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Loseyns - Medieval English Lasagna 

Tasting History with Max Miller
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Watch Proto Cooks where I discuss the more modern history of Lasagna at • How to make Lasagne~wi...
England doesn't often come to mind when you think of Lasagna, but in the middle ages, the ancestor of today's cheesy calorie bomb was making the rounds all over Europe. Today I explore the evolution of this wonderful dish.
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LINKS TO INGREDIENTS & EQUIPMENT**
Canon EOS M50 Camera: amzn.to/3amjvwu
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All-Clad Medium Pot: amzn.to/2FIZZ1T
King Arthur Bread Flour: amzn.to/2YpJnTj
LINKS TO SOURCES**
The Forme of Cury: amzn.to/3aNf12d
The Opera of Bartolomeo Scappi: amzn.to/329V1Tm
Liber de Coquina
Italy Dish by Dish by Monica Cesari: amzn.to/2E9Fn2J
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MENTIONED LINKS
Forme of Cury Episode: • England's Oldest Cookb...
De Re Coquinaria Episode: • Oldest Cookbook in the...
Tomato Episode: • The Poisonous History ...
LOSEYNS
ORIGINAL 1390 RECIPE (From The Forme of Cury) Translated
Take good broth and cook in an earthen pot. Take fine white flour and make thereof paste with water. And make thereof foils thin as paper with a roller, dry it hard and boil it in broth. Take Ruayn Cheese, grated, and lay it in dishes with Powder Douce. And lay thereon the foils large and many as thou might. And above powder and cheese, and so twice or thrice, & serve it forth.
MODERN RECIPE
INGREDIENTS (NOTE: You will have plenty of powder douce left over for future recipes)
- 2 Cups (240g) Bread Flour
- ½ (118ml) Cup Water
- 1.5 liters meat stock
- 8 oz (226g) Semi-soft cheese
- 2 teaspoons ginger
- 1 tablespoons sugar
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/2 teaspoon grains of paradise (Or other pepper)
METHOD
1. Assemble your powder douce by grinding all the spices into powder and mixing together. There will be plenty of powder douce left over for future recipes.
2. To make the noodles, mix the flour and water together and knead as you would bread dough, about 15 minutes by hand. Then cover the dough and let it rest for 20 minutes. With a rolling pin, roll the dough out as thin as possible, about 1/16 of an inch thick if possible. Then slice your noodles however you'd like. For this version of the recipe, I made squares 3 fingers in width. Then let the pasta dry.
3. Set the stock over medium heat and once it's at a rolling boil, add the dried noodles and boil for 8-12 minutes. The length depends on the thickness of the noodle and how well you'd like it done. Once boiled, empty the noodles and broth into a colander.
4. Assemble the lasagna before the noodles cool. One layer of noodles, a light layer of grated cheese, a layer of powder douce to taste. Repeat 2 or 3 times depending on the size of your tray or bowl.
PHOTO CREDITS
Vincisgrassi: Gastronomia Slow via flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0 (creativecommon...)
Lasagna Bolognese: Sambawamba / CC BY-SA (creativecommon...)
The Plague In Florence in 1348: Wellcome Library / CC BY-SA 4.0 (creativecommon...)
Tomatoes: Liz West via flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0
creativecommon...
Taleggio Cheese: By F. D. Richards from Clinton, MI - Taleggio Vecchia Lavorazione, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikime...
#tastinghistory #lasagna #medievalfood

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7 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 2,9 тыс.   
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
What kind of lasagna is your favorite? Have you tried any of the less known versions on the list?
@talosheeg
@talosheeg 4 года назад
My favorite is the classic!
@christophermorin9036
@christophermorin9036 4 года назад
I make Binging With Babish's Skillet lasagna. It's sooooooo gooooood and incredibly simple!
@Furburn
@Furburn 4 года назад
the kind that someone else makes for me.
@elijahramirez2017
@elijahramirez2017 4 года назад
I'm actually really late to the party. I didn't eat lasagna until I was an adult. So I've only had the classic, but boy am I ready to make up for lost time.
@telkins3388
@telkins3388 4 года назад
Béchamel lasagne!
@Will-vj5bc
@Will-vj5bc 4 года назад
"and so twice or thrice & serve it forth" - I see what they did there.
@trichogaster1183
@trichogaster1183 4 года назад
straight gangsta
@suppiluiiuma5769
@suppiluiiuma5769 4 года назад
I don't dish up anymore. I'm an Anglo. I serve forth.
@anidiotsjourney8328
@anidiotsjourney8328 4 года назад
RIGHT?! So good haha
@Astavyastataa
@Astavyastataa 4 года назад
Den Roten Hahn serve is a NORMAN word REEEEEEEE
@rebel4466
@rebel4466 4 года назад
ye olde pun intended
@tharos
@tharos 4 года назад
"Honey, why are you reading about the Black Death?" "Oh you know, just want to make some lasagna."
@justchevrotainrating
@justchevrotainrating 4 года назад
I asked the rare beer store in my town what i'd drink if i were dying of the black death and he walked off without saying anything. I thought "well, no try no chance..." but then he came back with two options. The one I had was a strong brown something, probably made by monks.
@Rekhan4242
@Rekhan4242 4 года назад
@@justchevrotainrating That's awesome! He gets it, just grabs your 🍻!
@katherinetutschek4757
@katherinetutschek4757 3 года назад
Whatever meat you can find.....
@Karlandra
@Karlandra 3 года назад
@@katherinetutschek4757 So duck, quail, beef, your lazy cousin Vyron....
@sephirothjc
@sephirothjc 3 года назад
I imagine the inventor of the fork, eating with their stick and thinking 'damn I wish I had four of these.'
@TristanBehrens
@TristanBehrens 3 года назад
Well they started with 2 tines, hence the name fork like a forked tongue or forked branch or fork in the road.
@lukematney7062
@lukematney7062 3 года назад
There were forks at the time but Christian nations more or less denounced their use because they "looked like male genitalia" and they wouldn't defile their women by using them. A Byzantine princess married a Western royal and they were all aghast when she pulled a fork from her cutlery set and began using it.
@eclipseslayer98
@eclipseslayer98 2 года назад
@@lukematney7062 I feel pitt for those poor people. They must have had really weird weiners. They probably hurt a lot too.
@David0lyle
@David0lyle 2 года назад
Probably started with the forked stick. 🤔 This is good, however …..
@grivza
@grivza 2 года назад
They used spoons though, I doubt they were eating lasagna with their hands or sticks.
@punchek
@punchek 3 года назад
That is so interesting, I just realised in Polish we have "łazanki", which is a square -shaped pasta served most often with cooked cabbage. I suppose the square shape is a connecting agent.
@mix-n-match834
@mix-n-match834 3 года назад
Well, that's because if you look when łazanki appeared in Polish cuisine, it's clear that it's reinterpretation of Italian recipe that was probably some early form of lasagna. Queen Bona Sforza was Italian and brought with herself to Poland plenty of Italian cooks, ingredients and recipes.
@kohinarec6580
@kohinarec6580 2 года назад
Łazanki's great!
@reddoor6114
@reddoor6114 2 года назад
Polish foods nice. I like how there are a lot of shops selling it in the UK where I'm from
@fr9062
@fr9062 2 года назад
@@reddoor6114 9
@jennifer1329
@jennifer1329 2 года назад
I'm not even Polish but I'll have to find a recipe for this. I love cabbage in any and all shapes or forms.
@cjspillmann5576
@cjspillmann5576 4 года назад
"Whatever else you can think of". Hearing that reminded me of the cafeteria at university. One day towards the end of the semester they cleaned out all the frozen foods from the freezers and served us what they called "cream of everything soup". The best part is that nobody could agree on what it tasted like...some said celery, others said potato, yet more said chicken. Good times lol.
@snazzypazzy
@snazzypazzy 4 года назад
Our university cafetaria also made leftover soups... One day they would serve something with sateh sauce, the next there would be peanut soup. The cheese-soup was horrible.
@raymondleggs5508
@raymondleggs5508 3 года назад
@@snazzypazzy you'd think the peanut soup would be worse
@joshjames582
@joshjames582 3 года назад
@@raymondleggs5508 Peanut soup is actually pretty lit.
@MonsterPumpkin
@MonsterPumpkin 2 года назад
@@snazzypazzy Can't believe peanut soup gets a pass but cheese doesn't ???
@snazzypazzy
@snazzypazzy 2 года назад
@@MonsterPumpkin The peanut soup was not my favourite but pretty decent actually. Kind of with an Indonesian vibe. The cheese soup was a mess.
@Khorre
@Khorre 4 года назад
If you ever get into doing merch, I think a Tasting History apron with the motto "Serve it Forth" would be perfect.
@dianamccay7276
@dianamccay7276 4 года назад
InstantBear Yes! I would definitely buy that apron! 👍🏼😊
@myemmieable
@myemmieable 4 года назад
I'd be down for a "Lasagna Family Tree" poster, too.
@smugly6793
@smugly6793 4 года назад
Seconded
@sarahfair9978
@sarahfair9978 4 года назад
I fourth this! Pleasseee!!
@kristiehollis4018
@kristiehollis4018 4 года назад
Yes please!!! Christmas coming up.... just saying😁
@efjay3183
@efjay3183 4 года назад
”Macabre, but useful for our lasagna recreation today.” A very interesting set of words.
@Orzorn
@Orzorn 4 года назад
"1 teaspoon of nutmeg" James Townsend has joined the chat.
@BBCHZ
@BBCHZ 4 года назад
How about John?
@tonicastel5933
@tonicastel5933 4 года назад
Now if we could just add a Bayleaf - moment of awe! - we would get Boris on.
@rustyshackelford3590
@rustyshackelford3590 4 года назад
“Let’s add a pinch a cayenne” *Chef John from foodwishes joins the chat*
@Borg1269
@Borg1269 4 года назад
"Boil it in broth" Marco Pierre White has joined the chat.
@FirstnameLastname-bh9qs
@FirstnameLastname-bh9qs 4 года назад
We could grab Babbish too with a generous pinch of kosher salt in the sausepin
@northumbriabushcraft1208
@northumbriabushcraft1208 3 года назад
I haven't heard 'rollin rollin rollin' in years, my uncle got kicked out of a pub for playing it 6 times in a row on the jukebox
@19Koty96
@19Koty96 3 года назад
could say they rolled your uncle out
@ambrosius
@ambrosius 3 года назад
I can’t stop laughing at this story
@Karlandra
@Karlandra 3 года назад
Rollin' down the river....
@shibolinemress8913
@shibolinemress8913 3 года назад
Did they crack a Rawhide whip at him? 😁
@rach_laze
@rach_laze 3 года назад
someone hasn't been watching enough Happy Feet 2 (lowkey better than the original ngl)
@Alphonselle
@Alphonselle 3 года назад
It's been 6 months but I still cant believe Max poured all that beef stock into the sink. tears were shed.
@maximilianmustermann5763
@maximilianmustermann5763 2 года назад
That seems rather wasteful for a medieval recipe. I guess they didn't pour it away but ate it as soup, or otherwise used it for a sauce or something.
@jimtomczak7374
@jimtomczak7374 Год назад
Maybe the wine's influence?
@bodyrumuae2914
@bodyrumuae2914 Год назад
@@maximilianmustermann5763 Could just drink it. Apparently drinking broth or stock is good for your health.
@shirleyannconfer9651
@shirleyannconfer9651 Год назад
I was wondering about that when I read the recipe. Very wasteful, especially when it could easily be reused.
@thanoseid2883
@thanoseid2883 Год назад
@@bodyrumuae2914 it is.
@Buzzy_Bee_Thoven
@Buzzy_Bee_Thoven 4 года назад
"This is gonna be a huge bite--" Proceeds to nibble from the edge
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
I chickened out 🤣
@xneurianx
@xneurianx 4 года назад
One has to maintain decorum.
@elfagottist
@elfagottist 4 года назад
Gentlefolk of good breeding never chomp or take large bites
@ushere5791
@ushere5791 4 года назад
@@TastingHistory lol!!
@caltheantirobot
@caltheantirobot 4 года назад
He knew you weren't going to avert your gaze
@jerkfudgewater147
@jerkfudgewater147 4 года назад
Buys “expensive cheese” makes medieval noodles from scratch... says it “takes like Kraft mac’n’cheese” 🤣
@faroukabad
@faroukabad 4 года назад
i think it would be better with ricotta or farmer's cheese.
@ilsje01
@ilsje01 4 года назад
As a Dutch person (Gouda cheese is a Dutch cheese) looking at the block of cheese he uses, i'm very sceptical and tempted to say it's not Gouda.
@miekekuppen9275
@miekekuppen9275 4 года назад
@@ilsje01 Living away from the cheese country these days I can confirm that most cheese sold as Gouda abroad is not the real stuff. Not a protected geographical indication.
@snazzypazzy
@snazzypazzy 4 года назад
@@ilsje01 It looks straight from the factory... I feel sorry for our American friends
@ajaxtelamonian5134
@ajaxtelamonian5134 3 года назад
I had a really nice aged gouda recently that was awesome.
@DanielleStJohn
@DanielleStJohn 4 года назад
That Neapolitan version for sure looks like American lasagna, and given that a significant portion of Italian immigrants to the US were Neapolitan, that *totally* checks out.
@spacemanapeinc7202
@spacemanapeinc7202 4 года назад
More Sicilian than Calabrian or Neapolitan.
@quelodequelo
@quelodequelo 4 года назад
Italy here, some friends from Neaple recommended me to try it only after Lent months, because they do so due to the heavy fat in the recipe. Stay healthy 😬✌️🖐️🇺🇲🇮🇹
@DionysusEleuther
@DionysusEleuther Год назад
I had this in a guesthouse in Romania, actually. I didn't catch the name of it (my Romanian was and is extremely limited) but the appearance and the flavor as you describe it was nearly identical, and it was served with the sticks instead of normal cutlery. It wasn't served as if it were an unusual dish they got out of an old book, so it looks like something similar has survived in that area or at least that family to the modern day.
@ashneehs
@ashneehs 3 года назад
I'm on the verge of crying, this is the first time I hear "vincisgrassi" on a lasagna video - they rarely name them in Italian videos as well ç_ç
@ariannedechateaumichel7777
@ariannedechateaumichel7777 4 года назад
One thing that strikes me is the similarity between "losenys" and "losenge," which is the medieval heraldic term (therefore a French term) used to denote a square rotated to be a diamond shape. The losenge is most familiar to us because it was used heraldically instead of the shield shape for a woman's heraldic display. Sounds like those three-finger squares to me!
@n.belliborovicka7679
@n.belliborovicka7679 3 года назад
This struck me too! Maybe it was a newish name for an existing "quick" Meal, which then got more complicated over time into the Italian lasagne, or remained uncomplicated in the Bulgarian breakfast dish which is essentially very very thin pasta "foils" Eaten with a soft white sheep's cheese, we usually used feta and topped with paprika fried gently in oil, but if you had a less salty version (proper sirene cheese) could be with sugar
@ganaraminukshuk0
@ganaraminukshuk0 3 года назад
That certainly explains why the diamond things on carpool lanes are also called lozenges. As a side note, cough drops are also called lozenges because they were originally shaped like diamonds.
@sabrasabranise3335
@sabrasabranise3335 3 года назад
Oh wow that is true ! Je ne l’avais pas remarqué. Bien joué ✌🏻
@iesika7387
@iesika7387 3 года назад
This is the etymology I had always heard. I even think I recall seeing a recipe that said to cut the dough into losenges during a unit on medieval food. That particular recipe was before the addition of cheese, and very heavy on the nutmeg.
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 3 года назад
Makes sense. Though I wouldn't recommend these lozenges as a cough drop.
@TonedMars
@TonedMars 4 года назад
Loving the medieval content. Might as well just cook everything from “The Forme of Cury” 🤷🏻‍♂️
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
I’d have a few years worth of content right there 🤣
@CindyLooWhovian
@CindyLooWhovian 4 года назад
I second this motion.
@Tomatonator
@Tomatonator 4 года назад
@@TastingHistory and I'd watch every second of it
@ushere5791
@ushere5791 4 года назад
@@CindyLooWhovian i third it! :) please and thank you, max--everything from apicius and forme of cury!!
@arokh72
@arokh72 4 года назад
@@TastingHistory if it means you'll be going for a few more years, at least, then I'll be happy with that.
@pickledboaby
@pickledboaby 4 года назад
WHY DID THIS NOT COME OUT ON A MONDAY *cries in Garfield*
@SinnohGreen
@SinnohGreen 4 года назад
He doesn’t do Mondays so he can’t be arsed cooking a lasagne.
@Vlad2319
@Vlad2319 4 года назад
@@SinnohGreen he may also film on Saturn's day rest on Sunday then edit in Mars's day
@WBlake01
@WBlake01 4 года назад
And here we made lasagna this monday/just yesterday...
@jared_du_jour
@jared_du_jour 4 года назад
@@Vlad2319 So-- Saturday, Sunday, and Tuesday? What happened to Moon's Day?
@dangly9454
@dangly9454 4 года назад
Because Garfield doesn't like Mondays
@doctordarkness100
@doctordarkness100 4 года назад
As a sicilian I've never heard of Lasagne alla norma,perhaps because we agree on the fact that the bolognese version is the one and true version, the rest being imitation or derivatives. Instead we have a lot of incarnations of "Pasta incasciata" which is similar, but consists of different types of pasta and fillings depending on the city or even the family. Also when talking about lasagna in Sicilia some confusion may be present due to the fact that the term was used to describe any type of long and somewhat thick pasta, like tagliatelle, the most famous example of this being the description of the farmer's daily feast in the novel "La Roba" by Giovanni Verga wherein he described the huge pots of lasagna needed to feed the farm workers but he actually either meant tagliatelle or vermicelli. As always good job and sorry for my english.
@katherinetutschek4757
@katherinetutschek4757 3 года назад
You have great English, no need to apologize!
@davidjoelsson4929
@davidjoelsson4929 3 года назад
I love spinach lasagne pasta plates
@jraaccounts
@jraaccounts 3 года назад
this was my understanding of italian lasagne history when i took an internet deep dive on it once upon a time - that what we eat here in america is actually italian-american (ie. created by italian immigrants, who were primarily from southern italy, after they arrived in america), rather than being a dish that's from italy; and that rather, lasagne alla bolognese is, in italy, considered the "ur" lasagne.
@SpicyButterflyWings
@SpicyButterflyWings 2 года назад
I know this is more than a year late, but your english is perfect. No apologies necessary friend :)
@gamingproject5601
@gamingproject5601 2 года назад
Credo per lasagne alla norma intenda la parmigiana Translation I think that for lasagne alla norma they mean the recipe that we call parmigiana, which is Layers of eggplant, mozzarella and tomato sauce layered like lasagne
@MichaelaFreeman
@MichaelaFreeman 3 года назад
Here in the Czech Republic, we make noodles with sugar, butter and ground poppy seed, another version with cinnamon sugar. I love it, so I can definitely relate to a sweet lasagna with apples!
@MsPomeranianlover
@MsPomeranianlover 2 года назад
In Hungary we also do the ground poppyseed version, and also finely ground walnuts or cottage cheese. Poppyseed is my favourite. Yummiest sweet noodles ever :)
@dorisfromage2349
@dorisfromage2349 4 года назад
"Doux" *does* mean "sweet", but it can also mean "soft" or "mild". That last definition would fit better as a counterpart to the "fort", meaning "strong".
@giansideros
@giansideros 4 года назад
Thanks for the clarification, gorgonzola has a similar naming convention as it's from a Romance speaking country. The milder version is "dulce" and the piquant version is "piccante", which I used to tell myself meant spicy not knowing better.
@clareselgin3208
@clareselgin3208 3 года назад
This is why I hang out on this channel. Smart people comments.
@sabrasabranise3335
@sabrasabranise3335 3 года назад
These words are French / Italian With the variations Doux / Dulce and Fort / Forte It’s more french when I think about it
@sanycschwartzwz4721
@sanycschwartzwz4721 3 года назад
@@giansideros piccante is spicy in french
@feralbluee
@feralbluee 3 года назад
Ahhh - thank you so very much. now i get it and it makes sense. a petite mwah to you :)
@trajanfidelis1532
@trajanfidelis1532 4 года назад
You need a show on the History Channel. I’d much rather watch you than pawn stars
@bluebagelman1920
@bluebagelman1920 4 года назад
He’s too good for the History Channel, as he discusses actual history 🙂 I am loving every episode!
@PhantomStella
@PhantomStella 4 года назад
The history channel wouldn't be brave enough to show actual history
@blackvial
@blackvial 3 года назад
Or put him on Food Network
@jasonwitwicker9796
@jasonwitwicker9796 3 года назад
P a w n S t a r s
@carltomacruz9138
@carltomacruz9138 3 года назад
History Channel already has a food history program. Unfortunately, they took Sohla El-Waylly as the host. Max even appeared as a guest in one of the episodes. I have nothing against Sohla, and I think she is a talented cook and chocolatier. But food history isn't her forte. Still, I am very very happy to see her thriving after shit hit the fan at Bon Appétit.
@maurogonzalez6609
@maurogonzalez6609 4 года назад
It actually makes a lot of sense that here in the US we use the South Italian spelling. Most Italian immigrants to the US were from the South (Naples, Sicily, etc.), while in Latin America most Italian immigrants were from the North.
@olivercuenca4109
@olivercuenca4109 2 года назад
Yeah and as far as Europe’s concerned, interactions have predominantly been with the richer, denser populated and more accessible north of Italy.
@maximilianmustermann5763
@maximilianmustermann5763 2 года назад
@@olivercuenca4109 I just realized that here in Germany, I have only ever known the Northern variant of Lasagne, and it's also spelled with an "e". I really wonder why that is, because a large part of the Italian immigrants to Germany in the 50ies & 60ies were from Southern Italy, around the Naples area. Maybe it's because Germans first learned to love the dish when they were on vacation in the northern regions of Italy and they just expected to get the same lasagne back home.
@wandanemer2630
@wandanemer2630 2 года назад
Funny thing. Here in the Argentina Capital, the most popular version is the Southern Italy one, as most of our italian inmigrants were from, back in the day.
@scottwhitley3392
@scottwhitley3392 2 года назад
In the U.K. there lots of Italian immigrant and descendants but mostly from northern Italy.
@user-lv6rn9cf8m
@user-lv6rn9cf8m Год назад
Have no idea what to make of any of this. Lasagna refers to one single sheet of pasta, the kind of pasta that goes into the dish lasagne.
@jean-yvesmead3972
@jean-yvesmead3972 4 года назад
"It's weird but I like it." Many a great evening has started with those words.
@headrushindi
@headrushindi 3 года назад
Frankly I am surprised that you haven' t got your own Television show. I don't think I can name one TV cook today who has such a well written , researched , and professional show that you are producing . Your personality is just perfect. It keeps me mesmerized and entertained , and I actually learn stuff. Just wonderful !!! As soon as I get the time , You can bet I am gonna whip up some of the dishes you have shared .
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 3 года назад
Thank you so much! Someday, maybe I'll be on TV : )
@Lafeolamom
@Lafeolamom 4 года назад
“Yeah it’s good “ guzzles down wine.
@faceless2302
@faceless2302 4 года назад
I saw that and immediately scrolled down to see if anyone else pointed that out
@RRRRRRP
@RRRRRRP 4 года назад
Montelpulciano wine deserves a good guzzle
@kamafa8418
@kamafa8418 4 года назад
I life in the south of Germany and the dish reminds me of Käsespätzle, Spätzle are typical noodles for the south of Germany . Made of flour, eggs, salt an water. Spread on a damped wooden plate and skratched fine stripes into boiling water. They are layered with fried onions and Emmental Swiss cheese in the same kind as you showed it in your video. By the way I love your channel!
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 4 года назад
I have had this once at a German restaurant! It was amazing!
@p.s.shnabel3409
@p.s.shnabel3409 3 года назад
Now, please don't crucify me ... but I don't know how to (nor care to learn how to) make my Spaetzle the way you describe (i.e. schaben). Never liked the Spaetzlespresse, either, always thought it hard to clean and quite messy (to say nothing of temperamental). Instead I got a Spaeztlewunder and have been absolutely happy with it. I'd encourage anyone interested in this versatile dish to go with this option (link spaetzlewunder.de/ .... it gives you an idea what you want to have). Maybe watch a video or two before you try it yourself. Spaetzle are a great option for a fast and delicious meal. They are cooked within minutes and can be used in a large variety of dishes. How they haven't become popular here in the States absolutely beats me, they are the ultimate in customizable food (including changing the recipe for the Spaeztle themselves).
@Swordandsteel
@Swordandsteel 4 года назад
Dish: *Has anything to do with a country that consumes alcohol * Max: WINE YAY No judgement I love you
@katiejohnston380
@katiejohnston380 3 года назад
As a professional musician and violin teacher, I really enjoyed the music you used in this video. Great choices!
@johntanner9787
@johntanner9787 2 года назад
Any idea what the guitar music is?
@laplanetesauvage5391
@laplanetesauvage5391 2 года назад
i'm dying how the descriptions of the black death mass burials helps us know what lasagne was like back then, truly amazing, we as a species will never stop describing things through food, because it is the easiest way to get others to understand
@jljljl1820
@jljljl1820 4 года назад
"or whatever else you can think of" is exactly how i cook. im keeping up the ancient style
@fedra76it
@fedra76it 4 года назад
That's how my father cooks, too. Unfortunately, his most profound belief is "If the single ingredients taste good, the final mix will taste good". Which is often untrue, sadly... :D
@samanthavanscoder9536
@samanthavanscoder9536 4 года назад
yeah i will never be the kind of person who goes to the store for 1 ingredient so i can cook something
@jljljl1820
@jljljl1820 4 года назад
@@fedra76it i try not to make that mistake :D
@chadfalardeau3259
@chadfalardeau3259 4 года назад
I MacGyver my meals. Cook with what you have
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 4 года назад
Me too! I can never make the exact same recipe twice, I'm always trying out different additions to see what might make it taste even better :)
@lonerider92
@lonerider92 4 года назад
US: Blood vs Crips Italy: Southern Lasagna Vs. Northern Lasagne
@zennvirus7980
@zennvirus7980 4 года назад
Canada/US: The Pemmican War.
@gege0298
@gege0298 3 года назад
France: Pain au Chocolat vs Chocolatine
@parkchimmin7913
@parkchimmin7913 3 года назад
@@gege0298 America: Allow me to introduce myself *_chocolate croissants_*
@angelashallow7930
@angelashallow7930 3 года назад
I just read that as blood vs crisps and went when the hell did Americans start calling potato chips blood
@lonerider92
@lonerider92 3 года назад
@@angelashallow7930 😂😂😂
@YukitsuTimes
@YukitsuTimes 4 года назад
That recipe looks like a medieval equivalent to microwaving cheese over your cinnamon toast crunch because you ran out of saltines. Not that I'm speaking out of experience or anything.
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 4 года назад
Misread as "ran out of sardines", comment was thoroughly worse to read.
@averageodd
@averageodd 4 года назад
Soooo... was it good? Asking for a friend...
@YukitsuTimes
@YukitsuTimes 4 года назад
@@averageodd I wouldn't know, but I assume it would be fine.
@LancesArmorStriking
@LancesArmorStriking 4 года назад
That sounds like a great dish for when you're high ngl
@SilverGreeneye
@SilverGreeneye 3 года назад
That... actually... sounds kinda... good
@unternehme
@unternehme Год назад
As a person from Bologna, I know how contentious this issue can be! So kudos for covering this thorny topic in such a well-researched and accurate way! (love the lasagna family tree!)
@robertcornhole5197
@robertcornhole5197 3 года назад
Medieval English garfielf: *I muste obtayne ye goode lasaga*
@raynemichelle2996
@raynemichelle2996 3 года назад
Lasaga 😛
@andytopley314
@andytopley314 4 года назад
You should check out 'Tods Cutler' for authentic medieval cutlery sets. They are all handmade & I have never heard of anyone buying from Tod and being disappointed, and his prices are incredibly competitive. P.s. love the channel & keep up the good work
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
I’m checking them out now. Thank you!
@41rmartin
@41rmartin 4 года назад
Also you can just buy a Mace on the internet now, which is neat.
@akicauchemar7286
@akicauchemar7286 4 года назад
I got a quillon dagger from Tod. Only wholehearted recommendation
@snazzypazzy
@snazzypazzy 4 года назад
They are way more affordable than I thought they would be! To bad I still need shipping across the atlantic...
@Rylatar
@Rylatar 4 года назад
The thumbnail reminded me of Polish łazanki - which is a dish that has been brought to us from Italy by queen consort Bona Sforza (and most likely derived its name from lasagna) and was initially made just like Italian lasagna - nowadays it evolved to a more loose form with smaller noodles, usually eaten with sauerkraut , mushrooms or meat but older traditional recipes also mention cheese and many other things.
@varana
@varana 4 года назад
This is sooo Central European - "oh, there's some food. Let's eat it with sauerkraut and mushrooms!" :D
@Rylatar
@Rylatar 4 года назад
@@varana True. And I live for that. : 3
@almostideal1306
@almostideal1306 4 года назад
I love how that Apicius is basically "just add meat"
@almostideal1306
@almostideal1306 4 года назад
@StinkyPirates Hell no. :D
@almostideal1306
@almostideal1306 4 года назад
@StinkyPirates I'm not sure, but I'm a huge fan of "more meat"
@almostideal1306
@almostideal1306 4 года назад
@StinkyPirates Now you're just flattering me
@almostideal1306
@almostideal1306 4 года назад
@StinkyPirates My phi9losopjy is more meat. Doing veg, add bacon, more meat, doing minced beef, more meat, always more meat.
@almostideal1306
@almostideal1306 4 года назад
@StinkyPirates My tip, fry your bacon until it's crunchy. Add crushed garlic and scallions/spring onions. Melt in some butter and then add cabbage.Fry until tender, trust me, it is a side you will love.
@joshuapatrick682
@joshuapatrick682 Год назад
The best lasagna I ever had was a rolled lasagna with prosciutto, spinach and ricotta. It was baked with a red sauce on the bottom and a white sauce on the top. It was magnificent!
@joeragliardo
@joeragliardo Год назад
That’s cannelloni!
@MackerelCat
@MackerelCat Год назад
Or maybe Rotolo
@troyard9047
@troyard9047 3 года назад
I just have to say for the record that my family's lasagna recipe is made with bechemel and a bolognese. And the bechemel does have sweet spices like nutmeg and cinnamon.
@nicolettiespaghetti
@nicolettiespaghetti 4 года назад
It's interesting that they use nutmeg in the pasta because in Greece when my grandpa makes any pasta dish he uses nutmeg in the tomato sauce or in the bechamel
@silvananivis9867
@silvananivis9867 4 года назад
Same for Belgium. Salt, (white) pepper and nutmeg is the standard basic requirement for most things
@merindymorgenson3184
@merindymorgenson3184 4 года назад
I always put a sprinkle of nutmeg in my bechamel! Not sure where I tasted it from, but remembered when I was trying to make it that it had a bit more complex flavor. My ruminating through my food bank memory produced nutmeg as the possible ingredient. I added it, and it was perfect. It’s not enough that you can blatantly taste the nutmeg at least the way I’ve tasted it. It just adds a little complexity to the flavor. And lucky you with a Greek grandpa that cooks you food! What’s your favorite?
@nicolettiespaghetti
@nicolettiespaghetti 4 года назад
Merindy Morgenson of course! I love the keftas my grandpa makes. They’re just Greek meatballs in tomato sauce but they’re so good.
@merindymorgenson3184
@merindymorgenson3184 4 года назад
Nicolette K mmmm! Those do sound good! Are you learning to make them so that you can make them for your grandkids? I think family recipes are a wonderful legacy. I loved my paternal grandma’s mashed potatoes and fried chicken, and also her strawberry shortbread was really outstanding. And my maternal grandma’s chocolate chip cookies were my favorites. Lots of other things too, but those really stood out. I don’t think I ever saw either of my grandfather’s cooking. Unfortunately, I have no recipes from either grandma, because they didn’t use them. My p. grandma tried to tell me the ingredients for her famous apple cream pie. When I tried to make it, it turned out a mess. But her directions were, “add some of this.” How much? “Well, until it looks right.” Any idea of how much that would be? “Oh, maybe a cup or so.” I finally got an edible version, but it was nothing like the magic of my grandma’s. Unfortunately, she has passed on now, so I’ll never be able to tease out the “secret ingredient” from her, or be able to watch her make it, but I’ll probably keep tinkering with it from time to time.
@nicolettiespaghetti
@nicolettiespaghetti 4 года назад
Merindy Morgenson yes I think it’s great to keep recipes in the family. I make my grandpa’s lemon chicken all the time and my mom showed me how to make her Italian food as well. Her homemade marinara sauce is the best.
@wendy5256
@wendy5256 4 года назад
Appetizer: Lasgna Main Course: Lasgna Dessert: Lasgna
@Ashden96
@Ashden96 3 года назад
okay garfield
@luanasari5161
@luanasari5161 3 года назад
L A S G N A
@shadmanhasan4205
@shadmanhasan4205 3 года назад
Bch Lasagna Bch Lasagna Look at Tseries, they going crying to their mama
@scottwhitley3392
@scottwhitley3392 2 года назад
Sounds like a great meal
@xneurianx
@xneurianx 4 года назад
I eat all my meals with a stick. Soup takes a while.
@banditmc12
@banditmc12 4 года назад
I imagine steak is also a challenge
@xRemRooodx
@xRemRooodx 4 года назад
@@banditmc12 Just inpale the steak and eat it like a sucker.
@matthewthiesen6098
@matthewthiesen6098 4 года назад
Comment for the win🎉
@Er0ndites
@Er0ndites 4 года назад
gotta smash the end of the stick until it looks like a paintbrush and then paint that soup on your tongue
@kaelang12
@kaelang12 4 года назад
Ysgramor's Soup Stick
@Miserybahamut
@Miserybahamut 3 года назад
One cannot watch just a single "Tasting History." I get lost in these and ... I've got so many bookmarked. So many. QQ
@DonyaLane
@DonyaLane 3 года назад
"I'm sticking with the stick!" LOL Max, the sweet lasagna iteration made me think of kugel. That got me thinking that it might be very interesting to do a Tasting History series on some traditional Jewish dishes. Ancient Passover foods might be an interesting subject! I have a feeling the preparations we have today are really Eastern European interpretations, and what they were before that is a mystery.
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 3 года назад
Funny you mention it; I’ve just started researching for an episode on the Seder.
@DonyaLane
@DonyaLane 3 года назад
@@TastingHistory , wow! I hope it turns out to be an interesting subject! I can tell that you really dive deep into the historical stuff. I've been binge watching...
@ragnkja
@ragnkja Год назад
Perhaps a look into Sephardic traditions might help unravel what’s part of the ancient core tradition and what’s Ashkenazi-specific? Since the things that are common to Sephardim and Ashkenazim are more likely to be part of their shared origin.
@tablon6948
@tablon6948 4 года назад
Man i love this content so fricking much, as a foodie and a history lover this channel is like a gift from the gods
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
Just a gift from Max 🤣
@lelekasa8564
@lelekasa8564 4 года назад
@@TastingHistory It's basically the same :)
@prussianeagle1941
@prussianeagle1941 4 года назад
Townsends is in the house bois.
@francescobromo
@francescobromo 4 года назад
Lol I’m Italian and I’d never noticed that it’s spelled differently in the North! Great episode!
@PiousMoltar
@PiousMoltar 4 года назад
I'm English and I'd never noticed Americans spelt it differently. Yes, "spelt". That's the correct word in England. Not to be confused with the type of corn. And yes, it is corn. Americans seem to reserve the word "corn" for maize. But wheat, rye, barley, spelt, etc, they're all types of corn. And I found out a couple of days ago that my mum had never heard of spelt, somehow.
@francescobromo
@francescobromo 4 года назад
@@PiousMoltar Lol I know that, I lived in the UK for several years. I am now more accustomed to American spelling. Also spelt is a type of wheat, not corn :)
@zeriyx
@zeriyx 3 года назад
@@PiousMoltar i am american and i read julius caesar's memoir on his invasion of gaul. he kept referring to tribes either giving or offering tributes of "corn" and i kept thinking, "...wasn't corn part of the columbian exchange?" yeah, i guess it's more of a general term outside of north america. people would look at you like a psycho if you called corn "maize" where i live.
@Groovy_Bruce
@Groovy_Bruce 3 года назад
@@PiousMoltar spelled, heathen.
@raynemichelle2996
@raynemichelle2996 3 года назад
@@francescobromo Originally corn just meant grain, in general. Apparently it still does in the UK
@ftcgaming4651
@ftcgaming4651 4 года назад
I'm from Italy and to be honest I didn't even know there were so many different types of lasagna still around. Though the one I think of when I hear lasagna is definitely the Bolognese.
@livinglifeleona
@livinglifeleona 3 года назад
It makes me so happy seeing you amused and just having fun, candidly giving us opinions on these dishes. Truly a passion project brought to life for us all to enjoy.
@stellaeleptheriadou3062
@stellaeleptheriadou3062 Год назад
Lasagna da Formel, the sweet Lasagna with walnuts, sounds a bit similar to baklavá, which is also layered with very thin phyllo-dough
@thebratqueen
@thebratqueen 4 года назад
Judges would have also accepted "Rolling rolling rolling... RAW DOUGH!"
@anniebale4343
@anniebale4343 4 года назад
You gotta admit, though. The way he sings "lasagna" with such grace could never be replicated.
@jamesterwilliger3176
@jamesterwilliger3176 4 года назад
"Whatever else you can think of" This is either a dream or a nightmare for those with vivid imaginations.
@ushere5791
@ushere5791 4 года назад
certainly sounds like my college dining hall. one time they served, and i quote, "beef and reef." i picked up one of the beyond-sad breaded fried shrimp by the tail, watched it droop apace, and announced to my table-mates, "wow--these shrimp really *are* battered." (i'll show myself out.)
@MildredCady
@MildredCady 4 года назад
I helped a friend make these for an SCA event and we used a little saffron to color half of the noodles (which we did as squares/diamonds).
@diananoonen2262
@diananoonen2262 4 года назад
Your channel just brings sanity and comfort to this very insane world. The Black Plague speaks to the fact that better times are in our future and good food with go forth.
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
That is so kind. Thank you
@iagoabadam977
@iagoabadam977 3 года назад
There's a recipe for ravioli (Ravieles) in British Library Add MS 32085 (late 13th or early 14th C). It's a sweet dough stuffed with cheese, butter, cream, parsley, sage, and shallots, served on a bed of cheese and topped with more cheese.
@jeniphirtaylor-mcintire81
@jeniphirtaylor-mcintire81 4 года назад
Me, lazy and without ingredients on hand: [tops a no-boil lasagna noodle with cream cheese and cinnamon] ::craunch:: Mmm! A dish fit for a queen!
@yungboy4216
@yungboy4216 4 года назад
I love comments like this
@jurassicsmackdown6359
@jurassicsmackdown6359 3 года назад
That's... Actually not a half bad idea
@Karlandra
@Karlandra 3 года назад
Add nutmeg....
@leticiacsan
@leticiacsan 4 года назад
I really want to try that ancient lasagna, for some reason (the reason being "sheets of dough deep-fried in olive oil")
@alyssia777
@alyssia777 4 года назад
The person who originally made the comparison of lasagna with mass body burying after the plague... Did they just really love lasagna a lot and were seeing it in everything or they're some sort of dark psychopath lol!?
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 4 года назад
They just liked to sprinkle cheese on dead bodies. It's not complicated.
@OnyxXThePunch
@OnyxXThePunch 3 года назад
Yes
@katelillo1932
@katelillo1932 3 года назад
Based on their “only a little bit of cheese in lasagna” ideology, I’m going with psychopath.
@samanthamaxwell924
@samanthamaxwell924 3 года назад
"Whatever else you can think of" "Dead people!" "Err..."
@markw-s5734
@markw-s5734 3 года назад
@@schoo9256 😂
@kallaghanburke2857
@kallaghanburke2857 3 года назад
I have to mention that I really appreciate that you make sure to limit the noises of eating to a minimum at the end of your episodes. It may not be apparent to people not familiar with recording and may not be noticed at first but it's a truely professional touch.
@chloegargiulo5289
@chloegargiulo5289 3 года назад
That debate in terms of what the ingredients to a modern lasagna are has certainly caused its fair share of conflict! I (an Italian-American) once got into a knock-down, drag-out Reddit fight with a Brit over whether proper lasagna had ricotta or béchamel (ricotta all the way, baby). Seriously, it was vicious and though it was some time ago, I’m still steamed about it. I am gratified to see echoed here what I found when I did more research, which is that different regions have different recipes (and therefore, most importantly, I am not wrong!). I found in my research that southern Italy, like Naples, uses ricotta and many if not most Italian immigrants to the US have come from southern Italy, which is why the ricotta version is more popular in the States.
@rudimentaryprobing5423
@rudimentaryprobing5423 4 года назад
Bro, as an Italian that loves arcanine, this might just have to default be my favourite episode ever. Keep up the good work!
@matt_it1990
@matt_it1990 4 года назад
In Bologna they say that the right thickmess for a Lasagna is when lifting the pasta you can kind of make out your hand against a light source on the other side... "grandmother"'s techniques"😂 but they always work
@Fikamar27
@Fikamar27 3 года назад
Window panning! But yeah it does works lol
@thevioletskull8158
@thevioletskull8158 3 года назад
Max: I'm going to make medieval lasagna, form England! Me a half Italian: *WHAT THE-*
@OkamiPrincess15
@OkamiPrincess15 3 года назад
Good thing you weren’t drinking anything at the time!
@scottwhitley3392
@scottwhitley3392 2 года назад
Wait till you find out all the earliest Mac n cheese recipe’s come from England 😂
@avengerex
@avengerex 3 года назад
I am rarely this excited on discovering a new channel but this channel is super dope.
@Oh_The_Irony
@Oh_The_Irony 4 года назад
Neapolitan here. This is actually really interesting, I didn't know that "our" local variant was considered a heavyweight in the contest. Everyone I know considers the neapolitan lasagna a riff, a variant, on the most iconic dish from Emilia-Romagna. Now over there, well, they actually have heated arguments over the damn thing. Someone I know from Bologna taught me a really interesting variant which she claims is canonical as THE lasagna (despite the fact that it's the first time I've seen it in my life): basically, she puts two layers of pasta on top of each other and bakes the whole thing at absurd temperatures for just a few minutes. She'll then rip out the top layer, which will now look like a biscuit, and serve the rest.
@claudiocaprioli4123
@claudiocaprioli4123 4 года назад
Qui c'è un resoconto sulla disputa abbastanza dettagliato www.lacucinaitaliana.it/news/in-primo-piano/lasagne-storia/. Mi raccomando, fallo leggere a chi crede che la lasagna sia stata inventata dagli emiliani.
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 4 года назад
God, I love Italian food fights. You guys come up with the weirdest ways of making the same dish, and it's all delicious.
@alexmaraver5581
@alexmaraver5581 3 года назад
American Lasgna is the Southern Italian Variant. Curiously in South America and other countries that had large Italian immigration and communities, they make Lasagna in the Northern Bolognese style with Bechamel, loads of cheese and meat sauce with no Marinara.
@LynnHermione
@LynnHermione 3 года назад
Crispy lasagna pasta is a wonderful snack in its own right, I have made it before. Accidentally.
@claudiocaprioli4123
@claudiocaprioli4123 3 года назад
@@alexmaraver5581 That's because South America mostly had northern italian immigration
@AppalachianTemplar
@AppalachianTemplar 4 года назад
Quarantine beard is coming along well. And when can we expect an album of Max sings the classic western cooking songs?
@mikedrop4421
@mikedrop4421 4 года назад
Our family tree is powered by lasagna. We're Irish but my family always has lasagna on Christmas and every family get together that's not a BBQ so I thought it was Irish food as a kid lol. Maybe the fact English varients exist explains it.
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
Irish lasagna. Love it!
@clispyleaf
@clispyleaf 3 года назад
My family has an amazing heirloom recipe for lasagne, it's the bolognese version passed down from my grandfather's parents who immigrated to the wales. I always looked at american lasagna recipes a bit askance. "Why do they all do it so weird?!" Now i know why. Thanks 😆
@paprika7577
@paprika7577 2 года назад
It's so funny you say that because we look at how you guys make it the same way. It's just so weird! Literally unheard of in the US
@fireemblem723
@fireemblem723 2 года назад
My dad has a killer lasagna. It's a monster holiday tradition of ours that takes three. full. days. Day one is dedicated to just making the sauce. Day two, the various meats and sausage, which get an early soak in the sauce to further meld all those flavors. Day three is noodles and final assembly. And it's no hyperbole to say this produces nearly 20 lbs of food. Aluminum baking dishes bend and buckle under the weight of this unholy, yet very delicious, abomination upon the cullinary arts. We then eat it for basically a week, sending metric tons home with friends just to save space in our fridge.
@SarafinaSummers
@SarafinaSummers Год назад
I'm sneaking over to yours for Christmas after smoking half a pound of weed. jj
@hamguin47
@hamguin47 4 года назад
Just looking at the finished product, medieval English cooking looks a lot like modern era broke college kid cooking.
@michealpersicko9531
@michealpersicko9531 2 года назад
Actually that's not a trait specific only to Medieval English food. England's food always looked like it was haphazardly thrown together by someone with zero basic culinary skills. I wouldn't trust that the country who created mushy peas or adult baby food local cuisine to be visually appealing even when you aren't strapped for cash and can't afford anything else to eat.
@dnmurphy48
@dnmurphy48 2 года назад
@@michealpersicko9531 Funny, but I love mushy peas, especially with Fish and Chips :)
@kevinroche3334
@kevinroche3334 Год назад
@@michealpersicko9531 That was rather rude. And a terrible case of generalising. I do not appreciate it at all - learn some manners.
@Whatismusic123
@Whatismusic123 Год назад
​@@kevinroche3334 boohoo Brit 🤡
@tracyajones
@tracyajones Год назад
@@Whatismusic123 It was still incredibly rude.
@suzybabyyeah
@suzybabyyeah 4 года назад
Well, this explains why my American husband thought my lasagne was weird. I am English and we commonly eat Lasagne alla bolognese al forno, so that's what I made him. He is used to Lasagna alla Napoletana. Mine is better.
@syl-p6271
@syl-p6271 4 года назад
What's the difference?
@alligatormonday6365
@alligatormonday6365 4 года назад
@@syl-p6271 Alla bolognese is just layers of noodles, bolognese and bechamel sauce. Napolitano is what we Americans grew up eating. Layers of pasta, meat heavy ragu and cheese. Alla Bolognese is the superior lasagna and its the only one i'll cook now.
@1911Zoey
@1911Zoey 4 года назад
@@alligatormonday6365 I second that. The rich bechamel sauce makes it all the more better.
@Bevalderon
@Bevalderon 4 года назад
Neapolitan here, no idea what you are talking about. Much love, from Naples xxx
@alligatormonday6365
@alligatormonday6365 4 года назад
@@Bevalderon It's the way we Americans incorrectly differentiate lasagne. Haha
@neoistheone7802
@neoistheone7802 4 года назад
My dad used to make the best homemade lasagna and ravioli, linguini, cannoli, meatballs etc. Miss his cooking.
@alexblair4511
@alexblair4511 Год назад
I have a coworker who's last day is TOMORROW. Found out about a potluck for her TODAY. I walked out to my car thinking "what am I going to make for her?" I pull out my phone and I see THIS. and what's even better is that I work at a preschool and my coworker who's leaving had a classroom called the BUSY BEE ROOM! Insane. What a blessing. So long story short, they're in my oven. haha 😅❤🧡💛🍯
@lucasdegennaro
@lucasdegennaro 3 года назад
I think I'm in love with this man! I could listen to him ALL day!! like when mom and dad read you a story before bedtime!! Just LOVE!!!
@kana0kitsune
@kana0kitsune 4 года назад
I'd love to see a recipe from Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, a mexican nun who was a genius writer who happens to have a book of recipes from Mexico in the second half of the 1600's
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 4 года назад
This sounds so cool.
@matthewmcree1992
@matthewmcree1992 4 года назад
I second this suggestion! As a Mexican, I would love to learn the history of the early New Spain-era Mexican cuisine. Guaranteed most of the dishes are still delicious! And who doesn't love Mexican food? It's even spreading (finally after 500 years of Western Imperialism in Latin America, the damn snobs LOL) like wildfire over in Europe!
@tinymuse
@tinymuse 4 года назад
Yesssss!!!
@oneparticularlysmartape
@oneparticularlysmartape 4 года назад
We need a physical History Hat
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
Soon. Soon.
@hanstun1
@hanstun1 4 года назад
Don't feed the nerds! :)
@DH-xw6jp
@DH-xw6jp 4 года назад
A floppy hat is a must!
@oneparticularlysmartape
@oneparticularlysmartape 4 года назад
@@DH-xw6jp I was thinking more like a bycocket
@jeph115
@jeph115 4 года назад
@@TastingHistory let me recommend a miller's hat, they'll look quite good with the culinary aspect.
@ABOWDEN107
@ABOWDEN107 4 года назад
Thank you so much for starting this channel this year! It’s so amazing!!
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
Thank you for watching it!
@HandyHelons
@HandyHelons 3 года назад
The best lasagne I’ve ever eaten was in Rome. In a little cafe full of locals. Business men/women and students and older people all seated at tables that were for everybody to share. It’s was just so tasty and felt like a huge family dinner with people popping in and out. We sat with some people we didn’t know and had a lovely time!
@MrMalagutiAle
@MrMalagutiAle 3 года назад
As I am from Bologna province I may have something so say about our traditional lasagne alla bolognese. First, we use a good amount of Parmigiano but not that much as you may think. Then we use to make green egg pasta, by preparing it with some boiled spinach or (specially in the countryside) boiled nettle leaves. Many people (like me) use to half cook the pasta in salty water and cool it down in a tin with fresh milk while assembling the lasagne, so the pasta is resulting more soft and rich and will raise a bit, while finishing cooking in the over, later. In some part of Italy, people use to call "lasagne" any pasta cut in stripes, but Bologna has it's own tradition which may not be so ancient as others.. but's so tasty!
@ActuallyJozu
@ActuallyJozu 4 года назад
"This is gonna be a huge bite, so turn away" *takes moderate sized bite*
@argella1300
@argella1300 4 года назад
13:12 as someone of Italian heritage who grew up with Italian grandparents and great grandparents, I can 10000% believe that families were destroyed over the lasagne debate 🤣
@elijahramirez2017
@elijahramirez2017 4 года назад
Ah, I remember those sow's udder and fish sloppy joes from middle school. Good times! Lol
@MrAranton
@MrAranton 4 года назад
Considering sows udders are usually discarded these days and how much (or rather little) schools spend on lunch, odds are you really do remember meals containing sow's udder - even if that wasn't actually pointed out to you.
@elijahramirez2017
@elijahramirez2017 4 года назад
@@MrAranton Fair point! With all the random animal bits that are thrown into food, who knows what is going into most commerical foods?
@andreasacerdoti7881
@andreasacerdoti7881 Год назад
It’s so good to finally find someone getting their Italian pronunciation correct. Kudos.
@CompliantCharlie
@CompliantCharlie 2 года назад
I was raised on a noodle dish called "Kugel" that seems to match your description of the Loseyns. You should make a Kugel! Egg noodles, cinnamon, raisins, etc. So good! Lots of people hate it. I love it!
@brendonhavener
@brendonhavener 4 года назад
So when Shadiversity makes his medieval castle are you going to live there as the castle chef?
@matthew4528
@matthew4528 4 года назад
That would be perfect
@Gooberpatrol66
@Gooberpatrol66 4 года назад
All medieval-related youtubers will live in the castle and perform their related specialities
@stamasd8500
@stamasd8500 4 года назад
@@Gooberpatrol66 Skallagrim will be on cutting duty. :)
@phileas007
@phileas007 4 года назад
Now that's one ambitious cross-over I'd like to see.
@prussianeagle1941
@prussianeagle1941 4 года назад
@@stamasd8500 No he will be on forging duty XD
@ThatKenpoGuy
@ThatKenpoGuy 4 года назад
You should find a recipe to make traditional Incan or Aztec hot chocolate! I remember that drinking chocolate was very popular and important to the Mesoamerican peoples but have not been able to find a recipe of what the drink would have been like! :)
@e.urbach7780
@e.urbach7780 4 года назад
I researched that, as well, and the oldest recipe that I could find was from Antonio de Colmenero, translated into English by Don Diego de Vades-forte in "A Curious Treatise of the Nature and Quality of Chocolate" which was published in London in 1640, and in Spain before 1631. He described the various ways that the Spanish drank chocolate in Europe and the New World, but also wrote a bit about how chocolate was used by the Aztec before the Spanish came. The book is available for free on Google Books, if you want to look it up.
@ThatKenpoGuy
@ThatKenpoGuy 4 года назад
@@e.urbach7780 Thank you so much, I'll have to look it up! I was very curious as I have seen many references to it, but hadn't found many details.
@Darkover92
@Darkover92 4 года назад
Once again you thoroughness surprises me! I didn't even know about "lasagne da fornel" and from a quick research on Google it appears that it's typical of a small valley in the Veneto Dolomites (Valle del Biois) where I've been going on vacation since I was a child. Thanks again for your work!
@jspuckett73
@jspuckett73 11 месяцев назад
When my grandmother made homemade egg noodles, she would cut them and then place them to dry on newspaper in an oven with the pilot light on. Some conventional oven lights do generate a bit of heat. I do the same trick with using the light in my electric oven. It works fine for drying out homemade pasta (I use parchment paper instead of newspaper).
@Aerisblack
@Aerisblack 3 года назад
I'm from Tuscany, Italy and I've always did the Bolognese one with besciamella and Bolognese Ragu.
@traviswonders
@traviswonders 4 года назад
Your spaghetti western music/singing made my morning XD. See what I did there, with the spaghetti? Ah nevermind ;)
@hughcapet5160
@hughcapet5160 4 года назад
Do you have a loicence for that loysens?
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory 4 года назад
🤣
@suppiluiiuma5769
@suppiluiiuma5769 4 года назад
Beat me to it
@maladypond
@maladypond 4 года назад
If ever there were a statement I needed on a shirt . . .
@jorgejarai
@jorgejarai 4 года назад
Oi, mate! And you got a loicence for making that comment, amirite?
@BalanceRight871
@BalanceRight871 4 года назад
As an Italian, I was like wtf when I’ve read the title, but I found the whole history very interesting. Today I try to make it.
@goblingunk_
@goblingunk_ 4 года назад
I like when he's explained everything, everything is cooked, and he tries it and just reacts like he normally would without the presentation.
@matthewmarin703
@matthewmarin703 3 года назад
2:30 Something that just caught my attention today on the subject of medieval spice mixtures. Besides its relation to poudre douce and poudre forte, wikipedia also mentions "poudre fine" and "poudre lombard", but I can find even less information on those than on the first two. Could you do an episode on the various medieval spice mixtures one day?
@spacemanapeinc7202
@spacemanapeinc7202 4 года назад
“Ruayn Cheese” sounds a lot like “Rouen Cheese”. Rouen is the Capital of Normandy, also Normandy is known for it’s cheeses in France, and since the Monarchs of England used to be rulers of the Dukedom of Normandy that leads me to the conclusion that “Ruayn Cheese” may be related to some of the cheeses of Normandy. *TELL ME! WHAT DO YOU THINK!*
@schoo9256
@schoo9256 4 года назад
I like it
@quietcat
@quietcat 4 года назад
That's what I was thinking
@PrettyH8Mach1n3
@PrettyH8Mach1n3 4 года назад
Makes sense
@MandingoChief1
@MandingoChief1 4 года назад
Is there a particular historical type of cheese that is made there? (I.e.- what type or name would one look for at the market?)
@andrewhawking7893
@andrewhawking7893 3 года назад
J'ai pensé la même chose, c'est la fromage du genre Rouen.
@MetalHeadReacts
@MetalHeadReacts 4 года назад
This is the ONLY cooking channel i have ever seen that ACTUALLY knows about the plural and singular aspect of the name... it's something that has always bugged me that people call it lasagna with an A because that would mean you cooked just a single layer of pasta since the sheet itself in called Lasagna, many sheets/layers is Lasagne.
@KyrieFortune
@KyrieFortune 4 года назад
I'm from Southern Italy and we say "lasagna", singular form, because Italian linguistics are a weak version of whatever the Caucasus has going on, with romance languages popping around from city to city and being different enough to be unintellegible while non-linguists still believe they're Italian dialects nd not wholeass languages
@andersbenke3596
@andersbenke3596 4 года назад
When they say stick, they probably meant stickER, like a knife, which everyone, children included, would have carried at the time.
@pattheplanter
@pattheplanter 4 года назад
There is some doubt as to whether it was a stirring stick or a spoon.
@-PadMo-
@-PadMo- 4 года назад
They probably did mean more of a stick, actually! One of the ancestors of the fork is what in German is called an "Esspfriem"/"Essdorn" ("eating thorn"), and it's really just a thick stick with a pointy end, much thicker than the stick he used. Mine are forged metal, but wooden ones were likely more common. If you google Essdorn, you can see 'em! They're alright to eat with, not much different from a fork tbh
@andersbenke3596
@andersbenke3596 4 года назад
@@-PadMo- I stand corrected, then. I did not know these things existed! Thank you for telling me.
@isthatrubble
@isthatrubble Год назад
your explanation of the two different kinds of italian lasagne - the kind with the wavy pasta and the kind with spinach - suddenly made so many things make sense! our "family" lasagne recipe is based on an auatralian woman's weekly cookbook from the late 80s/early 90s, and it jas bechamel and spinach in it. I always wondered why some people make it with wavy pasta and ricotta..... never again will I think that's stupid!
@helenjones4550
@helenjones4550 Год назад
I’m thinking a hand-whittled small branch of some fruit wood with a slightly sharpened end is more what might have been used. Everybody carried a small all purpose knife for all manner of uses.
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