Taste Testing STREET FOOD from Around the World
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 พ.ย. 2024
- Today Mike and Jamie are competing in a taste test challenge of global street food from around the world! Can they guess the correct countries from taste and some subtle clues?!
Check out our full Global Street Food Playlist HERE:
• Global Street Food Tas...
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In Mike's defense, most of the Caribbean countries have similar fritters made from salted fish. Here in Trinidad and Tobago, it's called saltfish accra
I've had the same basic dish on at least 4 different islands/nations in the Caribbean. How you'd get one specific one over any of the others I have no idea. I didn't even know they had specific names. I always just called them salt fish fritters.
Just looking at the dish without knowing exactly what it was, I immediately said T&T😂
I came to say this .. I was yelling THATS ACCRA! At the screen 😂
I saw it in the thumbnail and thought "those are bacalaitos" from Puerto Rico. Essentially codfish fritters but if you translate the word literally it's "little codfish".
Accra? Thats my city 😂
That jelly drink at the end would be PERFECT for a Poker Face challenge. There's so much you could hide in a gelatin and then hide it even more in a drink. Kush, are you game?
Kush is always game 😎😆
You are a genius, an evil genius but I like & respect that! Mwahahaha!
@@SortedFood this reply is funny if you imagine it's Kush talking about himself in third person
Ooooopppp, we found 😈
like sauerkraut juice🤭
These are always good fun - I'm grateful to whoever at Sorted came up with the idea of the global foods series!
I really want to see a 'Making Of' though - show us Kush creating these, maybe share some recipes and tips!
Would love recipes for several of these to make at home
"Day in the life of Kush" would be a fun video.
Yes please, I really want to see more cooking on the channel.
Give the normals basic instructions and have them make the dishes.
Yes - I always end up googling for recipes. I would love to see them being made.
It's similar to Good Mythical Mornings International Taste test one where they throw a dart on the map to guess, it's a cool concept tbh i'm surprised more people don't recreate it tbh
Jamie is the normal that has grown the most out of all of them in my opinion. Been watching for about 5 years now. I know, I know, they all get them REALLY wrong sometimes. But lately, Jamie's knowledge and logic has been top tier amongst the normals. You can tell he has been consuming a lot of food related media and researching more lately. It is showing Spaff!
Also he loves food in general and is the one that would probably try any street food in search of deliciousness
Jamie should've been sous chef. I'll die on this bacony steaky hill.
@@medio7570 get them out of the chat, almost all spanish food is from their colonies so they can't get angry at any fusion
@@riku_raph3653 Yeah, I am 100% on Team Jamie for Sous Chef. I think he was robbed by one judge specifically, who I will not name... lol.
Believe it or not but I'm approaching watching them for close to 13 years now, and I couldnt agree more!
Egyptian here! the kebda dish is usually made using beef liver as that's what most people have access to. we also use normal breadcrumbs just because it's easier to find😅. Enjoyed with some local bread (eish baladi) and a tahini dip and you got yourself the best meal! I'm surprised by how well you nailed down that dish cuz I could guess it just from the way it was plated. thanks for the amazing video as always!
It sounded delicious! Going to have to find the recipe and make it.
Hi! I am trying to find a recipe, but I can't seem to find one that looks like what they have in the video. Would you know where I can find this?
@@famkepoortier7248 I'll ask my mom for her recipe and it's almost identical to the one in the video! I'll post it here as a reply once I get it and translate 😁
@@brianhayes7153 it is!
As a Czech, this dish was very confusing to me. Liver (usually pork liver) is very common and traditional here. Frying things in breadcrumbs (meat, cheese, vegetables) is also a very common and traditional technique here. And yet I've never even heard of liver prepared this way!
In Trinidad we have the same “stamp and go” called Accra! Soooo close Mike
Jamie's reaction to Philippines being right is well worth watching. I was way off in guessing the buffalo liver dish as didn't consider water buffalo.
haha
but my question is , is it 'hollow hollow', or 'halo halo'
Ha, I got Egypt. It was from one word ‘Buffalo’
Water Buffalo are not a staple in the Middle East, nor in North Africa. However the exception to the Rule is Egypt, Nile is a great place to raise them.
Good logic...
@@aveekbh Funny, I got thrown off because of the exact same word. I was thinking buffalo/bison native to North America and nothing else about the dish made sense in that area!
That's not really true, there have been large populations of water buffalo in Mesopotamia, going back to 2500 BC.
@colbunkmust See, here's the problem.
You are assuming that the situation 4500 years ago is still true today. Modern day Iraq doesn't use buffalo in its cuisine.
Of course it would have been in mesopotamia, that's how the animals reached the west, but it didn't last.
Honestly the influence Italy had on Egyptian cuisine probably kept buffalo as part of it.
If you go to buffalo meat, rather than just water buffalo, wiki page it gives a list of the countries where it is part of their diet and the only middle Eastern country listed is Egypt.
When he mentioned buffalo, I immediately thought of water buffalo as well! I am not as familiar with that part of the world, so my guess was more towards Pakistan. 😅
Love the way Ben explains everything in detail….can see his Passion for food 👌👌♥️
Pinoy here. Loved that you featured Magic Water, though its a relatively new concoction even in Manila. Its previous iterations were colored drinks, also called "Palamig" which basically means "something cold," which are sweet flavoured waters with jellies or sago. Flavours could include coconut, mango and even strawberry.
The banana flavor surprised me. I remembered coconut or mago being much more common, but if it's a newer flavor that makes more sense.
I felt so badly for Mike, but dang, well done Jamie!!! He absolutely STORMED it this time!
I would love it if you guys would include maps showing where it came from, and where their guesses were in relation to it. I've started to pull up a world map when I watch this, so I can pinpoint my own guesses. It'd be great to have more of a visual within the actual video to show their guesses, though!
PS: I was excited that I got Jamaica spot on!! I've never seen any of these dishes, but it was the addition of Scotch Bonnet that nailed it for me! Though I was a bit thrown off by the origin of the cod. LOL
As a filipino, hearing it pronounced "Hay-lo Hay-lo" was understandable, but threw me for a loop. Glad you guys tried it, though! If you guys look at it again in the future, it's pronounced "Ha-lo ha-lo" ("ha"like the laughing "ha ha ha")
They're brits they can't pronounce words correctly in foreign language
Jamie SMASHED the game today 😱
He was on fire 🔥
Made up for the 7-1 loss against Ben.
They were pretty easy this round… I knew all of these
Except for his spelling of Philippines.
I was just about to start the video but thanks for the thumbnail spoiler I won't be watching it now
The fish is also very likely from Newfoundland as they once traded salt cod for rum. So much so the Newfoundland tradition of getting “screeched in” is done with a Newfoundland staple of Jamaican rum.
Yes! I was just going to comment this. We have a long history of trade.
i was just hit with the realization i've been watching you lot since near the beginning-- that's half my life by now! thanks for all your hard work!
11:33 When I first saw the dish, I had guessed HSP (Halal snack pack) from Australia until plantain was mentioned
Same! It looks so similar to a HSP, especially from a food truck late at night! xD
Eating a lovely Japanese noodle broth and gyoza whilst watching this, I hope is enough to not make me hungry like this series usually makes me. Though it likely won’t stop me wanting to a book a holiday 😂
Sounds bliss. Enjoy!
I have to actively ban Sorted past 7:00pm. If I don't, I will guaranteed start cooking and end up eating a 4th meal at around 8 or 9. They are so good at not only describing what they are tasting, but also filming the food so it looks absolutely delicious!
@@loswingman i never watch sorted unless i have some kind of food handy
Poker Face 2.0: Classics Edition. I was watching one of the old Poker Faces and think they should try them again in the new format. The burnt spices, garlic ball, over salted chocolate seem easy enough to hide in the group format.
8:20 We thank you very much for allowing it ebbers! Always gotta grab some good food after a night out with friends!
100%
@@SortedFood 🫡🫡🫡
Shouting country names at the TV while having leftover pasta with ketchup and some olives for dinner. Perfect sunday 😂
Sundays off are rare for me, this was a perfect start to a day off!
That previous cultivar of banana that artificial banana was based on is the Gros Michel. There are ongoing efforts to breed resistance to Panama disease, a fungal infection that's highly contagious, into Gros Michels, including at least one project to hybridize them with Cavendish bananas (which are resistant to Panama disease), but as far as I know nobody's gotten to large-scale production capability yet.
15:17 Someone should tell Mike that bananas originated in Southeast Asia.
Well-done, Jamie! Two spot on and all four choices winners. Mike, you were a very gracious non-winner today. 🙂
Lmao I love that he called out Jamie for choosing Turkey because "it was big".
Mike is always very gracious. 😊
Should do one of these with a couple dish's from the same place to throw off the guesses "It can't be *Country name* twice"
Absolutely love this format, especially with street food! 😋
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC MAKING IT TO SORTED MAKES ME SO HAPPY! 🇩🇴
Gotta say, the equivalent of a HSP with plantain chips sounds pretty damn tasty, too
Me Too.. although I've never seen it with yuca, and just one meat. Normally it's with chicken, sausage, pork. Alot of cheese, and either plantain or potato fries..
Representtttt 🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴
I saw the dish and immediately thought "esas son papas locas de Puerto Rico!" No estaba tan lejos 😂
I must say I thought it would be a Suriname/ Dutch Caribbean dish. As it looks really similar to the Dutch dish Kapsalon. Only adapted to the Caribbean kitchen.
Even more as it is only 20 years old as also the Kapsalon is more or less same age.
I got Jamaica spot on and Brazil for the other one so close-ish. Jamie getting two bang on is impressive! This game is Hard!
Those were my guesses as well! The others I had no clue.
@kelqueen9998 didn't even hear him say pita but did hear buffalo + the spices so was thinking water buffalo SE Asia, way off! Last one was alien food, there was no chance
While I wish the first appearance of my home Province would of been you reviewing our Donairs I am overjoyed to hear Nova Scotia mentioned in a video
Yes the Halifax donair would be a good shout on this format!
I’m sure they’d think it was middle eastern, so similar to doner/gyro but with the sweet sauce and beef it’s uniquely Canadian 😊
Yeah Nova Scotia! Home sweet home
After Jamie's guess in the last one, I saw Mike's soul leave his body
Poor Mike 😂
@Sorted As you're always looking for spice blends from different places you might want to include "vadouvan" in one of the games. An Indo-French curry masala. The French version of UK "Curry Powder". Great with fish or root veg especially, but used in many dishes & would confuse the guessers no end.
Ooooh interesting, thanks for the suggestion :)
I've just recently discovered vadouvan and have started using it in a lot of my cooking, thanks to an Angela Hartnett chicken recipe. Love the smoky flavour that it imparts.
@@danutagajewski3330 I must admit it's something I had in my spice cabinet but didn't know much about for ages. Did a little research on it & appreciated it all the more. I've ended up using it a lot in one of my favourite Sunday breakfast dishes kedgeree among other things. Will have to look out the Angela Hartnett recipe, she's one of my fave chefs.
This is an amazing series (and its sibling series). I always get excited when I’m able to speak about something brand new to my friends when talking about a country! Thank you all for all the work that goes into these!
I absolutely love these videos, I get so excited when you guys post one!
Glad you like them! :)
Yay an ingredient from Nova Scotia! Home sweet home
I love how this format is as much of a history and geography lesson as much as it is about food ❤
I love this series for 2 reasons. I learn more about foods around the world, and it's interesting seeing the thought process of the "normals". I wish more global foods were accessible in other places. Many of the ones you've had on your show I would like to try.
Another superb video !
In Austria there is a popular street food, called Bosna, which is a hot dog with mustard, curry powder and parsley, could be difficult for them to guess.
Maybe you can consider it for upcoming episodes.
Great job guys - LOVED this! It was amazing listening to Jamie and Mike's thought process as people who have traveled extensively and experienced such varations of food/culture. Pro-tip: the Philippine dish halo halo is pronounced hah-low hah-low.🤘
The way I GASPED when you mentioned Nova Scotia, Canada - love my home province! 🇨🇦
I love this series! Your episodes make my day Sorted 😀
As a Filipino when I heard palamig, my ear tingled a little. Haha
I heard the name and went "must be Phillippines". There's just something about your language that grabs me like that whenever it appears in these games. :D
I think they've featured some other Filipino and SEA dishes on the channel before.
Is halo-halo pronounced with a soft "a"? Like in the word "happy." That's how I think I've heard it here (Canada, but lots of Filipino people here). I remember the English-Filipino (Hawaiian too?) chef they had on
@@SquidandCatAdventures its not like Halo (as in the angel "crown" or game series) but more directly A like your example, lo like in locust ^^; its literal meaning is stir/mix x2 ^^
nagulat lang ako na banana-flavored ung palamig 😅
Yaroa is also served in Puerto Rico, which is where I had it, but I also guessed that it was from Dominican Republic. So final rundown I got Egypt, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, and The Philippines. I usually never get more than one spot on.
Never thought I’d see something obscure like Magic Water featured on this show! Damn the researchers are GOOD!
Love watching these and learning about foods I have never heard of. Thank you food team, everyone of you do a fantastic job. Bravo Jamie on a clean sweet. Mike, it is always a pleasure seeing you in these videos.
Thank you for the wonderful video tasting STREET FOOD from around the world 👍
Jamie with that last one!! i’m from that country and i didn’t even know where it was from until i heard what it was called!!
Yes! I was having a bleh day and then *boom*, I see my fave series from you folks. Instantly better. Thank you!
Brilliant.. Only got the first two bang on today. I was thrown on the "Magic Water". Used to cans of Chinese pop/soda with gelatin cubes in it.
Two is pretty good going 👏
I love this series! It’s always so good!
I always love a good Nova Scotia call out. My home exports such good food. You guys gotta do donair if you haven’t already that’d be hilarious for the normals to figure out!
There needs to be a sorted field trip to Newfoundland, Canada to experience the other half of the jamaca/canada connection. ;)
Man, great job Jamie! This was wonderful. I hadnt heard of any of these. Thanks for the videos!
Wow! They mentioned my province, Nova Scotia. Sorted realized we exist!! 😂😂😂
Dane her with a Suggestion for a Danish streetfood.
Bøfsandwich (Beefsandwich)
-Burgerbun
-Beefpatty
-Pickled beatroot
-Pickled Cucumber
-Ketchup
-Remoulade (danish condement)
-Soft onions
-crisp onions
-Brown pan sauce
Eaten with knife and fork
your global videos are my absolute favourite, really fascinating and informative. and always better when i get one right 😁
So glad you enjoy them 😁
The "stamp and go" is also called "accra" in Trinidad!
love the content!
Moment i saw the first dish i was happy, ate em in jamaica a lot and they are relatively easy to make anywhere. The texture when freshly fried is so nice and airy
Love this series. What about putting up a map showing where their guesses are and the country where the food is from?
I love these videos, it's both fun and educational -and make me hungry so I only ever watch them while I'm eating lunch.
Love global street food vids
I love around the world theme!!
But anything from this channel is fun and full of information too
In the north of the Netherlands we have the eierbal. It is an egg with a kind of curry paste. Maybe it can throw them off because of the curry paste.
The Naval connection to Stamp and Go is that "stamp and go" shanties were the only kind allowed in the Royal Navy. The synchronised the crew when hauling heavy ropes. Drunken Sailor is an example. They would jerk on the rope and stamp their feet in time. I expect the food was popular with sailors on shore leave!
yup the Gros Michel banana was the globally most popular banana up until the 60's when a fungus that they were susceptible to came about and killed most of them off, since most bananas were grown relatively close to one another. There are still a couple of plantations i believe that do grow the Gros Michel but not in large enough quantities for them to be a mainstay globally.
Love these. Sharp on the upload time today too.
For the next steeds food video you can try maybe "kibbeling" from the Netherlands. It is battered chuncks of white fish, commonly served with a mayonnaise based garlic sauce or tartar sause.
This might be the best format you guys have ever had!
Why thank you kindly.
You need to do a magwinya from South Africa. You get them on almost every street corner, but only in the morning, because it's all sold out at noon. So easy and so delicious!
Strangely or unsurprisingly, the battered cod is something you can pick up in several versions around Vancouver.
Being from Puerto rico the street food from the Dominican Republic seem extremely similar. I’ve never seen it made with fried cassava here in PR, but I instantly knew this had to be a dish from the spanish speaking Caribbean and Central American region, based on a few things. Ketchup mayo and mustard which is american influence, picadillo (the ground beef mixture) a very traditional dish from latam countries, and cassava a native and commonly eaten tuber from the region. My first thought was DR, so I got it right 😂.
Hi Mike,
I got the same score as you! These are really hard!
Jamie got luck, I can tell by the look on his face when he got the bullseyes! 😊
the gelatin drink at the end really reminded me of aiyu, which i had most in Taiwan, which is a sweet jelly made from natural aiyu seeds and often served in a cold ‘broth’ with acidity from lemon, lime, or melon!
As someone from Nova Scotia, I just get excited when we get mentioned!
I love the around the world vids 😊
Love to hear it! Enjoy!
For us who don’t have a great grasp of the World geography would it be possible to pop up a map of the guesses and where it actually is?
BTW we love this series! Always learn something wonderful
These are my favorite videos! These and the alphabet country cook.
I love this format so much! For your next street food adventure, I have a suggestion : Have you ever tried Boza? It's a traditional fermented drink popular in North Macedonia and other parts of the Balkans. It has a tangy, sweet flavor and is often served with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. Would love to see you try it!
Mike wasn't wrong...in Trinidad we do have a similar dish called saltfish accra
I love when I watch the video and the notification comes after!!!! I started playing along... I am usually way far off!!
Let us know if you get any today :)
@@SortedFoodI am a Mike today!!!! None!! Zero!!! But it was a great episode! Well done!
@SortedFood Caribbean food was way too obvious for me. Scotch bonnets and use of plantains are staples/ signature ingredients of that region. Need more poker face videos btw. One could be gelatin dishes from 70s where everything was put in jello and or gelatin
Love you guys ❤
I got Jamaica and the Philippines right!! Great job, Jamie!! And I guessed Brazil when y'all guessed Argentina and Chile, so right there with you.
You should try smultringer! Basically the norwegian version of a doughnut. We usually make it for christmas as one of the seven sorts of cookies, but can also been bought as a street food 😊
“It’s fake banana that used to be real banana” Gros Michel mentioned letssss gooooooo
Congratulations Jamie❤
Watching this while eating farmers sausage in my egg sandwich instead of the usual bacon thanks to Kush a few weeks ago... happy Sunday!
Food suggestion - Bunny Chow - South Africa (Does not contain Bunny).
Loving seeing some Egyptian street food on here! 🇪🇬 There are some legendary dishes from that region. The bread used is more commonly called baladi rather than pitta. Delicious either way! So good.
#3 was cool because it reminded me of poutine. It has the same basic building blocks. Meat cheese and starchy strips covered in sauce. Its really neat. And then hearing dominican republic, reminds me that the french influence spread so far.
I feel the need to comment 😂 First dish, you know them as Stampn/Go? When Jamie said Fish, I immediately knew they were also known as HushPuppies. in Southern USA fritters made with salt cod, made into fritters and fed to the dogs to keep them satisfied and quiet, hence the name hush puppies .
I learnt about them some years ago and started experimenting with the concept using smoked fish here in the UK, and they are delicious and kept my children quiet 😂
I give myself an invisible point for recognising what the dish was before Jamie and Mike did, without even tasting 😅
Interesting, the only hushpuppies I've had in the Southern USA are seasoned cornmeal w onions, deep fried. Yummy! No fish involved.
Hey there! You should try:
- stuffed mussels (midye dolma)
- grilled sheep intestines (kokoreç) (κοκορέτσι in greece)
- stuffed meatballs (içli köfte)
- çibörek (also known as çiğ börek) from turkey.
Also, I think leymehun would be a great diversion as its roots are in the middle east from armenia to syria, a national street food in uruguay!
Hey Sorted! I know it’s a throwback, but I would love to see more Foods that Made History. Gameshow Ebbers must emerge from the shadows again!
Well done Jamie!🏆
Next time you guys travel can you do a podcast type video where you guys sit around and chat over food? I really like the under the cloche episodes of the sorted crew over guests for some reason
Love you guys, wish I could get some more long form content.
You guys should DEFINITELY include the Halal Snack Pack at some point. It's a big fave here in Australia, especially in Melbourne.
Spaff that is amazing! Well done!👏
Nova Scotia name drop!
so happy to see my country, the Dominican Republic showing off a staple of the nightlife food, awesome!
The stamp and go is very similar to Pataniscas de Bacalhau from Portugal (Portuguese codfish fritters). They are also made with salted cod, but they use egg, flour, onion and parsley.
I love watching the boys try street food! It's hilarious!
when you were talking about bananas in relation to the philippines, i thought you might be amazed to see and taste the difference of all our bananas. i swear we have sooo many kinds and they all taste somewhat different from each other.