TOAST is no bread. Toasted ready and tasty but every bread is allready ready from the oven. My mother taught me that even white bread is somewhat like cake because of the dough. Dark, nutritious, and filling is bread. Sweet, white, and cloying is cake. So, toast is more like cake to me. btw: I LOVE CAKE! And i am shure there are a lot of german mothers who think exactly the same. 1:04 Yeah, it's absolutely true that the majority of Germans prefer their beer chilled, typically around 5-7°C or 41-44.6°F. It doesn't matter what style of beer! It's a national habit, and no one knows where it comes from or the real answer to this, but everyone would swear by their own solution. This is so common that even I used once to be like that. I know what I'm talking about. Today, I enjoy my beer at what we Germans call 'warm,' which is no joke, at just 15°C. Drinking beer from a glass is not that unusual, but Germans are known for their practicality, so every process should be as direct and efficient as possible. 2:29 they bumped into each other because they where looking in opposite directions while on the same path onto another. No? Did i missed something? 8:31 ohhhh! YEAHHHHHHHHHHH! this is german classic fastfood. Every time you get a "Wurst im Brötchen" you will be asked: "Senf oder Ketchup?" (Mustard or Ketchup?) I prefer Senf. By the way: In order to counteract the extinction of the diversity of German bread, the national UNESCO commission included German bread culture in the nationwide list of intangible cultural heritage in 2014, thereby declaring it a UNESCO World Heritage.
well Germany has, coffee, bread and beer culture. Tea is not... our forte. So the regular mass produced tea is more like aroma dipped into hot water 😉. Black tea plus milk is not uncommon, though.
The sausage in a bun at the end is typical german street food. The sausage would be grilled and served with mustard or ketchup.
Interesting! Thank you for the comment 💜
TOAST is no bread. Toasted ready and tasty but every bread is allready ready from the oven.
My mother taught me that even white bread is somewhat like cake because of the dough. Dark, nutritious, and filling is bread. Sweet, white, and cloying is cake. So, toast is more like cake to me. btw: I LOVE CAKE! And i am shure there are a lot of german mothers who think exactly the same.
1:04 Yeah, it's absolutely true that the majority of Germans prefer their beer chilled, typically around 5-7°C or 41-44.6°F. It doesn't matter what style of beer! It's a national habit, and no one knows where it comes from or the real answer to this, but everyone would swear by their own solution. This is so common that even I used once to be like that. I know what I'm talking about. Today, I enjoy my beer at what we Germans call 'warm,' which is no joke, at just 15°C. Drinking beer from a glass is not that unusual, but Germans are known for their practicality, so every process should be as direct and efficient as possible.
2:29 they bumped into each other because they where looking in opposite directions while on the same path onto another. No? Did i missed something?
8:31 ohhhh! YEAHHHHHHHHHHH! this is german classic fastfood. Every time you get a "Wurst im Brötchen" you will be asked: "Senf oder Ketchup?" (Mustard or Ketchup?) I prefer Senf.
By the way: In order to counteract the extinction of the diversity of German bread, the national UNESCO commission included German bread culture in the nationwide list of intangible cultural heritage in 2014, thereby declaring it a UNESCO World Heritage.
Wow! Thank you thank you for reaching me 💃🏻💃🏻 I learnt so much from this comment
@@AfricanGirlreacts DANKESEHR FÜR DAS HERZ! Auch ein Herz für dich. 💖 Dir und deinem Vater herzliche Grüße. Fühlt euch beide geherzt/umarmt.
Exactly
It's of course satire but at the same time about right :D very true with the bread and the tea. Love from germany
well Germany has, coffee, bread and beer culture.
Tea is not... our forte. So the regular mass produced tea is more like aroma dipped into hot water 😉.
Black tea plus milk is not uncommon, though.