Location pins: 1. Yemeni Restaurant: maps.app.goo.gl/W2SZoSNWzPXJrf6A8 2. Larder: maps.app.goo.gl/bcaYPqV4MJb7PHDy5 3. Dessert: maps.app.goo.gl/tBh66srZqNTDHXPK8 4. Avra: maps.app.goo.gl/xaYHstqfUkkpMR238 (as a note, they have two locations in Bangkok and they're both excellent. The second is this one: maps.app.goo.gl/Lca1bm6S7XwFDbMY9 ) 5. Sandwiches: maps.app.goo.gl/HsQyRWprQazgom31A 6. Chapter Market: maps.app.goo.gl/y2zTbhN7M5UcVCYi8 (one note on this one: this place deserves some love. If you're in the Sukhumvit area, swing through- I'm not a fan of night markets but the food here is next level- we go because of the first non-Chinatown Ann Kway Teow Kua Gai!- and it's convenient to Thong Lor and Asok) 7. As always, our to-camera "studio set" is at Boonlang: maps.app.goo.gl/hYsgisYZzjxGigYz9 Cheers all and Happy New Year.
I think humans as smarter apes experimented with eating WHAT THEY SAW other animals eat (bears wolves ate berries) then teach babies each other and what didn't kill them they kept eating. Watched their hunted or later herd deer bison gazelles sheep goats horses grazing munching on grasses, probaby back into Lucy 5 million yrs ago long ago ripping grass and chewing on it's tops was probably done maybe to calm stomach or rid of worms or loosen stool but then realized could survive for a bit with other plants fruits between meats hunting game. HOT ENVIRONMENT and water around eventually chewing grains fruit and drinking water SAMETIME hungry was tasty like eating modern oatmeal then if stuff was accidentally left to dry and got heated on a rock or near fire BOOM and wild yeast a lump of something tasty proto bread. Just like different humans were considering geometry in building things or later calculus was reasoned by same HUMAN MIND species. Even more than a thousand monkeys with typewriters over a thousand or millions years could type a novel human mind follows similar paths of thought and environment interaction and problem solving for needs.
@@klyanadkmorr Interestingly, there are remains of worked interlocking wooden beams (heavy beams not suitable for hauling anywhere) found near the Kalambo River waterfall in Zambia that date to 476,000 years ago. That's 176,000 years before anatomically modern humans existed. Our prehistoric ancestors were way more advanced than many experts currently believe. It's possible they made a form of bread (it's probable to my mind - if they worked wood, they used it to cook food; the step from cooked gruel to bread is a short one).
No joke I’m 10 minutes in and I say out loud, “Man, when was this uploaded? I’ve been looking for a good bread documentary.” Such amazing timing and an awesome video as usual.
This is rapidly becoming one of my favourite channels, not just food but overall. Would be genuinely be interested in a behind the scenes episode explaining just how you go about making these. Excellent stuff
@@SaviourSword995 I believe OTR already cover all except corn. Rice, Noodle , Potato, and now bread. They even cover khanom chin which is one of the most important carbs for Southeast Asians.
If you ever visit Hungary, you MUST try lángos. It's basically a yeasted flatbread which is then deepfried (usually in sunflowerseed oil or lard). The traditional toppings are either garlic oil and flaky salt or sour cream and cheese, but these days, you can find anything on top of them, from ketchup to Nutella. It's a very popular streetfood.
How about a 'History of dumplings' - a good excuse to go back to that Georgian restaurant and have Khinkali. But also to talk about Gyoza, Peirogi etc. Yum.
Your documentaries of the history of basic staples of human civilisation makes me so proud to live in the Bangkok Metropolitan Region. The variety of restaurants serving cuisines from around the world that you can find to illustrate the history of the food you're trying to tell just within city is quite baffling to me even as a native. Keep up the good work!
I used to hate sourdough until I had it from an actual really good bakery. After that I bought some starter and have been baking it for 4 years now. Its so good 🥰
Just a quick note that Marie Antoinette never said “let them eat cake”, that was something her detractors claimed she said to make her even more hated.
Exactly! And even beyond that, in French, the "Cake" that is referred to is not actually cake, but the hard tops, or the crusts of the leftover breads!
Adam; you were killing me with this one; most of my life has be been very active but the last few years have taken a toll and then lost year I got the dreaded Diabetes diagnosis which has required major dietary changes and specifically, I’ve cut out most bread and have given up my beloved clam chowder in a Boudin sourdough Bread bowl! 😩😫; and it breaks my heart so, as much as I loved the history and the ambience of your favorite bread establishments, watching u eat all that yummy sourdough almost killed me:-) i can’t wait to see what you do with cheese:-)
I think having Daria more involved with you in this video was a Plus. She appears to be a wonderful person and Just the foil to your banter. Thank you for your fanrtastic videos, I have learned so much from them.
We have a sourdough starter my grandma got when they lived in Alaska in the 1970s and it was already 50 years old when she got it. I have a ton of sourdough recipes including waffles, bread, cake, and so many more. It's something seriously special.
I just realised how amazing this channel and I love your content, but why aren't you available as a podcast because I've a trip coming up and I want to listen to food history for 8 hours on the plane. Please convert your episodes into podcasts
Another Master Work. I hope the channel makes lots of dough. Thanks again to the team. As always, I eagerly await your next episode. A few minutes into the view I paused to make two sandwiches with Palma ham, cheddar cheese, and fruit chutney. Delicious when washed down with chilled and spiced tomato juice!
this documentary is sooooo goood. interesting facts and goood food. i am always waiting for new content. but this is over the top. you outdone yourself!
My favourite thing to do in the kitchen is bake bread. I knead by hand as I love the feel of the dough. I love the aroma and that it's so alive! Thank you for the video! As always, both informative and entertaining.
What an incredible documentary, as always. I was surprised it did not mention "Casabe," the Amazonian cassava bread made by the Indigenous people for thousands of years. That means a "History of Cassava(Yuca, Mandioca, Manioc)" is next. 😁🙏
I work maintenance in a factory. To this very day, I eat peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, though usually before work instead of afterwards. Don't let silly people outside of the States bully you, they're simply wrong. Pb&j is a staple for a reason.
I got to say, you’re incredibly charming in the way you speak. Combine that with very interesting topics and trivia, and amazing shots of various restaurants and dishes, it makes this is one my all time favorite channels! I watch every video as soon as it’s released!!! Keep it up, love from Sweden 🇸🇪
Fantastic Docu OTR! Bread is Life! Thank You for doing a tremendous job and diving deep into the subject. It was eye-opening indeed. You guys are thankfully not influencers. Brrr... Keep up the good work and always looking forward to your uploads. Cheers!
To be fair, pb&j is a more modern invention than many other types of sandwiches. PB has a fair bit of protein and calories too. It's not anywhere near as substantial as something with cold cuts or whole cooked meats, but it's not a complete throwaway either.
Filipino/Tagalog bread sayings: "Walang matigas na tinapay sa mainit na kape". “The hardest bread does not stand a chance when dunked in hot coffee" No matter how tough someone thinks they are, one can break easily in a situation they're not built for.
I just finished learning about the village of Van Cu and thinking it'd be a while before another such in-depth video yet here we are… amazing. Thank you!
In a very real way, agriculture built civilization. For nomadic tribes of hunter-gatherers, either you gather and eat wild grains or you don’t. But planting the grain takes an investment and requires a level of organization that is the first step to civilization.
In Norway, hard flatbread was a necessity because bread was made in large batches. Leavened bread would not last long enough. The best baguette is made with mayonnaise instead of butter, then Ridder cheese, meat and tomato slices. A lettuce leaf is optional.
I didnt know Fatah came from Egypt because here in Pakistan the Marwat people make a version where chicken curry/salan is poured over shredded chapati and eaten in mostly winters. The dish is called Sobat here. Wow I learnt something new here! Thank you for this video!
I was thinking about your channel last night. I remembered watching a rather long documentary on tea, and since I started watching your food history videos I just kinda figured it was one of yours. But I needed to revisit it and couldn’t find it here. And that’s bc it was a modern marvels episode. But if you did a video on the history of tea, that would be spectacular!
Darya, you haven't lived until you've tried a peanut butter and jelly (not jam) sandwich with a glass of milk. When I was in Junior High School, there was a kid from Bangladesh, who would always have a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for lunch. The cafeteria workers started calling him "The Peanut butter boy". All this time, I thought he just loved peanut butter and jelly. However, it occurred to me just recently that he probably ate peanut butter and jelly because he was a vegetarian and there were no vegetarian dishes in the school cafeteria at the time except for peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
Awesome vid as usual guys, very comprehensive! I've got the bread book out ready to make something for dinner tomorrow. Still waiting on the history of Sate/Satay and that amazing peanut sauce. Cheers Simon
In defense of peanut butter and jelly sandwich, After a long, hard stretch of activity, nothing, no meal, will revive you quite like the protein and sugar punch of a pb and j. The sweetness of the jam combining with the salty taste of a good peanut butter between two pieces of simple white bread with a side of milk. It’s a rounded meal. It’s cheap. It’s filling. It’s got grain, protein, fruits, sugars, and salt. The perfect post mowing the lawn, building a shed, working in the garden, playing ball, post hike, food. And you don’t need a fridge for it so it’s also the perfect picnic sandwich, perfect lunch box sandwich. The perfect three ingredient sandwich.
I've always heard that anything cultural spreading between North/Central America to/from South America was historically extremely very unlikely. For instance potatoes were brought to Mexico from South America only after the Spanish conquest. Tortillas in Mexico can be traced back to what is now Oaxaca though, which is somewhat south. The arepa is from Ecuador. Even many native animals, plants, and even diseases don't exist on both sides of the Darién Gap. Though there is also a most likely missing link, the Salvadorean pupusa, which doesn't have much archaeological evidence as far as I could find. Anyway, damn interesting! I wouldn't be so certain that tacos are the most common use of tortillas. Outside Latin America probably, but inside I dunno there's so many really popular tortilla dishes in Mexico alone. Even though I just ate you're making me hungry!
Another valuable and entertaining lecture. Keep up the good work. I'm sorry that you and Daria aren't getting along so well these days. It's unfortunate to see.
I was drooling the whole time🤤 Especially when you came to Avra. I really want to try them all but I don't know any Central Asian restaurants in Indonesia😢
Location pins:
1. Yemeni Restaurant: maps.app.goo.gl/W2SZoSNWzPXJrf6A8
2. Larder: maps.app.goo.gl/bcaYPqV4MJb7PHDy5
3. Dessert: maps.app.goo.gl/tBh66srZqNTDHXPK8
4. Avra: maps.app.goo.gl/xaYHstqfUkkpMR238 (as a note, they have two locations in Bangkok and they're both excellent. The second is this one: maps.app.goo.gl/Lca1bm6S7XwFDbMY9 )
5. Sandwiches: maps.app.goo.gl/HsQyRWprQazgom31A
6. Chapter Market: maps.app.goo.gl/y2zTbhN7M5UcVCYi8 (one note on this one: this place deserves some love. If you're in the Sukhumvit area, swing through- I'm not a fan of night markets but the food here is next level- we go because of the first non-Chinatown Ann Kway Teow Kua Gai!- and it's convenient to Thong Lor and Asok)
7. As always, our to-camera "studio set" is at Boonlang: maps.app.goo.gl/hYsgisYZzjxGigYz9
Cheers all and Happy New Year.
I think humans as smarter apes experimented with eating WHAT THEY SAW other animals eat (bears wolves ate berries) then teach babies each other and what didn't kill them they kept eating. Watched their hunted or later herd deer bison gazelles sheep goats horses grazing munching on grasses, probaby back into Lucy 5 million yrs ago long ago ripping grass and chewing on it's tops was probably done maybe to calm stomach or rid of worms or loosen stool but then realized could survive for a bit with other plants fruits between meats hunting game. HOT ENVIRONMENT and water around eventually chewing grains fruit and drinking water SAMETIME hungry was tasty like eating modern oatmeal then if stuff was accidentally left to dry and got heated on a rock or near fire BOOM and wild yeast a lump of something tasty proto bread. Just like different humans were considering geometry in building things or later calculus was reasoned by same HUMAN MIND species. Even more than a thousand monkeys with typewriters over a thousand or millions years could type a novel human mind follows similar paths of thought and environment interaction and problem solving for needs.
@@klyanadkmorr Interestingly, there are remains of worked interlocking wooden beams (heavy beams not suitable for hauling anywhere) found near the Kalambo River waterfall in Zambia that date to 476,000 years ago. That's 176,000 years before anatomically modern humans existed. Our prehistoric ancestors were way more advanced than many experts currently believe. It's possible they made a form of bread (it's probable to my mind - if they worked wood, they used it to cook food; the step from cooked gruel to bread is a short one).
Making a documentary as an excuse to eat is a great idea.
It’s always funny when someone says something like “why do you always seem to like the food?”….because we get to choose what we film
@@OTRontheroadtime to make a deep dive in alcohol
Bread🥖🫓🥐🥞🥯🍕🍔🥪🎂🍰🧁🥧🍪🍩Superb!👌🫶👏
Excellent show, as usual! Thanks!
Eating corn tortillas with Mexican rice as we speak.
No joke I’m 10 minutes in and I say out loud, “Man, when was this uploaded? I’ve been looking for a good bread documentary.” Such amazing timing and an awesome video as usual.
This is rapidly becoming one of my favourite channels, not just food but overall. Would be genuinely be interested in a behind the scenes episode explaining just how you go about making these. Excellent stuff
History of RICE and now we have history of bread....I now have two favorite episodes...
For me its noodles and bread 😊
Rice, Noodles, Potato, and Bread.
@ mmmm potato was also good.
Rice was definitely interesting.
Potatoes and cooked dough are just so delicious
History of rice is already done by this channel. You can find it
@@SaviourSword995 I believe OTR already cover all except corn. Rice, Noodle , Potato, and now bread.
They even cover khanom chin which is one of the most important carbs for Southeast Asians.
Do I feel influenced? No. Educated? Yes.
Another fantastic and informative OTR video.
This is old-school National Geographic quality content. So well done.
Right down to the cinematography and everything!
Big shout out to whomever invented toast.
They received bread and said "cook it again."
If you ever visit Hungary, you MUST try lángos. It's basically a yeasted flatbread which is then deepfried (usually in sunflowerseed oil or lard). The traditional toppings are either garlic oil and flaky salt or sour cream and cheese, but these days, you can find anything on top of them, from ketchup to Nutella. It's a very popular streetfood.
How about a 'History of dumplings' - a good excuse to go back to that Georgian restaurant and have Khinkali. But also to talk about Gyoza, Peirogi etc.
Yum.
Your documentaries of the history of basic staples of human civilisation makes me so proud to live in the Bangkok Metropolitan Region. The variety of restaurants serving cuisines from around the world that you can find to illustrate the history of the food you're trying to tell just within city is quite baffling to me even as a native. Keep up the good work!
Just woke up to see a whole hour's worth of material from you! Great way to start the day. Thanks man! Hope you're doing well.
I used to hate sourdough until I had it from an actual really good bakery. After that I bought some starter and have been baking it for 4 years now.
Its so good 🥰
My kid just asked about bread at bed last night. Lo and behold, the perfect recommended video appears uploaded just days ago. Amazing
And on a slightly smaller scale, History of Soy Sauce or just Soybeans would be cool too.
It is so nice to see you rounder and rounder with every episode.
Just a quick note that Marie Antoinette never said “let them eat cake”, that was something her detractors claimed she said to make her even more hated.
You were there?
Proof?
Exactly! And even beyond that, in French, the "Cake" that is referred to is not actually cake, but the hard tops, or the crusts of the leftover breads!
Adam; you were killing me with this one; most of my life has be been very active but the last few years have taken a toll and then lost year I got the dreaded Diabetes diagnosis which has required major dietary changes and specifically, I’ve cut out most bread and have given up my beloved clam chowder in a Boudin sourdough Bread bowl! 😩😫; and it breaks my heart so, as much as I loved the history and the ambience of your favorite bread establishments, watching u eat all that yummy sourdough almost killed me:-) i can’t wait to see what you do with cheese:-)
I think having Daria more involved with you in this video was a Plus. She appears to be a wonderful person and Just the foil to your banter. Thank you for your fanrtastic videos, I have learned so much from them.
0:31 "it bakes the question" ... now I'll grab my coat and show myself out
We have a sourdough starter my grandma got when they lived in Alaska in the 1970s and it was already 50 years old when she got it. I have a ton of sourdough recipes including waffles, bread, cake, and so many more. It's something seriously special.
I just realised how amazing this channel and I love your content, but why aren't you available as a podcast because I've a trip coming up and I want to listen to food history for 8 hours on the plane. Please convert your episodes into podcasts
I’m literally downloading this episode via YT Premium right now in the airport to listen to or watch while on the plane 😂
I'm only 20 minutes in, and what a gem it is!
Thank you so much for posting this film. Very interesting.
I’ve literally been waiting for years for this documentary. Fantastic. Fascinating. Pretty definite . Bravo. Really impressive content.
Beautifully done! I am in a cheery mood from all the ancient carby goodness. Daria being sassy about PB&J …A+
I love these deep dive vids on stuff you never think about! so interesting hearing where everyday things come from.
Unironically one of the best videos I’ve ever seen on this platform
Those flatbreads, so simple and yet complex
I appreciate everything you do to educate us about the history of food,history and cultures.😊
OTR is so good ,i dont even eat bread anymore but im gonna watch it 😊
IKR. Should have at least touched on chaffles! 😂 Saving Americans, one keto meal at a time.... Let's hear it for lupin flour!🎉
fantastic documentary. never expected pretzel's history to be this wholesome.
Another Master Work. I hope the channel makes lots of dough. Thanks again to the team.
As always, I eagerly await your next episode.
A few minutes into the view I paused to make two sandwiches with Palma ham, cheddar cheese, and fruit chutney.
Delicious when washed down with chilled and spiced tomato juice!
this documentary is sooooo goood. interesting facts and goood food. i am always waiting for new content. but this is over the top. you outdone yourself!
A great, inciteful and entertaining video. This is exactly the sort of thing that I come to RUclips for.
Just want to reach out and say I adore your segments- very detailed and interesting. Great work!
Great content! You def influenced me to try baking more variety of breads instead of just 3 types that I already do.
That was fantastic. Would be great to compliment with a history of beer.
You never mentioned that fantastic-looking leberkaessemmel you were eating at Nevermind!
Genuine respect Adam for being in the mood for a beer after the massive amount of bread consumed in the day.
I had just finished making bread at work when I noticed your video come up… excellent timing!
Love it. Wrote papers on bread and the history behind it.
Subscribed a while back and really enjoying your channel, especially the history videos. Looking forward to more. 🙂
I love this as I just started baking my own bread! I can’t wait to continue my bread baking journey 😁
These videos have such a giant scope, and are very well made. Great work 🍻
My favourite thing to do in the kitchen is bake bread. I knead by hand as I love the feel of the dough. I love the aroma and that it's so alive!
Thank you for the video!
As always, both informative and entertaining.
If Daria is happy, we’re happy. Glad your ancient body survived the breadening, Adam! 😂🤣🤣
What an incredible documentary, as always. I was surprised it did not mention "Casabe," the Amazonian cassava bread made by the Indigenous people for thousands of years. That means a "History of Cassava(Yuca, Mandioca, Manioc)" is next. 😁🙏
Content like this makes me grateful and amazed by internet and people sharing their creative vision
The fact that he makes such good videos and his channel being less than 250,000 subscriber feels criminal.
I work maintenance in a factory. To this very day, I eat peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, though usually before work instead of afterwards. Don't let silly people outside of the States bully you, they're simply wrong. Pb&j is a staple for a reason.
I got to say, you’re incredibly charming in the way you speak. Combine that with very interesting topics and trivia, and amazing shots of various restaurants and dishes, it makes this is one my all time favorite channels! I watch every video as soon as it’s released!!! Keep it up, love from Sweden 🇸🇪
Bread is life
Bread is life.
Life is Bread.
Nothing more
Needs to be said.
Life is Bread
Bread is Life.
Baking, eating...yum, no strife.
Rice, noodles, salt, potatoes, and now bread. I'm loving these food history videos!!!
Welcome back!
Fantastic Docu OTR! Bread is Life! Thank You for doing a tremendous job and diving deep into the subject. It was eye-opening indeed. You guys are thankfully not influencers. Brrr...
Keep up the good work and always looking forward to your uploads. Cheers!
As per usual, your videos entertain me and give me new knowledge.
To be fair, pb&j is a more modern invention than many other types of sandwiches. PB has a fair bit of protein and calories too. It's not anywhere near as substantial as something with cold cuts or whole cooked meats, but it's not a complete throwaway either.
Thank you for making such as entertaining video
I just started to make my own sourdough bread here in Thailand 🇹🇭. Great documentary as always. Thanks amazing Thailand 🇹🇭 ❤🙏
There is a bread. And there is one bread the rules them all. Sourdough bread.
Filipino/Tagalog bread sayings:
"Walang matigas na tinapay sa mainit na kape".
“The hardest bread does not stand a chance when dunked in hot coffee"
No matter how tough someone thinks they are, one can break easily in a situation they're not built for.
Great proverb / idiom!
I just finished learning about the village of Van Cu and thinking it'd be a while before another such in-depth video yet here we are… amazing. Thank you!
Excellent as always. Thank you!
Brilliant 🎉 thank you for all your hard work and EATING 😂
nice!!
another knowledge for today
thanks OTR!
I'm always so sad when your videos come to an end. Fantastic work!❤
Fascinating! Great video and I am sure so much time went into researching it.
More power to you and your team. ❤
In a very real way, agriculture built civilization. For nomadic tribes of hunter-gatherers, either you gather and eat wild grains or you don’t. But planting the grain takes an investment and requires a level of organization that is the first step to civilization.
This was so wonderful and Informative, thank you So much, I really Enjoyed this.
In Norway, hard flatbread was a necessity because bread was made in large batches. Leavened bread would not last long enough.
The best baguette is made with mayonnaise instead of butter, then Ridder cheese, meat and tomato slices. A lettuce leaf is optional.
Such an underrated channel 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Did I just watch an hour long documentary for free about bread? Yes I did.
I've been looking for a video like this about Bread! Great Documentary!
I didnt know Fatah came from Egypt because here in Pakistan the Marwat people make a version where chicken curry/salan is poured over shredded chapati and eaten in mostly winters. The dish is called Sobat here. Wow I learnt something new here! Thank you for this video!
Best video on this app
Great video! Thanks for sharing the history of this amazing food! Bread, the best thing since... sliced bread :D
I was thinking about your channel last night. I remembered watching a rather long documentary on tea, and since I started watching your food history videos I just kinda figured it was one of yours. But I needed to revisit it and couldn’t find it here. And that’s bc it was a modern marvels episode. But if you did a video on the history of tea, that would be spectacular!
Bae wake up!! OTR posted!!
Darya, you haven't lived until you've tried a peanut butter and jelly (not jam) sandwich with a glass of milk. When I was in Junior High School, there was a kid from Bangladesh, who would always have a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for lunch. The cafeteria workers started calling him "The Peanut butter boy". All this time, I thought he just loved peanut butter and jelly. However, it occurred to me just recently that he probably ate peanut butter and jelly because he was a vegetarian and there were no vegetarian dishes in the school cafeteria at the time except for peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
You're on a roll with these last few videos. History of X foods are so good.
If channels could do the Sponsor agreements - not only would the channels get profit but the ads would be so much more appropriate! A win -win!
Heeeeell yes. I bake bread for a living. This is perfect to come home from work to.
Time for breakfast and another lesson from the goats
This was fantastic, thank you!
I would love a run down of the books you have on your shelves. I can only make out a few!
Blessed by another oTR video
Started to bake my own bread in retirement/ thanks for you programming
Awesome vid as usual guys, very comprehensive! I've got the bread book out ready to make something for dinner tomorrow. Still waiting on the history of Sate/Satay and that amazing peanut sauce.
Cheers Simon
i did not expect 1 hour video when I clicked...thanks bread is great so i'll watch it over the next year I guess
Brilliant brilliant. I love it. Thank you.
This makes me so hungry 🤤
OTR... videos are literally "Food for Mind"..
OTR: Sweet bread is cake.
Subway: tell me about it!
VAT accountants nod heads in agreement.
These "History of" videos are absolutely wonderful. Thank you.
In defense of peanut butter and jelly sandwich,
After a long, hard stretch of activity, nothing, no meal, will revive you quite like the protein and sugar punch of a pb and j. The sweetness of the jam combining with the salty taste of a good peanut butter between two pieces of simple white bread with a side of milk. It’s a rounded meal. It’s cheap. It’s filling. It’s got grain, protein, fruits, sugars, and salt. The perfect post mowing the lawn, building a shed, working in the garden, playing ball, post hike, food. And you don’t need a fridge for it so it’s also the perfect picnic sandwich, perfect lunch box sandwich. The perfect three ingredient sandwich.
The post-lawn mowing pb&j is a world class sandwich experience
Fantastic as always. Also went to that Georgian restaurant when I visited Bangkok, first time I recognize one of the restaurants you show :D
I've always heard that anything cultural spreading between North/Central America to/from South America was historically extremely very unlikely. For instance potatoes were brought to Mexico from South America only after the Spanish conquest. Tortillas in Mexico can be traced back to what is now Oaxaca though, which is somewhat south. The arepa is from Ecuador. Even many native animals, plants, and even diseases don't exist on both sides of the Darién Gap. Though there is also a most likely missing link, the Salvadorean pupusa, which doesn't have much archaeological evidence as far as I could find. Anyway, damn interesting!
I wouldn't be so certain that tacos are the most common use of tortillas. Outside Latin America probably, but inside I dunno there's so many really popular tortilla dishes in Mexico alone. Even though I just ate you're making me hungry!
Great video!
Very good once again, well done
Another valuable and entertaining lecture. Keep up the good work. I'm sorry that you and Daria aren't getting along so well these days. It's unfortunate to see.
We've recovered from the disagreement about peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. (I hope you don't actually think that was serious?)
I was drooling the whole time🤤 Especially when you came to Avra.
I really want to try them all but I don't know any Central Asian restaurants in Indonesia😢
Very informative and ghrelin releasing documentary. Thank you