Brit Reacts to What other countries are told is “American”

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athompson

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Brit Reacts to What other countries are told is “American”


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What other countries are told is “American” Reaction!

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50 Comments

  1. 4:40 as an American native to the West Coast, and my family coming from places like South Dakota and Illinois long ago, our Christmas dinners would usually be a roast turkey- pretty much a repeat of Thanksgiving dinner and our family because turkey actually is pretty inexpensive per pound, and I had seven brothers and sisters with two adults and then if we had guests… We had to have a lot of food at a reasonable price.
    So yeah turkey was a traditional main entrée, but later it could also be a glazed ham. Or it could be a really nice beef roast like a standing rib roast- which is really delicious.

    And yeah, mashed potatoes, or roast potatoes… and my personal favorite, green bean casserole with mushroom soup and crispy onions on top. My mom always made the sweet potato casserole for Thanksgiving AND Christmas with the toasted marshmallows on top which I happen to really like although I could only eat a small amount of it because it was so overwhelmingly sweet. Then we would have some kind of miscellaneous salad(s) and lots of pickles and olives and cranberry sauce and pickled sweet crab apples… and always gravy.

    Never, ever did we have fried chicken for Christmas.
    Fried chicken is an every day dinner. Delicious… But not “holiday“ fare.

  2. Ok, I"m sure it's all been commented below but yeah we don't eat KFC for Christmas. I think most family have stuff turkey, some may have ham. We don't eat fast food for Christmas…LOL. Gross on the relish/mayo thing for fries? Uh no and some weird pate meat thing? UH noooooo just no, we don't eat that. Hot dogs in a jar of brine? ewwwww, no. LOL. Pizza with hotdogs? That's gross. wow, pizza with all that fruit on it? that is hilarious. Creamed corn on cheese pizza….hahahaha. OMG, I can't comment on all this….I'm laughing so hard. hotdogs on everything…hahahahaha. Wait had to edit, we do have black & white cookies…they are super good but a bit different than what he showed but yeah we have those. That guy sounds Canadian as well…I love our canadian neighbors but not sure he's an expert on American food. I didn't realize Solo cups which is just a plastic disposable cup was so "American", I mean it's just a plastic cup….hahahaha.

  3. I always love finding "American" cuisine when travelling abroad. It's usually funny, occasionally edible, and always makes for a good conversation afterwards. All I can say is, "Thank you for acknowledging my culture, I appreciate you." The world, and the people in it, are truly awesome. <3

  4. Marshmallow fluff is generally eaten as part of a fluffer-nutter sandwich (a grilled pocket sandwich with peanut butter and marshmallow fluff and sometimes banana slices) or as an ingredient in ambrosia salad. Ambrosia salad is generally 8 ounces each of marshmallow fluff and cool whip. Folded into that is maraschino cherries, chopped walnuts, chopped granny smith apples, mandarin orange slices, two or three different kinds of grapes (halved if they are large), and shredded coconut. Sometimes, mini marshmallows are also folded in.

  5. marshmallow fluff is more popular in the northeast in a sandwich called a "fluffernutter" or peanut butter/fluff. it's just peanut butter and fluff instead of peanut butter and jelly. my kids love it.

  6. We use marshmallow fluff and mix it with an 8oz block of room temperature cream cheese and let chill in the fridge forat least 4 hours and use it as a dip for fruit. It is used in recipes for some desserts but is definitely not a commonly used ingredient lol

  7. I remember one time seeing a photo of a menu in a place in Japan with "American style" pizza and it was pizza with corn on it I was laughing at how dumb it was

  8. While he's clearly Canadian, he is North American…
    Not only do Americans have a multi course meal for Christmas which includes 1 or more of either roast (beef or pork), ham or turkey, but here in Louisiana we have a wonderful thing called turducken that's a chicken in a duck in a turkey – yummy!
    We package our hotdogs in plastic wrap, not jars.
    The "California" pizza and "American" fried rice looks and sounds revolting and the Brazilian idea of a hot dog was beyond revolting, it was insulting!

  9. christmas is turkey or ham or prime rib usually and we don't eat hot dogs in brine lol but yes hot dogs are a thing here by themselves or with topping and usually does as a side. solo cups are a thing.

  10. I had friends in Germany that bought American southwest food at the grocery store. They asked me for recipes because they didn't know what to prepare with it. Yes it was corn, kidney beans, diced tomatoes with Italian seaoning, some weird canned sausage, and tortillas. Lol. When I was in Turkey, if they put corn on a dish it magically became mexican.

  11. The placemat I am really only familiar with being used for little kids. Maybe it's a "messy eater" thing.

    I am trying to think back. I think if we didn't have a full cover tablecloth on the table, then we would have a placemat on the exposed wood table. Otherwise, if there is a tablecloth on the entire table, then we won't have a placemat. It's all about protecting the wood table underneath, or reducing how often you need to wash the full tablecloth.

  12. As an American, I do appreciate the creativity of other countries to create new recipes with typical American themed items.

    I think you would consider it a "play on" it, if you were a chef. Like the American fried rice, it a "play on" fried rice if it were American themed.

  13. Christmas meal in the USA I think might just be based on the source culture of the family. Meat and potatoes. Steak, or Ham, but never did Turkey. Turkey was Thanksgiving.

    The KFC thing in Japan might be very American if you consider the capitalist/marketing/advertising side of how they tricked the consumers in Japan. LOL

  14. I dont see why everyone is so shocked by the "hotdog in everything is called "american food"" because you fuckers throw a pineapple on EVERYTHING then name it hawaiian… being from hawaii ive never seen half the shit you throw pineapples on, you bunch of weirdos lol >.>