How Strawberries were Accidentally Invented

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024

Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory  Месяц назад +147

    Start speaking a new language in 3 weeks with Babbel 🎉. Get up to 60% OFF your subscription ➡Here: go.babbel.com/t?bsc=usa-influ-eg-dt-1m&btp=default&RUclips&Influencer..Jul-2024..USA-TATAM..1200m60-yt-tastinghistorywithmaxmiller-jul-2024

    • @danielsantiagourtado3430
      @danielsantiagourtado3430 Месяц назад +7

      You're amazing max❤️❤️❤️

    • @ZevTor
      @ZevTor Месяц назад

      Maybe this is a stupid idea... I think it would be cool when you have a sponsor like Hello Fresh that you could get a Max Miller special so us fans could follow along to your most popular videos.

    • @yippee8570
      @yippee8570 Месяц назад

      Sto imparando l'italiano con DuoLingo ed io penso che è va bene. Sto imparando per tre anni 💚🤍❤

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 Месяц назад +12

      Great show! Thanks, guys! Listen, guys, just a suggestion - I'd like to recommend a sorta vintage cookbook called Dining with William Shakespeare by author and researcher Madge Lorwin. I used it a lot back in the '80's (yes, I am that old now Lolz). There are a number of really well researched and explained recipes in that book. While the emphasis may be on the Shakespearean part, it's really a fun read. I happen to like Shakespeare, being an old former member of the Thespian Club. But it really is both interesting and fun to read if you're into historic cookery. I've seen used copies of it on occasion at Amazon. Cheers 'n' besos, guys!

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Месяц назад +17

      @@rosemcguinn5301 I’ll see if I can find it

  • @tskmaster3837
    @tskmaster3837 Месяц назад +1761

    "The knave of Hearts, he stole those tarts, all on a summer's day."
    If this is the kind of tart he stole, I'd say crime does pay.

  • @Martin_Koepl
    @Martin_Koepl Месяц назад +2989

    The smaller wild ones are still a thing, and they taste great. And by far better than most of the mostly just good looking cultivated ones. Just collecting them is a big pain in your backside.

    • @snelhestarna
      @snelhestarna Месяц назад +425

      Wild strawberries are incredible. And i agree, it's far superior to most cultivated ones in flavor, still picking them is a pain but if you have them growing on your property and around it, it's a nice little thing to do in the summer.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Месяц назад +387

      I wish we had them where I live ☹️

    • @karmagal78
      @karmagal78 Месяц назад +59

      We tended to use ours for lemonade flavorings.

    • @napoleonfeanor
      @napoleonfeanor Месяц назад +8

      ​@@karmagal78interesting. How?

    • @nicholasneyhart396
      @nicholasneyhart396 Месяц назад +89

      ​@TastingHistory I am surprised you don't, wild strawberries are native basically everywhere in the northern hemisphere including California.

  • @garymcmonnies6354
    @garymcmonnies6354 Месяц назад +515

    When Max says it’s the best thing he has made, you HAVE to run, not walk, to the grocery store. And I can confirm, it is PHENOMENAL! I added whipped cream on it. It was a huge hit with friends.

    • @frankcohen8662
      @frankcohen8662 25 дней назад +4

      Is the recipe in his cookbook?

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 19 дней назад +6

      @@frankcohen8662 - The cookbook came out well before this episode. But he gives the recipe and method here in this video and on his "Tasting History" page - get there through the description.

    • @frankcohen8662
      @frankcohen8662 18 дней назад

      @@MossyMozart I bought the book and will be digging into the recipes. Thanks. -Frank

    • @nataliet1260
      @nataliet1260 14 дней назад +2

      This is why it's not fair that I'm allergic to strawberries.

  • @shep6774
    @shep6774 Месяц назад +245

    The fact that he was committed enough to attempt to grow his own berries. This is a fantastic channel, gotta admire the work ethic and production value

    • @dustintacohands1107
      @dustintacohands1107 20 дней назад +1

      Yes he try’s to cover all parts of the subject and I respect that too

    • @Weirdiohw
      @Weirdiohw 17 дней назад

      i agree !! he puts in so much effort

  • @Lyiad
    @Lyiad Месяц назад +1053

    That one subdued "... Y'all" 16:08 just tells you that this was a winner without needing to say anything else.

    • @mamadragon2581
      @mamadragon2581 Месяц назад +117

      For me, it was Max's eyes going huge that said "This is GOOD!"

    • @duckrutt
      @duckrutt Месяц назад +4

      Channeling the spirit of Wesley.

    • @malloryoates8580
      @malloryoates8580 Месяц назад +7

      I want to make this but I don't have a pie pan, weights, or a sifter

    • @OrigamiMarie
      @OrigamiMarie Месяц назад +22

      ​@@malloryoates8580 the pie weights aren't actually a problem, you can use dry beans, like navy beans or kidney beans or whatever, from the grocery store. Even a pie pan isn't hopeless, if you have any kind of high sided baking dish. The sieve though, that's kind of a problem.

    • @LadyElaineLovegood
      @LadyElaineLovegood Месяц назад +9

      @@malloryoates8580 Modern flour doesn't require as much sifting as it used to. Just try not to pack it down when you measure it. And for the berries, maybe a couple layers of cheese cloth or a colander?

  • @nicolebrunzel6608
    @nicolebrunzel6608 Месяц назад +571

    My garden is overgrown with those tiny strawberries. I never thought of making a tart, though. I usually pick and eat them while weeding or grooming the roses. Which, I just realise, sounds far more romantic than it actually is.

    • @user-me4hg6ee4x
      @user-me4hg6ee4x Месяц назад +28

      they're the best... also so romantic.... lol

    • @FormerDragonette
      @FormerDragonette Месяц назад +34

      Strawberries are part of the Rosaceae family, so it’s certified Romantic!

    • @rickrussell
      @rickrussell Месяц назад +18

      "Nicole and the Rose Groom" would make a fantastic title to a novel.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Месяц назад +26

      Grooming roses is only romantic if you have masochistic tendencies. Nature's barbwire is very pretty to look at but rather strife on the touch.

    • @FormerDragonette
      @FormerDragonette Месяц назад +5

      @andersjjensen
      Alas, it’s the price of beauty.

  • @dreyhawk
    @dreyhawk Месяц назад +91

    I spent years growing strawberries as a teen and learned that you can control size by controlling the runners. Keep them trimmed back and you got bigger berries. Let them spread freely and you got smaller berries. If you want more plants you let a runner root then cut the stem attaching it to the parent plant.

  • @andrewevenson2657
    @andrewevenson2657 Месяц назад +114

    Fun fact. The “seeds” on the outside of strawberries are actually the botanical fruits called achenes, and there is a single seed inside all of the achenes.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 18 дней назад +5

      Strawberries are so complex! They also contain compounds that give them their perceived sweetness _without_ having much sugar in them

    • @oOIIIMIIIOo
      @oOIIIMIIIOo 10 дней назад +2

      Botanically strawberries are nuts.

  • @PoppycockPrincess100
    @PoppycockPrincess100 Месяц назад +1495

    This has got to be the definition of a happy accident.

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Месяц назад +153

      exactly!

    • @jansalava1046
      @jansalava1046 Месяц назад +10

      Nothing to be happy about some tasteless beets masquerading as strawberries.

    • @farenhaight4133
      @farenhaight4133 Месяц назад +31

      Just as Bob Ross intended.

    • @RainbowJesusChavez
      @RainbowJesusChavez Месяц назад +72

      ​@@jansalava1046may I suggest letting yourself actually enjoy life, friend?

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Месяц назад +45

      @@jansalava1046 Some varieties of strawberries can be very tasty, especially if you take them from local producers ^^
      The tasteless beets are usually imported from big glasshouse plantations, that harvest them before maturation ^^

  • @GCOSBenbow
    @GCOSBenbow Месяц назад +943

    Hi, Brit here. My grandma made strawberry tarts with this exact technique (barring the saffron) throughout my childhood. She'd also occasionally add a layer of homemade strawberry jam to the bottom as well! Goes well with crème fraiche and mint or a little Chantilly cream.

    • @darkdodo6672
      @darkdodo6672 Месяц назад +29

      It has to be good with Chantilly, hopefully I'll find some strawberries to try this recipe out

    • @danielgyila3662
      @danielgyila3662 Месяц назад +8

      Im gonna comment so I come back to this amazing recipe and plus you said, for sure gonna try it out!

    • @bjdefilippo447
      @bjdefilippo447 Месяц назад +3

      My favorite memories of two of my aunts is them in the garden picking strawberries, which we then had with cream.

    • @HeraldHealer
      @HeraldHealer Месяц назад +3

      That sounds amazing

    • @EMJean99
      @EMJean99 Месяц назад +1

      Yum 🤤

  • @TLhikan
    @TLhikan Месяц назад +48

    Honestly, a smaller, sweeter strawberry sounds way better than what we get from the store today.

    • @feuerling
      @feuerling 24 дня назад +4

      You can buy wild strawberry plants in pots. It's very simple to keep.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 18 дней назад +4

      ​@TLhikan - You can grow them from hanging baskets on your porch, deck, a hook outside your kitchen window, wherever. ^_^

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 18 дней назад +2

      I don't know if they can be successfully over-wintered.
      (I have a poblano pepper plant I bought last year that only gave 1 pepper after the deer chewed on it. I then kept it on an enclosed porch all winter - NYS - and it is going crazy THIS year! It still looks sad and leggy, but I already got 1 big pepper and there are a bunch more coming. _Jurassic Park_ was right - "life will find a way"! )

    • @feuerling
      @feuerling 18 дней назад +3

      @MossyMozart they grow wild all over europe and northern asia, so they're pretty frost-resistant.
      I would also recommend fragaria × vescana, a hybrid of the wild strawberry and the garden strawberry (which is already a hybrid. Strawberries are crazy.) The fruits have much of the aroma of the wild strawberry, but are closer in size and shape to the garden strawberry. There are a bunch of different vescanas from different reeding programs. The version I know is the "Florika" from germany, so the other hybrids might be different in some ways.

    • @CampingforCool41
      @CampingforCool41 3 дня назад +1

      They do taste way better but it can’t be overstated how small they are and how much work it takes to even pick a half a cup.

  • @MelanthaStr
    @MelanthaStr Месяц назад +236

    Fun fact: Not only Julius de Berry was renamed Fraise, after the Fraise, but his great-father is believed to be named Chantilly, which is a sweet whipped cream often eaten with strawberries ^^

    • @zachwilliams2597
      @zachwilliams2597 Месяц назад +42

      This is just a whole line of people named after really good foods

    • @kukuV.3
      @kukuV.3 Месяц назад +6

      👀
      booba

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 19 дней назад

      @@zachwilliams2597 - Madame du Berry?

    • @RowdyJr
      @RowdyJr 15 дней назад

      Berry Chantilly! 😂👌 I love berry chantilly cake! Soo delicious!!

  • @00TheRealTC
    @00TheRealTC Месяц назад +485

    Dude. The way your eyes popped when you had that first bite spoke volumes about how amazing the dish was. I don't think your face has ever been that expressive. Thanks for sharing this one with us.

    • @HLR4th
      @HLR4th Месяц назад +29

      It was like a Pokémon leveling up! Those eyes bulging are meme worthy!

    • @BluegrassGeek
      @BluegrassGeek Месяц назад +23

      I always love seeing Max be surprised at how tasty a recipe turns out. Definitely a moment of joy captured on film.

    • @montananerd8244
      @montananerd8244 Месяц назад +1

      Very grateful I get wild raspbs and straws in the mountains every August! And sometimes hucks too (a form of sweeet bluebs that cannot be cultivated)

    • @xondisco
      @xondisco Месяц назад +3

      He's a master of facial expressing real emotions ❤

    • @blueseercontent
      @blueseercontent Месяц назад +2

      The only time I can think of is a negative one, when he ate the "dragon" heart lol

  • @HeyNonyNonymous
    @HeyNonyNonymous Месяц назад +1062

    "And then the only thing you're growing is strawberries." I fail to see the problem.

    • @katarh
      @katarh Месяц назад +87

      It's much like mint. If you plant mint in the ground, you may end up with a garden of nothing but mint. But if you LIKE mint, then.....

    • @FrozEnbyWolf150
      @FrozEnbyWolf150 Месяц назад +38

      You can easily move them aside to plant other crops. Strawberries can sometimes be grown as an understory crop to taller plants.

    • @chloeedmund4350
      @chloeedmund4350 Месяц назад +1

      Ikr? 😂

    • @erzsebetkovacs2527
      @erzsebetkovacs2527 Месяц назад +11

      @@FrozEnbyWolf150 That sounds like a good idea for weed control, but I'm wondering about the distribution of nutrients between the two layers of crops.

    • @FrozEnbyWolf150
      @FrozEnbyWolf150 Месяц назад +35

      @@erzsebetkovacs2527 Good question. Strawberries can be intercropped with leafy greens and legumes. Vegetables grown for leaves take up a lot of nitrogen, which is precisely what you want to scale back for strawberries when they're about to fruit.

  • @LotofNothing
    @LotofNothing Месяц назад +34

    I just want to comment on the comments section in every single one of Max's videos: you guys are consistently so wholesome and so welcoming, sharing stories of your family's histories and foods, or just bring super friendly! It's such a wonderful place to be on the Internet and i appreciate you all 💜

  • @camerongunn7906
    @camerongunn7906 Месяц назад +34

    The way he said, "Y'ALL!" Every southerner's ears perked up.😂😂👍

  • @maudline
    @maudline Месяц назад +595

    In Denmark, we call the smaller wild variant “forest strawberry” and our literal name for them is “earth berry”. As a child, I always put them on a thin straw/grass and ate them like a kebab 😅🍓

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Месяц назад +119

      A strawberry kebab! I love it.

    • @samovarsa2640
      @samovarsa2640 Месяц назад +50

      ​@@TastingHistory and in Sweden they are given the mysterious moniker 'jordgubbe', which means... Earth... Boys? But not boy as in a child, boy as in... 'buddy', as in how one cowpoke would address another. Why? I could not say.

    • @leetri
      @leetri Месяц назад +49

      @@samovarsa2640 Because "gubbe" also means "small lump". So the name is literally "small earth lumps".

    • @ThePapaja1996
      @ThePapaja1996 Месяц назад +17

      The forest variant is called smultron in sweden

    • @jackdaw99
      @jackdaw99 Месяц назад +13

      The quintessential Scandinavian summer experience 🌱🍓

  • @jameslovelady7751
    @jameslovelady7751 Месяц назад +235

    On a business trip in Brussels in a fancy restaurant (the boss was paying) I had "Fraise du Bois Chantilly ". Tiny wild strawberries and whipped cream. Still remember that luxury 49 years later.

    • @hypothalapotamus5293
      @hypothalapotamus5293 Месяц назад +8

      My parents had an uncontrolled patch of small strawberries in the back yard. I firmly believe that large strawberries were a mistake. They scaled up the size, but they didn't scale up the flavor.

    • @williamboisdenghien2849
      @williamboisdenghien2849 Месяц назад +9

      Probably Fraise des bois not fraise du bois. Basically "strawberries of the woods" Otherwise it sounds like your strawberries come from a wood next to the town of Chantilly

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 18 дней назад

      @@williamboisdenghien2849 - So, they came pre-creamed?

    • @williamboisdenghien2849
      @williamboisdenghien2849 18 дней назад +1

      @@MossyMozart no you can add the chantilly cream on top or on the side

    • @andreasavester
      @andreasavester 7 дней назад

      And here I thought that wild berries, including forest strawberries, are poor people's food. Just get on your bicycle and ride to the forest and spend your weekend picking free food.

  • @CS-pz8wq
    @CS-pz8wq Месяц назад +38

    It turns out I am drastically more likely to sit through the advertisement when you have just proven that not only are the subtitles top notch but that someone has taken the time to care about how they are placed within the video so that they don't sit over the top of in video text. Thank you so much for that care and attention.

    • @Othehughmanatee
      @Othehughmanatee Месяц назад +6

      They have said on the Ketchup with Max and Jose channel that Jose does all the subtitles! His attention to detail is exceptional!

    • @catscratchfever1473
      @catscratchfever1473 22 дня назад +1

      Accessibility win!

  • @cinnamonbeardstud
    @cinnamonbeardstud Месяц назад +49

    The name of this dish is the best insult I've ever heard and I can't wait to use it. Don't patronize me you TUDOR STRAWBERRY TART!

  • @ShinoSarna
    @ShinoSarna Месяц назад +166

    In Poland we actually distinguish between wild strawberries and domesticated strawberries as plants with different names that are separately cultivated so it's actually relatively possible to get to buy wild variety.

    • @royjohansen3730
      @royjohansen3730 Месяц назад +13

      That makes a lot of sense because the flavours are quite different. The Swedes also have separate names for them (I'm a Norwegian, and we don't, unfortunately). The tiny, wild strawberries are just PACKED with flavour, and I urge you to try them if you have a chance!

    • @annej710
      @annej710 Месяц назад +7

      @@royjohansen3730 Yes, we call the wild ones smultron, and they really are delicious.

    • @FireflyOnTheMoon
      @FireflyOnTheMoon Месяц назад

      everyone does the same

    • @srebrnaFH
      @srebrnaFH Месяц назад +9

      And "poziomka" does carry that close-to-earth factor, too. You can easily buy seeds, or seedlings of them, too, for container planting. And yeah, the aroma and flavour is vastly different.

    • @ousou78
      @ousou78 Месяц назад +2

      In France we have "Fraise" for strawberry and "Fraises des bois" basically wood strawberry

  • @ViennaVampire
    @ViennaVampire Месяц назад +93

    You talking about the "pineapple strawberry" made me laugh! When I was a teen, I took a summer job in the kitchen of a home for the elderly here in Vienna. We always prepared different fruit platters for breakfast (depending on what was available) and one day we had some strawberries to add to them as well. I was put in charge of manning the fruit section and SO MANY old folks came up to me, gleefully expressing how happy they were that there "finally was some pineapple on the menu again!". I was so confused, thinking at first that maybe they were confusing the canteloupe we also offered for pineapple, but they were all locked onto the strawberries, repeatedly calling them pineapples. I was at a loss. Until, later at home, my mom laughed and explained that, apparently, in certain parts of Austria the commonly available strawberries used to be a variety that was called "Ananas-Erdbeere" (Pineapple strawberry). Thus, there are to this day SOME people (mostly older folks now who grew up speaking certain austrian dialects) that still refer to all strawberries as pineapple. Leaving 16-yo me endlessly confused. 😂

  • @Foolish188
    @Foolish188 Месяц назад +28

    My neighbor gets upset with me for not mowing the "weeds" in my lawn. Wild strawberries, chickweed, blue violets, green amaranth, etc. Yum!

    • @Downhomeherbwife
      @Downhomeherbwife Месяц назад +4

      What a great lawn!

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 18 дней назад +1

      Bees must love you. *_And they can use all the help they can get!_* Maybe you can add some clover just for them? There are lots of folks these days that have replaced their lawn grass entirely for clover. Also, look for "tapestry lawn" - it doesn't have to be grass-free; it can be mixed into lawn grass.

  • @jgagnier
    @jgagnier Месяц назад +4

    In a world full of script-readers saying "I hope I'm pronouncing that right" and "Apologies for my pronunciation", I want to commend Max Miller and his team for their continuous effort in pronouncing foreign names and words.

  • @quito787
    @quito787 Месяц назад +197

    That story about the descendant of Frezier 800 years bringing back the Chilean strawberry to
    France resulting in cross-breeding is so amazing and cool!

  • @Felixicity
    @Felixicity Месяц назад +17

    well now i know why the strawberries at the edge of my granparent's farm were so tiny and tasted so good--they were just some wild ones they let grow there since it ended up benefitting them.

  • @kefirasun8963
    @kefirasun8963 Месяц назад +17

    You know it's good when Max goes wide-eyed and starts off with "Ya'll!" 😂
    Thank you for yet another fantastic video and recipe!

  • @NoMoreCrumbs
    @NoMoreCrumbs Месяц назад +1536

    Look, strawberries might have different standards than you do, but calling them a tart seems pretty harsh

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Месяц назад +377

      No judging 😂

    • @ldcraig2006
      @ldcraig2006 Месяц назад +14

      😄

    • @tonyharpur8383
      @tonyharpur8383 Месяц назад +8

      😂😅

    • @ameliadiaz8040
      @ameliadiaz8040 Месяц назад +8

      😅😂🤣

    • @juliastraus4273
      @juliastraus4273 Месяц назад +23

      Took me a second, mind's not what it used to be-- for a heartbeat, I thought, what the heck could he have said about... and boom!😄😄 Thanx for the chuckle! Take good care!😊

  • @jollyjohnthepirate3168
    @jollyjohnthepirate3168 Месяц назад +338

    Strangely, there's a wild strawberry that grows as a weed in peoples lawns. Yes they make little, tiny berries. Perfect for birds who eat the ripe berries and spread the seeds when they do their business later.

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Месяц назад +32

      I planted strawberries once when I was a kid and they kept coming back bigger and bigger every single year. It’s a hardy plant, that’s for sure!

    • @petervanderwaart1138
      @petervanderwaart1138 Месяц назад +24

      The faux strawberries that grow in my lawn are about a quarter inch in diameter and inedibily pithy inside.

    • @VanguVegro
      @VanguVegro Месяц назад +9

      Back in the day, they (or something similar) grew in my grandparents' garden too. I had some, they were incredibly watery and frankly, not worth the effort.

    • @lynnodonnell4764
      @lynnodonnell4764 Месяц назад +6

      So that's what I have found here and there in my yard- teensy weensy strawberries.
      Lots of mental illness in my moms family tree- thought I'd finally 'fell off some kind of edge' lol

    • @marshawargo7238
      @marshawargo7238 Месяц назад +3

      My yard, both front & back, are almost more strawberry than grass😢!!! & mulberry grow like weeds, I can't make them stop😮!!!

  • @tomaspesce5790
    @tomaspesce5790 Месяц назад +13

    I am extremely grateful Max, I have been watching your videos for a year and when I worked the night shift in a hotel they accompanied me in my solitary work.
    For months I thought what Chilean dish could be interesting enough to recommend on your channel and it didn't occur to me. We Chileans have many good recipes but with few stories.
    Finally Chile appeared and in what a beautiful way, we have always had good fruit and especially strawberries (we call them “frutillas”), but I had no idea of ​​the historical value that these have!! I will probably be talking about this for weeks 🎉

  • @chetzmom65
    @chetzmom65 Месяц назад +8

    Strawberries, especially the smaller perennial, make an EXCELLENT garden border. They also fill in those weird spots, like btw the garage or house, and a walkway/driveway. Grow strawberries! Not as crazy or hard as you think!❤

  • @imogenk5157
    @imogenk5157 Месяц назад +65

    The only surviving folk song in the original Cornish language pre-revival is called Delkiow Sivy which translates to "Strawberry Leaves" because the chorus has the refrain "Rag delkiow sivy ra muzzy teag" which means "For strawberry leaves make maidens fair". The song dates back to at least 1698 when it was first written down by Thomas Tonkin 😊💖

  • @Der_Kleine_Mann
    @Der_Kleine_Mann Месяц назад +88

    The wild strawberries are so highly aromatic it almost seems unnatural.
    I grow a wide variety of strawberries in my garden, but the tiny wild ones that I also grow are always worth picking, even though it's quite the laborious work.

    • @christavanderburg4382
      @christavanderburg4382 Месяц назад +2

      In our garden you'd also find those wild woodland strawberries, both red and white/yellow. Though I'm not a strawberry fan (certainly not the big, pale, tasteless, watery strawberries from the supermarket), but I do love these wild strawberries. And indeed the aroma is so intense!

    • @Crosshill
      @Crosshill Месяц назад +2

      they smell and taste so much like the strawberry scented erasers and gel pens from way back in middle school that its actually upsetting the first time you try one

  • @Sendarya
    @Sendarya Месяц назад +4

    Thank you Max. So much media today makes me want to cry, but here you always are to make all of our weeks a little brighter!

  • @auerbacher69
    @auerbacher69 Месяц назад +6

    watching him genuinely enjoy something he made is just so delightful, i just really really love this channel

  • @tildal.
    @tildal. Месяц назад +112

    We still very much eat "wild strawberries" here in Sweden, we even grow them ourselves out in our garden here on our farm. We call them "smultron" but I would say they taste pretty different from modern strawberries. We usually string them on a long straw like a necklace and ate them like that.
    They actually gave name to another thing called a "smultronställe" which is a very special, pretty spot you keep to yourself, just like how you would keep the place you pick your smultron to yourself.

    • @Xiroi87
      @Xiroi87 Месяц назад +1

      Smultron is not the same as wild strawberries, even if Bergman's film Smultronstället was translated as Wild Strawberries. Smultron is fragaria vesca, and wild strawberry is Fragaria ananassa

    • @mosing3966
      @mosing3966 Месяц назад

      ​@@Xiroi87 fragaria vesca is wild strawberry. Cmon take 5 secs to google it

    • @mosing3966
      @mosing3966 Месяц назад +7

      ​@@Xiroi87fragaria vesca is wild strawberry. Cmon takes 5 seconds to google

    • @mosing3966
      @mosing3966 Месяц назад +2

      Annasia is not the wild ones. Max used annasia in thos video

    • @erzsebetkovacs2527
      @erzsebetkovacs2527 Месяц назад +2

      @@Xiroi87 Fragaria x ananassa is the garden strawberry.

  • @stumccabe
    @stumccabe Месяц назад +71

    Max, when you're reading very old English texts please remember the the "y" was used in early printing to represent the older English letter "þ" (thorn) which is pronounced as "th" . So "ye" is pronounced "the"!

    • @rasmusn.e.m1064
      @rasmusn.e.m1064 Месяц назад +9

      Correct. When talking about the "ye" in "ye olde X" of course, but not the first one in "Ye are ye most X". Just wanted to clarify.

    • @veryberry39
      @veryberry39 Месяц назад +7

      ​@@rasmusn.e.m1064Damn, so it wasn't actually Ye Olde Shoppe, but THE Olde Shoppe?
      Makes more sense, but also saddens me. 🤣

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 Месяц назад +1

      Yes but then we wouldn't understand it. So ,ya he will probably continue to use what is familiar to us.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Месяц назад +5

      @@veryberry39 Indeed. English lost a bunch of letters because the imported printing presses didn't come with types for them, and printers initially were too stingy to have them custom-made: ƿ, þ, æ and ð. (w, th, ae, and th). ƿ and æ were on their way out anyway, but þ and ð presented a problem. y was used for a while, but that wasn't very smart because there are plenty of ys already in English, before they settled on th for both.
      Also, those letters not being part of the Latin alphabet but either being Nordic runes (ƿ, þ) or modified Latin (ð is a modified d, easier to see in the uppercase version: Ð) made them unpopular as they were seen as old-fashioned and outdated. This explains why they weren't added back when types were produced locally.

    • @auntiecarol
      @auntiecarol Месяц назад +2

      > So "ye" is pronounced "the"!
      Except, thorn is the unvoiced version of eth (ð|Ð), and the "th" in the definite article for all native speakers of modern English is voiced.
      But yeah in printing terms, you are correct y == þ. Aaand eth and thorn were somewhat interchangeable.
      And with all things English… it's a mess! A beautiful, wonderful splashpuddle of contradiction and weirdness.

  • @Binidj
    @Binidj Месяц назад +6

    Here in the UK we have a thing called "pick your own" where members of the public are allowed into fields to harvest the fruit themselves, with the containers being weighed once they were done. I imagine that, if you asked nicely, you could add some leaves to the haul.

    • @logiconlifesupport1899
      @logiconlifesupport1899 Месяц назад +3

      We have that here in Michigan too. You go in the fields and pick what you want and pay on the way out after weighing

    • @Manachtron
      @Manachtron 15 дней назад +1

      We have it here in Germany as well!

    • @davinasquirrel7672
      @davinasquirrel7672 9 дней назад

      It used to be common in Australia about 50 years ago, but not very common now. Easy enough to grow your own.

    • @halo7oo
      @halo7oo 7 дней назад +2

      That's common for apples here in Wisconsin.

  • @liv97497
    @liv97497 Месяц назад +5

    When I was little, my aunt had a big patch of those little strawberries and they were my most favorite thing ever. They didn't grow a lot of strawberries, but it was so satisfying when they actually did! The way we had to wait for them to ripen, and then go looking for the reddest ones, and they were so little they went perfectly with the little kitchen playset. Such good memories!

  • @shemmo
    @shemmo Месяц назад +135

    wild strawberries are so intense in taste and flavour, but it takes a while to collect just 1 cup

    • @WasatchWind
      @WasatchWind Месяц назад +9

      Reminds me of huckleberries. Huckleberries make absolutely amazing ice cream and are great in pancakes, but it takes ages tromping through the forest to collect even a cup.

    • @youmukonpaku3168
      @youmukonpaku3168 Месяц назад +3

      makes me think of the wild grapes that grew in the corner of the Ontario backwoods I grew up in; tiny and hard to find many the birds hadn't eaten, but if you spent a day or two collecting a bucket of them, they beat the pants off any commercial grape for any purpose.

  • @ramonarjona4928
    @ramonarjona4928 Месяц назад +169

    English dude makes dillegrout for the English king, gets an estate and an income.
    French dude grows strawberries for the French king ... gets a new name.

    • @youmukonpaku3168
      @youmukonpaku3168 Месяц назад +17

      France was in one of those periods where the monarchy had spent all its money on gambling debts, lost wars, and failing colonial ventures, with which it alternated its periods of glory.

    • @thezootopiahusky
      @thezootopiahusky Месяц назад +19

      Brazilian finds new ingredients and makes a new recipe for the Brazilian president
      Gets taxed

    • @CreedK
      @CreedK Месяц назад +30

      King: “and thus henceforth, you shall be known a-“
      Dude: “but I like my last nam-“
      King: “-AND HENCEFORTH YOU SHALL BE CALLED MR STRAWBERRY! BECAUSE YOU ARE VERY GOOD AT STRAWBERRY!
      TAKE US FROM THIS PLACE MR CARRIAGE DRIVER (ancestor of Adam Driver)”

    • @MatthewTeachout-xj4yy
      @MatthewTeachout-xj4yy Месяц назад +2

      @@CreedKAwesome 😂

  • @xpyr
    @xpyr Месяц назад +3

    15:57 The look on Max's face, I could tell the taste was that good. It's like he could hardly wait to tell us how good it was.

  • @jasonweeks6318
    @jasonweeks6318 Месяц назад +6

    the look on maxs face says that tart will not live to see dawn

  • @lazarusrat6159
    @lazarusrat6159 Месяц назад +47

    I really enjoy that painting of "Charles the Simple"
    No one is happy and he looks like he's saying "IDK what you guys want from me. Kinging is hard, GOSH."

  • @Steven_Edwards
    @Steven_Edwards Месяц назад +52

    When Max's eyes go wide @16:08 and he says: "Y'all!"
    You know its going to be good.

    • @Steven_Edwards
      @Steven_Edwards Месяц назад +2

      I like the way he's talking about the crust @ 16:58 '...fine...' like get this crust away from my review of this Strawberry Tart filling.

  • @MsLeenite
    @MsLeenite Месяц назад +3

    I'm glad the tart tasted so good, Max, because it certainly looked beautiful!

  • @eb7713
    @eb7713 Месяц назад +5

    As a kid in school, i loved when the lunch ladies made strawberry Bavarian pie. Light and fluffy but not the same as Max's tart. Yum!!!
    As an organic gardener in Texas, a tip for growing strawberries is to plant them in hanging baskets to keep the snails away. Also, you can make the plants last for years by throwing them in a greenhouse during the winter, then feeding them a good organic food when you bring them out in the spring. There's nothing like a really fresh strawberry so plant as many as you have room for! 😊 🍓

  • @HeyNaniNani
    @HeyNaniNani Месяц назад +76

    How big your eyes got at that first bite was great. You don't have that "good shock" look on your face after one bite that often.

  • @notsonominal
    @notsonominal Месяц назад +57

    Litteral translation of strawberries is earth berries here as well, the wild ones are considered a weed - but weeds that bring bribes sometimes get to stay..

    • @0neDoomedSpaceMarine
      @0neDoomedSpaceMarine Месяц назад +1

      Oh how I wish that my lawn was overgrown with wild strawberries instead of dandelions.

    • @VeretenoVids
      @VeretenoVids Месяц назад +2

      @@0neDoomedSpaceMarine Dandelions are great sautéed with onion and garlic and then baked with eggs and cheese. Each spring I make at least one dandelion fritatta with what I collect from my yard. (That said, if you don't care for bitter greens, probably better pass.)

    • @dinlupus3196
      @dinlupus3196 Месяц назад +1

      @@VeretenoVids and Dandelions leaves make a great tea that helps with anxiety, its something I learned in my botanic class in college

  • @chloevulpone
    @chloevulpone Месяц назад +1

    I absolutely love your videos!! You've really inspired me to get back into cooking. I was wondering if you would do a video on Horn and Hardart's Automat soon? It's such an underrated piece of history

  • @America_Yea
    @America_Yea Месяц назад +2

    If there is one thing I've learned from historical cooking it's that tudor dishes never fail to impress in one way or another.

  • @dianakuakowska1986
    @dianakuakowska1986 Месяц назад +72

    In Polish the small strawberries are called 'poziomki' and the name actually reflects their horizontal (horizontal = poziomy) nature. The 'regular' strawberries are on the other hand called 'truskawki' which derives from a word 'trzask' meaning 'to crack'. Apparently the fragility of these plants had to be so irritating (or maybe uncommon when compared to other types od berries?) for Polish people that they ignored the more obvious features of strawberries like growing them under banches of straw that other nations decided to conserve in their languages.

    • @Cassiopeia7o7
      @Cassiopeia7o7 Месяц назад +3

      Also, poziomki have more complex and much more distinct flavour than strawberries. It's like the difference between jagoda and borówka.

  • @erzsebetkovacs2527
    @erzsebetkovacs2527 Месяц назад +21

    Those Versailles kitchen gardens of the king are still a thing of wonder, seriously. De La Quintinie had created a system of walled gardens, where the walls would shelter the plants from the cold, thus providing different growing climates for different plants and making an early harvest of ripe fruits possible. He had also invented the method of fastening the branches of fruit trees on these walls, which might look torture for the trees, but actually makes them live longer and bear ripe fruit earlier. All this was spurred on by the vogue in court for fresh fruit and vegetable such as green peas.

    • @toosiyabrandt8676
      @toosiyabrandt8676 21 день назад

      Hi
      Walled fruit trees are called ‘ Espallier’!

  • @jonathon9407
    @jonathon9407 Месяц назад +2

    Pretty awesome to see how far you’ve come since deciding to leave Disney and start your channel, you did it Max, well done sir!

  • @joshuarogers9001
    @joshuarogers9001 12 дней назад

    The way you said soggy bottom made "I am a man of constant sorrow" start playing in my head.

  • @darthplagueis13
    @darthplagueis13 Месяц назад +41

    Wild strawberries are actually amazingly easy to grow if your home climate isn't too extreme.
    Years ago, we picked up a wild strawberry plant on a walk in the woods and planted it on a sunny hillside in our garden. Within just a year or two it had basically completely taken over that hillside and we ended up needing to contain the spread of strawberries.
    Because the thing is, they don't just propagate through blossoms, fruits and seeds like most plants, but they also form stolons/runners, which is a lot quicker.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Месяц назад +1

      I wish ours would do that, but they just don't want to come out from under the shade. On second, thought, this probably is good ;)

    • @tsugima6317
      @tsugima6317 Месяц назад

      My mother used to grow strawberries to sell to the grocery store when I was young. The runners grew strawberries much like the wild ones. We would pick the big ones to sell, but the little, sweet, dark red ones were all ours!

  • @reay1864
    @reay1864 Месяц назад +132

    theres tons of wild strawberries near my grandparents house and i used to eat so many every summer when i was a kid. theyre better than farmed strawberries imo but theyre way harder to find enough of!

    • @bethroney6718
      @bethroney6718 Месяц назад +1

      I have them growing in my yard. I left them for the birds. I'm going to try them

  • @thinking_toomuch
    @thinking_toomuch Месяц назад +2

    Fun fact: Cows don't like to eat wild strawberry plants(they taste bad) so they grow in abundance in traditional grazing areas, as the cows eat all the other competing plants.

  • @BigglesAboutTown
    @BigglesAboutTown 27 дней назад +1

    In French we call the small ones that still grow wild “Fraises des bois” (strawberries from the woods)

  • @friendlyfrankenstein
    @friendlyfrankenstein Месяц назад +94

    "hm what am i going to watch while I study before bed", I think, absently refreshing youtube. Well well. Strabwerrry History...

  • @TrailRat2000
    @TrailRat2000 Месяц назад +24

    The bakery, where I did my work experience in the 90s, used to make these in summer. They called them Wimbledon Tarts, because strawberries , Wimbledon and summer is a thing here in the UK.
    I can swear this is exactly how they made them. I remember the job of pulping and straining a whole lot of strawberries. Then you'd take any stale bread from the previous day and turn it into crumb.
    Always got given one, during the two weeks I was there, with my lunch. That's brought on a whole bunch of sensory memories.
    Might have to throw together a few of these again. We made them small, about the size of a saucer.

  • @junglekiity
    @junglekiity Месяц назад +1

    Our childhood backyard was full of mock strawberries. The betrayal of trying them and have them taste like absolutely nothing.

  • @jennyskeen3826
    @jennyskeen3826 Месяц назад +3

    Hello gentlemen; I love how your eyes turned as big as saucers when the taste hit your taste buds Max, hopefully Jose had the same reaction??

  • @ernstschmidt4725
    @ernstschmidt4725 Месяц назад +75

    Chile mentioned,
    always knew that modern strawberries were a crossbreed from the mapuche Freson kelleñ
    but i didn't knew they initially couldn't grow them in europe due only bringing females by accident.

  • @susanrybak7192
    @susanrybak7192 Месяц назад +35

    Wild strawberries taste so much better than cultivated ones. I picked wild blueberries as a child as did my children. We all pick and eat wild berries when we find them on our dog walks and runs.

  • @Freakyjohnsson1
    @Freakyjohnsson1 20 дней назад

    I like how you talk about wild strawberries like it's something old and forgotten, but it's super common in Sweden to go out and pick berries, wild strawberries included.

  • @jamesrestel
    @jamesrestel Месяц назад +1

    I made this today - very easy recipe to follow and the results were perfect. My cooking fan club gave it the highest compliment, they wanted more!

  • @josephlucatorto4772
    @josephlucatorto4772 Месяц назад +39

    I have made strawberry syrup from just strawberry juice and sugar, and it is really amazing how flavorful that concentrated strawberry is. People treat the flavor of strawberry candy like its completely artificial, but it can be made like this

    • @Moonpearl121
      @Moonpearl121 Месяц назад +1

      Me too - very nice in cocktails or to make a sorbet.

  • @cingkrimson_requiem
    @cingkrimson_requiem Месяц назад +136

    I hate biting into a strawberry that's actually really sour

    • @TastingHistory
      @TastingHistory  Месяц назад +46

      And it so often happens

    • @commodorenostrils
      @commodorenostrils Месяц назад +1

      I like Santa

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Месяц назад +5

      Sour is kinda my thing, I hate biting into one that’s soft and sweet

    • @howardsternssmicrophone9332
      @howardsternssmicrophone9332 Месяц назад +12

      I've noticed that a lot of the time, it's the really big strawberries that don't have that great of a flavor. I saw a strawberry one time that was about the size of an egg or a little bigger. I thought it would be really good, but it was just kind of tart, and flavorless.

    • @kanesmith8271
      @kanesmith8271 Месяц назад +6

      Life is like a strawberry, you never know what you’re gonna get 😂

  • @johnatyoutube
    @johnatyoutube 11 дней назад

    I love your channel! It's so unique, fun, and educational. This makes me think about paintings of fruit and vegetables from medieval times and the Renaissance that show us what they looked like hundreds of years ago. They were SO different than what we have now.
    Plants have been crossbred and cultivated for generations to be consumed by people rather than the animals that the plants originally developed a symbiosis with. It's fantastic to look at how we've evolved plants for our use.
    And this was your most wonderful video - not just the historic information, but your sheer joy in tasting a delicious long lost dish. And your pie was beautiful as well! I bet it will make a comeback due to you. Bravo!!!

  • @AshtonBlaze
    @AshtonBlaze Месяц назад +1

    My garden has a lot of wild strawberries in it. They grow up between the paving slabs around the pond. And yeah they're extra sweet and also very fragrant. A strawberry smelling patio is quite nice.

  • @Vanda-il9ul
    @Vanda-il9ul Месяц назад +20

    Yup, picking wild mushrooms, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, blueberries, ... was /is still a part of childhood of lucky ones here in Slovakia. (Lucky ones means, the ones who have grandparents/relatives in the countryside where they can go picking those things. And are motivated to do so, because being glued to screen is just more appealling 😂).

  • @heidim7732
    @heidim7732 Месяц назад +40

    I have picked wild strawberries, and the jam I made was sublime... but that was a special-occasion jam. Extended rain at the critical time has spoiled my harvest these past 2 years, I hope that I will have better luck next year.

  • @ArlettyAbady
    @ArlettyAbady Месяц назад

    The look on Max's face as he savours the 1st bite ! Am so excited to try this recipe, Like Charles V, I too have a penchant for the fruit.

  • @sugarfalls1
    @sugarfalls1 26 дней назад

    Max, just discovered your channel, and I just want to say, I love your enthusiasm and how you immerse yourself in the languages you're speaking and really delve so deeply into this, not just making a strawberry tarte but really a whole extremely interesting history lesson! I was riveted to watching your video! Nicely done!

  • @JeevasJerico13
    @JeevasJerico13 Месяц назад +21

    I'm from Quebec, the french province of Canada, and I wanted to mention that your pronunciation is excellent! Cheers from La Belle Province ❤

  • @aksbs3700
    @aksbs3700 Месяц назад +22

    11:14 Thank you for being one of the few that properly say Chile instead of Chilly or Chíle.

  • @hbrunet72
    @hbrunet72 6 дней назад

    Your eyes when you first tasted it! Priceless!! I look forward to making this for the family. ❤❤

  • @bisharrykatz59
    @bisharrykatz59 2 дня назад

    Will definitely make! No need to blind bake. Just preheat oven with an upside down sheet pan and bake the pie/tart on it. No soggy bottoms. Tip is from Cathy Barrow.

  • @Sleipmon
    @Sleipmon Месяц назад +21

    My mother planted strawberries in our garden because we all love them. Turns out our dogs also love strawberries as they'd always check the plant on the way by to snaffle any ripe berry. We rarely got strawberries from that plant.

    • @AdDewaard-hu3xk
      @AdDewaard-hu3xk Месяц назад +1

      Oh dear.

    • @KayPrescesky
      @KayPrescesky Месяц назад +1

      Dammit, that sounds like my labradoodle mix. Sorry about that. /l

    • @tsugima6317
      @tsugima6317 Месяц назад +1

      Had to laugh at this one.... the neighbor whose garden backed up to ours had 8-10 feet tall fences and when I asked why he said his husky would eat his garden. He tongued off all the raspberries, dug up all the carrots 🥕 and stole the tomatoes! Out of pity I'd throw him the bird pecked tomatoes from my garden and he always looked for me to visit my garden.

  • @Thrillhou
    @Thrillhou Месяц назад +31

    15:45 that face of surprise and excitement when Max takes that first bite, and he waits and contemplates...
    He's always so professional and poised, and for whatever reason i was expecting him to just drop a bleeped F-Bomb like
    "Yo, that's f****** good."

  • @batt3ryac1d
    @batt3ryac1d Месяц назад

    The breadcrumbs in a tart is surprisingly good i really like the tecture it brings to treacle tart too.

  • @everythingknife8763
    @everythingknife8763 Месяц назад +1

    At the end, those eyes and simply "Y'all" told me everything I needed to know.

  • @peabody1976
    @peabody1976 Месяц назад +90

    Even now, strawberries are still viewed as royal, at least in Belgium: the king is gifted with the first strawberries of the year.
    And summers are the best time for strawberry lemonade! The tart looks amazing!

    • @bobdole8830
      @bobdole8830 Месяц назад +1

      You guys can't even pick a language OR a Parlament mate! ;)

    • @_FMK
      @_FMK Месяц назад +4

      Strawberry lemonade sounds delicious ❤

    • @L.E.C.S_85
      @L.E.C.S_85 Месяц назад +5

      Same in Sweden😅. The royal family gets the first batch of strawberrys of the season👍

    • @daphne8406
      @daphne8406 Месяц назад +2

      My Dutch grandmother used to call, strawberries “zomer koninkjes” meaning summer kings ☺️

    • @malloryoates8580
      @malloryoates8580 Месяц назад +2

      strawberry lemonade and sorbet 😍

  • @anastasiyaivanova4665
    @anastasiyaivanova4665 Месяц назад +24

    I was today years old when I learned that what I had always considered to be two distinct berries (because in my native language they have different names) are the same berry but one is wild and one is cultivated. Thank you, English language, and thank you, Max.

  • @AutumnSun140
    @AutumnSun140 Месяц назад +1

    I love the small strawberries, which we in Denmark call skovjordbær (forest earthberries). I found them all the time when I lived in Norway and went on hikes. And I always wanted them in my yard when I got a house. Luck would have it that the yard of the house we bought last year, was already full of them! It was truly meant to be! ❤️🍓

  • @escapetherace1943
    @escapetherace1943 Месяц назад +1

    His reaction is priceless, lol. So many of those old European dessert recipes are mindblowingly good, and yet somehow so simple

  • @carolmelancon
    @carolmelancon Месяц назад +13

    Your expression at 16:00 was such a perfect "Holy Sh*t, that's fantastic" face that I wasn't surprised when you said it may be the best thing you've ever made. Excellent endorsement! I'm certainly going to try it now.

  • @CrussaderGrarl
    @CrussaderGrarl Месяц назад +33

    for the safron thers a german folksong called "Backe Backe Kuchen" in it its a verse "Safran macht den Kuchen Gael" = Safron makes cake yellow ^^

  • @earthcitty
    @earthcitty 27 дней назад

    This is why I come back so often. I love the kind of history and the way Max teaches history in such an engaging way. As always, well done.
    If you ever have the ability to make something from the Suffragist Cookbook called "Vermont Pumpkin Pie" it would be amazing.

  • @kathlene1111
    @kathlene1111 24 дня назад

    I have large areas covered in wild strawberries. I let them cover my flower gardens. They feed the bees in spring with their flowers the birds in the summer, they keep weeds down, turn a lovey red in the fall. And they are delicious for morning breakfast in cereal, oatmeal pancakes.

  • @plutus2559
    @plutus2559 Месяц назад +30

    You don't need lots of land just to get a taste of wild strawberries. It's easy to grow them in pots on a balcony or terrace.

    • @vbrown6445
      @vbrown6445 Месяц назад +14

      Unless it's repeatedly over 100F, as Max's poor potted strawberries have experienced.

    • @mwater_moon2865
      @mwater_moon2865 Месяц назад +6

      That might work in the northern US, but that will not work in SoCal. In Mexico (where most imported strawberries, ie winter/spring berries are grown) they have green houses that have to be actively cooled in the summer to keep the plants alive. In Mississippi my mom's plants produced a few berries into June, but they are more of a May harvest.

    • @Amy_the_Lizard
      @Amy_the_Lizard Месяц назад

      I wouldn't say easy - I've been trying since March and all I've got to show for it is a single sprout a quarter inch tall, and some moldy dirt

  • @napoleonfeanor
    @napoleonfeanor Месяц назад +13

    I'd love to try this one.
    Here in Germany, many farmers allow you to pick the strawberries yourself for money so you can also take leaves

  • @HariOmRadhaKrishna
    @HariOmRadhaKrishna 22 дня назад +1

    We grew wild strawberries this year, in hanging baskets. Trying the recipe today.

  • @GlennInman
    @GlennInman Месяц назад +18

    Sir,
    I have been a contributor of yours for a bit.
    I find you show awesome, and I love the history.
    Thank you, and I appreciate your openness.

    Thank you Sir,
    Glenn

  • @hannahbrown2728
    @hannahbrown2728 Месяц назад +32

    On Tuesdays we watch Max.

  • @exidy-yt
    @exidy-yt Месяц назад

    I used to pick wild strawberries in the woods by the park as a little kid. There were never all that many around but that made the ones I found that much more delicious. As Max said, they are smaller and much sweeter/more fragrant then the store-bought ones. That smell is to die for, I can smell it right now just remembering. Great video triggering a trip down memory lane!

  • @4thejoyofit233
    @4thejoyofit233 Месяц назад +1

    I'm Canadian and my childhood and my children's has been spent grazing meadows for these delicious tiny strawberries. Eaten next to the flavourful small ones the Store bought taste like water. Delicious treat and such fun memories ❤🍓❤

  • @KetchupwithMaxandJose
    @KetchupwithMaxandJose Месяц назад +19

    Can confirm this is a must try for strawberry lovers 🍓

    • @aerocarnie
      @aerocarnie 28 дней назад

      Ha ha, after the look on Max's face after the first bite, my first thought was "I hope he shared!"