This person seems more into western/japanese/korean food more than chinese food. Sure, there is the xiaolongbao, and that counts as chinese but the company is bibigo (korean company) and the original title must have been steamed soup dumplings and then she translates that into xiaolongbao which is actually a term popularized by the famous din tai fung restaurant chain that is headquartered in the Republic of China (Taiwan). She is named Emily Lee with Lee as the surname. So, she is most likely Chinese or Korean, not Vietnamese or Japanese. There are Viets with Ly which is derived from the same Chinese character, and while it is possible that they may transliterate to Lee idiosyncratically, most Viets have come to America during or after the Vietnam War era, and thus would have more established romanization system. Japanese surnames are very distinguished from the East Asian bunch. However, she uses the term xiaolongbao to refer to soup dumplings, so I am guessing American with South Korean or Taiwanese family background.
omg a VLOG perfect way to end 2024 IM SO EXCITED 🥰🥳🫶🏻
WE HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS ‼️‼️‼️
SHE'S BACKKK!!
super love your yummy yet cozy vlog Emily!! ❤❤
Loved the video! New subscriber ❤
the fear I felt for you for ur preparation of ur midnight snack
Finally❤❤❤
This person seems more into western/japanese/korean food more than chinese food.
Sure, there is the xiaolongbao, and that counts as chinese but the company is bibigo (korean company) and the original title must have been steamed soup dumplings and then she translates that into xiaolongbao which is actually a term popularized by the famous din tai fung restaurant chain that is headquartered in the Republic of China (Taiwan).
She is named Emily Lee with Lee as the surname. So, she is most likely Chinese or Korean, not Vietnamese or Japanese. There are Viets with Ly which is derived from the same Chinese character, and while it is possible that they may transliterate to Lee idiosyncratically, most Viets have come to America during or after the Vietnam War era, and thus would have more established romanization system. Japanese surnames are very distinguished from the East Asian bunch.
However, she uses the term xiaolongbao to refer to soup dumplings, so I am guessing American with South Korean or Taiwanese family background.
burrito…….