I love that the chef went into this so open minded about food with cheaper ingredients than he’s used to and no seasonings etc and actually kind of liked it. I also love the wrapping technique 😂
Pro cook here, our diets are energy drinks and leftover fries. I make about 30 Peking ducks a day and a couple hundred dumplings. And while they taste amazing this prison burrito is speaking to me rn 😂 Chefs who are extremely picky and close minded about ingredient quality (that we eat ourselves, not serve) are the ones I choose not to cook with 😅
I was a corrections officer, and man I remember watching them make burritos or “pizza” cake and all this stuff and I would just sit there and watch them. It was crazy seeing them do that.
@Aaron Moore totally agree, they are being defended by common society just because they are ‘defending a minority’ I believe everyone deserves the same rights, but BLM did it the wrong way
I miss the og buzzfeed. This use to be my dream job until I saw everyone with character slowly leave the company and make their own channels. They are a dying company and it is so sad to see.
They should do another episode with these two where the professional chef teaches the ex con to cook something fancy or something. Get like both perspectives
@@RadicalTurbine Dont say that, that is mean and is not kind. What did he do to you that you think he would go back to prison if he has done nothing bad yet?
They didnt need that. If black people are just as human as white and all others (they are dont get me wrong) then why fixate on it? Just let them be them. We don’t need a whole celebration on it
@@krashsytegaming9222 We celebrate their culture and remember all the influencial people of color (but mostly black people) who have made the world the way it is today. It's a very important celebration.
I was thinking the same thing!!!! Very interesting video and I loved it into the black history piece. Like why Buzzfeed??? What is so historical about a black ex felon teaching a professional chef how to make prison food. Black history is American history, and there’s absolutely nothing historic about the contents of this video.
Mario seems like a really cool guy. He's pretty humble and respectful in this vid, always using sir and is willing to learn too. Hope his situation is much better now so he doesn't have to worry about being sent to jail ever again.
It was cool how the chef wasn't judgemental at all throughout the process... See what happens when you let down your guard & see things from a different prospective
Would be a great way to open the former inmate up to finding he has a real passion for cooking. He seems like he could get somewhere if he got serious and educated.
“Not everyone in jail is a criminal”. Reminds me of Niko Omilanas speech about running for London mayor .‘Employ more policemen and put them straight into the houses of parliament, as ‘that’s where the real criminals are”
I can attest that this kind of stuff is completely true. Now, during my unfortunate time in jail I wasn’t in a place that offered such niceties as food on the commissary, aside from sugar free candy (known as fart candy bc of its diarrhetic effects) and sugar free fruit punch mix. And any food you tried to keep from your meals of 1200 calories a day were considered contraband. So you had to get real creative when you did try to make things. Tbh, very rarely was anything ever created that even equaled the some of its parts. But it was different. And often it was more About the distraction of creating something. Anything to distract you for even a few minutes is completely worthwhile. Now, we did something’s make things that were good. A friend and I won thru gambling like a dozen hard boiled eggs one morning and bc I smuggled the necessary ingredients back in from my trustee job that day, we made deviled eggs that night and shared them with all the people we won them from that night. And people that worked on the farm would always bring in hot peppers that we’d use to make blazing hot hot sauces with. That was actually great bc you’d put it on the jail food and erase any kind of taste it had. The only downside was forgetting you were slicing peppers for an hour with a razor from your shaving razor and then going to the bathroom. You basically had to give up peeing for the rest of the day or you were in for an interesting night. And btw…I did a total of around 13 months over 3 years, all for what is considered noncriminal offenses. Like he said, driving on a suspended license. I remember getting arrested on my way home from work (I got pulled over in my development about a hundred yards from my house bc my license plate had my old county on it) and waiting waiting for my bail which was 2 grand and finding out the guy I was talking to was in for selling crack and his was $500. Gotta love the legal system.
@@emmathomas340 They're buying it from commissary. The prison system is designed so that large segments of the population can be forced to work at lower than minimum wage. Then they are purposely starved by the prison, so that they just use their own meager earnings to buy food to supplement their nutrition. For example, a prisoner's total allotment of fruits & vegetables for an entire week can consist of 1 orange. The prison profits from prisoners' cheap labor, government subsidies, and the money the commissary pulls in. Since the prisoners makes so little, and prison goods & services are overpriced, the prisoner's families end up bankrupting themselves trying to send money to their locked up relatives. The prison charges hefty transaction fees for this too. The prison then takes a small portion of this wealth and hires professional lobbyists to bribe local politicians to overcriminalize, over-police, and under-invest in poor neighborhoods, in order to ensure a steady flow of new prisoners into the system. For example, prison owners were one of the major lobbying groups fighting the decriminalization of marijuana. This is because people accused of nonviolent drug offenses are the single largest demographic in prison. Case study: Louisiana State Prison used to be a slave plantation, now it is a prison where an overwhelmingly black population of prisoners are forced to do hard labor at a salary of as little as 2 cents per hour. The highest salary is less than 50 cents an hour. The vast majority of these prisoners come from nearby poor neighborhoods with underfunded schools and weak social services. Why is the social safety net so underfunded? Because Louisiana spends it's budget on giving tax breaks and subsidies to large corporations who use its waterways as shipping routes. The same people who operate the prisons, are investors in these corporations. They are also the same people staffing and funding the councils that determine subsidy rates. This is the American prison-industrial complex.
I really like Mario's perspective about the whole ordeal and how not everyone in prison is a hardened criminal, some just made bad decisions or the lesser of 2 bad choices. My friend Kory for example went to prison for a crime he didn't even commit because the police gave him a deal after his "friend" pinned the blame for a breaking+entering charge on him (dumbnut walked in to find his "friend" stealing and the cops showed up about the same time and found them both) Aside from being friends with a criminal, he hadn't done anything wrong and served 2 years for taking the deal (he didn't know at the time that "when they offer a deal it usually means they don't have anything on you"-- his words, not mine)
I could see why black people offended, especially when this recipe and the chef suspect. I mean @ JCaesar TH-cam page has a very similar recipe he made a year ago….
This video was amazing ! Please do more of these. And it would be nice if next video the chef would teach the ex-inmate! Si so heartwarming to see them share and learn from each others experience
With the taste test at the end too, gotta remember that the chef didn't live on cardboard food for potentially months/years before making this burrito which would drastically change the way you perceive how it tastes
As a cook who has gone to jail, I have learned a lot about how to make decent food while locked up. So many possibilities and flavor combinations, techniques, ect. Some of the dishes are pretty good too. Spinning peanut butter jars and throwing ramen on the floor to break it up is something you should stop doing when you get out though, lol.
While working in a facility I once saw them make Tamales for Easter by smashing Doritos into powder and mixing it with something and it became the paste for it. They're pretty damn creative
Yah they're was a group of dudes at my facility that would press that mixture into soap dishes then wrap it in plastic from spare trash bags individually to walk around and sell for 2 dollars each.
Civilians can't understand how good that burrito is until they ate only jail provided food for a month. Then they can truly appreciate that masterpiece lol.
@@ThisGuyz2Legit that’s what I was saying, but people are saying there was a BLM tag on the video or title, I’m not sure. If it was there, they removed it 💀
Midnight? 😂 I might too, from the leftovers. I made something like this before, I actually asked @ JCaesar to make a wet burrito at his TH-cam n he made one just like this a year ago
As a professional chef for 16 years, im astounded with how this chef took the time to seek in order to learn how to create. Doesnt matter what type of cooking, one should always seek out the methods and ingredients. This is how you become better, more refined.
Y’all had a surprisingly creative video with interesting hosts. Honestly, I usually love learning about prison food and crafts, and the ingenuity is very entertaining. And then y’all had to go and post the PRISON video in BLACK HISTORY MONTH.
I saw a meme a while back that had Martha Stewart and Snoop Dogg cooking. It said something to the effect of, 'Remember, only one is a convicted felon.' Makes you think.
I ended up in rehab a couple years ago self admitted but I met a bunch of cool cats who had came in from a drug treatment program from prison here in Hawaii and they got me familiar to these kinds prison meals. When you locked up or in my case stuck in a program, I feel like you appreciate the struggle meals more. It may sound gross to you but when that’s all you got, it tastes pretty damn good
Don’t let him scare u. It’s a variety channel there r hits and misses I personally don’t mind Buzzfeed and u can stalk the channel and watch watever u want! :)
I’ve never been to jail or prison but I have had family that has, I gotta say some of the food that they made after they got out was amazing, still make some from time to time
there is a German documentary that shows Mario's time in Prison. His job was to print number plates. he was so humble. i am glad he is out now and doing great. stay positive mario.
Im a fire fighter, and one day i was so hungry at a hitel room, and everything was closed it was me and my partners, i had doritoz and half of fajitas i had bought, so i threw the doritoz in a bag with warm water, made it into maza, made myself a tamal 😂😂😂. Prison food can save you 😂😂
speaking of history, black people in america were a slave race, they were treated bad and most of them were anded up in prison, also black people is the one who invented bbq through their unique and creative way on cooking some animal rib, back then rib was not considered as a luxury food because they were lack on meat and have mostly bone in them so they gave those rib to their slave and their slave make bbq with it. and what i see from this video is an equivalent to that history
that actually looks pretty good and I bet it is a comfort for inmates to make stuff like that sometimes. The ingredients to us are cheap but since commissary can be limited spending a couple bucks on a burrito might be the equivalent of a lot more in real world so this is probably a luxury dish in the prison!
When you realize how poor you were growing up based on little things prisoners do similar when making food.(using can lid as a knife to cut up chicken)
So just curious why a prison food video is a part of Black history Month???? This was shameful, I loved the video and the awesome respect these two guys had for each other but to label this as Black History Month is a message that was done in poor taste. I'm curious did you run this idea past a Black person??? I highly doubt that!
Can't keep the can, because it has been altered from its original state. It is considered trash, but if kept is considered contraband. I'm a correctional officer aka CO/DO js in case ur wondering
“not everybody in jail is a criminal” best line.
Indeed
Exactly. Same as: Not everybody out of jail/prison is innocent
Some of us just made a mistake and had to deal with the results. I’m not a bad person, I just did a bad thing.
Crazy to think some people are still in jail for having or smoking weed, but nowadays its legal or a misdemeanor/fine
My aunt is wrongfully incarcerated
This ain’t just prison food this the kinda food I make at 3 am stoned af
*Hits exotic cart*
😎☝️ real talk
LMAO hope the best.
🤣💀
nah u wouldn’t tho lazy bum 😂😂
I love that the chef went into this so open minded about food with cheaper ingredients than he’s used to and no seasonings etc and actually kind of liked it. I also love the wrapping technique 😂
Pro cook here, our diets are energy drinks and leftover fries. I make about 30 Peking ducks a day and a couple hundred dumplings. And while they taste amazing this prison burrito is speaking to me rn 😂
Chefs who are extremely picky and close minded about ingredient quality (that we eat ourselves, not serve) are the ones I choose not to cook with 😅
He was prolly capping cuz my dad and i made a jail house pizza and it was nasty they just be mixing everything together
That technique is very popular!
@@lovelybtches prison burrito be bussing tho
@@kemo7821 couldn't have said it better myself
I work in a kitchen at a prison. I cannot tell you how much I enjoy both teaching & learning from inmates.
Eh man I'll give you three mackerels for an onion
DO you F them in THE ARSE?
I was a corrections officer, and man I remember watching them make burritos or “pizza” cake and all this stuff and I would just sit there and watch them. It was crazy seeing them do that.
Did you try it
@@og_cynthia6563 no, I'm sure he did not. They are not allowed to partake in whatever food the inmates make even if they (the officers) wanted to.
He prolly sent them to lockdown for contraband
Just for cooking. I seen people sent to the 1 man cells for cooking
@@luisperes8634 they do much worse
Buzzfeed took the black history month tag off real quick before they got cancelled
Was thinking that too
LMAOOOO
I was lookin at the comments really confused for a sec lmao
@Aaron Moore did you make a TH-cam account just to type ignorance? That’s quite pathetic bud
@Aaron Moore totally agree, they are being defended by common society just because they are ‘defending a minority’ I believe everyone deserves the same rights, but BLM did it the wrong way
I miss the og buzzfeed. This use to be my dream job until I saw everyone with character slowly leave the company and make their own channels. They are a dying company and it is so sad to see.
Same here. Was my dream job at one time but look at the crap they do ... jail food on black history month! And this is why they are slowly going down.
It all went downhill when the try guys left
@@Jake0666 yep the try guys, jen, saafiya
@@deecollins9048 bruh
@@deecollins9048 you delusional weirdo
They should do another episode with these two where the professional chef teaches the ex con to cook something fancy or something. Get like both perspectives
I'm sure after this video Mario will be a professional chef
Or back in prison
@@RadicalTurbine bruh touché
Fake white liberal networks and their subconscious racism... 🤦🏾♂️
@@michaelfreeman256 Are you talking about me?
@@RadicalTurbine Dont say that, that is mean and is not kind. What did he do to you that you think he would go back to prison if he has done nothing bad yet?
The prison food video is apart of the black history month video collection.....come on now buzzfeed lmao i liked the video right up until the very end
It's possible that it's commentary on how many black people are wrongly imprisoned, but that might just be me trying to look on the bright side, lol
They didnt need that. If black people are just as human as white and all others (they are dont get me wrong) then why fixate on it? Just let them be them. We don’t need a whole celebration on it
@@krashsytegaming9222 We celebrate their culture and remember all the influencial people of color (but mostly black people) who have made the world the way it is today. It's a very important celebration.
I was thinking the same thing!!!! Very interesting video and I loved it into the black history piece. Like why Buzzfeed??? What is so historical about a black ex felon teaching a professional chef how to make prison food.
Black history is American history, and there’s absolutely nothing historic about the contents of this video.
I had this exact thought..
My dad used to make prison burritos just like this for us when we were young & we loved it 😂
Your lucky frfr
@@user-cy2ju1ux5o ??? Bro what
And now you have high blood pressure
@@dingus1655 what are you 80???
Ngl the prison burrito looks bussin
Mario seems like a really cool guy. He's pretty humble and respectful in this vid, always using sir and is willing to learn too. Hope his situation is much better now so he doesn't have to worry about being sent to jail ever again.
Plot twists:
The pro chef did something bad, and knows he gonna go jail so he gotta know that secrets
Lol
Now he in jail for robbing a produce store
hes in prison for stealing ingredients for prison burrito
@@hannahpetal315 😅 Good one 😏👉🏼
That's not a plot twist, he already said he's from Long Island.
The fact that Mario has so much respect sad he ended up in jail
Sarcasm lol
Well that's what happens when u molest children.
@@artlopez6621 and your mom too
It was cool how the chef wasn't judgemental at all throughout the process... See what happens when you let down your guard & see things from a different prospective
Now reverse it and try to walk him through making this how a chef would, preparing meat and flavors etc.
Would be a great way to open the former inmate up to finding he has a real passion for cooking. He seems like he could get somewhere if he got serious and educated.
“Not everyone in jail is a criminal”. Reminds me of Niko Omilanas speech about running for London mayor .‘Employ more policemen and put them straight into the houses of parliament, as ‘that’s where the real criminals are”
Dude I just love the respect .
Chelsea me too.
“And then they’re refried and re-dried” 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I can attest that this kind of stuff is completely true. Now, during my unfortunate time in jail I wasn’t in a place that offered such niceties as food on the commissary, aside from sugar free candy (known as fart candy bc of its diarrhetic effects) and sugar free fruit punch mix. And any food you tried to keep from your meals of 1200 calories a day were considered contraband. So you had to get real creative when you did try to make things.
Tbh, very rarely was anything ever created that even equaled the some of its parts. But it was different. And often it was more
About the distraction of creating something. Anything to distract you for even a few minutes is completely worthwhile. Now, we did something’s make things that were good. A friend and I won thru gambling like a dozen hard boiled eggs one morning and bc I smuggled the necessary ingredients back in from my trustee job that day, we made deviled eggs that night and shared them with all the people we won them from that night. And people that worked on the farm would always bring in hot peppers that we’d use to make blazing hot hot sauces with. That was actually great bc you’d put it on the jail food and erase any kind of taste it had. The only downside was forgetting you were slicing peppers for an hour with a razor from your shaving razor and then going to the bathroom. You basically had to give up peeing for the rest of the day or you were in for an interesting night.
And btw…I did a total of around 13 months over 3 years, all for what is considered noncriminal offenses. Like he said, driving on a suspended license. I remember getting arrested on my way home from work (I got pulled over in my development about a hundred yards from my house bc my license plate had my old county on it) and waiting waiting for my bail which was 2 grand and finding out the guy I was talking to was in for selling crack and his was $500. Gotta love the legal system.
Now this is an amazing comment
Why don’t you get food in prisons over there in the states? Doesn’t this contradict with human rights ??
The egg thing is wholesome
Gotta love the system. 🤦♂️
U.S. doesn't care about human rights as long as there's a price tag attached.
I'd be hiring Mario after this.
We didn’t get any canned foods in Rikers cause of all the stabbing and slashing that goes on everything is packaged in packets
I'm wondering where there ingredients coming from also whole plastic bags we had to use chip bags
You went to prison?
@@emmathomas340 They're buying it from commissary. The prison system is designed so that large segments of the population can be forced to work at lower than minimum wage. Then they are purposely starved by the prison, so that they just use their own meager earnings to buy food to supplement their nutrition. For example, a prisoner's total allotment of fruits & vegetables for an entire week can consist of 1 orange.
The prison profits from prisoners' cheap labor, government subsidies, and the money the commissary pulls in. Since the prisoners makes so little, and prison goods & services are overpriced, the prisoner's families end up bankrupting themselves trying to send money to their locked up relatives. The prison charges hefty transaction fees for this too.
The prison then takes a small portion of this wealth and hires professional lobbyists to bribe local politicians to overcriminalize, over-police, and under-invest in poor neighborhoods, in order to ensure a steady flow of new prisoners into the system.
For example, prison owners were one of the major lobbying groups fighting the decriminalization of marijuana. This is because people accused of nonviolent drug offenses are the single largest demographic in prison.
Case study:
Louisiana State Prison used to be a slave plantation, now it is a prison where an overwhelmingly black population of prisoners are forced to do hard labor at a salary of as little as 2 cents per hour. The highest salary is less than 50 cents an hour.
The vast majority of these prisoners come from nearby poor neighborhoods with underfunded schools and weak social services. Why is the social safety net so underfunded? Because Louisiana spends it's budget on giving tax breaks and subsidies to large corporations who use its waterways as shipping routes. The same people who operate the prisons, are investors in these corporations. They are also the same people staffing and funding the councils that determine subsidy rates.
This is the American prison-industrial complex.
I really like Mario's perspective about the whole ordeal and how not everyone in prison is a hardened criminal, some just made bad decisions or the lesser of 2 bad choices. My friend Kory for example went to prison for a crime he didn't even commit because the police gave him a deal after his "friend" pinned the blame for a breaking+entering charge on him (dumbnut walked in to find his "friend" stealing and the cops showed up about the same time and found them both)
Aside from being friends with a criminal, he hadn't done anything wrong and served 2 years for taking the deal (he didn't know at the time that "when they offer a deal it usually means they don't have anything on you"-- his words, not mine)
The chef was a great student. That shows passion.
I thought kevin was gonna be the inmate
Me too bro you're not alone
hahahah
all of you kee saying this and I'm just confused, how is a person with an apron more like an inmate
is it simply a bias?
@@sakesaurus the tattoos
Fr
I would watch a cooking show with these two teaching each other things!
What has this got anything to do with Black History Month?!? Come on Buzzfeed
Loll
Truth hurts apparently
Where?
trying too hard to be “woke”
@@LakeLyfe315 ???
wtf why does this have to have the black history month tag
idk
Where?
@@XForever_Loyal i think they got rid of it
@@fedorabread oh, good 😂
I could see why black people offended, especially when this recipe and the chef suspect. I mean @ JCaesar TH-cam page has a very similar recipe he made a year ago….
This video was amazing ! Please do more of these. And it would be nice if next video the chef would teach the ex-inmate! Si so heartwarming to see them share and learn from each others experience
they put this in the black history month collection. cmon now buzzfeed! lmao.
Where?
if the shoe fits....
@@seankenny1275 it doesnt thoe
@@alrightey Statistics would say otherwise ;)
@@seankenny1275 source? pullin stats outta ur ass bruv
Love it!!! Love how humble they both are ❤
And they both walked away with knowledge 💕
With the taste test at the end too, gotta remember that the chef didn't live on cardboard food for potentially months/years before making this burrito which would drastically change the way you perceive how it tastes
As a cook who has gone to jail, I have learned a lot about how to make decent food while locked up. So many possibilities and flavor combinations, techniques, ect. Some of the dishes are pretty good too. Spinning peanut butter jars and throwing ramen on the floor to break it up is something you should stop doing when you get out though, lol.
While working in a facility I once saw them make Tamales for Easter by smashing Doritos into powder and mixing it with something and it became the paste for it. They're pretty damn creative
Yah they're was a group of dudes at my facility that would press that mixture into soap dishes then wrap it in plastic from spare trash bags individually to walk around and sell for 2 dollars each.
jail food....on black history month.
FRR like cmon now
Hulk Hogan was on WWE TV on BHM. So I guess we're over this...
So you’re saying that they can’t post anything like this for a whole ass month?? Stop overthinking it, it’s just a video 😭
Nvm I just read someone’s comment saying that they added it to the black history month video collection. If that’s true, then that’s fucked 😭😭
Mmm
They could have made a series. Where the 2 explore different prison foods and find ways to make it better, using only the ingredients allowed in jail.
I would 100% go to a prison inspired restaurant.
6:50 Kevin got hungry and more comfortable lmao
to heck with the chef, this other dude needs a channel. his efficiency is astonishing.
No one a pro chef when Gordon Ramsey in the same room with them
making a video that has to do with prison part of black history month, it's like they do it ironically
Where?
You sir are sped
after all, black people do have a history in prisons
W O K E
Best crossover ever I bet they both learned something’s and that’s what comes with respect. A safe learning fun environment 🧚🏽♀️
I'm glad the chef was honest instead of just pretending that it was great.
Ngl the chef look like the inmate lol, I fr thought he was until they said he wasnt
Civilians can't understand how good that burrito is until they ate only jail provided food for a month. Then they can truly appreciate that masterpiece lol.
When he said beans, I couldn't stop thinking about that meme "BEEEEEAAAAANNNNZZZZZ WTF"
The top of the can would make a heck of a prison style weapon.
My ex taught me how to make prison spread that he learned from his grandpa. I got to say it was not bad at all. Sometimes I crave it.
Imagine opening a restaurant that does prison hack food
Never heard someone mispronounce hoisin and sriracha before, well til now lol
"I'm from Long Island,New York,I say everything wrong" man why did you have to do us like that 😂
You should flip the settings and have Kevin teach a dish he makes to Mario.
You can understand by the way Mario talks that he is a nice person, I wish him success in life.
Now watch this show up in some 5 star ⭐️ bougie restaurant.
I love this, respectful human being, just share what they know and love to each other, without the hate and differences between ways of life...
Yeah. They have a good chemistry tbh.
Shout-out to this brother for paving a new way for himself, and keeping it a hunnid!! ❤💯
This was awesome seeing humans come together! God bless.
Bro wtf this gotta do with black history month??
i’m pretty sure it’s because it’s black history month when they posted it not the video itself
@@talanglover983 so with that logic every video they posted this month should have a black history month logo at the end right?
@@ThisGuyz2Legit that’s what I was saying, but people are saying there was a BLM tag on the video or title, I’m not sure. If it was there, they removed it 💀
Yes they just cut out the entire ending lol
@@impulseki9896 .
If the bald dude had the apron on I would have thought that the other guy was the inmate
you call this prison food, i call it midnight delight
Midnight? 😂 I might too, from the leftovers. I made something like this before, I actually asked @ JCaesar to make a wet burrito at his TH-cam n he made one just like this a year ago
As a professional chef for 16 years, im astounded with how this chef took the time to seek in order to learn how to create. Doesnt matter what type of cooking, one should always seek out the methods and ingredients. This is how you become better, more refined.
Y’all had a surprisingly creative video with interesting hosts. Honestly, I usually love learning about prison food and crafts, and the ingenuity is very entertaining.
And then y’all had to go and post the PRISON video in BLACK HISTORY MONTH.
Reply if you'd like to know more, could tell you a lot about it.
A “pro chef” who didn’t realise the top of the can was used as a knife or what hoison sauce was.. Riiiight.
Two chefs with different specialties Yessir💪🏽
I like how the last step was to bless the food.
When I saw the thumbnail my first thought was that the chef was the ex-crim. Just does to show you can’t judge people from first impression.
I saw a meme a while back that had Martha Stewart and Snoop Dogg cooking. It said something to the effect of, 'Remember, only one is a convicted felon.' Makes you think.
Two respectful men from different walks of life.
Lol. A Mario and Kevin “cam” just in case we can’t tell who is who
7:28 “ I still gotta it “ hell yeah brudda mane😂
no they didn't include black history month at the end...chileeee. who thought that was a good idea?!
Where?
@@XForever_Loyal I don't see it, so I guess they came to their senses and removed it.
I don't believe a single person that saw a guy wearing very chef like clothing and a dude in street cloths thought the guy on the left was a felon.
“Have life or doing 30 years “ Then Ol Kevin fuckin giggles 🙃
This fuckin chef is gonna catch a chincheck if he keeps interrupted, correcting, and fuckin with my man here...
1st vid I watched in a while even though I’m subscribed 😂
Im a bad guy, but that does not mean i am a bad guy.
I ended up in rehab a couple years ago self admitted but I met a bunch of cool cats who had came in from a drug treatment program from prison here in Hawaii and they got me familiar to these kinds prison meals. When you locked up or in my case stuck in a program, I feel like you appreciate the struggle meals more. It may sound gross to you but when that’s all you got, it tastes pretty damn good
That's called using what you have, making it last and being resourceful when there's no other way.
1st time watching Buzfeed seems interesting
You are mistaken my friend
@@daxbrown3422 why ??
@@devanshsaini2776 every video you’ve ever seen has been a buzzfeed video
Don’t let him scare u. It’s a variety channel there r hits and misses I personally don’t mind Buzzfeed and u can stalk the channel and watch watever u want! :)
@@daxbrown3422 then why are you here?
"Whatever your religion is, you bless your food"
Gotta respect that level of open-mindedness. I can't even hurt on that from an atheist standpoint.
I thought that was Wayne Brady in the thumbnail
I like how they split the screen when they right next to each other
Pro chef: has a highly prestigious profession
Pro chef: I wanna make convict food
I’ve never been to jail or prison but I have had family that has, I gotta say some of the food that they made after they got out was amazing, still make some from time to time
I wonder how much of a chef he is, that don’t even know what hoisin sauce is
there is a German documentary that shows Mario's time in Prison. His job was to print number plates. he was so humble. i am glad he is out now and doing great. stay positive mario.
Im a fire fighter, and one day i was so hungry at a hitel room, and everything was closed it was me and my partners, i had doritoz and half of fajitas i had bought, so i threw the doritoz in a bag with warm water, made it into maza, made myself a tamal 😂😂😂. Prison food can save you 😂😂
😂 were you in fire camp?
This is a great video.the fact of two individuals teaching and learning from each other life experience without any judgement. Outstanding. I love it
Like what is he asking without asking - at the end of the day I sat 4 1/2 months a DUI lesson learned - but this is gold
Now how does this relate to black history month? Buzz feed messed up real bad
speaking of history, black people in america were a slave race, they were treated bad and most of them were anded up in prison, also black people is the one who invented bbq through their unique and creative way on cooking some animal rib, back then rib was not considered as a luxury food because they were lack on meat and have mostly bone in them so they gave those rib to their slave and their slave make bbq with it. and what i see from this video is an equivalent to that history
that actually looks pretty good and I bet it is a comfort for inmates to make stuff like that sometimes. The ingredients to us are cheap but since commissary can be limited spending a couple bucks on a burrito might be the equivalent of a lot more in real world so this is probably a luxury dish in the prison!
I hope COVID-19 ends as soon as possible and everyone is happy and healthy. 😁😆🙏
YES! More prison food videos. These are the best.
He couldn't stop eating it! 😹🤩😍
When I saw the thumbnail, I thought the image and the chef was the other way around.
looks fire i used to make this in the county jail, in prison we much more advanced but wet burritos in a cup always 🔥🔥
There is no plastic bags, no can openers in prison lmaooooo
I appreciate the respect that the prochef has for Mario
Instead of the cups we used rice bags that had a ziploc closure at the top to keep the heat in. Then we would wash them out and use them again later
When you realize how poor you were growing up based on little things prisoners do similar when making food.(using can lid as a knife to cut up chicken)
When a lot of prisoners get out, they're practically still prisoners. They're always making what the made inside.
So just curious why a prison food video is a part of Black history Month???? This was shameful, I loved the video and the awesome respect these two guys had for each other but to label this as Black History Month is a message that was done in poor taste. I'm curious did you run this idea past a Black person??? I highly doubt that!
Where?
Can't keep the can, because it has been altered from its original state. It is considered trash, but if kept is considered contraband. I'm a correctional officer aka CO/DO js in case ur wondering