Dear Mr. Miller, my family loves to watch your videos. Today’s video I felt missed a very important point. Those hardworking ladies feeding the people in the bomb shelters were the W.V.S. The Women’s Voluntary Service. They did so very much to help the war effort. I thought they deserved to be named. The W.V.S. Helped with the evacuations, grew food, canned jams and other foods and even knitted to help others in Britain and Europe stay warm. These ladies also helped collect rose hips and make rose syrup so the country would not lack for vitamin c. I would love for you to do their rose syrup recipe and share a little of their history.
@AidanNaut05 күн бұрын
good point
@sherrihaight27245 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@dlynnlynn7415 күн бұрын
Wow! That would be a really interesting episode
@borgmardunkleson22255 күн бұрын
This needs more upvotes
@JanisKeller-lv6em5 күн бұрын
I would love to hear about these ladies. What they cooked, crocheted, and did in general. Thanks
@yesmisskitten5 күн бұрын
My mom was born in '36, and basically grew up in an air-raid shelter in the northeast - she would talk about my nana pinning a note to her dress with her name & address and then pinning her tin cup to her coat so it wouldn't get lost going down to the shelter. Once everyone was in & settled, the children were first up with their little cups, they'd get an Oxo cube (beef bouillon), someone would fill it with boiling water, and then a crusty slice of National Loaf dropped in. For her whole life, whenever she was ill or feeling low, a boiling cup of Oxo with a soaking slice of bread was what she craved for comfort, I'd even bring it to her in hospital before she passed. Brightened her right up. She would have *loved* this channel. ❤
@The3Storms5 күн бұрын
Thanks for this mini story.
@censusgary5 күн бұрын
The National Loaf had a rather negative reputation among Brits who lived through the war. It was bread designed to be more nutritious and efficient than regular white bread- made from wholemeal flour fortified with vitamins and minerals. Apparently it didn’t taste too bad, but it was an unappealing gray color, and was said to have a texture that was both mushy and gritty. Also, it was only sold when it was at least a day old, on the grounds that a slightly stale loaf could be sliced thinner than a fresh loaf, and therefore would go farther.
@timefoolery5 күн бұрын
What a lovely memory! I’m sure it could get scary at times, but she obviously found comfort in that tiny ritual. I bet it made the kids feel important to be served bread and Oxo first. ❤ Thank you for sharing this.
@timefoolery5 күн бұрын
@@censusgary I believe Max made some on a separate episode, and yeah it didn’t look great. But I bet it beats silage bread!! 😮
@mostlyghostey5 күн бұрын
So very sweet. I'm glad you were able to bring comfort to her in the hospital. That's how I feel today about my mother's broccoli cheese soup.
@Dean-xk7kv5 күн бұрын
My favourite thing to do is read the comments of everyone's grandparent's stories about these old times. It's like a second video in itself. Thank you Max for bringing us this side of history
@tactic34wot525 күн бұрын
Agreed
@Fraxxxi5 күн бұрын
I didn't get a lot of stories from my grandparents before they died, but one thing I know is that one day in '43 while they were eating dinner a bomb hit their house, crashed right through the roof and got stuck in the second story floor - it was a dud, but of course they couldn't know if it would detonate with a delay so they moved in with their neighbors across the way for a couple of days until the bomb was defused and removed and the roof patched over.
@mindyhaun88955 күн бұрын
Same here. It's so interesting. My grandparents are gone, so I've enjoyed seeing other people share their stories.
@dmckim31745 күн бұрын
Another reason I love the WWII series. ❤
@madtownangler5 күн бұрын
My grandpa was drafted but got lucky and the War was just about over. He went to California and since he was a mechanical guy he ended up working on planes for about six months. First time he ever met a black person in his life. Not a single "colored" person lived in his county. He went back to the farm and married a woman for the next fifty plus years. He had the biggest garden of cantaloupes and watermelons of anyone I knew. He used to go to all of his grandkids houses in the fall with his car loaded up. He told me about when he and his father first got a tractor for farming. It was a big argument My dad still has that tractor in his shed. My brother gets it someday he fixes them up and goes on a tractor drive with his friends a few times a year. Imagine thirty tractors going down the road.
@SarahDawnsDesigns5 күн бұрын
My Grandmother was one of the kids who was sent out to the country - she was sent to rural Wales ,and apparently had quite the trouble there, since not everyone spoke English. She did eventually learn some Welsh though, and, it worked out as best as could be expected, considering she was one of the children who was placed with strangers. The story that she would sometimes tell is that, when all was said and done and she was reunited with her parents, they got back and their family home was just. . . gone -- except for the family cat, who was still there, and very, very happy to see the humans again. They had no idea how the cat survived, given the state of the building, and that cat was renamed 'Lucky' for the rest of his life. 💙🐾
@Марта-й7е5 күн бұрын
Прекрасна съдба за всички.
@mostlyghostey5 күн бұрын
I could never leave my cat. We are two peas in a pod. Where I go, he goes. I'm glad lucky was safe!
@taylamuller18115 күн бұрын
@@mostlyghosteyvery sadly, pets were not allowed into the bomb shelters all. Unfortunately many people actually were told by a horribly worded government pamphlet that if they were not able to rehome or send their pets to the countryside for safety, they would be better off euthanised. Many people, because of this, sent their animals to shelters or euthanised their pets as they couldn't rehome them, and were likely unable to feed or care for them due to rationing and pet owners being sent to war as soldiers. Horribly depressing time for both the pets and pet owners, where apparently your options are "magically find a safe place for your pets in the countryside with six pence to your name, or kill them for their sake."
@SarafinaSummers5 күн бұрын
I mean, absolutely no disrespect when I say this… But, that cat not only had nine lives, but was a future cameraman. 😊 thank you so much for sharing that story, it is beautiful. 🫂
@daniellefrushtick13174 күн бұрын
@@mostlyghostey spoken like someone who has never lived through a war. People were sending their CHILDREN to live with strangers in the countryside.
@imjustabee5 күн бұрын
I don't have any living relatives that remember the war, but my best friend's grandmother did. She very recently passed but she told us what she remembered. She was a child when the war started, she had a single mother and both were evacuated together as she was too young to be alone. They were sent to the Welsh countryside, were taken in by the sweetest couple. The two women had a small farmstead, just a couple cows, chickens and vegetable garden. The women were incredibly welcoming and kind to them for the years they were there. I know many evacuees found abuse or forced labour when they were sent to the country but his grandmother got the lottery placing. Once it was safe they returned home but her mother found it difficult to find work. They ended up going back to Wales, to a small village where her mother got a job typing documents for a local store owner. They never left Wales again, which is why my friends family had all been born and lived here. This experienced truly changed how they thought, living with a gay couple taught his grandmother to grow up accepting, and when my friend came out as gay at 18 she was the only person in his family to be immediately accepting of that. God bless that woman, I hope she's still watching over him somewhere
@PaladinDansesGirlfriend4 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing this!
@Sunshine-dw5cm5 күн бұрын
I lived in a third world country for a while. Cooking vegetables to mush makes the water more nutritious. The poorer the country, the more water they put in their soups. If you have 3 times more water than veg, you need to find a way to make that water appetizing so you fill your belly.
@ktspirit15 күн бұрын
We call it pot likker (liquor) and I still like to sop my cornbread in it!
@RobertJWaco5 күн бұрын
I was thinking the same, but from a chemist POV.
@cmaden785 күн бұрын
@@ktspirit1the women in my family used that name too, but only in reference to soup beans that were boiled with a giant ham hock. (Usually using the one leftover from our Easter ham)🩷🐖
@ktspirit15 күн бұрын
@@cmaden78 Turnip greens, black-eyed peas, etc. Not a drop of that likker is going to waste! LOL
@TheDoctorWholigan5 күн бұрын
also the old/young who have few teeth can eat it.
@ditlee60715 күн бұрын
This reminds me of an anecdote from my ex wife's family in which, upon heading towards the shelter the elderly matriarch showed great concern as she had gone without her dentures.. The response from the nephew was "Nan! They're dropping bombs, not sandwiches!!" 😂
@lornacy5 күн бұрын
😂
@annbower62785 күн бұрын
😂❤
@casinodelonge5 күн бұрын
Hence the 1 hour boiling!!
@kaitlyn__L5 күн бұрын
@@casinodelonge haha yep. Plus I figure the ration loaf was so tough, you were glad for the soup to be softer than them!
@myrigarou5 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@kimberlyterasaki48435 күн бұрын
Kinda tangentially related but the scene with the Pevensie children at the beginning of the most recent Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe movie was one of the best opening scenes of an children’s movie to me. The actual book kinda just brushes past it but the movie having that opening scene of the Blitz really made the stakes known from the start. The kids are basically refugees in their own country.
@cheesyllama5 күн бұрын
My mind immediately went there too. One of my beloved favorite childhood books and films.
@raquellofstedt97135 күн бұрын
That and the scene of the children leaving to evacution while the soldiers were being sent to the front, especially when only three or so years separated the oldest of the children and the youngest of the soldiers.
@DBZVelena5 күн бұрын
bedknobs and broomsticks, that disney movie, also happens during the blitz.
@cheesyllama5 күн бұрын
@DBZVelena oddly enough, I don't think I've ever seen it. And I'm an 80s baby.
@charlespentrose78345 күн бұрын
Yeah, that scene really increased my understanding of what the children were going through. It hadn't really hit me before then that this wasn't just a summer vacation type thing.
@czarowli48285 күн бұрын
My Nana lived in a suburb outside of Manchester during the Blitz. Her stories have stayed on with me all my life. She told me a story about a Luftwaffe pilot who wrote an apology letter to the town she lived in after he dumped his payload when his aircraft was hit. Nana is one of the strongest women I know, she’s 95 next year, still drives, still cooks still lives by herself. That British iron will is REAL.
@ElianaMassey-t3b5 күн бұрын
My first thought for a film showing family displaced by the bombings was The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.
@princesseville68894 күн бұрын
Grave of the fireflies - but thats specifically a japanese movie ^^'
@sarahhopper88914 күн бұрын
Does it strike anyone else as Ironic that the kids were sent to that manor house in the country to escape the war & keep them safe only for them to end up FIGHTING in a (totally different) war ???
@tiffanyvseric4 күн бұрын
A really great book I read as a kid about the children being displaced with strangers in the country side is "Good Night, Mr. Tom" but I'm warning you right now, I am 40 years old and limit myself to reading it once every other year simply because of how hard I cry.
@PiepMiau044 күн бұрын
Yes Narnia and Summerland (2020) too.
@Hecatate4 күн бұрын
Don't forget about Bedknobs and Broomsticks
@clausbitten5 күн бұрын
Maybe the soup had to be mushy because a lot of people actually drank it from a cup or thermos? I guess having a soup bowl/plate was not the best idea in a cramped environment with also the danger of dust etc. falling into the larger surface which would have been much more complicated to cover?
@lightskitty5 күн бұрын
Also makes it easy to eat for the elderly and young.
@user-ue6iv2rd1n5 күн бұрын
I don't know, all the older generation liked everything overdone from meat to veg.
@1One2Three5Eight135 күн бұрын
It could also be just that the recipe writer was following Mrs. Beeton's school of cookery. Especially if the recipes were curated from other sources, rather than being developed for the book.
@dixietenbroeck87175 күн бұрын
Great thinking!
@peterwhite64155 күн бұрын
It was likely this. Making it mushier also would allow the cooks to blend the vegetables, and if the soup become to mushy or paste like, you just add more water, so you can serve more people if necessary. Watering the soup down might not be the best idea, but if theres to many people, it might be necessary to do.
@Dwynfal5 күн бұрын
My parents were born at the beginning of WWII and grew up with Blitz soup as a winter staple even though rationing was comparatively light in Canada. My grandma would put bones in a cheesecloth to be able to get them out easier and she used Bovril as her meat extract of choice. And yes, it would be cooked until it turned to mush! In turn I was brought up with the same in the 60's & 70's but my mum didn't cook it quite as long unless she planned to mash the veg and add cream at the end. It took advantage of the root vegs that were cheap and plentiful during our harsh winters. I still make Blitz Soup in winters nowadays, sometimes keeping the veg whole with less cooking time, sometimes pureeing them and adding cream. Very filling and like a giant nostalgic hug for me! 😊❤
@joanhoffman37025 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story! 💞
@chavahbateli33555 күн бұрын
Love Bovril or Marmite to flavour soups...❤
@grendelgrendelsson54935 күн бұрын
Many people don't realise the enormous contribution that Canada made in WW2 with troops, the RCAF and the RCN. When the war started, the RCN had only 11 warships. If I remember correctly in 1945 the RCN had around 400 warships making it the fourth biggest in the world. Two of my great uncles served in the RN on North Atlantic, and Arctic, convoys initially from Halifax and a place called Sydney (I think) until the RCN grew in strength and they were posted elsewhere.
@marshallbowen86935 күн бұрын
@@grendelgrendelsson5493 Rationing remained in Canada until 1947. My only memory is my mother giving ration stamps to the butcher. I was too young to realise that there were food shortages. After 1945, food was being sent to Britain which had rationing until 1954 and I remember Christmas packages being sent to relatives. My version of blitz soup is made in a slow cooker using beef or vegetable broth and assorted vegetables. I blend it at the end and add some 18% cream (1/2 cup) for flavour then freeze it in lunch size units.
@sisco82255 күн бұрын
My great gandmother worked in one of the Blitz Kitchens during the bombing of London, i have vivid memories of my grandmother (who during the Blitz was 12-13) telling me stories of eating this exact meal her Mom made among others. It must have been a terrifying time, i have a photograph of her standing on top of a Dornier bomber which crashed in the street where she lived after being shot down. My grandmother continiued to make the Honey biscuits up until the late 90s, so i got to eat them all though my childhood. Great video as always!
@shamrock45005 күн бұрын
I read a story some time ago of children living in the underground during the blitz, they said they didn't really pay attention and just had fun with other kids playing football and skip rope etc. they thought it was grand because they didn't have to go to school.
@mwater_moon28655 күн бұрын
My mom uses the honey biscuit recipe for cut out sugar cookies at Christmas. I used to wonder why our family's sugar cookies were also so not sweet, but now I know and it makes total sense! I'm sure her mom was so used to rationing that she just kept making this recipe for cut out cookies since they don't swell or spread very much (today would have been my grandmother's 114th birthday!)
@alexandraruck36425 күн бұрын
my grandmother lived in London during that time, just celebrated her 90th birthday, even though she was very young she has so many stories of that time. her and her older sister were shipped off to the country side for i believe 2 years. they had to go to school with a suitcase and tiny gas masks everyday, the story i think that stuck with her most clearly was hiding with her sister under a tablecloth covered side table from the mean teenage boys that they lived with. on a more sad note, the lasting effect of that time is still with my great aunt, a combination of rationing and protecting her young sister took its toll. they are both alive and mentally here. i love them both and all the stories they have from a long well lived life
@Pattilapeep5 күн бұрын
I was a little girl during WWII, and remember very well the effort my Mom had to make dealing with the rationing of so many items. When I went to High School there was a girl who had lived in London during the war and she remembered the "buzz bombs" (the V2 rockets) as being the worst. She said it was really bad. We were lucky here in America to only have the rationing to deal with. Love your show Max and am really enjoying these war videos. Take care. Pat in New Jersey
@lesliefranklin18705 күн бұрын
Just a small correction, the "buzz bombs" were the V1 rockets. They used a pulse-jet engine that was designed to shut off over the target and fall into it. They travelled relatively slowly, so people could hear the buzz of their engines, hence the name. The V2 rockets were a true ballistic missile that actually travelled a little into lower space. They travelled faster than the speed of sound and made no noise until they hit the target and exploded. Sadly, both of these were terrifying weapons. 🙁
@dragontear16385 күн бұрын
@@lesliefranklin1870 To add to this, we used to call the V1 rockets 'doodlebugs', because of course we gave such a name to such horrifying weapons that bombed us around the clock. The V1's were less actual rockets, more bombs with wings.
@catopig76115 күн бұрын
Both of my parents grew up in London and always taught me with doodlebugs when the engine cut you start counting, if you reach 10 it wasn't going to hit you. V2s gave no warning and terrified everyone. My dad also still has the shrapnel from a German fighter chasing him down the street, as a small boy of course he went back for the bullets which didn't hit him 😅
@mcintoshpc5 күн бұрын
“I am devoutly thankful that we did not adopt a general policy of providing deep and strongly protected shelters.” Me too. I hate it when my citizens can actually survive being bombed.
@Allronix5 күн бұрын
Figures that some rich, dimwitted, silver spoon asshole aristocrat who's got his own shelter is going to tell the working classes "shut up and deal with the bombs - we need you at the factory tomorrow."
@generalrubbish95135 күн бұрын
I bet he had a private shelter of its own.
@nw425 күн бұрын
There’s no arrogance quite like the arrogance of British government officials.
@francisdec16155 күн бұрын
Don't British people love to suffer for the royal family, the aristocrats and the capitalists?
@colinburke83895 күн бұрын
In the immortal words of Sir John Anderson: "It seemed like a good idea at the time...."
@Cyrillcito5 күн бұрын
These war time videos always make me realize two things in regards to food: - how lucky are we to be able to buy such variety and plenty of foods and ingredients almost everywhere - how you don't actually need that many fancy and exotic ingredients to make a delicious meal but simple can be just as good
@livingdeadgirl56913 күн бұрын
And that no matter what, there is gonna be hardtack!
@cyndyritterКүн бұрын
Amen !
@PLuMUK545 күн бұрын
In Birmingham, during the period of bombing, thousands of people would travel out to the countryside. They would even walk if necessary, like a long train of refugees. This was only possible during the better weather because people slept under hedges. It happened night after night. Many people did not go to their shelters. Apparently, during a particularly bad raid, my young mum and my Grandma decided to shelter under the stairs. In the morning, they heard someone moving around in the front parlour and, peeping out, shocked a policeman. He was checking that gas lighting had been turned off. The whole village had been evacuated because of unexploded bombs. He escorted them to the next village where neighbours had spent the night. They took a shortcut through the allotments opposite the house. A brick structure in the middle had had a direct hit, leaving a pile of rubble. Being a child, mum climbed it and jumped down the other side. She landed on something soft. Looking down, she was standing on a hand, attached to an arm sticking out from the rubble! It seems that she screamed so loud, the policeman said that if the village hadn't been evacuated, people would run to their shelters thinking it was the air raid siren! Despite his joke, he was kind and gave mum some chocolate he had in his jacket pocket.
@barrymalkin44045 күн бұрын
I hope your mother wasn't plagued by nightmares after the experience with the hand. The late Metropolitan Opera General Manager Sir Rudolph Bing worked as a manager in a major London department store during the war and was also a siren warden after hours. He remembers finding a dismembered hand after a raid and had bad dreams about it years after.
@grendelgrendelsson54935 күн бұрын
My mum was in London when the Doodlebugs started to arrive. Her school was down a narrow road and had to walk past a wall where an ARP Warden had been blown into the rendering by a V1. It had been scrubbed but it he was too deeply imbedded in it and it was stained brown for years.
@PaladinDansesGirlfriend4 күн бұрын
@@grendelgrendelsson5493do you mind sharing what a rendering was?
@Vanni-Bear4 күн бұрын
@PaladinDansesGirlfriend 'Rendering' in this case, refers to the outside coating of plaster/stucco on a wall I believe
@grendelgrendelsson54934 күн бұрын
@@PaladinDansesGirlfriend Sorry, I should've explained! It's a cement coating applied to the wall for weather proofing and/or for decorative purposes. It can be smooth or rough depending on how it was finished. This was rough hence the difficulty in removing the remains of the poor chap.
@TheVanillatech5 күн бұрын
My Dad was born in 1924. He was a kid when the war broke out. Towards the end of the blitz, his Dad (my Grandad) would grab him when the sirens went off and they'd meet up with the home guard and fire brigade and wait, while the rest of the family ran to the shelter, as my Dad was the oldest boy. They'd clear rubble and pull people (dead or alive) from any bombed buildings. He lost his first girlfriend who lived in the next street to a bombing raid. He left school at 14 (as you did back then) and got a job as an apprentice fitter at the docks. He tried to join the army and lied about his age but he was small (5'7") and looked young and he was marched back to his parents who confimed he was too young and his Dad smacked him round the head for doing it. By the time he was old enough to serve, he was basically a full time fitter and spent all day fixing railway tracks or re-fitting ships with guns or replacing engines etc - he was classed as essential and had to stay in his job. After the war he joined the Merchant Navy as an engineer and did that for 25 years. He often told me about the Blitz, but he saw a lot of people die. Neighbours and friends alike. Hull was severely bombed due to it's double dockyards and shipworks, and it was a coastal city relatively easy to hit. He described the meals he had back then and carried on eating things like tripe and pigs trotters well into the 1980's. Luckily for him, after my Mum left I learned how to cook a few decent meals so by the mid 90's he was eating a diet fit for a king! XD See when my Mum absconded, my Dad was left to do everything including the cooking. Only he had never learned how. The ONLY thing he could "cook" was stew. And by stew, I mean it was basically vegetables of any type (or age) tossed into a pot of water with a a handful of raw sausages and cooked for 2 hours, then maybe a stock cube thrown in. He'd never heard of salt of pepper or garlic. So I had to suffer that stew for a couple of years. Whats the dinner Dad? STEW! Ok same as yesterday then! Yeah, it's yesterdays stew.. OK so whats for desert??!?!! More stew.... Hence why I learned to cook! XD
@fableagain4 күн бұрын
What a story... I like stew but not that kind of stew!
@osric17303 күн бұрын
I think that this was the sort of response to the Blitz that Anderson was determined to encourage by not reacting to the prospect of aerial bombardment by encouraging everyone to hide. Its a brutally utilitarian calculus but there is something to be said, if you want to win a total war of attrition, for encouraging people to carry on regardless and inure themselves to the danger and the cost rather than hide away and regard normal life as too risky. A few hideous experiences and terrifying moments and before long you have a population capable of taking it on the chin and getting on with the job, as your father did. That may cost a few more civilian lives than the alternative, but winning the war was more important. A hundred thousand less civilians but hardened and prepared to work through it is more useful than cowering troglodytes living in fear. He was probably right, to an extent, the suffering on the home front also galvanised a common effort with the armed forces in a manner that was spectacularly lacking in the First World War.
@Trekki200Күн бұрын
@@osric1730 And not to forget, the rich didn't live in those circumstances. Any large amount of live lost would be poor poeple, and no parlamentarian would have cared much about those in the 30s...
@osric1730Күн бұрын
@@Trekki200 Except they did. Both the British and the French were extremely concerned about the ability of their population to sustain casualties following the experiences of The Somme and Passchendaele. There had been serious unrest, sympathy for the Soviets, national strikes and a good deal of resentment stemming from the previous war and The Great Depression. It wasn't indifference to the lives of the working class, it was a cold hard calculus as to what war mindset it was best to foster among the civilian population facing aerial bombardment, and the necessity to ensure that mindset was such that they would accept risk and "Keep Calm and Carry On". Anderson was concerned with casualties which is why Anderson Shelters were a thing, he just felt that mass sheltering was both hideously expensive and fostered risk aversion in a population that would need to be able to shoulder risk for the purposes of the war effort. It was utilitarianism not indifference. And anyway given the experience of the First World War, the ruling class had no expectation of getting out of the war lightly. Say what you like about the British ruling class but they were more than prepared to be decimated in the front lines of WW1, and they were, and fully expected a repeat performance in WW2. I'm not saying the man was right, simply that there is a more plausible explanation than contempt for the poor. He couldn't afford to treat them with contempt, he needed them to win the war, but he also needed them to take aerial bombardment on the chin and function. And that's what happened.
@TheVanillatechКүн бұрын
@@fableagain Dude my brother and I, when my Dad finally passed away, we had so many laughs (with tears) talking about his Stew Days. My brother had already moved out with his young girlfriend and avoided that, she was half-chinese and her Dad owned a takeaway where my brother worked part time as a delivery driver he ate like a King for all that period! But he'd come over and look at the dreaded pot of stew on the stove and feel sorry for me - we were both rolling around the floor laughing about it! XD Even the vicar who'd come over to find out information about my Dad for his wake was chuckling. My Dads dreaded "Stew". LOL! God bless him.
@sasjhwa5 күн бұрын
My mom grew up in this era. I didn't have an al dente vegetable until I left home for college and went out to eat with my girlfriend's parents. Suddenly I enjoyed vegetables for the first time in life.
@Марта-й7е5 күн бұрын
На Балканите суровите пресни зеленчуци са голяма част от диетата ни.
@minuteman41993 күн бұрын
I can relate to that. This is how my mother who was a child during the Blitz cooked veggies..
@MtnNerd3 сағат бұрын
I was raised by my grandparents who both served in that war. Same thing. Found out I liked vegetables when they are anything but boiled.
@chrism73955 күн бұрын
The government reaction to the blitz early on extended to forbidding local authorities from evacuating people from cities. In my home city of Plymouth (which, per person, was more heavily bombed than any other British city outside of London itself) a local councillor, Bill Miller, was arrested for organising nightly evacuations. Plymouth doesn't have an underground and Bill knew people in the poorest areas, closest to the Dockyard and industrial areas, were most at risk so he commandeered lorries, trucks and buses to get women and children out of danger so they could camp overnight and return in the morning. Although he was charged, he was later vindicated as the government changed policy and allowed local authorities to organise official evacuations. He was a pretty amazing guy; he was the grandson of a freed Senegalese slave, before the war he was known as the "people's lawyer" providing free legal advice to his constituents and organising a free electrical wiring service and instrumental in the building of the city's iconic Tinside Lido. After the war, he worked with the Admiralty to retool the Dockyard so that it could provide prefabricated houses for those made homeless and even refused the offer to become Lord Mayor as it would take him away from the Housing Committee. Between 1946 and 1948 he was awarded the British Empire Medal, an OBE and a CBE, continuing to work as local councillor until shortly before his death in 1970.
@ThinWhiteAxe5 күн бұрын
And shared a surname with our Max!
@ecitraro5 күн бұрын
Now that would make a movie script!
@patriciahowellcassity7675 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing this ❤
@joepollardmagic5 күн бұрын
Fellow Plymothian here and my comment reflects this fully. I talk a bit more about the food but can confirm this story. Perhaps Max you could do an episode on a Plymothian dish. As a comedian and actor well known in my hometown and London, I would be very happy to collaborate with you.
@sherrykloster74895 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. What an amazing man!!!
@joshuataylor35505 күн бұрын
'Deep shelter mentality' is the name of a good heavy metal band.
@Skorpychan5 күн бұрын
Doom metal, possibly. Or thrash.
@handsoffmycactus295814 сағат бұрын
It’s terrible
@blegher5 күн бұрын
My first thought of a movie depicting families displaced due to the bombings is the chronicles of narnia: the lion, the witch, and the wardrobe.
@battiekoda5 күн бұрын
Nice call-out!! LOVED those books!
@sarahgilliss35035 күн бұрын
I also thought of the movie Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Disney film, had Angela Lansbury in it. Awesome film!
@garyrowden71505 күн бұрын
@@battiekoda i had completly forgotten them , my friend's mum read them to us when we were six -47 years ago, i did watch the movie though
@jayburris62525 күн бұрын
I thought about Narnia AND Bed Knobs and Broomsticks.
@feiryfella5 күн бұрын
Finland has the best shelter system in the world! My mum was born in 1937, so lived through the war. She was evavuated to a farm not far from where she lives now. Her sister was born there just before the war ended. My Grandfather was evacuated at Dunkirk. When he landed in England, there was a chap sitting on the beach in a deckchair. 'What are you doing here?' He asked him. 'I'm on holiday', he replied. LOL
@casinodelonge5 күн бұрын
My Grandad was at Dunkirk as well, he told me a little about it but not much, he bloody hated Stukas though, that was the main thing I remember him saying.
@karenneill91095 күн бұрын
I saw a special on Finland’s shelters. They’re amazing. They double as ice rinks, swimming pools, community centres, etc. My Mom was born in Helsinki during the war, but still has vivid memories of the war. When we were little, there was a train derailment (Mississauga, 1981?), and the air raid sirens went off. I will never forget her panic. She also couldn’t stand underground parking lots.
@kaitlyn__L5 күн бұрын
That's very cool. I'd only heard about how the North got most wooden buildings sabotaged by the invading armies... (by my brother whose job is to lovingly restore/re-build the 100-150 year old wooden buildings that remain).
@sarahnixdorf12 күн бұрын
My grandparents would love this soup as its soft. They passed on couple years ago. Still miss them from time to time. But in a better place.❤💚🍁
@patbrown81175 күн бұрын
My grandfather was running for his bus in London, and the conductor just stood on the back and laughed at him running frantically down the road after the bus. My grandfather stopped, totally puffed out, and watched the bus drive away. Moments later, it was struck by a doodlebug, and most on board were killed. My grandfather escaped with very minor injuries from the blast. His (and my) lucky day!
@livingdeadgirl56913 күн бұрын
Well, atleast your grandpa got the last laugh
@misterthegeoff97675 күн бұрын
My Grandmother was in her kitchen out back of her house when she heard a doodlebug engine cut out and sprinted for the Andersen shelter. The V-1 hit across the street, demolished every house on the other side of the street and took out the front wall of her house. And that was just in the suburbs. It beggars belief that anyone thought it a good idea to *not* let people shelter in the tube stations. She lived in that house until she died and I remember the rooms facing front were always colder and draughtier than those at the back because of the repaired/rebuilt front facing wall.
@mbr57425 күн бұрын
The tube was not bomb proof either. Quite a few took hits with severe loss of live
@christine8995 күн бұрын
All my family lived in Birmingham, during the war we had a lot of bombing but the name Birmingham was rarley mentioned "A town in the midlands" was how it was reported, there was a lot of war industry in our city, the house I lived in (I was born 1945,) none of the window lintles were straight the sash cord windows rattled when the wind blew also the door lintels were out of place too, the wooden hand rail up the stairs also had deep gashes in from broken glass coming from the skylight and the front bedroom ceiling was a "tempry one " (was still there in 1978 when I left) all this damage was caused by bombing, we lived 2 miles from the city centre, The house my grandparents lived in and the house my great grandmother and aunt lived in were all distroyed by a landmine droping in their back garden, my great grandmother was killed but my aunt survied she was buried in the rubble for a long time. My dad was in the home guard and his sister was in the land army, my mother worked in a parachute factory, everyone was involved in that war, even children, they collected paper for recycling and rode on their push bikes with messages between air raid wardens when phone lines were down, My grandad was an air raid warden, and yes they did "Dig for Victory" they had a huge allotment , they also kept chickens and rabbits, but when the time came to eat the rabbits, they couldn't do it, the chickens were for eggs, only got eaten when they no longer could lay, my Grandmother used tp preserve the eggs in a galvanised bucket with issling glass. Rationing finished in 1954 I was 9 years old. I am 79 years old now.
@chloeaca5 күн бұрын
My grandma was just a little girl when this happened. Down in the shelters with her mickey mouse gasmask on, and even losing some family to the shelling above. I can't even imagine what it was like for her as she never wanted to talk about it (understandable). She would tell me stories here and there but I know there was a lot of trauma she was suppressing. Her Dad as mean as he was helped smuggle goods in on his tugboat to help the family. A cousin of hers was even up in the skies in a Spitfire. So I have a lot of connection with this period of time. Thank you for making this Max (:
@keithbell68665 күн бұрын
My mother also had the mickey Mouse gas mask! She was born and raised in Northern Ireland though. Still, it is one of the memories of that time that she talked about to me when I was growing up nice and safe in British Columbia, Canada.
@kaitlyn__L5 күн бұрын
Similar. My nan's in her 90s and she would happily talk for hours about the ration cards, the cooking, her playing in the field then having to run home when the siren went off, scrambling to the shelter outside of town... but not about the actual experience of waiting for the bombing to stop.
@mostlyghostey5 күн бұрын
My grandmother was born just after the war and she never talks about it because the memories are too painful
@Chrischi3TutorialLPs5 күн бұрын
Regarding the texture, do consider here that: 1: Most people had seriously bad teeth until we started to care more about dental hygiene post-WW2 2: Blitz Soup had to feed people of every age, including the elderly. It was intended to be easily prepared in great amounts to feed anyone who needed it.
@mbr57425 күн бұрын
Also a "mushy" soup is easier to eat from certain types of mess tins (if in doubt - drink it)
@handsoffmycactus295814 сағат бұрын
And …. It’s… SOUP. Soup is soft and liquidy mush
@darnokthemage1702 күн бұрын
My grandmother was born here in northern Sweden on a small farm in 1937, And we stayed out of the war. But she remembers being afriad of planes, Thinking they were going to drop bombs. My grandfathers dad served on the swedish border to finland during the war and was actually captured by the soviets for two days before being released.
@PaulSkySwitzer5 күн бұрын
My Grannie was one of the children sent to Canada, at only 8 years old, to escape the rockets. She never returned to London, and still lives in Canada to this day. She has quite the stories about the bombings and the trip to Canada, chased by u-boats.
@annbower62785 күн бұрын
My grampy was a radio communications officer aboard the Corvette that patrolled the St Laurence Seaway during the 2nd world war. He, along with the others aboard the corvettes were making sure that not a single u-boat was going to get thru to sink more ships. Churchill referred to the corvettes as the cheap nasties. He would be pleased to know if he had been alive still that he had helped keeping your granny safe while aboard that passenger ship.
@BeaMickeyDoodle5 күн бұрын
Was she sent across the ocean by herself?
@PaulSkySwitzer5 күн бұрын
@@BeaMickeyDoodle with a sibling, just the two girls.
@Dabednego5 күн бұрын
Marmite jump scare
@TastingHistory5 күн бұрын
😂
@duncanluciak55165 күн бұрын
ViRol sounds worse
@ACloutToken5 күн бұрын
you should’ve seen the face i made when it came on screen 🤢😂
@Kierstalin-u2q5 күн бұрын
Yum!
@Tallahassee215 күн бұрын
Eating marmite by itself is like eating a spoon full of salt, why? But for add ons to food, chefs kiss
@Marthisdil5 күн бұрын
My guess it was cooked so long to make the veggies super soft to people of all ages could eat it - from babies to the elderly.
@david-f9u2j5 күн бұрын
actually back then food cooked like we do now would be called half cooked. some recipes for christmas dinners called for starting the veg boiling the day before.
@elizabethmayberry34145 күн бұрын
I agree, I think dental care was probably hard to get and teeth might have painful. I also think crisp cooked veggies are a more modern taste. A lot of vintage recipes I see have mushy veggies.
@b.h.abbott-motley24275 күн бұрын
One hour isn't a remotely long time to simmer a soup. My favorite are soups left on the stove all day, or more.
@MrGrimsmith5 күн бұрын
@@elizabethmayberry3414 Probably not far off. I believe my maternal grandmother had her teeth removed in her 20s and then wore dentures for over 70 years. One thing with the soup though - first you're not losing any of the nutrients as you don't drain the veg and secondly you didn't generally have a stick blender so you could then just mash it down.
@imacanoli8975 күн бұрын
My grandparents were children in the Great Depression. They over cooked meat and veggies...a lot...steaks were like shoe leather and white chicken meat was like drywall. Veggies were boiled into absolute tenderness. Decent pastas though since great grandma was from the old country lol.
@John_Fugazzi5 күн бұрын
I love the way Max creates themes of times, places and events rather than just a random bunch of recipes and history lessons. It maks it more like a deep dive into interesting topics.
@InABroadwayStateOfMind5 күн бұрын
My first taste of the Blitz was when I learned about WW2 in 6th grade and had to read a fictional novel called ‘Goodnight, Mister Tom’ for it, a story about a young boy who’s sent to live with a crotchety old man and the bond that builds between them. Though it was in the background, the ominousness of the war and what life was like for the ‘evacuees’ leaving their lives in the city for safety in the countryside felt very real. Also, I’ve probably said this before, but as much as I always love the music selections Max picks to fit the countries depicted in each video, I appreciate when he forgoes music for the more serious ones like the WW2 series to convey the gravity of the world events happening at the time.
@lyspeth3 күн бұрын
I read this book as well! The author, Michelle Magorian, wrote another one about a young girl who was sent to the US (as a few folks here in the comments have described) and came back after the war and really didn't fit in anymore, and she hated it and missed her American family at first. It must have been such a hard adjustment on both ends for many.
@andrewthorpe25395 күн бұрын
My Grandparents had one London evacuee live with them. Ironically he even had the same surname as us. One day he and my father found some matches and boys being boys played with said matches setting a field on fire….Regarding rations my Dad routinely collected dock leaves and nettles to supplement meals. On one occasion his uncle Fred came over on leave and wasn’t impressed when he found out that it was spam for tea! (In the North tea = main dinner). On a different occasion my Dad aged around 8 or so (so more or less 1945), had a pet rabbit called Rupert, was in hospital, after his op, his Mum and Dad visited, my Dads first question was ‘how’s Rupert’, my Grandma’s response ‘well he was a bit tough’ yup he’d gone in the pot. You know things are hard when you are eating nettles, dock leaves and your kids pet rabbit.
@jeanclark77975 күн бұрын
My dad was one of the kids shipped to the country. The people who took him in used them as labour on their farm and were supposedly not the nicest people. Still he did develop a love of the countryside and farm life. Eventually he was brought back to London just in time for the blitz.
@Somebody.Alive-pj6xp5 күн бұрын
To be honest. My favorite series has to be, The Titanic, Lusitania, RMS Carpathia, Zeppelin, and transportation episodes. The War and Rationing episodes. Medieval recipes. And The Home front series. Tbh I just have so much respect for Max’s dedication and helping spark up my Love for History again. Hope the sugarplums went well! Happy to see your doing alright Max!
@TastingHistory5 күн бұрын
They’re almost done. I have the last step to finish them today.
@Somebody.Alive-pj6xp5 күн бұрын
@@TastingHistoryHope your Hairdryer hasn’t caught the smell of sugar. Well at least you guys would smell pretty sweet for the next few weeks
@rikwen965 күн бұрын
A really old series which was really good and is still online is Danger UXB. In it a group of soldiers were in London defusing bombs that had dropped on the city but didn't go explode.
@cheesyllama5 күн бұрын
@@TastingHistorywhat a freaking insane recipe!
@limeparticle5 күн бұрын
@@TastingHistoryI’m invested in the sugarplums to a ridiculous degree and can’t wait for the video!
@nuttynatsu23545 күн бұрын
Past few years I've been looking into my Mums side of the family, and discovered my grandfathers sister was killed during the Blitz in London. I live in Sheffield, which was also targeted. A few years ago during the anniversary of the Sheffield Blitz, I was in the City Hall watching a Christmas concert. Exited to the sounds of air raid sirens and search lights in the sky. I got chills and it wasn't because of the weather.
@BSWVI5 күн бұрын
That must have been scary! but what an effective way to bring home what it's like in still too many places around the world 🫂
@casinodelonge5 күн бұрын
@@BSWVI Second scariest thing to happen to Sheffield after "Threads"!
@canadaisdecent16355 күн бұрын
@@casinodelongethat’s a great movie
@arh37335 күн бұрын
The Imperial War Museum in London has a marvelous Blitz experience simulator. You walk down a London street and as air raid sirens are sounding, go down the stairs to a shelter. The people in the shelter are shaken by nearby bombs with loud noise and shaking effects where the whole room rocks. You emerge into a simulation of the same street, but now with bomb damage and with a tea cart nearby. You'll never forget it!
@gyrogeargoose5 күн бұрын
Went in that 30 years ago and you are quite right - I will never forget it! The mangled baby pram lying on it's side with one of the wheels still turning had me crying.
@martharichman74574 күн бұрын
I went when I was around 6 years old... Nightmares for months and you're right I'll never forget it. I can't imagine how children grew up surrounded by it...
@giausjulius45 күн бұрын
The initial scenes of Bedknobs and Broomsticks is also a result of the blitz! Carrie, Charles, and Paul are all shipped off to the countryside and wind up with one Ms. Eglantine Price, played by Angela Landsbury, an apprentice witch! With the help of Mr. Emelius Brown and a little bit of magic they repel a German expeditionary force and save the British Isles! My all time favorite Disney movie
@eledatowle87675 күн бұрын
Max's skillful storytelling is great, but I have to add that when Jose gets creative in the subtitles ("[chop]") it always makes me chuckle. Thanks, Jose, for adding a bit of humor in a fun, subtle way.
@SerbAtheist5 күн бұрын
Could you do one on the Yugoslavian hyperinflation of the 90s and the so-called Embargo Cake?
@Justanotherconsumer5 күн бұрын
When the bags of cash you have to pay weigh more than the groceries you can buy with those bags it’s a bad sign.
@elitecabela53295 күн бұрын
Seconding; that sounds like a good video.
@obsidianjane44135 күн бұрын
A bit politically spicy for Max's channel. Are you sure you really want him going there Mr. Serb? You an't gonna be the Good Guy (because there weren't any).
@elitecabela53295 күн бұрын
@@obsidianjane4413 he just recently did a video on food on the German Homefront so I'm not too worried. He did a very good job presenting the nuance of the situation.
@lornawolfe98565 күн бұрын
My mother grew up in London during the war and she and her brother and sister were sent out to the farms for safety and to work in the fields. Being the oldest, my mum came back to the city to work and one of her first jobs was to go to the roof of the office building she was in when the air raid horns went off. She was a spotter for her building and sounded an alarm if the bombing got to close. She met my dad at a dance and after the war came to America to marry him. I grew up on their stories and when we visited London new stories came out when we were actually standing in the places things happened. The effects of the war never left my mum. NOW when people hem and haw about supporting Ukraine and large scale war threatens Europe , and other places in the world, I wish people had heard these stories and felt their power like I did. Their hearts might inform their actions differently.
@sherrykloster74895 күн бұрын
I couldn't agree more. So many people are living this reality right now 😢
@Марта-й7е5 күн бұрын
❤
@nikoking8255 күн бұрын
My dad was from Scotland and was born 12 years after the war, but he told stories about family members in it (and also WWI). He had an aunt stationed in London during the war, and she was out shopping on September 7, 1940 when hundreds of German planes filled the sky over London. And while useing the tube stations as shealters is famous, only about 200,000 Londoners actually did.
@MrSheckstr5 күн бұрын
When i was a little kid in the Cub scouts we had a visit from a couple Of English scout masters, one a veteran of WW1 and another who had been a Scout during the London Blitz. The “younger” scout master spoke if using the bush crafting skills while in the shelter, particularly making dust tents for food from a couple of tripods , a crossbeam made from a broom handle with a bed sheet and blanket
@Melonlordrinrei5 күн бұрын
One of my great aunts was in London during the blitz. She never really talked about it except for one incident where she woke in her bed to see a bomb had torn through the roof and was in her room unexploded
@Ozziecatsmom5 күн бұрын
Wow!
@BSWVI5 күн бұрын
😮😳😦
@nayrusama83785 күн бұрын
Did she make it?
@mewry66695 күн бұрын
@@nayrusama8378 I mean, she told the anecdote
@ShanRenxin5 күн бұрын
She officially wins every "You will not believe the morning I've had" story!
@jlshel425 күн бұрын
Happy Tuesday, Tastorians
@djwheels665 күн бұрын
Oooohhhhh!! Tastorians!!! I like that. ❤
@jwilliams32695 күн бұрын
I love this! ❤❤❤ Max, make it official. Please call us all your fellow tastorians!
@jlshel425 күн бұрын
@@jwilliams3269Been trying to make it a thing for a year or more now haha
@melindayoung51335 күн бұрын
Every Tuesday is happy for Tastorians!
@boomslang1825 күн бұрын
My grandmother was a teenager during the blitz. She didn't talk about it a lot but I remember she said that there were a few parties with the other kids and they still had fun. We made a lot of pies together and when she did cook, it was always a classic english meal made with love. My grandfather was stationed in the pacific and picked up a more adventurous taste for curries and spiced noodles. I know she sent him apples and cigarettes once. The apples rotted, but they did make the cigarettes taste like apples which sounds kind of fun. I wish I asked them more about it, it was only when I was doing a project for school that we spoke about it in a lot of detail. I did have her gas mask for a bit. I think it might be with my cousins now. My parents were born about a decade after WW2 but still remember rations and the city being rebuilt. I'm lucky to live in a city surrounded by history and know people who lived through it. Thanks for the video and the channel. My favourites are the ancient history recipes but it's cute how everyone is sharing stories in the comments for this one
@michelguevara1515 күн бұрын
I remember making these biscuits and dishes associated with the second world war in primary school in england. the '70s were not so far removed from that conflict and many english households still kept tins of corned beef stashed in odd places 'against the day'. oddly, 'bully beef', the 'tommy's' field ration of mashed potatoes and corned beef, is still popular to this day in belgium. odd to think that a school cookery project from my childhood is now worthy of inclusion in tasting history's repetoire! too many now forget the sacrifices made both at home and abroad to ensure their comfortable existence today. *LEST WE FORGET*
@insulaarachnid5 күн бұрын
Excellent episode Max. I am not surprised that the marketing people for the movie got in touch with you, it's kind of a perfect partnership really.
@duncanluciak55165 күн бұрын
11:58 Love Max's switch to mid-Atlantic accent
@Anesthesia0695 күн бұрын
I wouldn't be here if it were not for the Blitz. It's why my nan's family moved to Harefield and that's where she met my grandad! I heard there was so much light from the fires you could read the newspaper by the window.
@laurencollins20765 күн бұрын
Anderson's policies against deep shelters smells awfully like a calculated "acceptable" collateral damage approach to me. Appalling.
@davidmccarthy60615 күн бұрын
He knew that the damage would be mostly limited to the lower class and that is always acceptable almost everywhere.
@Mikalent5 күн бұрын
So as a Corpsman who worked with Seabees and ACOE, there is an actual explanation why they wouldn't want people to congregate there. It was something Germany, China, and the UK learned in WW1, at the main issue is ventilation and Carbon Monoxide. With the tubes, they have a complex system of ventilation shafts to vent out Carbon Dioxide and Carbon Monoxide, which work well, until they are covered by rubble or damaged by bombs. One of the most dangerous things to occur would be a building fire near an intake vent. In Dresden alone, during a similar blitz by the UK (though in Germany) 18,000 civilians died of asphyxiation while taking shelter in the Subway, out of 48,000. By the end of the Desden bombing, over 38,000 died from Asphyxiation, and a total 148k died from the bombing, so effectively 1/3rd of all deaths were from taking cover in deep areas. Now does it mean "Sit in your home", no, but the idea of spreading out the shelters has a logical reason, even if it is grim. Lose say 20 people a day to bombing, or risk losing 600 if some of the ventilation is damage. That's before you start accounting for the incendiary bombs Germany started using after the Berlin retaliatory strikes. It is sadly the grim arithmetic of war, the most pointed to example being Coventry. The entire city was leveled, and thousands died, because while the British *KNEW* the scale and time of the attack well in advance, they didn't warn anybody. Because, if they warned and started evacuating people, Germany would have realized the Enigma Machine was compromised, and changed encryption, thus Britain, the US, and USSR would have lost a major source of intelligence. So which do you chose, lose 100k people to bombings, while trying to minimize the damage, and potentially save over 100k more by keeping the secret of the Enigma, or lose the Enigma, *MAYBE* save 100k,though the Germans will just Coventry another city, and you will have no warning whatsoever.
@joshpetersen59685 күн бұрын
@@Mikalent Actually the Coventry thing is a myth that first appeared in the Seventies and was repeated ever since. There is no evidence that it actually happened. Could it have happened, maybe, maybe not, but there is no evidence it actually did happen.
@lloydcollins63375 күн бұрын
@@Mikalent All very good points. Another one to remember from the time is the idea that "the bomber will always get through" - this was believed by a lot of governments including the UK until it was disproved during WW2. This belief meant that the UK government put more preparation into dealing with the effects of bombing rather than protecting against it, including stockpiling hundreds of thousands of cardboard coffins in 1938-39
@kimmyquevil5 күн бұрын
I was waiting for it to be a financial reason
@themadwomanskitchen97325 күн бұрын
5:25 I remember stories my grandmother told me about living in the US during WW 2. For most of the way it was just her and my grandfather (he was too old and disabled to serve), so she used her dairy rations to buy butter, but recalled that margarine was called oleo, which was short for oleomargarine was white when you bought it at the store and came with a tube of coloring which you had to mix with the oleo. I later found out that it was illegal to sell colored oleo to prevent stores from tricking people into buying fake butter.
@emjayay5 күн бұрын
I think those laws were local or state laws, and supported by the dairy industry to make the margarine less appealing - so probably more in states like Wisconsin.
@sima83235 күн бұрын
My grandmothers neighbors house was blown up from the bombing, she left with her american husband to the states. They had a house with a garden in Cali, made their own food. I learned a lot from her. The strongest woman I had ever known. Learned most of my cooking from her. I got the chance to Visit the Uk two years ago and its amazing to me that many of the buildings still have large holes from the bombings that are left in place! As a reminder of the past.
@grendelgrendelsson54935 күн бұрын
I live in the town where my dad was born just before the war started. The main street still has buildings with bullet scars in them because German fighters used to come across the North Sea under the radar, pop up and machine gun the streets. My gran pulled my dad under a bus when a German plane strafed the street when she'd taken him shopping. He was only five but he remembers it as if it happened yesterday.
@PaladinGaymer5 күн бұрын
Bedknobs and Broomsticks also is set up with children being sent to live with a stranger in the country. In this case, Angela Lansbury playing a witch studying magic through a correspondence course. XD
@sharimeline30775 күн бұрын
I love that movie so much.
@topaz34685 күн бұрын
Honestly, in a strange way, this explains a lot! My mother was a child during the depression, and when she raised her family in the early 60's, was absolutely obsessed with everyone taking cod liver oil. To her dismay, I couldn't keep it down and refused any further attempts to force it down my throat. The other food items you have mentioned also made it to the dinner table when I was a kid... unfortunately!! She never seemed to recover emotionally from food rationing and shortages. Something I didn't fully understand for decades later 😮 She didn't know how to cook, as all dinner food except hamburgers and pork chops came out of a tin and were heated accordingly. I finally learned how to cook from scratch before the 2008 recession by attending night classes at a local culinary school. My mother is now in her nineties and still thinks olive loaf (bologna), jello, and mayonnaise salads are healthy staples. 😂
@ktspirit15 күн бұрын
My mother told me the same thing about cod liver oil, so she never gave it to us kids, haha.She was born in 1930.
@That.Lady.withtheYarn5 күн бұрын
Well she is in her 90s :) But that whole time period messed with people’s minds for decades after. Same with those who grew up in child poverty and food scarcity.
@topaz34685 күн бұрын
@@That.Lady.withtheYarnSo true...an entire narrative was proliferated by food companies, grocery stores, and pharmacies. LOL.
@ktspirit15 күн бұрын
@@That.Lady.withtheYarn my mother died in April 2024 at the age of 93. Guess she didn't need cod liver oil!
@PBcoverlet5 күн бұрын
@@ktspirit1 I was given cod liver oil every day when I was little. This was a few years after the war.
@katescaringcorner67655 күн бұрын
In my geriatric career I took care of people who fought in the Second World War. One private duty assignment was a dear man who was stationed in London during the blitz. The building in which he was living was hit while he slept. He, obviously, survived but the bed next to his where his buddy had slept was gone and he looked at where he was to the outside. Just steps from his bed was gone. He grabbed what belongings he had left and left the room and made his way to the ground by shimmying down the side of what was left of the wall. Many stories he told me of his life. This was the only one he told me of the war.
@margotmolander50835 күн бұрын
Dag nabit, here's me having a bit of a cry at another Max video over my lunch break. There are so many classic children's stories about children who were sent away (Bedknobs and Broomsticks, or The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe) that make it sound like a grand adventure, but from the perspective of a parent it's so hard to imagine how hard it would be to send your child away.
@ladyrazorsharp5 күн бұрын
My mom loves the series "Foyle's War," and there's an episode that deals with a family who takes in a London child. As far as I can recall, the child is an ill fit for the house; he constantly causes trouble because he's bored, and the patriarch (who is a piece of work himself) always butts heads with him. I checked on iMDB and I think the episode is called "A Lesson in Murder."
@rebeccakoch92035 күн бұрын
Especially since in the last book, all except Susan die in a train crash. 😬
@mybluesrunthegame2 күн бұрын
I love your videos, first saw one after being revived after a accidental drug overdose and then again after being hospitalized for the ... Idk uhhhits above 10th time for b*limia and anor*xia. I never really watch food videos but you talked about the history and distracted me from bad thoughts so I would watch your videos when they served dinner and I was able to force myself to eat as I was distracted. I still eat when watching your videos and it helps me. Thank you, Max for your amazing channel and being an amazing man. You literally saved and changed my life.
@MsLeenite2 күн бұрын
💗
@Anesthesia0695 күн бұрын
My wife's grandad still has an Anderson shelter in his garden!
@grendelgrendelsson54935 күн бұрын
My in-laws have one too. A fox lives in it!
@CynUnion-ji9uj5 күн бұрын
"Eventually people just busted in" I'm honestly shocked that's an Eventually and not on day 1. Even more shocking that the bobbies kept people out instead of going "oh no, we're being bombed" and hiding in the tube themselves.
@CrashBoomBang785 күн бұрын
Not surprising in the slightest. You see police cracking down on the general populace all the time still. Robots obeying orders is all they are.
@JuliaIKE-c2x5 күн бұрын
For real they must have had so much willpower of they didn’t attempt to hide
@QuantumRangerPower4 күн бұрын
British Subject mentality.
@MasterShake90005 күн бұрын
Conspiracy theory: the soup is mush so that a packed shelter of eaters don’t have to hear each other munching
@MandalorV75 күн бұрын
Seriously. If I was locked in a tunnel with a few hundred people horrible eating their soup, I might go crazy.
@donnajones41315 күн бұрын
Misophonia is real!
@chrisdonovan87955 күн бұрын
@@donnajones4131 When my wife moved in, I discovered how much I hate the sound of people eating as an adult. It occurred to me that I didn't notice while we were dating because we were at restaurants, or there was music playing.
@handsoffmycactus295814 сағат бұрын
I don’t get what else you expect soup to be? IT IS SOUP
@katiekofemug2 күн бұрын
It's taken me two days to read all the respectful, interesting, and tid-bitty Comments and Stories shared on this video. What a community you have built Max! Thanks so very much for sharing your recipes, experiences and research that inspires us so.
@TastingHistory2 күн бұрын
Thank you! It’s great to share the history with all of you, and learn even more back.
@AiisakaTaiiga5 күн бұрын
8:42 crazy that people had to will to fight for the sake of "people" like that.
@professorrhyyt36895 күн бұрын
Finland doesn't get enough coverage in this series! They sent many of their children to Sweden during this time. Those children often arrived to a family that didn't even speak the same language. Could you follow a recipe from their wartime cookbooks or maybe do Mannerheim´s Vorschmack?
@eledatowle87675 күн бұрын
Holy cow, Max. I just looked over and you have 2.8 million subscribers?! I remember when it was low 3-digits... You've come a long way, and really found your voice! Congratulations, and many more!
@DenaRivard-v8w5 күн бұрын
2.81 actually
@casinodelonge5 күн бұрын
Max is "da bomb" as it were...
@lazyrmc2 күн бұрын
Time flies man, it's wild. But I couldn't have happened to a nicer guy
@ConstantCompanion5 күн бұрын
There's a video online called the forties house. They took a family and recreated the experience of going through World War II in Great Britain. The food and how they cooked in survive during that time was the emphasis of the series. I learned a lot. I was particularly impressed with how The experience changed the grandmother. She almost divorced her husband over it, but in all honesty? She came out for the better. So for the fun of it, I took a week and emulated some of their limitations. No going to the grocery store. Use what I've got, be as Frugal as possible yet make attractive meals. You'd be amazed how far you can make a little bit of food stretch. It's called the 40s house if you're interested. I watch it every month or so to keep my priorities straight.
@sharimeline30775 күн бұрын
Love that whole series, all the eras.
@ConstantCompanion5 күн бұрын
@sharimeline3077 it's one of my favorites. Lyn has such a hard time but I learned the most from her.
@newcreatureinchrist50875 күн бұрын
I watched that as well. I wish my grandparents were around so I could ask them what rationing was like here in the US.
@ConstantCompanion5 күн бұрын
@newcreatureinchrist5087 my dad used to tell me about it. There were stories. One of the cuter ones was about a older couple who had a mina bird for a pet. It would eat breakfast at the table with them. Breakfast for the bird was buttered toast and tea with sugar in it. When they rationed? She tried to sneak in substitutions to save on rations. She put margarine on the toast instead of butter? The bird took a bite and threw it on the floor. Said, something's wrong with the toast mom. Something's wrong with the toast. She tries sweetener in the tea? Same thing. Tipped it over on the floor and said something's wrong with the tea. Theres a story about Corn Flakes and BLT sandwiches with beets on them. I actually tried that. It's not bad. The depression gave my father a particular appreciation for food. He was a very good cook, and tended to call us spoiled because we had no idea what the Depression was like.
@kathyleighton90915 күн бұрын
@ConstantComp...I have seen this video. It is almost like a mini series. I love the 1940's era....the clothes, music, meals, etc. I would love to go back in time to experience it.
@greenshadow6225 күн бұрын
No pokemon to be found. My Disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined. Great video Max! Fascinating history!
@TastingHistory5 күн бұрын
Sorry, no go on this one. Blitzle will have to wait for its moment.
@leianog5 күн бұрын
My nanna passed away in August at 95 (3 months off 96). One of the last times I saw her, I got out my voice recorder on my iPhone as asked her about the Blitz and later being in the English Army. She still remembered it in detail and talked about how her and her parents were evacuated to the basement of the Town Hall. She was later sent to a family in the countryside for safety. I will treasure her memories and that recording forever
@Segafishy5 күн бұрын
My Grandmother was born January '41 in Mile end mid Air Raid, my Great Grandfather was an Air Raid Warden (he had been badly burned working as a mechanic so wasn't enlisted into normal service until the later years of the war) and had to fetch a Midwife on his Bicycle which must've been utterly terrifying, fortunately he got through safely and all were safe, sadly he'd passed by time I was old enough to understand as apparently he managed to avoid death a number of times, at one point booting a bomb into the river that was near some flats and when enlisted as a driver managing to get a truck across a bridge that was about to blow up, they definately were built of sterner stuff back then.
@Ozuhananas5 күн бұрын
The Pokemon plushie got transformed into a helmet it seems
@TastingHistory5 күн бұрын
That it did. 😂
@merrittanimation77215 күн бұрын
Pokemon evolutions got intense during WWII
@joshseidel28145 күн бұрын
Naw it’s just a mobile Pokémon bunker. They’re safe and sound (and fed) in safety underneath
@slwrabbits5 күн бұрын
@@joshseidel2814 this is my new head canon, I will now entertain thoughts of which one is hiding beneath the helmet, all snug and sound
@Darkgun2315 күн бұрын
It's the latest regional variant of Shuckle!
@alphamuplays16695 күн бұрын
Good to see even during ww2 the government refused to help the common man because they were worried they might decide their own safety was more important than the economy
@nomisunrider64725 күн бұрын
And sometimes the common man prioritized the economy over the safety of others too. Like that one town on the coast that refused to turn off their lights even though it made it easier for German submarines to sink ships. Learned about that on a post about anti maskers in the COVID era. People can be awful.
@mykolatkachuk77705 күн бұрын
if factories stoped Britain woldn't have the weapons to defend itself. as simple as that. They wanted to get rid of bunker menality. BTW the Brits handled the air raids far better than the Germans. They displayed much higher levels of solidarity and seldsacrifise than Germans. British men were well disciplined. British wemen helped the war effort.
@sharimeline30775 күн бұрын
@@mykolatkachuk7770 Was there any bunker mentality to get rid of though? Because most people knew they had a responsibility to pitch in with the war effort.
@alenahubbard13915 күн бұрын
"Amazing. Every word of what you just said was wrong."@@mykolatkachuk7770
@obsidianjane44135 күн бұрын
@@mykolatkachuk7770 That is completely untrue. Germans reacted much the same way as Brits. But German cities were bombed an order of magnitude more, to the point where many cities centers were uninhabitable, so the populations had to disperse to surrounding small towns.
@kennethclark-qm6vo5 күн бұрын
When you are starving anything can be flavorful and may become comfort food as it keeps you alive.
@bobbler424 күн бұрын
0:30 given honey wagons were used to collect night soil, and given classic working class alondon humour, I’m not sure about those biscuits.
@Foolish1883 күн бұрын
Honey trucks are used today to pump out septic tanks.
@ludicrousfunone57055 күн бұрын
04:28. Incredibly wonderful British humour!!! Love that it hasn't changed all that much in all these years
@SmolFenFen5 күн бұрын
It really is funny. Literally in war, people have to run to shelters and go underground to stop from dying. Bombs flying buildings exploding, but let's make sure that everyone knows we cook vegetables worse than everyone else XD.
@EMSpdx5 күн бұрын
Hi Max! Remember that stoves back then were not as efficient as our modern stoves, so 30 minutes would be a better cook time. ALSO, I bet that soup would be amazing when passed through a sieve or whipped up in a blender for a cream of vegetable soup.
@annbower62785 күн бұрын
Yep, I remember the series that was about the war years in the 1940's by 2 archaeologists & a historian (2 men & 1 woman). The parafin used to heat the oven/stove was rationed, so the meal was cooked halfway on the stovetop was placed in a box lined with straw & something else then covered the box with a wooden lid to finish the cooking time. Absolute History channel has the series.
@emjayay5 күн бұрын
Heated water cannot get over 100C/212F, so the efficiency of the stove is immaterial. Simmering is simmering on anything.
@joannagoedeke20495 күн бұрын
I love Max’s 1940s newspaper voice
@kathyleighton90915 күн бұрын
My parents lived thru the depression and the war. They were 6 and 12 when the depression started. I never heard them talk about that or the war. How I wish when I was younger that I had my fascination w/ the depression and war years. I could have learned so many 1st hand stories from them and my grandmother.
@mayanscaper5 күн бұрын
My mother and her parents had been expelled from Germany with almost nothing but the clothing on their backs and hidden money sewn into the linings of their coats. They left Germany upon the release of my grandfather from Dachau in December 1939. Britain accepted Jewish refugees but they were not allowed to work. I don’t know if they were able to use the shelters and they didn’t speak English. Nevertheless, they decided to send my mother at 9 years old, to the country when the bombing began. She was lucky that the family she stayed with were kind and treated her like family. She learned English there. She told me that other children were not treated well but like servants. Her family was actually waiting for their lottery number to come up for their American visas. They’d waited six years. By April, 1940, they were able to leave London for New York City. I can’t imagine those five months of being in a place being bombed and not speaking the language.
@leviturner32655 күн бұрын
I mean for the families housing people it makes sense that they would require people to do chores to make their keep. It sounds like a fair trade to me. There is a lot of work to do on a farm. I am guessing that they spoke German, or Yiddish based on the time, and the context given. Yeah, would not be common in London, maybe more common in New York, but seems to me you would be not able to communicate with 95% of the populace either way. Just the benefit of New York being that it is further from the war, and was not being bombed. Possible other benefit for your family's context, there was/is a significant Jewish population in New York.
@IR_Baboon5 күн бұрын
Who needs history class when we have Max?Matter of fact he educates better than some teachers.
@frankperkin1245 күн бұрын
Not hard to do. Most teachers suck.
@sophiefrancis82955 күн бұрын
@@frankperkin124Sorry that was your experience. All mine were brilliant.
@h.b.40585 күн бұрын
My Dad and Grandparents lived through this in Birmingham. My Grandad swept burning embers off rooftops. Another great movie about the Blitz is Hope and Glory.
@brianartillery5 күн бұрын
My late mother, and her older brother were both evacuated at the beginning of the blitz - they lived in north London on a road which was right next to a railway line. German planes would often fly along the route, occasionally taking potshots at the surrounding buildings. My mother went to Cheltenham, in Gloucestershire, and was very well looked after - but her brother went elsewhere, and was treated like a slave. My gran went to visit him, unannounced, and on her way from the station, encountered a dirty, bedraggled child, carrying large bags of coal. She was horrified to find that the child was her son. Gran confronted the people who had taken him in, and told them in no uncertain terms, that he'd probably have a better life back in London, and went back home with him. I very much doubt that this was an isolated incident. The consistency of the soup might have been deliberate, as it can be eaten by anyone, of any age, whether they have teeth or not.
@TriXJester2 күн бұрын
Theres a series in the UK that aired in 2012 called Wartime Farm that really delves into what life was like for the farmers during this time and how they worked to both feed their nation and themselves while rationing became harder and harder. It features 3 historians who live through a year as if it was the time period that is featured. There are 8 episodes and you can watch them online easily, I highly recommend checking it out! They also have different series for other time periods as well, Tudor, Edwardian, Victorian, and the Stuart period!
@Mike286255 күн бұрын
Hope and Glory is one of the best movies set in the Blitz. Written and directed by John Borman based on his own experiences. It's a beautiful film
@suzannejones92945 күн бұрын
My mum was 7 and my dad 5 when war broke out so I grew up on stories of rationing, air raids etc.
@ChaitanyaSharma-w5f5 күн бұрын
Nice video, sir!!! Me and my grandma always watch your videos to learn about history and to make and try these beautiful historic dishes.
@TastingHistory5 күн бұрын
Thank you 😊
@ChaitanyaSharma-w5f5 күн бұрын
@TastingHistory you're very welcome!!!❤️❤️❤️❤️
@ChaitanyaSharma-w5f5 күн бұрын
@@TastingHistory sir, I have a video suggestion for you in which you might be interested. What did Alexander the Great eat? What was his diet that turned him from a small boy to the world conqueror which we all know and love.
@EndisNi5 күн бұрын
Up in Nottingham, the citizens took one look at the Anderson shelters and went "nah duck, for the last eight hundred years every time it's gotten real we've headed into the Caves. Ta-ra, bombs!"
@tyriafairy5 күн бұрын
In the Wartime Farm series they talk about a network of caves being used as shelter ! It was so interesting Also about people being scared of Anderson shelters since they tended to flood...
@calyodelphi1245 күн бұрын
Something my boyfriend does whenever he makes his vegetable stew is he'll take some of the veg and blend them into a slurry that gets mixed with the water and tomato sauce so that the liquid part of the stew has just as much if not more nutritional content than the solid bulk. It's really great. I could imagine doing a similar thing with this "blitz soup" by cooking half of the veg for an obscenely long time, then mashing it all up so that you get this thicker sort of stew-like base, and then the rest of the veg gets cooked a more normal time so that it stays quite solid.
@jonathanpanlaqui18555 күн бұрын
Hi Sir Max and I'm watching here, during the German bombing raid in London, blitz soup is served to residents being evacuated safely in underground shelters in 1940. Thanks for this new episode, I'm interested on WWII history, next on the series: Italy and Japan.
@asmith86925 күн бұрын
While London might have been the most bombed, my great-grandfathers on my father's side lived and died in Hartlepool which was where any bombs that hadn't been dumped by that point would get dropped. According to my aunt, her grandfathers died on the same night when the bus they were riding was hit. Hartlepool was a ship building site.
@misterthegeoff97675 күн бұрын
I grew up just outside London in Dartford. There was a massive AA battery on Dartford Heath (and a Vickers factory nearby). The "Bomb" craters I used to play in as a kid were mostly made by downed planes but a Heinkel hitting the ground with enough force still made a bloody big hole in whatever was underneath.
@angusmacdonald71875 күн бұрын
My paternal grandmother, born 1896 in Kansas, was know for her horrible vegetables. The boiled them all, often together, until they were more or less a slurry. Her cooking was one of the reasons that my father decided to join the Navy in WWII -- yep, the military had better food than my grandmother ;-)
@ryanwilliamson57145 күн бұрын
I live in inverness in the scottish highlands, and RAF inverness was thought by the germans to have been a seaplane base so wasnt a target for major bombing runs and thus saved inverness from any, but after the war it - according to what i could find in my own research - actually held hitlers own personal plane for a number of years, and the base converted back to a small airfield using captured german planes until the current airport took over as the main area for civilian flights because it was more spacious and thus safer :-)
@redtankgirl55 күн бұрын
My dido was brought to Canada to build airports to train pilots to fight the Nazis and so they brought the rest of the family with him. Baba cooked for the officers. My mother’s family had a victory garden and she would tell me stories about the rations and her father cooking with rations. We lost many members of our family in the war but they still had good memories too around their radios. I enjoy listening to those stories and miss those old folks.
@kaileafire5 күн бұрын
My grandmother was a part of the children sent to the country, but in a bit of a unique way. She was German and Jewish and my family were able to get to England while waiting for their papers to get to America, although they had absolutely nothing while there. My grandmother was sent to the country during the Blitz and actually learned English there. It was only for five months but it’s so crazy to think of the journey she made at the age of 8. Thank you!
@MrMegaManFan5 күн бұрын
No notes Max! Just thank you as always
@TastingHistory5 күн бұрын
You are most welcome!
@Justanotherconsumer5 күн бұрын
The emperor still complains it has too many notes!
@handsoffmycactus295814 сағат бұрын
He’s reading from an autocue ….
@ChairmanChico5 күн бұрын
You know it’s about to get for SERIOUS serious when there no Pokémon in the BG.
@maryp.38335 күн бұрын
Thank you! I have been wondering if I was blind and just not seeing it. Maybe it's hiding under the helmet.......
@FrinkyBaby5 күн бұрын
My daughter was sooo disappointed!
@RandomIssa5 күн бұрын
I came to the comments for this particular reason! Bring back our Pokémons!
@benjamintillema35725 күн бұрын
Whenever he gets a media company (Apple TV in this case) as a sponsor he can't have Pokémon or any other IP in the video. It was the same when he did a video to promote Shogun.
@ChairmanChico5 күн бұрын
@ ahhh… that explains it.
@jeanbellabasura15395 күн бұрын
My Dad (a baby at the time) and his family lived in Hackney during the blitz, there are no tube stations in that part of East London, so they had a Morrison Shelter installed, the morrison shelter doubled as a kitchen table. After dinner my Nanna would attach the protective sides and the family would bed down under the table. My Dad says he remembers listening out for flying bombs, and counting the seconds between the engine cutting out and the explosion of impact, trying to judge how far away the bombing was. Quite terrifying really.
@eileenhildreth83555 күн бұрын
My mum talked about the doodle bugs and listening for when the engine cut out, you were safe all the while you could hear them
@AJBrayWrites5 күн бұрын
I’m surprised you didn’t use wholemeal flour! They would’ve been on National Flour by then, and wholemeal/wholewheat is the closest thing we have to it today. But what a fantastic video, thank you, Max! Loved it.
@dilihopa5 күн бұрын
My parents lived through the Blitz. Rationing was severe and was worse for them when the war was over. I have so much respect for this generation and what they endured.