all rice in my country is pre washed LOL mandatory by law to sell clean food if not clean it's not allowed to sell. and i do not eat rice or pasta at home. i make real food like a stew with fries or a fresh pizza
I'm Jamaican... I've never seen rice cooked like that. we never use cups for water we listen to our ancestors who tell us to stop lol. And she didn't even use soy sauce...like such a bland fried rice...
@@alexar.h.5031 Rice for Latinos and Caribbeans is a staple and its the basic of the basic for food. It determines if you are even a good wife! Its a serious cultural thing. Brits dont eat rice as a staple honestly so I'm not surprised.
@@art-byfayleif3938 if they don't wash their rice I'm afraid to ask if Brits wash their beans since they eat a lot of beans on toast (but they probably just eat canned beans) 😆 Brits don't cook they just heat things up
Lol.....after I saw that she washed it after cooking it half way, I was like not so bad then, at least she wash it, but there are people in the Western countries that does not wash rice. They just pure it straight from the packet...I've seen that and that's y I cook my own foods...
I cook asian food all the time. I've had immigrant neighbors ask why I cook "ethnic" dishes. I said life is too short to eat boring food. Japanese dishes include tempura, chicken yuzukosho with kabayaki sauce, beef sukiyaki, cream stew, chicken katsu, golden curry, and chicken yaki udon. My wife's friend from Kyushu said my cream stew tastes like home. No better compliment than that. 8 Pounds UK is a little less than $11USD
Let me just say. I LOVE YOU.. if more people were as intuitive etc Marriage rates would be through ceiling...Sadly all the Sweet people in Japan commit suicide.. its still a huge problem..Like with Haruma ..back in July 2020..
I also cook asian food all the time, and all kinds of other "ethnic" foods too. I absolutely love learning to make new dishes and trying new foods. Japanese food is really tasty and comforting but i especially love street foods, my favourites to make are gyoza, teriyaki chicken, katsu chicken, ramen, and yakisoba
I got so bored of food that's common here... so I pretty much go for everything else. My favorites so far are mostly various Asian dishes. I'm currently tearing my way through learning South Korean cuisine while expanding what I know of Japanese, Thai, Vietnamese, various regional Chinese, and Indian foods.
@@kochanchannn5014 Im an Asian replying to an Asian after commenting and reacting on a video of an Asian about reacting an Asian that is reacting to an Asian who's afraid of rice.
@@rfmerrill Haiya is just aiya with extra sighing in front, lol. You know like when aiyaaaaa.... trails off into a sigh? If you start sighing before you even get to the aiya then it'll come out as haiya. Seems to be more common in southern Chinese dialects though.
Here in Malaysia we haiya quite a lot when we're upset/frustrated. It really depends on the country and what kind of word they use to describe how frustrated they are
@@voidmain2453 and ヤバい? I searched it and apparently it means "dangerous" or in slang "cool, sick, awesome", but that doesn't make sense here, does it? :D "Sick" in it's negative meaning would work, but is ヤバい also usable positive as well as negative?
I'm French and I can say according to your reactions about this video that most of frenchies do not know how to properly cook rice. Everyone I know, including myself, make really wet rice and remove excess water from the pan, exactly like pasta. We also usually don't wash the rice before cooking but I began to do it few months ago. I'm interested about learning how to make a good rice according to japanese people for example because I've never been teached so! I send you love from France, you're doing great!
I completely understand. My rice never turned out good, until watching Uncle Roger now I wash my rice 2-3x, measure it correctly, and cook it without burning or having to strain. It's an art you have to use patience and practice. But fluffy, "dry", beautifully cooked rice is worth it!
I'll never forget when we were sharing cultural heritage in my elementary class and one of my classmates taught us to make fried rice! It was delicious and the best part of the whole week.
you can also check out this one: "Uncle Roger HATE Jamie Oliver Egg Fried Rice" this one also really funny to watch and also really pissed me off a little bit😹🙈
George we love you💕💕💕. Never knew you would react to Uncle Roger not that I'm complaining lol. Idk why I find you so generous and kind person just through the smile. Great reaction keep up the good work once again lots of love😁😘😘
Well... probably. If you are going to make a 'white person' rice dish then this is not a wrong method (well, not the rinsing of the rice at the end... don't know anyone who does that). Take risotto for example. Doubt any chef would use a rice cooker to make risotto. But, as she was doing an asian dish this was clearly the wrong method. One should adapt to the technique of the dish one is going to make.
@@evawettergren7492 yes but risotto is made with different rice. Aborio rice I believe. Not with beautiful Jasmine rice for example. I've messed up so many pots of rice in my life! Lol
Even as an American, I was sitting here yelling at this video about her not washing the rice and draining rice like it's pasta. I cook Japanese at home, and I would never cook rice this way, lol. As a fun follow up, Uncle Roger actually did another video where he met the chef (Hersha Patel) in person. :)
My dad has taught me the correct ways to cook Asian foods and I’m very glad! I can make some amazing fried rice! (I’m very proud of my culinary skills and I’m very interested in improving!) Pro tip-Invest in a rice cooker, it will make your life a much more simple existence!
While in this instance and most you should wash the rice, there are dishes like risotto where washing the rice is counter productive to making a good dish. (Assuming the rice is clean of all debris which it usually is in America)
It's not dirty. You don't wash dirt off of rice, you wash off the excess surface starch. If you don't, your rice ends up gummy and the excess starch burns to the side of the pot. Rinse your rice a couple times under water to get rid of a lot of that "cloudy" water that comes out (the starch) and then soak your rice before cooking it to get really nice, fluffy rice instead of a pile of sad, chewy plop.
Everyone is so focused on the rice straining, but I must point out she said to drain after TEN minutes! If rice cooked in 10 minutes, life would be so easy. Her rice has to be crunchy.
It takes a couple minutes for it to reach a boil and then she tilted the lid to let it cook for 10 minutes. So it probably took 12-13 minutes to cook in total.
@@rene925 Does tilting the lid make it cook in less time? (I was referring to actually simmer time, btw. Just to be clear. But I don't know of very many rices that have an actual simmer time of 10min...)
She maybe cooked it on a very high temperature. I cook rice like this: heat up until it boils and then heat gets reduced to very low heat for 12 mins -> Now the water should be gone and i put the pot on a place that is not hot. Maybe add some butter on top and wait for another 12 mins.
I lived in Brazil for three years and I really liked the way Brazilians cook rice. Back in my country I continued doing it the Brazilian way, it's very good! (Here in Japan I use Thai rice because Japanese grain is not suitable for this)
Here in Italy we never wash rice for risotto to leave all the starch in it to help thicken it. But even here, if you need to drain the rice there's something really wrong going on. I have no clue about UK's local recipes. Ps: It really depends, most people don't cook anything but Italian food at home, but there are exceptions of course.
If it's arborio rice, I usually just toast it straight away for risotto. Otherwise any other rice you would pre-rinse it. My Nonna used to make it all the time when I was little :)
@@rifahnanjib1284 Of course! I was talking about an Italian dish though that usually toasts the dry rice, you can't really rinse it if you need to toast it first. Always wash your rice otherwise though!!
Well yeah, if you wash it or not depends on what are you going to do with it. George asked if it was common not to wash it and I was just pointing out that for some recipes it is.
in germany its also not commend that the rice gets washed, when my friend was here and i did onigiri she was like "Why do u wash the rice?!" i just shot back "WAIT WHAT U DONT DO IT?!"
Yes sadly, it's disgusting :( I think it's because dangerous contents are more stricly measured/prohibited before a food goes on the shelf here and Germans don't eat rice that often so the risk isn't as high. But it's still a horrible thing 😅
@@alicia.katharina Well, from a scientific viewpoint washing the rice before cooking it won't actually get rid of any arsenic that might be present in the rice. To get rid of arsenic you will need to cook the rice in water that you then remove, not steam it. If you cook rice in a rice cooker the arsenic will simply be reabsorbed in to the rice again along with the water. So from that perspective she was doing the right thing. Her rice will not contain as much arsenic since she boiled out the arsenic and rinsed it away.
@@evawettergren7492 Sorry. We Asians have been doing this method (wash your rice first before cook it) since ages ago. And many have lived up to 80 y/o and even 90 y/o but still healthy. I'll listen to westerners if they talk about cheese and breads though. lol~
@@wannaim6958 I did not mean to make it as if it is wrong to wash the rice. I was merely pointing out that for getting rid of arsenic specifically it won't work. Most likely the rice in asia rarely conatin arsenic so it doesn't matter anyway. (It might be local conditions or modern pollutions that cause some rice to have higher levels of arsenic.) As the japanese are nr 1 in the world when it comes to good health and they sure eat lots of rice (probably washing it too) I of course would never argue the practice. As for cheese... well, we europeans argue among ourselves a lot about cheese so who are we to say nobody else can join in?
I never saw anyone drain rice before. And I’m American living in America where lots of people mess up cooking. I was taught you NEVER drain rice or mess with it while it’s cooking.
I live in the UK and literally dashed across my flat once to stop my partner from draining the rice. 🤦♀️I think it depends on how your parents cooked at home. My mum is Indian and I grew up in Puerto Rico, so you bet I know how to cook rice! But my partner grew up with roasts and bread, so he only learned as an adult. 😅
Yes!! I enjoyed watching this even more than watching the original video. George’s reactions just add something special to it. It’s like hanging out with a buddy. ...I am SO LONELY in my quarantine. 🤣
In Europe, many rice packages say to "cook the rice in an overload of water" and to "drain the rice afterwards". They also say there's no need ti wash the rice, because it's already 'clean'. Also in Europe, most rice is quick-cook rice which needs to cook for like 8 minutes. It's a disaster.
We have rice like this in America too, I was shocked the first time I saw it. I forbade my husband from ever buying that kind of rice. The only rice in my home comes through the door in 50-lb bags.
It is just a quick way to cook rice. In West Europe we don't need to wash the rice. The rice is already washed before being packed. We don't use rice cooker. There is so many different types of rice and there is a ton of different ways how to cook rice. If I want good japanese cooked rice, I asked a japanese cook for it, if I want Italian risotto I just ask my Italian chef father.😉 I am so happy, I love all types of rice in all diferent ways cooked.
Quick cook rice like Minute rice might taste okay to some but its stripped of most nutriments...Easier dosen't equate to better a extra 12 minutes tops on stove or just 3 minutes more in rice cooker...Seriously I don't understand the laziness...Food is important to health.
I am American. I always rinse my rice, I do measure because we don't have a rice cooker, and I've never seen someone rinse the rice after cooking it. It isn't uncommon to make fried rice at home, but we almost never make more complex asian dishes.
I'm from the UK and my mum cooks rice exactly like this. The rice always ends up really soggy and tasting like water and it's not very good. This is probably why I do not like rice much. I have been to friends' houses where their parents have cooked rice like this too.
This is literally how I was taught to cook rice 😂 for years I could never eat rice because I thought it was hard and it always hurt my stomach. Now I have a rice cooker 🙄
Only legends know that when this video uploaded the title was *"A"* 😂 *Edit* - Oh god "322" likes i never got this much..you guys are awesome thank u :)
So yes, it's an extremely common thing for Westerners in general to not rinse their rice. I can read in five languages and looked into it some years ago and learned in some countries they're as outraged by rinsing polished rice (waste of potable water) as most Asians are by not rinsing rice. It is common to cook some Americanized versions of Chinese, Japanese, etc. cuisine. Growing up, we always used teriyaki sauce as a meat marinade. I tasted how my Vietnamese roommate made rice about 12 years ago and that was it, I changed over to how she made rice, but my mom still likes her wet, heavy rice better.
Chinese takeout is like, the cheap option! I would never pay £8 for a fried rice dish lol that's probably at some capitalist chain place. The local places owned by Chinese families it's like £3 even in London for egg fried rice.
@@misumatchua Very true. Here in Canada I knew a guy who owned a Chinese restaurant, he had the normal menu for customers, but when Chinese people came in they got the "secret" menu of actual Chinese food. We tried a few things from there, and it was COMPLETELY different from what you'd normally expect from Chinese food.
Hi, old UK lady here. I wash rice, cook rice, no water left to drain if it cooks right!!!I make a mean spicy, prawn noodle soup. I don't have msg but do have many Asian spices and also like to make sweet red bean pancakes. I tried making mochi but I failed. Katsu is very popular in UK right now.
Nigel Ng is professional stage comedian. Uncle Roger is his character he plays. And he is really good in connecting people through humor. There is another video where he tells, he cried when his parents laughed watching this video. Here in Europa is lot of people who don't like rice a don't know how to cook it. On rice packaging are instructions how to cook it and some are in this rice murdering style. :D
It's pretty common to cook Asian-inspired dishes in America. I grew up eating chicken teriyaki and rice, and also stir-fried veggies and chicken with soy sauce, garlic, and ginger. The supermarkets all have frozen battered chicken with veggies and sauce that you can fry up at home and pair with rice, too. And frozen egg rolls, spring rolls, dumplings, pot stickers, etc.
I've been watching your content for about a month off and on, and well George I like you, you are entertaining, and informative, you sir have earned a subscriber 👍
I love uncle roger’s videos. They actually get along really well done and have done videos together. I love they way you and Uncle Roger reacted the same time when she strained the rice 😂
About her not washing the rice at the beginning, some brands pre-rinse it. To be honest, I go ahead and wash the rice anyway because I don't trust that they were thorough. Also, she doesn't know how to cook egg fried rice correctly. She made everything separately. The great thing about stirfry is you fry it all together and the tastes combine and enhance each other.
@Gold Star Gaming I put either chicken or pork tenderloin in mine, bean sprouts, snow peas, baby bok choy, onions and red bell peppers, so yeah, it has as much as stew when you include the rice and eggs.
fun fact you are not supposed to put pasta over cold water source: www.thelocal.it/20170717/ten-golden-rules-how-to-cook-pasta-like-the-italians-al-dente-chef edit its number seven on the list
I have a lot of food allergies, so I have to prepare most of my food from scratch at home each day. Traditional American food-at least from the central states-doesn't emphasize many vegetables, or when vegetables are presented, they're fried or covered in cheese or high calorie sauces. I have discovered so many new vegetable recipes from watching mealtimes in Asian dramas and trying to figure out what the dishes are! Gailan is amazing!!! TH-cam is such a great resource for new recipes as well!
I grew up on a farm. We ate a lot of vegetables and I still do. It was very traditional in the south to eat several vegetable sides with each meal. I think the thing to remember is that America is very large and very diverse. 🙂
My mother has always been the type to make sure we have at least some sort of vegetable with our meals though I totally see your point. My fiance won't eat many vegitables unless I cook them in butter first.
I gotta say, watching you react to Uncle Roger react to BBC fried rice was hilarious haaaiiiyaaa 😂😂 Maybe you should check out his reaction to Gordon Ramsay's fried rice video, it's almost the complete opposite of this one 😁😉
I love making Japanese soups. It's my favorite food when it's cold outside or if someone is sick. Nothing smells or feels better than warm broth with ginger and soy sauce when you have a sore throat.
Yeah but in the UK we don’t use wang to mean that. We would day knob, or dick etc 😂 We use wang as a verb, it’s like a relaxed way of saying put or throw. Just wang it in the pan, can you wang that bag over here?
To be fair that’s the way over only ever seen people do it in the UK! That’s also how the rice packet says to cook it. I only know the ‘proper’ Asian way from watching Asian people cook
Where I live people don't eat rice a lot and if they do most of rice available to buy is in these prepackaged portions (in one box you have 4 plastic bags with portion for one person, you cook the rice in those plastic bags and then hang them to let the water drain), so most people do not wash rice in here. I am one of the few probably that buys rice that is packaged per kilograms (the bigger package I can find the better) and I always wash rice and omg never drain it! When you cook your rice correctly there is no water left! I wanna buy 炊飯器 next time I'll be in Japan, but the voltage difference makes it difficult.
In Portugal we don’t wash the rice because the rice is cleaned at the factories 🏭 and is packaged ready to cook but we don’t use a colander or drain the rice. It’s not common for family’s in Portugal to cook non-European food, we have a rich cuisine as well so in our households he usually stick with traditional or European food. Also if you don’t live in a “big” city is really difficult to find supermarkets where you can buy Asian, African or America (etc...) ingredients like Mirin, Maple syrup, Mandioca etc... Love your channel keep up with the good work 😊.
No Brasil acontece o mesmo, o arroz já é vendido lavado pela grande maioria das marcas, mas acredito que seja algo recente, talvez dos últimos 15-20 anos, pois existem casas ainda, normalmente mais velhas, onde as pessoas ainda guardam escorredores de arroz.
@@mrsrockbison my mom is black half of my family is black and No One washes de rice 🍚 so I’m pretty sure is not about the color of our skin but about our family’s costumes 😅😅😅
It's normal to wash the rice in Europe (and in my case - Norway) as well - sometimes with the exception of already portioned bags, where it can be a bit of a pain. Edit: Not AFTER cooking the rice, but before. 😋
Unfortunately it is not. I live in germany and most people here haven't even heard of washing the rice before cooking it. They are always shocked when they learn that unwashed rice can even contain arsenic residue.
As a westerner i can confirm a lot of us cook blandly like this. I’ve only started eating foreign and seasoned food on the regular when i was like 15 or something
Living in the USA on the east coast I get most of my Japanese from local restaurants but when I tried Korean for the first time hours and hours away I knew I had to learn to cook it. Now I have an actual rice cooker in the house and tend to cook a good bit of Japanese, Korean and other things. Mexican is probably still the country I cook the most of but I always try to make a variety. Even if I can't afford to travel the world I can cook the different things at home! Hopefully correctly!
"Uncle Roger is Malaysian PEEPO!" Actually he is. Nigel Ng is a Malaysian comedian. I love his stuff, and how his accent breaks all the time. He sounds like the Malaysian nurse who taught me to make Serbuk Kari Ayam dan Daging. As a WHY PEEPO, myself, I love the way his head blows up every time he says "WHY PEEPO". That nurse and I used to mess with the Asian Radiologists at our hospital back in the day (early 1990's). She'd casually refer to me as a "fahn gwai lo" and I'd mutter "you come to our country and steal our women". We got a huge lecture one time, about how "RACISM WILL NOT BE TOLERATED!" There wasn't any. We were literally doing what I theses days I call an "UNCLE ROGER". Wouldn't try it today. No one understands nuance, or they do, and just want to virtue signal.
Hi I'm Malaysian here & I just subscribed your channel 😊 I think u r good looking 😝, u r funny too when u said haiyaaaa lol 😂u really made my day 😉 haiya is Malaysian n Singapore Chinese people slang 😁
I'm originally from Iraq, and been cooking rice since I was 7 !! We wash the rice first, soak it for at least 15 minutes, add oil in a pot, then add the rice. We put enough water to cover the rice by about one centimeters (since it was already soaked), cover until it is fully cooked, stirr, and cover again until ready to serve.
2:33 8 Pounds = 9.46 USD = 989.71 JPY Which is pretty expensive for asian countries that costs about 1 to 2 Pounds for sidewalk's friedrice 🤣 Edit: Sc: CurrencyPlus Updated: 19.54, Oct 27 2020
I laughed so much. I grew up on parboiled rice cooked in too much water strained through a collander. The European way. I was never a fan. Then I learned the right way to cook rice and it actualky tasted good. Mind blown. 😂
Yeah her way of cooking rice is...unusual 😂 In Jamaica where I’m from, it is mandatory to wash the rice before cooking it. Great video George. New subbie 😊
I like how "Uncle Roger" is a 20 something year old guy playing a 60 year old grumpy grandpa 🤣
@Sanjiv Bindraban nooo lol he's 29
@@misumatchua 29 is 20 something
@@Aikano9 ye ik but some one commented saying he was 40 lol
@Sanjiv Bindraban ik lol
69th like haha
I cooked egg fried rice following her recipe. It was not for me :) Lol
Why you want to die or something
😄😄😄😄😄
That was brave
Wet & undercooked rice was 😖 blech
all rice in my country is pre washed LOL mandatory by law to sell clean food if not clean it's not allowed to sell. and i do not eat rice or pasta at home. i make real food like a stew with fries or a fresh pizza
I'm Jamaican... I've never seen rice cooked like that. we never use cups for water we listen to our ancestors who tell us to stop lol. And she didn't even use soy sauce...like such a bland fried rice...
yes! gotta pile on the sodium, otherwise it doesnt taste authentic 😂
That looks like semi fried boiled rice... Eww, thankfully I'm Mexican-American and know how to cook rice
@@alexar.h.5031 Rice for Latinos and Caribbeans is a staple and its the basic of the basic for food. It determines if you are even a good wife! Its a serious cultural thing. Brits dont eat rice as a staple honestly so I'm not surprised.
@@art-byfayleif3938 if they don't wash their rice I'm afraid to ask if Brits wash their beans since they eat a lot of beans on toast (but they probably just eat canned beans) 😆 Brits don't cook they just heat things up
I agree
he didn’t get the bbc joke 😩this man has to be protected
Think he got it haha
Yeah hahahaha 😂
Explain it to me i too didn't get it. Plz
@@noobbutsmart2326 stay innocent pal
stay away BBC...........
...............................
very biased news channel
Lol George reverted back to say "MAJI?!"" which means "are you serious" in Japanese
"My body is made of fried rice"
-Every university student ever
More like 40% of it, the rest is instant noodles 🤣
@@yukinokoyuki1488 I feel personally attacked by this response
@@cyqry dw we've all been there
@@zero_s jokes on you I'm severely disabled and have someone cook proper food for me everyday.
Well then my body is made up of instant noodles. -_ a university student
Being an Indian when I saw her washing rice after cooking I screamed my lungs out "WHY" "WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOU"
🤪
That's evil what monster washes it after it cooks 0-0
Same
Lol.....after I saw that she washed it after cooking it half way, I was like not so bad then, at least she wash it, but there are people in the Western countries that does not wash rice. They just pure it straight from the packet...I've seen that and that's y I cook my own foods...
Since she didn’t wash the rice before cooking, it gets starchy after it’s cooked. That’s the reason for washing it after :-D
"I don't trust my finger" - George, 2020
I cook asian food all the time. I've had immigrant neighbors ask why I cook "ethnic" dishes. I said life is too short to eat boring food. Japanese dishes include tempura, chicken yuzukosho with kabayaki sauce, beef sukiyaki, cream stew, chicken katsu, golden curry, and chicken yaki udon. My wife's friend from Kyushu said my cream stew tastes like home. No better compliment than that.
8 Pounds UK is a little less than $11USD
Let me just say. I LOVE YOU.. if more people were as intuitive etc Marriage rates would be through ceiling...Sadly all the Sweet people in Japan commit suicide.. its still a huge problem..Like with Haruma ..back in July 2020..
I also cook asian food all the time, and all kinds of other "ethnic" foods too. I absolutely love learning to make new dishes and trying new foods. Japanese food is really tasty and comforting but i especially love street foods, my favourites to make are gyoza, teriyaki chicken, katsu chicken, ramen, and yakisoba
I got so bored of food that's common here... so I pretty much go for everything else. My favorites so far are mostly various Asian dishes. I'm currently tearing my way through learning South Korean cuisine while expanding what I know of Japanese, Thai, Vietnamese, various regional Chinese, and Indian foods.
@@Kanamagus some south Korean dishes are absolutely fantastic. Ssambap wraps are awesome
an asian reacting to an asian reacting to an asian who's afraid of rice.
Lol same I’m Asian
Then im an Asian reacting to an Asian reacting to an Asian reacting to an Asian who's afraid of rice.
@@Reymax164 Then I’m an Asian reacting to an Asian reacting to an Asian reacting to an Asian reacting to an Asian who’s afraid of rice
@@kochanchannn5014 Im an Asian replying to an Asian after commenting and reacting on a video of an Asian about reacting an Asian that is reacting to an Asian who's afraid of rice.
@@Reymax164 wooooooaaaaah
When Uncle Roger is upset, he puts his leg down.
When George is upset, he starts speaking japanese. 6:08
lol best part
What else he puts down? :D
@@laserdiscbeatz9846 uP
I died
Ngl I had the same reaction XD
6:09 you know its bad when goerge starts speaking japanese
Bro I also noticed that💀💀
I laughed so hard since that is one of the few words that I do understand 🤣
@@Tsuki_no_Megami can you tell me what it means
@@ee.-.8743 maji is like "for reall?????"
and yabai is like "thats fucked up" or something along the lines
I guess that was japanese equivalent of 'haiyaa'
"I don't trust my finger."
-George Japan
This can be taken wrong so easily 😂
@@josevitorlobo517 Surely that's the beauty of it lol
Yes
Yubi Yubi
I trust my finger. It measures better for me. To each their own
Uncle Rodger: "Who's afraid of rice?!"
Me, an American who frequently accidentally burns all the food she tries to cook: * sweats nervously *
I’m a rice master and have burned 5 pots of rice in the last 2 months 😅 it happens to us all
Failure...
I burned Roman because I but no water.😭👎🏾🤦♀️
@@lizemore187 my sister burned our microwave doing that lol
wait rice can be burnt?
I’m British and have never seen this style of rice cooking. Shocking destruction of rice!
I feel like Uncle Roger is going to make all asian people start saying “haiya” every time they see something they don’t like. Lol
We kinda already do. My country's version is "Ay-ya" or "ayay", so pretty similar.
哎呀 āiyā is a very common Chinese exclamation. I don't know where the "ha" comes from in his version, maybe it's a Malaysian version?
@@rfmerrill Haiya is just aiya with extra sighing in front, lol. You know like when aiyaaaaa.... trails off into a sigh? If you start sighing before you even get to the aiya then it'll come out as haiya. Seems to be more common in southern Chinese dialects though.
Been hiyaing since I was small.
Here in Malaysia we haiya quite a lot when we're upset/frustrated. It really depends on the country and what kind of word they use to describe how frustrated they are
6:09 You know you fak up when george using japanese instead of english in his english video XD Haiyaaa
6:09 When George speaks japanese and Nigel forgets get into Uncle Roger character 😆 you know you f up..
As an English person I gotta apologise for this. This isn't a style of rice, this is a fuck up lol
I second that!
6:19 he said maji (seriously) yabai (dangerous) losely translated... But i laughed through the whole video I swear-
6:10 george so surprised he said まじ and forgot he should be speaking English
Also, ヤバい
😂
I heard that too, but the direct translation doesn't really fit. When do they say it?
@@Schnapsbrennor まじ means "seriously?", in the way we say "omg, really?"
@@voidmain2453 and ヤバい? I searched it and apparently it means "dangerous" or in slang "cool, sick, awesome", but that doesn't make sense here, does it? :D "Sick" in it's negative meaning would work, but is ヤバい also usable positive as well as negative?
@@Schnapsbrennor oh ヤバイ can mean "this is Crazy" in a negative way, like saying "weird!!" or "what the hell"
I'm French and I can say according to your reactions about this video that most of frenchies do not know how to properly cook rice. Everyone I know, including myself, make really wet rice and remove excess water from the pan, exactly like pasta. We also usually don't wash the rice before cooking but I began to do it few months ago.
I'm interested about learning how to make a good rice according to japanese people for example because I've never been teached so!
I send you love from France, you're doing great!
c'est trop ça? j'étais là en mode "mais les instructions sur la boîte c'est de faire comme elle???"
Check out gordon ramsay video. Cook rice in 10 to 12 minutes
Understandable, that's how you cook pasta so without instructions you default to that.
I completely understand. My rice never turned out good, until watching Uncle Roger now I wash my rice 2-3x, measure it correctly, and cook it without burning or having to strain. It's an art you have to use patience and practice. But fluffy, "dry", beautifully cooked rice is worth it!
My favorite part about uncle Roger is the fact that his real voice barely even has an accent, he just does the stereotypical one for his character
That's interesting, I didn't know that!
This made me cringe just like when an argentinian lady tried to make tacos & tortillas and every mexican felt insulted
Maru Botana!! Jajaja
I'll never forget when we were sharing cultural heritage in my elementary class and one of my classmates taught us to make fried rice! It was delicious and the best part of the whole week.
you can also check out this one:
"Uncle Roger HATE Jamie Oliver Egg Fried Rice"
this one also really funny to watch
and also really pissed me off a little bit😹🙈
Yes this is the best video!!!!
You mean the "How to cook instant death rice" video?
@@tomlucht5015 Lol
George we love you💕💕💕. Never knew you would react to Uncle Roger not that I'm complaining lol. Idk why I find you so generous and kind person just through the smile. Great reaction keep up the good work once again lots of love😁😘😘
😊😊😊😊😊
he is just acting lol. He is living there of course he knows what BBC is
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
It's a porn joke. Big beautiful something
@@sassywolf1 big black cocktail 🍸🍸🍹
Yea he's been on BBC shows before xD
@@sassywolf1 you're confusing BBC with BBW
I love how accepting you are of everything as long as that person is happy. More people should be like this!
“How u learn how to make rice, white people cooking school”
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Well... probably. If you are going to make a 'white person' rice dish then this is not a wrong method (well, not the rinsing of the rice at the end... don't know anyone who does that). Take risotto for example. Doubt any chef would use a rice cooker to make risotto. But, as she was doing an asian dish this was clearly the wrong method. One should adapt to the technique of the dish one is going to make.
@@evawettergren7492 yes but risotto is made with different rice. Aborio rice I believe. Not with beautiful Jasmine rice for example. I've messed up so many pots of rice in my life! Lol
Ahahahaha!
Even as an American, I was sitting here yelling at this video about her not washing the rice and draining rice like it's pasta. I cook Japanese at home, and I would never cook rice this way, lol.
As a fun follow up, Uncle Roger actually did another video where he met the chef (Hersha Patel) in person. :)
My dad has taught me the correct ways to cook Asian foods and I’m very glad! I can make some amazing fried rice! (I’m very proud of my culinary skills and I’m very interested in improving!) Pro tip-Invest in a rice cooker, it will make your life a much more simple existence!
While in this instance and most you should wash the rice, there are dishes like risotto where washing the rice is counter productive to making a good dish. (Assuming the rice is clean of all debris which it usually is in America)
I was taught that American rice came pre-washed, like how they have to pre-wash eggs. I'm also white tho, I could be malinformed.
It's not dirty. You don't wash dirt off of rice, you wash off the excess surface starch. If you don't, your rice ends up gummy and the excess starch burns to the side of the pot. Rinse your rice a couple times under water to get rid of a lot of that "cloudy" water that comes out (the starch) and then soak your rice before cooking it to get really nice, fluffy rice instead of a pile of sad, chewy plop.
Same here lol. I might do that but before cooking it lol (for washing purpose yes). Never strained it like that
Everyone is so focused on the rice straining, but I must point out she said to drain after TEN minutes! If rice cooked in 10 minutes, life would be so easy. Her rice has to be crunchy.
There are rices that cook in 10min, but they are rare...Most cook in 15 at minimum...
It takes a couple minutes for it to reach a boil and then she tilted the lid to let it cook for 10 minutes. So it probably took 12-13 minutes to cook in total.
@@rene925 Does tilting the lid make it cook in less time? (I was referring to actually simmer time, btw. Just to be clear. But I don't know of very many rices that have an actual simmer time of 10min...)
She maybe cooked it on a very high temperature. I cook rice like this: heat up until it boils and then heat gets reduced to very low heat for 12 mins -> Now the water should be gone and i put the pot on a place that is not hot. Maybe add some butter on top and wait for another 12 mins.
@@derPetunientopf That is one way...but....her rice was wet. And that's prob the weirdest part of all of it. She didn't let the water boil out...@@
I love how even though the lady shocked him with her method, George reminds us that this is probably delicious for her.
To each their own.
I am in the US, southern Louisiana and I have never seen rice cooked that way either 😅 We eat rice alot here, not everyday but very often.
As a Brazilian, I'm personally insulted by the wet, strained rice.
FEIJÃO COM ARROZ É VIDA
I'm brasilian and actually hate beans, but I agree!
ALL HAIL RICE WITH BEANS!
I lived in Brazil for three years and I really liked the way Brazilians cook rice. Back in my country I continued doing it the Brazilian way, it's very good! (Here in Japan I use Thai rice because Japanese grain is not suitable for this)
🇧🇷❤
@@marciashiraishi5891 I'm glad you liked our rice so much!
@@lhamagalopante6735
Brazilian rice is very delicious! 😋😋😋
"who afraid of egg fried rice? Why you afraid of egg fried rice, where your courage?"
Here in Italy we never wash rice for risotto to leave all the starch in it to help thicken it. But even here, if you need to drain the rice there's something really wrong going on. I have no clue about UK's local recipes.
Ps: It really depends, most people don't cook anything but Italian food at home, but there are exceptions of course.
If it's arborio rice, I usually just toast it straight away for risotto. Otherwise any other rice you would pre-rinse it. My Nonna used to make it all the time when I was little :)
but dear it's an Asian dish you must wash rice grains and dry up rice soup in rice .😊 maximum Asians do the same
@@rifahnanjib1284 Of course! I was talking about an Italian dish though that usually toasts the dry rice, you can't really rinse it if you need to toast it first. Always wash your rice otherwise though!!
Well yeah, if you wash it or not depends on what are you going to do with it. George asked if it was common not to wash it and I was just pointing out that for some recipes it is.
@〈TheKfictions〉 not for risotto, no. The starch helps it to become nice and creamy :D Same reason we put pasta water in the sauces
Finnaly you reacted to him
Ive been waiting
in germany its also not commend that the rice gets washed, when my friend was here and i did onigiri she was like "Why do u wash the rice?!" i just shot back "WAIT WHAT U DONT DO IT?!"
Yes sadly, it's disgusting :( I think it's because dangerous contents are more stricly measured/prohibited before a food goes on the shelf here and Germans don't eat rice that often so the risk isn't as high.
But it's still a horrible thing 😅
@@alicia.katharina Well, from a scientific viewpoint washing the rice before cooking it won't actually get rid of any arsenic that might be present in the rice. To get rid of arsenic you will need to cook the rice in water that you then remove, not steam it. If you cook rice in a rice cooker the arsenic will simply be reabsorbed in to the rice again along with the water. So from that perspective she was doing the right thing. Her rice will not contain as much arsenic since she boiled out the arsenic and rinsed it away.
@@evawettergren7492 Sorry. We Asians have been doing this method (wash your rice first before cook it) since ages ago. And many have lived up to 80 y/o and even 90 y/o but still healthy. I'll listen to westerners if they talk about cheese and breads though. lol~
@@wannaim6958 I did not mean to make it as if it is wrong to wash the rice. I was merely pointing out that for getting rid of arsenic specifically it won't work. Most likely the rice in asia rarely conatin arsenic so it doesn't matter anyway. (It might be local conditions or modern pollutions that cause some rice to have higher levels of arsenic.) As the japanese are nr 1 in the world when it comes to good health and they sure eat lots of rice (probably washing it too) I of course would never argue the practice. As for cheese... well, we europeans argue among ourselves a lot about cheese so who are we to say nobody else can join in?
Germans make rice in plastic bags that they boil and drain, its weird.
Omg George just reacted at the same moment as uncle roger when she used the colander lol
I never saw anyone drain rice before. And I’m American living in America where lots of people mess up cooking. I was taught you NEVER drain rice or mess with it while it’s cooking.
No... Wash the rice before cooking. Once it's cooking, don't mess with it
Ye but that womans from England tho so shes probably the only one who cooks like that
I live in the UK and literally dashed across my flat once to stop my partner from draining the rice. 🤦♀️I think it depends on how your parents cooked at home. My mum is Indian and I grew up in Puerto Rico, so you bet I know how to cook rice! But my partner grew up with roasts and bread, so he only learned as an adult. 😅
I have never drained rice either. I’m American. I was shocked too!
Lol, George’s reaction to the video is great. Together they really vibe. Also, George, your face really transforms when you laugh, it’s a great laugh!
Yes!! I enjoyed watching this even more than watching the original video. George’s reactions just add something special to it. It’s like hanging out with a buddy.
...I am SO LONELY in my quarantine. 🤣
@@MarinaRhymin Marina, I feel you lol
In Europe, many rice packages say to "cook the rice in an overload of water" and to "drain the rice afterwards". They also say there's no need ti wash the rice, because it's already 'clean'.
Also in Europe, most rice is quick-cook rice which needs to cook for like 8 minutes. It's a disaster.
We have rice like this in America too, I was shocked the first time I saw it. I forbade my husband from ever buying that kind of rice. The only rice in my home comes through the door in 50-lb bags.
yo mate. Wash the rice before cooking is not just trying to make it clean. It will make the rice taste bettter.
i hate quick cook rice 😷 blasphemous invention!
It is just a quick way to cook rice.
In West Europe we don't need to wash the rice.
The rice is already washed before being packed. We don't use rice cooker.
There is so many different types of rice and there is a ton of different ways how to cook rice. If I want good japanese cooked rice, I asked a japanese cook for it, if I want Italian risotto I just ask my Italian chef father.😉 I am so happy, I love all types of rice in all diferent ways cooked.
Quick cook rice like Minute rice might taste okay to some but its stripped of most nutriments...Easier dosen't equate to better a extra 12 minutes tops on stove or just 3 minutes more in rice cooker...Seriously I don't understand the laziness...Food is important to health.
My dad made excellent authentic Sukiyaki. He learned while serving in the Air Force, stationed in Okinawa. It was always a special occasion.
I am American. I always rinse my rice, I do measure because we don't have a rice cooker, and I've never seen someone rinse the rice after cooking it. It isn't uncommon to make fried rice at home, but we almost never make more complex asian dishes.
I’m from the UK and I have never cooked rice like that. This makes me sad
I think only her get that wrong method. Nor any of my UK friends did it.
I'm from the UK and my mum cooks rice exactly like this. The rice always ends up really soggy and tasting like water and it's not very good. This is probably why I do not like rice much. I have been to friends' houses where their parents have cooked rice like this too.
@@_teasles_ HAAAIII YAAA. Tell your mum to stop. No more rice for her.
Me neither. This is awful.
This is literally how I was taught to cook rice 😂 for years I could never eat rice because I thought it was hard and it always hurt my stomach. Now I have a rice cooker 🙄
"haaaiyaaa"
-uncle roger/every asian
heyyy subaru!
except indians
First of all, you must be with Echidna, second, Ging Ging
@@Tai_SYNF you watch Nathan to
every asian? no?
Only legends know that when this video uploaded the title was *"A"* 😂
*Edit* - Oh god "322" likes i never got this much..you guys are awesome thank u :)
Its still A
Whyyy "A"
@@naiaaaa. cuz my name starts with A
yeah 😂
YEA
i just started watching the vidoes of this channel and they are so wholesome i actually love these 😩❤️
So yes, it's an extremely common thing for Westerners in general to not rinse their rice. I can read in five languages and looked into it some years ago and learned in some countries they're as outraged by rinsing polished rice (waste of potable water) as most Asians are by not rinsing rice. It is common to cook some Americanized versions of Chinese, Japanese, etc. cuisine. Growing up, we always used teriyaki sauce as a meat marinade. I tasted how my Vietnamese roommate made rice about 12 years ago and that was it, I changed over to how she made rice, but my mom still likes her wet, heavy rice better.
How did your Vietnamese roommate make rice 🍚 🌾 🍙???
@@cultural-ketch-up About how you would expect: wash the rice, use the knuckle to measure in the rice cooker.
I’m just wondering, is there another way to drain the rice without using a colander??
£8 is JP¥1090.14
In Ireland, Chinese food is the most expensive take out you can get. I assume it's the same in the UK.
Chinese takeout is like, the cheap option! I would never pay £8 for a fried rice dish lol that's probably at some capitalist chain place. The local places owned by Chinese families it's like £3 even in London for egg fried rice.
@@itsRebeccaRayne Good old Rip-Off Ireland strikes again so!
lol chinese food in ireland (or any western country i think) isnt the food you would find in china. its just noodles, fried rice and curry.
@@misumatchua Very true
@@misumatchua Very true. Here in Canada I knew a guy who owned a Chinese restaurant, he had the normal menu for customers, but when Chinese people came in they got the "secret" menu of actual Chinese food. We tried a few things from there, and it was COMPLETELY different from what you'd normally expect from Chinese food.
I'm an American and I cook Asian food a lot, it's my favorite. And the only time I use a strainer for my rice is when I wash it BEFORE I cook it.
George is so surpised, he goes full Japan for about 3 seconds
George, it is so adorable that you didn't get the BBC joke. You are too precious! 😂😂😂❤️❤️❤️
Hi, old UK lady here. I wash rice, cook rice, no water left to drain if it cooks right!!!I make a mean spicy, prawn noodle soup. I don't have msg but do have many Asian spices and also like to make sweet red bean pancakes. I tried making mochi but I failed. Katsu is very popular in UK right now.
Nigel Ng is professional stage comedian. Uncle Roger is his character he plays. And he is really good in connecting people through humor. There is another video where he tells, he cried when his parents laughed watching this video. Here in Europa is lot of people who don't like rice a don't know how to cook it. On rice packaging are instructions how to cook it and some are in this rice murdering style. :D
This is the 2nd time he uploaded an old title "A". There is only one person making this letter popular these days. I see you George, I see you
a
It's pretty common to cook Asian-inspired dishes in America. I grew up eating chicken teriyaki and rice, and also stir-fried veggies and chicken with soy sauce, garlic, and ginger. The supermarkets all have frozen battered chicken with veggies and sauce that you can fry up at home and pair with rice, too. And frozen egg rolls, spring rolls, dumplings, pot stickers, etc.
I've been watching your content for about a month off and on, and well George I like you, you are entertaining, and informative, you sir have earned a subscriber 👍
I love uncle roger’s videos. They actually get along really well done and have done videos together. I love they way you and Uncle Roger reacted the same time when she strained the rice 😂
About her not washing the rice at the beginning, some brands pre-rinse it. To be honest, I go ahead and wash the rice anyway because I don't trust that they were thorough.
Also, she doesn't know how to cook egg fried rice correctly. She made everything separately. The great thing about stirfry is you fry it all together and the tastes combine and enhance each other.
@Gold Star Gaming yes, but from experience, I know this way is not very tasty at all. Would you cook everything separately to make a stew?
@Gold Star Gaming I put either chicken or pork tenderloin in mine, bean sprouts, snow peas, baby bok choy, onions and red bell peppers, so yeah, it has as much as stew when you include the rice and eggs.
she said she made it the way bbc told her to 😅 she doesn’t cook it like this at all
She still cooks rice a bit odd, but she definitely cooks rice a lot differently to how she cooked in the video
"My body is made of fried rice"
Me: *nods of approval* same same
Fave quote:
"Oh, the sad gloopy rice that ran through colander."
She cooks the rice like Americans cook pasta.
fun fact you are not supposed to put pasta over cold water
source: www.thelocal.it/20170717/ten-golden-rules-how-to-cook-pasta-like-the-italians-al-dente-chef
edit its number seven on the list
@@aaronchung8059 wait americans do this?
Haiyaaa!
... I apparently cook pasta correctly, but I don't even like eating it 😅
"We can not say it's wrong"...
Take it from someone who is english: it's wrong. 😂
I have a lot of food allergies, so I have to prepare most of my food from scratch at home each day. Traditional American food-at least from the central states-doesn't emphasize many vegetables, or when vegetables are presented, they're fried or covered in cheese or high calorie sauces.
I have discovered so many new vegetable recipes from watching mealtimes in Asian dramas and trying to figure out what the dishes are! Gailan is amazing!!! TH-cam is such a great resource for new recipes as well!
I grew up on a farm. We ate a lot of vegetables and I still do. It was very traditional in the south to eat several vegetable sides with each meal. I think the thing to remember is that America is very large and very diverse. 🙂
Look up Indian food we have tons of vegetarian recipes.
My mother has always been the type to make sure we have at least some sort of vegetable with our meals though I totally see your point. My fiance won't eat many vegitables unless I cook them in butter first.
Omggg 😂😂
It was so shocking when she rinsed the rice with the cold water 😨🤔
Plus ur laugh was so cute 😂
I gotta say, watching you react to Uncle Roger react to BBC fried rice was hilarious haaaiiiyaaa 😂😂
Maybe you should check out his reaction to Gordon Ramsay's fried rice video, it's almost the complete opposite of this one 😁😉
Happy birthday George!! Big fan you're amazing and I like and love all your videos!!!
Your video is very cute and entertaining. It also unintentionally gives insight into Japanese attitudes and culture. Please keep making more videos!
I love making Japanese soups. It's my favorite food when it's cold outside or if someone is sick. Nothing smells or feels better than warm broth with ginger and soy sauce when you have a sore throat.
I’m American and I love cooking Japanese food. I just learned how to make tsukemen and I love it!
“Wang” can also mean a man’s, hmmm, you know which body part not to show in public places, in front of your woman, or any women.
Wang
Oh I get it. D*ck?
@@kdjoshi726 Penis NOT Duck. 😉
@@zedcarr6128 k & d joshi meant dick not duck. Lol
Yeah but in the UK we don’t use wang to mean that. We would day knob, or dick etc 😂 We use wang as a verb, it’s like a relaxed way of saying put or throw. Just wang it in the pan, can you wang that bag over here?
Tbf to the British, I've been taught how to cook by my mum and I've never once heard of anyone straining rice like pasta
To be fair that’s the way over only ever seen people do it in the UK! That’s also how the rice packet says to cook it. I only know the ‘proper’ Asian way from watching Asian people cook
Where I live people don't eat rice a lot and if they do most of rice available to buy is in these prepackaged portions (in one box you have 4 plastic bags with portion for one person, you cook the rice in those plastic bags and then hang them to let the water drain), so most people do not wash rice in here. I am one of the few probably that buys rice that is packaged per kilograms (the bigger package I can find the better) and I always wash rice and omg never drain it! When you cook your rice correctly there is no water left!
I wanna buy 炊飯器 next time I'll be in Japan, but the voltage difference makes it difficult.
In Portugal we don’t wash the rice because the rice is cleaned at the factories 🏭 and is packaged ready to cook but we don’t use a colander or drain the rice.
It’s not common for family’s in Portugal to cook non-European food, we have a rich cuisine as well so in our households he usually stick with traditional or European food.
Also if you don’t live in a “big” city is really difficult to find supermarkets where you can buy Asian, African or America (etc...) ingredients like Mirin, Maple syrup, Mandioca etc...
Love your channel keep up with the good work 😊.
No Brasil acontece o mesmo, o arroz já é vendido lavado pela grande maioria das marcas, mas acredito que seja algo recente, talvez dos últimos 15-20 anos, pois existem casas ainda, normalmente mais velhas, onde as pessoas ainda guardam escorredores de arroz.
na fam, u gotta go to like amanhecer or something get those nice big sacks of rice and wash it yourself.
@@Keiotaka aren’t those previously washed???? Like the small package???
As a black Portuguese we always wash the rice, even if pre-washed, only white Portuguese that don't 😖
@@mrsrockbison my mom is black half of my family is black and No One washes de rice 🍚 so I’m pretty sure is not about the color of our skin but about our family’s costumes 😅😅😅
It's normal to wash the rice in Europe (and in my case - Norway) as well - sometimes with the exception of already portioned bags, where it can be a bit of a pain.
Edit: Not AFTER cooking the rice, but before. 😋
it’s normal for everyone to wash rice BEFORE cooking it! It removes the starch and just cleans it!
Unfortunately it is not. I live in germany and most people here haven't even heard of washing the rice before cooking it. They are always shocked when they learn that unwashed rice can even contain arsenic residue.
@@frolleinanika8186 Austria too. I started washing my rice a year ago and my mum was like "what in God's name are you doing?"
I live in Croatia and I never heard of washing the rice before cooking it 🤷♀️
everyone washes rice lmao
I like the Old title: *A*
same
Man watches Gawr Gura
Shark
I like that one reply: *Shark*
I am trying to find a reasonably priced rice cooker that doesn't spray out starchy hot water all over. Love your videos George, thank you
As a westerner i can confirm a lot of us cook blandly like this. I’ve only started eating foreign and seasoned food on the regular when i was like 15 or something
George..when you said "hiiieya" felt like you started becoming uncle roger
In Brazil we eat a lot rice and we NEVER do what she did. Disgusting
Yup... we have to wash the rice first until the water runs clear 😊
Living in the USA on the east coast I get most of my Japanese from local restaurants but when I tried Korean for the first time hours and hours away I knew I had to learn to cook it. Now I have an actual rice cooker in the house and tend to cook a good bit of Japanese, Korean and other things. Mexican is probably still the country I cook the most of but I always try to make a variety. Even if I can't afford to travel the world I can cook the different things at home! Hopefully correctly!
George, you and 'Uncle Roger' would make an excellent comedy team. Styles are different but complimentary. Great stuff. 😄
"Uncle Roger is Malaysian PEEPO!" Actually he is. Nigel Ng is a Malaysian comedian. I love his stuff, and how his accent breaks all the time. He sounds like the Malaysian nurse who taught me to make Serbuk Kari Ayam dan Daging. As a WHY PEEPO, myself, I love the way his head blows up every time he says "WHY PEEPO". That nurse and I used to mess with the Asian Radiologists at our hospital back in the day (early 1990's). She'd casually refer to me as a "fahn gwai lo" and I'd mutter "you come to our country and steal our women". We got a huge lecture one time, about how "RACISM WILL NOT BE TOLERATED!" There wasn't any. We were literally doing what I theses days I call an "UNCLE ROGER".
Wouldn't try it today. No one understands nuance, or they do, and just want to virtue signal.
In the US they fortify the rice with vitamins like folic acid so not rinsing it is healthier, but rinsing makes it taste better.
I’m in North America, never seen anyone drain rice then rinse it 😥
When this video was uploaded the title was 'A' 😂🤣🤣
that flex at the end was the most adorable thing ever
All through this video, I was half expecting someone to walk through that door
" i put my leg down from chair" at 6:14 🤣🤣🤣
So wholesome how he didn't get the BBC joke
Yes in Australia people cook all kinds of Asian foods a lot - it's delicious.
Hi I'm Malaysian here & I just subscribed your channel 😊 I think u r good looking 😝, u r funny too when u said haiyaaaa lol 😂u really made my day 😉 haiya is Malaysian n Singapore Chinese people slang 😁
I'm originally from Iraq, and been cooking rice since I was 7 !! We wash the rice first, soak it for at least 15 minutes, add oil in a pot, then add the rice. We put enough water to cover the rice by about one
centimeters (since it was already soaked), cover until it is fully cooked, stirr, and cover again until ready to serve.
I'm British but mostly African and idk anybody in England who cooks egg fried rice like that, And I'm grateful i dont.
2:33
8 Pounds = 9.46 USD = 989.71 JPY
Which is pretty expensive for asian countries that costs about 1 to 2 Pounds for sidewalk's friedrice 🤣
Edit:
Sc: CurrencyPlus
Updated: 19.54, Oct 27 2020
I laughed so much. I grew up on parboiled rice cooked in too much water strained through a collander. The European way. I was never a fan. Then I learned the right way to cook rice and it actualky tasted good. Mind blown. 😂
Your channel is GOLD!
Yeah her way of cooking rice is...unusual 😂
In Jamaica where I’m from, it is mandatory to wash the rice before cooking it.
Great video George. New subbie 😊