What was the FIRST pasta you ever ate? Was it some boring, homemade recipe or a can of DELICIOUS SpaghettiOs? 😉
@quelodequeloАй бұрын
I don't know but the timballo with anelletti, if I had to choose, would be my last supper for sure (as a first course 😅)
@ragazzotexanoАй бұрын
It was either alphabets with butter or the classic Italo-american a spaghetti with meat sauce. My mom made both as we were growing up. Not necessarily authentically Italian, but solidly good. I still get a hankering for alphabets every now and then.
@deniseg812Ай бұрын
Pastina with butter and pecorino
@irishpixieroseАй бұрын
It was either spaghetti, lasagna, or macaroni and cheese. All homemade. Is there a reason you linked the pasta on the walmart site instead of the one you used in your video?
@AMPProfАй бұрын
Haaa lolz idk Bet it was macaronies or Some Soup shapes
@paulbonge6617Ай бұрын
"Uh-Oh Spaghetti O's!" was indeed from a television commercial and not a Harper's father-ism. Even as a child, that commercial along with the jingle and cute little girl singing "Rice-a-Roni the San Francisco Treat." was so insufferably cutesy that it made your skin crawl!
@dereks2042Ай бұрын
In fact, that phrase popped into my head, the instant I saw the title of the video. ;)
@SAboundАй бұрын
Yes I remember those commercials fortunately for me dad was Italian
@anetraetheredge5740Ай бұрын
"little round spaghetti you can eat with a spoon----uh oh spaghetti-os"
@pattyward5925Ай бұрын
The neat, round spaghetti you can eat with a spoon Uh-oh! SpaghettiOs!
@carlenaponce9205Ай бұрын
😂
@MilewskigeАй бұрын
Chef Boiardi (original spelling) was a REAL Italian chef. He was instrumental in bringing Italian food to an American audience. Before him, most Americans DID NOT eat Italian food of any kind. He did have to change recipes to fit American tastes (and later for kids) but as Americans grew up, they developed a more mature taste for Italian food - which is why it is so popular today. Great episode on the History Channel show "The Food That Built America" Season 3, Episode 12
@TreatsandthreadscomАй бұрын
Didnt realize it made the show, I have to see that one
@Silentgrace11Ай бұрын
I agree that Boiardi was a fabulous human being and did a lot for America during times of strife, and I love telling that history. That being said, spaghettios was actually made by Donald Goerke sometime in the 60s to compete with the Chef Boyardee brand.
@paddington167027 күн бұрын
Now the important question - is it BOY-ar-dee or boy-AR-DEE? hmmmmm????
@danielstriker373925 күн бұрын
Nice. But you forgot one important detail. Spaghetti-O's are not Chief Boiardi!
@thadmatson475422 күн бұрын
i remember eating Chef Boyardi ravioli alot. similar colored can.....lol
@ToniPfauАй бұрын
Eva missed an important clue about Spaghetti-Os -- the lid has a pull-tab. That's proof it's meant to be eaten when you don't have a can opener because your house burned down and the entire neighborhood, even the entire city, is a wreck because of an asteroid strike or the zombie apocalypse, and the only thing that has survived the carnage is that can of Spaghetti-Os. The pull-tab is life. And if you still can't bring yourself to eat it, you can always feed it to the neighbor's dog, then eat that.
@hkonyt797Ай бұрын
😂
@aeolia80Ай бұрын
I live in France, we don't have the Chef Boyardee brand, but we do have canned pasta that tastes like it, lol, and yes, it's a pull tab, and yes we have some in our emergency pantry, hahahah
@thelmaguaetta1109Ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤!
@8s9s96Ай бұрын
And.. if you don't have the benefit of an eating utensil, then you can use your two fingers to scoop the goo out of the can like the way Mad Max demonstrates the way to extract Dinky Di dog food
@philgowerАй бұрын
Eva made me laugh but your comment had me rolling on the floor! Thanks! 😂
@quintonlloyd2393Ай бұрын
I could listen to Eva talk all day. Italian is such a beautiful language!
@paddington167027 күн бұрын
She speaking English though?
@Absentimental3426 күн бұрын
😂@@paddington1670
@RBFSmurf21 күн бұрын
@@paddington1670 Pretty sure he’s referring to her accent. Her English is so good, but Italian accents are cool.
@paddington167020 күн бұрын
@@RBFSmurf ok agreed.
@dale1956tiesАй бұрын
When I was kid in grade school, my buddy and I used to walk home for lunch. When we'd go to my house, my Italian mother fed us real spaghetti or other home cooked goodies. When we'd go to his house it was Spaghetti-Os or Ravioli-Os. We went to my house as frequently as we possible.
@torilessАй бұрын
My mom made spaghetti a lot so I never had the canned stuff. It may have been an American version and not a proper one but better than the canned crap.
@bigchainring197717 күн бұрын
So even though you were very young, you knew where the good stuff was..
@Nothemomma904Күн бұрын
I would have wanted to be his friend too. I remember my childhood friend who was polish and the sleepovers were absolutely amazing. Lots of food for us and vodka for the adults
@asherbeal8357Ай бұрын
At 13:34. Yes, That was the jingle from the commercial in the 70’s and early 80’s.
@jonathanrio6587Ай бұрын
OMG!!!! "Uh oh, spaghettio's!!!" We said that too!! I'm a 60's kid!!!!!! You just took me back! I used to LOVE them!!! Today, just looking at them grosses me out. I'm with Eva! hahahahaha
@telebubba5527Ай бұрын
Pasta is just one of those things that you can-not.
@tangoangel2782Ай бұрын
Post-war they had so many weird things canned… Canned bread, canned whole chicken, etc… 😳 And at some point people would had eaten anything, if they did not have to cook it and could just pop it in a microwave… 🤦♀️ So “modern” 😂
@briansmith48Ай бұрын
It grosses you out now because it's made for toddlers. After you've outgrown SpaghettiOs you would graduate to Chef Boyardee. Then onto real Italian food. 😊 🍝 🍕 😋
@SheldonRobert-x8oАй бұрын
🎶The neat round spaghetti you can eat with a spoon .🎶.uh Oh..🎶🎶🎶Spaghetti-Os..🎶🎶🎶🎶
@SheldonRobert-x8oАй бұрын
@@tangoangel2782 We didn't get microwaves until the 70s/80s. I finally got one in 1982. Just a sauce pan on low with a lid on for ten minutes while you buttered your bread and maybe made a little salad, stirring occasionally.. I no longer have a microwave. I haven't had one in over 5 years I don't miss it. LOL.
@JMarSa-1Ай бұрын
Harper, you are one very lucky man!! This version of Eva’s Spaghetti-Os is a beautiful dish, all I can say is perhaps a toddler wouldn’t know any better. But, we all do! Eva, you are a very good sport.
@singing3495Ай бұрын
I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, home of Hector Boiardee, better known as Chef Boyardee. The first pasta I had was a boxed spaghetti dinner. It included dried pasta, a can of meat sauce, and a small package of Parmesan cheese. My siblings and I often had it for lunch. We did sometimes have canned pasta, also from Chef Boyardee, but even at that very young age we preferred the freshly cooked dry pasta.
@tookitogoАй бұрын
My grandmother knew Hector! Her husband (who was Italian) was from Cleveland. They moved back to Pennsylvania (where Granny was from), and their little farm there was a tomato supplier to Hector, who had also moved to PA. Granny was always proud that their tomatoes had supported the WW2 war effort. (As I understand it, Boiardi was a supplier to the military during the war.)
@SheldonRobert-x8oАй бұрын
And The Pizzas in a box! Best Pizza Sauce ever! Just add your own toppings ....
@singing3495Ай бұрын
@@tookitogoso interesting. I knew his granddaughter but not The Chef himself.
@singing3495Ай бұрын
@@SheldonRobert-x8oyes, the pizzas were special - not like the best takeout pizzas, just good kid food
@SheldonRobert-x8oАй бұрын
@@singing3495 My aunt would always let us girls make them when we stayed on the week-ends. She'd fry some sausage, and someone would open the mushroom can, and someone separated the pepperoni, and someone would grate cheese and chop onions and peppers, and my one cousin loved Pineapple. We'd make 2 or 3 depending how big the crowd was. Put your p.j.s on, make a black cow or root beer float, grab a piece of pizza and start watching the Saturday Night Spooky movie, only to be asleep by midnight...lol.
@nickvoutos6089Ай бұрын
The look on Eva’s face. Is priceless. Makes me laugh, and most times smile. Her passion is priceless.
@Marrio49Ай бұрын
Not in my house. My parents were first generation Americans from Sicilian immigrants. My mother made homemade tomato sauce and pasta every week including dozens and dozens of other Italian dishes. We had “The Right Stuff” No brag, just fact. But, my Irish friend’s mother made spaghetti with Campbell’s soup. My mother didn’t have to twist his arm to eat spaghetti for dinner with us. By the way, the expression was from the commercial. I m 74 and remember it well.
@themadwomanskitchen9732Ай бұрын
Huh, my late husband, who was from Indiana, *also* made spaghetti sauce with Campbell's soup. TBH, I like the sweetness it adds to the sauce.
@themadwomanskitchen9732Ай бұрын
13;32 that was part of a Spaghettios TV jingle.
@Viva_la_naturaАй бұрын
It's unfortunate Pasta Grammer calls corporate "food" American food because depending on where you are in this massive country, the quality of Itaian food varies drastically. I'm third gen Calabrese from NY, and nobody I know ate corporate Italian food. The US is a country bigger than Western Europe; it's regional. You're not going to find as many Italian-Americans in Utah as you do NY, NJ, CT, RI etc. We have pretty good food in the tri-state area.. but Italy certainly does Italian food better; no doubt about it. Pizza is debatable though...I live in New Haven CT, a city with a large neapolitan immigrant population dating back a century, and the pizza is pretty great...
@Marrio49Ай бұрын
@@Viva_la_natura I know Pepes very well. The pizza in Naples Italy and Rome cannot be beaten by any measure. Go there and find out for yourself. Enjoy.
@Viva_la_naturaАй бұрын
@@Marrio49 I’m actually a pizza guy…I make Pizza in teglia, Neapolitan etc. high hydration, low hydraton Sourdough, biga, poolish…I have a batch of 63% hydration dough proofing in my fridge for Sunday evening pizza, which I make in an outdoor pizza oven on a biscotto stone. I know pizza...Pepe’s, at one ancient point in history, was very good, but it’s by no means the best in CT, or the tri-state area. It’s interesting how you assumed that I have never tried authentic Italian pizza. American pizza, in NY, NY and CT is phenomenal pizza; it’s just a different style. To make the claim that Roman or Neapolitan pizza is superior is bold. Both Italian and Italian American pizza have undergone a bit of a renaissance, and both have improved. Take Bonci in Rome or Franco Pepe for Neapolitan or Chris Bianco who does an artisanal style blending both American and Neapolitan. I’ve got to tell you..this “either or” thing is just getting to be a little much.
@jessgunn6639Ай бұрын
I'm Irish and I am 100% on Eva's side on this! Even as a child I thought tinned spaghetti was gross lol
@sharimorris1021Ай бұрын
Lol, loved when Eva said,"you made this, you deserve this".
@kendebusk2540Ай бұрын
I'm with you, Eva, never liked the canned stuff :) Although my mom never had any notion about what "al dente" meant, she did make some nice meatballs with sauce. Once I got old enough and she was working, she would have a recipe card on the counter, all the ingredients were in the kitchen, and I got to make dinner. I was in my "exact" stage of learning cooking. If it called for 2 T of olive oil, I measured it down to the exact drop. I later learned that approximations are fine in that sort of cooking; it's only in baking that exactness plays a part.
@redsoxgrltАй бұрын
Thank God you didn’t force Eva to try the Spaghetti-O’s with meatballs version! You’re a good sport, Eva!! 🙏😂😱🤢
@icebeargamingrobloxd981Ай бұрын
😂
@TreatsandthreadscomАй бұрын
Terrible lolo
@marifersh7Ай бұрын
Eva's hair is always on point, love it! :)))
@MrLanternland26 күн бұрын
She's delightful!
@sewterieАй бұрын
Never in my childhood had we ever been fed canned pasta. My parents were first generation American. I never knew about canned pasta or sauce. Everything was fresh. Later my children's first pasta was pasta, NOT canned pasta. Home made sauce and pasta. "Ut oh Spaghetti-Os" was a slogan in a commercial. I must try this recipe with my family. Thanks so much for sharing. Ciao.
@mick-berry5331Ай бұрын
We never had canned food as children. The only thing I take from a can are beans or Italian tomatoes. I'm from Austria.
@maurice491Ай бұрын
I agree with Eva, that can should not exist in anybody's kitchen, but her dish is amazing.
@AmericaHasFallen2020Ай бұрын
most Americans, "That is the largest bay leaf I have ever seen. That cannot fit into those 1" McCormick containers they charge $4 for.
@d1943iАй бұрын
the bay leaf they are using is indian bay, which comes from a tree closely related to cinnamon, and has a pretty different flavor from european bay leaf, aka bay laurel. indian bay leaf is super large while the leaves of bay laurel are usually small enough to fit in those little containers. in the US, often the "bay leaf" that is sold fresh, or is sold as large leaves in a big bag, come from indian bay or california bay, which both impart different flavor than the bay laurel, which is what is usually called for in most EU and US recipes. if you are shopping at most any average US grocery store, the best way to ensure youre getting actual bay laurel leaf is to buy the dried leaf in those little spice containers. maybe you want to choose a higher quality brand than mccormick, but thats what you want to look for. in the US, fresh bay leaf is usually california bay, and you can identify indian bay because the leaf is huge and has 3 central veins running thru the leaf vertically, while bay laurel only has one central vein.
@penelopepittstopPАй бұрын
lol right?
@spoonierv1543Ай бұрын
@@d1943iWhere I grew up in California, a local facility for horse and cow events had a row of laurel trees planted down one side. The smell was amazing, and we always had a little branch hanging on the door of the kitchen that my mom would pick leaves off of to cook.
@harshalshah4685Ай бұрын
The container itself costs $3.95; contains less than $0.05 worth of labeled ingredient
@BozeboАй бұрын
@@d1943i Yeah they are hard to find too when you want them for Indian cooking :( I guess that tasted a little like Moussaka? I put cinnamon in mine at least, plus the nutmeg, aubergine.
@michelerenem23 күн бұрын
I'm 47 years old and I STILL love Spaghetti Os!! Also, I remember when I was 5 years old, I was eating a meatball in a can of Spaghetti Os and meatballs, when my first tooth came out! My grandmother laughed at me bc I was crying about it. LOL
@thegoodrevbadandyarr4272Күн бұрын
idk how you can stand the barf stench, unless you dont cook them.
@RotGolemАй бұрын
L'espressione di Eva nei primi 30 secondi è devastante.😂
@aris1956Ай бұрын
Infatti è quello che ho detto anch’io in un commento. 😀 0:12 È forte osservare Eva mentre Harper racconta cose sue, abitudini americane e cose del genere, e vedere certe espressioni e certe facce che fa. Un po’ come a dire….. ma quante ne combinano sti americani ?! 😀
@woodspirit9817 күн бұрын
First time viewer. In the beginning it was obvious your wife was not happy even a little bit. But after your spaghetti o history lesson and she started mentioning true Italian dishes she literally lit up with the most beautiful smile. She's a true treasure of a wife. Listen to her when it comes to food. This woman is an expert.
@jelsner5077Ай бұрын
My mom never bought Spaghetti Os, but my grandma would get them for me when I stayed weekends with her. There was an old commercial for Chef Boy-R-Dee that was filmed in Italy that made Italy and canned pasta look so romantic. At the end of the commercial, a young boy who grew up to become "Chef Boyardee" lifts his fist into the air and cries, "Some-a day, cheeldren eberywhere will tanka me!"
@penelopepittstopPАй бұрын
lol I vaguely remember this!
@philstone3859Ай бұрын
That is by far the best pronunciation of Spaghettio’s I’ve ever heard. I think I need a cute, little, Italian woman in my life now. 😄👍 Ok, I’ve heard Italian people speak my whole life. I could listen to her all day, It doesn’t matter what the subject is. She has perfected it. 😄🇮🇹 I know this may sound a little weird, but I can picture listening to her when she 80 years old and she will sound great. I guess it’s the traditional, Sicilian, old world, Italian grandmother style of accent that’s getting to me. Ha Ha! If I was a content creator, I would hire her just for voice work! 😁 Seriously, she’s got a great voice.
@fedzciullaАй бұрын
Here in Palermo it’s just a tiny bit different and we usually call it “pasta al forno”, or “pasta ‘cu furnu” as many like to call it. Usually it’s not layered, eggplants and eggs are common, but not always used, and the cheese is mixed with the pasta. But basically very, very similar.
@francescoenriquez765Ай бұрын
Ye but it’s not timballo, this is timballo with fried aubergines covering the ground. In my house usually we make it also with “ciambellone” tray Like a big donut baked pasta covered by fried eggplants ✊🏻✊🏻
@eliseleonard3477Ай бұрын
I was little in the early days of Spaghetti-O’s, but our Mom wouldn’t buy any processed foods (before that was cool), except for bread. She grew up on a farm in Vermont during the Depression. So of course I was excited to have them at other kids’ houses and even then I thought they were horrible yet somehow strangely irresistible. Just like box Mac &cheese. Eva’s spaghetti-O’s look AMAZING. I have everything in the house to make them (yes even the same brand of O pasta) except the eggplant. Contemplating a grocery store run now 😊
@gloriapaddock6714Ай бұрын
Oh my the look on Eva’s face when the spaghettiOs came out of the can!!! I will definitely order the pasta & make this amazing recipe!!!😋❤️
@chrisburgess6893Ай бұрын
I get such a kick out of you two, you’re so much fun to watch. Thanks for sharing.
@lisapop5219Ай бұрын
When my mom was very sick, she would ask for a can of spaghetti o's, cooked on the stove (she insisted that it was not the same in the microwave) with bread & butter sometimes. It was a comfort food
@penelopepittstopPАй бұрын
Indeed it is best heated in a stainless steel pan atop the stove! I'm with your mom! They have changed the original recipe though. It's just not the same as it was when it was Franco American.
@tangoangel2782Ай бұрын
Microwave is definitely not the same. Avoid those.
@breezemenardi1472Ай бұрын
My mom always made this for me. Maybe she grew up on it?
@jeanna785123 күн бұрын
@@penelopepittstopP💯
@nautifella21 күн бұрын
Stove top Spaghetti O's and buttered white bread is *STILL* one of my comfort foods. That and Beefaroni.
@thedave160223 сағат бұрын
one of your bests! thanks Eva, for trying the spaghettios, and showing us some more amazing food
@lyricaltravellerАй бұрын
I used to love spaghettiOs as a kid. That was 50 years ago. Unfortunately, it is not nearly as good today as it used to be. virtually NO cheese flavor. Sauce is watery and the added sugar makes it too sweet. And the taste of the can is overpowering. Poor Eva!
@monkeygraborangeАй бұрын
I can never figure out if our palates evolved enormously, or if the quality of packaged foods have deteriorated tremendously. Last winter just for nostalgia’s sake I made a can of Campbell Tomato soup, which was a much loved staple of my childhood and I was able to gag down a single spoonful before pouring it in the sink. Even as a kid Spaghetti-Os would have been untouchable even if I could have persuaded my mother to buy them, which never would have happened.
@jimangela4589Ай бұрын
Beefaroni got me through college 40+ years ago. What happened to it. My full blooded Italian wife or they seriously corporatized it or both.
@aris1956Ай бұрын
I honestly find it very hard to believe that that stuff, fifty years ago, was anything good. There can be no pasta bought ready-made in jars that can be called "good." Probably fifty years ago, those who knew no better than that kind of stuff in jars evidently found it something "good." Once one has begun to ruin one's palate with certain stuff, those things begin to have a "good taste." Just simply see the reaction of the two in this video. Harper talks about it almost as a “specialty”. Eva, on the other hand, used to other flavors, genuine flavors, is completely disgusted.
@penelopepittstopPАй бұрын
YES, yes, yes! I agree. They screwed it all up. It used to be so good.
@penelopepittstopPАй бұрын
@@aris1956 You are most likely correct. When I say "good" I mean it tasted delicious to me but surely it wasn't really good in the true sense of the word.
@carlenaponce9205Ай бұрын
Iconic! You two are just delightful! Really interested in the Pasta Grammar Tour !!! ❤
@d1943iАй бұрын
just FYI - you guys have a "weird" bay leaf. that is indian bay leaf, aka Cinnamomum tamala, while the bay leaf used in most of EU and the US is bay laurel, aka Laurus nobilis. the indian bay leaf has a more cinnamon like flavor(which makes sense as it is in the same genus as cinnamon), while the bay laurel has more pine/lemon notes. in the US, indian bay leaf and california bay laurel(Umbellularia californica) are often sold simply as "bay leaf" with no indication it comes from a different species of tree or has a different flavor than bay laurel/Laurus nobilis. bay laurel has the superior flavor, and is the species of bay that is virtually always what is called for in any EU or american recipe. PASTA GRAMMAR INAUTHENTIC CONFIRMED :-P
@penelopepittstopPАй бұрын
I've never seen a bay leaf that large and in charge!
@sevenandthelittlestmewАй бұрын
It is tej patta. They call it Indian bay leaf in America. The flavor and fragrance of tej patta are delicious. It’s not a weird bay leaf, though. 😂
@telebubba5527Ай бұрын
To most people bay leaf doesn't even mean a thing and have absolutely no conception of it, no matter the kind.
@d1943iАй бұрын
@@sevenandthelittlestmew i just mean "weird bay leaf" as a category that includes all the other types of bay besides bay laurel, like indian bay, west indian bay, california bay, mexican bay, etc. in the US, these leaves are sometimes sold as simply "bay leaf" with no indication its actually a different type of bay. this is especially common with fresh bay leaves in the US, which are almost always california bay. most EU and US recipes, and especially italian recipies, are referring to bay laurel when they say "bay leaves"(bay laurel is native to italy and has been part of their cooking since at least the times of ancient greece). because sometimes these other types of bay are sold only as "bay leaf", often people will buy them not realizing it is a different spice than their recipe actually calls for, which is why i lump them all into the made up category "weird bay leaves", not because they taste weird, but because they are a group of plants that are often mistaken for bay laurel/laurus nobilis, at least in the US, due to improper marketing.
@lampmk2310Ай бұрын
Bay laurel doesn't have a "superior" flavor; it's just different and is used in different recipes than Indian bay leaf.
@cubanmama4564Ай бұрын
What a gorgeous dish! Thank you for posting this video. I am going to make it this week.
@rogerwilco71Ай бұрын
When Harper first met Eva in Italy, he said: “Love is the emblem of eternity; it confounds all notion of time; effaces all memory of a beginning, all fear of an end.” as he showed the baby pic eating SpaghettiOs......the storied romance began....Pro-tip 😎🤣🤣
@dbaargosy4062Ай бұрын
Love is Emmanation
@woodspirit9817 күн бұрын
You can tell she's a great cook because she measures everything with her hands.
@pattyperez1014Ай бұрын
Sorry I can't say I thought the O's were all that. 😕 I wouldn't have appreciated your version as a kid, now I look at your version and I really want to have some!! You Eva are an artist. Harper your parents did you a serious solid when they brought her into your life. You seriously owe them big time.
@guyelluzzi2705Ай бұрын
LOL the look on Eva's face when trying Spaghetti-O's is priceless. Comedy gold.
@ausnettingАй бұрын
I love how Italian Eva got in the last couple of minutes 😂
@gailpeczkis5292Ай бұрын
I am going to try to be brave and try this recipe someday. Looks so delicious!!!! Thanks for this fun video.
@timothytikker1147Ай бұрын
Spaghetti-Os first came onto the market during my childhood in the 1960s -- and yes, the TV commercials back then did use the slogan "uh oh, Spaghetti-Os!" . They were an enjoyable novelty for me at the time... but, take comfort, I did soon outgrow them!
@AMPProfАй бұрын
Sir that's Bonkers .. Spawww GEHHHTIIOOOHHS are Awesome..
@wgiraud9376Ай бұрын
Spaghetti-Os are older than the 1960s. I ate them as a child in the mid to late 1950s, depressingly with some regularity. I concur, the slogan is from a TV commercial. I can still hear it in my mind. I'm going to be humming the damn tune all day long today. Damn!
@pulykamellАй бұрын
@@wgiraud9376 Spaghetti O's debuted on the market in 1965. (Campbell's own website states October 18, 1965.) Perhaps you're thinking of Chef Boyardee, which goes back to the late 20s.
@wgiraud9376Ай бұрын
@@pulykamell Ah... Of course.
@penelopepittstopPАй бұрын
@@pulykamell and they were originally Franco American not Campbell's.
@OscarInAsiaАй бұрын
Loved SpaghettiOs as a kid, and at 54, I still eat it occasionally. In fact I've recently tried their new SpaghettiOs with Frank's "Red Hot" product, it was fantastic! While your Sicilian take on SpagettiOs looks amazing when I was a picky eater as a child, you would have lost younger me with the peas and eggplant. 😂
@lorettaorini8851Ай бұрын
La cosa più divertente è vedere le espressioni del viso di Eva quando Harper parla di cucina: un misto di amore (per l'uomo) e di odio (per le cose che dice)😂😂
@cynthiastauffer8012Ай бұрын
I am 62, and i still LOVE spaghetti O's!!
@pennyreed645825 күн бұрын
You two are hysterical!!!!! I'm so glad i stumbled on your channel!!!!
@barbarakelly1020Ай бұрын
Growing up in Germany long before Harper and Eva were born, the only spaghetti we ate was in a box that contained dry spaghetti, a pouch of tomato gravy and a pouch of parmesan. You just had to cook the spaghetti, heat up the sauce and top with the cheese. We loved that! Raising 4 Kids in the US, I can'ts say that they never tried spaghetti-Os but it wasn't often (they smell strange). I cooked my own spaghetti, they way that I thought it should taste.
@user-dh6bj2me5pАй бұрын
"I CAN'TS say..." What? WHAAAAT?
@bsteven885Ай бұрын
It seems like a version of the Chef Boyardee box spaghetti mix made its way around Europe (surely after WWII and the tastes of American GIs took hold).
@65dehАй бұрын
@@user-dh6bj2me5pEnglish isn’t this person’s native language. Maybe you should take that into consideration before spewing your disrespectful insults and making a fool of yourself.
@eoinmixolodian7967Ай бұрын
The wonder that is Miracoli. Still available, btw.
@kuebbischАй бұрын
Yeah, but now without the saw dust, sorry "Parmesello" included.
@marcysowers2852Ай бұрын
I think this was my favorite video so far!!! I had to laugh and could really sympathize with her at the end. Never gonna eat it-I hated spaghetti-os!! Her version-I could eat every day!! I might just order some and make this!! Fabulous!!
@ChrisinOSMSАй бұрын
My first pasta dish was Kraft Mac and Cheese with hot dog slices. My mom was gourmet.
@AMPProfАй бұрын
HOT DOGS ARE GOoD BUt Home made with Sausages.. YAHH
@michaelcarey9359Ай бұрын
I left three otherwise nice girls who couldn't make the Blue Box by the instructions... they added hot dogs, broccoli, and chicken, because THEY liked it that way, didn't care about how I liked it. I married a girl who never even saw Blue Box. No problems on that front.
@woodspirit9817 күн бұрын
Man if I could just try one of her meals, I'm certain my life would be complete. That's called cooking with love.
@eclecticexplorer7828Ай бұрын
I recall when Eva cringed a bit at Lidia's video, and now I see that she is using an emptied jar of Lidia's marinara sauce for breadcrumbs.
@plia1984Ай бұрын
I felt the same
@jamesmcvey7472Күн бұрын
that dish looks absolutely delicious I am going to keep this recipe and will enjoy this Thank you
@alan11121959Ай бұрын
Hey guys, Spaghetti-O's are not Italian. They were developed by the Franco-American Company as a ration for GIs during the World Wars. Yes there was a Chef Biardi (Boy-Ar-Dee) who developed the first spaghetti kit sold on the commercial market.
@sevenandthelittlestmewАй бұрын
*Chef Boiardi
@telebubba5527Ай бұрын
@@sevenandthelittlestmew Ettore Boiardi, anglicised to Hector Boyardee. The name of the brand was therefore 'Chef Boyardee'.
@KimH831Ай бұрын
I love Spaghetti-Os! I’m 46 and I still eat them for lunches while at work. But I have to have the meatballs in mine. In fact I had them yesterday for lunch. 😂
@MaryellenS.13Ай бұрын
“Spaghetti O’s” are SO disgusting for even non Italians! 🤢🤮
@katatonic72625 күн бұрын
Ava gives BIG Darlene energy 😅 (like from Roseanne), it's not just the beautiful hair - it's the *endearing* snarky attitude 🤣 & Ava had every right
@thomashounsome773712 сағат бұрын
Spaghetti Os on toast was a childhood lunch that was always welcome! I'm a 60s kid. :)
@abou8963Ай бұрын
Timballi Anelletti is great! I made THESE spaghettios and also used them with pesto! Excellent choice for children and elders! Going to prepare like Eva now! Thank you! We'll continue to use peccorino! 😂
@Joseph-eu6jpАй бұрын
Wow, that Sicilian spaghettio recipe is phenomenal, great video.
@SkepticalSteve01Ай бұрын
New Zealander here: no spaghetti-os here, none, and no pasta anneli Siciliano either, which is a shame because that ragu-eggplant-peas-peas-and-hard boiled-eggs thing looks great and different varieties of short pasta are always fun. As far as insults to Italian cuisine go, we do have a couple: first, canned spaghetti in tomato sauce, which I imagine are like free-form spaghetti-os, too sweet and nutritionally empty. In the supermarket canned spaghetti is shelved next to canned English-style baked beans, which we’re quite fond of and at least contain some fibre. The other atrocity we mock Italian food with is pizza baked at home in small kitchen ovens, topped with cheddar cheese, bacon or ham, and _canned spaghetti_ . I apologise for mentioning this nightmare, and I’m ashamed to confess that Kiwis ever dreamed it up.
@bry_mac-tyredАй бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing all your culinary/ cultural/ regional knowledge and the humor is so incredibly delightful. I wish I could watch your videos more often but I'm cooking with them, Unfortunately ingredients can be difficult to find and/or a bit pricy. I hope it's okay my saying, but you took me back to Naples with several dishes. Thank you so much.
@crystalynnbearr18 күн бұрын
My kids loved spaghetti Os! Loved them! And when you have 4 kids running around like me, you’re grateful for that quick lunch 😂 wanna be fancy? Add a grilled cheese lol
@kakashisix16343 күн бұрын
I remember the taste from 80s-2000s being slightly sweet and salty. I use a few dashes of lowrys and 1 tbsp, rounded, sugar. Love the content!
@chrishorst699321 күн бұрын
The foodie tour in Italy sounds fun
@trentBowie14 күн бұрын
That look of sympathy from Eva means a lot to me. I never liked Spaghetti-O's even as a kid and once I was old enough learned how to make pasta properly.
@RogerCasella3 сағат бұрын
My friend, count yourself lucky to be around her with them spaghetti-os. Hi Eva ❤️
@emmadickey5602Ай бұрын
My dad accidentally took a soapy spoon out of the sink to stir the spaghettios when I was a kid. He made all of his children cry.
@TonyBauer-wr1pwАй бұрын
No matter how much my brother and I begged (from watching TV ads), our 'mean' mother steadfastly refused to buy Spaghetti-Os or anything made by Chef Boyardee. Many years later I bought a can in a fit of nostalgia. Eva's reaction was hilariously similar to mine. Thanks Mom!
@Nothemomma904Күн бұрын
Omg she said how can they still be in business after she tried spaghettios 😂😂
@patriciabaugh6745Ай бұрын
You have inspired me to make this for a Sunday family dinner. My 3 daughters, all in their 50"s now, would NEVER eat that crap in a can, nor would I ever considered giving it to them. I loved them too much to do that to them.
@williamkaczmarek3996Ай бұрын
I stand with you Harper. It's funny watching your bride fight the Spaghetti-O's so fiercely. However, I didn't know about that Sicilian Ragu dish and that's why I enjoy watching you guys. You always bring something new to the table so to spaek.
@MrMattDatАй бұрын
That is an incredible presentation for a pasta dish! Eggplants are almost ready in my garden too!!!
@nephilimslayer73Ай бұрын
Aussie here. I love Italian food but didn’t grow up eating it. I developed my taste for Italian food as an adult. Our household lived on traditional foods like meat and three veg. My parents didn’t know how to cook pasta from scratch. Their idea of a homemade pizza used tomato sauce (like ketchup) instead of pizza sauce and processed cheddar cheese instead of mozzarella. We only tasted garlic salt used to season the meat on the BBQ. And the only spaghetti we ate on a regular basis was canned spaghetti (like spaghetti-o’s without the ring shapes. It was also tasteless and mushy, usually served on toast or crumpets, sometimes as a filling in toasted sandwiches. My tastes and cooking have seriously improved with Italian and Asian recipes being among my favourites, and I make a delicious lasagna. When I first learned how to make it, I never went back to buying the ready made stuff from supermarkets. I do, however, keep a couple of cans of spaghetti in the pantry for my prepping supplies. I would definitely choose the Italian “spaghetti-o’s” over your American canned mush anyday.
@JubeiKibagamiFezАй бұрын
16:24 This is exactly how I felt the first time I had spaghettios at a friends house.
@sweetmusic3821Ай бұрын
Totally agree, Eva. They're gross!! 🤢
@jacquespoulemerАй бұрын
Hello Eva and Harper. The kid with the red sauce facial hehehee what a foto!!! Spaghetti-Os were marketed as a LESS messy way to eat spaghetti. but Creative kids Like Piccolo Harper didn't get the memo. Love your content guys. I love the Eggplant timbale. I will surely give it a try one of these days. Hugs from Oaxaca Jim
@violettaporrazzo4199Ай бұрын
Only you guys will appreciate the humor in this! After watching this episode (part of my journey!) I went into work on Monday open the employee pantry and it was loaded with BOY R D! I'm with Eva! Being Italian I have no idea what that can stuff is however definitely not from our roots!!! 😂😂😂and
@marilyndoering2501Ай бұрын
Wow, that looks so amazing! I wish I could join you tasting it! Eva always manages to make every dish look so appetizing and beautifully presented!
@RochesterhomeАй бұрын
No Italian family had a can in the cupboard. It was a sin! :) I tried them once as a kid and spit them out. They are uneatiable. We all knew Eva wouldn't eat them as soon as you asked her too. Ah-ho spagetti'o is an old commercial.
@torilessАй бұрын
So sad, canned tomatoes are better than fresh 9 months out of the year.
@CrazedsHideout21 күн бұрын
I don't know about everyone else, but I'm from an Italian family and I ate a lot of canned pasta growing up. If my family was around to cook it was another story, but I was home alone a lot when I was little and it was just easy for the family to stock up on canned food and tell me to eat what I wanted. It's not something parents make for their kids, its something kids make for themselves because it doesn't use any fire or knives.
@dessiplaer4 күн бұрын
That looks really amazing, and I bet it tastes just as amazing.
@markhosking1882Күн бұрын
Spaghetti Hoops in the UK. Tinned spaghetti is generally viewed as junk food, but on toast is a great comfort snack.
@kittycat7505Ай бұрын
my mom has a great story about these things. my grandparents are from palermo and my mom grew up eating traditional food from that region, in this her home. she begged my nonna to buy these for her and my nonna said " you arent gunna like it" but then she gave in. my mom came home and she warmed it up and took one bite. she hated it. my nonna forced her to eat every bite.
@agn855Ай бұрын
Remember that Italian-American wedding vow _"…till Spaghetti'O tear us apart"_ 😂
@dmmnessАй бұрын
I always bought the ones with the little meatballs. lol They were so good as a midnight snack.. Even as I have gotten much older, it is fun to pick up a can to relive the old memories.
@ercrapa75Ай бұрын
Guys thank you so much for letting the world know about "Anelletti al forno" !! Such an iconic dish from my hometown Palermo.. It's also funny how in Palermo they're actually called "Pasta col forno" that literally means "Pasta WITH the oven", which obviously makes no sense.. Everyone in Palermo loves this dish, to the extent of carrying and eating it on the beach when it's 140 F ..
@JJJJJJ507617 күн бұрын
The look on her face is priceless 😂😂😂
@MildredCadyАй бұрын
I was in Tuscany last month, my first time in Italy, and gods the food is amazing. (Lucca, Pisa, and Tuscany specifically) Visiting Southern Italy (and Northern Italy) is on my bucket list.
@lizoconnor2752Ай бұрын
It was a tv Comercial in the 1960s....give that can away....that Sicilian timballo looks spectacular!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@themattschulz3984Ай бұрын
Well ... Eva´s face when she tasted those ... things ... out of the can says it all really.
@savagestevens6398Күн бұрын
I ate spaghettios (with meatballs) and chef boyardee raviolis as a kid and I’m 50 years old and still eat them occasionally. It’s not about being the best or most traditional in a class of food. Sometimes it’s just about enjoying something you enjoyed as a kid and having a comfort food.
@brettbuck736210 сағат бұрын
Plus, the rampant food snobbery in this thread notwithstanding, almost no kid I have ever known or seen would eat the "authentic" Italian meal/mess she made in 100 years. That looked absolutely vile.
@LorienDrechslerАй бұрын
Uh oh, Spaghetti-O's was followed by the brand name, Franko-American. It was the Spaghetti-O's jingle in the commercial.
@rosacortes5074Ай бұрын
Uh-Oh Sicilian Spaghettios! Yes, it was a commercial! Looks delicious, Eva. Thank you.
@louisaziz1235Ай бұрын
Ava is absolutely right. Her pasta is a work of culinary art. If there was a museum of culinary masterpieces, this would be there. It has all the best ingredients found in the best Italian kitchens. So sorry, Chef Boiardi.
@Concreteowl16 күн бұрын
We have tinned spaghetti in the UK. When I was growing up in the 70s we were quite poor. Dried pasta was actually kind of expensive and hard to find. Sometimes we would have tinned spaghetti as a cheap quick food as part of a meal. But my mother would get dried past once in a while and we would have it with butter salt and black pepper. The two things looked and tasted so different that I didn't connect the two. What you have there we would call spaghetti hoops and we didn't eat them. The UK version just has tomato sauce and it's not as runny.
@vincentstivali156128 күн бұрын
same here! a can of that NEVER entered our house, fresh sauce every sunday!
@jeghaterdegforfaenАй бұрын
If I'd been lost in the woods for several days and I'm starving, and then I come across a cabin and the only thing in the pantry is canned spaghetti, then I'll eat it. But I would curse the cruel fate that had led me to eat the one thing I'd sworn to never eat again.
@lb6135Ай бұрын
British folks eat it too, as "Hoops on Toast." I was introduced to this in high school as my best friend's Dad was British. Believe it or not, it was great for breakfast with scrambled eggs. I still love the Anellini pasta shape, but I make it from scratch now.
@marcuscarrozza732Ай бұрын
My first introduction of pasta is from the real thing as a toddler,even though we ate those as well. My family is Italian and Sicilian, and Greek. So we had plenty of the real thing all the time . Maybe ravioli was my real first pasta . 3:51 4:18
@neorenamonАй бұрын
Yay! Something with Anellini ring pasta! The pasta rings are bigger than I imagined. Also, the only brand of SpaghettiOs I like was Franco American SpaghettiOs with just Tomato Sauce (no cheese). I hated the little garbage meatballs and the crappy sliced franks. My brothers were more than happy to let me pick them out and pass it on to them.
@sydneyneidigh9381Ай бұрын
I saw that jar of breadcrumbs and it immediately took me back to my childhood watching Lidia’s Italy 🇮🇹