We been making these in the hood for 20 years. Edit: Damn where did all these likes and comments come from 😲 😂🤣😂 thank y’all for letting me know I ain’t trippin cause I’m 38 and know the candy lady was selling these hunts back in the 90s 😂
@@missneek3094 Get over it. Different race cooks can think of the same idea at different times. You expect all people to know where every recipe originated and stay away from it if it didn't start with their race? You're mistaken.
@@missneek3094 y’all people need to have a seat trynna act like you own everything just because you owned nothing at a point… we were all slaves ! We all have recipes! We all can do what we want. If you really been making that in the “hood” you should of patented it and make some money off it. Instead your out here gatekeeping for what ???
I always come up with things just to find out there is already a recipe out there so like someone just said anyone can come up with anything doesn't mean they seen it from somewhere. How would someone need to give credit to where they found it if the came up with it on the spot?
I was gonna say they're like toffee apples but with Grapes! I'm from 🇿🇦 Now I'm wondering if Americans have toffee apples 🤔 or do they call 'em crack apples 😂
Is it me or are the RU-vid shorts comments starting to get more negative than usual? I don’t remember having such a high amount of unhappy comments on such peaceful vids.
@クラゲちゃん☆ At this rate you don't even have to sort by new. People are just overly argumentative. I do too have a tendency to say absolutely dumb stuff in comments when bored... But this is excessive.
yeah i'm glad it isn't just me it's so fucking annoying that people get so mad about videos that do no harm. it's funny. people say "omg this new generation is so sensitive" while they're the ones who are being sensitive. legit so mad
Yeah we did this in hood growing up. Mrs. Nelson was the candy lady and she hooked it up. But really this originally comes from China it's called Tanghulu (obviously not made from jolly ranchers lol).
@@ghostytoasty2187 it's always the ONLY ONE that gets it among the animals in the comments _"we did this in the hood growing up, they taking what we created❤️"_ 💀
@@KillTheCupcakesthey typed 糖葫芦/tanghulu it’s a Chinese snack which is hawthorns dipped in rock sugar. But now people call it the same but make completely different things. People just candy fruit and call it tanghulu
Chinese people when they see this “Wtf man we’ve been doing that forever just better” Edit: dang I didn’t even see how many likes I got it’s not a ton but my first time
@• m0o • whatever. That’s like looking at gluten free pancakes and saying “those aren’t pancakes real pancakes have flour” It’s the same premise, the authentic ones have melted sugar, jolly ranchers are melted flavored sugar.
@@payton3673 it's similar, but it's not the same at all. Imagine posting this as a tanghulu tutorial... If you're going to replicate a recipe like that you have to follow it exactly. Take Mexican food for example. Anything edited at all is not real Mexican food. Stuff like taco bell goes into a totally different category and any Mexican will fight on that 😂 I don't think any other culture is different, except for western nations because our culture is always changing.
@@payton3673 no tanghulu has a even number of fruit and tanghulu is apart of Chinese culture. If you’re not Chinese honestly you can’t say nothing abt it. Tanghulu has melted Sugar on it .
@@ImBaldyeon it's an Chinese snack of fruits dipped in hot liquid sugar and then immediately dipped in ice water to firm it up. Many different fruits can be used. I see grapes used the most but strawberries and other fruits are good too. It's a sugary hard outer shell.kind of like rock candy..
Honestly I thought this wouldn't be that good I made them from watching your video my girls wanted to try it and I was shocked how delicious they were 😋
@@tahjaniagibbs tanghulu is a desert traditionally eaten in china, it is made out of rock sugar that is melted and coats the fruit. the amount of fruit on the stick really determines if it's tanghulu or not. if it's an odd number of fruit it's not tanghulu. if it's an even amount of fruit it's tanghulu. in this case, the fruit in the video has an odd amount of fruit and is covered in jolly ranchers and pop rocks. some of y'all will look at fruit on a stick and call it tanghulu.
You could place the muffin cups in a muffin pan, fill a baking dish with boiling water and place the muffin pan inside the pan of boiling water, it’ll keep them runny for longer
Ive eaten an unhealthy amount of candy (not chocolate) in my life and im 32. I've never once had a cavity or any other issues. This would be fine to eat.
@@thatguy6638 those are your teeth and that's great you never had a cavity but that's not the case for everyone what u can do doesn't mean that's for everyone I have great teeth and I wouldn't recommend anyone do this, why recommend unhealthy habits to people makes no sense
@@thatguy6638 Like I said that's great for you but it doesn't work like that for everyone some people are born with bad teeth, they brush twice a day and still have cavities I see you didn't mention flossing and that's very important for you gums that holds your teeth😉
@@tamiyaharrison9774 right, Kpop is a thing now Koreans own everything 🥴. Also Korean meals are borrowed from Thailand and Philippines and a lot of entertainment inspiration from Japan.
Be super super careful handling liquid sugar like this. It doesn’t just burn for a second like wax does, it can do really serious damage if you’re not careful
@@koo-core7274 I know there is a Korean street food very similar. Regardless of the name, the OP talked like they invented it. Just say it is your twist on this treat from China.
@@koo-core7274 no but it seems to be very inspired by tanghulu with its own twist. Plus alot of Asian countries have their own rendition on foods that derived from another. Either with the same name of a similar name 🤷🏾♀️
Just made tanghulu last week with strawberries, grapes, watermelon and oranges,I will definitely try it this way with the jolly ranchers! Looks easier....
"Seven" is sung from the perspective of an innocent little girl and childhood innocence in general. Although it feels like a bright song, there are allutions to chuld abuse if you look at the lyrics closely. "I think your house is haunted. Your dad is always mad, and that must be why. And I think you should come live with me, and we can be pirates; then you won't have to cry or hide in the closet." There's this vivid imagery of a little girl telling her friend about what's going on behind closed doors, but obviously, children don't pick up on the gravity of the situation. Especially when she sings about becoming pirates or going to India in order to escape the "haunted house" or her "dad." It shows the naivety and innocence of children. Absolutely beautiful song, but also rather eerie.
I know I've watched far too much Ann Reardon because I've been mildly pleased that, although it was quickly handwaved, there were warning on hot sugar's danger and instruction on how to achieve the right results/examples on what may go wrong.
Why is Gen Z going crazy about these grapes ? My grandpa used to sell these at his ice cream shop in the 90’s . California childhood classic to be exact the Bay Area created these .