Extra Pickles Please we know the boy who owns the toys' name is Andy, but he was most likely referring to Woody. Andy doesn't really do anything 'badass' in the movies.
You should do a series on the recipes in the test kitchen that didn't make it to air. Why didn't they work, what were the problems, and showing that pros don't get things right 100% of the time.
If it's too much oil for you, you can simply sauté it in a little less oil and finish it with lemon juice instead of olive oil. Don't omit the oil though because it adds flavour. Buy a good quality olive oil and you'll see.
I hear you but excellent olive oil has a low smoking point and the less the better, in my view. I like this guy even though his recipes don't always jive with my experience; always great ideas.
Molly looks like she just escaped from an under ground bunker where they made her believe she lived in a post apocalyptic world and had to crank a crank for electricity
Alan Chung there was a comment that was exactly the same as this one just slightly re worded it’s cool that there is a reference but I literally don’t care... like at all 😂😂
I'd actually go old-school and say Oishinbo as my favorite, though it could be argued Oishinbo is more of a "food anime" than a cooking anime. But, you get a very young sounding Kazuhiko Inoue doing the lead role of Shirou Yamaoka - which is really nice.
This is pretty much how I make ratatouille, but I like to add a bit of lemon at the end just to make it a bit brighter, especially if the tomatoes are really sweet. Goes great with any dish!
I tend to add whatever mushrooms I have stocked in the house, with herb de provence. Love that Andy added the tomatoes at different stages, since plain roasted tomatoes (we use campari & cherry) are it's own level of flavor. Solid recipe that preserves well.
if you make it like in the movie with the thinly sliced veggies, it actually has a super delicious bell pepper sauce that really transcends the flavours!!
it's wonderful! i saw it for the first time at like 20 but i loved it & have watched it again since & it also inspired me to make some delish confit byaldi
These people are so charismatic and skilled that I'm powerless to resist liking them in spite of my enormous bias against people that are charismatic and skilled.
we made this dish last night. Easy peasy and very flavorful. Had the leftovers today and my daughter even wants me to make (vegetables!) again. Thanks Andy! Love the show!
Not only did my ratatouille come out great (thanks, Andy!), but when he says to discard the thyme branch, I immediately thought, "You mean like the Avengers did 30 times in Endgame?"
1) Ratatouille is one of the two best Pixar movies ever made (the other is Toy Story 3). 2) Take the comparison as a complement. Ultimately, the story is about how Remy (the rat) is able to transcend the limitations that others put on him. Through dedication, focus and a belief in himself, Remy is able to become a first-rate chef even though he is a rat.
Actually Remy's story is one of natural-born talent and luck. He doesn't really work that hard to get where he is compared to how long and hard actual chefs have to work. The best chefs in the world got there by working in their restaurants 7 days a week, 12-16 hours a day. Ratatouille is a great movie, but if you're trying to use Remy as an analogue for the ideal chef, then you're wrong. Many chefs do have natural talent but Remy's journey doesn't even halfway represent the blood, sweat and tears it takes to make it.
I would suggest that you re-read my comment before you imply that I was trying to use Remy "as an analogue for the ideal chef." Nowhere did I write that. Remy's story is one of his dedication to the craft that he loves DESPITE every indication that he has no place in that world: Remy is a RAT. Furthermore, I can't see how Remy's natural talent precluded him from struggling to achieve his dream of becoming a chef. The story was about him overcoming barriers, both natural and otherwise. Furthermore, the old saying pertains to ANYONE with "natural gifts" in any field of endeavor: talent is 90% perspiration and 10% inspiration. Even the "naturally talented" Remy had to work to prefect his craft. PErhaps he didn't have to work as hard as I would have but he did have to work nonetheless. IN any event, I find myself feeling foolish for arguing this. My only point was that the chef in this video should just shrug his shoulders and take it as a complement the next time someone compared him to Remy given the rat's grit, dedication, and, yes, talent.
My mom used to make ratatouille all the time when I was a kid and I would cry because I hated it so much. I’m 40 now and I still might cry if you put it in front of me... TEARS OF JOY, that is!
I'm sorry but as a French guy who comes from the south of France, I have to say this is not a "classic Ratatouille" like you say at the end of the video, even thought your dish seems reaaaally yummy and packed with flavors. This dish from Provence is generally more liquid than yours, and is usually being cooked for longer than 30 minutes in total, to completely break down the veggies. Kisses, love ya 😊😘
Jviens de Provence aussi, jveux bien te suivre sur une cuisson plus longue, et oui un peu plus liquide mais ça doit pas être de l’eau, ça reste assez épais tu vois ce que je veux dire?
Not just in france, my familys version is more liquid too, cooked until broken down and reduced (using liquified tomatos as a base, then spices and the roasted vegetables until they nearly dissolve Germany, but my family lived in the french occupation zone so that might have influenced it
Ratatouille was the first dish I REALLY learned how to make when I was 16 and newly vegetarian - every food show in 2005 was nuts for it and honestly it was a great way to learn chopping and other basics. It was the first time I understood craving vegetables - I'll have to try using cherry tomatoes!
evelyn baron I mean a lot of French pastries and French associated things (macarons, croissants, Mirepoix) weren’t actually french. Macarons and Mirepoix are Italian Croissants are Austrian
Plenty of Provençal /Occitan dishes are vegan, but people associate French cuisine more with northern France where they can't cook without cream or butter
I love that ratatouille is very flexible, you can cut any form you want, cook it on stove or oven it, serve it as it is, serve it as a pasta sauce (just add a bit stock while sauteing) .
Andy did such a great job, lovely dish. Its not a ratatouille but it is a very nice plate of beautifully roasted vegetables. Ratatouille is a stew and is cooked gently for about 30 to 40 min. Also the dish in the movie is not actually Ratatouille but a similar dish called Tian and as equally delicious
Great presentation Andy! I'd certainly serve it with some crusty bread toasted and rubbed with sliced garlic. Provencal dishes are truly simplistic, but hold so much flavor and visual appeal!
I made this last night but assembled it differently, I stacked the sliced squash & zuchini and made a serpentine in my dish. Did not have the eggplant, but don't like it anyway. This was incredibly delicious with yeast rolls & sliced homegrown cucumbers
I think Ratatouille is one of the very few select items in the world, that supports the idea that, "if a thing's worth doing, its worth doing badly"! That is, you can rough chop an onion, an aubergine and a courgette, chuck them in a pan with some olive oil and a couple of cloves of garlic, dump in a can of toms and a sprinkle of packet mixed herbs and 45 minutes later, you end up with something delicious!
I never peel my aubergine. Also, could you make a video about all your cooks and how they got to here, as how their career began, which school they attended, where they worked and for how long, what they would recommend doing or better not doing etc. I'm really generally interested how that could look like and I'm sure your cooks have all a different story to tell!
as a true provencal i approve this ratatouille! i have nothing to add frankly if i were nitpicky i would add a bit of a good mix of 'herbes de provence' but frankly i have no idea if it's easy to find in america great job andy!
Lovely recipe. For a quick veggie side dish sauté a thick-sliced sweet onion such as Vidalia, Mayan Sweet or yellow granex till it Browns around the edges in olive oil and butter then add half-moon sliced zucchini and sauté till just tender. Finish with S&P and a squeeze of lemon. Sounds dull but it's great!
Been cooking this recipe of yours for more that a year now.. and I can sayand my friends said it was super!! I just cut down the olive oil..and even ask me the recipe.. so I shared your this video of yours to my friends
It's a classic French dish. That's why it's made by an Iranian, filmed in the United States, with Brazilian background music. Beautiful work, Andy! You're beautiful too!
Never fry eggplant in olive oil. It's very common mistake. Always fry eggplant in vegetable, sunflower, canola, or safflower oil. Eggplants soak up olive oil like a sponge and they become saturated with it.
People say you're like Remy because he is cute and little and incredibly passionate about food. The ingredients are like notes that he composes into a symphony. If you need someone to watch it with...
I always get confused when I see a video with ratatouille in it because in Hungary we have a dish that is kinda similar but no eggplant at all instead we put in eggs It's called lecsó and the movie in hungarian is also called Lecsó but the dish you made is usually called francia lecsó (french lecsó/ratattuille)
I’m Sorry To Say , As Many Times As I’ve Watched the Movie . Even Have It On DVD .... I never thought this was a meatless dish . Thought some of the red was sliced salami or something 😂🤷🏽♀️
Andy would really love for you to show us how to make restaurant quality Persian rice dish. The basic with the saffron on top or Baghali Polo. thank you
Actually, Ratatouille is the dish’s name, you’re thinking of Ratatouille’s monster.
Chalba you made me snort laugh
😂 true. A lot of people call Remy, Ratatouille now that I think about it...
This comment is so underrated
Is this about Frankenstein
This is the most hilarious, next-level comment in all the land.
“The character Andy is kind of a badass” .... I feel like he meant to say woody? Lol
He was referring to Andy, the kid that owns the toys.
Why would be say that Andy... The Kid... Was badass?
Extra Pickles Please we know the boy who owns the toys' name is Andy, but he was most likely referring to Woody. Andy doesn't really do anything 'badass' in the movies.
brenley woodard he said Andy cause his name is Andy and they share the same name I think lol
I dont know, the guy's name is Andy so he probably is saying that because his name is also Andy
You should do a series on the recipes in the test kitchen that didn't make it to air. Why didn't they work, what were the problems, and showing that pros don't get things right 100% of the time.
The Kirby T they actually do tell us about the mistakes they make and how to prevent it in the videos
Call it 'Offcuts'
The way Andy looks at the camera at the end always melts my cold gay heart.
absoluuutelyyyyy
Andy is bae
Actual factuals
Lookin like Freddie Mercury and he worked at Chez Panisse. Definite heart-throb.
we love facts!
“Maleficent can turn a look” I needed that confirmation that Andy is, at a minimum, an ally.
I think the whole BA staff is made of allies, but I get your point :)
An ally of what? Lgbt? You do know he's gay, right?
Rimuru he never officially said it but duh
@@tarumpalo He's open. Read his article in BA 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄
bongo not on this channel but he’s openly gay and is not afraid to share it. Checkout interviews.
Are you sure a rat isn't secretly making this dish?
Justin Y. You mean Andy isn't the rat
Where would it hide?
Rai Urie in his pants
Justin Y. we meet again. 😝
wtf justin im seeing you everywhere, like i just saw a comment of yours on Gus Johnsons video lmao
Leave molly and her ugly apron alone 😂 she never hurt anyone
It's not the apron its the pants
Best comment ever! Lol
"I'm gonna be such a good Dad with all the Dad jokes." Hello, Daddy.
If it's too much oil for you, you can simply sauté it in a little less oil and finish it with lemon juice instead of olive oil. Don't omit the oil though because it adds flavour. Buy a good quality olive oil and you'll see.
I hear you but excellent olive oil has a low smoking point and the less the better, in my view. I like this guy even though his recipes don't always jive with my experience; always great ideas.
@@evelynbaron2004 the smoking point doesn't matter really.The new science on it is that the olive oil doesn't actually break down at that point.
I would do a little less olive oil and put a little bit of red wine in. Tastes great
Molly looks like she just escaped from an under ground bunker where they made her believe she lived in a post apocalyptic world and had to crank a crank for electricity
Uuuunbreakable!
You just reworded a different comment 😂
Alan Chung there was a comment that was exactly the same as this one just slightly re worded it’s cool that there is a reference but I literally don’t care... like at all 😂😂
Ratatouille is the best cooking anime, right after Shokugeki no Soma
A Vsaucy Boi yassssss
I'd actually go old-school and say Oishinbo as my favorite, though it could be argued Oishinbo is more of a "food anime" than a cooking anime. But, you get a very young sounding Kazuhiko Inoue doing the lead role of Shirou Yamaoka - which is really nice.
ITS NOT ANIME ITS A CARTOON
Yakitate!! Japan and Yumeiro Patissière are my other favorites :)
They are likeable but also frustrating to me. But I think it's great there are actual amine focused solely on baking! :)
Brad, Claire and Andy... name a more perfect trio! Bon Appétrio!
Don't forget Carla
Chris, Brad and Claire.
And Vinnie! Who’s better’n him eh????
Not sure he added enough oil
Just fill up the pot! Why not eh?
Lmfao
Lol
😒
stop already ; he's had some brilliant ideas, just forget the olive oil. I love his veg stock and other brilliant ideas.
I made this last night, despite forgetting the red pepper, it was still crazy delicious: Thanks Andy, this is now a go-to recipe for me!
This is pretty much how I make ratatouille, but I like to add a bit of lemon at the end just to make it a bit brighter, especially if the tomatoes are really sweet. Goes great with any dish!
I DEMAND MORE VIDEOS FROM ANDY PLEASE!!!
This channel is literally my favorite the people here are funny and just real lol I love andy, Claire, Brad and Benny, they're the stars of this show
What did we do to deserve 2 videos in 1 day??
what do you mean? I think they might have published another one by mistake, because right now there is no other video.
They had the Brad Makes Beet Kvass video earlier today. I think that's what they're referring to.
why did you watch both of them?
I’ve only ever watched Carla, Brad, and Claire but wow - Andy is a new fav. Cute, nice banter, can cook - no cons seen
I tend to add whatever mushrooms I have stocked in the house, with herb de provence. Love that Andy added the tomatoes at different stages, since plain roasted tomatoes (we use campari & cherry) are it's own level of flavor. Solid recipe that preserves well.
He has great onscreen presence!!
He has a face that you can’t trust. Kind of a shyster, player types. He has certain smirk and smugness about him.
I didn't know it was just oily vegetables and salt.
classic way is not that oily but why not ^^
oh please what do you know about pecking duck
a significantly better dish? Yes what about it?
Coribec but it tastes good
if you make it like in the movie with the thinly sliced veggies, it actually has a super delicious bell pepper sauce that really transcends the flavours!!
"She can turn a look" ANDY IS A GAY ANGEL SENT FROM HEAVEN ❤️
Is he actually gay?
@@shubhanshjain DUH
mahdi kabir we said this about chris though and he stated that he has a wife and kid soooooo......
@@Deme_Diora666 he had an article written about him in Out magazine
Ratatouille is definitely one of my favs, you should watch it!
I second Katie. It makes some terrific points about collaboration and creativity and giving proper credit!
okay, scolling back up xd
Science with Katie you eat rat in your religion?
it's wonderful! i saw it for the first time at like 20 but i loved it & have watched it again since & it also inspired me to make some delish confit byaldi
These people are so charismatic and skilled that I'm powerless to resist liking them in spite of my enormous bias against people that are charismatic and skilled.
we made this dish last night. Easy peasy and very flavorful. Had the leftovers today and my daughter even wants me to make (vegetables!) again. Thanks Andy! Love the show!
Not only did my ratatouille come out great (thanks, Andy!), but when he says to discard the thyme branch, I immediately thought, "You mean like the Avengers did 30 times in Endgame?"
Andy is my favorite. The whole test kitchen is my favorite!!
1) Ratatouille is one of the two best Pixar movies ever made (the other is Toy Story 3). 2) Take the comparison as a complement. Ultimately, the story is about how Remy (the rat) is able to transcend the limitations that others put on him. Through dedication, focus and a belief in himself, Remy is able to become a first-rate chef even though he is a rat.
Actually Remy's story is one of natural-born talent and luck. He doesn't really work that hard to get where he is compared to how long and hard actual chefs have to work.
The best chefs in the world got there by working in their restaurants 7 days a week, 12-16 hours a day.
Ratatouille is a great movie, but if you're trying to use Remy as an analogue for the ideal chef, then you're wrong. Many chefs do have natural talent but Remy's journey doesn't even halfway represent the blood, sweat and tears it takes to make it.
It also has some amazing music in it
Marty Back exactly, people think the craft is easy, hell naw. It's one of the hardest parts of the industry right before the music industry.
I would suggest that you re-read my comment before you imply that I was trying to use Remy "as an analogue for the ideal chef." Nowhere did I write that. Remy's story is one of his dedication to the craft that he loves DESPITE every indication that he has no place in that world: Remy is a RAT. Furthermore, I can't see how Remy's natural talent precluded him from struggling to achieve his dream of becoming a chef. The story was about him overcoming barriers, both natural and otherwise. Furthermore, the old saying pertains to ANYONE with "natural gifts" in any field of endeavor: talent is 90% perspiration and 10% inspiration. Even the "naturally talented" Remy had to work to prefect his craft. PErhaps he didn't have to work as hard as I would have but he did have to work nonetheless.
IN any event, I find myself feeling foolish for arguing this. My only point was that the chef in this video should just shrug his shoulders and take it as a complement the next time someone compared him to Remy given the rat's grit, dedication, and, yes, talent.
My mom used to make ratatouille all the time when I was a kid and I would cry because I hated it so much. I’m 40 now and I still might cry if you put it in front of me... TEARS OF JOY, that is!
I vote more videos with this guy! It's like a "things you can actually cook, plus some dad jokes" series
I'm sorry but as a French guy who comes from the south of France, I have to say this is not a "classic Ratatouille" like you say at the end of the video, even thought your dish seems reaaaally yummy and packed with flavors. This dish from Provence is generally more liquid than yours, and is usually being cooked for longer than 30 minutes in total, to completely break down the veggies. Kisses, love ya 😊😘
Tom DUPUIS
Tu l'as dit mon cousin Français!
Jviens de Provence aussi, jveux bien te suivre sur une cuisson plus longue, et oui un peu plus liquide mais ça doit pas être de l’eau, ça reste assez épais tu vois ce que je veux dire?
Not just in france, my familys version is more liquid too, cooked until broken down and reduced (using liquified tomatos as a base, then spices and the roasted vegetables until they nearly dissolve
Germany, but my family lived in the french occupation zone so that might have influenced it
Growing all dat in my garden! Ratatouille for dayssssss!
Ratatouille was the first dish I REALLY learned how to make when I was 16 and newly vegetarian - every food show in 2005 was nuts for it and honestly it was a great way to learn chopping and other basics. It was the first time I understood craving vegetables - I'll have to try using cherry tomatoes!
Molly low key flexin' on em
Such a clean fit
His eyes render him honest and terribly delightful. I can't get enough of him.
How come I don't see you anymore?
Yo this guy is baked as hell
You clearly haven't been around many baked people
looool he said in one of his older vids he was a "former" stoner hahaha sure buddy
When you realize ratatouille is a French vegan dish.
I was thinking about that!
Not even French, if you think about it. a brilliant chunky not wheat (jjust me) pasta marinara -- not stretching the idea, think of Genoa etc.
evelyn baron
I mean a lot of French pastries and French associated things (macarons, croissants, Mirepoix) weren’t actually french.
Macarons and Mirepoix are Italian
Croissants are Austrian
Plenty of Provençal /Occitan dishes are vegan, but people associate French cuisine more with northern France where they can't cook without cream or butter
It was probably around a lot longer than the word "vegan".
its 2018, it came out in 2007, a banger has been out for 11 years and you haven't seen it, disappointed
Biomz it made me laugh bc i literally saw it for the first time last week. talk about being late for the party lmao
really great comment
Ive made this and its hands down the best thing ive ever done
Andy playing with Eggplant. My favourite dish.
The aubergine skin is the *best bit* of ratatouille!! I stopped the video at 0:32... :-(
I love that ratatouille is very flexible, you can cut any form you want, cook it on stove or oven it, serve it as it is, serve it as a pasta sauce (just add a bit stock while sauteing) .
Awwwww I really want to give him a hug while singing some Disney songs...
Andy did such a great job, lovely dish. Its not a ratatouille but it is a very nice plate of beautifully roasted vegetables. Ratatouille is a stew and is cooked gently for about 30 to 40 min. Also the dish in the movie is not actually Ratatouille but a similar dish called Tian and as equally delicious
Andy STOP👏BEING👏SO👏DAMN👏CUTE👏
Been making this dish for decades. Tried this recipe and will never make it any other way. Super! Thanks.
I have murophobia but ratatouille is my favourite movie. THATS how powerful it is
I am not into veggies, I saw Andy on the TH-cam screen shot link and I was, politely happy to watch him and his talent.
Great presentation Andy! I'd certainly serve it with some crusty bread toasted and rubbed with sliced garlic. Provencal dishes are truly simplistic, but hold so much flavor and visual appeal!
i fall more in love with andy every video
I thought I was the only one who felt awkward during the singing scenes in movies. I am not alone...
Maria Gabriela Garcia Cheran I am always yelling 'WHY' and 'MAKE IT STOP' until my husband skipps it forward.
I have just found my people. I haaaaaate hate hate hate singing in movies.
Andy, are you okay? You okay? You okay, Andy?
You've been hit by. You've been hit by. A smooth criminal.
I made this last night but assembled it differently, I stacked the sliced squash & zuchini and made a serpentine in my dish. Did not have the eggplant, but don't like it anyway. This was incredibly delicious with yeast rolls & sliced homegrown cucumbers
Lol Andy’s super existential stare off into the distance at the end. I guess singing cartoons will do that to ya.
I forgive the dad jokes, Andy can be my Zaddy any time.
"Gonna be a good dad with all my dad jokes"LMAO!
Andy Baraghani is the original salt bae.
Looks amazing. Living for the amount of oil he used too 😗
I think Ratatouille is one of the very few select items in the world, that supports the idea that, "if a thing's worth doing, its worth doing badly"! That is, you can rough chop an onion, an aubergine and a courgette, chuck them in a pan with some olive oil and a couple of cloves of garlic, dump in a can of toms and a sprinkle of packet mixed herbs and 45 minutes later, you end up with something delicious!
I never peel my aubergine. Also, could you make a video about all your cooks and how they got to here, as how their career began, which school they attended, where they worked and for how long, what they would recommend doing or better not doing etc. I'm really generally interested how that could look like and I'm sure your cooks have all a different story to tell!
Omg he gave a Mean Girl stare at the beginning. Poor girl was just trying to get a dish!
as a true provencal i approve this ratatouille!
i have nothing to add frankly
if i were nitpicky i would add a bit of a good mix of 'herbes de provence' but frankly i have no idea if it's easy to find in america
great job andy!
I always like see old dishes that were considered like peasant food become popularized
Lovely recipe. For a quick veggie side dish sauté a thick-sliced sweet onion such as Vidalia, Mayan Sweet or yellow granex till it Browns around the edges in olive oil and butter then add half-moon sliced zucchini and sauté till just tender. Finish with S&P and a squeeze of lemon. Sounds dull but it's great!
Knife used is a Shun Hikari, for anyone interested.
Been cooking this recipe of yours for more that a year now.. and I can sayand my friends said it was super!! I just cut down the olive oil..and even ask me the recipe.. so I shared your this video of yours to my friends
It's a classic French dish. That's why it's made by an Iranian, filmed in the United States, with Brazilian background music. Beautiful work, Andy! You're beautiful too!
Ratatouille is one of my favorite dishes
I love Andy’s voice in this.
This is so epic to me!
Andy: "I'm going to season this with a good amount of SALT"
A wild Molly Baz appears!
😂😂😂
This is my 3rd day in Culinary School and we are to research a Ratatouille to make tomorrow and this is it! TIA!!!!
Never fry eggplant in olive oil. It's very common mistake. Always fry eggplant in vegetable, sunflower, canola, or safflower oil. Eggplants soak up olive oil like a sponge and they become saturated with it.
I have never met someone speaking so much facts. Ursula and Maleficent carried the whole animation!
Andy... amazing as always.
Ps: are going to be a dad soon ?
People say you're like Remy because he is cute and little and incredibly passionate about food. The ingredients are like notes that he composes into a symphony. If you need someone to watch it with...
I need more videos with Andy... and Carla... and Claire.. I need more videos from BA.
"That's not really creative" - The nice way of saying "That's dumb...."
Thank you for your food videos. Your videos are like a fresh breath among so many boring cheesy food vlogs.
"she knows how to turn a look" dead
I always get confused when I see a video with ratatouille in it because in Hungary we have a dish that is kinda similar but no eggplant at all instead we put in eggs
It's called lecsó and the movie in hungarian is also called Lecsó but the dish you made is usually called francia lecsó (french lecsó/ratattuille)
I made this and added in a winter squash !
Gosh I love Andy
Made this for dinner tonight and had it with some flat bread...it was absolutely delicious. Thanks.
Andy holding an eggplant is what we all needed to see in this life!
im making this tonight, thanks. Andy
I love making this with 'Roma' tomatoes and black olives and adding to pasta!
you guys are awesome thank you so much. Definitely keep making more videos.
I’m Sorry To Say , As Many Times As I’ve Watched the Movie . Even Have It On DVD .... I never thought this was a meatless dish . Thought some of the red was sliced salami or something 😂🤷🏽♀️
Lexiaa Forever I legit thought it was three different types of meats layered together.
I thought it was noodles. Deadass.
I could watch him cook all day, everyday.
I made this version of ratatouille with the addition of a sliced hot pepper and it was delicious.
Thats a lot of oil
Mark Mendoza Hernandez I agree also to much salt.
David Millard the salt makes sense. It releases the moisture.
Its good for you
Daveson
Hahahaha where did you hear that a gallon of any oil is good for you?
Especially since its all heated and turned into transfats anyway
tHaTs a LoT oF OiL
Andy would really love for you to show us how to make restaurant quality Persian rice dish. The basic with the saffron on top or Baghali Polo.
thank you
Is there a TH-cam award for best eyebrows?
Andy is pure love
I really need to make this myself
Why dont you make the rat from Ratatouille
i cackled
Does Andy have a calendar, cuz I'd buy it.
I made this and it turned out delicious. Thank you Andy
I really like the recipe and the explanation, thanks alot for that! Using metal cookware in an enemalled pot like that makes my head hurt though.