Have you tried any of these snacks or candy from Poland? 😍 Here's the link the Polish Snacks Part 2🍫: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-gmIrjSB293s.html If you're interested in treats from other countries, check out this video on Greek snacks and candy: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xg58Ru3QLSY.html
I have a butcher in my town run by first generation Polish immigrants. They have all of these things, plus other random Polish stuff. Along with selling regular meat, they sell recipes from their hometown in Poland, and other Polish snacks and meals.
Ja strasznie nie lubię alkoholu w cukierkach, więc go doskonale rozumiem. To był największy zawód za dzieciaka (ja nawet malagi nie jadłam). Uuuu, powinni spróbować tikitaków i kasztanków.
There are so many different flavours of it and it is mainly a flavoured sugar :) So please, DO NOT GET ADDICTED! By the way, Phil, do you like marzipan sweets? There are tons of them to be bought in Germany. I wonder if average German person really like marzipan, because I love it so much!!!
They are soooo old I remember my mum used to binge eat coconut ones 20 years ago it's nice to see even packaging did not change throughout the years 😉😉
Whaaaaaat? Wow, I was living in Poland while studying in the uni and don’t know about it. Imagine how many hedgehogs I help because I was eating like a tons of jeżyki😂
Also, oranżada and draże korsarz/marynarz are really old - like packaging almost didn't change for decades, so many people love them for nostalgia. Oranżada is also sold in dry version - you add the powder to water to make bubbly drink 😂 as kid I remember always eating it dry tho.
@@Tulipan_. Yup. When we were in primary school, me and my mates, we were doing it with Zozole from time to time, which wasn't the best idea, since the Zozole powder was sparkling. 😄 Sniffing it like cocaine. Jesus. xd
My polish friend (born and grown up in Germany) always told me that they have awesome sweets in Poland. He always brings them over when he visits his grandparents.
I love Poland and on the list for when we can return to Europe, a great place to travel to, so much history and the food 100% delicious. Love their sweets.
Ptasie Mleczko was created in 1936 in the chocolate factory of Jan Wedel, the richest man in Poland before World War II. Delighted by the taste of the new sweet, he asked his employees what might be missing for someone who has everything: health, family, money, happiness and one of them replied "I guess only bird's milk". This is the name given to the new product: Ptasie Mleczko (Bird's Milk)
Well, I've never seen anyone mixing oranżada with vodka 😂 and yeah, we have a lot of chocolates with alcohol 🙈 Phill you read in Polish very well 😁 And you can find "draże" (the ones you loved so much) in Polish shops in Germany easily ;) At least I can get them in Köln 😂🙈
Exactly - that is a bar with the Advocaat filling. In Poland some people are making the homemade version of that liquer called "ajerkoniak". That name comes from German "eier-" (eggs) "-cognac" and it is made from eggs and spirit.
"Pawełek" have also some other liquids in like chocolate and if i rem good that there's a cherry liquid or som but it tastes as advoocat but theres no taste of it only its chili-like and smells alcohol too
@@juniperjane9582 However to most people in the world is great. That's why Italian food is the most exported and influential food. Also, much healthier than polish food
@@DeanaandPhil If you travel to Poland I recommend to hike in beautiful Riesengebirge and to visit the nice little towns near the border (Jelenia Góra and Karpacz). In 1996, when we Germans still had the D-Mark everything there was so incredibly cheap for us. In Poland you could go to Pizza Hut and have a big Pizza, a drink and ice cream for 5 D-Mark (about 2,50 Euro)... Not possible in 2021 any more.
I did not expect an episode related to my country, a pleasant surprise. The taste of childhood. Probably everyone from Poland ate these sweets at least once in their life. By the way, in some stores in Germany (Kaufland, Globus) you can buy several Polish products. I recommend the juice in a box Tymbark, apple&mint and juice in a bottle Kubuś (thick fruit juice, probably there are no such in Germany)
You can't become drunk from Moncherie ! I read an article about it where a woman tried to eat 10 packs and see if she gets fully drunk but only a little bit stayed. The doctor who watched over her said the result is so low cause 1) the sugar in the candy regulates a bit from the alcohol level and 2) she takes a long time to each all these so after she ate a few the alcohol of the first she ate allready got disolved from her body so thats why people who ate these will never get fully drunk
The cake from the 8:20 is called Sękacz (spit cake) and it's baked layer by layer on the roasting spit which is turnerd around very slowly. The whole cake can take over 60 eggs to make, depending on the size.
I'd also like to add that the name doesn't directly translate to "spit cake" but rather "sęk" means "wood knot" - the name refers to that it looks like a many-knotted log. Given that it has rings like a tree does, it's quite apt. The Wikipedia article for these uses their Lithuanian name, so they're presumably more associated with there, but they're popular in Poland too.
No, we never mix Oranzada with vodka. That would be gross. Oranzada is some kind of nostalgia thing. It reminds the taste of cheap, artificial sodas in the old communist times. I don't know who drinks this ^%$& today. Perhaps only some elderly people.
I'm surprised Phil never had Katzenzungen....I always knew them to be German chocolates. Our polo bars are called Marco Polo....OMG cow fudge (it's not taffy) is awesome....most of the others I've either tried or seen....but I'm in Toronto so you can get food from any country here.
You shouldn't mix vodka with anything :). I guess apple juice or orange one are acceptable. But not oranżada. Never. Kamyki orzechowe means nutty stones. Nothing about cows there ;)
Kocie jezyczki - nothing special... I could die for Prince Polo and Pawełek. 😄 Krówki 😍 The gooey ones are best! Jezyki - not my kind of sweets... Złota Wiśnia - yummy! (basically, anything with alcohol! Lol) Have no idea what the spongy thing was... Ptasie Mleczko is my #1 - I stay away otherwise I eat the whole box in one go. ❤ Draże - erm... They're OK. Michalki are OK too. Don't like fizzy drinks. You should watch some Frugo adverts - every teen wanted to be cool & drink Frugo. Czeko-tubka - what the hell... Andruty are great but not on their own. Spread something sweet on the top, e.g. jam or Nutella. Kamyki are awesome. Lakotki - I think I just don't like cookies...
This was enjoyable! All of these treats are popular in Poland. You were misinformed about the "cows tongues", they are called "Kamyczki" , which means "pebbles". Makes sense now, right?
About tea/coffee, we drink pretty much both; there are coffee drinkers, tea drinkers and peeps that don't mind either way. But you don't usually get a biscuit with your drink, because one measly biscuit would NOT be enough 😂 you either drink it alone or with a full course meal 🤣
I love seeing these various foods/snacks from different countries. What a great way to discover something new. Thank you!! I only wish I could try them as well where I live but maybe when I can travel to other places again or find more grocery stores with international foods.
This whole time when Americans are talking about eggnog, and I thought I'd never tried it and maybe never get to try it, and here it was advocaat the whole time 😂😂😂. Years and years of thinking I couldn't imagine what it's live. This is hilarious to me!
Haha. And it’s actually kind of difficult to find Advocaat in the US. It’s not carried in all liquor stores. The only caveat on the difference is that eggnog is what we call the creamy egg drink whether it has alcohol added to it or not. You can buy fresh cartons of egg nog in the dairy refrigerated case at holiday times and it is doesn’t include alcohol. You just add your own.
@@prk2543You can buy Advocaat in the US. There are no trademark restrictions. It’s just not widely known or popular and you might need to go to fancy or well stocked shop to find it. And pay a big premium. But egg nog is just a recipe you can even make yourself. Advocaat just happened to make their own version with alcohol and gained popularity in Europe.
These triangles are sliced sękacz a type of cake. And here is a video of how to make this cake in the traditional way: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-H89BxtrRGYA.html
😂 I am Polish and most of that sweets You have tried are random childhood treats. It Was so nice to watch You taste it and love it! We never mix Oranżada with vodka. We mix vodka with Red Bull 😈
12:48 we don't mix oranżada with vodka we drink cola or Pepsi (I think only young ppl drink it like that) AFTER drinking the vodka, my brother mixes his (something but not vodka I forgot the name) with cola or Pepsi. We drink oranżada on hot days like a refreshing drink.
If you really liked this polnish stuff, maybe you can find near you (in Köln there are) a polnish shop and/or a Mix Markt, because they have some polnish/rüssish/rumänish/east european praline and other stuff.
Cow's tongues 😀😀😀 unfortunately we don't have food named like this 😉 Thanks for giving me a good laugh - some of your pronunciation was funnier than funny cats videos 😉 Btw, draże kokosowe is sth i like coming back to, now when i'm older maybe once a year but when i was a kid i was crazy about them
Pirate cocnut "candies" are the best. The packeging is the same as I remember and I am 33yo. Taste of my childhood, going to the sop buying one packgage of this and an "Kaskada" but the second isnt produce anymore.
Danish snacks, have i missed a video? On the otherhand, would it be fun to send a bunch of candy and inject everything with Alcohol 😈 and watch you go drunk fast 😈😈
To reach 0.08% of blood alcohol, you have to eat ~160 of the classiv "cognac beans", I guess for Mon Chérie it isn´t that much different (was an article in a driver magazine ages ago), After so many, alcohol probably is your least problem!
13:08 frugo before sugar tax costed 2pln for 0.5l 1usd is around 3.5 pln now after sugar tax idk and oranzada before tax 1.80 pln for 0.4l we dont actually mix wodka with oranzada
Are you disgusting how a Pole can mix vodka? Vodka is drunk without any combination: D Greetings from Poland! And we invite you to visit a beautiful country a lot to explore :D
@@Reani71 weisst du wie schwierig und auch teuer das ist. Das Equipment, Ahnung von Ton Beleuchtung. Alle Steuer Rechtsfragen geklärt... Und das wichtigste, du musst Herz und Seele treffen um langfristig sicher dein Publikum zu bekommen. Gelingt ja vielen Anfangs, dann kommt Geld und dann drehen sie durch... Schlimmstes Beispiel Gewitter im Kopf
Bin Werbekauffrau, wüsste um die Effekte. Aber Pocket Hazel. So peinlich , wir haben uns getrennt. Tausend heulen, ne Dirk hatte OP. Fand die beiden Anfangs nice, jetzt mag ich auch nicht mehr folgen
I've ate a few of those when I was a kid^^ Always got those from my grandparents when we visited them. My parents really love the Krówka and Ptasie Mleczko, but I admit I was never really fond of most polish treats. Maybe I should try a few again when I go to Poland next time.
"Have u ever mixed this stuff with vodka?" - well... Sometimes 😂 but me and my homies are used to mix vodka with orange/black currant/apple juice 😁 and this is the more popular way of mixing vodka with softs
i'm from poland and little info about 'ptasie mleczko'(bird's milk) in poland we usualy give it for birthay other events in other form and its called bird's milk becose in some belivings this is an delicius food that is really rare so producers call it like that to show that is really rare sorry if my english was bad
@@justynastecel Ptasie Mleczko was created in 1936 in the chocolate factory of Jan Wedel, the richest man in Poland before World War II. Delighted by the taste of the new sweet, he asked his employees what might be missing for someone who has everything: health, family, money, happiness and one of them replied "I guess only bird's milk". This is the name given to the new product: Ptasie Mleczko (Bird's Milk)
A lot of these were not in standard form people buy it but yeah some good stuff you got Krówki, michałki, draże and ptasie mleczko… old and traditional but loved
Hey there guys, I’m actually polish and all I can say about the first drinks you had is that no we would never mix it with vodka and the mini marshmallows are called birds milk if you have any other questions just ask I’m happy to help :D
So im polish and at 2:27 he eats a choclate bare that i often ate as a kid and up untile now i had now idea that it contand alcohol ( tbh i relly like it as a kid still do and i find his reaction relly funy 🤣)
Legend says that old polish ppl drank orenżada+ vodka. But we still believe that vodka tastes best with pickled cucumber only. We also have a drink for the brave or for ppl on diet and this is vodka + milk. And a drink for the poor ppl: vodka + instant noodles (uncooked/dry) We also have vodka for the homeless in Poland: denatured alcohol +dry bread. You have to come to Poland and try it;-)
We do not have a "tea time", but if somebody pays you a visit during the day (when it is too late for breakfast and too early to invite them for dinner, or if it is after dinner,) it is custom and polite to offer them tea (or coffee) and cake, cookies, biscuits or other sweets. And also in some homes, if they eat a 3-dish dinner, there will be something sweet as dessert, and it could be some cake with tea or coffee.