4:10 I can't believe after 59 years I have realized where the word stores come from, like grocery stores,clothing stores, furniture stores, any stores. An old dog can learn something new every day! Thank you Real Royalty!
This reminds me of the cabinet pudding my grandma used to make: she used old bread, raisins and the egg milk mix. Then the pudding was filled in a special pudding mold (which I still have today) and steamed in hot water. The pudding was popped out and served with a zabaion made of white wine and egg whites. For children the zabaion was replaced by vanilla custard. Yummy...
I know I am late to the game finding the series but so happy that I did and I do have to say this one I find to be my favorite only because the laughter the playfulness the camaraderie was so genuine and authentic and a much more relaxed atmosphere than some of the others and I find I enjoyed it above all the the rest because of it! Bravo!!!
Yeah, it almost sounds a bit stereotypical, but in a very uplifting way given this show was meant to appeal to all ages. They do almost sound like cartoon characters, but that's what makes the show so charming and makes us really genuinely curious about Victoria. It reminds me a lot of when I was a child and story readers and plays would be done in goofy exaggerated voices to keep us captivated. The style may have gone out of favor sadly as we enter the "stoic era" but that's kind of why it feels so nostalgic.
Erin Norquist this series has been so fun to binge watch! I’ve been pretend vacationing with them, all the joy of travel, none of the fuss of packing and unpacking. I’m having so much fun with all the history and the dishes.
It’s amazing how some of these dishes are very inexpensive to get the ingredients. The only issue is that many are/were very labor intensive to put together. Aspic for instance was replaced by powdered gelatin decades ago and made jello from a high end dish to something institutions can serve.
I found this series, quite by accident, and I'm SO glad I did. I LOVE Tim & Rosemary. This series is FANTASTIC !!! They sure did eat vast amounts of meat & game. I, myself, very rarely eat meat & I know some folks will laugh at me, but I CANNOT stand the thought of hurting an innocent animal. Please, people, do not write me ONLY to laugh & poke fun. I've been this way ALL my life. I would really love to see one on vegetables !!
BootsNsaddle there was a video on pastry that had asparagus in it. Naturally I can’t find it now. I understand your point of view and don’t disrespect your decision. Everyone deserves to live happily as long as you don’t harm other people. Have a lovely day you fantastic human. Love from America from a not crazy person. 😉
@@mza2195 ""Asparagus in a pastry", Now, that sounds FANTASTIC !! I, also am in America. Texas, to be exact. I don't think we are at the hub of exotic cooking, LOL. My weakness is pastries, NOT anything sweet, but something with a bit of a crust. Another one of my idiocracies(?), I suppose. No meats & no sweets. I've just never had a craving for sweets, except a "Butterfinger", maybe 3 or 3 times a yr.
BootsNsaddle I have quite a few friends in Texas! I’m in California and while some people are all about creative food I’m a pretty simple girl. Except for Korean food, my Korean half will go happily feral for my comfort food. My husband and kids look at me funny when I do my “happy food dance”, but I don’t care. Lol. I used to love sweets, but I just lost the taste for it. Better for my butt! A butterfinger sounds good though.
@@mza2195 "Feral"? Only 'feral'?? Why.......I go absolutely rabid over anything within a 'pastry' or a noodle or a dumpling. Chicken pot pie? Keep the chicken, and hand that crust, right into my little fat paw, LOL. Did you say 'noodles'? The large, wide, buttery kind ??....in a sauce ?.......browned in the oven, with a slight crust ?? Then, you best hand them over....the ENTIRE pot of noodles, if you please. Mz A, some folks rob banks or jewelry stores. Me? just give me those damn noodles or whatever you're baking that has a crust. WOW, one of my best friends was from Korea, her name was Cho.
Love these episodes.....I would like to know how many of the dishes had to be made to accommodate so many people. For instance...how many of these puddings were made for a typical dinner with guests.
@ Margaret Palmer ......... I also am of that mind. I would like to know WHEN & HOW such preparations were started, how many folks were needed, what their schedules were like. Though I'm quite certain these folks most likely worked 24/7 or most certainly, 18/6 or even less.
I am going to play the pudding part of the video and write down the recipe with the measurements that were given. I believe the correct amount of every ingredient is spoken out loud in this part. For the sauce though, I think I will have to guess at the amounts for the ingredients that were mentioned. I look forward to trying this recipe.
@@jeanninegodwin2285 Yes, your right. The ingredients for the steamed pudding are said out loud. How long to steam.... the sauce too? Good Luck 🍀 Love Rosemary and these videos.
I was half expecting her to say the f word, the 3 letter one that also means "exhausted" in old english but have a very...very offensive meaning today. XD Though I love how that's ALL she had to say about the house. XD Blessed.
There may have been a lot of alcohol put into that sauce, but by the time it was done cooking, it would have all evaporated off. The actual sauce, as served, would have had only a tiny trace of alcohol left. So while it would have tasted of the booze, it wouldn't have had any of the kick.
This was one of the best episodes of this series. I loved the hilarious anecdotes and the "sauce" on the pudding, which was nothing more than a mixed drink. I wonder if alcohol based sauces are where calling liquor "sauce" came from or the sayings "lay off the sauce" or getting "sauced."
17:10 that's fascinating that they did the whole 3D painting effect back then too! Or maybe I'm just noticing that now and they always did something like this to that effect at that point in time 🤷.
That's a very misleading joke, for "real" as "royal" is an adjective and "real" as referring to reality is a noun. Also: the translation for royalty is "realeza", and for reality is "realidade".
@@JeSuisAsra, you are right. I was thinkink about it after I wrote this, and these questions came to light. So, the 'joke' worked in my head once, but is not a usable joke.
Just a plain bread pudding with rum sauce is our standard 'leftover' dessert. It's so cheap and easy and we use every heel from loaves of bread or crusty left over Italian or baguette loaves. We just tuck them in the freezer until there's enough for a pan, we grab a box of raisins from solar general and a cheap bottle of rum, some staple ingredients most kitchens have already and YUMMY night cap!
Yeah, though even I'd imagine back then, you had a reason to show off all this land and wealth when hosting but today, doing that would just make the hosts look pretentious. Like I feel the last thing I'd want when visiting a particular person is a bunch of brownnosers who had thier hand in wall street acting like they deserve some of my time too cause they have an entire bank vault dedicated to them. Like imagine inviting Prince Harry to hang out and then Elon Musk shows up and absolutely destroys the mood.....
Lovely story about the purpose build driveway, but I wonder if they might have mixed up the two entrances, because the still existing meandering road is the one that leads to Cambridge more directly, and is also the one that is named 'Victoria Drive' on maps.
Finally, allowing us simple Bourgeois ppl a glimpse into royalty ...but the understanding that they still had archaic needs, eating, illness, wants and desires,appetites, favors, and cheating spouses...but really that stripped down of their crown and jewels 💎, they were humans first! They were born, they lived, and they died. Death is the gr8 equalizer. It comes to us all!
As a matter of fact, a LOT of us today live FAR better than even the royals of Victoria's time. things like central heating and decent meals were considered luxury then, but are pantry staples and expected in even the cheapest of homes today. I like to imagine what it'd be like if a Royal from the past (or any major figure) was alive today and saw first hand how much things have changed, and maybe even if they'd have changed thier minds on some things. But we do have Harry, the closest in line to being King (6th behind Charles and William, and Will's children, both of which had priority over Harry) literally "quitting" being a Royal so he can live in peace with his wife and kids in the US. So if anything, the royal joined US!
Probably more than we think but less than they should have. They spent a lot of time doing "house cleaning" especially in their kitchens (at least the well off) so it follows that the cooks would wash their hands while working in there, just maybe not as often as we would.
Unless it’s regular ol’ Jello, I can’t deal with food that jiggles. Makes my stomach flip over. Blame my aunt. My uncle was an engineer, so we had to have every new gadget/technology which came on the market ASAP. We had one of the first commercial microwaves back in the 1970s - huge, scary thing. We lived on the coast of Lake Michigan, thus had a lot of Chinook Salmon & Lake Trout in the freezer at all times. They’re big, fatty fish, sometimes up to 50-60 lbs. When we got the microwave, the first thing my aunt did was put a fresh filet on a paper plate & nuke it. Do you know what happens to a thick chunk of fatty fish when that happens? It becomes a hot, JIGGLY mound of steaming, stinky fish. That was decades ago, and I’m getting nauseous just thinking about it. 🤢
WindWoman 3 what a waste of fish. Microwave fish sounds disgusting by the way, I’m sorry you had to see and smell that. I’m nauseous thinking about it.
The name of that dessert implies that it's normal to go through so much cake and cookies that you always have a leftover to throw into a bowl to make a pudding out of.
When i worked in restaurant ,we baked lot of cakes ,vanilla, chokolate etc on the paper lined oven trays, used cutting rings for what size we needed, always leftover bits for puddings and crumbs and so.
@@wareforcoin5780 That's because it was normal for a large house. The kitchens of mansions and the like were ran almost exactly like a restaurant, so MrPH30 was spot-on. Regarding cabinet pudding itself: this is just a gussied-up version of it. Stale bread, old cake, scraps, etc... were more typical. Cabinet pudding was a frugal dish for the poor and rich alike. Waste not, want not.
@@aprilbennett4161 I'm commenting on the scale of food consumption of a single household. I get that rich people do rich stuff. The dish puts into perspective how much cake rich Victorians went through, is my point.
The kitchens and all around the house made food and items of all kinds for the large farm which the grand house was part of also, and many people there each day of staff and visitors ,so it probably went baking a lot all day,and lot of leftovers ,day old bread ,sponges and lot more.
Is Tim ok? Normally he is more happy happy joy joy when he sees a dish served upon him. Or was he genuinely disgusted? Even Rosemary had a momentary look of concern flashed over her face.
Queen Victoria guuuuuurl you were like the Victoria and David Beckham of your age so of course everybody wanted to get a glimpse at you two. I would have been in front row trying to peak you two.
I disagree. I'll bet that pudding's delicious. Crumbled cakes and cookies, butter, dried fruit, baked in custard, and served with an alcohol-based fruity syrup - what's not to like?
He likes to scold her to not be so naughty her mission to make him shine .Oh no he loved her both had different way of expressing. That's the beauty of the Jesus match.
Were people toothless back in the day where they couldn't eat anything that isn't slimy? So far I've seen gelatinous and mushy textured dishes, nasty! If that's royal food they can have it. Pass me a plate of grilled crispy fish and veggies - something you can actually eat, not slurp, lol 😆
4:10 I can't believe after 59 years I have realized where the word stores come from, like grocery stores,clothing stores, furniture stores, any stores. An old dog can learn something new every day! Thank you Real Royalty!
Well it stands for storage i suppose
@@tarua3076
renew
replenish
replace
restore
restaurant
restroom
rest stop
restock
recharge
revamp
revive
revitalize
reinvigorate
resurrect
resuscitate
rejuvenate
regenerate
renovate
redecorate
redo
refill
refuel
refresh
refurbish
refurnish
refinance
refine
rewind
rebind
rebuild
reboot
reborn
This reminds me of the cabinet pudding my grandma used to make: she used old bread, raisins and the egg milk mix. Then the pudding was filled in a special pudding mold (which I still have today) and steamed in hot water. The pudding was popped out and served with a zabaion made of white wine and egg whites. For children the zabaion was replaced by vanilla custard. Yummy...
8:28 I’m obsessed with this mans voice. He seems so genuine. I love him a lot and hope he’s doing well.
I know I am late to the game finding the series but so happy that I did and I do have to say this one I find to be my favorite only because the laughter the playfulness the camaraderie was so genuine and authentic and a much more relaxed atmosphere than some of the others and I find I enjoyed it above all the the rest because of it! Bravo!!!
I'm not a native Englisch speaker but i love how all of them speak with such lovely diction and with so much enthusiasm without rushing their lines
Yeah, it almost sounds a bit stereotypical, but in a very uplifting way given this show was meant to appeal to all ages. They do almost sound like cartoon characters, but that's what makes the show so charming and makes us really genuinely curious about Victoria. It reminds me a lot of when I was a child and story readers and plays would be done in goofy exaggerated voices to keep us captivated. The style may have gone out of favor sadly as we enter the "stoic era" but that's kind of why it feels so nostalgic.
I love Tim and Rosemary as a team they are a hoot!
Erin Norquist this series has been so fun to binge watch! I’ve been pretend vacationing with them, all the joy of travel, none of the fuss of packing and unpacking. I’m having so much fun with all the history and the dishes.
I am really enjoying this series
Me too
What a charismatic trio. Great pick
Agreed
tigerlily7100 Me too fascinating!
Myself as well
I literraly held my breath while Rosemary slowly pulled the budding mold haha
I look forward to watching these every Friday on the train, heading home from work!
In modern times. Even on minimum wage.common people can make and eat this royal food
It’s amazing how some of these dishes are very inexpensive to get the ingredients. The only issue is that many are/were very labor intensive to put together. Aspic for instance was replaced by powdered gelatin decades ago and made jello from a high end dish to something institutions can serve.
@@fjmj1980 remember when lobster went from being served in prison to being served in high-end restaurants
@A Part-time Astronaut now THAT I didn't know 😮! I heard before that a long time ago salmon was considered peasant food.
@@TheMeloettaful
A lot of classy dishes used to be paesant food.
@@hermescarraro3393 and white bread was only for the royalty while wheat bread was what the commonfolk ate. Oh how times have changed. XD
What a gorgeous house! Those ceilings! And when he was a young man Albert really was beautiful.
lol, try the palace of Versailes in France... after you saw that, no comment needed...
@@Arltratlo that doesnt make it less beautiful tho
@@방탄리사 lol, if you say so...
vanity is thought of as being petty and vulgar as it should be.
I found this series, quite by accident, and I'm SO glad I did. I LOVE Tim & Rosemary. This series is FANTASTIC !!! They sure did eat vast amounts of meat & game. I, myself, very rarely eat meat & I know some folks will laugh at me, but I CANNOT stand the thought of hurting an innocent animal. Please, people, do not write me ONLY to laugh & poke fun. I've been this way ALL my life. I would really love to see one on vegetables !!
BootsNsaddle there was a video on pastry that had asparagus in it. Naturally I can’t find it now. I understand your point of view and don’t disrespect your decision. Everyone deserves to live happily as long as you don’t harm other people. Have a lovely day you fantastic human. Love from America from a not crazy person. 😉
@@mza2195 ""Asparagus in a pastry", Now, that sounds FANTASTIC !! I, also am in America. Texas, to be exact. I don't think we are at the hub of exotic cooking, LOL. My weakness is pastries, NOT anything sweet, but something with a bit of a crust. Another one of my idiocracies(?), I suppose. No meats & no sweets. I've just never had a craving for sweets, except a "Butterfinger", maybe 3 or 3 times a yr.
BootsNsaddle I have quite a few friends in Texas! I’m in California and while some people are all about creative food I’m a pretty simple girl. Except for Korean food, my Korean half will go happily feral for my comfort food. My husband and kids look at me funny when I do my “happy food dance”, but I don’t care. Lol. I used to love sweets, but I just lost the taste for it. Better for my butt! A butterfinger sounds good though.
@@mza2195 "Feral"? Only 'feral'?? Why.......I go absolutely rabid over anything within a 'pastry' or a noodle or a dumpling. Chicken pot pie? Keep the chicken, and hand that crust, right into my little fat paw, LOL. Did you say 'noodles'? The large, wide, buttery kind ??....in a sauce ?.......browned in the oven, with a slight crust ?? Then, you best hand them over....the ENTIRE pot of noodles, if you please. Mz A, some folks rob banks or jewelry stores. Me? just give me those damn noodles or whatever you're baking that has a crust. WOW, one of my best friends was from Korea, her name was Cho.
@@mza2195 BTW, I lived in San Francisco for bout two yrs, long, long ago.
Love these episodes.....I would like to know how many of the dishes had to be made to accommodate so many people. For instance...how many of these puddings were made for a typical dinner with guests.
@ Margaret Palmer ......... I also am of that mind. I would like to know WHEN & HOW such preparations were started, how many folks were needed, what their schedules were like. Though I'm quite certain these folks most likely worked 24/7 or most certainly, 18/6 or even less.
All very interesting. Wish you would have posted the recipe for this wonderful looking steamed confection.
I am going to play the pudding part of the video and write down the recipe with the measurements that were given. I believe the correct amount of every ingredient is spoken out loud in this part. For the sauce though, I think I will have to guess at the amounts for the ingredients that were mentioned. I look forward to trying this recipe.
@@jeanninegodwin2285 Yes, your right. The ingredients for the steamed pudding are said out loud. How long to steam.... the sauce too?
Good Luck 🍀
Love Rosemary and these videos.
So interesting! Really enjoyed the interviews, personal anecdotes and readings from the Queen's diary and servant's notes.
This episode was so much fun lol 😂 I really love this series
27:30 "I'm not sure the cook hasn't already been on the sauce"... made me chuckle!
Tim and Rosemary are just wonderful and quite funny!! Love their work!
>The old fashioned use of the term "I felt knocked up and somewhat tired"
Lmao
I was half expecting her to say the f word, the 3 letter one that also means "exhausted" in old english but have a very...very offensive meaning today. XD
Though I love how that's ALL she had to say about the house. XD Blessed.
There may have been a lot of alcohol put into that sauce, but by the time it was done cooking, it would have all evaporated off. The actual sauce, as served, would have had only a tiny trace of alcohol left. So while it would have tasted of the booze, it wouldn't have had any of the kick.
So true. Gushing about alcohol content in a properly cooked dish is green.
@@Maria-tm2eu She actually drank opium-spiked alcohol, she said it gave her a wonderful energetic feeling.
It's a joy to see them interact!
This was one of the best episodes of this series. I loved the hilarious anecdotes and the "sauce" on the pudding, which was nothing more than a mixed drink. I wonder if alcohol based sauces are where calling liquor "sauce" came from or the sayings "lay off the sauce" or getting "sauced."
I love that kind of sauce! I used to have a great recipe for rum sauce with butter, which really made the dessert more tasty
Haagen Dazs rum raisin ice cream is yummy!
17:10 that's fascinating that they did the whole 3D painting effect back then too! Or maybe I'm just noticing that now and they always did something like this to that effect at that point in time 🤷.
"Real" in portuguese, is "real", and "royal" is also "real".
So, "Real Royalty" looks like "Royal Royalty" or "Real Reality", wich is funny.
i prefer the french way of royals, headless are the best kings and queens...!
That's a very misleading joke, for "real" as "royal" is an adjective and "real" as referring to reality is a noun. Also: the translation for royalty is "realeza", and for reality is "realidade".
@@JeSuisAsra, you are right. I was thinkink about it after I wrote this, and these questions came to light.
So, the 'joke' worked in my head once, but is not a usable joke.
it's just like the english call it a brioche bun :-)) which in france would be a brioche brioche :-)))
@@olavwilhelm6843, some people say Mount Fujiyama, wich is "Mount Mount Fuji".
I've been binging this series for a few days now and it's worth it.
Same! Just randomly found it and the combination just hit right! Even telling my friends about it.
RUclips recommendations this time never disappointment me.
Quarantine hero
Thank you so much for posting! These videos are my vacation this year
Just a plain bread pudding with rum sauce is our standard 'leftover' dessert. It's so cheap and easy and we use every heel from loaves of bread or crusty left over Italian or baguette loaves. We just tuck them in the freezer until there's enough for a pan, we grab a box of raisins from solar general and a cheap bottle of rum, some staple ingredients most kitchens have already and YUMMY night cap!
I love this!! Hope more people see this!
So interesting to hear how the Royals went visiting at other castles. Much different than Royals today.
Yeah, though even I'd imagine back then, you had a reason to show off all this land and wealth when hosting but today, doing that would just make the hosts look pretentious. Like I feel the last thing I'd want when visiting a particular person is a bunch of brownnosers who had thier hand in wall street acting like they deserve some of my time too cause they have an entire bank vault dedicated to them. Like imagine inviting Prince Harry to hang out and then Elon Musk shows up and absolutely destroys the mood.....
Thank you, I love watching your videos!
These wonderful, video(s) are a lot of fun, food, and history: I love it!🙂
Lovely story about the purpose build driveway, but I wonder if they might have mixed up the two entrances, because the still existing meandering road is the one that leads to Cambridge more directly, and is also the one that is named 'Victoria Drive' on maps.
They have really good voices for narrating.
Finally, allowing us simple Bourgeois ppl a glimpse into royalty ...but the understanding that they still had archaic needs, eating, illness, wants and desires,appetites, favors, and cheating spouses...but really that stripped down of their crown and jewels 💎, they were humans first! They were born, they lived, and they died. Death is the gr8 equalizer. It comes to us all!
As a matter of fact, a LOT of us today live FAR better than even the royals of Victoria's time. things like central heating and decent meals were considered luxury then, but are pantry staples and expected in even the cheapest of homes today. I like to imagine what it'd be like if a Royal from the past (or any major figure) was alive today and saw first hand how much things have changed, and maybe even if they'd have changed thier minds on some things. But we do have Harry, the closest in line to being King (6th behind Charles and William, and Will's children, both of which had priority over Harry) literally "quitting" being a Royal so he can live in peace with his wife and kids in the US. So if anything, the royal joined US!
Lovely series, a great deal of fun!!! Dentistry, in England, is still so sad...a welll-to-do gent, with teeth like a picket fence, sheeesh!
Absolutely fascinating!
Great upload. Cheers.
"praying for the pudding god"
SAUCE FOR THE SAUCE GOD
PUDDING FOR THE PUDDING THRONE
Where did they store the ice ? I always presumed underground, but how do you keep it from melting ?
Large blocks of ice, covered in sawdust and stored in large quantities in a cool dark shed will not melt away.
netram28 thank you
i love this series 😭
This is so good watching under lockdown
24:43 I wouldn't mind hearing the rest of that story, sounds like a good read
I adore Sir Ivan's voice!
I love this series!
LOVE these videos!!! :D Keep it up!!
I wonder if Victorian servants washed their hands very often.
They would be sanitized by the enormous amount of alcohol
That depends how much the servants despised their masters...
Probably more than we think but less than they should have. They spent a lot of time doing "house cleaning" especially in their kitchens (at least the well off) so it follows that the cooks would wash their hands while working in there, just maybe not as often as we would.
If you read Elizabeth Beetons book, you will find that she is very keen on cleanliness.
@@WhiteDragon689 Especially the one who handled the chamber pot. XD
Unless it’s regular ol’ Jello, I can’t deal with food that jiggles. Makes my stomach flip over. Blame my aunt. My uncle was an engineer, so we had to have every new gadget/technology which came on the market ASAP. We had one of the first commercial microwaves back in the 1970s - huge, scary thing. We lived on the coast of Lake Michigan, thus had a lot of Chinook Salmon & Lake Trout in the freezer at all times. They’re big, fatty fish, sometimes up to 50-60 lbs. When we got the microwave, the first thing my aunt did was put a fresh filet on a paper plate & nuke it. Do you know what happens to a thick chunk of fatty fish when that happens? It becomes a hot, JIGGLY mound of steaming, stinky fish. That was decades ago, and I’m getting nauseous just thinking about it. 🤢
WindWoman 3 what a waste of fish. Microwave fish sounds disgusting by the way, I’m sorry you had to see and smell that. I’m nauseous thinking about it.
I wish they would post the recipes.
Shishoushou that would be amazing!
I really enjoyed the video. Great for Giggles and Information.
"...and she had been on the throne for six years."
Wow, I'll bet her back sure hurt!
Legs fell asleep around year 2. Donut arse by year 4🤣🤣
The name of that dessert implies that it's normal to go through so much cake and cookies that you always have a leftover to throw into a bowl to make a pudding out of.
When i worked in restaurant ,we baked lot of cakes ,vanilla, chokolate etc on the paper lined oven trays, used cutting rings for what size we needed, always leftover bits for puddings and crumbs and so.
@@MrPh30 Yeah, but this was served at someone's house.
@@wareforcoin5780 That's because it was normal for a large house. The kitchens of mansions and the like were ran almost exactly like a restaurant, so MrPH30 was spot-on.
Regarding cabinet pudding itself: this is just a gussied-up version of it. Stale bread, old cake, scraps, etc... were more typical. Cabinet pudding was a frugal dish for the poor and rich alike. Waste not, want not.
@@aprilbennett4161 I'm commenting on the scale of food consumption of a single household. I get that rich people do rich stuff. The dish puts into perspective how much cake rich Victorians went through, is my point.
The kitchens and all around the house made food and items of all kinds for the large farm which the grand house was part of also, and many people there each day of staff and visitors ,so it probably went baking a lot all day,and lot of leftovers ,day old bread ,sponges and lot more.
Love the house and the food!!!
Best episode yet!
SO funny when they are tasting the pudding!
Best binge watching ever
Excellent
OMG!!! I’m droooooooling!
Fabulous!
I love when Rosemary says No hanky panky. It always makes me smile
I like the books I could be there all day LMAO
Wonderful
With all due respect to the presenters....but somehow i would like to see Carson and Mrs Pattmore doing this.
Is Tim ok? Normally he is more happy happy joy joy when he sees a dish served upon him. Or was he genuinely disgusted? Even Rosemary had a momentary look of concern flashed over her face.
Huh? He looked overjoyed if you ask me.
She felt knocked up🤣
She probably was...😂
Poor Calladan! I hope he enjoyed the dance.
So it’s like bread pudding?
a bit
My Family and I we ❤ the UK 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
That pudding looks scrumptious!
Aggressively British 😂. I love it
So it’s bread pudding. I love it and I love custard. I bet that is delicious.
I was really expecting a tour of the library and they didn't.
At the end of the series, they should tie the knot. They make a lovely couple. Cheers! Can I have some of that pudding?
Do you have Prince Albert in a can?
Well you better let him out!
😂
I used to want so bad to go to a Winter Olympics, just so I could pull that joke on the Monaco bobsled team.
Mmm, that pudding looked “scrummy”.
Did he just say "cal-SYE-ahm?'
The Brits also say 'al-you-MIN-ee-um' for aluminum.
Imagine speaking the English language the way the people invented it intended 🤦♀️
Alcohol pudding!! Awesome!!
Victoria and Albert looked💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋
I shouldn't watch these when I'm hungry.
Nowhere near enough glace cherries!
Wonder if these will stage a comeback? I would like to try some cabinet pudding but sans booze.
nope ice?
Just once I would like Rosemary to say something tasted terrible.
Why do people always say naughty for her I mean is she a child with a teacher named Albert to keep her out of trouble allllll the time.
Yeah!
Imagen being TRAPPED in a chapel full of servants, I would die !!!!!!
Looked really tasty. Enjoyed it once more
I want some 🙋🏻♀️
TIME TO DELIVER A PIZZA BALL!
TIME TO DELIVER A PIZZA BALL!
I lost count of the ads. RUclips greed is over the top.
Queen Victoria guuuuuurl you were like the Victoria and David Beckham of your age so of course everybody wanted to get a glimpse at you two. I would have been in front row trying to peak you two.
@22:00
Please give me URDU translation i like this video i lives Pakistan 🇵🇰 Karachi city
this serious teaches soooo little !! at the end all you know is a little something about a side dish
No wonder british food has such a bad reputation.
I disagree. I'll bet that pudding's delicious. Crumbled cakes and cookies, butter, dried fruit, baked in custard, and served with an alcohol-based fruity syrup - what's not to like?
What is this pints and ounces business? Where's your metric system???
I guess it's a spirit cabinet pudding.
He likes to scold her to not be so naughty her mission to make him shine .Oh no he loved her both had different way of expressing. That's the beauty of the Jesus match.
Spiffing Timothy you old Rascal
The prince was getting turnt on pudding! 🔥
Were people toothless back in the day where they couldn't eat anything that isn't slimy? So far I've seen gelatinous and mushy textured dishes, nasty! If that's royal food they can have it. Pass me a plate of grilled crispy fish and veggies - something you can actually eat, not slurp, lol 😆