "man" know that more than 2 thousand years AFTER HE DIED; ALL THAT WILL HAPPEN, There are so "Many" christian religions today, doing exactly what He prophesied more than 2000 years ago.
      "Remember the former things, those of long ago;
      I am God, and there is no other;
      I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning" -Isaiah 46 ruclips.net/video/U7Eh3hkF_YU/видео.html

    • @ronalddonner3396
      @ronalddonner3396 2 года назад +10

      I'll stick with my berries and fresh cream,thank you!

    • @chanceDdog2009
      @chanceDdog2009 2 года назад +17

      Bananas parmesan. Sounds delicious

    • @Akren905
      @Akren905 2 года назад +15

      Somewhere an itialian granny rolled over in her bed n murmured no no it's no fruit on fruit and cream no no. Instant nightmares from poking at the cuisine.

    • @shutup-gc2yk
      @shutup-gc2yk 2 года назад +4

      Intrusive comments that should land you in jail: 😩💀

  • @erikjohnson8430
    @erikjohnson8430 2 года назад +1794

    I'd love to see a multi-part piece on mushrooms throughout history.

    • @jeff-jo6fs
      @jeff-jo6fs 2 года назад +62

      Mushrooms are mysterious and alien-like

    • @Juan-lf6qo
      @Juan-lf6qo 2 года назад

      U
      Jesus said:"Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons.." -Matthew 7 How did that "man" know that more than 2 thousand years AFTER HE DIED; ALL THAT WILL HAPPEN, There are so "Many" christian religions today, doing exactly what He prophesied more than 2000 years ago.
      "Remember the former things, those of long ago;
      I am God, and there is no other;
      I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning" -Isaiah 46 ruclips.net/video/U7Eh3hkF_YU/видео.html

    • @jameskosusnik1102
      @jameskosusnik1102 2 года назад +34

      Yaaaassss and yesterday I saw a meme screenshotting a article about how mushrooms can communicate with each other through pheromones I think.

    • @derekbaron2172
      @derekbaron2172 2 года назад +11

      That would be awesome, I think orange would be a good one too

    • @ForageGardener
      @ForageGardener 2 года назад +18

      @@jeff-jo6fs we're the aliens maaaan

  • @corsetedwasteland2630
    @corsetedwasteland2630 2 года назад +35

    I adore strawberries 🍓 I decorated my entire kitchen in them and grow as many as possible each year. Thanks for this! Love these Food History videos!!

  • @malthesse
    @malthesse 2 года назад +84

    Here in Sweden the large, cultivated strawberry is called jordgubbe - "earth man". Strawberries with whipped cream are a must as a dessert at the Swedish Midsummer celebration - and of course they have to be locally grown Swedish strawberries, and so they become very expensive in the days just before Midsummer.
    The wild European woodland strawberry is very different both in appearance and taste. So different that we have a completely different name for it - smultron. They are next to never commercially grown or sold in stores, but in my opinion they are actually almost more tasty, especially when you pick and eat them during your forest walk on a beautiful summer day.

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix 2 года назад +2

      Expensive? Well, get seeds and grow them. Soil, water, sunshine.

    • @uncletiggermclaren7592
      @uncletiggermclaren7592 2 года назад

      @@MemoGrafix In fact it is worth doing but not for the economy of the matter. Swedes get paid far more than most other people on earth, and so it isn't an economic use of their time, growing their own food. It is far cheaper to pay someones prices, even if demand has lifted cost for a period.
      The reason it is worth doing is merely for the pleasure of it, the pleasure of growing your own things.
      And most people in the world? They are too busy enjoying OTHER things to take the time to grow food.

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix 2 года назад +1

      @@uncletiggermclaren7592 - I comprehend most people are not cut out for growing food. It's DIRTY WORK and I love it when it's about growing food and other productive things.
      When I see/listen to people complain about expensive fruits & vegetables are I almost don't care hearing the whining, anyone even with half a brain can grow _some type of food._ Indoors/Outdoors, small/large spaces.
      If one will grow Canibus Hemp in a 3ft/91.44cm wide closet, some type of food can be grown also in that same size space.
      My late Father grew up farming in South Carolina. He moved to Harlem, NYC - 1955 and still grew food on rooftops of apartment buildings, still growing on his parents land. Even while We lived in NYCHA-Public Housing, started out with window boxes growing food then on roof. We moved to Buffalo, NY in 1978 and every house he owned he made sure there was a big yard. We were never without food.
      Me born & raised in NYC, wanted nothing to do with growing so much as a house plant, let alone a garden/farm. I hated when he would take Me & My Brother South to work with him & other Family on the farm. My Father *_MADE_* Me know how to grow food among other things. Saying: *_"When You know how to grow, raise & cook food You'll never starve unless a gun's pointed at Yo' head."_* My Father died in 2009 I had no choice but to go ahead & grow food especially after My Mother died in 2014.
      I'm glad I have the skills to do it. I don't have skills for raising large farm animals. like cows. My Father didn't make Me do that, that's for the Men to handle.
      Moving on, _money's always good to have in most situations to pay someone else to do the farming/work, but when Governments are dissolved and their currency dies with it people WILL panic & scramble to get food._
      *The Great Depression in the USA in the 1930s, some reports were the Farmers did not starve unless they stayed in **_The Dust Bowl._*
      Swedes *GETTIN' PAID* very well is good but always keep in mind nothing lasts forever.

    • @Idiomatick
      @Idiomatick 2 года назад +1

      @@MemoGrafix 'Wild' strawberries aren't commercially viable. At least not fresh. You cannot ship them, they need to be ripened on the vine. They are very fragile. And they are smaller so avg consumers won't pay for it. Maybe they'd be worth freeze drying or something but I'm not sure how well the difference would shine through when not fresh.

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix 2 года назад +1

      @@Idiomatick - I'm fully aware wild strawberries are not commercially viable/available. However, I'm not talking about that, I'm talking about getting seeds even from the forest, growing Yourself. Not hard since they are WILD.
      Freeze Dryings does alter the taste of food a little. I'm quite sure wild woodland strawberries flavor would be altered as well a little.

  • @BaronVonQuiply
    @BaronVonQuiply Год назад +2

    Hello, Sir. I am from the Internet Winners' Association. I would like to officially award you one internet for producing the most believable conclusion to a film ever produced.
    Congratulations.

  • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115
    @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115 2 года назад +206

    As a Chilean myself I highly appreciate this video. We use "frutilla (small fruit)" instead of "fresa" here.
    Edit: Chilean "frutillas" develop more sugar when get their pollination done by native wild bees.

    • @Juan-lf6qo
      @Juan-lf6qo 2 года назад

      N
      Jesus said:"Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons.." -Matthew 7 How did that "man" know that more than 2 thousand years AFTER HE DIED; ALL THAT WILL HAPPEN, There are so "Many" christian religions today, doing exactly what He prophesied more than 2000 years ago.
      "Remember the former things, those of long ago;
      I am God, and there is no other;
      I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning" -Isaiah 46 ruclips.net/video/U7Eh3hkF_YU/видео.html

    • @xolotlmexihcah4671
      @xolotlmexihcah4671 2 года назад +7

      Por favor podrías decirme nombres de platillos típicos chilenos hechos con frutillas, quisiera prepararlos y probarlos en México.
      Un saludo fraternal al pueblo chileno.

    • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115
      @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115 2 года назад +8

      @@xolotlmexihcah4671 Las comemos con crema o en tarta, no somos muy imaginativos con ellas, excepto cuando van con vino (Borgoña especialmente), espumante, o incluso aguardiente.

    • @lollllolll.
      @lollllolll. 2 года назад +11

      In Albania we use "Luleshtrydhe"
      Lule = Flower
      Shtrydhe = Squeeze
      My ancestors probably liked to make strawberry marmalades

    • @marioxxx154
      @marioxxx154 2 года назад +3

      Frutita y frutilla son diferentes frutita seria para fruta chica pero frutilla na que ver con fruta chica. Aqui en chile se comen con vino y en postres

  • @MaskedStellar
    @MaskedStellar 2 года назад +21

    I just wanna say after watching your videos for years, you never fail to get me interested in your videos, even the ones that sound boring or ridiculous always get me to watch it and made it very interesting, good job for always making very entertaining and fun videos, love your channel and keep going!

  • @SaraMKay
    @SaraMKay 2 года назад +14

    in Switzerland they are called "Heubeeren" like "hay-berries" and I always thought straw or hay in the name is because while growing, they should not touch the wet soil otherwise they spoil and so to cultivate, the fields are covered in straw or hay to provide a dry environment for the berries to rest on and ripe.

    • @YasuoUrawa
      @YasuoUrawa Год назад +2

      I recall reading something similar regarding the English name 'strawberry', that straw was used while the berries were grown.

  • @peacefulpossum2438
    @peacefulpossum2438 2 года назад +98

    I’ve never had better strawberries than the ones my granddad grew in his garden in Illinois when I was a kid. Quite a bit smaller than the ones found in stores, they were dark red, juicy and so flavorful. The fresh were amazing on shortcake and my grandma made the best jam to last most of the winter.

    • @sweetkitty2798
      @sweetkitty2798 2 года назад +5

      That's because fully ripe strawberries only last 1 day. So you will almost never find them in stores. Most of the sweetness pushes into the berry on the last day, hence why store bought are almost always sour.

    • @MH3GL
      @MH3GL 2 года назад

      @@sweetkitty2798 are you attempting to imply that strawberry growers haven't done what seemingly every other commercialized fruit grower has done, and jam packed their product full of chemicals and steroids to get a large crop at the expense of quality?
      My father and grandfather both grew strawberries in their backyards when I was growing up. I can assure you, as with this poster, they were different - in size and flavor.
      Based on your argument, if it were simply picking the berries before they were ripe, shouldn't they also be smaller (not larger), as they should be less developed?

    • @adampiech7143
      @adampiech7143 2 года назад

      Technically speaking the best strawberries grow up north, when there's a lot of daylight but the temperature at night stays at reasonable level. Soil also is important. Here we have almost 18 hours of daylight and relatively loose, sandy soil. And excellent strawberries. Best I've had. But I personally also collect some wild ones as well. They are noticeably different, to the point we consider them different "berries" altogether.

    • @moef.5326
      @moef.5326 2 года назад +1

      I found strawberries actually don't need much light. A couple of mine are directly under bigger plants and get almost 0 sunlight, yet they still produce.
      (alt of Sweet Kitty)

    • @adampiech7143
      @adampiech7143 2 года назад

      @@moef.5326 0 direct sunlight. Well, it's hard to compare without samples ;)

  • @iulian96c
    @iulian96c 2 года назад +47

    I live in a river valley in the Carpathians Mountains in Romania and we cultivate garden strawberries but also around June there can be found wild strawberries in the woods nearby which as shown in the video are smaller. I always thought that people took those wild strawberries, cultivate them and used selection in order to get big fruits. Thanks for such an informative video !

    • @tiberiudabo9988
      @tiberiudabo9988 2 года назад +3

      Had wild strawberries in Romania (Transylvania) more than 6 decades ago. They were much smaller and more flavourful.

    • @tiberiudabo9988
      @tiberiudabo9988 2 года назад +1

      Also, there were two varieties of wild strawberries - fragi, in the forests and more delicate and capsuni, which also were cultivated

  • @geekelly000
    @geekelly000 2 года назад +25

    Interesting. When I was a kid I remember wild strawberries being way sweeter than grown strawberries.

  • @tyrelerickson7147
    @tyrelerickson7147 2 года назад +247

    The only thing wrong with this, the sweetest most delicious strawberry I ever tasted was a little wild strawberry in North Dakota. It was like 5 of our modern strawberries packed into one little one.

    • @PDVism
      @PDVism 2 года назад +8

      If you ever have the chance... go outside the USA and eat a fresh local strawberry.
      The ones I ate in the States were huge but kind of 'meh'.
      The ones I introduced my American wife to here in Belgium made her moan with delight
      Think of it this way, just like canned tuna doesn't taste anything as fresh tuna does so shouldn't straw berried flavored things (including strawberry jam) taste anything like actually fresh strawberries. If it does then your strawberries are crap.

    • @elisekuby2009
      @elisekuby2009 2 года назад +5

      I have to agree! The sweetest strawberries are the wild ones that we kids used to pick in border country, in the forest glades, in common ground that alternately belongs to either France or Germany. They are called Fraise du Bois, literally berries of the forest. About the size of a child's pinky nail.
      The sweetest, most tasty berries ever.

    • @rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291
      @rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291 2 года назад +9

      I grow strawberries and the smallest ones are almost always the sweetest. I have around 8-9 different varieties in my gardens.

    • @taliarain-k4r
      @taliarain-k4r 2 года назад +5

      I grew up in Alberta and they would grow in the bush and sometimes on lawns and they were so tiny, but so tasty.

    • @causasui8185
      @causasui8185 2 года назад +3

      It's the same strawberry mentioned in the video. The Virginia Strawberry (Fragaria virginiana) is native in North Dakota. (Lots of North American plants have "Virginia" in their names because the names come from colonial times that predate the states of Virginia and North Dakota.)

  • @lostpaws2178
    @lostpaws2178 2 года назад +31

    Yo FoL, glad to see you're getting more comfortable adding small bits of comedy in your work. It's very subtle, but provides a good chuckle with your timing. Glad to see yer enjoying yourself dude.

  • @Turlifutz
    @Turlifutz 2 года назад +13

    The word 'fraga' mentioned here in the area of Romania is actually used to describe a very small, wild fruit which is incredibly flavoured. I used to have them in summers as I would go pick them in the forest. We have another word, 'capsuna', for the strawberry which you can buy from the store.

  • @robertlaw4073
    @robertlaw4073 2 года назад +70

    Here is a bit of background on the role of strawberries in Iroquois society - told to me by an Iroquois ambassador who visited my high school social studies class: The Iroquois veneration of the strawberr was based on a number of thing, only four of which I can remember: 1) It was the first berry to appear in spring, therefore, it's appearance was considered a good omen that winter was over (and at a more practical level, if your winter food stores were running low, the strawberry was Nature's first line of winter relief!) 2) The strawberry symbolically represents a virtuous existence because it's seeds are on the outside - it is not concealing anything. 3) It resembles the shape of the human heart (after watching this video and seeing how the heirloom strawberry resembled a biological heart more than the "heart shape", I have a new appreciation for the authenticity of this sensibility). 4) Strawberries float. I can't remember exactly why that was special to the Iroquois, but not having the benefit of Archemdies principle, I would venture to say that things that could float has a general sense of mystery around them. Perhaps the hollow center of the strawberry was using as a way to explain why a hollowed out log would float as a dugout canoe. There might have been a fifth reason, but the years have been many and I can't think of any more now. If you anyone has direct knowledge of this subject to add, I hope you will reply to this post. I had always wanted to visit the resettlement that the ambassador came from, which was portrayed as an exquisite type of commune, but I think it was lost to the NYS penchant for casino-izing native American communities in the 1990s.

    • @AND-od5jt
      @AND-od5jt Год назад +4

      Thanks for sharing your knowledge 🤟

  • @khiem1939
    @khiem1939 2 года назад +41

    Near my grandparent's farm in Western Oregon were wild strawberries which grew in an area on a steep hillside in the forest which was very difficult to get to. As a child we used to go to extreme efforts to get to that area and pick those small but very flavorful berries, amusing that we would go to such effort for strawberries, since on our farm we grew about 25 acres of cultivated strawberries, nice berries, but WITHOUT the GREAT flavor of those wild berries!

  • @shermanhofacker4428
    @shermanhofacker4428 2 года назад +10

    When I was a kid we grew three varieties, blakemore, aroma, and everbearing. The first two were grown for sale the everbearing were in the home garden. The blakemore ripened earlier, were smaller, and not as sweet. The aroma were quite large and very sweet and flavorful. The Ozarks had a bunch of strawberry growers because they don't need extremely fertile soil and can be grown in our rocky fields.

  • @markify8019
    @markify8019 2 года назад +75

    I did some digging around, and it turns out I’m a direct descendant of the Fraser family, including the guy mentioned at around 8:20. My grandparent’s last names are Frazier (an Americanized version of Fraser/Frazer/Fraisier, and we even have a coat of arms! The earliest member of the family I could find went back to Sir Simon Fraser in 1306. When our family migrated to North America in the 1700s, the last name was changed slightly. Family is crazy!

    • @AldousHuxley7
      @AldousHuxley7 2 года назад +12

      My great great grandpa in 1844 took a steamboat from New Orleans up to Cainsville which is now called Council Bluffs. He found a group of Mormons bought a hand cart and waited until the river froze to cross into Omaha and then proceeded to walk the mormon trail all through Nebraska and Colorado to Salt lake city Utah over 1200 miles dragging his hand cart with all of his possessions. Then around 1846 there was some kind of uprising there and he left walked back to Colorado and built the first log cabin in the county just north of Denver that is now a museum.

    • @yunoewig3095
      @yunoewig3095 2 года назад +6

      Wow! That's so cool!

    • @noddybebetrain9896
      @noddybebetrain9896 2 года назад +1

      You are not related to him, the scottish english frasers are different from the french fraisiers.

    • @markify8019
      @markify8019 2 года назад +8

      @@noddybebetrain9896 they are not. Clan Fraser is believed to have originated from Plantagenet Anjou in France (which a simple search on Wikipedia shows). They are directly related to each other. Please don’t try to disprove my family lineage.

    • @noddybebetrain9896
      @noddybebetrain9896 2 года назад +8

      @@markify8019 you're not special. stop trying so hard, that's so american.

  • @christineplaton3048
    @christineplaton3048 2 года назад +49

    The woods have changed. Years ago when I was a preteen living on rural Long Island little wild strawberries grew locally. They were very small, fragrant and delicious. Because of their small size it took extra time to pick our favorite treat. We found them in between stands of trees, where there would be some open areas. These had various wild grasses and other wild flowers grew, such as milkweed. Many areas also had brambles with blackberries...it was a happy time for me. Today you can find seeds for the same wild strawberry and grow them in pots or your garden.

    • @syntaxerror8955
      @syntaxerror8955 2 года назад +1

      I found ripe wild strawberries just weeks ago. Yes, they were delicious.

    • @lolvivo8783
      @lolvivo8783 2 года назад +2

      Truly happy times. Nowadays ppl simulate them in games and movies

  • @geckoo9190
    @geckoo9190 2 года назад +20

    Here in Mexico, one of the most important regions for straw berries is Irapuato in guanajuato, my family from the side of my father lives in an area near and some of my relatives work on the strawberry fields.

    • @terimorris6394
      @terimorris6394 2 года назад +3

      Do you get to eat them? Buy them? Art they expensive there ?

    • @only_folls
      @only_folls 2 года назад +1

      🦎🍓

  • @miamidolphinsfan
    @miamidolphinsfan 2 года назад +33

    My grandfather was a strawberry farmer in the 1930's and 1940's here in the Miami, FL area, along with tomatoes.....his harvest time for both plants....November through March

    • @ForageGardener
      @ForageGardener 2 года назад

      Wow, growing strawberries in florida cant be easy!

    • @miamidolphinsfan
      @miamidolphinsfan 2 года назад +2

      @@ForageGardener LOL are you joking ?

    • @miamidolphinsfan
      @miamidolphinsfan 2 года назад +5

      @@ForageGardener LOLOLOL I love it when people assume they know things they don't.....DOH.....Florida has the 2nd largest strawberry industry in the US (behind only California) and hosts the largest strawberry festival in the US every year in Plant City since 1930....Florida is also the 4th largest dairy state....many people assume that the only industry in Florida is tourism.....you'd be wrong....everything grows here, mostly farmed vegetables in the Winter

    • @davidarundel6187
      @davidarundel6187 2 года назад

      Southern Hemisphere harvest season . 👍

    • @miamidolphinsfan
      @miamidolphinsfan 2 года назад +1

      @@davidarundel6187 LOL Florida isn't in the Southern hemisphere LOLOLOL

  • @Kolchak_Enjoyer
    @Kolchak_Enjoyer 2 года назад +59

    Mad respect for the people who created the strawberries

    • @skandababy
      @skandababy 2 года назад

      Hey-Zeus and his magical stick.

  • @4321Wicky
    @4321Wicky 2 месяца назад +1

    Excellent presentation! Learned a lot about this delicious fruit! Thank you!

  • @KlodFather
    @KlodFather 2 года назад +55

    In the Philippines, they love strawberries but they can only be grown in the mountains because it is cooler there. Philippines is very temperate hanging around 80 to 90 degrees F most of the time, but in the mountains it is 60ish and the berries love this climate. It also helps that its always misting and raining in the high elevations.

    • @johnc2438
      @johnc2438 2 года назад +5

      Yes! The town of La Trinidad, just outside Baguio, has a luscious strawberry farm run by a local university. Because the area is high up in the mountains (around a kilometer and a half, or so), the weather's perfect for growing them. Delish!

    • @mayraeg2629
      @mayraeg2629 2 года назад +2

      Knowing how strawberries flourish, my guess would be all the extra water is what makes them grow more than the cooler temperatures. With that said, since it sounds like those strawberries have been grown there in the mountains for years, they wouldnt do so good if yiu suddenly moved them somewhere hotter.

    • @KlodFather
      @KlodFather 2 года назад +2

      @@mayraeg2629 - I don't know, but from the families I met there, they said even seeds from USA in the east and midwest, they did not do well in the lower areas. Philippines is ALL tropical. Its green as hell everywhere. If left to its own devices, mother nature just spiderwebs everything in green there. All sorts of thick plants grow up at every level. For some reason, many fruit plants that grow around here in Ohio Pennslyvania and West Virginia just don't do well there unless at a higher elevation in the Phils. It is perpetual summer there. THey have a hot season and rainy season, but it is always hot and wet there.

    • @mayraeg2629
      @mayraeg2629 2 года назад +3

      @@KlodFather That is why i said if you moved the strawberries there from the mountains to lower elevations, then they wouldnt do as well. Its the same as what you have been told. The reason the US variety doesnt do as well is because its not acclimated to the new environment, because you are taking it from one climate to another one. That can shock the new plants so they dont grow or produce as well. When plants grow in the same area after many generations, the plant will grow better because its used to its environment

  • @sanbalestrini
    @sanbalestrini 2 года назад +78

    Best strawberry I ever had was down in Chile, found it in the southern woods of Patagonia. It was pretty small and completely white, absolutely delicious

    • @yackablejohnson1485
      @yackablejohnson1485 2 года назад

      White strawberries are not ripe. Lol. They most certainly do not taste delicious. Lol. I have strawberry bushes. They take 5 to 6 years just to have a crop. I know what I'm talking about. You do not. I don't think you ever visited chili. I think your story is a lie. You're a liar. An internet liar. A RUclips comment liar. You giant liar. Go eat your non- ripe fake strawberries that you think are full of flavor. Lol.

    • @lunarballoonistxo
      @lunarballoonistxo 2 года назад +1

      That's a wild strawberry 🍓

  • @13Shadow_LV23
    @13Shadow_LV23 2 года назад +4

    That ending was hilarious and so relatable. Thanks for teaching me something new today.

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 2 месяца назад

      Yep, we drop everything we are doing to race out to the ice cream truck when we hear it...

  • @The_End_Is_Never_The_End
    @The_End_Is_Never_The_End 2 года назад +5

    This man's exceptional ability to narrate and using it to make anything interesting is amazing. I'd listen to him for hours talking.

  • @lisapop5219
    @lisapop5219 2 года назад +41

    Strawberry cornbread, interesting. I'm a raspberry person but I do like strawberries. This the season where I am. This was interesting, thank you.
    The ending was a bit weird because it didn't seem to fit. It abruptly went from talking about strawberries to an ice cream truck. But hey, if you like it, more power to you.

    • @ForageGardener
      @ForageGardener 2 года назад +1

      People do honey and cornbread so it makes sense, I want to try it!

    • @cwalt4483
      @cwalt4483 2 года назад +1

      The ice cream truck had strawberry ice cream on board.

    • @Brunz1844
      @Brunz1844 2 года назад

      I think someone heard the 70's album "Don't crush that dwarf, hand me the pliers" a few too many times. The end of that album is about the same.

    • @princessmarlena1359
      @princessmarlena1359 2 года назад

      Here’s a “raspberry” for ya’! 👅 “Pbbbbbbtttttthhhhh!” (Sorry, couldn’t resist).

    • @lisapop5219
      @lisapop5219 2 года назад +1

      @@princessmarlena1359 🤣

  • @silverchesnov5247
    @silverchesnov5247 2 месяца назад +1

    I can say without a doubt that wild strawberries , although significantly smaller, are much tastier and more aromatic than cultivated ones

  • @emmakivisild3431
    @emmakivisild3431 2 года назад +19

    When I was visiting my cousins in Sweden, they said we should pick strawberries and string them on a piece of straw, because if you put them in the basket they can get spoiled. This is why I think they are called “strawberries”, because you use straw to gather them

    • @peterw3544
      @peterw3544 2 года назад

      lol.

    • @PennyAfNorberg
      @PennyAfNorberg 2 года назад +2

      They are called smultron in swedish, the wild kind that isn't jordgubbar.

  • @craftycriminalistwithms.z3053
    @craftycriminalistwithms.z3053 2 года назад +17

    Thank you for the amazing endings. Especially today, it’s been 5 years since my mom passed away and it’s been super hard. Your little personality bits, and my fav so far next to Hallar Back Girl is this one!

  • @raulcastro7633
    @raulcastro7633 2 года назад +1

    Creepy Joe loves to wander away when the 'Ice Creme" truck music comes along.

  • @marinazagrai1623
    @marinazagrai1623 2 года назад +20

    Strawberries accompanied by cream might have derived from the French...but the cream was slightly fermented (don't boo until you've tried it). The fruit is sliced and layered with sugar, best if refrigerated overnight, and served with Creme Fraiche...This recipe is especially good with not so ripe/sweet store bought fruit.

    • @destree6348
      @destree6348 2 года назад +4

      A coworker had me try them with the crème fraiche and then dipped in brown sugar… sooooo good

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al 2 года назад

      Balsamic vinegar is a weird but good thing to dip strawberries in. Not the thicker stuff, the normally liquid balsamic vinegar.

  • @comtedesaintgermain9269
    @comtedesaintgermain9269 2 года назад +21

    Perhaps they're called Strawberry because in order to overwinter them in cold climates you cover them with straw to protect them during snow/cold seasons

    • @maiaallman4635
      @maiaallman4635 2 года назад +3

      That's what I heard as well.

    • @wharpblast264
      @wharpblast264 2 года назад +1

      I used to grow strawberries. We would use straw to keep the fruit clean while developing. Usually the fruit is too heavy for the plant to hold above ground. But the name is probably just a coincidence.

    • @Fireoflearning
      @Fireoflearning  2 года назад +7

      That's a good theory, but the problem is the name predates cultivation

    • @comtedesaintgermain9269
      @comtedesaintgermain9269 2 года назад +1

      @@Fireoflearning ah true, i never even thought of this! derp. very interesting though.

    • @Fireoflearning
      @Fireoflearning  2 года назад

      @@comtedesaintgermain9269 I was surprised as well

  • @TheMixCurator
    @TheMixCurator 2 года назад +19

    My grandfather used to grow strawberries, but what we used to love to do at the end of summer was go to the forest and pick lingonberries. They made the best jam and the best "saft" (squash or cordial like). Also super high in anti-toxicants and all the good stuff. Its like a super strawberry but easier to grow and get large yields 👍

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Год назад +3

      Sounds incredibly good. Americans don't know how many good European berries they're missing out on!

  • @alhollywood6486
    @alhollywood6486 2 года назад +38

    I love these Food History episodes!

    • @Juan-lf6qo
      @Juan-lf6qo 2 года назад

      P
      Jesus said:"Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons.." -Matthew 7 How did that "man" know that more than 2 thousand years AFTER HE DIED; ALL THAT WILL HAPPEN, There are so "Many" christian religions today, doing exactly what He prophesied more than 2000 years ago.
      "Remember the former things, those of long ago;
      I am God, and there is no other;
      I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning" -Isaiah 46 ruclips.net/video/U7Eh3hkF_YU/видео.html

  • @keithweiss7899
    @keithweiss7899 2 года назад +39

    My city-raised wife was in the Ozark country with me when I came across wild strawberry’s. I picked several and convinced her to try one. She reluctantly did and her eyes opened wide with delight! They are about twice as sweet as commercial ones, despite being small. She was soon grazing on them like a cow!🤣

    • @emanon2794
      @emanon2794 2 года назад +1

      Like a cow...lol

    • @mrsbluesky8415
      @mrsbluesky8415 2 года назад +4

      Please, never make a comparison between your wife and a cow. I’m telling you as a concerned citizen.

    • @lolodee3528
      @lolodee3528 2 года назад +1

      For the love o mike....

    • @nataliebutler
      @nataliebutler 2 года назад

      Interesting, I'd say they are less sweet than the commercial ones, they have an interesting but different flavour. I think commercial varieties vary a lot though. Some might be tasteless, but some are incredibly sweet.

  • @timboslice980
    @timboslice980 Год назад +1

    We used to have some vast strawberry fields where I live. After trains were replaced with trucks the strawberry industry took a massive hit. There’s still some amazing local strawberries though. Harder to find every year

  • @randomperson6988
    @randomperson6988 2 года назад +7

    Babe, wake up. The Unbelievable History of Strawberrys just dropped

  • @AlishN7
    @AlishN7 2 года назад +100

    Interesting! I’m Russia we called the tiny wild strawberries “zemlyanika” which will translate to “earth berry”. Didn’t know Germanic languages also called them that! Who influenced who I wonder.

    • @terrymcpheters3034
      @terrymcpheters3034 2 года назад +5

      Germans influenced ... The language let's you know this.

    • @mikedubovs1574
      @mikedubovs1574 2 года назад +7

      Well Rome and Greek language and troops were in both areas as well

    • @blakerackley8874
      @blakerackley8874 2 года назад +2

      why does it translate to klubnika?

    • @AlishN7
      @AlishN7 2 года назад +8

      @@blakerackley8874 do you mean why we call the cultivates fruit “klubnika”? I don’t really know. We have two different names for the fruit. Klubnika for cultivated and zemlyanika for tiny wild variety.

    • @blakerackley8874
      @blakerackley8874 2 года назад +6

      @@AlishN7 That is fascinating, thank you for helping me understand it better.

  • @stefandrakche
    @stefandrakche 11 месяцев назад +4

    "Berry" means pick in Balkans, strawberry means what you pick from the grass . Cranberry is what you pick from a tall tree

  • @annadynchxoke2466
    @annadynchxoke2466 2 года назад +5

    You did lose me at the eggplant.
    .
    .
    .
    My favorite science teacher was Ms Berry and now things make sense.

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu 2 года назад +19

    I occasionally run into wild strawberries, and I'm amazed at how small they are compared to store-bought strawberries.

    • @adamclark9004
      @adamclark9004 2 года назад

      Yeah because store bought are pumped with steroids and sprayed with pesticides. They literally have no nutritional value compared to organic strawberries

    • @macsnafu
      @macsnafu 2 года назад

      @@adamclark9004 This sounds like nonsense. Cite or evidence that store-bought strawberries have no nutritional value?

  • @michelepastele5347
    @michelepastele5347 2 года назад +2

    I was told that my great grandfather was the first farm owner to farm strawberries in Wisconsin. He had a 'model' farm where people trying to learn agriculture would visit and work with him. I never knew him, but I love strawberries. In an old community garden in the Midwest, we had 'wild' teeny strawberries that showed up in our garden. They were very sweet and flavorful - nothing like strawberries in the stores.

  • @nastyab8003
    @nastyab8003 2 года назад +13

    I found wild strawberries in the steppes of Kazakhstan... One day I looked at a plot of land no more than a couple of meters square and found tiny tulips, several primroses, grasses, and tiny fully formed strawberries with incredible flavor...

  • @lauriejones4507
    @lauriejones4507 2 года назад +12

    My amazing little grandson calls them "strawbabies!" 🍓👶🧡

  • @psterud
    @psterud 2 года назад +12

    Fun fact: The strawberry in Sweden is known as "jordgubbe." "Jord" means "dirt," and "gubbe" means "old man," which I think describes the strawberry quite accurately.

    • @TightNinja
      @TightNinja Год назад +3

      So in Sweden strawberries are considered Dirty Old men?

    • @psterud
      @psterud Год назад +2

      @@TightNinja Yep. Makes sense, though, right, considering what they do to one's mouth? But Swedish strawberries are SO much better than American ones. :)

  • @erkim7547
    @erkim7547 2 года назад +19

    if you have ever eaten any of those small strawberries, you will know that they are all actually very good. I am actually annoyed about calling them less sweet when they are being compared to the ones you might buy from the store and have a good chance of being tasteless.

    • @ericschulze5641
      @ericschulze5641 2 года назад

      Must have to do with the variety, here in upstate NY their tasteless or even bitter

    • @AnarchistMetalhead
      @AnarchistMetalhead 2 года назад +1

      @@ericschulze5641 there is a plant with fruit that look similar to strawberries, but more perfect looking and held upright to the top of the plant rather than hanging down.
      those are watery with an offputting taste.
      real wild strawberries taste lovely, although i wouldn"t call them sweeter than farmed strawberries, but certainly more intensely strawberry flavoured.

    • @kevinbyrne4538
      @kevinbyrne4538 2 года назад +1

      Years ago, I was walking along the sandy shoulder of a road in Maine (USA) when I noticed that little strawberries were growing on the road's shoulder. I tasted a few, and they were the sweetest and most flavorful strawberries that I've ever eaten.

    • @clarencegreen3071
      @clarencegreen3071 2 месяца назад

      @@AnarchistMetalhead Here in North Carolina we have wild berries that resemble wild strawberries but they taste awful. We call them skunkberries.

  • @ElMayo31
    @ElMayo31 2 года назад +6

    Strawberry Cornbread sounds amazing. Great video!

    • @lunhil12
      @lunhil12 2 года назад

      Yep. Got me thinking about making strawberry cornbread pancakes.

  • @LoralynnAnn
    @LoralynnAnn Год назад

    I watched your watermelon video and decided to check out your other videos. The ending of this video had me smashing the subscribe button! I love your sense of humor!!!

  • @elibrod9981
    @elibrod9981 2 года назад +25

    Nothing on Earth comperes to what to translate in English as Earthberry (Russian: Земляника), small (size of a medium blueberry) wild strawberry, grown in the forests of the central Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. Can’t be cultivated. Nothing on Earth compares in the complexity of an aroma, texture and taste... It is divine. It is a perfection and it will cost you... If you are ever in that part of the world, make an effort to find some jam on the farmers market. Ones you try it, your will never be the same..😀

    • @maiaallman4635
      @maiaallman4635 2 года назад

      Sounds delicious! In Afrikaans (South Africa) we call them aarbeie, which means earth + berries.

    • @LV-ni3qs
      @LV-ni3qs 2 года назад +2

      I wonder what the fuck did Finland think when naming it mansikka.

    • @Catlily5
      @Catlily5 2 года назад +3

      @@LV-ni3qs Well, they don't speak an Indo-European language in Finland right?

    • @Currywurst4444
      @Currywurst4444 2 года назад +1

      Just plant a few in your garden or balcony. If the climate is right they grow very easily and even spread very well.

    • @herrakaarme
      @herrakaarme 2 года назад

      @@LV-ni3qs Eh. It's basically earthberry in Finnish as well. That's the prevalent theory. It's just that "berry" isn't strictly written in all the names of berries, just like it's not in lingonberry ("puolukka") or bilberry ("mustikka"). But you see how those words are ending, just like "mansikka", with that vowel+kka (-kka being technically diminutive). "Herukka" (currant) is one more to add to the list. "Vatukka" is the genus Rubus, which includes raspberries and blackberries. The beginning of the word "mansikka" comes from "maa", "mantu" or something like that, which is, surprise surprise, earth.

  • @jovanweismiller7114
    @jovanweismiller7114 2 года назад +690

    It is too bad that 90%+ of strawberries available in the grocery store are tasteless, red objects.

    • @sazon860
      @sazon860 Год назад +29

      GMO

    • @gildardo
      @gildardo Год назад +92

      My dad works in the strawberries industry. It's all about the variety. The big players plant a bland variety, most likely because it does good in long-distance travel. My dad grows sweater types.
      edit: sweeter not sweater, thanks fellow commenters. HAHA

    • @sioux22
      @sioux22 Год назад +67

      ​@@sazon860gmo isn't the reason. It may be how some seeds used it but gmo itself isn't the cause

    • @justdoinmything
      @justdoinmything Год назад +36

      If you refrigerate them they lose flavor but if you don't they're spoiled by tomorrow

    • @fiolettbjorn7461
      @fiolettbjorn7461 Год назад +51

      It's unfortunate that you think you can get fresh, ripe, tasteful fruit at a grocery store for a reasonable price year round. It's people like you who make that idea marketable.

  • @kiblerjuergen5247
    @kiblerjuergen5247 Год назад +6

    Thank you for the informative video, it’s very thoroughly researched. I want to point something out: in Chile, strawberries are called “frutillas”, which literally means “little fruit“. After watching your video, I assume it’s because for the ancient mapuches the strawberry was just a “little fruit”. Most of the rest of Latin America calls strawberries “fresas”, as you pointed out.

  • @jerrydwaileebe1661
    @jerrydwaileebe1661 2 года назад +5

    I worked on a berry farm in the 60s and we always put straw on and around the plants. planted in early spring, temperatures were often below freezing in the mornings, it kept them from dying.

  • @dudmic
    @dudmic 2 года назад +16

    In romanian "Fraga/Fragii(pl)" we call that the wild strawberries, while domestic strawberries are called "Capșuna/Capșunii(pl)" (pronouced capshuna).
    Also wild straberries wherein Romania are incredible sweet and super flavorful, but i don't know what genus are they, maybe they're hybridized with domestic ones.

    • @ilayohana3150
      @ilayohana3150 2 года назад

      Do wild strawberries have different flowers than the regular ones

    • @dudmic
      @dudmic 2 года назад

      @@ilayohana3150 pretty similar

    • @soare5182
      @soare5182 2 года назад

      Fragi si mure 😋

  • @rocketruss3405
    @rocketruss3405 Год назад +1

    I live in North central BC Canada. The wild strawberries we find here are tiny, like the size of a smily face emoji on your phone, a large one is twice that size. But the flavour is amazing and sweet. You will smell them before you see them. If you have the patience to collect a handful, 20-30 berries, before eating, I guarantee it will put a smile on your face when you pour them into your mouth, and you will say, “Now thats what a strawberry should taste like!”

  • @danjames5552
    @danjames5552 2 года назад +7

    I used to work on a fruit farm and I always was told that strawberries where called strawberries because you put straw underneath the plant so the fruit is protected from the ground and they still do this today .

    • @Aikano9
      @Aikano9 2 года назад

      From what I’ve heard the name comes from the Vikings, they used to take those tiny wild strawberries and thread them onto straws because they’re very soft and get squished if put them in buckets or pouches. This is still done throughout Scandinavia (Homeland of the Vikings). The Vikings had a very large impact on the English language.

  • @fernandocarlegenda8513
    @fernandocarlegenda8513 2 года назад +18

    We still eat wild strawberries every summer here. We usually go hunting for them in late summer and make some sort of a spread out of them, sour cream and sugar in the same way it has been made for decades.

  • @elijahcumpton9926
    @elijahcumpton9926 2 года назад +8

    Was just wondering about this exact thing! Found a patch of wild strawberries in my yard, and wow - they're not exactly tasteless, but they're not very sweet at all. They remind me of the taste of green wheat stalks, kind of like a slightly unripened honeydew melon. Which of course made me wonder, "how did this become such a different plant through cultivation?"
    So thanks!!

    • @ronniespach9482
      @ronniespach9482 2 года назад +12

      There is a "mock strawberry" that really resembles real strawberries. A weed that runs like crazy wherever it gets established. Has tiny fruit that are just about tasteless.

    • @anathema2325
      @anathema2325 2 года назад +4

      @@ronniespach9482 thank you for your explanation, I was wondering why everyone was praising wild strawberries while the ones around here taste like nothing at all .

    • @LadyRavenhaire
      @LadyRavenhaire 2 года назад +3

      My aunt had wild strawberries growing in her yard. They were very small and round, but oh my God were they tasty & delicious. Unlike strawberries in the supermarket.

    • @angelwithbrokenwings2456
      @angelwithbrokenwings2456 2 года назад

      I live in West Virginia, the Virginia strawberrt grows here ! They as VM big as a nickel amd an inch long!! They are soo good the commercial tast like raw potato beside these,))

  • @jakenord9061
    @jakenord9061 2 года назад +5

    I am thoroughly enjoying these food ones. One of the only vids I watch that the wife is excited to watch too.

  • @MindBodySpiritMusic
    @MindBodySpiritMusic 2 года назад

    You are hilarious 🤣. I enjoyed this, but especially the ICE CREAM TRUCK that derailed the closing of your video. 😁😁

  • @NickVenture1
    @NickVenture1 2 года назад +43

    Nice to listen to you. You are an artist.

  • @SARSteam
    @SARSteam 2 года назад +4

    This was highly informative and entertaining :) Thank you kindly.

  • @majedsoufi
    @majedsoufi 2 года назад

    That was easily the crème de la crème of RUclips outros. Well done, my friend, you have gained my like and subscribe for your effortless, nonchalant humor 🎉

  • @injunsun
    @injunsun 2 года назад +6

    @Fire of Learning, an important note: the most common strawberry today is unable to reproduce by seeds much of the time, because it is triploid. The parents species were normal diploid and tetraploid species. There are some hexaploid varieties, and a few pentaploid, because of rare hybridization events, where two triploid gametes are produced and meet, or a triploid and diploid gamete meet, producing viable offspring. Plants can often do that, while we mere animals normally cannot. See also, most commonly planted potatoes (quadruploid).
    Thanks for your content.

    • @InHisService333
      @InHisService333 2 года назад

      Breaking News:
      Supreme Court Clerk Reveals All in Secret Exclusive OWNN
      ruclips.net/video/QHpEGWkQ9jU/видео.html
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  • @bodawei425
    @bodawei425 2 года назад +3

    Such a great video! A share of history, a slice of science, a pinch of anecdotes and a zest of humor. Instructive, entertaining and very well edited. Great work, I'm in! Thanks!

  • @spasjt
    @spasjt 2 года назад +2

    This was amazing. Also, the timing of your humor is perfect. You've got another subscriber sir. Also, how was that ice cream and did it melt?

  • @ClearlyPixelated
    @ClearlyPixelated 2 года назад +6

    Great writing! Thank you for your hard work!

  • @ZetaEntity101
    @ZetaEntity101 2 года назад +16

    Strawberries are definitely my favorite fruit of all time they're so pretty,juicy and yummy to taste 🍓

    • @modsa8901
      @modsa8901 2 года назад +1

      Today's modern commercially grown Hybrid/GMO Strawberry is a tasteless (& possibly nutritionally) piece of crap.

  • @phfen
    @phfen 3 месяца назад

    How fascinating a story ! Thanks and congrats for your French pronunciation 👏

  • @skytrip5273
    @skytrip5273 2 года назад +30

    I used to eat wild strawberries like a grazing cow when I was a kid in Ohio . They grow everywhere. 😁👍 Unlike the Title of the video. Strawberries were not created, but merely modified to grow bigger.

    • @georgeherbertcarson7538
      @georgeherbertcarson7538 2 года назад +1

      thank you for the clarification

    • @bobbun9630
      @bobbun9630 2 года назад +2

      I think what was meant by the suggestion that strawberries were "created" is that the garden strawberry, specifically, is a hybrid that exists because of human cultivation rather than a species that occurs naturally in the wild. The same is true of bananas and a number of citrus fruits.

    • @charleshash4919
      @charleshash4919 Год назад +2

      Modern strawberries are the product of conventional plant breeding (crosses between different types followed by selection among the progeny and clonal propagation of "The best").

  • @AaronC.
    @AaronC. 2 года назад +4

    I love this kind of videos, where I learn from where have descended the plants and fruits that we nowadays have. Interesting! 😄

  • @alexallen934
    @alexallen934 2 месяца назад

    Enjoyed this video. The ending was the strawberry on top! 😂

  • @BSIII
    @BSIII 2 года назад +5

    This is fascinating. I used to pick the wild strawberries by my school, but never knew why they were so different from the bigger strawberries I would see at the store. The little wild strawberries were still good, though.

  • @mrelisard
    @mrelisard 2 года назад +36

    As Swedish, I recognize that wild strawberries were always collected with picking a straw, and thread all the berries on it. You can see it in the Bergman movie “wild strawberries”. I’m pretty confident that’s were the name comes from before it mutated to the current form. Swedes and Anglo saxons all came from the same proto-Germanic tribes.

    • @leonamay8776
      @leonamay8776 2 года назад

      Wasn't that also described in Emil i Lönneberga?
      Astrid Lindgren was obviously born long after humans started cultivating strawberries, but I still find it interesting.

    • @mrelisard
      @mrelisard 2 года назад +2

      @@leonamay8776 I think so. It’s literally what everyone used to do when they found wild strawberries in the wild. I think it’s because it tastes a little better when eating a few of them in a go. I used to think they were hard to cultivate as they were mostly wild, but I saw some pots with them growing in Wisby. Oh, I found some growing in prospect park here in New York, I couldn’t believe it, there were some Russians next to me, and they couldn’t believe it either

    • @rememberthiscomment7434
      @rememberthiscomment7434 2 года назад

      Thanks for sharing

    • @kekistanihelpdesk8508
      @kekistanihelpdesk8508 2 года назад +1

      The simplest answer is more often the right one.

  • @alyssastewart738
    @alyssastewart738 2 года назад

    The end 😂😂 very interesting. And instant subscribe for the ending!

  • @c182SkylaneRG
    @c182SkylaneRG 2 года назад +8

    So my own personal experience has been that the wild strawberries growing in my lawn are typically MORE sweet than ones I buy at the grocery store, rather than less. I suspect this is more a consequence of commercial mass production than anything else, however.

    • @mikemhz
      @mikemhz 2 года назад

      It depends on the type. I have wild strawberries in my garden right now - they are tasteless.

  • @CarthagoMike
    @CarthagoMike 2 года назад +10

    Wild strawberries here in the Netherlands tend to be much sweeter and strong of flavour than cultivated ones.
    That aside, great video :)

    • @nickvanemden
      @nickvanemden 2 года назад

      Vraagje, waar in Nederland groeien wilde aardbeien? Ik heb er dus nog nooit 1 geproefd

  • @audralynn7454
    @audralynn7454 Год назад

    You said that was the ice cream truck, just as the ice cream truck showed up at my apartment complex. I had to turn the volume downnon the video to see if i was hearing the vide or the truck here.😂😂😂
    Very interesting video btw!!! Thank you for sharing this cool info about straw(berries) 🍓🍓🍓

  • @NelsonPalma10
    @NelsonPalma10 2 года назад +3

    Frazier discovered the chilean strawberries in the country side close to Penco, 540 kms from Santiago due South, in Chile. You can still find those ancient strawberries there under the woods.

  • @Gribbo9999
    @Gribbo9999 2 года назад +16

    Thanks for that interesting tale . I didn’t know natural strawberries were so widespread around the World. I remember back in the 1980s I was fairly newly arrived in Papua New Guinea and
    was walking along a remote mountain track in the highlands and coming across a strawberry plant with a mature berry by the side of the track. Without thinking I picked and ate it then immediately thought was that really a strawberry? Or was it some some deadly jungle look alike!. It was a silly thing to do but anyway it tasted like a strawberry and obviously I didn't die. I always assumed it was just a feral escapee from some imported plant. But now I know it may have been a native. Thanks for filling that little detail in for me after 40 years! I still eat strawberries almost daily on my meusli. Delicious!

    • @jwahhadai8257
      @jwahhadai8257 2 года назад

      It was an escapee, strawberries were exported all over the world over 400 years ago & the earliest versions were the most hardy straight from the Americas. This video is 99% fiction with some 'historical facts' thrown in to lend credibility. Scientific fact has obviously been left out for a reason. 'Unbelievable ' in the title is not put there by accident, it is a disclaimer because they know they're making it all up as they go along. Dont believe stuff made for entertainment purposes here on RUclips as actual fact... its definitely not in this case.