THE FENIAN BROTHERHOOD

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • In the aftermath of the Great Famine, Ireland was exhausted. The population had fallen dramatically through death from hunger and disease, and from mass emigration. Over a million people had fled to seek a new life in North America, and possibly the same number settled in Great Britain. They took with them a seething hatred of England, blaming the government for the calamity that had fallen upon their motherland. The men who had taken part in the Young Ireland rebellion of 1848 began to recruit and plan armed insurrection.
    Kevin and Oisin walk through the rise and fall of The Fenian Brotherhood

Комментарии • 140

  • @The_Red_Off_Road
    @The_Red_Off_Road Год назад +22

    I’m from a small but old town on the Mississippi River. Natchez, Mississippi. Give it a google.
    The city cemetery is a national park and has too many stories to tell here, but one of the more interesting stories are the ones about the Irish immigrants from before the War Between the States. You can find a lot of Irish headstones that were from the Southern part of Ireland, especially Cork.

    • @Connor.ria21
      @Connor.ria21 Год назад +1

      Jesus, I've been to Natchez two or three times and wish I knew this before!

    • @The_Red_Off_Road
      @The_Red_Off_Road Год назад +1

      @@Connor.ria21 next time you are there you have to go spend a day at the cemetery. It’s a National Park and they do offer a lot of different tours

    • @seegee9
      @seegee9 Год назад

      ​​@Kyle Temple have you read the greg isles series? Natchez burning. One of my favourite series/authors

    • @The_Red_Off_Road
      @The_Red_Off_Road Год назад +1

      @@seegee9 oh Yeah. He is prolly the most famous Natchezian. Those are great books but even as a native he misses a lot of what the social life is really like. So as a local I can spot some things that just aren’t right. But def great stories. Unfortunately Natchez has some dark history and Greg Ike’s does a lot to bring it to light. My favorites of his are his first two, they are about WW2.

  • @FreeIreland32CountyRepublic
    @FreeIreland32CountyRepublic Год назад +37

    Loyalist and Unionist bell🔚's think calling us "Fenians" is a derogatory term, it's a badge of honour.

    • @rambojp73
      @rambojp73 7 месяцев назад +7

      Agree 💯 I'm proud to be a Fenian! 🍀🇮🇪🍀👊🏻

    • @rambojp73
      @rambojp73 6 месяцев назад +3

      19th Century reply, how appropriate!! 🍀🇮🇪🍀👊🏻

  • @geek211
    @geek211 Год назад +29

    I am a lover of history, and this was one of the single greatest things I have ever seen. he should think about doing a podcast of his own, or a miniseries. Just fantastic, I cannot communicate how much I loved this in words. Just stellar!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    More! Am I right lads?!
    and Lassies ;)
    ?

  • @Ohaodhatirfothuinn
    @Ohaodhatirfothuinn Год назад +14

    JJ Breslin’s involvement in the Fremantle Prison Escape reads like something from a Mission Impossible movie!!😂👍🏼🍀🇮🇪 He dressed impeccably in the best suits money could buy, left huge tips in every establishment he crossed in Fremantle, spoke in a very refined manner, wined and dined on invitation with many of the elite of the small Port Town/City of the time… Smoked the best cigars money could buy and was INVITED into Fremantle Prison where he made his first contact with his boys…
    They call it a Rescue as they refuse to acknowledge they planned an Escape from a prison that was apparently and proudly not escapable…🤷🏻‍♂️😅 It’s a World Heritage site today, and on tours you’ve to push some Tour guides on occasions to mention the Escape… Éire is etched into and written on the walls all over old parts of the Prison!!😃👍🏼🍀🇮🇪

  • @northside7
    @northside7 Год назад +19

    That was fantastic, the volume of back stories was incredible,so much I didn't know.
    Thanks again Kevin, the Podcast literally gets better every episode.
    It's funny seeing the Irish leap out of you when you too get together.

    • @bigc5630
      @bigc5630 Год назад

      Theres a book, called" voyage of the catalpa", a fantastic read!

  • @griffsolutions348
    @griffsolutions348 Год назад +5

    I backpacked through Ireland in the early/mid 90's and coming from Australia knew very little, if any of their history. Fell in love with a local Irish girl & got to learn what the British did to them over time. I understand why the Irish despise the Brits, and got to see it fist hand during my stay. Was meant to stay in Belfast but only lasted 2 days there, it was way too violent for me. Thank you Kevin for putting this out there, I am sure most people have no idea about Irish history & how the republic was formed.

  • @johnd5244
    @johnd5244 Год назад +13

    Excellent podcast again! Oisin is a wealth of history. Can’t wait for more. Thank you both for sharing with us.

  • @bigmal1690
    @bigmal1690 Месяц назад +1

    As a protestant in NI, I never learned about the wider irish history until I left school and looked into myself, I did read a lot about the Troubles, I remember asking my perents and others why does them ones want to kill us, and getting a different answer everytime, nobody seemed to know, even my dad who was a cop didn't have a good answer, So when I was about 10yrs old I started to read every book about the troubles that I could get my hands on, and that started me on the path to a lover of history that I still have to this day.
    And I still don't know and understand how the Troubles started because I can never get my head around why people would want to kill each other over a peice of land, a different flag, a name, or a different church and political belief.

  • @thomasnguyen5639
    @thomasnguyen5639 Год назад +11

    This was easier to follow than the last podcast for someone new to Irish history.

  • @AKsusan907
    @AKsusan907 Год назад +6

    What a great listen gentleman! Definitely enjoy hearing more. Thank you both. 🇮🇪

  • @bazduggan4042
    @bazduggan4042 Год назад +4

    Iv learned more about the lRB in that video then I learned in school. Fantastic!
    From co. Laois.

  • @robertryan2542
    @robertryan2542 Год назад +7

    Brilliant. I can't wait to hear this. From Limerick 🇮🇪

  • @tmmccormick86
    @tmmccormick86 Год назад +11

    Fantastic to see another podcast episode and it's a History one to boot!

  • @ciaranward4685
    @ciaranward4685 11 месяцев назад +3

    Very interesting and evocative. Thank you.

  • @BSaunders3754
    @BSaunders3754 Год назад +5

    Holy crap, that was one of the best podcast I’ve ever seen. As a fellow amateur historian, I have an insatiable appetite for all things history! This podcast was like “crack” to an addict for me. Mr. Owens I strongly recommend you create a “history themed” podcast about wars and battles and conflict with a heavy emphasis on obscure and unknown facts not recorded in history books. Your podcast can be called McHistory, an Irish warriors historical exploration of unknown facts surrounding conflicts, wars, and violence.

    • @kevinowens9636
      @kevinowens9636  Год назад +3

      That would be so much fun

    • @BSaunders3754
      @BSaunders3754 Год назад +1

      @@kevinowens9636 I agree! You could also integrate the podcast into your travel adventures. You can discuss obscure facts and tell anecdotal stories that are unknown or have not been discussed before (i.e. Col Joshua Chamberlin’s last ditch desperate bayonet charge at Gettysburg which prevented the south from successfully flanking the north’s far left flank). Let me know if you are looking for any idea’s and keep on doing your thing.

  • @thisdrinkinglife
    @thisdrinkinglife 7 месяцев назад +4

    Absolutely brilliant, Oisin is great, and has a great way of relaying the history, informative and educational, love it. New sub.

    • @kevinowens9636
      @kevinowens9636  7 месяцев назад +2

      Oisin is awesome indeed. Welcome to the channel.

  • @JudoTim3891
    @JudoTim3891 Год назад +3

    Thanks lads, that was a great episode… please do more Irish history!
    Slainte 🇮🇪

  • @tombarry2523
    @tombarry2523 8 месяцев назад +3

    I learned alot today, thanks for the podcast. 👍

  • @Summit_Moto_Utah
    @Summit_Moto_Utah Год назад +6

    Wow, wow wow... more of these!! Do one more detailing that Australia rescue!! Fantastic... great job.

  • @alanfox1309
    @alanfox1309 Год назад +2

    As a scot of southern Irish descent I loved that. But I was Surprised there was no mention of Wolfe Tone. but i loved it.

    • @patrickliam1720
      @patrickliam1720 4 месяца назад

      Wolfe tone was burned in a barrel of pitch in 1798. This talk is about fenians, not the untired Irishmen of the 1798 rising. The term fenian actually wasn't in popular use until the mid 1800s

  • @MrBlart
    @MrBlart Год назад +4

    You guys should make this a on going series,
    It flows very well with great banter I think I watched both videos 2-3 times I can’t wait for more appropriate all the work you both put into it 😀

  • @patrickyoung3503
    @patrickyoung3503 7 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent Irish history lesson for me . More of the same please I would appreciate that very much .

  • @jessmcglothlin8094
    @jessmcglothlin8094 Год назад +5

    Loved this one-great listen. Nice work, Kevin and Oisin.

  • @chrisspeanburg7951
    @chrisspeanburg7951 Год назад +1

    Kevin, my great great grandfather, John Kenny ( from County Kildare ) was a member of the Fenian Brotherhood, IRB and Clan-na-Gael. He was involved in many operations from the Catalpa Rescue to the Easter Rising, pretty much spent his entire life working for Irish independence. On one of his last ops he was the IRB's secret envoy to the German government, seeking arms for the Easter Rising, that story is like something out of a John le Carré novel. Lots of deep Irish roots over here in America.

  • @MrHITACHI75
    @MrHITACHI75 Год назад +4

    Brilliant lads really enjoyed listening to this podcast. Some very interesting stories especially about the prison breakout in Western Australia, can you imagine how big that was back in the day. Bold Fenian men 🇮🇪

  • @hugmc
    @hugmc Год назад +1

    I need too listen too this often because I had problems learning at school just didn’t want too listen about anything doped most school days was a expert at missing school 😊

  • @barrett2022
    @barrett2022 Год назад +1

    Best podcast i've ever listened to. Wealth of information i've ever knew about the IRA .

  • @keithbyrne2475
    @keithbyrne2475 Год назад +3

    Great podcast! I'm from Dublin, Kevin. I had an uncle who was a Sergeant in the DF during the 80's/90's.

  • @DetPaddyOC
    @DetPaddyOC Год назад +4

    “Glory-O, Glory-O…. To the Bold Fenian Men 🎶 “

  • @michaelbishop6831
    @michaelbishop6831 Год назад +1

    Pure class!

  • @davidweisbach5376
    @davidweisbach5376 Год назад +2

    Good Lord. This is great stuff. Keep it coming. Thank you.

  • @seandoshandy
    @seandoshandy Год назад +3

    Great content! Belfast lad here stateside.

  • @stevebillet2092
    @stevebillet2092 Месяц назад

    Excellent history lesson, thank you guys. Steve

  • @JimmyD_C172
    @JimmyD_C172 Год назад +1

    Thank you for all of these videos. I can't get enough of this history. My Grandfather came over from Cavan in the early 1920s and never got to talk to him about his experiences. I put Barry's book on my wishlist. Be well.

  • @ciarancassidy203
    @ciarancassidy203 Год назад +1

    Cheers Kevin , rally enjoyed this

  • @hughobrien1234
    @hughobrien1234 Год назад +2

    When I grew up in the 70s and 80s in Dublin fighting was the norm, just tough working class.

  • @AS-qy4hk
    @AS-qy4hk Год назад +2

    Oisin is fantastic, I’d love to see him on more.

  • @bigc5630
    @bigc5630 Год назад +1

    This is truly great stuff, please keep the podcast going Kev!!!!!

  • @ronkeely909
    @ronkeely909 Год назад +3

    Grandpa McKeown's family left Ireland in the 1840s and settled in Tennessee and he married a Cherokee woman.

  • @vitigaymer1053
    @vitigaymer1053 Год назад +1

    Great interview

  • @davedriscoll1652
    @davedriscoll1652 Год назад +1

    Kevin, first thankyou for your service & God bless you for the Irish podcasts i loved listening to you guys. Reminds me of my dad, he was an amature Irish-American historian., and i miss hearing the stories of southwest Cork. Im a new subscriber, and am eager to hear more. God bless you from northwest Iowa, Dave Driscoll.

  • @Richard1A2B
    @Richard1A2B 4 месяца назад

    I love your explaination of how foreign forces can build up resistance by their actions, but how this can be a difficult thing to avoid 16:43. A really great podcast, very informative.... and I am Irish, living at the foot of Lugnaquilla near the Glen.

  • @jato62
    @jato62 Год назад +2

    Great great show!

  • @stonewall3745
    @stonewall3745 Год назад +1

    Fascinating

  • @jimsweet3256
    @jimsweet3256 Год назад +2

    This was so awesome! Thanks guys!

  • @OpaKnows
    @OpaKnows Год назад +1

    Fascinating couple of videos. Hope you make it a regular thing.

  • @CWD2006
    @CWD2006 Год назад +2

    This is the Best , Thanks !!!

  • @AminuteofhistoryK
    @AminuteofhistoryK Год назад +2

    Extremely interesting good on both of you for this content. Please do more. Thank you for getting out of the box of typical podcasts. God Bless

  • @eaomonn1215
    @eaomonn1215 Год назад +2

    Fantastic podcast

  • @shortstackdale4516
    @shortstackdale4516 Год назад +2

    Great podcast!

  • @robkenny1529
    @robkenny1529 Год назад +2

    Great coverage lads. Well done 👍🏻

  • @SpicyAl3000
    @SpicyAl3000 Год назад +1

    Part 2! Fantastic :) Cheers :)

  • @texdad91
    @texdad91 Год назад +3

    Kevin, I’m really enjoying the podcast. I’ve learned so much from this couple of discussions with Oisin. I had read a book about Michael Collins a number of years ago, and getting all this background was outstanding. I picked up War in the Shadows today. Btw, hope you guys can schedule some medical classes North Richland Hills, TX. I live down in SE Texas but would be willing to make the trip…Mike

  • @yukefort8402
    @yukefort8402 Год назад +2

    Great job.

  • @darrenhartigan3033
    @darrenhartigan3033 Год назад +2

    Love this

  • @William-Welch
    @William-Welch Год назад +2

    Great episode. Loved the history.

  • @ArimaKihe1
    @ArimaKihe1 Год назад +2

    Hey Kevin. Love your podcasts! Have you ever thought of getting James Crawley on the show? He’s Irish and ex US SF like yourself but he was part of the IRA. There’s a wonderful podcast with James English (a Scots) and they talk about his life leading up to his imprisonment

  • @mikewinter7697
    @mikewinter7697 Год назад +2

    Please keep this going. This is very entertaining and interesting

  • @_lukemills
    @_lukemills Год назад +2

    Been looking forward to this one for a while, thanks Kevin

  • @Disraeli82
    @Disraeli82 Год назад +2

    Fantastic episode. Really enjoyed it.

  • @wyattterrell
    @wyattterrell Год назад +2

    Excellent

  • @beardly0121
    @beardly0121 Год назад +3

    This is extremely interesting history. Thanks for this upload and I hope you lads have a happy new year!

  • @danlynch8024
    @danlynch8024 Год назад +1

    This is just like sitting at the kitchen table with my Father and his friends. So much of what I was taught was just by listening at the table. Go raibh maith agat.

  • @UrNotThatGuyPal
    @UrNotThatGuyPal Год назад +1

    While i have no idea if this dude is right on all his history… the sheer amount of regurgitated knowledge/history is astounding.
    Thanks Doc/Kevin

  • @donfilkins298
    @donfilkins298 Год назад +2

    That was awesome!

  • @longtabsigo
    @longtabsigo Год назад +2

    As a member of the Irish Diaspora, thank you! If you are in North Carolina, have you ever been to Paddy’s here in Fayetteville?

  • @De_Bars_Gullible_Travels
    @De_Bars_Gullible_Travels 6 месяцев назад

    Kevin,I don’t know why or how you ended up on my feed,maybe because I have been watching my Irish history again,but I am so so happy you appeared…
    This channel is the poodles privates!!!
    The services you provide,I had a look at your website,are truly amazing!!! I’m Irish,from Dublin,49 and a truck driver and no real ties anymore,so I am still able to learn something new…
    I have always wanted to go to America,if I do,getting some training with you would be an honour!!!
    Thank you for these videos,amazing content!!!
    Go raibh maith agat mo chara ❤ 🇮🇪 ❤ 🇺🇸

    • @kevinowens9636
      @kevinowens9636  5 месяцев назад

      you're welcome ( forgot how to say it in Gaelic )

  • @bryanmcdermott4204
    @bryanmcdermott4204 Год назад +1

    This was quite interesting, and the book recommendations were greatly appreciated.
    Also, Lucky Charms are fantastic.

  • @veecantu6915
    @veecantu6915 Год назад +1

    Excellent podcast, a topic you may want to look at sometime in the future, "El Batallón de San Patricio"

  • @rowanmcdonagh3663
    @rowanmcdonagh3663 Год назад +1

    Love these conversations. As an Irish semi historian Oisin is so well read. Important listening for anyone irish never mind us or other.keep these up! Great job!

  • @jimrad9525
    @jimrad9525 Год назад +1

    Shout out from country down Ireland yea weird history lovely places morne mountains good to walk

  • @Kieran.Walsh.
    @Kieran.Walsh. Год назад +3

    Nice 🇮🇪

  • @brandonearly267
    @brandonearly267 Год назад

    Outstanding!!!

  • @MediaAttorney
    @MediaAttorney Год назад +2

    "For slavery fled, o glorious dead, when you fell in the foggy dew."

  • @generalkrang7138
    @generalkrang7138 Год назад

    Excellent podcast

  • @omalleyshepherd2936
    @omalleyshepherd2936 Год назад +3

    Great stuff! I’ve read s o m e Irish history, but Oisin condenses it nicely. It always seemed to me that DeValera ratfucked Collins, hiding off to NY, and getting Collins to put his signature on the treaty, then coming back to become Tesioch, but my reading hasn’t been that deep.

  • @randallpink5153
    @randallpink5153 Год назад

    Love the POD , you got a little echo in mic tho, i think we pounded some of the same ground in Afghanistan , FireBase TYCZ in DRW .

  • @silvermint2080
    @silvermint2080 Год назад +1

    Oisin please finish all pods with slan lads ha

  • @EdwinYee1
    @EdwinYee1 Год назад +1

    1:05:16 And no one can forget that there are a lot of boxing champions like James Braddock and Mickey Ward with Irish lineage

  • @markt4281
    @markt4281 Год назад +2

    Lmao I JUST finished your last video and clicked on this. The accent is so much thicker 😂 hey, I do it too gojng from just LA to SD. Good stuff

  • @darrenhartigan3033
    @darrenhartigan3033 Год назад +2

    Yeah only went as far as leaving certificate in education. I joined Irish army straight out of secondary school but always loved history

  • @northred4930
    @northred4930 Год назад +2

    Ireland Unfree shall never be at peace . TAL

  • @dmike2010
    @dmike2010 Год назад

    Labhraim Gaeilge..well i learned it on Duolingo...always wanted to learn it when I read about the Hunger Strikers/Bobby Sands

  • @tech6263
    @tech6263 Год назад +1

    I think my family is from Ireland. I know. Shame on me. I’m just an American mongrel. There I said it. It has been great to hear this history lesson from my family’s history.

    • @eaomonn1215
      @eaomonn1215 Год назад +1

      If you feel irish you are irish my friend, welcome to the clan best regards from a fellow irish man

  • @scottbmedic
    @scottbmedic Год назад +1

    I believe the reason the British kept the Irish starving is when you’re suffering from malnutrition you’re to weak to revolt. The same thing goes for the people in North Korea being kept near starvation by their government.

  • @MiG2880
    @MiG2880 2 месяца назад

    In "A View of the Present State of Ireland", circulated in 1596 but not published until 1633, the English official and renowned poet Edmund Spenser wrote "They are all papists by profession but in the same so blindingly and brutishly informed that you would rather think them atheists or infidels".
    In a "Brief Note on Ireland," Spenser argued that "Great force must be the instrument but famine must be the means, for till Ireland be famished it cannot be subdued. . . There can be no conformity of government where is no conformity of religion. . . There can be no sound agreement between two equal contraries viz: the English and Irish".
    - Excerpt from Wikipedia page on 'Anti Irish Sentiment'.
    Please note. This was published well over two hundred years before the 'famine' (a.k.a. genocide) happened. Apparently they'd been sitting on that plan for a very long time.

  • @genevievedolan1288
    @genevievedolan1288 7 месяцев назад +1

    There is history going back thousands of years in America. Not to nitpick.

  • @thepiratepenguin4465
    @thepiratepenguin4465 11 месяцев назад

    8:38 Many Irish came to South Africa to work the gold mines of the Transvaal. That is how my family ended up here.

  • @freemindthinkerezrapound5071
    @freemindthinkerezrapound5071 Месяц назад

    As the great freedom fighter emiliano zapata 1879-1919 said, I would rather die standing than live on my knees

  • @jacqueline4905
    @jacqueline4905 7 месяцев назад +1

    Maybe I'm on the wrong channel but we Scottish suffered too

  • @Kieran.Walsh.
    @Kieran.Walsh. Год назад +2

    1:05:17 That’s still very real 😂 even at about half nine pm in cork the warmups commence

  • @irishcoffee5412
    @irishcoffee5412 Год назад +1

    1798 was a Fenian uprising

  • @dmike2010
    @dmike2010 Год назад +2

    Did you see Black '47?

    • @kevinowens9636
      @kevinowens9636  Год назад +2

      Yes, loved it

    • @dmike2010
      @dmike2010 Год назад +1

      @@kevinowens9636 the scenes really brought to light the books i read about the Great Hunger (fyi there is a memorial in NYC near WTC) ... I wanted more of Sara Greene singing mo ghile mear

  • @derrick9635
    @derrick9635 6 месяцев назад

    Ireland had the terrible misfortune to be neighbours of the British empire.

  • @squatch2461
    @squatch2461 Год назад

    🍻

  • @eaomonn1215
    @eaomonn1215 Год назад

    Was barry not an nco?

  • @williamsteele1409
    @williamsteele1409 10 месяцев назад +1

    we don't use the brits term northern ireland its the occupied 6 counties

  • @jacqueline4905
    @jacqueline4905 7 месяцев назад

    HAPPY BURNS NIGHT

  • @johnking6406
    @johnking6406 8 месяцев назад

    Greetings gentlemen, Actually the submarine developed by J.J. Breslin and John Phillip Holland came later on. I think that Mr. Breslin may have been inspired by the submarines built and deployed by the Confederate States of America under the auspices of the Army (initially, and later the Navy), notably the C.S.S. Hunley, which was invented by H.L. Hunley, James McClintock, and Baxter Watson. The C.S.S. Hunley was actually the FIRST submarine to be deployed against and enemy vessel and sink it, but the Yankee mythmakers who fashioned what passes as "American History" could never countenance that fact, and did everything they could to BURY the memory of the Hunley and its exploits. Indeed the ship and what it did for the Cause of Southern Independence, might have forever been lost had it not been for a wealthy, Yankee born, but Southern raised mogul who financed a movie about it in the 1990s. His name was Ted Turner.

  • @jordanomasuin8023
    @jordanomasuin8023 Год назад +1

    My Grandmother often makes cornbeef with cabbage and I am from Ireland maybe you are referring to something else with the American lingo. When My parents were growing up they used to always get bread with butter and just sugar on top. That is what they got everyday for school.

    • @donfleming7062
      @donfleming7062 Год назад

      Cornbeef in Ireland is like spam, it comes in a can. I often had sandwiches using it when I was growing up in Cork. Cornedbeef in the U.S. is not the same thing. The Irish did eat cornedbeef and cabbage in the states due to it being cheap. Its actually a Jewish dish originally.

    • @jordanomasuin8023
      @jordanomasuin8023 Год назад

      @@donfleming7062Apologies for the late reply , my notifications are turned off. I am still confused I meant cornedbeef in my orgional comment. I had to google a picture of it after your comment My grandmother still makes it for dinner with gabbage and sometimes with mash potatoes with Turnip. It is slightly chewy from what I remember, it has been a number of year since I tried it but I know she still makes it. I used to eat it on sandwiches with cabbage and brown sauce when I came home from work. I am not talking about cornbeef / spam in a Can ( I have never even tasted that) or those thin slices you get these days for sandwiches. The second part of my comment in relation to the sandwiches was just another thing my mother used to tell me when they were growing up so I added it in. They come from a large family my grandmother had 11 kids, everyday when going to school they used to get bread with butter and just sugar on top. My grandfather used to have goats, chickens practically everything in the back garden. I am from Co. Wicklow. I may just be talking about something completely different but when I google "Cornedbeef" it is the same as in what I am talking about. It is probably different with the american lingo and it is probably something completely different in the states.

    • @donfleming7062
      @donfleming7062 Год назад

      @@jordanomasuin8023 Damn, I miss turnip. Never went for the brown sauce, stuck with the ketchup lol. All this talk about food is making me hungry now. Anytime I go back home, I stuff myself. I used to make sugar sandwiches myself, but my siblings weren't into it as much as I was. I do know that in the old days, we didn't eat as much meat as we do today, its way cheaper nowadays. Mutton, bacon with crackly, rashers, just can't get the same stuff over here where I live. Thinking of moving back home, or at least my stomach is lol. Thanks for the reply Jordan

    • @genevievedolan1288
      @genevievedolan1288 7 месяцев назад

      My Irish dad always made bacon and cabbage, with potatoes, but they don’t have that kind of cut of a side of bacon in the USA, so corned beef is the nearest thing. It is a side of corned, ie salted beef, not like the corned beef you get out of a can. You simmer it for ages then add the cabbage to cook toward the end. I can’t believe these men have not had bacon and cabbage in Ireland.