Just to correct the record, frozen custard is NOT just ice cream. It is completely different from soft service and traditional ice cream, namely because of it's egg yolk content and that it is not held at freezing or below temperatures, meaning that it has to be made fresh every 4 to 6 hours or the texture is ruined. Source, worked at a frozen custard shop in Green Bay Wisconsin for a year.
@JohnSmith-tz7iyАй бұрын
Interesting, I never knew that. I am a little confused on one thing though. you said custard "is not held at freezing or below temperatures" but then said you "worked at a _frozen_ custard shop".
@jayjaybob2Ай бұрын
@@JohnSmith-tz7iy because it is frozen, but it is not held at a the freezing point. It's frozen slowly to prevent the buildup of air bubbles and then it is stored in containers above freezing to prevent ice crystals from forming. Hence why it needs to be made fresh every 4 or so hours. Anything that's left over gets put in the fridge to melt and then gets added in the next day along with fresh base (plain custard base + whatever flavorings like vanilla or chocolate).
@santamanoneАй бұрын
@@jayjaybob2 soft serve IS traditional. That’s the way ice cream was invented with a hand crank ice cream freezer at least two centuries ago. (Before we had electric deep freezes to harden it)
@jayjaybob2Ай бұрын
@@santamanone I never commented on if soft serve is traditional or not. I just said soft serve isn't the same as frozen custard, because it's not.
@santamanoneАй бұрын
@ sorry. I got confused and thought you were comparing one against the other. Rereading it I think I see what you meant.
@stapuft2 ай бұрын
Cider is made from WHOLE cold pressed apples, it is pressed skin and all, which is why it has a cloudy appearance. It CAN be made alchalolic if the apples are not washed, and the natural yeast ferments the batch, or yeast can be added after pressing. Whereas juice is made from peeled and cored apples, and filtered further to ensure it remains clear.
@headerahelix2 ай бұрын
incorrect, cider is an alcoholic beverage. it has to be fermented, otherwise it's just juice. next you'll say whole pressed oranges are orange liqueur.
@amymagdaleneta2 ай бұрын
in Europe, "soft cider" is just called unfiltered apple juice lol
@PatrickHames-mj4ro2 ай бұрын
Cider is fermented apple juice and has the same alcohol by volume (ABV) as beer.
@stapuft2 ай бұрын
@@PatrickHames-mj4ro no, thats HARD cider
@JustMe-dc6ks2 ай бұрын
The US had prohibition. So now we have a distinction between cider and hard-cider.
@HogsliceАй бұрын
Heather is wonderful! Her laid back personality, subtle sense of humor and casual elegance would make anyone comfortable in her presence. She is very smart, but humble. No pretentiousness at all. Those attributes, combined with her natural beauty, make her perfect. I'm happy for both of you. We need more good people like you two in the world. Best of luck.
@kilbert666Ай бұрын
Jesus christ dude, take a cold shower.
@71lizgoeshardt3 ай бұрын
As an American married to a non American, Evan, your excitement when Heather loves something or says it's excellent is EXACTLY the way I react when serving a bit of Americana to my husband and he declares he likes it. I just about died laughing. You perfectly captured this feeling on camera. I feel like cheering when Heather says "it's excellent" from empathizing too much with you LMAO
@darricshhh2 ай бұрын
Its the same kind of feeling when introducing your kids to something you were exposed to as a kid that they have never experienced. Its very satisfying when they actually enjoy it.
@QueenNoTeetha1512 ай бұрын
I’m a Brit living in the States and I get so excited when I meet Americans who know and like some British things. It’s like my gosh I’m not so alone! They get me! 😂
@darricshhhАй бұрын
@QueenNoTeetha151 it's not that hard. You all just copy us anyway. The beatles? American. The stones? American. Curry dogs? Uh, American. Yeah sure, American.
@FreezyAbitKT7AАй бұрын
Pizza good enough to not need a dipping sauce. Very rare in Great Britain.
@tomrogue13Ай бұрын
@@darricshhh did you say the Beatles were American???
@alexisrendel23303 ай бұрын
As someone who lives in London and hasn't been home to Glen Mills, Pennsylvania in almost a year, seeing a classic Italian Hoagie and a Wawa (a Wawa I have been to) within the first minute almost made me cry. I cannot wait to subject my British partner to this experience.
@skarasik40213 ай бұрын
Hello from Glen Mills and Wawa!
@youbadolivez2 ай бұрын
@skarasik4021 hi from Johnstown Pennsylvania WaWa is ok but I prefer Sheetz
@minor18222 ай бұрын
hang in there you'll get some flavor soon
@usercarefree442 ай бұрын
Wawa..its a bread roll with hardly any filling...lol And creamer is crap!
@bkeen70132 ай бұрын
My god, there are much better “hoagies” than at Wawa. Didn’t you ever go to Delco? Much better than anything from Wawa. Hope you’re enjoying London.
@MsSprinkles1120Ай бұрын
Canadian with British husband in NJ and I learned so much about our adopted state in this video!!
@trishlehecka11993 ай бұрын
I love your girlfriend content. Now get that lady her own mic pack
@evan3 ай бұрын
I knoooooow! While editing this video it became painfully obvious I need another mic
@colinofay72373 ай бұрын
Funny cause i thought he was a puff! Good video!
@roberthindle51463 ай бұрын
@@colinofay7237Well, 1974 just called.
@hat91723 ай бұрын
@@roberthindle5146 🤣
@S_J_banana3 ай бұрын
@@colinofay7237 why would you think that?
@booknoser3213 ай бұрын
The production quality on this video is tv show level. Feels like I just watched a Food Network segment
@BostonDon3 ай бұрын
This guy has a future.
@ChrisPBacon710Ай бұрын
was going to comment this as well but you said it perfectly! well done with the videography loved the 360 cam usage on the apple farm!
@Axqu7227Ай бұрын
My husband is from central NJ (which exists!) and I love seeing Heather’s reactions to a lot of the stuff my husband showed me out there. He uses Taylor Ham and Pork Roll totally interchangeably. I suss out whichever one my conversation partner is using and deliberately pick the opposite. Husband says i captured the spirit of his home state doing that. I miss NJ. I miss the food. I miss having a crapload of different immigrant communities piled on top of each other that creates a beautiful and amazing food culture. I miss the bagels. I miss the people. I miss my in-laws.
@mh2120Ай бұрын
I was kind of hoping people from Central New Jersey would blend the two terms together, into something like Taylork Hamroll
@tylermccann984126 күн бұрын
@Axqu7227 the fact that you have to state exists proves otherwise. There's only north or south. I'm willing to die on that hill 🤣🤣🤣
@springerengineering669712 күн бұрын
@@tylermccann9841 I'm from NJ, when I was touring colleges in my senior year of HS, I was touring UCSD and the tour guide just so happened to also be from NJ. She asked where I was from, and I said central jersey, to which she replied "pff, central jersey doesn't exist". Debating about the existence of central jersey is the most new jersey thing to do. Also, op, deliberately pissing everyone off by using Taylor Ham/Pork roll is very in spirit for New Jersey, specifically central jersey. You make us proud.
@PaulMackSomers4 күн бұрын
@@tylermccann9841 Historically, it's East and West Jersey, the dividing line shown in modern times by the Turnpike from New Brunswick south.
@tylermccann98414 күн бұрын
@@PaulMackSomers born and raised here 25 years. Ive never heard that. I'm gonna look further into before disputing, but it's always been a north vs south rivalry as far as I can remember
@luzleal4743 ай бұрын
i am an american living abroad in japan right now, and this video was so comforting. not to mention the quality was through the roof! i cannot wait to see more videos you come out with with heather!
@CrimsonRequiem12 ай бұрын
I cant wait to travel to japan, what part are you living at?
@finallife87Ай бұрын
is that you chris?
@haleywink13073 ай бұрын
As a long islander I’d like to say that maybe you’ve been spoiled bc all of your ice cream places serve frozen custard, but soft serve ice cream and frozen custard are definitely not interchangeable! Frozen custard is elite
@markpolo973 ай бұрын
Frozen custard has egg yolk (legally min. 1.4%), where ice cream doesn't
@theshig96182 ай бұрын
I was looking in the comments to see if anyone else was going to bring up that Ice Cream and Frozen Custard, while similar, are NOT the same thing.
@kaldogorath2 ай бұрын
It hurt me when he said that frozen custard is soft serve.
@TheOtherBill2 ай бұрын
I'm glad you mentioned this! The FDA requires ice cream to have 10% to 16% dairy milkfat, otherwise it must be sold as frozen dessert. To be sold as frozen custard it must meet the same milkfat standard plus have at least 1.4% egg yolk solids. This is most noticeable when you're buying it in the supermarket where you can read the label and compare cost/oz.
@danielwade94872 ай бұрын
As someone that lives a few blocks from Andy's HQ, I can confirm all of this.
@TDiddi162 ай бұрын
Jersey girl here... was not expecting to see my state on this video!!! 🖤 Then, Glassboro threw me because I grew up in Pitman, right next door, and my Aunt graduated from Rowan University in Glassboro. My Dad did the welding at Manc & Manco on the Boardwalk! The Johnson's popcorn!!! Shrivers saltwater taffy! Ahhh, Sorbello Girls, my Dad lives up the street, so I get my honey from there! The apple cider doughnuts rival Johnsons Corner Farmers Market! Our peaches, corn, and tomatoes are the best!! A tomato sandwich with mayo, salt, and pepper; summer staple!! Wow, I never knew a pretzel cone was just an us thing. Now, I need to try Dippy's, too! I live in Gloucester County, so it's a short drive! Lovee that she's asking for rainbow jimmies, as a former Mister Softee driver, my heart loves it! 😍
@GPandzik3 ай бұрын
Me: "Huh, he doesn't sound like he's from Jersey. Maybe he's a transplant?" Evan: "Woorter" Me: "Ah, there it is." 😂❤ Love the episode!
@DawnFLee3 ай бұрын
I don't say woorter I literally say water and I'm from S, Jersey. BUT... what I do say that gives me away is how I say.... CAWFEE!!!!
@word420693 ай бұрын
South jersey came out.. lol
@argusfleibeit11653 ай бұрын
Heh-ew-geeee.
@natsinthebelfry3 ай бұрын
How did you not realize when he said "hehw-gee"
@RayneZaleska3 ай бұрын
He has been living in England for 5+ years, but he was born and raised in Jersey.
@melodiousramblings84703 ай бұрын
I enjoy all of your videos but this one ranks in the top 3 for me! So delightful to share your childhood with someone
@user-tc6xg5ze2u3 ай бұрын
Same here. Love it. Great content, very relatable with fast narrative and superb editing. Great job Evan 👏🏻
@aye36783 ай бұрын
Agreed!
@hellskitchen100362 ай бұрын
Waa Waa and Hoagies ? he's not from New Jersey , he's from South Jersey , otherwise he would say 7-Eleven and Subs.
@kathleenharrison66432 ай бұрын
I love this video! But everyone from new jersey knows a TAYLOR, egg and cheese is on a fresh toasted kaiser roll, and the cheese is american! That's a classic in north jersey, at least! I was also very excited to see you at Angelo's- my son went to Rowan and we loved that little diner!
@LAWLESSKINGАй бұрын
I am so in love with the fact you made this. A lot of people don't know what Jersey is really like and this is a much more mundane yet excellent take. I'm from Vineland. That meal of a Wawa italian, blue gatorade, and herrs chips... I could taste the scene. I grew up on scrapple (but I always order extra thin and get a slice of American on top and crack some pepper on it) grew up going to the Ocean City boardwalk and Gillian's pier (RIP) and the wooden castle playground afterward with the. Bathrooms lol South Jersey mannnn
@Darrenski19 күн бұрын
Is Vineyard anything to do with the Vikings, or is it just a wine thing?
@PaulMackSomers4 күн бұрын
@Darrenski Wine.
@hugh-johnfleming2892 ай бұрын
I had a Soviet Russian Girlfriend back in school. She was here on scholarship and exchange. The best day we ever had was her first Thanksgiving with my family, add we are all outrageously good cooks. More than the meal she was overwhelmed by my kin and their kindness, the Spirit of the Holiday. She wept. It was a lovely day...
@retireorbust2 ай бұрын
I'm retired and watch a lot of KZbin. So many Europeans are surprised at our friendliness to one another. We're blessed.
@nanananananananana00Ай бұрын
that’s such an awesome memory awh
@jaxblonk5127Ай бұрын
In a similar vein of exchange students that's how I figured out "Oh. I'm not totally straight am I?" So when I was in my early teens and going to a thanksgiving with the extended family one of our relatives had a French exchange students that was about my age. He was a ray of sunshine, bright blonde, ocean blue eyes, and their passion for the food was infectious. That smile made me want to impress them, so I passed them some of my own favorites and what I had them with, just watching his eyes light up. Their complimenting our family bread roll recipe as some of the best bread they'd had lives rent free in my mind. Wonder where they are these days.
@cal30m1Ай бұрын
In the early 70’s we had relatives visit from Poland. They thought the local supermarket wasn’t real, capitalist propaganda. In reality our local supermarket was a very small “supermarket”…
@pilsplease75613 ай бұрын
I like Heathers real honest opinions
@evan3 ай бұрын
I always appreciate how articulate she is especially when describing food! It’s a joy
@pilsplease75613 ай бұрын
@@evan I wish that friends would actually describe how they feel about food when we try stuff instead of just saying whether they like it I cook a lot and want to know why someone likes something. It infuriates me honestly.
@raymondporter20943 ай бұрын
Blasphemy from Heather preferring the American bacon to her "usual rashers". She might not be allowed back home... Mind you, she gets 10/10 for taking a decent mouthful of the various foods (eg the pizza) rather than a delicate nibble.
@evan3 ай бұрын
@@pilsplease7561I try to describe everything I like about food as much as I can to learn and remember things better
@Drew-Dastardly3 ай бұрын
It's quite clear she has a no nonsense attitude - I like it. I see why Evan is betrothed already 🤣
@BertDoesMusic24 күн бұрын
I just discovered your channel today from one of your Can you Learn Spanish from only using Dualingo (btw, as a native Spanish speaker here... congratulations! you're doing very well) I've been watching recommended videos of yours for hours now. I watched this video and the New Jersey fair one, and I have to say that I find you two so disgustingly wholesome and cute. I'm originally from NYC, then Rochester but I moved to North Wales after I met my Welsh wife almost 8 years ago. I tragically and unexpectedly lost my dear wife in 2024 and miss her dearly, so I just find the two of you as an endearing US-ExPat/British couple very heartwarming, touching and nostalgic. We had so many similar conversations throughout the years comparing US/UK things. I think my wife would have loved your channel too. I will keep watching and catching up on your content. Really enjoying it. Wish you guys the best.
@Darrenski19 күн бұрын
I'm very sorry for your loss. I have never lost a partner but i have lost a daughter. But you'll always have those 8 years in your heart.
@BertDoesMusic19 күн бұрын
@Darrenski thank you so much, you're very kind. Today is exactly 11 months to the day and feels like yesterday and an eternity ago all at the same time. I'm also extremely sorry about your daughter... it's something you just don't get over. Hopefully over time, it becomes less about the loss and more on holding on to the happiness we shared with our loved ones. ❤️
@Zhiperser3 ай бұрын
I've never heard Evan's accent as much as in this video. He usually has a smoothed out general American, but the hoagies and the ocean brought it out.
@kele.w2 ай бұрын
My family is from Philly and he is hitting all those vowels HARD. 😅
@ausican4ever2 ай бұрын
Accents are so weird! After a few years in Australia, I brought my husband to meet my family in the States. My American accent had morphed to the point of people not realizing from a short confab that I was foreign, but as soon as i boarded a Greyhound in LA... I was suddenly hitting those Rs like a big brother playing whack-a-mole!
@Forenzics2 ай бұрын
really sticking the landing on "hoagie" lol
@LynnEsq2 ай бұрын
"Wooter" for water. I'm from Maryland & many pronounce it the same. Snow cone, too. Didn't realize they don't have them everywhere until I moved to Oklahoma. No one knew what it was. Lol
@kaldogorath2 ай бұрын
That wooderice
@theukyankee3 ай бұрын
As an ex-PA resident, lived in NJ and last 20 years a Londoner, this was so much fun to watch. So many memories.
@thomaslorenz14842 ай бұрын
Heather is gorgeous, her accent melts my heart. Wish you too all the best on your journey of love, happiness and life.
@mwflanagan13 ай бұрын
Always love when you include Heather in your videos, Evan. I just know you each gained at least 12 pounds on that trip. That was fun. Thanks. You’ve done a good job through the years of championing your home state.
@evan3 ай бұрын
I’ve been on a cut since April (down 12kg) and my trip to Jersey put a big damper on my progress haha
@annbeth67302 ай бұрын
@@evanwow you actually know about metric weights .
@EricMBlog3 ай бұрын
I’m a bit confused by saying that frozen custard and soft serve ice cream are the same thing. Like, they are very similar, but to my knowledge they use somewhat different ingredients. At least in the Midwest. (I don’t think normal soft serve has eggs, while custard does).
@IceMetalPunk3 ай бұрын
You are correct.
@carrie54903 ай бұрын
@@EricMBlog I was confused as well, custard in the uk and Australia is made with cream, milk, sugar, vanilla pod, and egg yolk. I was wondering if this was just a frozen custard, which sounds amazing, or if it was just another America way of saying ice cream.
@adrianamo8193 ай бұрын
The FDA regulates what you can call the products based on ingredients and nutrition facts. Legally, ice cream must contain a certain % fat content (and cream) to be labeled as such in the US. Gelato has a different % fat content, and custard has another (and egg yolks/eggs). This is why Dairy Queen is not ever referred to as ice cream, it’s soft serve. They’re not legally allowed to call it such.
@pjschmid22513 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. Soft serve ice cream is dairy queen. Frozen custard is Culver’s and they aren’t the same thing. To be considered frozen custard it has to contain 1.4% egg yolk solids by weight. Dairy queen would not qualify nor would most soft serve ice cream. Frozen custard is superior in my opinion.
@triscuitbiscuit3 ай бұрын
That is correct. NJ has both soft serve and frozen custard places. Definitely not the same thing.
@Penotter4 күн бұрын
I'm from PA but visited New Jersey very often as a kid. The nostalgia is hitting hard
@jadecollins76933 ай бұрын
Really really enjoyed this video- the subject, the editing, the way you and heather interact. Theres something so sweet about someone showing their gf some of the best parts about the place where they grew up. 😊
@ethelmini3 ай бұрын
The British military don't have a marketing department, so they had "Non Dairy Whitener" instead of Creamer in their rations. Brutal honesty wins wars.
@VaughanCockell3 ай бұрын
And the major brand name for it in the UK is probably CoffeMate.
@userequaltoNullАй бұрын
@@VaughanCockell That's also the brand in America lol
@HeroicPunchАй бұрын
That fact that this started at Wawa is amazing. 10/10. Doing Jersey right.
@damealeta35413 ай бұрын
Aw, that's sweet! Let her say tom-ah-toe, it's special the way she says it. Born and raised in Southern California my mother She introduced us to Liverwurst and Braunschweiger sandwiches as well as tomato sandwiches. YUM We would get up super early in the summer when the apricots were ripe and pick a bunch of buckets for jam and canning. She had a huge garden and we had fresh sweet corn throughout the entire summer along with 3 varieties of squash, regular tomatoes, cherry and pear shaped tomatoes. Home grown beef in the freezer and while we weren't rich by any means we ate like kings!
@lzbrtstwbrtakaliz3 ай бұрын
I don’t know how I came across this video, but I’m so glad I did. We clearly grew up near each other (I went to Gateway,) because these are all places I grew up going to that have a special place in my heart. By the end I was waiting for Dippy’s and you didn’t disappoint!
@fs57752 ай бұрын
Loved her review at the end !! That was a delight to watch as an American expat from Philly watching from Vietnam. Thank you for this !!
@evanАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@cassieoz17023 ай бұрын
Creamer is a chemical abomination. I find it fascinating how many Americans have never actually questioned their use of 'creamer' and its flavoured variants
@RushfanUK3 ай бұрын
I don't get why they don't just use cream if they want creamy coffee, odd.
@paulthomas82623 ай бұрын
@@RushfanUK cream is not cheap.
@cassieoz17023 ай бұрын
@RushfanUK cheaper ingredients and bigger profit leading to advertising push, I'm guessing. There's the dry/ powdered versions too, that were sold as 'convenience'
@KevinAmatt3 ай бұрын
What’s the point of adding seed oils into the creamer?
@cassieoz17023 ай бұрын
@@KevinAmatt cheap, profitable.
@tb77712 ай бұрын
As a US veteran I have lived all over the world. I have visited England many times, I love the British people. You are one very lucky lad to have such a lovely girlfriend! Cheers.
@afcgeo8822 ай бұрын
I had the privilege of being stationed in England for three years (RAF Mildenhall) and it was fantastic. Highly recommend it.
@redpointt2 ай бұрын
Heather is such a delight, you love her a lot, it’s so nice!
@BBKing19773 ай бұрын
Ok, Heather deserves a greater presence in your vids! The comedic timing of her flopping beside you at the end was perfection!
@t.m.p81873 ай бұрын
Such a cute couple and so cute that they can expose each other to their cultures!
@atra7xroxs18 күн бұрын
As somebody who grew up in mullica hill and went to moods at least once a week, and each of the other places you have visited, this makes incredibly nostalgic and happy to randomly come across it
@mausmalone3 ай бұрын
As wonderful as a diner breakfast is, I also feel like dinner at the diner is an event as well. The sheer variety on most NJ diner menus, and the complexity of the meals is pretty astounding. You can seriously roll in to a 24-hour diner at 3 in the morning and order a thanksgiving dinner and it'll be on your table in under 10 minutes.
@powerofdeath.2 ай бұрын
As someone from South Jersey, this video is crazy because everything feel so familar and homey. It make me homesick since I'm away for college
@jimmy-g3oАй бұрын
I'm from North Jersey and I don't understand the South Jersey obsession with gas station food. When he was like "Wawa is beloved by all New Jerseyans" my first thought was has he never been to North Jersey?
@DakotaTheRotaАй бұрын
@@jimmy-g3o I think you are very insulated, I know people from North Jersey and they love Wawa as well.
@PaulMackSomers4 күн бұрын
@@jimmy-g3o Thee are Wawas in North Jersey I've been told, but down here in South Jersey they are all over!
@jamesreese216815 күн бұрын
I feel like Heather saying the UKs ice cream is poor is a southern thing... In the North, we have dairy farms who have cafés, ice cream parlours, and kids' play areas attached for additional income
@caeliachapin53173 ай бұрын
In some parts of the US where I've been, "creamer" is used as a generic term for any creamy thing you can put in coffee, including actual cream and the liquid plastic.
@thecolorjune3 ай бұрын
Same
@sparkyUSA19763 ай бұрын
I'm from NJ and have been all over the Continental US. I've been to grocery stores where I'd be lucky to find one row of pints of half and half. I can't remember what state it was (probably West of the Mississippi) but while I was in a grocery store I got tired of staring at the milk products and finally asked an employee if they had half and half. I got a puzzled look and eventually a "half what?" so I said "like creamer but real dairy, not CoffeeMate. It's technically half milk and half cream." I could tell by the look on his face he was seriously wracking his brain to recall such a thing and finally he suggested the heavy cream. I opted for that because I can't stand fake creamer and milk just takes the joy out of my version of the coffee experience. Dude's puzzled face was burned into my brain for days. What world do I live in where Americans don't know coffee with half and half? I rarely go in coffee shops, and I haven't traveled much in the past decade, but these half and half deserts *might* have gotten a bit better in recent years. I can't say for certain. Bueller? Every chain coffee shop I've been dragged into did in fact have half and half. I think a few places had some kind of ultra pasteurized non-fat version. And hey, DD - just stop with that sugar chemical mess you call creamer. Anxiety - what if they don't have half and half?! And am I going to be paying more than 2 bucks for some weak nasty slop because I refuse to cover up the butt taste with extra flavored nonsense? Give me some paper towels or even a clean sock, a cup and hot water and I can make something I know I'll like lol Well to be honest I graduated from paper towels a long time ago. Though my wandering days seem to be over, I still have my portable "filter" dohicky (compact net on a ring type thing) I found on Amazon. And a Contigo! When a friend took me to a fancysmansy spot in Austin the server did need further instruction as she offered milk (like that was standard), then thought I wanted CoffeeMate, then said they might have whipping cream and then she remembered they had half and half for some other purpose, presented a pint and poured it in my coffee like she was happy to serve me a bowl full of jelly beans where I had asked her to pick out all the licorice ones. I don't eat out much these days but my experience is that most places outside NJ that I've been to only have CoffeeMate cups at the table, but back in the day in NJ only the more questionable diners didn't have real half and half cups. "Bring out lots of creamer. I use more than 2 in my cup!" Curious what other die hard coffee and half and half lovers have witnessed in more recent years across the country. Are we winning the battle over flavored creamy oil AKA "creamer?"
@thecolorjune3 ай бұрын
@@sparkyUSA1976 I’m not a huge coffee drinker, but at least in Seattle/Washington I’ve found that they always have had real milk and cream options most places I’ve gone, as well as plant milk options. That being said, I don’t often order coffee outside of cafes and brunch places that are more specialized for coffee lovers.
@sparkyUSA19763 ай бұрын
@@thecolorjune thanks for your observations! I've spent time in Oregon, Idaho and Washington and they seemed to be ok for the most part. I also discovered their dairy secret in the form of ice cream - Tillamook!
@hkandm4s233 ай бұрын
@@sparkyUSA1976 ..... seriously? I'm in Oklahoma and I don't know a single grocery store that wouldn't carry half and half. Heck, even chain restaurants have it in single serve cups if they serve coffee. Typically under the brand mini moos.
@helenroberts11073 ай бұрын
It’s good to see a British viewpoint on American food. Every time we went to Cornwall we stopped in Penzance where you could get an ice cream (not whippy) with Clotted cream on. Yummy
@evan3 ай бұрын
Cornwall makes sense! My main point was that 99x out of 100 from the places I’ve been in the south, north, and wales, if a place offers ice cream (soft serve) it’s mr whippy which is just no comparison to actual ice cream. I’ll have to trip out to Cornwall and Devon
@letitiakearney24233 ай бұрын
@@evanthere are lots of Italian ice creams especially here in Northern Ireland and only ice cream vans serve that shit. 😂.
@letitiakearney24233 ай бұрын
@@evanthere are real ice cream places in London just google them. Italian ice cream is sold in most places if you look. Plus ice cream according to FDA must contain 10% Milk fat and good ice cream must be from cows that aren’t treated with artificial growth hormones. Just saying but enjoyed you showing off your home to Heather.
@lynettesherburne3 ай бұрын
Oooh you must try clotted cream ice cream! 😁🍨
@MatthewJBD3 ай бұрын
Oxfordshire, Cotwalds too... @@evan
@eieensebastian4461Ай бұрын
My parents are from Pennsylvania and we had scrapple all the time. I miss it very much.
@Mmolonn3 ай бұрын
Oh more of Heather please!! She's wonderful 🥰
@maurobraunstein94973 ай бұрын
This is one of the most interesting videos I've seen on KZbin. I'm kinda obsessed with local food, because every place has its own culture, and I very rarely see such a wide-ranging exploration of American local foods with someone new to them like in this video. You're doing the world a service!
@evan2 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@ziggygunz244721 күн бұрын
The great thing about scrapple is you can choose how you cook it. So if you don't like the creamy paste texture inside just cook it longer and make it crispy the whole way through. Plus since it's a loaf you can slice it as thick or thin as you want.
@raisedfromash3 ай бұрын
Omg haha "I wont describe to you what it is until after you try it" with the Scrapple xD Knew what was coming with family from Philadelphia!
@brandon911913 ай бұрын
Yeah…it is best that you try not to think about what Scrapple is made out of when you have it.
@miriamrobarts3 ай бұрын
Yes, she was brave to try it, esp. with that intro.
@Ahzpayne3 ай бұрын
@@brandon91191 I find it best to just not eat the shit that it's best I not think about. I'm not some savage on the verge of starvation like my ancestors. And they sacrificed so I can have better. I'll be damned if I will dishonor that collective effort by eating or thinking like one of them.
@tsrenis3 ай бұрын
@@Ahzpayneah you're so advanced and victorian dear, truly a bastion of civilization to not eat any of the disgusting heathenous slop that the commoners and invalids chow down upon, always shoving their mouths full like rabid hogs. truly elucidated darling, I'm quite sure you'd get along swimmingly with jamie oliver
@TurnipTroll2 ай бұрын
I helped with making scrapple once. Once was enough. He glossed over it's not just meat scraps but the left over meat cooked off the bones. But I still like the taste but it doesn't agree with my stomach anymore, the same with pickled tripe.
@carrie54903 ай бұрын
If you go out of London, particularly into the south west there are a few great local ice cream shops. It may not be huge but it is there. Ultra creamy ice cream in Somerset, Devon and Cornwall for sure
@carbongrip21083 ай бұрын
Hmmm... interesting. Evan, research this and report your findings :P
@jasminebraid58913 ай бұрын
Devon and Cornwall especially well known for clotted cream ice cream (bonus points for a dollop of clotted cream on top too!)
@carrie54903 ай бұрын
@@jasminebraid5891 yep, can’t get more creamy than clotted cream ice cream.
@carrie54903 ай бұрын
@@carbongrip2108 yes, I’d love for him to try these and see if it is anything like the ice cream from home
@FTZPLTC3 ай бұрын
I'm a philistine - used to go to Cornwall all the time as a kid, but I *hated* the local ice cream. My child-brain thought it tasted like it had hair in it? Always wondeer if anyone else had that experience.
@shaylasosa9892Ай бұрын
Tomato and mayo sandwiches are a southern staple too! Tomato, mayo, salt, and pepper! 17:06
@LogicalNiko2 ай бұрын
Europeans (except for the really the north-east) doesn't typically grow up with access Maple syrup, other tree syrups, or maple flavored syrups. Instead, they have Golden Syrup, which is a white cane sugar syrup that has been reduced until caramelization occurs. It is similar to some of the qualities of very light molasses but missing some of the components that are filtered out of raw sugar. This difference is because during the early colonial era the cost of the importing of sugar from South America/Caribbean was high. This favored doing all the refining before shipping (whereas the colonial US was a much shorter trip and could afford to bring unrefined sugars). The US tends to also use Corn based fructose in their syrups. This is also why many people find a lot of US sweetened things "too sweet". The nuance and the initial hit of sweetness of Fructose and Glucose are subtilty different tastes. As the US sweeteners amplify Fructose (High Fructose Corn Syrup) the taste sensation seems "overly sweet" or maybe out of balance to people who grew up with other forms of sugar. In the US Apple Juice is filtered and generally pasteurized, Apple Cider is raw pressed apples (so it still contains much of the pectin and enzymes from the apples). Spiced Apple Cider then usually has some cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, etc. in it. Mulled Apple Cider has been heated with the spices to extract more spice flavor (and then can be hot or chilled). Apple Cider in the US used to also refer to the hard (fermented) product until prohibition. In fact because of our climate and the prevalence of the apple tree it was the primary alcoholic drink with beer being the secondary. Prohibition, pasteurization, and refrigeration all occurred near the same time and thus changed the common US meaning of Apple Cider to be non-alcoholic. And with Prohibition followed by WW1 Americans tended to then prefer beer. US Bread crumb (texture) tends to be different then European style too and tends to suffer from the same Fructose thing. Also much of US wheat is of different variety mixes than those grown in Europe.
@wandapease-gi8yo2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the information.
@bobbbxxxАй бұрын
Golden Syrup is the same as North American corn syrup. Brits freak sometimes at food made with High Fructose Corn Syrup, but they have no problem eating Golden Syrup in things like Eccles Cakes. Also, a "Golden Syrup" can refer to a really bad man's toupee. 😂
@lynneserman6054Ай бұрын
Interesting.From all I've read about corn syrup I'm surprised it's not been banned.
@bobbbxxxАй бұрын
@lynneserman6054 I wonder if golden syrup is any different?
@Janus-yv8zmАй бұрын
@@bobbbxxx They are absolutely not the same thing and it is disingenuous to pretend they are.
@Neenerella3332 ай бұрын
I grew up in Western New York. The tomato sandwich with Trusello's crusty bread and my Grandpa's garden tomatoes, just a bit of salt and pepper. Perfection.
@seanwilnerАй бұрын
I was always taught that scrapple is the bits of the pig that were left over after the butcher used up all the trimmings that were fit to be made into sausage.
@TheSulross3 ай бұрын
Fresh orchard peaches, sliced and put on home made (must be hand cranked) vanilla ice cream is THE best concoction this side of Heaven
@jackiescoones56063 ай бұрын
Sounds divine 😋 ❤
@afcgeo8822 ай бұрын
There is one better… substitute ice cream with fresh ricotta (not the supermarket kind), a touch of honey and coarse black pepper.
@karendepasquale60782 ай бұрын
Fellow Woodstown native here. Thanks for showing our part of the country!
@nicholascurci1020Ай бұрын
I’m from Levittown,pa. So much nostalgia in the video for me ❤ Wawa, scrapple, I hope pork roll/taylor ham is also on the menu! 6:15 again being from Levittown PA, I use to have people make fun of me all the time in college for calling them “Jimmies” instead of what they called them “sprinkles” 26:30 I loved this video! First time I came across your videos was today. This was the second one, the first being what Germany teaches about WWII with Anne. Keep up the great work and make us proud back home in the Tri state!
@auntlynnie3 ай бұрын
I was so happy when she compared scrapple to black pudding. I do feel like it’s pretty analogous. I live in the Catskills Mountains (NY), and we have scrapple in the supermarket.
@StewedFishProductions3 ай бұрын
TBH: I believe the closest English foodstuff to American 'Scrapple' would be 'haslet' _(especially "Grasmere Farm" 'Lincolnshire Haslet whole meat loaf')_ - Several other butchers sell haslet loaves on-line. You can also buy sliced haslet in Tesco, Morrisons and ASDA. Although no longer made with the pork offal etc. of traditional haslet, when sliced it does look similar to the scrapple they were eating. OR: Look up videos on YT of how to make 'home-made' Lincolnshire haslet. If you have never eaten it, give it a go, its great for a Ploughman's Lunch or a 'cold meat' selection. 👍👍👍 😋
@donovanfoto32632 ай бұрын
Although, they missed 'Delicious Orchards' in Colts Neck, Cranberries and the Jersey Devil, and the whole Jersey Shore experience (NAEC Lakehurst, the Hindenburg, the Black Mariah (first movie theater), etc.
@StewedFishProductions2 ай бұрын
@@donovanfoto3263 I'm British and genuinely have no idea what you just wrote !? LOL - I DO recognise 'Jersey Shore' as a US reality TV show, the Hindenburg (as the one that caught fire ?), a 'Black Maria' (here in the UK is a police van used to transport suspects or prisoners), although YOUR spelling was a bit different and you mention a movie theatre... So I am NOT sure what you mean at all? Sorry, but as they say, we may speak English, but everything can have a differnt meaning... 🤔🤣🤣🤣
@donovanfoto32632 ай бұрын
@@StewedFishProductions : Yes, I agree with you. The Jersey shore was a recreational area long before it was a god awful TV show. The Hindenburg was indeed that "Great Ball of Fire" in 1939. The "Black Mariah" was the WORLD FIRST MOVIE THEATER, invented by Thomas Edison. American perspective here. These are all New Jersey things that you would not necessarily be aware of.
@StewedFishProductions2 ай бұрын
@@donovanfoto3263 Thanks for clearing that all up... Makes sense now, cheers.
@rjstrange3 ай бұрын
Top notch production quality. I feel like I'm watching The Food Network.
@williamdom38143 ай бұрын
But without real food.
@gordygroover2 ай бұрын
Yeah she's gorgeous and all that but just listen to her! Well spoken and a joy to listen to. Never fumbles her words and says exactly what she means.
@reaganhopelynch7660Ай бұрын
A lil Creepy
@vickywitton10083 ай бұрын
All British ice cream is not whippy! If you go anywhere in the UK you can get loads of different ice cream flavours! In fact we have something called ice cream farms, where the choice is immense
@evan3 ай бұрын
Yes but you must seek those out. The difference is these are the standard in most of my state and the US in general. Same could be said if I said the US isn’t walkable. You could say “yeah well what about New York???” That is not the standard.
@aprillesley3 ай бұрын
@@evan It is standard where I live in Lancashire. Around here you would really struggle to find Mr Whippy type ice cream. Even all the restaurants and pubs sell the local ice creams, because nobody would visit them if they didn't. I think there are many areas of the UK that are similar. Love your video though - very interesting to see your girlfriend trying your childhood foods.
@neilmeadowcroft75693 ай бұрын
I would describe every tub of ice cream sold in supermarkets as proper ice cream, I only know whippy from certain ice cream vans.
@geemo42843 ай бұрын
My Whippy is normally only found in ice cream vans, in the UK, or, occasionally, shops that sell general groceries and they might have a machine in the corner. Most ice cream shops, which you will find all along the coast and in towns and cities, will sell proper ice cream, and ice cream, in tubs, is available in all supermarkets, so I’m a bit baffled at your experience. Did you just got to ice cream vans, or something?
@Blayda13 ай бұрын
@@evan no , there really not ,, having been to your side of the pond ,, it is defo not the "norm". Some really good icecream parlours over there but its not the standard.
@stefthepef3 ай бұрын
I am not from New Jersey and I gotta say, pork roll is MAGIC. Less mushy than Spam. More flavorful, almost like a breakfast salami. It's great! You don't need to defend it because it's objectively good.
@dankappus7004Ай бұрын
Get a girlfriend who looks at you like Heather looks at Evan. Life goals.
@doctorprancer3 ай бұрын
Love this video. It's like a food crawl TV episode, I would try some of those bagels.
@jamesdickey54072 ай бұрын
My dad made me scrapple once a month and were from Indiana. Everything but the oink
@kathybouziane52692 ай бұрын
The bagels looked delicious. I think I'd pass on the scrabble though. Hard pass . As far as the tomato sandwich goes , our midwest relatives use Vienna bread (untoasted), and spread a mix of cream cheese, sour cream, lemon juice and seasonings on top. Add almost any sliced vegetable. Mainly tomato, cucumber, and fresh water cress. Addicting ❤❤
@jennifermarkulin72873 ай бұрын
Love this! I’m from Baltimore and we have all the same things, minus the pork roll 😂 We even say “woorter”. South Jersey, Philly and Baltimore are all very similar. I have been to Philly and South Jersey and they both feel like home. Sprinkles are always jimmies, we eat Scrapple fried thin with mustard, we have pretzel cones, but we call snow cones, snow balls. We even have an Ocean City, Maryland! ❤
@alyzu47552 ай бұрын
My mom is from Silver Spring, and she moved to Boston, my dad's native city, after they got married. I like to say that she picked up all the Rs he dropped. He said "watah", she said "woorter". 😊
@LynnEsq2 ай бұрын
From Maryland, too and thought the same thing. Wooter. Lol
@Bloodsworth752 ай бұрын
Eastern Shore of Maryland here and many things from Jersey felt like home. It broke my heart that she didn't like scrapple lol.
@endeityloon136Ай бұрын
Black birch, which is the species most commonly used to flavor birch beer, is known for having a taste reminiscent of root beer or wintergreen. When I was growing up, I was always told that you could chew a twig if you forgot your toothbrush while camping! Not sure if it actually helps clean your teeth, but it tastes nice and probably helps to freshen your breath
@mocat13 ай бұрын
Being from Ontario, after always wondering about why this US Wawa chain, is named that, I finally googled it. I had no idea that there was another place called Wawa. I’ve only ever known about Wawa, Ontario. They have a giant Canada goose statue beside the Trans-Canada highway.
@donovanfoto32632 ай бұрын
I was told, years ago (1976???), Wawa is "Great Flying Goose (Canada Goose).
@Geekeh_UK3 ай бұрын
The one thing I'd suggest now you're back in the UK, is buy yourself an ice cream maker. I remember many many years ago when my father bought one, and followed one of the included recipes for vanilla ice cream, which was very close to, if not exactly a recipe for proper traditional egg custard, and then obviously frozen with the gadget that constantly stirs it as it freezes. But yeah, it tasted fantastic, totally unlike anything I'd ever had before. And obviously you can keep trying new recipes and tweaking them until you find the perfect flavour.
@duckypam2 ай бұрын
Kudos for finding a fun woman who speaks her mind easily but kindly. I now desperately want pizza from the east coast. we don't have good pizza in California
@travcollier2 ай бұрын
That was a lovely wholesome video. Heather is great... Perfect combination of nice but not afraid to give her own opinions. Yall make a good pair.
@jpack853 ай бұрын
Frozen custard isn't the same as ice cream. Frozen custard has egg yoke.
@cassieoz17023 ай бұрын
I'm old, and have always made ice cream with milk, cream, sugar and egg yolks. Eggless ice cream was originally a commercial product, made possible by the use of emulsifiers.
@franciscopozole3 ай бұрын
Traditional ice cream is made with egg yolks. It is quite literally custard that has been frozen and churned. The fact there is cheap knock off ice cream being sold as soft serve is kind of irrelevant.
@mikeymutual54893 ай бұрын
@@franciscopozole Yes and no. Philadelphia-style ice cream does not have any eggs in it, while French-style ice cream does. They are both historic styles. When it comes to frozen custard, it is distinctive not just because it has egg in it, but because of the noticeable amount of egg in it, while regular soft-serve ice cream usually doesn't bother with eggs in the first place.
@PeacefroggАй бұрын
That scrapple sounds like a thing we have in the netherlands called ‘balkenbrij’, which is a puree of meat scraps, buckwheat and spices ( a special spicemix we call ‘rommelkruid’) that is first boiled, then left to harden and then cut into strips and fried in a frying pan on high heat to get a crispy outside and a soft inside. The best version also has raisins in it. I grew up on this cheap ‘meat’, and so did my grandmother and in her time it was already considered a classic dish. I wonder how old it is.
@jonnynexus3 ай бұрын
"It looks like apple juice and it tastes like apple juice because it is apple juice." :)
@bradparnell6143 ай бұрын
I suppose, yet at the same time anyone can tell apple cider and apple juice apart by sight, smell, taste, and texture.
@colinstu3 ай бұрын
that is NOT cider what they're drinking. Hate those "clear" juices claiming to be cider, this ain't it. There's a definite difference.
@tsrenis3 ай бұрын
@@colinstueeyup, real sweet cider aint clear, its cloudy and a bit pulpy.
@colinstu3 ай бұрын
@@tsrenis exactly! definitely some mouth feel, pulpy!
@63angel3 ай бұрын
There's no comparison between a fresh tomatoes and a store bought tomatoes. Most tomatoes in grocery stores are actually "hot house" meaning grown in greenhouses. They don't get the sunlight and they can grow year around. The only ones that are fresh are the vine ripe tomatoes. Which the stores always charge more for them instead of other tomatoes. I love tomatoes, but I won't eat them on anything unless they are fresh tomatoes.
@miriamrobarts3 ай бұрын
Most grocery store tomatoes (out of necessity) are varieties developed to ship & store well -- unfortunately at the cost of flavor. They're likely to be picked prematurely for the same reasons. I live in a hot-summer Mediterranean climate, so tomatoes love it here. I'm guessing if someone lived in a colder zone, but had a backyard greenhouse that got warm enough (or grew indoor with grow lights), they could grow great tasting heirloom tomatoes, too.
@rb95803 ай бұрын
@@miriamrobarts For better or worse, tomatoes have changed radically in UK over the last 20-30 years. They used to be a more seasonal product, grown in UK glass-houses and sold in different sizes and colours, but we have now converted (or been converted!) to the most common supermarket offering being plum or cherry tomatoes. These are now much more consistent than before and on the shelves all year round, but they are also very much sweeter, with a consequent loss of the background tomato flavour. At times it can be difficult to find the old standard tomatoes, which have become "salad" tomatoes and as for the larger "beefsteak" tomatoes, best of luck finding them in a UK supermarket these days!
@marym.15673 ай бұрын
Most grocery stores in NJ sell NJ tomato’s during the season. People are serious about a tomato sandwich
@miriamrobarts3 ай бұрын
@@rb9580 That's sad. 'Beefsteak' tomatoes are great for burgers and sandwiches. I hope you can find a good place to get them, & good luck if you try growing some yourself.
@jeraldbottcher1588Ай бұрын
That is why I grow them in my garden. I love fresh tomatoes!!!
@itslegotimedad1594Ай бұрын
I like that she takes actual bites of everything to get a good taste of it and that she doesn’t too objective
@Crusty_Camper3 ай бұрын
When I visited my American cousins in Georgia the new food experience I loved the most was...... fanfare......GRITS! Yes, that mixture of frogspawn and wallpaper paste is delicious !
@Bozebo3 ай бұрын
If you call it polenta it sounds fancier :P
@steventambon25883 ай бұрын
As a person from Delco, we are from the same cut of culture and that includes not giving up an opportunity to shit talk. I laughed so hard at all the jabs at North Jersey and New York
@SDWNJАй бұрын
Pretzels and ice cream go so well together. As a kid I’d sometimes get a bowl of ice cream, let it get a bit soft and use pretzel sticks to eat it rather than a spoon.
@BronzeManul3 ай бұрын
"Grape 👉 🍬" - Heather 0:14
@chrisperyagh3 ай бұрын
American grape flavour is the most vile flavour ever invented. It doesn't even taste anything like any grapes I know of and I've got grapes growing in my garden which are nice and sweet.
@afcgeo8822 ай бұрын
Well… I can see why you’ve picked Heather. She’s right about everything, especially the bread. Next time make a tomato sandwich open-faced on a toasted slice of sourdough. She’s a 9/10.
@scottbrown74152 ай бұрын
I love this video! It’s always interesting to watch the reactions from people that are trying food items that they are not familiar with.
@user-tc6xg5ze2u3 ай бұрын
The wrap up though ! You two are verrrrry cute 😍 Thank you. One of my most favourite episodes so far !
@evan2 ай бұрын
Yay, thank you!
@bostonjunk3 ай бұрын
Coffee 'creamer' is called 'whitener' in the UK. It makes coffee taste creamier than just milk.
@itsmephil22553 ай бұрын
Like 'coffee - mate' in the cardboard container with the red plastic lid
@Singlecatlady1112 ай бұрын
As a Brit , I have never heard of “whitener
@nmscmt222 ай бұрын
as a south jersyian married to a brit and now living in the west midlands uk, this vid is fabulous. my face hurts from smiling. love everything here! :D
@ellenwatts48093 ай бұрын
Taffy in Wales is a name for a welshman, originally for dafydd(david)
@frankhooper78713 ай бұрын
In the words of the poem: Taffy was a Welshman, Taffy was a thief.
@rextitan3 ай бұрын
I read a bunch of comments about it but I still wasn’t ready to hear “99% of uk ice cream is the same, mr whippy.” That’s just misinformation.
@philcoogan73693 ай бұрын
Quite 99% of UK ice cream is not mr whippy
@Natz-d2c3 ай бұрын
@@philcoogan7369 I'd struggle to buy Mr whippy here, there are no ice cream vans but ice cream shops with really nice ice cream. Yes I am in the UK.
@JohnWatkinsUK3 ай бұрын
It's certainly not 99% Mr Whippy the *actual* brand, but think about the volume of soft-serve icecream that fast food outlets like McDonald's, KFC, Burger King sell on a daily basis, it must be enormous in comparison to shop bought tubs and fairly niche shops (sea-side shops obviously, but with limited trading days throughout the year, and then a lot is still soft-serve).
@Laughing_Chinaman3 ай бұрын
mr whippy i.e soft-serve is the fast food of ice cream, because it can be shipped pre made then frozen. also it has a lot of air in it so you're conning the customer
@dougfile66443 ай бұрын
Yep. Saying 99%of uk ice cream is mr whippy is like saying that US restaurants are all terrible. 🤣 "We have lots of michelin starred restaurants in the uk, but I went to Olive Garden, Arbys, and Cheesecake factory and they were all awful"
@evanpierriАй бұрын
As a Jersey native I loved this video…My wawa go to every time. Wawa Pretzel, Kandy Kakes, Wawa Raspberry Tea. Now that I live out of state I usually throw extra pretzels in my checked luggage to savor the vibes when I get home.
@MatthewBrannigan3 ай бұрын
As someone from San Diego, this is as alien to me as it is for Heather, so I really need to get to NJ sometime!
@cheyennemoore83803 ай бұрын
Yay! This is my favorite video of this year. Thank you!
@noahgenda29 күн бұрын
theres no added spice in apple cider, its just unfiltered. it is associated as a seasonal food (though it is in the grocery store year round here in michigan) because it has a shorter shelf life than standard filtered apple juice
@daniellelevy80563 ай бұрын
I'm originally from Philly, and I have family in Ocean City that I grew up visiting so everything about this video was so nostalgic for me. I just spent the whole video salavating🤤 (btw johnson's popcorn ships and it is totally still good even if it's not still warm)
@NZKiwi873 ай бұрын
I’ve never understood how creamer is just accepted as normal.
@LiveFreeOrDieDH3 ай бұрын
marketing!
@nyanuwu42093 ай бұрын
Over time, people took 'creamer' to mean 'this specific thing' rather than 'whatever makes the coffee creamy' which can be that powdered stuff, cream, milk...
@JBM4253 ай бұрын
Ain’t nothing like the real thing, baby! Half-and-half or cream in my coffee… NEVER “creamer.” ☕️
@WhatDayIsItTrumpDay3 ай бұрын
I'm baffled as to why the aversion to it here in these comments.
@LiveFreeOrDieDH3 ай бұрын
@@WhatDayIsItTrumpDay Because creamer is made in a lab. Why ingest that when you can have something that actually came from a cow? Put another way, given the choice between lab-grown meat and a real steak, which would you choose?
@triptomartinАй бұрын
Reigning from exit 2, this whole video brought me so much nostalgia. I haven’t lived back home for nearly 10 years. Everything brought me back to being a kid riding my bike around town
@Mous3v23 ай бұрын
Frozen custard is actually different than soft serve. It has eggs in it.
@BrianRandall-v8c3 ай бұрын
And neither can be legally called ice cream.
@Mous3v23 ай бұрын
@@BrianRandall-v8c Custard is SO much better.
@katinthehat76553 ай бұрын
im pretty sure we also have frozen custard but its just a type of ice cream, you can make it without eggs though thats probably what you call ice cream:)
@Mous3v23 ай бұрын
@@katinthehat7655 it's called frozen custard because you're actually making a custard it's not just ice cream. You need the eggs to do so.
@judyhorstmann63323 күн бұрын
I can pass soft serve or ice cream all summer long. Custard? ALL DAY LONG!!!
@spanishdncr713 ай бұрын
I’m a Brit living in North NJ for 27 years and I’ve never heard anyone call sprinkles Jimmy’s. They call them rainbow sprinkles which took me a while to get used to as we call them hundreds and thousands in England. I tried scrapple once when I was at a diner in the Poconos years ago and I had forgotten all about it until watching this video. The taste was nice, but I didn’t go away feeling like I’d want it again. I’ve never seen it on the menu at any diner I’ve ever been to in NJ. NJ pizza is just as good as NY pizza. We are so close I don’t know why New Yorkers even have this argument. It isn’t as if we are Chicago! My most favourite bagel place is Bagels 4 U. Their’s was the first place I ever tried bagels from and I’ve never really preferred any other since then. Jersey tomatoes are delicious, the sad thing is you can only get them during the season which is short lived. I often get a craving for salt water taffy as it’s the closest thing to sweets I’ve had in England and they are way better than airheads. I really love the different flavours. I really enjoyed this video, it was one of your best!!
@raymondturro98533 ай бұрын
I’ve lived in Jersey all my life and I’ve never heard anyone in the state call them Jimmies, even way down in the “deep south “ where this was filmed. The only times Ive heard Jimmies is used in in New England and even there I don’t think it is as common as it once was
@jibern3 ай бұрын
My new england wife and i argue about it. My NNJ self is team sprinkles
@phillyphilly20953 ай бұрын
I am 65. Grew up in Salem County. They were called Jimmies. Never heard them called sprinkles until I moved to Pennsylvania.
@mariandaum83133 ай бұрын
@@raymondturro9853They are called jimmies in the Philadelphia area and South Jersey
@fs57752 ай бұрын
Born and raised in Philly and "jimmies" and "sprinkles" are interchangeable
@alexandramarkus99872 ай бұрын
As a Canadian who moved to Philly, can relate to Heather on so many levels. My husband is still introducing me to stuff all the time.
@rabbitos3 ай бұрын
I'm from Philadelphia but there's a lot of overlap so it's very fun to see local foods being rated :D
@Sponkadonkit3 ай бұрын
Watching as someone who is lactose intolerant I probably couldn’t eat anything you tried but it all looked so amazingly delicious 🥲
@warfricАй бұрын
For what its worth, frozen custard is not the same thing as soft-serve ice cream. Custard specifically has egg yolks in the batter. Soft serve ice cream has extra air introduced during freezing, which leads to a softer/airier texture than "normal" ice cream.
@stellamex13 ай бұрын
As someone from Lancaster county, with half her family from Philly, and who grew up going to OCNJ, loved this video!! I do not like scrapple. Lancaster County Amish farm ice cream places have the best ice cream (as opposed to custard), imo. Pine View Dairy & Fox Meadows Creamery are two you should definitely visit (Pine View's Oreo Caramel Espresso is the absolute best ice cream in the world). And fyi, technically, custard is made with a base that includes egg, ice cream only has cream.
@soniagallo98963 ай бұрын
I’m also from Lancaster, and I completely agree that pine view dairy has the best ice cream.
@kevinmcfalls945Ай бұрын
Also from Lancaster. Glad to see I am not the only one who dislikes scrapple.
@brandonlevy86803 ай бұрын
Reading Rainbow. Now that brings back some memories. Thumbs up just for that.
@KatyFaulkner-f6c2 ай бұрын
I'm from Philly and spent many weeks with my cousins in south Jersey and yep, Pork Roll and Hoagie's etc. Awesome! I could never even try scrapple though and my extended family loves it! Heather gets huge applause from me for even trying it!!!
@clovesbian2 ай бұрын
Love your travel-channel style. I enjoy the addition of fun facts and sharing cultural details.
@evan2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoy it! I like providing the actual context :)