Actually If honey crystallizes that means it's without any non-natural additives. Good quality honey ALWAYS crystallizes, sooner or later (depending on the type of honey).
Im a polish soldier. We actually prefer this ration instead of cooked by our cooks dinner during the duty time. No suprices in mre unfortunatelly i cant same thing about food in unit.
These biscuits are called "concrete wafers or panzer wafers". And yes, you totally can chip your tooth on these. If not for food, these can be used as armor plating.
Well I am from Poland and my dad is in the army, he's a general and I LOVE it when he brings some bags with Food resources and items to prepare it. He used to show me them and teach how to use them. I See You got a MEDIUM bag. Here in Poland are 3-4 kinds of Bags with food resources one: SMALL 1-3 days, MEDIUM 1 week, BIG to 2 weeks and the large one should be enough for a month (this one is not that offten used - only in special missions, where You're for a long time away in a area without easy food availability. I am not sure but usually in this bag (which You got) should be a napkin and a special cover for the fireplace to safe the fire/food while it's raining and quite windy - its like 4 metal sticks (1-1.2m long) and a special "rubber" material or something like this, and I see there wasn't special cornflakes with dried fruits and a powder ball milk in Your medium bag. There is a large bag too which contains ofc more food and kindling stuff but also some food in tube and icecream, the "icecream" is first in a water consistence but when You start to squeeze it with Your hands it turns into ice... I know its "magic". Much love and greetings from Poland ❤️💕
Where I live in London we have a huge Polish supermarket and buying from there is a voyage of discovery. The food is so tasty and hearty that I can imagine that the ration pack is equally as good. If you find a Polish store near you, I recommend a visit. Everything from the bread to the meats, cheese, cans of food, confectionery, it's all delicious.
@@frofrofrofro900 I should add that there is a large Polish community here (hence the need for the large supermarket!) and they are lovely people. There are several living in my block of flats and they are a pleasure to have as neighbours.....friendly and considerate.
Skelmer Na poligonie w Nowej Dębie trzeba bylo pr,ejsc z kilometr i w takiej małej wsi byl Dziadek i Baba ,którzy mieli odpowiedni zasób towarów wyskojowych ,w tym że nie konkurowali ze soba bo mieli okreśony rodzaj alkoholu.Jedno piwo i wino,drugie wódkę ...:D
Public Enemy No co Ty-bie byłes na poligonie!? Człowiek mieszoa całe życie w Opolskim i nawet nie wiedział, że jest tak uzależniony o piwa.... 😁 Chłopaki że Szczecina (śledzie) tak byli wyposzczeni na Unitarce, że w Hotelu w Dębicy tak pochlali,że obrzygali wezystko w testauracji, a potem mało nie zgwałcili kelnerki.... Przez dzikusów zabrali nam Stałki na... 😁 miasto
Panzerwaffles are multi-purpose. You can eat them, but they also double as ballistic plates, reactive armour for vehicles, ninja stars, you can hammer in nails with them, chip them into a point and stab somebody, the possibilities are endless.
Norway has improved, but they are still very stingy on toiletpaper/napkins, and there is never enough coffee. Come to think of it, its quite terrible actually.
Well, our army lack new generation of gear, tanks, weapons, uniforms and such, but yeah, mre's are lovely. The company which produces them (Arpol), are distributing rations to army, police, firefighters (yes, they use them in field training), and such uniform duty units, also for tourists, offroaders, survivalists... It's hard to not like this company, civilians can buy those rations not in bulk, but as single pieces straight from the producer. They keep the food as chem free as possible as well, so most of it is actually quality products. Candies, jam, chocolate and instant beverages tho are pretty cheap discount store type of stuff, but people around the world still like it, which is a mystery for me ;)
Unfortunately Poland doesn't care that much about hospital patients. The last time I was in a hospital I didn't even want to touch the food they served me. Extremely small amounts of gross food
Emmy in another life: "This war is challenging, but have you tried the new MRE with a side of Strawberry jam. It's light and refreshing [dodges mortar round] while still being filling." Emmy, you are awesome! I'm so glad RUclips exists as a platform for you to share your passion for food and your kindness.
No, we do not have two meals a day. We eat three. In the morning, when we wake up we eat breakfast, so just some sandwiches or fried eggs. Something fast and easy to make. Then sometimes we take with us the second breakfast like again sandwich, but not everyone does that. Then at 14:00 or 2 pm we have what w call a dinner. Usually it's a meal consisting of mashed potatoes or rice etc, meat and some veggies and it can be some steamed/boiled ones, some "salads" or pickled beets or pickles. Sometimes we have soup to this meal, but not everyone does that. The soup is without meat, but sometimes we have a tablespoon of potatoes/rice etc with veggies, so it's not a bowl full of stuff. Mostly full of just broth. Then in the evening we eat a supper, which is usually like breakfast. Sometimes we make it fancy, because we have time, but sandwiches are good. Sorry if my English is not perfect. I live in Poland my whole life and that's the way my family and my friends have eaten for my whole life.
I haven't heard of just two meals a day either. Anywhere after 1pm to 4pm is dinner time, biggest meal of the day, main event. Breakfast and supper are on the low low I feel like.
"Panzerwaffel" crackers have their name from 2 things: - You can use them as an improvised bulletproof armor - If you are a good thrower, they can be used as an anti-tank shurikens Also opening cans, choping trees, and digging trenches.
7:13 sorry Emmy but Matt is wrong or is not really Polish... In Poland traditionally there are 3 main meals per day. 1st is breakfast pretty much same as in the US when it comes to time and portion size. 2nd is dinner which unlike in the US is usally eaten around 2~3 p.m. Traditionally it's a 2 course meal consisting of soup and main dish. Lastly there is supper served around 7~8 p.m.
Nuriko DB maybe the region of poland that he’s from doesn’t typically have breakfast? my family almost never has breakfast and only eats the two main meals so he’s not completely wrong
@@yes-hv5wt There are 3 standard meals per day in Poland, period. There might be families that have different habits but they're the minority. End of story.
The Army sent by BTS I think he meant eaither that our dinner i two course meal or that we have offen two hot meals dinner and supper. Becouse yes we always eat breakfast like everywhere it is the tradition but some people dont eat in the morning. But they know it is the tradition and it is mostly becouse they dont have time. But. I can believe that in his home they always ate hot dinner and supper and cold breakfast and maybe he thought that is a tradition
When I saw the can that said Fasola I thought it might be beans because the Arabic word for beans is Fasouliya. So interesting because I had no idea we had similar words with Polish!
We should all remember. This mean that loooong time ago our ansestors sat at the same fireplace and shared same food;) We all come from the same place. We can find more things similar or same:)
Gram Sobie studenci uzupełniają kaloria morzem alkoholu i zamiast uczyć się lub zapierdalać po polu z PKM i kopać stanowiska strzeleckie..to się opierdalają głównie...aż przychodzi sesja. 😂
I love your videos because I’ve never watched you try anything and disrespect it. If anyone else were trying this, the Haitian cookies, Great Depression foods, they would exaggerate and disrespect it. And it’s not even like you’re holding back a reaction, your genuine reaction is just so authentically respectful.
In my army days when i was a company office work soldier i always added one more request for a whole box of panzer waffles for office, my captain and me used to eat them a lot with coffe while doing paper work and many soldiers know that at any time in office we have whole box of them hidden in the old AK47 crate and we are happy to share :D No teeth broken :D
My Polish grandparents always called lunch dinner. I never knew that was odd till I was an adult. We ate 3 meals though. Breakfast (oatmeal with butter n salt) dinner and supper. Generally noon was for holiday big meals. Polish candy is delish. Opłatki means wafer, like communion wafer -- very thin--so that would make sense
Dinner is supposed to be the main meal of the day. If you eat that at noon or in the afternoon, you call that dinner (or lunch if you want). The evening meal can be tea or supper, depending on the time and the food served. So your grandparents had breakfast, dinner, and supper, as you state.
It's funny that you were shocked by the size of beans, same thing happened to me when I opened Heinz can of beans, I didn't know beans could be this small xD
You can trust blindly that these packs will work as intended - Emmy would likely not even need the whole thing, it's designed to feed soldiers in the field: Larger, more muscular and probably physically active people. If an army can do one thing, with literally hundreds of years of experience, it's feeding its soldiers to keep them healthy and strong.
Christian Breitenstein , thats why i suggested what i did!! just because theyre meant to do something it doesnt mean theyre effective at it! i think it would be curious to see if she finds herself staying full extremely long or of she needs the snacks. its food, of course its going to feed, however seeing how well it feeds would be fun
Christian Breitenstein and by work, i didn't necessarily mean how well they keep you full, i was more talking about the practicality of it and how well their design works, as well as the food. how long does it take to actually sit down and finish a meal? stuff like that, we cant really see it with tastings
David Drygas i dont really understand you comment, but what im saying is she should try to eat those as her only food over 24hrs like the packs are designed to
Emmy! Next time you do a 24 hour ration, I would love to see you actually film it over 24 hours (only meal times) and eat only the ration for that period. No external foods or drinks. I would love to see how the experience is for you if you eat the ration as intended. Please do one like that! Like if you would also like Emmy to try this 😊
Being Polish myself I absolutely LOVED watching this video! It was so fun and interesting to see your reactions and tasting the rations. I think its so interesting to see how different each MRE and Army meal is from other counties! I love your videos and you should do more videos on trying Polish foods and snacks!😍
I was feeling down until the auto captions wrote “It’s a donkey mouth...mmm delicious” instead of “itadakimasu...mmm delicious.” Now I can’t stop giggling.
I just bought one of these rations and I'm floored at how stinking good it is. Lovely food. I'm really impressed. Wish we had something like this when I was in the army.
Ja nie rozumiem jak można w wojskowej racji żywnościowej pakować tyle sztućców i kubków. 1 drewniana miska i 1 łyżka powinna wystarczyć, a resztę wypchać żarciem !
while i was watching the video i realized that beans in polish is called "fasola" meanwhile in Arabic beans is called "فاصولياء" which read as fasolia.. i don't know what is the origin of the word but this fact blew my mind
That is a good find. I wonder how they’re related? Arabic is from an entirely different language family than Polish. From my experiences the languages really wouldn’t have much contact with each other. For example Persian (Farsi) is in the same language family as Polish but has had significant contact with Arabic. I’m doubting coincidence here since they are so close. Linguistics is crazy!
Looking at the root for bean in Slavic languages that weren't under Ottoman control and languages that were, I'm pretty sure that this word for bean was introduced via the Ottoman language, which is a mixture of Turkish, Arabic and Farsi, or that it was introduced from one of Poland's neighbouring countries that had been influenced by the Ottomans.
She’s not polish though... in Poland we do not allow people other countries in us army/military. And even if she make it in Poland army she still would likely fail training. Please just stop crap this. (If English sucks it because I use google translate
You’re so adventurous and don’t limit your experiences to food. It’s so amazing. As a person who sides more on being picky (although not as bad as I used to be for sure) watching you embrace everything you try is so cool.
I think he gave you that hat with velkro with the thoughts of you being able to change the flag of the MRI in each video you shoot This way you have the possibility to get as many flags as you want or need and stitch the appropriate velkro on the back, easy and fairly inexpensive, bringing a neat touch for you in each video That was really thoughtful of him! And intelligent :0 Kudos on the idea
Velcro name, which is used in the US, is the name of the company that produces the hook and loop fastener system based on a plant, a kind of a thistle. The thistle provides the hooks and everything else provides the loop. Evolution at work. I'm sure this thistle is all over Europe and probably other places. The type of tape is called rzep type. Google the particulars and the pronunciation if you care enough. There is a saying in Polish "he/she stuck to me like a rzep."
Lovely stuff there. I think Polish cuisine is often underrated a little internationally. A lot of the hearty meals don't look as pretty as, say, Japanese food, but are very flavourful. And yes, those paper like things, are a form of Oblaten - greetings, a German friend.
I honestly think the same can be said for some British meals - our food ends up being much maligned abroad, and they're not always pretty (except maybe the baking ;) ), but there are some great, hearty and delicious stews, pies and pasties :) Some of the Polish stews I've seen look great, I'd love to try one ^-^
You had me at those cans with beans and meat. Ain't no secret anymore. Poland has the best food. Even polish soldiers are having spoiled tongues. Lucky bastards!
Totally. When I was in Trashcanistan there was a boderline black market for Polish and Australian MRE's. Especially the coffee candies that came with the Polish ones.
My uncle In the army exchanged one polish 24h Racja for 6 US MRP. I got 3 of them... but now I see that one Polish consists way more than the MRE! ;D Now I know why for years U.S allies were so happy to exchange it ;D
That's interesting. This Polish ration sure looked heartier than the US MREs we were given during the hurricane Rita aftermath. I would've gladly traded, if I had any Polish allies back then.
The paper on the fruitbar is called 'eetpapier' in dutch, wich translates to 'eat paper' like edible paper. It's candy sold in the Netherlands in many different flavors. It's also de base of a 'kokosmakroon' wich is a coconut cakelike pastrie. Eetpapier is sweet and dissolves in your mouth the second you touch it, but it stays firm when no liquid is involved. A good way to prevent sticky hands when eating a kokosmakroon. :)
And in polish it's called "opłatek" - made from wheat flour and water - it may be flavored and eated as a snack ;w; I still remember that i got them in mine school canteen
@@wiktorszymczak4760 You should better change your habits to more healthy ones: dinner at 2 p.m. - 3 p.m., supper at 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. and introduce some "podwieczorek" around 5 p.m.
Emmy, the fruit bar you're eating at 18:43 is called obleas in México but in stead of eating them with fruit in the middle, we have them with Cajeta which is like a milk caramel candy. The outside is a very thin wafer and definitely edible
@@conradsz If you are soldier in a battlefield, high protein and energy from these types of meals is essential and will be healthy. The meals also have stuff like fruits and nice hearty soup meals, and some snacks.
I've reviewed both, yes exactly the same but they originate in Poland. must say, the polish MRE was superior (both were individual meal rations) but I still have to try a few more from both countries, my Lithuanian MRE review comes out by Thursday 25th Apr if ytoure interested to see an Outdoor review on MRE's :)
Mr. Emmymadeinjapan home from work: "What's for dinner tonight?", Emmymadeinjapan: "Lunchmeat and Liver pate on crisps, freeze dried fruit, pork neck stew, and beans and sausage on hard tack!" Mr. Emmymadeinjapan: "Huh?"
Molly Fanton - I love watching Steve1989. Nice hiss. Less get this onto a tray, Mkay! I giggle everytime. And his love for coffee instant is so cute. I've sent links to his videos to several friends and they love him too.
Loved the video! Quite frankly as a Polish person I wouldn't say we usually have two meals… I'd say it's ussually three - breakfast, dinner and supper. The difference is our "dinner" comes more at a time of English "lunch" - that is early afternoon - and our supper is a very small, light meal that you'd eat in the evening (couple toasts, yoghurt, cereal… kind of like small breakfast size I'd say). The biggest difference is generally the time at which we eat our "large meal" - from general experience I can say this time shifts between European countries which is fun to watch in my flat (sharing with students) since we can almost never share a meal because we all eat at diffrent times. These pates by the way are the taste of my childhood xD They are pretty unhealthy (I mean they last forever in that can, I would not expect a lot of actual meat in them - the rule is to never read the ingredients otherwise you'll lose your apetite) but I loved them so much as a kid that if I ever got my hands on one (not too often since my mum was not a big fan of them, understandably) I'd eat it with a spoon.
Actually, good quality pates are pretty meatty and not artificial at all. The key to they long preservertion is that they're canned and deprived of any air access. You can do this with an actual cooked chunk of meat and it will be good months later. Once you open the can the pate goes bad pretty quickly.
I think he was talking more about the canned pates that you can buy at any supermarket in Poland, i wouldn't trust their ingredient list, but they are really good, for the price tag at least. The cheaper ones will cost you like 30 cents for a can and the more luxurious ones are maybe twice as expensive. And they come in a wide variety of flavors; chicken or pork, geese, paprica, tomato, mushroom, garlic, black or white pepper and many, many more, there's this one company in particular which makes like 20 different flavors. The other day i actually had one from some limited edition that was red wine flavored (it was a bit more savory and sharp than the regular one), they're kinda like Japanese Kit-Kats in that regard ;). And they're also, alongside ramen noodles, a staple in the diet of any selfrespecting student. They're great for sharing too, i have many fond memories from my university days of sitting down between classes with a piece of bread roll each and a can of pate being used like a dip :)
Tbh the Pates are my jam. Literally. A sandwich session without them is just not worth eating sandwiches at all. With fermented Cucumbers....oh yes. My older brother used to joke and tell us that it consists of hooves, nails, utter, fur and other animal ingridients to make fun of it 😂😂😂
as a polish dudette I'd smash that kiełbasa krakowska can and devour it's contents immedietly. It's so good that I felt hungry for it just watching this video xD
Dinner means the biggest meal of the day. In the US it's often in the evening. Supper is derived from Soup. Big meal early in the day makes sense if you are doing heavy work (marching under load, digging, etc.).
Yay I was hoping you'd upload an MRE video. My ancestors are from Ukraine close to the border of Poland. We eat lots of Polish food. That MRE looks awesome.
This has to be one of the best ration packs I've seen so far, great variety. I husband was in the army(uk) and I brought a couple of his home, they were not the best but this one looks awesome 😊
I've watched many of your videos in the past, but just realized how amazingly positive you are. Many times in life, happiness is a choice. So glad to experience you sharing that with us.
Thank god for your videos!!!!! Your voice helps me go to sleep (no hate. Nothing has been making me sleep lately). I love your content it relaxes me so much.
Emmy always takes big, luxurious bites and I love that. Even with the edible insect episodes, she was the best trooper and chomped away. I was proud of her :D
I like the fact that she describes how things taste. I also love that she sees the good in all foodseven if we would all be kinda uneasy to try certain foods.
Amy! Water purification tablets are in a separate kit in Poland :) oh and we also have oblaty in Poland sold separately as a snack, they came to us from Germany :)
Cześć Emmy! I'm so glad you've tested Polish MRE and you liked it! :-) If you ever visit Chicago you should definitely visit some Polish restaurants and delis. Polish community is huge here.
I was a Marine platoon commander in Vietnam 68-69. We had C-Rations that came in a cardboard box. I don't remember everything that was in it but each box came with a "Heavy" and a "lite" which referred to a large can and a small can. The large can could be beans and franks, ham and lima beans, beef slices with potatoes, spaghetti and with balls, and maybe one or two other meals. The small can could be a slice of beefsteak, turkey loaf, chopped ham and eggs, or ham slices. A box would also have a can of bread such hardtack biscuits and sometimes a bread backed into the can. And there would be a dessert in a medium can such as pound cake, fruitcake, or fruit cocktail in a large can (if you had fruit cocktail then you always had a small can of meat like above). There was never two large cans or two small cans in a ration. There was also a very small can of cheese which I found to be uneatable and sometimes peanut, and a small can of jam. There was an accessory pack with gum, a small pack of cigarettes, powdered cocoa or coffee, a piece of candy, sugar, salt and pepper, powdered creamer, matches, heat tabs (no stove--you made your own out of one of the small cans) and toilet paper that was completely useless during the monsoon season. There were so many preservatives in the food that we joked that if we got killed we would already be embalmed, saving the morgue some extra work. In general, everything tasted terrible except the turkey loaf, beefsteak slices, and ham slices. Every other kind of meat / beans was unpleasant and consumed only because it was the only thing you had to eat. The bread wasn't too bad and the dessert wasn't that bad either. We tried a lot of ways to improve the taste. Might add the powdered coffee to beans and franks, mash in the pound cake to the ham and lima beans, mix in some peanut butter to the beef slices and potatoes, but the most effective way was to chop up one wild pepper that were about the size of a fingernail and mix it in. These were the hottest peppers I've ever had. One small piece would make your eyes water, nose run, lips burn, and cheeks numb. C-Rations came in various combinations and the one I described was the one I most often had in Vietnam. Technically, each Marine rated three C-Rations a day. However, the area we operated in made being resupplied unpredictable due to the enemy threat, weather, and mountainous terrain. During my time in Vietnam, I don't remember getting more than one C-Ration a day and because resupply was unpredictable, that one ration usually had to last 2-3 days. Typically, we had a "Heavy" or "Lite" in the morning and the remaining can the next morning. Everything else we stretched out for a long as possible. I always saved a few small cans of peanut butter and some jam to keep my energy up between resupplies. C-Rations were fairly heavy and bulky and ammunition was far more important than food and so it was good that we only had to carry one ration for a couple of days. The biggest problem was water. There was no such thing as bottled water in the field nor was there a way to effectively helicopter in potable water. So we filled canteens with whatever was available such as catching rain, a stream, local wells, and as a last resort rice paddy water. Except for the rain, all other sources were polluted and would make you very sick and it usually stunk. We'd put three times the number water purification tablets in the canteen to try to kill whatever was swimming round. After I retired from the Marines in 1989, I ended up as an independent consultant supporting US military exercises for Special Forces and the Army around the world. That's when I was introduced to MREs which were a 100 times better than the C-Rations in Vietnam. The Polish rations look even better than the MREs.
I know I'm late, but the Polish hardtack uses caraway as a seasoning - it tastes a bit like fennel:) It's kinda exotic spice outside of Eastern Europe, where it's super popular and kind of love or hate ingredient.
Actually If honey crystallizes that means it's without any non-natural additives. Good quality honey ALWAYS crystallizes, sooner or later (depending on the type of honey).
Actually, honey crystallizes due to humidity getting to it. 🤓
Honey crystals look beautiful
All honey can crystalize..
All sugary liquids crystalize, bunch of Einstein's here, lmfao
@@Dainith
Light
Meal
For
A
Otter
Im a polish soldier. We actually prefer this ration instead of cooked by our cooks dinner during the duty time. No suprices in mre unfortunatelly i cant same thing about food in unit.
Not from my country but thanks for your service either way :)
polish soldiers are hooot
@Porucznik Włóczykij kocham twoje prof i nazwę
Ewelina Strzałka l
420 baby
You’re like the food version of Bob Ross! So genuine, kind, and pure!
Supes Min this is the most perfect comment!
Oh my heart
So right 👌👌👌
1st sign that you have no creativity or originality. Make a comment on RUclips comparing someone to Bob Ross.
Harald Blotand Ew, take your negative soul elsewhere.
These biscuits are called "concrete wafers or panzer wafers".
And yes, you totally can chip your tooth on these.
If not for food, these can be used as armor plating.
What do you mean as armor plating
@@haileynovak9539 they are just as hard as armor. Nothing complicated, just a meme
Use them as ceramic insert substitute for your bp vest - should work (someone should totally do a test on the range myth buster style
As kevlar
Or as the Hammer
Well I am from Poland and my dad is in the army, he's a general and I LOVE it when he brings some bags with Food resources and items to prepare it. He used to show me them and teach how to use them.
I See You got a MEDIUM bag. Here in Poland are 3-4 kinds of Bags with food resources one: SMALL 1-3 days, MEDIUM 1 week, BIG to 2 weeks and the large one should be enough for a month (this one is not that offten used - only in special missions, where You're for a long time away in a area without easy food availability.
I am not sure but usually in this bag (which You got) should be a napkin and a special cover for the fireplace to safe the fire/food while it's raining and quite windy - its like 4 metal sticks (1-1.2m long) and a special "rubber" material or something like this, and I see there wasn't special cornflakes with dried fruits and a powder ball milk in Your medium bag.
There is a large bag too which contains ofc more food and kindling stuff but also some food in tube and icecream, the "icecream" is first in a water consistence but when You start to squeeze it with Your hands it turns into ice... I know its "magic".
Much love and greetings from Poland ❤️💕
Wiadomość z pierwszej ręki :D
now we know where OUR taxes go... into ur belly, u little abuser... joking,sis, no off :P
Wow.
I am very curious about the ice cream.
Now I'm going to have to try and make one of these my first mre
So this medium bag would last a soldier a week??
Where I live in London we have a huge Polish supermarket and buying from there is a voyage of discovery. The food is so tasty and hearty that I can imagine that the ration pack is equally as good. If you find a Polish store near you, I recommend a visit. Everything from the bread to the meats, cheese, cans of food, confectionery, it's all delicious.
:D yeah
Pozdrawiam z Polski 😀 🇵🇱
Absolutnie! Polskie jedzenie jest najlepsze i najtańsze na świecie! A trochę świata już zjeździłem.
Nice to hear. Greetings from Tricity in Poland
@@frofrofrofro900 I should add that there is a large Polish community here (hence the need for the large supermarket!) and they are lovely people. There are several living in my block of flats and they are a pleasure to have as neighbours.....friendly and considerate.
A wódka gdzie
Ta część chyba we własnym zakresie ;)
Skelmer Te napoje ,dobre by były na bimber :)
Skelmer Na poligonie w Nowej Dębie trzeba bylo pr,ejsc z kilometr i w takiej małej wsi byl Dziadek i Baba ,którzy mieli odpowiedni zasób towarów wyskojowych ,w tym że nie konkurowali ze soba bo mieli okreśony rodzaj alkoholu.Jedno piwo i wino,drugie wódkę ...:D
@@jansaddam3829 Jeśli nie ściemniasz, to brzmi jak scenariusz filmowy ;)
Public Enemy No co Ty-bie byłes na poligonie!? Człowiek mieszoa całe życie w Opolskim i nawet nie wiedział, że jest tak uzależniony o piwa.... 😁
Chłopaki że Szczecina (śledzie) tak byli wyposzczeni na Unitarce, że w Hotelu w Dębicy tak pochlali,że obrzygali wezystko w testauracji, a potem mało nie zgwałcili kelnerki.... Przez dzikusów zabrali nam Stałki na... 😁 miasto
In the Polish army, we say panzerwafers.These wafers will survive an atomic explosion :P
Hahaha, even the roaches that survive the blast won't be able to bite through them 😂
@@TinksiehTink Roaches be like - F*ck panzerwafers i'll eat the can instead.
And they can be used as a hammer in a pinch!
Yes, it's true :-D Pozdrowienia z Polski :-)
Panzerwaffles are multi-purpose. You can eat them, but they also double as ballistic plates, reactive armour for vehicles, ninja stars, you can hammer in nails with them, chip them into a point and stab somebody, the possibilities are endless.
There are 4 cups for a reason. When you meet Russian, German and Czech you can drink vodka.
Aaaah brings up memories.:P
why would you want to drink with a german...
@@clotz1820 Cause when he's holding a glass he's not holding Sturmgewehr 44...
@@bobocpe Polish man has vodka cup in one hand and a Tantal WZ.88 in the other
@@illegalalien4444 More like vodka and ViS wz. 35
Wow! You can tell which countries care about their soldiers and which ones don’t by these ration kits. Good job Poland! 🇵🇱
Norway has improved, but they are still very stingy on toiletpaper/napkins, and there is never enough coffee. Come to think of it, its quite terrible actually.
Well, our army lack new generation of gear, tanks, weapons, uniforms and such, but yeah, mre's are lovely. The company which produces them (Arpol), are distributing rations to army, police, firefighters (yes, they use them in field training), and such uniform duty units, also for tourists, offroaders, survivalists... It's hard to not like this company, civilians can buy those rations not in bulk, but as single pieces straight from the producer. They keep the food as chem free as possible as well, so most of it is actually quality products. Candies, jam, chocolate and instant beverages tho are pretty cheap discount store type of stuff, but people around the world still like it, which is a mystery for me ;)
Unfortunately Poland doesn't care that much about hospital patients. The last time I was in a hospital I didn't even want to touch the food they served me. Extremely small amounts of gross food
@@arnon85 I think that's universal for hospitals. Maybe to motivate patients to leave lol.
@@arnon85 because Polish hospitals are run by government. And every thing that goverment touches turns in pile of shiet
Emmy in another life: "This war is challenging, but have you tried the new MRE with a side of Strawberry jam. It's light and refreshing [dodges mortar round] while still being filling."
Emmy, you are awesome! I'm so glad RUclips exists as a platform for you to share your passion for food and your kindness.
I love this comment haha
This is one of the cutest lil comments ever 😭😭😭
14:25 those are Panzer Wafers, they are called like this because if your tank will get hit you can use then to patch the hole in the armour...
pls everyone don't take it serious XDD
in case someone belived it
@@dinozaurka7004 guilty 😂💀🤷🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️
Can you smack somebody in the head with it?
Hahaha!! Meanwhile Emmy’s over here thinking it’s a delicacy LOL 😂
Outstanding. Well reported! Kudos to the Polish Army for providing their people with such tasty, morale boosting rations!
Well, atleast one thing we can do right.
@@mattphyx lates Polish tank design is pretty good but... yeah other than than and the food we cant do much well.
Thanks God that "Christ's Soldiers" are not considered as part of actual Polish army beacuse we would be even bigger laughing stock of EU 🙆
It shows they care for their soldiers.
No, we do not have two meals a day. We eat three. In the morning, when we wake up we eat breakfast, so just some sandwiches or fried eggs. Something fast and easy to make. Then sometimes we take with us the second breakfast like again sandwich, but not everyone does that. Then at 14:00 or 2 pm we have what w call a dinner. Usually it's a meal consisting of mashed potatoes or rice etc, meat and some veggies and it can be some steamed/boiled ones, some "salads" or pickled beets or pickles. Sometimes we have soup to this meal, but not everyone does that. The soup is without meat, but sometimes we have a tablespoon of potatoes/rice etc with veggies, so it's not a bowl full of stuff. Mostly full of just broth. Then in the evening we eat a supper, which is usually like breakfast. Sometimes we make it fancy, because we have time, but sandwiches are good.
Sorry if my English is not perfect. I live in Poland my whole life and that's the way my family and my friends have eaten for my whole life.
I haven't heard of just two meals a day either. Anywhere after 1pm to 4pm is dinner time, biggest meal of the day, main event. Breakfast and supper are on the low low I feel like.
@@marta0929 I think she meant 2 big meals
Maybe she meant that but it didn't sound like it. Statements like these are causing disinformation.
still, typically I know of one huge meal and then supper and breakfast are smaller
In the US we have 3. Breakfast, lunch and dinner..then a snack 😉
"Panzerwaffel" crackers have their name from 2 things:
- You can use them as an improvised bulletproof armor
- If you are a good thrower, they can be used as an anti-tank shurikens
Also opening cans, choping trees, and digging trenches.
Likely an inspiration for Dwarven combat bread.
And to drill concrete.
7:13 sorry Emmy but Matt is wrong or is not really Polish... In Poland traditionally there are 3 main meals per day. 1st is breakfast pretty much same as in the US when it comes to time and portion size. 2nd is dinner which unlike in the US is usally eaten around 2~3 p.m. Traditionally it's a 2 course meal consisting of soup and main dish. Lastly there is supper served around 7~8 p.m.
I found a lot of people on west claiming to be polish but not knowing really basic stuff about Poland lol
Nuriko DB maybe the region of poland that he’s from doesn’t typically have breakfast? my family almost never has breakfast and only eats the two main meals so he’s not completely wrong
@@yes-hv5wt There are 3 standard meals per day in Poland, period. There might be families that have different habits but they're the minority. End of story.
The Army sent by BTS I think he meant eaither that our dinner i two course meal or that we have offen two hot meals dinner and supper. Becouse yes we always eat breakfast like everywhere it is the tradition but some people dont eat in the morning. But they know it is the tradition and it is mostly becouse they dont have time.
But. I can believe that in his home they always ate hot dinner and supper and cold breakfast and maybe he thought that is a tradition
u right! dokładnie tak!!!
Any Polish people here?! :D
I love your videos Emmy ❤️
Zgłaszam się. Całkiem niezła ta polska racja żywnościowa, lepsza niż ruska.
I’m Thai but i know Kurwa!😂😂😂
@@UanTao no to kurwa great:D
I'm english born but half of my family is polish, from zakopane 😊💙
Better do not use this word if you're with women, otherwise she will be very angry
When I saw the can that said Fasola I thought it might be beans because the Arabic word for beans is Fasouliya. So interesting because I had no idea we had similar words with Polish!
Beans in italian is fagioli with a very soft g so it seems a lot of languages have similar words for beans!
i'm arab too, and i noticed the same thing!
We should all remember. This mean that loooong time ago our ansestors sat at the same fireplace and shared same food;) We all come from the same place. We can find more things similar or same:)
Ooooooh interesting 0 - 0
@@rudosci or just invaded each other resulting in a mingling of cultures XD
Racje na 24h?? Studentowi starczyło by to na 2 tygodnie!
potwierdzam
racja
Gram Sobie studenci uzupełniają kaloria morzem alkoholu i zamiast uczyć się lub zapierdalać po polu z PKM i kopać stanowiska strzeleckie..to się opierdalają głównie...aż przychodzi sesja. 😂
hehe
Lel
At least the military food is better than in the hospitals 😂
Hmm. It's good idea. When I start a labor I'll take some of those to hospital 😂
I wanted write the same 😂
Scythe I actually like hospital food 😂
better than the food in school
in Pouland we have really good food in hospitals
I love your videos because I’ve never watched you try anything and disrespect it. If anyone else were trying this, the Haitian cookies, Great Depression foods, they would exaggerate and disrespect it. And it’s not even like you’re holding back a reaction, your genuine reaction is just so authentically respectful.
And the famous panzer waffle (suchar specjalny su-2). :/
'People lost teeth to it'.
Removing these from a Polish ration would cause a riot.
"We lost a lot of good teeth out there..."
@@suma4m This comment is so underappreciated.
In my army days when i was a company office work soldier i always added one more request for a whole box of panzer waffles for office, my captain and me used to eat them a lot with coffe while doing paper work and many soldiers know that at any time in office we have whole box of them hidden in the old AK47 crate and we are happy to share :D No teeth broken :D
The true purpose of these waffles is to achieve weapon-grade stool hardness. Google "the Inuit shit knife".
@@suma4m 😂😂😂😂
Hallo! Polish soldier greets you. Enjoy your meal - smacznego:)
My Polish grandparents always called lunch dinner. I never knew that was odd till I was an adult. We ate 3 meals though. Breakfast (oatmeal with butter n salt) dinner and supper. Generally noon was for holiday big meals. Polish candy is delish. Opłatki means wafer, like communion wafer -- very thin--so that would make sense
Dinner is supposed to be the main meal of the day. If you eat that at noon or in the afternoon, you call that dinner (or lunch if you want). The evening meal can be tea or supper, depending on the time and the food served. So your grandparents had breakfast, dinner, and supper, as you state.
It's funny that you were shocked by the size of beans, same thing happened to me when I opened Heinz can of beans, I didn't know beans could be this small xD
Same here :D "What kind of beans is that? Is that for sure beans?" hahaha
Fasola "Duży Jaś"
@@Srolmops Piękny Jaś xD
@@langustakoala1769 Beauty John
to je kurła polsko fasola a nie jakoś amerykańsko hujnia
you should try actually eating the ration packs over 24 hours so you can see how well they actually work!!
You can trust blindly that these packs will work as intended - Emmy would likely not even need the whole thing, it's designed to feed soldiers in the field: Larger, more muscular and probably physically active people.
If an army can do one thing, with literally hundreds of years of experience, it's feeding its soldiers to keep them healthy and strong.
Christian Breitenstein , thats why i suggested what i did!! just because theyre meant to do something it doesnt mean theyre effective at it! i think it would be curious to see if she finds herself staying full extremely long or of she needs the snacks. its food, of course its going to feed, however seeing how well it feeds would be fun
Christian Breitenstein and by work, i didn't necessarily mean how well they keep you full, i was more talking about the practicality of it and how well their design works, as well as the food. how long does it take to actually sit down and finish a meal? stuff like that, we cant really see it with tastings
SteveMre does them over the course of breakfast lunch and dinner if you want to check him out
David Drygas i dont really understand you comment, but what im saying is she should try to eat those as her only food over 24hrs like the packs are designed to
Can we appreciate how incredible she is in describing what she’s tasting 😮😲
That's looks way bigger than the bag of Doritos that feeds me for 24hrs.
DORITOS in Poland have bad taste!
😂😂😂
@@gamemaster19842 tak?
Family value pack 👌
Emmy! Next time you do a 24 hour ration, I would love to see you actually film it over 24 hours (only meal times) and eat only the ration for that period. No external foods or drinks. I would love to see how the experience is for you if you eat the ration as intended. Please do one like that!
Like if you would also like Emmy to try this 😊
This is A Good idea
This is what Steve1989 does for his videos.
Great idea.. I'd like to see that!
Why not swing by my channel and look at MRE Outdoor reviews? Got another going to be freshly uploaded this upcoming Thursday :)
Cheers
She is emmy, and she is not some lab rat to do experiments, if you want to see the effects, then go anf try on yourself
Being Polish myself I absolutely LOVED watching this video! It was so fun and interesting to see your reactions and tasting the rations. I think its so interesting to see how different each MRE and Army meal is from other counties! I love your videos and you should do more videos on trying Polish foods and snacks!😍
Poland takes care of its army
You seem to not know about panzerwaffer
No a co ty sobie kurwa myślałaś
They dont have many wars. Theyve got more money to give with food and not guns
@@crystaltheo8494 mmm yeah I didnt know I'm certainly not polish
@@crystaltheo8494 "not guns" ok xD
I was feeling down until the auto captions wrote “It’s a donkey mouth...mmm delicious” instead of “itadakimasu...mmm delicious.” Now I can’t stop giggling.
The captions are always way off every time
Considering some of the other "odd food" videos she's tried.... there's got to be Donkey Mouth eventually. Maybe it's just seeing the future?
😂😂😂
TheRaspberry92 🤣
Someone should make a collection of all the misinterpretations hahahahahahaha
I just bought one of these rations and I'm floored at how stinking good it is. Lovely food. I'm really impressed. Wish we had something like this when I was in the army.
Myślałem że sobie zęby połamie na panzerwaflach XD
ja tez :D
Panzerwafel xD genialne. Swoją drogą, kto to je? Nikt nie lubi a wszędzie są :D
Ja nie rozumiem jak można w wojskowej racji żywnościowej pakować tyle sztućców i kubków. 1 drewniana miska i 1 łyżka powinna wystarczyć, a resztę wypchać żarciem !
greed marks Może juz nie daja niezbędników i manierki ...
ja lubiłem hehe na razie zęby całe
while i was watching the video i realized that beans in polish is called "fasola" meanwhile in Arabic beans is called "فاصولياء" which read as fasolia.. i don't know what is the origin of the word but this fact blew my mind
🤗🤗🤗
That is a good find. I wonder how they’re related? Arabic is from an entirely different language family than Polish. From my experiences the languages really wouldn’t have much contact with each other. For example Persian (Farsi) is in the same language family as Polish but has had significant contact with Arabic. I’m doubting coincidence here since they are so close. Linguistics is crazy!
Looking at the root for bean in Slavic languages that weren't under Ottoman control and languages that were, I'm pretty sure that this word for bean was introduced via the Ottoman language, which is a mixture of Turkish, Arabic and Farsi, or that it was introduced from one of Poland's neighbouring countries that had been influenced by the Ottomans.
In romanian the word for bean is "fasole"😁
Beans are faggioli in Italian. Nearly the same word! Roman Empire?
7:16 That is incorrect, we have 3 meals per day: śniadanie (small breakfast), obiad (bigger dinner), kolacja (smaller supper)
It depends, in comparisson to other countries we could clearly say, we have 2 bigger meals a day.
@@AX-fc5sc I've never met anyone in Poland who'd have only 2 meals a day
Nope we have five, you've missed drugie śniadanie ( elevenses) and podwieczorek (brunch)
@@raf9974 Theoretically yes, but I don't think many people in Poland eat 5 meals a day... Although formally speaking you are correct :)
II śniadanie i podwieczorek jeszcze
You couldn't fight against Emmy, the hat made her the cutest polish soldier 😊
Agreed
She looked adorable! 😊💕
So stinking adorable Lol
She’s not polish though... in Poland we do not allow people other countries in us army/military. And even if she make it in Poland army she still would likely fail training. Please just stop crap this. (If English sucks it because I use google translate
What!!! Emmy is not Polish, my mind is blown I will need a moment to pull myself together. Thank you for setting me straight
Of course this sausage tastes like like kielbasa. In polish sausage means kielbasa. So in a matter of fact all the sausage in Poland is kielbasa 😀
I don't know, what about parówki or kabanosy. I wouldn't call them 'kielbasa'.
You mean "Kabanosy" or "Parówki"?
Kabanosy are a kind of Kiełbasa/sausage. Parówki are not a kind of sausage at all.
even in under pants? XD
Thanks for the explanation buddy!
You’re so adventurous and don’t limit your experiences to food. It’s so amazing. As a person who sides more on being picky (although not as bad as I used to be for sure) watching you embrace everything you try is so cool.
I think he gave you that hat with velkro with the thoughts of you being able to change the flag of the MRI in each video you shoot
This way you have the possibility to get as many flags as you want or need and stitch the appropriate velkro on the back, easy and fairly inexpensive, bringing a neat touch for you in each video
That was really thoughtful of him! And intelligent :0
Kudos on the idea
That's a Polish tactical cap from Polish gear maker Helikon-Tex; and as Hugo said it's Polish Woodland camo.
Velcro name, which is used in the US, is the name of the company that produces the hook and loop fastener system based on a plant, a kind of a thistle. The thistle provides the hooks and everything else provides the loop. Evolution at work. I'm sure this thistle is all over Europe and probably other places. The type of tape is called rzep type. Google the particulars and the pronunciation if you care enough. There is a saying in Polish "he/she stuck to me like a rzep."
Lovely stuff there. I think Polish cuisine is often underrated a little internationally. A lot of the hearty meals don't look as pretty as, say, Japanese food, but are very flavourful. And yes, those paper like things, are a form of Oblaten - greetings, a German friend.
Yay!!! I got it right. 👏 Thank you!
I honestly think the same can be said for some British meals - our food ends up being much maligned abroad, and they're not always pretty (except maybe the baking ;) ), but there are some great, hearty and delicious stews, pies and pasties :)
Some of the Polish stews I've seen look great, I'd love to try one ^-^
In Spanish is similar: obleas 🙂
@@emmymade my Polish mother called it oplatek very similar to German.😀
Lmao I think you're wrong because polish food can be just as pretty as japanese
U have to be polish to understand but yer not
Intro: Dramatic, foreboding music, tension mounting
(Cuts to cute,soft-spoken woman in a cozy kitchen): “Hello my beautiful lovelies! ❤️🌈🤗🤗❤️” lol
You had me at those cans with beans and meat.
Ain't no secret anymore. Poland has the best food. Even polish soldiers are having spoiled tongues.
Lucky bastards!
When was Christmas time coming and you went into bigger supermarket the smell of the Kielbasa was sooo great!
Totally. When I was in Trashcanistan there was a boderline black market for Polish and Australian MRE's. Especially the coffee candies that came with the Polish ones.
To be honest, Polish food is the best
I conquer the beans are super delicious 😋
Wow you're so positive. I think all polish people loves you so much! ❤️
Wait that’s so cute that he sent her a hat and a name badge thing 🥺🥺🥺
My uncle In the army exchanged one polish 24h Racja for 6 US MRP. I got 3 of them... but now I see that one Polish consists way more than the MRE! ;D Now I know why for years U.S allies were so happy to exchange it ;D
Well. Friends told me when that when they didn't get fresh food on their deployment they were eating US MRE first xD
That's interesting. This Polish ration sure looked heartier than the US MREs we were given during the hurricane Rita aftermath. I would've gladly traded, if I had any Polish allies back then.
When she says itadakimasu my subtitles says "it's a donkey mouth" lol😂
😂
Me too
Mine too!! 😂 was looking for a comment to see if anyone else pointed it out before I commented lol. So funny 🤣
I'm so hungry right now, this looks absolutely delicious
Yesh very true
Same
And it is delicious, polish army could open fast food restaurant
Right! Both "meals" the stew and beans, both look yummy!
The paper on the fruitbar is called 'eetpapier' in dutch, wich translates to 'eat paper' like edible paper. It's candy sold in the Netherlands in many different flavors. It's also de base of a 'kokosmakroon' wich is a coconut cakelike pastrie. Eetpapier is sweet and dissolves in your mouth the second you touch it, but it stays firm when no liquid is involved. A good way to prevent sticky hands when eating a kokosmakroon. :)
they use something very similar for nougat! sardinian nougat is very sticky and gooey when it's fresh so it's a godsend
And in polish it's called "opłatek" - made from wheat flour and water - it may be flavored and eated as a snack ;w; I still remember that i got them in mine school canteen
Edgyedgelord I see, never knew that
Here in México, we call them "Oblea" ❤️ sometimes they are stuffed with "Dulce de leche" or "Cajeta"
In German it's " Ess-papier " or " Oblaten "
In Poland people eat three meals a day traditionally.
Breakfast - sniadanie.
Dinner - obiad
Supper - kolacja.
Nice movie.
Aaron Stein * Video
But breakfast is really small. It sometimes only one small sandwich.
@Inverted Villain
dinner - 4 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Supper 8 p.m. - 9 p.m.
@@wiktorszymczak4760 You should better change your habits to more healthy ones: dinner at 2 p.m. - 3 p.m., supper at 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. and introduce some "podwieczorek" around 5 p.m.
@@lothariobazaroff3333 i know, i know. But we talk about reality, not a dream
Emmy, the fruit bar you're eating at 18:43 is called obleas in México but in stead of eating them with fruit in the middle, we have them with Cajeta which is like a milk caramel candy. The outside is a very thin wafer and definitely edible
I love that Emmy gets excited over paper cups
you cant go wrong with these mre's, we all tend to kinda laugh at them but to be honest this stuff is great in the field
The most important, the Polish food is very healthy too. Thanks for sharing.
Healthy how?
@@conradsz If you are soldier in a battlefield, high protein and energy from these types of meals is essential and will be healthy. The meals also have stuff like fruits and nice hearty soup meals, and some snacks.
@@houdinimagician1794 and you are also going to pierdzieć after you eat fasolka po bretońsku
the polish GOVT IS VERY GOOD TO THEIR TROOPS! This MRE is first class!
Fringe talk with soldiers about it Man.
Dobrze ,że sporo tego jest- Polak jak głodny to zły.
Zastanawiam się, w którym wojsku jest taka racja żywnościowa ;)
Public Enemy jak ja byłem w woju to tylko panzerwafle ,chleb z puszki (niezły był) i tuszonki hehehe.I nieśmiertelna Inka...
@@RafvanZi Jak kiedyś przywiozłem panzerwafle z przepustki, to kumple myśleli, że to klocki hamulcowe ;)
a jak zły to głodny
@@PublicEnemy. jesteś psychiczny, jak mozna pisać takie rzeczy 🙄🙄🙄
I’ve had one of these. Back when we traded MREs with the polish army. Absolutely loved it.
I spent 30 years in the US Army and have eaten many mre's but never tried polish rations, but they look pretty good!
This one was really good.
@@emmymade thank you for the reply! I love you're channel!! There's to much stupidity on RUclips, but youre very enjoyable to watch!! Thank you!!
Please contact me if you want to try some polish rations
@@Drzedan272 Polskie zelazna racje z lat 70-tych kartonik pancernych sucharow plus puszka mielonki. JW 2848 1971
@@tedmar2811 Zapomnialeś o kostkach kawy slodzonej i cukierku.
Oh those are panzercrackers Lithuanians have the same ones.
I've reviewed both, yes exactly the same but they originate in Poland. must say, the polish MRE was superior (both were individual meal rations) but I still have to try a few more from both countries, my Lithuanian MRE review comes out by Thursday 25th Apr if ytoure interested to see an Outdoor review on MRE's :)
Masz talent Dziewczyno do prezentowania!
Przy okazji pokazałaś, że polskie jedzenie jest naprawdę smaczne. Gratuluję i Pozdrawiam!
Polish food rations are the best, traditional Polish food is great too and Polish soldiers are also great, the best. Greetings from Poland 😊🇵🇱💂🎖️
👍
@@BettyWood793 👍
I’m wondering if Emmys actually a low key dooms day prepper
Nope. Just voracious :)
@@lisamariee3546 especially with all her knowledge about food from hard times!
JustMelinda I was thinking the same!
hell yes she is 😁
It’s so hard to pay attention when emmys just constantly being adorable 😂
Mr. Emmymadeinjapan home from work: "What's for dinner tonight?", Emmymadeinjapan: "Lunchmeat and Liver pate on crisps, freeze dried fruit, pork neck stew, and beans and sausage on hard tack!" Mr. Emmymadeinjapan: "Huh?"
''Nevermind, I'll just eat the leftover spaghetti-o jello''.
"Nice!!"
200th like
Okay, why is anytime I see Emmy do an MRE taste test I just hear Steve1989 going, "Niiiice." 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Let's get it out onto a tray
@@MazDeff Nice.
Nice hiss. See ya
Steve is a fan of Emmy. I found her link on his page.
Molly Fanton - I love watching Steve1989.
Nice hiss. Less get this onto a tray, Mkay! I giggle everytime. And his love for coffee instant is so cute. I've sent links to his videos to several friends and they love him too.
Emmy: says “itadakimasu”
RUclips captions: *its a donkey mouth*
Loved the video!
Quite frankly as a Polish person I wouldn't say we usually have two meals… I'd say it's ussually three - breakfast, dinner and supper. The difference is our "dinner" comes more at a time of English "lunch" - that is early afternoon - and our supper is a very small, light meal that you'd eat in the evening (couple toasts, yoghurt, cereal… kind of like small breakfast size I'd say). The biggest difference is generally the time at which we eat our "large meal" - from general experience I can say this time shifts between European countries which is fun to watch in my flat (sharing with students) since we can almost never share a meal because we all eat at diffrent times.
These pates by the way are the taste of my childhood xD They are pretty unhealthy (I mean they last forever in that can, I would not expect a lot of actual meat in them - the rule is to never read the ingredients otherwise you'll lose your apetite) but I loved them so much as a kid that if I ever got my hands on one (not too often since my mum was not a big fan of them, understandably) I'd eat it with a spoon.
Actually, good quality pates are pretty meatty and not artificial at all. The key to they long preservertion is that they're canned and deprived of any air access. You can do this with an actual cooked chunk of meat and it will be good months later. Once you open the can the pate goes bad pretty quickly.
I think he was talking more about the canned pates that you can buy at any supermarket in Poland, i wouldn't trust their ingredient list, but they are really good, for the price tag at least. The cheaper ones will cost you like 30 cents for a can and the more luxurious ones are maybe twice as expensive. And they come in a wide variety of flavors; chicken or pork, geese, paprica, tomato, mushroom, garlic, black or white pepper and many, many more, there's this one company in particular which makes like 20 different flavors. The other day i actually had one from some limited edition that was red wine flavored (it was a bit more savory and sharp than the regular one), they're kinda like Japanese Kit-Kats in that regard ;). And they're also, alongside ramen noodles, a staple in the diet of any selfrespecting student. They're great for sharing too, i have many fond memories from my university days of sitting down between classes with a piece of bread roll each and a can of pate being used like a dip :)
Tbh the Pates are my jam. Literally. A sandwich session without them is just not worth eating sandwiches at all. With fermented Cucumbers....oh yes.
My older brother used to joke and tell us that it consists of hooves, nails, utter, fur and other animal ingridients to make fun of it 😂😂😂
Malcadicta yeah I relate to wanting to have brunch but also sometime steak after dessert
as a polish dude i was waiting for a polish ration for so long! im so happy u did that x
as a polish dudette I'd smash that kiełbasa krakowska can and devour it's contents immedietly. It's so good that I felt hungry for it just watching this video xD
Me too! This made me miss Poland 😩
Dinner means the biggest meal of the day. In the US it's often in the evening. Supper is derived from Soup. Big meal early in the day makes sense if you are doing heavy work (marching under load, digging, etc.).
Emmy: I'm not going to light this, it would be quite toxic.
Steve1989MREInfo: Nice.
Lol
LMAO
Nice hiss
Haha. Its a wonder how he is still alive.
i read that in his voice. i actually laughed.
Yay I was hoping you'd upload an MRE video. My ancestors are from Ukraine close to the border of Poland. We eat lots of Polish food. That MRE looks awesome.
I just realized how much she reminds me of a bee. Small, kind, loves honey, probably also makes a "whoop!" sound when bumped into, and graceful.
That's one of the loveliest compliments I've ever heard!
Finally Polish rations :) You're also welcome to visit Poland for more delicious food :)
Theraflu brand is also available in Poland, just to let you know
Yeah, true
Theraflu really helps out my cold/flu symptoms. Works better than pills or syrup. Even the store brands work well.
@@pay9011 Are you sponsored..?
@@pay9011 and it's better then gripex! And, no, nobody pays me. Just theraflu is better🤷♂️
I know this video is like two years old, but oh my gosh, that hat is such a sweet touch. What a nice little extra gift.
I'm actually jealous
I just love how she gets so excited over the food😅😍 she is adorable lol
This has to be one of the best ration packs I've seen so far, great variety. I husband was in the army(uk) and I brought a couple of his home, they were not the best but this one looks awesome 😊
I've watched many of your videos in the past, but just realized how amazingly positive you are. Many times in life, happiness is a choice. So glad to experience you sharing that with us.
Polish food is great
XDD
Natalia Strzelecka ogarnij się
A luj wam wszystkim w pupę!
Yep.
Emmy: *puts on hat*
Emmy: *becomes cuter, somehow??*
Great video, as always!
Loved the review of the polish mre! I'm polish American and loved how traditional it was. Just found your channel. You do a great job.
Thank god for your videos!!!!! Your voice helps me go to sleep (no hate. Nothing has been making me sleep lately). I love your content it relaxes me so much.
Not alone in this. She's just cheery and happy and gentle sounding it's wonderful .
I use her channel for sleep too! Lol I didn't wasn't to sound offensive, but her voice is so calming, and soothing.
Emmy always takes big, luxurious bites and I love that. Even with the edible insect episodes, she was the best trooper and chomped away. I was proud of her :D
I like your MRE videos. You give a great description to the items you are eating. Plus I thought the way you said, “Chocolate bar” was so adorable.
I love Poland.
Love the videos! Could you possibly someday make moon cakes?! With all the pretty designs on top. :]
Ah finally !! I really waiting to emmy making some moon cake ☺
janice mai oooo I’d love to see that! I’ve always wanted to learn how to make them
I like the fact that she describes how things taste. I also love that she sees the good in all foodseven if we would all be kinda uneasy to try certain foods.
Amy! Water purification tablets are in a separate kit in Poland :) oh and we also have oblaty in Poland sold separately as a snack, they came to us from Germany :)
i love these MRE videos!!! :D
Hi Moxie 😁 . This video so awesome ! I like too
Me too! I’ve actually already seen this MRE... CrazyRussianHacker has done TONS of them! I’m so curious to see what Emmy thinks.
Same these are my fave too !!
Look up "Steve1989MREinfo". You won't be sorry.
I WISH I COULD GET THOSE MREs
This looks like one of the best MREs out there! Outstanding review Emmy!😊
I can tell you enjoyed this package, made me wanna try
Me too
They cost 10 dollars in poland, 30 złoty
omg rations from my country, that's so cool :D
yes I'm from poland :)
dobry wieczór
Czeszcz! Ja tez. :)
:D
🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱
Woops... I meant cześć. I always get that wrong. I'm not fluent at all, but I try. :)
@@eurovision50 it's ok :)
Very civilsed! I'm quite impressed with the thoughtfulness which went into designing the Polish ration pack.
Thanks for the video, Emmy!
Interesting to see that "Fasola" is actually a Polish word! That is how we call beans in Sicilian dialect :P
Its latin roots word, latin was official langauge for Republic of Poland for almost 300 years. You know Polish people pretends the are last Romans....
@@kamilprzybylski3499 maybe Russians claimed their Roman heretige so called the 3rd Rome theory.
hahahahahahahah
in Poland, specifically this type of bean is called "peas Jasiek" - Mr. Bean -> Jaś Fasola
Greetings from Poland to Sicily
Cześć Emmy! I'm so glad you've tested Polish MRE and you liked it! :-) If you ever visit Chicago you should definitely visit some Polish restaurants and delis. Polish community is huge here.
She has a lovely and genuine vibe about herself. A keeper.
I adore your personality, I feel like I know you since forever! 😘😘💜💜
why am I so impressed with the handle for the stove
I was a Marine platoon commander in Vietnam 68-69. We had C-Rations that came in a cardboard box. I don't remember everything that was in it but each box came with a "Heavy" and a "lite" which referred to a large can and a small can. The large can could be beans and franks, ham and lima beans, beef slices with potatoes, spaghetti and with balls, and maybe one or two other meals. The small can could be a slice of beefsteak, turkey loaf, chopped ham and eggs, or ham slices.
A box would also have a can of bread such hardtack biscuits and sometimes a bread backed into the can. And there would be a dessert in a medium can such as pound cake, fruitcake, or fruit cocktail in a large can (if you had fruit cocktail then you always had a small can of meat like above). There was never two large cans or two small cans in a ration.
There was also a very small can of cheese which I found to be uneatable and sometimes peanut, and a small can of jam.
There was an accessory pack with gum, a small pack of cigarettes, powdered cocoa or coffee, a piece of candy, sugar, salt and pepper, powdered creamer, matches, heat tabs (no stove--you made your own out of one of the small cans) and toilet paper that was completely useless during the monsoon season.
There were so many preservatives in the food that we joked that if we got killed we would already be embalmed, saving the morgue some extra work.
In general, everything tasted terrible except the turkey loaf, beefsteak slices, and ham slices. Every other kind of meat / beans was unpleasant and consumed only because it was the only thing you had to eat. The bread wasn't too bad and the dessert wasn't that bad either.
We tried a lot of ways to improve the taste. Might add the powdered coffee to beans and franks, mash in the pound cake to the ham and lima beans, mix in some peanut butter to the beef slices and potatoes, but the most effective way was to chop up one wild pepper that were about the size of a fingernail and mix it in. These were the hottest peppers I've ever had. One small piece would make your eyes water, nose run, lips burn, and cheeks numb.
C-Rations came in various combinations and the one I described was the one I most often had in Vietnam.
Technically, each Marine rated three C-Rations a day. However, the area we operated in made being resupplied unpredictable due to the enemy threat, weather, and mountainous terrain. During my time in Vietnam, I don't remember getting more than one C-Ration a day and because resupply was unpredictable, that one ration usually had to last 2-3 days. Typically, we had a "Heavy" or "Lite" in the morning and the remaining can the next morning. Everything else we stretched out for a long as possible. I always saved a few small cans of peanut butter and some jam to keep my energy up between resupplies.
C-Rations were fairly heavy and bulky and ammunition was far more important than food and so it was good that we only had to carry one ration for a couple of days.
The biggest problem was water. There was no such thing as bottled water in the field nor was there a way to effectively helicopter in potable water. So we filled canteens with whatever was available such as catching rain, a stream, local wells, and as a last resort rice paddy water. Except for the rain, all other sources were polluted and would make you very sick and it usually stunk. We'd put three times the number water purification tablets in the canteen to try to kill whatever was swimming round.
After I retired from the Marines in 1989, I ended up as an independent consultant supporting US military exercises for Special Forces and the Army around the world. That's when I was introduced to MREs which were a 100 times better than the C-Rations in Vietnam.
The Polish rations look even better than the MREs.
I know I'm late, but the Polish hardtack uses caraway as a seasoning - it tastes a bit like fennel:) It's kinda exotic spice outside of Eastern Europe, where it's super popular and kind of love or hate ingredient.
I call caraway seeds "zombie seeds" because they infect everything they touch. 😂 I'm not a fan of the flavor, you may have guessed.