The Working Man's Doughnut

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2024-01-21に共有
Did you know there were doughnuts in Roman times? The 18th century cookbooks have recipes for beignets, fritters, and cakes. Where so doughnuts fit in, and who is eating them? Find out in The Working Man’s Doughnut.

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コメント (21)
  • It seems like nearly every culture in history has just instinctively thought to fry dough in fat, and I think that’s wonderful
  • @otte940
    This man is the face of "if you love what you do you never work a day in your life"
  • @DieLuftwaffel
    There is a museum in Miles City MT with what they claim is the oldest surviving doughnut in the world. The story is that a mother made a bunch for her son to take with him as a soldier in the Civil War (1860s). One doughnut hardened and fell to the bottom of his pack, unnoticed until long after the war when it became a family heirloom and then was donated to this little museum. It's the star attraction I would say.
  • @bvd7517
    Donuts for dinner: Every five year-old's dream.
  • My grandfather was a child in the Austro-hungarian empire was selected by his school master to go on a hunt with the "King" (Frans Joseph?). He and other children beat the fields from sun up to sun down to chase the game to the king and his hunting party. His reward for the all day long field work was a chocolate doughnut.
  • "Peppernuts" is still a popular Christmas biscuit in parts of Germany, made with spices, not actually pepper. It is more like a walnut size gingerbread ball.
  • @seronymus
    I would actually love a pastry shop that bakes colonial era goods like this, eepecially those donuts/fritters! 🍩 More people should use ginger and allspice too.
  • In Holland we call this oliebollen, oil balls, and we eat them at old years eve. It is a dough with yeast and raisins and currents
  • @-cody_
    i remember reading "Farmer Boy" a lot as a kid and they would constantly reference donuts as a staple part of the extravagant breakfasts that the mother would prepare for the family. as a kid that always sounded so luxurious, the way that i pictured the donuts lol
  • @sophroniel
    When I grew up, every New Year's Eve an old dutch couple at my church made "olibollen", round donut balls with sultanas. The wife passed 10 years ago, and I still remember these so fondly.
  • @LyneaFlynn
    We still have a baked good at Christmas called "Pfeffernüsse", pepper nuts, in Germany.
  • The German word is Ölkuchen = oil cakes. The small doughnuts go by the name of "Baked Mice" here in Vienna. They are commonly sold at Christmas markets now.
  • I love this series, the working man. History should never be lost .
  • @freedpeeb
    Making doughnuts on a cold, snowy morning! What could be better? Thank you for the pockets of calm your videos provide.
  • @lcky2993
    This recipe is called 'rain cakes' where I live. It is pretty common to eat when it is raining. Cold and rainy days are rather rare, so when they appear, most of the time we make some rain cakes and coffee for lunch. Mixing with cocoa or plain chocolate powder can easily make a delicious dish for lunch.
  • @asahearts1
    Making some of those tube biscuits as donuts later. Just use a bottle top to cut a hole and shallow fry them in a pan and top or fill them with chocolate syrup or whatever. Lifehacks
  • @LordBrittish
    I’ve managed a big bakery on a busy Saturday morning. Really makes me wonder if their bakeries back in the day had lines out the door on certain days.
  • @renmuffett
    To be historically authentic, a working man during that time period would not have been eating a doughnut made with white flour. Getting white flour was so expensive and tine consuming to create, only the richest of the rich could afford it. When flour was called for in the oldest of recipe books, they meant actual whole grain flour unless stated otherwise. The instructions would suggest sifting it and that was to remove some of the bran & germ.
  • @75egcg
    All able-bodied freemen of the 18th century had an inner Homer Simpson
  • @BluejThompson
    I make donuts every Sunday and as I rolling out my brioche you post this and my heart was just so full thank you!