I’m American. Your full Irish breakfast is AMAZING!!! I know they’d both love it if they tried it. It might sound weird but all the flavors go together perfectly.
An american guy rented a room in my house in Ireland. He couldn't go to the supermarket often, so he did a big grocery shop and bought six loaves of bread. He asked me 5 days later why his bread was covered in mould.
The huge corporation Kraft bought Cadbury, fired the British workers and closed their factories. Kraft moved production to Asia and the taste changed too. However the Irish Cadbury factory is still going and the chocolate still has the great taste it had during the 1900s.
I wish they tried potato bread, soda bread/farls or wheaten bread, tea cakes, jaffa cake, wagon wheel and after eights Try it next please In northern Ireland the only thing we call cookies is choc chip
I'm American and believe me, you don't have me fooled... I'm clued into the shiat. My Father was Irish and therefore that makes me 1/2 Irish and I know the Irish very very well. All us Merican's aren't as clueless as you seem to believe we are.
12:09 / 12:10 The Daily Milk Chocolate 🍫 by Cadbury is actually not from Ireland 🇮🇪🍀 at all, but The Daily Milk Chocolate 🍫 by Cadbury is actually original from Uxbridge, London, England 🏴, The United Kingdom 🇬🇧, The Great Britain 🇬🇧👑, by the way my friend 😊😊😊🎉🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊😁😁😁😎😎🙂🙂🙂🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻🍫🍫🍫🍫🍫🏴🏴🏴🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🍺🍺🍺🍺🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻🍻
My grandfather came to America with his mom and dad as a little boy from Airdrie, Scotland. He fought in Vietnam as a United States Marine. He passed in '98. A real legit bad ass
@@purplefairyx5893 we'll eat the tayto which gives us power for battle and we charge with our Viking axes and throw bags of tayto with so much power we destroy entire world's am'nt I right person? Btw I definitely don't hoard alot of tayto in my cupboard...
Yes Irish was our language but when the British took over, we started speaking English. The Irish language is used in school so every school learns it to keep it alive, it’s written on signs English to Irish.And in some counties (different parts of Ireland) Irish is used all the time, I don’t if this makes sense but it’s the easiest way to explain.
I'm Irish and I'm going to an Irish school,and a funny thing is when the English came to Ireland they made new names for places that had Irish names and the names they gave them had no meaning but sounded like the Irish one so like "Round stone" that means nothing and its a place in irland but in irish it "Cloch na róin" that means stone of the seal bc there where seals living there
Paddy is a nickname for Pádraig which is the Irish for Patrick. By the way Ireland’s Call was created because some Protestants of the Irish rugby team refused to sing ‘Amhrán an Fiann’.
Yeah,becuase when the english played against ireland in croke park they refused to sing amhran na fiann because its about defeating the english ancestors
Pearse I know about this as I have fifteen men named Patrick that I’m related to in one way or another including my cousins six year old son . We all call him little paddy .
Sianna fianna fàil Atà faoi geal ag eireann Buinn dà slua Seo an tìr a romhnaig cuamhainn Seo a bhàid bheith saor Sean tìr a sinseair fasta Nì fhaigar faion tìreann à faion trà Mar anocht a tèmasa na bhearna bhaiol le geal ar Gaeil Cun bàs nù saol Le gunna ag screach Làn le bpillèar Seo ag channaig amhrain na bhfiann
@@michealodriscoll6796 He never said he was both. An Irish American is an American of Irish decent. America was built on immigration. Besides Irish Americans have more love for Ireland than we do! 😂
Niap Si evil you are so stupid just shut up you are probably just another American who’s neighbours sisters friends dogs mothers owners aunts friends cousins husbands brothers teachers sisters girlfriends moms pet rock is one sixteenth Irish
@@niapsievil7002 if you don't know how to pronounce it properly i wouldn't speak about how you think it should be , p.s it's "Irish" not "eyer-ish". I wouldn't recommend telling an Irish person they're wrong about how they pronounce their own country or nationality.
In Ireland cookies are thick cookies with like chocolate chips or something and biscuits are thinner and are mainly for tea because they dissolve in liquid
Irish taters (I personally call them that) I'm Irish and don't know a lad who don't like taters, but irish don't always go to a pub (bar) and get drunk with Guinness and fight people
Cadbury and dairy milk is from the uk if it’s made in another country or not is no argument if that’s the logic Nike is now Indian lol. Carlsberg is brewed in the uk and is our number one beer but it’s not English.
No Cadbury Diary Milk Chocolate is just a product of Cadbury and is made all over the world but Cadbury Diary Milk Chocolate was first produced by the Cadbury Brothers at Bournville in Birmingham UK in 1879 where as Cadbury Chocolate only started production in Ireland around 1932, so yes it may be made in the Irish Factory, but it is made in every Cadbury Factory.
If your bread lasts more than 2 days then it's not proper bread, the guy looks genuinely shocked that it only lasts a few days, not eager to try American bread I have to say. I'm Irish and my father won't eat bread that's more than a day old, has to be Brennans too.
I'm argentinian, I've tried them in Canada and I think they are awesome. I love them. Inside is like the filling from the "galletitas Sonrisas" covered in chocolate!! 😋
the name Paddy comes from the name Padraig; which I believe is one of the more formal spellings for the name Patrick (english spelling and pronunciation)... since you did ask.. ;)
Cadbury chocolate is British including flake not Irish as is hobnobs biscuits. Irish. Full Irish breakfast is the same as ours in Britain. Also the 99 ice-cream is British too. Irish crisps are amazing especially Ranchero's. I'm English, Scottish and Welsh and my daughter's girlfriend is Irish so we get our favorite Irish crisps sent over to us.
In Ireland we do speak English but some people do speak Irish. In school you learn Irish but some people who have learning disabilities or a learning curve they do not learn Irish.
Thaught the same thing whilst watching it. But i previosly didnt make sense but it was the only valid reason to why i thaught it could be :) happy to see someone else comment it :)