Thank so much for watching, guys! I've been a bit inconsistent with uploading new long-form videos as of late, but I have been getting Shorts out every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Hopefully you've been catching those as well. Nonetheless, I am trying to get back to posting regular videos on Fridays so keep a keen eye out for those coming in hot! 🔥If you enjoyed, please consider liking this video and subscribing to the channel😊
@marcustulliuscicero54436 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure gelato came to Germany the other way around. The German economy saw a massive boom in the 1950s leading to a significant labour shortage in the 60s in 70s which the German government battled through visa agreements with several southern European states, among them Italy. This led to hundred of thousands of Italian to migrate into Germany, bringing their ice cream with them.
@PassportTwo6 ай бұрын
You're definitely correct! When I was doing my research, I read about how post-war, many Germans traveled to Italy for vacation and fell in love with gelato and, exactly like you explained, many Italians came to Germany in the same period bringing gelato with them. I talked about this much more in depth in a different video and this video I was trying to just quickly mention the connection with Italy. Maybe I should have worded it differently and highlighted the Italians bringing it with them more than the aspect of Germans traveling to Italy.
@ohauss6 ай бұрын
Actually, there were Italian ice cream places in Germany even before the war. The father of the inventor of "spaghetti ice", Dario Fontanella, came to Hannover in 1931, where an uncle already had such a place, and then in 1933 moved to Mannheim and opened his own place there which Dario later took over (and recently closed/is about to close in favor of other locations...)
@alicetwain6 ай бұрын
It could also have helped that the Italian migration to Germany is significantly more recent, and given the nearness between the two countries, Italian migrants could easily come and go for holidays and visits home.
@Rico-oz4ct6 ай бұрын
No, there were already italians selling ice cream in Germany before the war.
@avengerofthedisenfranchised6 ай бұрын
@@ohauss@PassportTwo 1932 Eissalon am Dom opened Regensburg and it's running till today. In Winter you can purchase Nürnberger Lebkuchen. In spring the family is coming back from Italy
@jackmclane18266 ай бұрын
Germans in restaurants just remain seated after eating and have another drink and a coffee. This "having a drink at the bar" is weird for us.
@picobello996 ай бұрын
In Dutch this is called "natafelen" - literally "after tabling"
@1972Ray3 ай бұрын
And that's exactly what we do in the US when we go to a restaurant. We get a coffee or a drink, sit around and talk, and I'm telling you in my 60 years, I've never felt rushed. This mans experience seems to be limited to McDonalds.
@friedrichmatthies606529 күн бұрын
@@1972Raynot sure where you live in the USA, BUT in virtually all parts of USA, the waitstaff is trained to maximize turnover to increase total number of customers/revenue PLUS more importantly, American waitstaffs' income is totally dependent on tips so number of customers wheras German waitstaff is paid fair hourly rate.
@JörgKirchberger29 күн бұрын
Ja das stimmt. An dem Essen wird nichts verdient. Der Gewinn wird mit Getränken gemacht. Ein Espresso vor dem Essen. Ein Bier beim Essen, ein Kaffee bevor man geht.
@jackmclane182628 күн бұрын
@@1972Ray It is a cultural thing. And regardless how long I live in the US... it's still weird to me. ;)
@according2her6 ай бұрын
Another reason we're allowed to take our time eating in restaurant is that wait staff don't rely on quick turn around and thus more tips for their income as they are paid hourly living wages. Tipping is just a bonus so their income doesn't depend on the number of guests they service a night.
@alexj96036 ай бұрын
And they make more money from selling drinks than from the food - as opposed to the US where you have free refills. So the restaurants are fine with people staying longer after their meal, as long as they order drinks from time to time.
@hannesh.30246 ай бұрын
Nailed it spot on. Good explanation.
@1972Ray3 ай бұрын
@@hannesh.3024 Except it's a generalization and often wrong. This man must only go to McDonalds. As for free refills, that's only in convenience stores and gas stations, not decent restaurants. It's very hard to believe this guy is an actual American. Radiators and towel warmers? Very common. gelato places are all over. It's just off a bit....
@katrina367023 күн бұрын
@@1972Raynot all for sure, but many regular restaurants give free refills on soda.
@klausstock802018 күн бұрын
@@katrina3670 In Germany, only some fast food chains offer free soda refills. Yes, a few places have "all you can eat" and "all you can drink" offers...but especially the "all you can drink" offer is pretty uncommon, as it promotes binge drinking. Yes, in Germany, "all you can drink" would usually include alcoholic drinks (and coffee). No one in Germany wants to drink two buckets of Coke or Pepsi, but beer and wine and spirits are fine. And beer would usually not comes in a Maßkrug (unless you're on the Oktoberfest), but in smaller glasses. Germans don't like their drinks stale. Yes, some Germany visiting the US were disappointed that "free refills" doesn't include alcohol, coffee or hard liquor. In the US and Canada, free refills are much more common. A Subway shop in Berlin had a "NO FREE REFILLS" sign because US visitors would automatically assume that Subway in Germany also offers the same service as in the US. Oh well, after a few years one Berlin Subway gave up and now offers free refills. That said, while not every restaurant in the US gives free refills, it's still much more commonplace than in Germany, where this is pretty rare exception. Note that it might be more commonplace in some regions of the US than in others. Some states or cities had even tried to ban free refills.
@Alice_vom_See6 ай бұрын
Most Germans do not use the word "Gelato". The most say simply "Eis", that means ice. But there are some sorts of ice, like soft ice and more.
@theredestbull6 ай бұрын
the gelato thing is a 'trend' to charge more for your standard Waffeleis
@tobiaspeter65554 ай бұрын
I'm German and I've never heard people talking about "Gelato". They say "Eis" or, more and more, "Eiscrème".
@Sylvia-yd2gwАй бұрын
We do not use the word 'gelato'. I have never heard it. It is 'Wir gehen ein Eis essen in die Eisdiele'.
@saschawalmroth5465Ай бұрын
It's just the same word like in Spanish helado. What also means Eis. No meaning
@EuropeanWrenАй бұрын
_Eis_ doesn't mean "ice" in English, @alice, which would be the ice on streets... Correct translation is _icecream._
@HappyBeezerStudios5 ай бұрын
Long meals are obviously a result of how eating out is seen. It'ts not just going somewhere to eat. It's meeting somewhere to spend an evening together. And the fact that italians, french and spaniards take even more time shows that they also embrace the idea of a friendly meetup that just happens to also involves food. Like spending a late summer evening in a restaurant, on a table in front of the building, chatting, having fun, enjoying the blue hour with a couple beers or glasses of wine.
@MarcoTorrance6 ай бұрын
Things Considered A LUXURY in the USA But NORMAL In Germany: - A full covered affordable and working health insurance. - No school shootings - Education. (Sorry, couldn't resist! =D)
@susannelachmuth36706 ай бұрын
The only thing German education apparently consistently fails at is teaching Germans how to use adverbs and commas in English. Sorry, couldn't resist! ;-) (A fellow German)
@borstenpinsel6 ай бұрын
Where does the health insurance thing comes from? If an American would choose to pay a german salary portion into health insurance, they'd have a great insurance. In Germany you're forced to pay for "free" stuff and still not everything is covered and you will still get a bill for many things. I'm rarely sick, thankfully but I still have to pay on top for every single medicine I need. And since this wasn't enough already we had a few years where we paid 10€ for a doctor's visit directly at the reception 😅 (once per quarter of the year).
@x-pilot61806 ай бұрын
@@borstenpinsel 10€ 😂
@MarcoTorrance6 ай бұрын
@@borstenpinsel, that 10 Euro thing is over like many years ago. =) Interestingly the education thing doesn't bother you lol. Anyway don't take these things too serious. ;-) It causes needless arguing. =)
@phunkzdotnet6 ай бұрын
some more different political parties to vote, not a bunch of mass shootings per week...
@obsidianwingАй бұрын
Luxury in Germany : Tap Water that Taste not like Clorine and is the best controlled Food in Germany everybody can have. Sunscreen
@DuRoehre90210Ай бұрын
In theory. But then again, you can hardly find any public fountains and the restaurants want real money for basic water.
@mellowmiu25 күн бұрын
Das Wasser in meiner Wohnung darf ich nicht trinken, weil es verkalkt ist lmao
@nicmiller790524 күн бұрын
@mellowmiu Mir hat jemand gesagt, der Kalk sei Calcium und somit ok.
@felixmoeller936723 күн бұрын
@mellowmiu :D kalk darfste trinken ;)
@mellowmiu22 күн бұрын
@felixmoeller9367 Ja, aber bei unser Viertel ist das zu sehr verkalkt. Zu sehr verkalkes Wasser kann zu Gesundheitsschäden führen. ^^
@teatimewiththeia6 ай бұрын
I actually never met a German who uses the towel heater the intended way. It's nearly always turned off and we simply hang our towels over it to dry. Only if it's a really cold winter I sometimes use it to warm my pajamas before bed😅
@berndbaasner74456 ай бұрын
Because of the cost tower heaters are not turned on in the summer. Some ran on electricity, but most on the heating System. So the sre a additional Header for the winter to the floor heating. Petting a tower on it..heats up the tower, but not the room. Putting your night wear on it...Shows , that you wear night wear....hopefully sexy
@Suma_286 ай бұрын
Mir hat man vor 6 Jahren son Ding eingebaut, ich hab das original noch nie angemacht
@herbertschmerbert6 ай бұрын
Was, ich kann mit meiner Heizung im Bad Klamotten erwärmen, wenn ich sie einschalte? Life hack!
@vkdrk5 ай бұрын
In Slovakia, they are always on in winter when the heating is on. People hate cold bathrooms/toilets. My parents would even keep it on in spring/autumn when it's warm outside 🤣
@MalteKampmeyer5 ай бұрын
I use it all the time. It's just nice to have warm towels
@HenriBourkelАй бұрын
2:40 As a matter of fact, towel heaters are used less in order to provide a warmed towel to somebody who has just taken a shower, but rather to make sure that a wet towel dries up as quickly as possible before becoming smelly because of its dampness.
@Dluv092125 күн бұрын
Plus German towels could be considered shop rags in the US.
@hw25086 ай бұрын
The "towel warmer" is not a luxury but German pragmatism. (Old) German houses use radiators for heating the rooms. Often this radiators are ugly and need a lot of space. However, in the bathroom there is a need to hang towels. And to dry them if possible fast. Bathrooms are usually small, so why not switch from an ugly old fashioned radiator to a new towel hanging radiator? And it will dry the towel after you took your shower. A warm towels is just a nice 'colaferal profit'.
@annwyche54715 ай бұрын
Floor heating is usually what most modern Germans would go for 🤷♀️
@HappyBeezerStudios5 ай бұрын
@@annwyche5471 my bathroom has neither floor heating nor a towel radiator. But the pipe to the radiator goes across the floor, so it gets warm anyway.
@gasauto1675Ай бұрын
@@annwyche5471 floor heating needs an extreme isolated ground, new houses got more than 2 feet of XPS Isolation as base for the concrete that is on this XPS or you are heating everything for much money and Energy is waaaaay more expensive as in US !
@mortifinkenbein955910 күн бұрын
Be careful with the word "masseuse" in Germany. In German there are similar words "Masseurin" und "Masseuse". The former is a medical professional, the latter is the one giving happy endings. ;)
@ZY19826 күн бұрын
As an Italian living in Germany, I find the long time spent eating in restaurants is exhausting. I never stay more than one hour in a restaurant, unless I am there to celebrate a wedding or something similar.
@Bramfly6 ай бұрын
All those things you mention are not specifically German. They are common in almost every European country 😊
@FirstLifeFan6 ай бұрын
Weeeeeell try looking for an italian icecream place in France. You‘d be surprised. If you find an icecream place, chances are it‘ll be either a French brand (Carte d‘Or) or american (Häagen-Dasz), both pretty expensive and no high probability of getting one of those fancy Eisbecher creations…
@andyydna49385 ай бұрын
Come to us in the Franconian countryside. Here you can sit in the beer garden. In our area it is called a beer cellar and is often in the forest or on a hill in the middle of nature. Here you can sit all day until the sun goes down, you can eat and drink and your children can use the playground next door. No waiter would dare to tell you that you have to leave because you have finished eating. In the villages you can still get real ice cream made from milk and at a reasonable price. The people here are very relaxed and even Germans from other parts of the country come here for vacation. My employer gives me 31 days vacation and vacation pay and Christmas bonus. :)
@gaia_tellus_19 күн бұрын
Wo in Franken genau?
@andyydna493818 күн бұрын
@@gaia_tellus_ Oberfranken, in der Nähe von Bamberg....
@Alina_Schmidt4 ай бұрын
4:14 More likely the ice cream culture in germany is that good because there were quite a lot of italian immigrants to germany in the 60s.
@ClausStephanSchlangen6 ай бұрын
Pro-Tip, perhaps really a bit posh: There is a device called "Elektrische Heizpatrone" you can add to the towel warmer radiator. You can program a schedule to it so it starts heating at the time you usually take a shower/bath so you have warmed towels all over the year, not only when the normal heating is on. Second benefit: The towels dry faster and don't start to smell.
@hannesh.30246 ай бұрын
3:48 I have lived in germany for 19 years now and literally never heard someone use the term "amarican ice". Besides some marketing on for example Ben&Jerry this isn't really a thing here.
@johapunkt30535 ай бұрын
Yeah, "American Ice Cream" usually means off-brand B&J's or Häagen Dasz, usually with chunks of whatnot in it (dough, cookies or other sweets), or food items typically associated with US culture, like pecans.
@ArmadilloGodzilla4 ай бұрын
Agree.
@angelikalindenau94326 күн бұрын
It was a thing in the post-war era though, before my fellow Germans got around to the more luxurious things of life. Growing up near an American base, I was aware of their huge tubs of the frozen stuff.
@angelikalindenau94326 күн бұрын
@@johapunkt3053you're obviously born in the Neuzeit. My memories go back to long before there was any of brands you mention. It's like the thing with the phone stuck to the wall and you dialled it via the rotating disc 😉
@hannesh.302426 күн бұрын
@angelikalindenau943 then I have to specify: It isn't a thing anymore. Not really relevant for this context here but still.
@retrieveri6 ай бұрын
As a Finn, I found it strange that you came up with sauna culture in Germany. It is a small thing compared to Finland. And yes, I know how it is in Germany (been there like 15 times) and US (have lived there for a year + several shorter visits).
@RoyalDudeness6 ай бұрын
We don’t have a sauna culture in Germany. Very few go to a public sauna and some have a sauna in the basement, but you never invite friends unless you are swingers. Americans make a big thing of „german sauna culture“ because their sick brains can’t comprehend being naked in public
@mathildameier83406 ай бұрын
As a German, I totally get your perpective.. ;) For us (whilst I can only speak from my experience..) Sauna is just a normal thing in Gyms (my parents had a well used one in their house) and Spas (and we get naked). With regards to a cultural thing the point certainly goes to you and other nothern countries. Hi from Berlin.
@borstenpinsel6 ай бұрын
Well this video compares Germany and USA not Finland 😅
@brennsuppa6 ай бұрын
I hear you, I like the finnish way of sauna without the strict german rules where you are not allowed to enter during "Aufguss".
@MiaMerkur6 ай бұрын
As student (lower price) I was nearly every week in a fancy sauna (45, 60, 8, 90, 120 C finnish, roman steam, biological, swimming inside amd outside, big slide, whirl streams, whirl pools, restaurant, café, ping pong, cinema. So luxury was a day ticket instead of 2 or 4 hours ticket once in a while.
@bythelee6 ай бұрын
Towel radiators are "bog standard" in the UK, too. You can get ones that are stand-alone, filled with oil and heated electrically, and do not have to be plumbed in to the usual central heating. So you can have your heated towel radiator in any bathroom, regardless of the household heating system. While on secondment in Germany in 1996, I was stunned that the local Italian pizzeria in the tiny local village was run by an Italian, and offered pizzas 50% larger, sumptuously and deliciously topped, at about half the price of the tasteless crap offered at the pizza chains in the UK. Those pizzas remain my lasting impression of "cultural difference" between UK and Germany. It seemed like German pricing in general was always "good value" (fair price with a decent minimum quality), whereas the UK was about "charge as much as we can get away with" - selling absolute cheapskate rubbish at as high a price as possible, often driven by a lack of choice or competition. But that was in 1996. Perhaps mileage thse days may vary. The UK has not improved, but Germany might not have maintained those "fair value" and "quality" standards. Having said that, I now reside in the Republic of Ireland, and am rediscovering standards of food excellence at reasonable prices. Grass fed beef, real milk and butter, and so on. It is a bit more expensive, but paying 10 to 20% more for something twice as good, is worth it. Then again, the German budget supermarket chains (Aldi and Lidl) remain (sometimes BY FAR) a cheaper option than the local UK supermarket chains. While still offering "genuine" products from all over Europe. Parma ham from Parma, brie cheese from France, bratwurst from Germany, etc. They even run "specialities" of limited duration, where you can get Greek delicacies (baklava and moussaka and gyros, for example), sometimes French, sometimes Swedish or Danish or Spanish... And they all taste far better than the stuff pushed by UK supermarkets. I don't understand how they can sell grissini (breadsticks), made in Italy, at half the price of the product sold in the regular supermarkets. As one example. But yeah, HALF the price. And at least as good for taste and quality. Then I see the problems in most of the rest of the world, and have to remind myself just how fortunate I am to have these "luxuries" to pick and choose from.
@andreasu.35465 ай бұрын
Here in Germany, I often actively avoid name brand food products and go for store brand instead (mostly in Aldi), as they often are better quality and the manufacturers have not jumped on the shrinkflation and skimpflation bandwagon as much as the big brands have.
@FreebirthOne2 ай бұрын
@@andreasu.3546 More often than not store brands are made in the same factories like the big brands. For some brands thats a problem because the supermarkets say 'You either let us sell your product also under our own brand or we do not sell your products at all'
@felixdombek605222 күн бұрын
The video says "we don't have radiators, we have central heating" which doesn't make any sense at all.
@angelikalindenau94326 күн бұрын
I grew up in the village next to which Vogelweh was built and I remember how impressed we were with American ice-cream when somebody got a tub of it. But the 60s were long before the overwhelming ice-cream culture took off, started, no doubt, by the sprouting Italian ice-cream salons.
@languageatworkinh.r.-b.kip80436 ай бұрын
As a two time survivor of skin cancer who happens to also be a nudist/FKKler, I am *definitely* Team Sunscreen! Remember: your skin never forgets what you do to it.
@patriciamillin-j3s6 ай бұрын
True. I lived in Cyprus for many years as a kid to teenager, sunscreen was definitely an important “luxury” item.
@bejoscha5 ай бұрын
Yup. And go to your check-ups regularly without hesitation, particularly if you or someone close to you notices some changes on your skin. Delaying for 2 weeks can make all the difference between an "uncomfortable" day at clinic getting minor surgery and years of stressful treatment with always having to think of the "odds" of things going good or bad... Speaking of experience.
@frank-m.senwolf56015 ай бұрын
@@bejoscha at the age of 15 i lived in "la herradura" near Coquimbo/Chile, at the spring beginn i started with sunbathing...at the summer my skin was almost as dark as a black guy...i myself am 180 m tall and blond, now at the age of 77 never had any skin problems. It was a wonderful time there, nice people and beautyful girls/ladys. I´m back in Germany since 1966 and using the I-net to talk to some of them.
@HappyBeezerStudios5 ай бұрын
Absolutely team sunscreen here. Especially when I intend to stay in the sun for a while. For the quick walk to the store? Not neccesary. For an afternoon in the cafes at the riverbank? Absolutely!
@ArmadilloGodzilla4 ай бұрын
Recent studies however, show a correlation between sunscreen usage and incidence of skin cancer.
@Petra44YT5 ай бұрын
Yeah well. The ice cream (and pizza) here is not only Italian style, but usually made by Italians who decided to live in Germany.
@DasTamii6 ай бұрын
Eating slow is more healthy
@c.b.42706 ай бұрын
Only if you eat healthy quality food, which explains why Americans try eat there " food" so fast.😋
@kdks78435 ай бұрын
@@c.b.4270 🤣🤣🤣
@jankoster1084Ай бұрын
We germans do not use the word "gelato" at all. We just call it "Eis" (= ice, even pronounciation is the same). There are quite a few italian ice cafes in Germany/Europe, and they often have written the italian word gelato on their cafe and or as headline in the menue, like other italian restaurants use "pizza" or "pasta", which is italian, too. When you order in an italian ice cafe, you say "Eis", and the individual description of the different ice creations in the menue say "Eis" as well.
@EuropeanWrenАй бұрын
*Italian ice CREAM _parlor_
@k.schmidt27406 ай бұрын
Team "as little sun as possible" in the summer.
@willietorben56023 күн бұрын
As a German, I laughed so hard at 4:10. Yes, *precisely* this. NOTHING says "German town" like a gelato bar named after Venice. It's literally more famous than bratwurst (which is a regional thing).
@s.zander62115 ай бұрын
As a German, i would never ever think about living in USA. Nevvvver. 😂😂
@kathrintaraba32744 ай бұрын
Same!
@jeroenvangastel90794 ай бұрын
Same here my German neighbour. Grtz from the Netherlands 🇳🇱
@weissblau3 ай бұрын
Klug - ich bin schon lange hier, konnte nichtaber nie mehr zurueck, Es ist finanziell, sondern die schreckliche Einsamkeit (Ich war lange Lehrerin dort - Englisch un Deutsch, und kann Englisch besser als die meisten Amis - man gehoert einfach nie dazu. Lieber trockenes Btot in der Heimat, als das Fleischgericht in USA.
@s.zander62113 ай бұрын
@@weissblau Ich denke, es wird immer mehr Menschen bewußt, wie wichtig die eigenen Wurzeln sind…Es wird uns vorgegaukelt, daß mehr Geld zu haben wichtiger ist, als soziale Kontakte und Familie. Am Ende wollen wir alle zu Hause sein. ❤️
5 ай бұрын
A towel warmer is a luxury, on both sides of the Big Pond. Never had one whereever I've lived.
@jaysigma26 күн бұрын
The oldest and first icecream- bar was found in Germany in the city of Esslingen by an Italian Emmigrant named Bertazoni in 1885.
@_Yannex6 ай бұрын
There's no need for 'holiday airlines' in the US bc of the lac of holidays🤷
@Altonahh105 ай бұрын
They would basically serve two routes: Vegas and Honolulu.
@thomasabike6 ай бұрын
The "table reservation time duration" is a policy which has changed in some places in large cities like Frankfurt here, too. Yes, in the past you were able to say "once sit down, nobody pushes you to hurry up to drink, eat, pay and go" but in the last few years some restaurants here started the common use of "2 hours reserved" or whatever you may call it. Yes, you're reading it correctly. In some places you are politely but directly urged to make your table cleared up for the next guests. Luckily I have not seen it in smaller towns yet.
@petergeyer75846 ай бұрын
In some of the more popular neighborhoods in Berlin where I live, when you make a reservation, they’ll tell you it’s for two hours. As an American, it’s usually not a problem, unless the service is particularly slow. But even then, as long as I’m not sitting without food or drinks, that two hours is pretty flexible. I will admit, I can’t stand eating out in the US when I go back to visit. When an American server gives me the check when they deliver my food, they have guaranteed that I will eat and drink as slowly as I can.
@RustyDust1016 ай бұрын
Considering *German* eat-out experiences to be long is funny to me. My Belgian relatives had a lunch celebration for the christening of a baby that lasted for roughly five hours. Ok, it was a celebration, so yeah, it was expected to last well into the afternoon. It began around 11.30 AM and ended after 4.00 PM. But it wasn't even considered exceptionally long for Belgian standards. Similar applies to the French and Italian celebratory meals. Three to four hours is absolute normalcy for them even for non-celebrations, just a family-get-together for no particular reason. Sure, not during weekdays, but on weekends where they have the time. Dinners are often very long affairs in any of these countries, even during the week nights. Being ushered out by the wait-staff in Europe for any of these occurences would be the height of rudeness. Edit: RQotW: definitely sunscreen. Not the ultra-high SPF cause that stuff competes with the sun for detrimental effects on your skin biome, but 100% betweeen 15 and 25. After my time is up I retreat into the shade for safety.
@zaldarion6 ай бұрын
hmmm the more I tink about it, the more confusing it is, us icecream , well it's in the word itself, cream, but the us version is more like an ice block unless you let it melt for a while, and gelato is cream 🤔
@rodalfderraticht20413 ай бұрын
Kacketeller are epic. So much pride to be harvested for seeing the mountain you just made. 💪🏻😂
@JensPilemandOttesen5 ай бұрын
"US Ice Cream" is only used for Ben & Jerry copies. Paperbuckect with chunks of stuff.
@youserawaiting38765 ай бұрын
In most part of europe "american ice cream" is the type like they sell at MacDonalds - milkpowder mix and water, called soft ice.
@PassportTwo5 ай бұрын
Nah...if Europeans perceive that as American ice cream, they are very wrong! (Also, even with McDonald's being an American "classic," their burgers do not represent a true "American burger") What they serve at McDonald's is yet another type of ice cream called "soft serve ice cream" which is COMPLETELY different from "American-style ice cream."
@bubbles45255 ай бұрын
The one-hand tap is actually still missing under thing 1. In America, you always have to turn on hot and cold for hot water. We solve this in a faucet, without turning.
@emjayay5 ай бұрын
None of that is true at all, if what I'm guessing you mean by that confusing comment is correct.
@flo85172 ай бұрын
Yesssss the tap in the US and Canada is often really stupid. By turning up the water volume you also increase the temperature. So having low volume warm water isn´t possible and having high volume cold water isn´t possible either. This was my experience in LA, San Francisco, on Hawaii, in Vancouver and just BC and Alberta in general (ranging from normal single family homes to hostels and hotels). I´m in Québec rn and gosh they finally have a normal shower tap. Also from Germany I´m used to the tap becoming hot, warm, cool, cold pretty much instant while it takes ages here in North America. Noting that it does that while the water never reeks of chlorine at all and is safe to drink at all times. Though I gotta give it to San Francisco they have superb tap water. Prolly the best i had in North America.
@Daniela-sc5bsАй бұрын
I think it is a good thong when flights are as expensive as possible so that you don't fly short distances all the time (Stuttgart-Berlin is very popular for example).
@SELBLINK_in_your_area3 ай бұрын
No one says "gelato" in Germany. That's just a written word to show that the ice-cream is Italian because that's considered the best ice-cream in Europe. We say "Eis" (can mean both ice-cream or ice as the frozen water)
@1972Ray3 ай бұрын
A lot of modern German homes don't have poop shelf toilets. Towel heater are also in the US, they sell them on Amazon. Many US homes use radiators for heating. It's very common in older homes. Gelato is sold everywhere in the US. This guys experience at restaurants in the US seems limited to McDonalds, but there are countless fine dining options that are very relaxed and you take as long as you want. Germany is a terrible comparison to the US, Germany being so small, it fits inside a US state. Different culture, different language, different history. But here we are comparing the two.
@juttapopp18696 ай бұрын
The luxury you SSHOULD have mentioned is maternal or parental leave with job security, or unlimited paid sick-leave, minimum four weeks of paid holidays PLUS bank-holidays, lol.
@jeroenvangastel90794 ай бұрын
Those are to painful to be mentioned to his US audience. Again these applies to all EU countries. Some even better is African countries.
@s.zander62113 ай бұрын
Überall ist es besser als in den USA. Machen wir uns doch nichts vor. 🤣
@FreebirthOne2 ай бұрын
Unlimited paid sick leave is questionable. Yes, you get at least 42 paid by your employer. After that the Pflegekasse takes over, and in that you automatically paid into before
@nicowolters895927 күн бұрын
We have minimum five weeks as a apprentice (25 days) but most company's are offering up to 40 days
@Critizens5 ай бұрын
3:30 Correction: Officially they is even more differentiation than just "Gelato" (not a legal term in Germany) and Ice Cream. - Cremeeis: ≥50 % Milk + ≥270 g Egg (or ≥90g egg yolk) per litre - Milcheis: ≥70 % Milk - Rahm-/Sahneeis: ≥18 % Milk fat - Eiscreme: ≥10 % Milk fat - Eis: Contains vegetable fats - Sorbet: ≥25 % fruit (≥15 % for high-acid fruits like a lemon sorbet) A good "Eisdiele" usually offers Milcheis, Rahmeis or Eiscreme. If it only indicates something like "Vanilleeis": Run as fast as you can.
@Altonahh105 ай бұрын
And then there is Mövenpick and Cremissimo: Milchpulver, Zucker und Schaum 😬
@FreebirthOne2 ай бұрын
@@Altonahh10 If You get milk at all. Most brands nowadays use palm oil or coconuts oil
@mbo74386 ай бұрын
Would be interessting to see how many Germans have a Handtuchheizkörper in their Bathrooms. I live here since almost 50 years Munich, Stuttgart, Cologne, Dortmund, Hamburg and Munich again and all i ever saw was regular radiators or heaters.
@Altonahh105 ай бұрын
I have one. And never use it because I have an underfloor heating.
@reinertretter627322 күн бұрын
I also have one. And I use it for towels.
@stephaniepeters2590Ай бұрын
I've actually never heard Gelato used in Germany/by Germans. First and only time I heard it was a colleague from the US using it, and I had no idea what they meant :) We mostly say "Eis", or rarely "Eiscreme" as others have already stated. Of course that is the same word that also means ice as in frozen water. Context is everything I guess :)
@chrisspencer65026 ай бұрын
He left off the number one thing Healthcare In most European countries healthcare is free. I can go see a doctor at short notice for free
@germankitty6 ай бұрын
Before the pandemic, I sometimes took a budget airline, EasyJet, for one-day shopping trips to London -- leave from my hometown airport at 7.30am, arrive at 8.15 (different time zone), have breakfast at the airport and be in the city by 10, just when the shops open. Go back to the airport by 4pm, lift-off at 7.15pm local time and be back home by 9 -- all for ~€40 (plane tickets and bus service). They were actually used as commuter flights for work by some people, and you could book several flights in advance. How's that for luxury? 🙂 (Sadly, EasyJet no longer serves my local airport, and the alternates have less advantageous flight times even from nearby places. *le sigh*)
@Thommygun-qv7um6 ай бұрын
Damn, I reckon that recording and editing that video must have been really hard. Reading that script in the leisure activity clothes and the other half in the business suit and then cutting both halfs together. I apprechiate the effort. Also, I am team "stay out of the sun as much as possible".
@maylinde9866 ай бұрын
My thought!
@1337fraggzb00N5 ай бұрын
Gelato is nice, but also try Sorbet, it's quite delicious. Meanwhile there is some kind of trend in Germany, where waiters in restaurants also constantly ask "Is everything alright?" or "Do you need something?" and it is so annoying. Sauna rocks. Sit in 194 Fahrenheit for 20 minutes, then jump into a pool of ice cold water, get out, have a beer and a shot, then go back into the sauna. You get fucked up almost free. If you want it a lillte nicer, you go to a "Thermalbad".
@dot860510 күн бұрын
We don't say gelato. Ever. It's Eis. The american ice cream is just Ben&Jerry's - formerly good, now ruined by putting cookie dough into it 🤢.
@Tillerman5629 күн бұрын
Do your research of the 'poop-shelf toilet' again, but better. There are good reasons for it, mainly being able to check your health. Nothing traumatic. Only for Americans I think, as I see this subject pop up regularly.
@wohlhabendermanager6 ай бұрын
Maybe it's just me, but I love putting my socks on the radiator when I take a shower. And when I'm finished, I can put on fresh, warm socks. It's really nice during winter time.
@vonpfrentsch6 ай бұрын
Na, na. Ein wohlhabendermanager wechselt die Socken nach dem Duschen!
@sarahmichael2702446 ай бұрын
as long you use NEW/ FRESH socks!.....
@wohlhabendermanager6 ай бұрын
@@vonpfrentsch Dass man nicht die Socken vom Vortag anzieht dürfte irgendwie klar sein, oder?
@wohlhabendermanager6 ай бұрын
@@sarahmichael270244 Why would I wear yesterday's socks? Doesn't make sense.
@vonpfrentsch6 ай бұрын
@@wohlhabendermanager Just kidding.
@ralfbaechle5 ай бұрын
The US has the distinction between restaurants and bars where in Germany it's common to go to a restaurant for dinner and then just stay there for a few (too many?) drinks. And it's not so uncommon to leave past midnight.
@VRaven-wh3zf29 күн бұрын
For us germans the Train Infrastructure is more frustrating than luxury 😂
@schorsch567713 күн бұрын
About flying, I read about two friends living in different cities who said that both flying to Mallorca in Spain to meet is cheaper than one taking the train for a visit.
@Lia282319 күн бұрын
The sauna culture comes from the romans, who had baths with different pools, gyms and saunas. It was a big part of the Roman culture and since their empire was pretty big, this was carried all over their empire and it survived in a lot of places. So it’s not just I’m Germany, but in many parts of the old Roman Empire. And for them, it really was essential! In some city’s you can either visit old Roman baths like a museum, or you can even visit a restored one.
@PCLHH5 ай бұрын
Stammtisch is another thing that I had to "figure out" in Germany. Well, its a group of friends that meetup in a restaurant every week, say on the Thursday evening at 19:00. To talk and exchange what´s new in their lives. The sauna-culture in Germany was quite a surprize to me. Naked? I. Have. To. Go. In. Naked?!
@sophiaherschel567Ай бұрын
"God´s Own Country", "Land Of The Free", "best country in the world". If it wasn´t so sad, i´d laugh.
@butenbremer19656 ай бұрын
Three out of five ice cream parlors of my town in Hesse are carrying the name "Venetia".
@patriciamillin-j3s6 ай бұрын
I used to live in Cyprus. When there were family get togethers for dinner, especially BBQs, eating could easily last all afternoon!
@Mokrator6 ай бұрын
behold... saunaclub is not about sauna at all (18+ only, primary s*xual "activities")... A real sauna is not age restricted, but for very small children sauna may be to hot. A very beautifull Sauna/Spa you spend ~ 40€-45€ per day. They would be "tropical" themed with a 24°C Air temperature, offer cold and warm pools (specially cold one to cool of after sauna) and they have strict rules like shower before going into any pool. You may walk in most areas FKK but as they often offer Restaurant and Bar the rules usually state you need to wear a bathrobe there. Thongs are worn everywhere exept of inside the Sauna itself to avoid to spread fungus infections (also don't go if you know to have an infection). s*xual behavior is prohibited - if it's difficuilt for men keep it relaxed hanging maybe don't go.
@ravanpee13256 ай бұрын
Saunaclub is either a Gay Sex sauna or a Swinger Club
@LarsSchönfeld-m8k6 ай бұрын
When it comes to FKK - a visit to the German Baltic coast can shock many an American too
@artforz6 ай бұрын
@@LarsSchönfeld-m8k Bonus points for staying at a FKK or clothing-optional(quite useful if you have teenage kids with body image problems) campground.
@frank-m.senwolf56015 ай бұрын
lmao ...relaxed hanging...u made my day! Use a towel when UNrelaxed
@theredestbull6 ай бұрын
flat platter shelf toilets are common in germany. whats traumic is public toilets with gaps in the cabin doors that you can easily look through... I mean why???
@andreasu.35465 ай бұрын
You mean like in America where the stall door is a 20" wide strip of wood?
@lumina9995Ай бұрын
Shelf toilets may have been common 60 years ago, the few that remain just haven't been replaced. I wonder when people will finally stop talking about them. 🙄🙄🙄
@qualitytraders53336 ай бұрын
1. I would mention the 28 paid working days of vacation, which means taking 3 weeks in summer and 2 weeks in winter. 2. Also healthcare. 'Nuf said. 3. American icecream is mostly made of vegetable fat. In Germany it's animal fat i.e. cream from milk. Compare margarine with real butter. 4. We normally don't eat beef but pork, chicken or fish.
@Moonchild06 ай бұрын
1. Yes and no. Depends how long you have been in the company (over 25 years in the same company there are 6 weeks or 36 work days). Also it depends a lot of the Collective agreement. It also depends where you work. In health care system there can be a holiday stop OR limited vacation time. Some companies also allows you to take holiday one go. What you describe is the 0815 office job. 3. Ice cream as we know (Milkcream) is mostly cream, and/or mixed with egg yolk. Gelato is whole milk and no egg yolk. (and since there are many other vegan milk options too, gelato can be vegan too) 4. Austria on the other hand it A LOT of beef. Usually: 1) Pork 2) Beef 3) Chicken 4) Lamb and mutton 5) Fish In Germany it's a bit different yes: 1) Pork 2) Chicken 3) Beef 4) Fish (depends on where you are; in north towards the sea people eat a lot more fish whereas in Bavaria)
@marcmathes6 ай бұрын
@@Moonchild0 A small correction to 1: It is 20 days (5-day week) or 24 days (6-day week). This is what the law guarantees. 28 days PTO is an average based on current data, not a legal requirement that employers must meet. Currently, we're starting to see 32 or even 35 days of PTO as companies compete to hire qualified professionals. They also need to offer at least two consecutive weeks of vacation per year to ensure that people can actually relax and aren't pressured to take a day here, a day there. A vacation block can happen, but employers must give detailed reasons for it. Regularly, one particular reason doesn't pass legal reviews by labor courts: too few employees and too much work. This is not a legal reason for a block because it is the employer's responsibility.
@Moonchild06 ай бұрын
@@marcmathes From what standpoint do you write this? From Austria or from Germany law? 'cuz mine is from Austria. Different countries, different laws. Because you didn't specify it, it could be confusing. You sounds and stated like that's everywhere. Well, it is NOT. Btw it's actually 25 days for 5 day-week or 30 days for 6 day-week. After 25-years in same company it would be 30 days for 5 day-week or 36 days for 6 day-week. And you also get 3 days off for anniversery (like 10 years/20 years and so on in the same company). To the holiday block: It's usually for a certain time period. So not the whole year - that would be illigal. Like the two weeks from Christmas to New Years (which I mean the whole week wether both days are Monday or Sunday). Or like summer, there might be an intern regulation like "no-more-than-two-weeks-in-a-row-or-less". So that everyone can take holiday in summer. This actually happens quite often in healthcare :/ As you said: Too much work, too less personal. Sadly it won't be any better soon.
@axelmende8270Ай бұрын
this "places" are called : intimbereich
@alexandermarkhart15826 ай бұрын
Hey, great video, though I think you spoke about most of the things in other videos shortly (at least I feel, like I heard it before). Anyway, to the question of the week: It's the first time I am kinda perplexed by a qotw, since there is absolutely no debate about this in my social circles... Of course everyone uses Sun screen when going out for any length of time in the summer. The health risk of sun exposure is just way more impactful than any annoyance of rubbing on sunscreen...
@LeicaM116 ай бұрын
I am pretty sure, nobody in Germany has ever heart of Gelado!😂
@mncsrhjkkligv6 ай бұрын
It is written gelato and of course we heard of it
@PotsdamSenior6 ай бұрын
@@mncsrhjkkligvYes, in Italy.
@JFKrieger28 күн бұрын
The picture of the "fancy" sauna / spa pool is located at vabali spa in Hamburg. Really nice place, only young adults and older, ( no children) about 50 € a day, lots of saunas, pools and of course no textiles allowed inside a sauna.
@vonpfrentsch6 ай бұрын
Very funny. Never thought of this. Well, my last trip to the US was around 30 years ago. And Springfiled, IL., is not particularly fancy, e.g. they were "proud" not to have an Chinese Restaurant in town. Italian, with no italian speaking personnel, was the most exotic they had to offer.
@PassportTwo6 ай бұрын
I think Italian with no Italian speaking personnel is quite common in the U.S. haha
@vonpfrentsch6 ай бұрын
@@PassportTwo You know what another big difference is in dining out in the US vs. Germany/Europe? The waitress/waiter explains to the guest in a lengthy and elaborated way what the food consists of. The full recipe, with all ingredients and even the spices. Here, and I´m not talking about fine dining with nouvelle cuisine dishes, normally you know and you can recognize what´s in your plate. Nobody tells you "the sauerkraut was prepared with a glas of Mosel wine, broth, then seasoned with bay leaves, juniper berries, salt and pepper and a spoon of sugar".
@benlee61586 ай бұрын
Well, most "Italiener" in Germany are in fact from the Balkan or Turkey.
@vonpfrentsch6 ай бұрын
@@benlee6158 Not in Munich; we have famous restaurants which opened in the 50s. One even opened in 1890 and was the little man´s with moustache favorite restaurant in Munich. I´m not talking about slices of pizza around the corner. And you can talk with the waiters in italian.
@maylinde9866 ай бұрын
@@benlee6158No, ours (: are all from Italy!
@Andi_mit_E5 ай бұрын
In America "gelato" not only SEEMS to be from a land far away it IS from a land far away! 😆Italy is much closer to Germany! 😉
@justdaniel51636 ай бұрын
Great video! Loved the explanation on the luxurious feeling of flying… one must add that gas prices are also higher in Germany compared to the US. I think that‘s also part of the reason we‘re avoiding cars as a mean of transportation for holidays… it‘s just cheaper to pay (even for say a nicer airline) 250€ for a return flight with extra baggage than to take your car and lose two vacation days plus well over 500€ on gas, tolls, etc. to fly out from Germany to say the Spanish south coast or Turkey
@youoptigan5 ай бұрын
NOWHERE in Germany, or the rest of Europe for that matter, have I seen anyone referring to American ice cream. What did they ever bring to the table...? Italian ice cream, AND Italian gelato is readily available everywhere. Any southern German town or city will have a number of outlets relative to their size, only to stop trading when Christmas season sets in.
@anna-elisabethbender31235 ай бұрын
Eis: Guys, there was a life in Germany before 1950, believe it or not. The first ice-caffe was called "Alsterpavillon", founded in Hamburg n 1799.
@Siplexus6 ай бұрын
even the french with their 2hours and 13mins do Rookie Numbers compared to us Turks, visit a Turkish Restaurant and try to leave before 4 hours they gonna look at you confused hell our breakfast alone can take like 3 hours
@Altonahh105 ай бұрын
Well, looking at most Turks, I think you should eat less, maybe. No offense 🤣
@rob.w.t.33564 ай бұрын
I experienced Sprint when flying from Austin to Baltimore for 80 bucks in 2019. It was a funny experience and I may not repeat that. Bur who knows, things change over the years.
@saskia66936 ай бұрын
Just came back from beautiful and friendly US, what you mention is right, let me add 4 more things. 1. No espresso after dinner, most restaurants just offer coffee - if any at all. 2. No "going for a walk-culture". When I wanted to take a stroll like after dinner, my American friend used to say 'You don't go for a walk, you gonna get killed'. We went on a walk anyway and passed many homeless people on our way. I tried to keep a bit of a distance to them (after that horrible incident the German tourist had in Santa Monica). 3. No vegetarian options on the menu (except in huge cities like NYC). Trued to stuck to salad, potato and corn add ons. 4. Well, tipping culture, but sure you covered that before. Thanks a lot for your uploads!
@Geo_Knows_Things6 ай бұрын
(2) your friends live in Watts? South Central, perhaps?
@Khangel4 ай бұрын
When in Europe, I hang washed clothes on the towel radiator, that I cant put in the dryer. They dry incredibly quickly.
@cjane_world5 ай бұрын
I don't like towel heaters and decided against it when we renovated our bathroom. I'm HOT after showering, I don't want warm towels on top of that 😂😅
@emjayay5 ай бұрын
Radiators are part of a central heating system. It's just a hot water system, not a forced air one.
@der_jonny5 ай бұрын
I do not get the difference between german ice cream and gelato because there is none in germany. maybe there is a difference in other countries. just the name is different and depends on the person that runs the shop because most people that sell ice cream/gelato in germany are of Italian descen. nobody says "gelato" in germany except people from italy =) The dinner thing depends on the city/location. If you visit a steak house downtown they want you to leave after 90 mins because the tabe is booked by another group. if you visit an italian pizzaria you can stay as long as you order. "sauna club" does not mean sauna. this is a code word for adult entertaiment.
@MM-ow4mp24 күн бұрын
what about rolling shutters on the outside (that you pull up and down from inside). Not only blocking the light out completely but somewhat also keeps cold out in winter and heat in summer. Never understood why they don't have it as a standard here in the US - especially in areas with hurricane and tornado like winds.
@TrangleC6 ай бұрын
Something strange is going on with KZbin. I have been subscribed to this channel a long time and still am and I refresh my "subscriptions" page several times a day and normally don't miss any videos uploaded by the channels I am subscribed to, with the one exception of this channel. It happened several times now that I did not see a video on this channel pop up in my feed, but had to stumble over it randomly in my recommendations to become aware of its existence, as if I would not be subscribed to this channel. Actually, just a month or so ago, I wondered whether this channel stopped uploading videos, because it has been such a long time that I last saw one. Today I see this 3 day old video in my recommendations, as if it would be a unknown channel suggested to me to check out and when I then go into my subscription video feed and scroll down 3 days, I don't see it among the 3 day old videos of other channels I am subscribed to. Really weird.
@rosshart95146 ай бұрын
#5: Air travel fees have to rise! The land masses of America and Eurasia drift apart more than 1mm each and every year! (To our imperial minds: 1mm is 7/19 of one Delawarian Bushel at 100°F at noon (11.15 in winter.)
@marcromain646 ай бұрын
Or even simpler, 1 millimeter is 457.2 minimum shotgun length.
@rosshart95146 ай бұрын
@@marcromain64 Not an Yankee, have no clue what you're talking about.
@marcromain646 ай бұрын
@@rosshart9514 Your "confession" is in no way defamatory. Quite the opposite, in fact.
@SusanCroce12 күн бұрын
sun sceen... from Australia..we also have towel warming racks [rarely turned on has to be very cold...gelato has been here all my life [69..lots of ltalian immigrants]..take our time eating at restaurants with the option of if you finish by?? then you can sit at a reserved table...sauna culture not so much beach culture dominates...l found this very interesting and hope to watch more
@volfravn6 ай бұрын
I’m team “no sun”. I either avoid the sun altogether or I wear protective clothing and sometimes even use an umbrella.
@stueyphone6 ай бұрын
Why? Is it for a medical reason?
@volfravn5 ай бұрын
@@stueyphone Yes. But also no. I have an allergy but I also like the benefit of avoiding the skin aging effect of the UV radiation. UV radiation is bad and there’s no “healthy tan”. If you lack vitamin D, just supplement. I’m also a night owl, so I combine what’s best for me with my natural way of living.
@TobiasRieperGER6 ай бұрын
We was in a restaurant today, and were sitting there for 3,5 hours. No Problem. Yes i am from germany.
@andreasu.35465 ай бұрын
You mean 3,5 hours before the waiter showed up for the first time, right?
@ChesserRookАй бұрын
For me as german (berlin) i've never saw someone going often to a sauna or spa and see it also as something pretty pricy
@Muck0066 ай бұрын
*Team NO SUN!* [Having your brain cooked in the heat is stupid.]
@ArmadilloGodzilla4 ай бұрын
Heard of vitamin d3?
@DuRoehre90210Ай бұрын
There are more things. Example: affordable eyewear! The American colleagues look at me with shocked eyes when I mention that I have ordered a new pair for 50€ (including fitted glasses).
@norbertk5400Ай бұрын
As a German, I flew for a day in the sun and lunch to Spain, Italy, or Greece. The whole day was cheaper than a dinner in New York.
@EuropeanWrenАй бұрын
"In the sun"??? 🤔 You need a better translation program...
@norbertk5400Ай бұрын
@@EuropeanWren Maybe one day there will be a better translation program.
@twinmama426 ай бұрын
RQOTW: No sun, if possible. Sunscreen when necessary.
@nina16086 ай бұрын
Concerning icecream: American style icecream brands like Hägen Dasz or Tom and Jerry's suck majorly. Give me "gelato" any time! (Living in Vienna, I know every "gelato" parlor in my area and can lead erudite discussions about their respective qualities; they are closed during wintertime, we can get pretty impatient waiting for them to re-open in late spring.)
@Hun_Uinaq6 ай бұрын
No argument concerning Ben & Jerry’s and Häagen-Dazs. What I am wondering though is have you tried bluebell? It puts them to shame.
@nina16086 ай бұрын
@@Hun_Uinaq Not available where I live. I suppose it's still industrially produced - so it won't be up to the standard of artisanal gelato.
@MLPPixel7275 ай бұрын
I’m on team sunscreen. Usually, if I’m doing more than walking into or out of a vehicle, I want to put effort to protect my skin.
@nicowolters895927 күн бұрын
We have also places where you can go as fast as you want, as long you drive at least 80 kph with your car there
@Ilikechese893Ай бұрын
where i live in germany we have a lot of italian ice cream . we have one that in winter goes to italy so its authentic italian ice cream/gelato
@ArneBab4 ай бұрын
Eating Ice Cream is also special in Germany - the kids love it (and I do, too). But yes, it’s normal to treat yourself this luxury; actually part of culture, I’d say.
@donarmando9165 ай бұрын
To stay at home can be more expensive in Switzerland than going abroad and have a nice vacation in an all inclusive resort.
@heindaddel25316 ай бұрын
Not sure if you mentioned it but being naked in the sauna in Germany is mandatory because of hygiene. And: Another reason for plane tickets being that cheap is the fact that distances in Europe are much shorter than in the US. An airline can easily turn around a plane several times a day which means more paying passengers.
@tobiaspeter65554 ай бұрын
I'm German and I'm not familiar with any of these things. Except, perhaps, the thing about restaurant times.
@Colaholiker23 күн бұрын
As a German who spends quite some time in Oklahoma, I can say that I totally envy you guys for having Braum's. 😂
@PassportTwo23 күн бұрын
YES! One of the TOP things we miss and even many Americans don’t understand because they don’t have Braum‘s 😂 THANK YOU!
@Colaholiker23 күн бұрын
@@PassportTwonow I'm sitting here on my sofa, at home (near Frankfurt) and crave a Braum's burger with their awesome crincle cut fries, dipped in their special sauce and a medium chocolate milk shake with it... 🤤 But I guess you need to have experienced it to understand it. And most people who haven't been to OK (or surrounding states not too far from the state line) just won't get it. 😂 Fortunately, when I am in OKC, they are on every other street corner.
@PassportTwo22 күн бұрын
STOP! STOP! STOP! You're gonna make me wanna go back to Oklahoma now 😂
@Colaholiker22 күн бұрын
@@PassportTwo 🤐
@olli10686 ай бұрын
Putting towels on radiators can be dangerous or perfectly safe. It depends on the type of radiator. If you have a radiator connected to a central heating, it can't get hotter than about 50 degrees celsius, because the hot water flowing through it is only that hot (depending on the setting of your heating and the position of this radiator in the loop). The energy basically comes from a big volume of not so hot water. If you however have an electric radiator, the heating element itself gets much hotter. The energy here comes from a relativly small wire, which gets really hot. If you cover it, the temperatur can reach a level that's high enough to ignite something. If you see a power cord attached to the radiator, don't cover it. If you are sure there are only tubes connected, it's probably safe. And if you aren't sure, stay on the safe side! Talking about the safe side: Put on a hat, stay in the shadow, wear long but wide cloths and no sunscreen is needed.
@Pidalin6 ай бұрын
50°C is pretty low temperature for central heating, heating system can have up to 90°C, but lowering it is a new trend in last years, but you need much bigger radiators then.
@olli10686 ай бұрын
@@Pidalin You're right, still not enough to burn anything.
@__christopher__6 ай бұрын
Electric radiators in the bathroom usually come in the form of "Heizstrahler" (sorry, don't know the English term) where you couldn't put a towel on it anyway.
@Pidalin6 ай бұрын
@@__christopher__ Here in Czechia, we often use oil radiators that have lower surface temperature than classic "přímotop" (I also don't know ho to say it in English, it's like direct heater) and these are very often used in bathrooms and yes, you can put towel on it, but I stll don't recommend to put it there for long period of time. I studied heating and cooling and the fact that so many people even want heater in bathroom is bizzar for me, you don't need it, hot water from showering will heat it pretty fast. When we were making some projects of heating systems, we mostly didn't count with any heating in bathroom and toilet and mostly not even in hall, these places when it is in middle of apartment or house are mostly not heated, but today people just want their 26°C in bathroom before they start showering, I don't understand it and then, they complain about expensive energy.
@maylinde9866 ай бұрын
@@PidalinUnser Haus steht halb im Wald (Bad) und man müsste eigentlich sogar im Sommer vor allem nach dem Duschen/Baden, je nach Wetterlage, heizen, sonst würde sich leider Schimmel ausbreiten