Lol. I had a friend that couldnt eat a lot of stuff because she is allergic to msg. It gave her seizures. I remember she got out of having to choose a meal plan in college because she couldnt eat any of the food.
There are definitely a lot of people who have fake MSG sensitivities but there are also definitely real MSG sensitivities and it's unfortunate that the discourse around it has become so politicized and permanently damaged by some unfortunate discourse that started in the 70s when one person called it "Chinese restaurant syndrome." For me, highly-concentrated MSG affects me very differently than the glutamates that naturally occur in all of the "gotcha" foods like tomatoes and parmesan, and the MSG-heavy snack foods give me horrible headaches that don't happen even with very thick mushroom broth. It was actually noticing the difference between how I handled flavored and unflavored corn chips that clued me into having a problem. It might just be a matter of concentration, or it might be a matter of other chemicals coming along with it (such as having too much salt or some of those other nucleotides Dan mentioned in the intro), but in my experience it's best for me to avoid things that list MSG on their ingredients.
@@fluffycritter aaw man thank you for sharing. Im glad you figured out your sensitivity so now you know to avoid certain things. “Chinese restaurant syndrome” is effed up 🙄
It's probably a histamine reaction. Lots of high MSG foods are fermented, and fermentation creates histamine. Potato chips aren't fermented, neither are tomatoes.
@@BooBaddyBig I get histamine reactions to a lot of foods but the MSG reaction is pretty different. But the fermentation aspect might still be a glance in the right direction for figuring it out.
My dad used msg as a flavor enhancement in the 70’s and he also introduced us to prolific use of garlic. To say he was ahead of the times is an understatement. He was a home chef and we were recipients of his interest and talent. MSG got such negative press so I am pleased to see it making a comeback. Excellent video.
My dad was a home cook as well! I’ve not come across anyone else who said that before, I got to enjoy my 70’s, 80’s and most of my 90’s with him, and excellent food.
The problem with MSG is people tend to over use it to replace the lack of quality ingredients. As you put it, it enhance not replace. Very fair judgement.
My family often asks me why my cooking is so good. I tell them it's because I cook with love. But it's really because I have a giant bottle of MSG and I put it on literally everything I cook when no one is looking.
Chili crisp over GOOD fresh peaches is next level, my dad goes through a jar a month eating this in the summer. In the summer, I'll combine cold udon noodles, poached chicken, shredded fresh veggies(carrot, zuchinni, squash, etc), and sliced peaches, then toss with chili crisp and sesame oil, then sesame seeds over the top. Soooo good and refreshing.
I love peaches with tomatoes cheese and olive oil. Sorta similar but i will definitely have to try those ideas that noodle dish sounds amazing thanks for the recipe
My late, great high school chemistry teacher was a former Frito Lay food scientist in Texas. He said his favorite Dorito was the unseasoned ones only available to workers. RIP Bob White!
This one of the best videos Dan has done! The right side of the chart he showed could also have included nutritional yeast, which is PACKED with nucleotides. Please, everyone, try making a Caesar dressing with both parm and "nootch." You'll never leave either out again. You can even ditch the egg if you'd like, because the yeast does some thickening.
Yes oc. I learned about nut.yeast (that was so confusing because there are no nuts) back in Tennessee at a place called "The Farm" in Summertown Tennessee. They were and are "strict vegetarians", now called vegan. There is a GREAT cookbook called "The Farm Vegetarian Cookbook" that is unique in the early teaching of how to make chewey gluten steaks, called saitan, and nut.yeast Cheezy Sauce. Great stories in it about Uncle Bill too.
He doesn’t say it here, but love kenjis theory that words are meant for communication. When he says stir-frying should really be toss-frying kinda blew my mind lol. Because yeah I don’t really stir it, I toss it.
As someone who absorbs a ton of food RUclips, I thoroughly enjoyed this and honestly think it was of my favorite videos I've seen in weeks. Subscription earned!
I love when Kenji releases a book because that means he's going to be doing the rounds on my favorite cooking channels on RUclips to promote it. Wish he'd do more crossovers when he's not in the middle of a promotion cycle but I'll take what I can get lol
Marmite and worcestershire sauce are what I use to add a huge amount of flavor to savory foods. They key is to not add too much. A teaspoon of each is plenty.
Dirty Martinis? I have a whole new level of respect for you. That was my specialty when I worked in restaurants and bars. Its a rare group who love a Dirty Martini.
Late to the party, but thought I'd share. I keep a 32oz deli container full of what I call chef salt. Fist, you combine 25% by weight sodium inosinate and guanylate (I+G) with 75% by weight monosodium glutamate (GSM). Then this new mixture you combine 10% by weight with 90% by weight salt. The I+G significantly boost the umami effects of the MSG and having it premixed with kosher salt just makes for a coinvent and intuitive use. I use this salt on all savory applications.
Dan! Kenji! • I made the ginger frozen yogurt (fermented 24 hrs | strained for 6) and am totally making chili crisp & I'll live in bathtub forever with it! • I also made a sweet cream ice cream that I topped with parm, olive oil & big ole flaky salt : will add a bit o msg next time. Y'all are thee best. Keep it up!
many take-outs from this vid. hats off. biggest for me was when kenji said 2% salt when u want them to buy more beers, meaning when u want it extra salty, and dan proceeded to add at least 50% more than super salty to the salt stock
17:43 Does Kenji now recommend wok cooking for those who only have induction cooktops? I recall him saying in the past that if you have induction you should just use a skillet due to not being able to get heat up the sides of the wok.
15:29 if you want to cook with a wok at home remove that defuser plate first. Then you’ll get the concentrated flame Kenji is describing to use when wok cooking.
Yeah, this!! I said (to myself) the very same thing. That round cap that difuses the flame into tiny flames in a circle can be easily removed... Which makes the fire bigger and centered on the bottom of the wok.
I do call out people who say they can't eat MSG but yet use or eat food with "yeast extract"..hello...MSG! I use Laoganma on a lot of foods. I buy the ones with beans in it as well as with peanuts. The one with beans is slightly saltier than the other.
The MSG sensitivity, when it’s psychological, reminds me of Chuck’s illness in Better Call Saul. It’s unreal how powerful the mind is in creating delusions.
My Polish granny used MSG in many/most of her recipes. They don't taste right if the MSG is removed. Sister has old Polish cookbooks that specify MSG. Perhaps Polacks are immune... 🤣
Kenji says around 17:50 that he's only cooked with this wok on an induction cooktop. I trust him, but how does that make any sense? Woks are made to be ripping hot, which you can't do with induction if the wok is in the air half the time you're using it. Is he just stirring instead of using the motion of the pan to help the food evaporate moisture? Or is he just letting the pan cool off while it's in the air? Curious if anyone else has experience cooking with a wok on induction.
I'm an old and remember when Kenji would enter from off camera for ATK recipe demos. And I'm Korean and handing your kid the violin at a young age was a big thing for Korean parents.
Great episode; however, I've always wondered, who decides how far the line under the subject goes at the beginning of each episode? Weird question I know. But it's never the same.
This is one of my favorite episode. Kenji and Dan nailed it! Thanks for clarifying MSG is safe. I knew most of the snacks have Msg that's why its delicious! Great episode! 👍
I prefer Vlasic kosher dill pickle brine. For a hangover, I would save the stuff and leave it in the fridge. Perfect hangover cure in the morning. A few swigs and good to go!
Unfortunately, they changed their brine recipe when they removed dyes. At least it doesn’t taste the same to me. It tastes like you mixed old Vlasic brine with Claussen pickle brine.
I eat all these foods but I still don't understand what "umami" is supposed to taste like. Not sure if it's super subtle, or my taste buds are broken, or if I'm just a big dummy. Maybe I need to do a side-by-side taste test to really "get it." Great video!
All while disregarding the chemistry problem at hand (maybe I missed it, though). I thought they wanted to control for sodium. So you would need to know the 'sodium to rest' weight ratio in MSG to find out how much salt to add after fixing the amount of MSG
That was a great and enjoyable episode. Kenji has so many insights, and it was great to see you use olive brine for your martini. I use it in a clamato ceaser drink. and the chili crisp i will be trying that out with ice cream. Well done!!
*I follow Kenji on Instagram and was surprised last week when in a discussion about what wouldn't he eat he wrote "I do not see anything wrong with eating dogs. Pigs are just as smart and emotional". I'm still thinking about that!!*
I find these combos really help when cooking with bitter/ sulphurous compounds - especially veg like broccoli, kale, cabbage, brussel sprouts etc. I've had so many people say 'Oh, I hate '. It's so fun to see their eyes widen in shock and awe when they try it 'my way'! :D I'm glad that the research around MSG continues to grow. It still has a bit of a stigma from that 'Chinese Restaurant Syndrome' article, of course. It's good that people understand that it occurs naturally in so many different foods.
Another great episode! Brian David Gilbert's recipe for pepcorn uses Lao Gan Ma - I haven't tried it but it looks tasty. I love Piri Piri seasoning + cinnamon on vanilla ice cream, so I imagine this might be similar: the kick of the spice and the cool of the cream complement each other well.
Love this video! My only critique would be the word “placebo”. Placebo describes a positive psychological effect from an inert substance. In contrast, a “nocebo” is , essentially, a placebo that one perceives to cause harm.
I believe he has an induction burner with a rounded depression in the middle. Somewhere I saw a video of him packing his book tour case and it showed the burner. You can get them online.
In his book “the wok” I’m pretty sure he said not to buy a round bottom wok. Period. Allegedly they were only good for legit wok burners. The quote: “Unless you have a custom insert in your range you want to avoid round-bottom or induction woks”.
I’m curious about what Kenji said about using that wok on induction. I notice he’s using a round bottomed wok. Does he use that on a flat induction or a wok induction burner which has a concave shape?
Great episode as always Dan. What I want to know that no one seems to talk about is how to use the nucleotides more in cooking. Like with the Doritos, is there a powdered form of the inosinate and guanylate available for consumers that I could/should have on my counter just like my MSG that I could be adding? Or a perfect ratio they've figured out that I could mix up to have a seasoning salt with weighed out salt, MSG, disodium inosinate, and disodium guanylate? I would love to use something like this to be able to kick foods like fried rice up to another level of savoriness without having to add ingredients that have a lot of their own flavor like bonito flakes
Should have applied chemistry to make sure that the moles of sodium were similar across the samples ie account for molar mass of MSG and NaCl. MSG is 3x more massive per molecule/mole.
My first brush with the malaise of misinformation. 90’s me was warned about the dangers of this “horrible” ingredient. Only years later did I find out how wrong I was; and how big a moron I was for not fact checking an urban myth (the internet wasn’t a thing, information moved slowly). Now I proudly keep a full jar of the magic in my cabinet at all times.
I made homemade chicken soup awhile ago, and found just a small splash of soy sauce made it come alive! Not too much, you don't necessarily want to turn it into a Chinese dish (maybe you do), but just enough to change the color slightly...AWESOME!
No sooner than Dan says there's not many places you wouldn't put chili crisp, the first words that popped into my brain was " Ice Cream, you wouldn't put chili crisp on Ice Cream" as the most absurd combo to pop into MY mind and lo and behold, the next image to appear on the screen and the next words out of his mouth is Ice Cream!🙄
@@kenmore01: Not if they are talking about food preferences. As Kenji points out, the reason why someone has an aversion to a particular food is irrelevant. So maybe it’s not an allergy; maybe they simply don’t like it. That doesn’t matter. What matters serving people food they can eat and enjoy without having to justify their choice.
I'm curious about the categorization of tastes, as related to the location of taste sensors on the tongue. (1) Isn't MSG a variant of the taste "salty" (sodium), rather than a separate taste category? (2) And what about the taste "astringent?" While maybe in western cuisine astringent isn't consideted a food taste, but in some other cuisines (Thai, for example) astringent is definitely considered a food taste, and a desirable one that is sought after.
MSG doesn't taste "salty." I think what you're calling astringent, most people would just call sour and astringent would probably fall under sour in the hierarchy anyway. I could be wrong about that but I'm sure MSG doesn't taste "salty."
I'm freaking out about how great this show is. Can anyone provide a non-vague answer about oils used for wok cooking and if different what is used for to season.
Oils for wok cooking need to be resistant to burning at high temperatures in order to avoid too much bitterness or burnt flavors. Oils for flavor should taste good cold or warm; these can be natural or infused with some other tasty food/herb.
I've been waiting for this episode since seeing Dan's Instagram story about the chili crisp on ice cream. I was so intrigued (and, admittedly, a little put off!) by the idea then, but after watching this, I would try it. This is one of my favorite episodes--it definitely ranks up there with the pancake episode. Love seeing Dan's unscripted interactions with his guests (even when it is trying to solve math!). Thank you, Dan!
There's a restaurant in Chicago, Duck Duck Goat, that at one time served a dessert that was sort of a crepe filled with ice cream and chili crisp. Definitely a complex combo to process but overall I liked it.
I have friends who swore they are allergic to MSG but have no problem gulfing down a bag of potato chips that has MSG as an ingredient.
Lol. I had a friend that couldnt eat a lot of stuff because she is allergic to msg. It gave her seizures. I remember she got out of having to choose a meal plan in college because she couldnt eat any of the food.
There are definitely a lot of people who have fake MSG sensitivities but there are also definitely real MSG sensitivities and it's unfortunate that the discourse around it has become so politicized and permanently damaged by some unfortunate discourse that started in the 70s when one person called it "Chinese restaurant syndrome."
For me, highly-concentrated MSG affects me very differently than the glutamates that naturally occur in all of the "gotcha" foods like tomatoes and parmesan, and the MSG-heavy snack foods give me horrible headaches that don't happen even with very thick mushroom broth. It was actually noticing the difference between how I handled flavored and unflavored corn chips that clued me into having a problem.
It might just be a matter of concentration, or it might be a matter of other chemicals coming along with it (such as having too much salt or some of those other nucleotides Dan mentioned in the intro), but in my experience it's best for me to avoid things that list MSG on their ingredients.
@@fluffycritter aaw man thank you for sharing. Im glad you figured out your sensitivity so now you know to avoid certain things. “Chinese restaurant syndrome” is effed up 🙄
It's probably a histamine reaction. Lots of high MSG foods are fermented, and fermentation creates histamine. Potato chips aren't fermented, neither are tomatoes.
@@BooBaddyBig I get histamine reactions to a lot of foods but the MSG reaction is pretty different. But the fermentation aspect might still be a glance in the right direction for figuring it out.
My dad used msg as a flavor enhancement in the 70’s and he also introduced us to prolific use of garlic. To say he was ahead of the times is an understatement. He was a home chef and we were recipients of his interest and talent. MSG got such negative press so I am pleased to see it making a comeback. Excellent video.
My dad was a home cook as well! I’ve not come across anyone else who said that before, I got to enjoy my 70’s, 80’s and most of my 90’s with him, and excellent food.
The problem with MSG is people tend to over use it to replace the lack of quality ingredients. As you put it, it enhance not replace. Very fair judgement.
My family often asks me why my cooking is so good. I tell them it's because I cook with love. But it's really because I have a giant bottle of MSG and I put it on literally everything I cook when no one is looking.
it is the secret weapon!
You should probably share, I hate cooks who keep secrets!
I mean, you're not lying, you love MSG.
Hahahahaha
12 WAYS MSG DESTROYS THE BODY --- ruclips.net/user/shortsoEzHLxkkHh8?feature=share
I'm from the Philippines, been using MSG to whatever I and my family would cook. I'm now 68 and no major health issues.
Chili crisp over GOOD fresh peaches is next level, my dad goes through a jar a month eating this in the summer. In the summer, I'll combine cold udon noodles, poached chicken, shredded fresh veggies(carrot, zuchinni, squash, etc), and sliced peaches, then toss with chili crisp and sesame oil, then sesame seeds over the top. Soooo good and refreshing.
I love peaches with tomatoes cheese and olive oil. Sorta similar but i will definitely have to try those ideas that noodle dish sounds amazing thanks for the recipe
Sounds so good
That sounds fuckin banging
That sounds kinda like one of my favorite summer snacks of Tajín seasoning sprinkled over pineapple or mango.
funny I put SALT on peaches, apples and watermelon, so it's probably close to the same "umami" type of thing.
My late, great high school chemistry teacher was a former Frito Lay food scientist in Texas. He said his favorite Dorito was the unseasoned ones only available to workers. RIP Bob White!
... So he liked tortilla chips?
Kenji and Dan are the best food pairing since peanut butter and jelly! So cool to see them together.
Came here to recommend a peanut butter and chili crisp sandwich thought this seemed an appropriate place to leave it.
You’re both right!
Not “konbu and katsuobushi“? I would think that’s a more relevant pairing here. 😛
My thoughts too! These two are fantastic and I'd love to see them do this again lots of times!
I kinda miss KLA’s home cook vlogs during Covid (especially the late night snacks). It’s like we were all in it together😂😭❤️🙏
🤣
Yup!!!
But COVID ain’t over, yet…
Yeah really sad his channel slowed down so much
He just posted a new one!! He must have seen your comment!
This one of the best videos Dan has done! The right side of the chart he showed could also have included nutritional yeast, which is PACKED with nucleotides. Please, everyone, try making a Caesar dressing with both parm and "nootch." You'll never leave either out again. You can even ditch the egg if you'd like, because the yeast does some thickening.
Nutritional yeast is basically canned cheese flavor dust and it's great
I add nutritional yeast to my homemade vegetable stock. It’s the base to many of my recipes and would not be the same without the nootch.
Yes oc. I learned about nut.yeast (that was so confusing because there are no nuts) back in Tennessee at a place called "The Farm" in Summertown Tennessee. They were and are "strict vegetarians", now called vegan. There is a GREAT cookbook called "The Farm Vegetarian Cookbook" that is unique in the early teaching of how to make chewey gluten steaks, called saitan, and nut.yeast Cheezy Sauce. Great stories in it about Uncle Bill too.
He doesn’t say it here, but love kenjis theory that words are meant for communication. When he says stir-frying should really be toss-frying kinda blew my mind lol. Because yeah I don’t really stir it, I toss it.
this is why learning the metric system is important. for 500 ml like 1-1.5 gram of salt max! also salt varies in saltiness.
really cool seeing kenji explain the motions behind the toss in the stir fry
As someone who absorbs a ton of food RUclips, I thoroughly enjoyed this and honestly think it was of my favorite videos I've seen in weeks. Subscription earned!
I love when Kenji releases a book because that means he's going to be doing the rounds on my favorite cooking channels on RUclips to promote it. Wish he'd do more crossovers when he's not in the middle of a promotion cycle but I'll take what I can get lol
As a data nerd this is the best collaboration I've seen.
Marmite and worcestershire sauce are what I use to add a huge amount of flavor to savory foods. They key is to not add too much. A teaspoon of each is plenty.
Dirty Martinis? I have a whole new level of respect for you. That was my specialty when I worked in restaurants and bars. Its a rare group who love a Dirty Martini.
Well, include me! I love them!
Wow, just wow. What an episode. Loved it. Dan and Kenji together talking about the magic powder.Yes please
Magic powder 😂
I’m so happy to see a new episode of ‘What’s Eating Dan?’ 👏🏽
Dan is by far my favorite food nerd. Kenji is probably second.
Thank you for demystifying MSG via this discussion on umami
I love watching food scientists at work. Sure they call themselves Cooks or Chefs, but they are in fact flavor Scientists.
Late to the party, but thought I'd share. I keep a 32oz deli container full of what I call chef salt. Fist, you combine 25% by weight sodium inosinate and guanylate (I+G) with 75% by weight monosodium glutamate (GSM). Then this new mixture you combine 10% by weight with 90% by weight salt. The I+G significantly boost the umami effects of the MSG and having it premixed with kosher salt just makes for a coinvent and intuitive use. I use this salt on all savory applications.
Dan! Kenji!
• I made the ginger frozen yogurt (fermented 24 hrs | strained for 6) and am totally making chili crisp & I'll live in bathtub forever with it!
• I also made a sweet cream ice cream that I topped with parm, olive oil & big ole flaky salt : will add a bit o msg next time.
Y'all are thee best.
Keep it up!
many take-outs from this vid. hats off. biggest for me was when kenji said 2% salt when u want them to buy more beers, meaning when u want it extra salty, and dan proceeded to add at least 50% more than super salty to the salt stock
17:43 Does Kenji now recommend wok cooking for those who only have induction cooktops? I recall him saying in the past that if you have induction you should just use a skillet due to not being able to get heat up the sides of the wok.
15:29 if you want to cook with a wok at home remove that defuser plate first. Then you’ll get the concentrated flame Kenji is describing to use when wok cooking.
Yeah, this!! I said (to myself) the very same thing. That round cap that difuses the flame into tiny flames in a circle can be easily removed... Which makes the fire bigger and centered on the bottom of the wok.
if salt is the treble, msg is the midrange and sweetness is the bass.
Salt is obviously the bass
mix engineer?
not a bad analogy
It's funny to see that even Dan becomes starstruck in the presence of Kenji
I do call out people who say they can't eat MSG but yet use or eat food with "yeast extract"..hello...MSG! I use Laoganma on a lot of foods. I buy the ones with beans in it as well as with peanuts. The one with beans is slightly saltier than the other.
The best Dan episode so far. Jam packed with interesting information!
loved everything; especially the riemann hypothesis chat on proportions. great fun Gents; thank-you both.
I love talking about MSG's evils while having some fries and ketchup or Doritos.
The MSG sensitivity, when it’s psychological, reminds me of Chuck’s illness in Better Call Saul. It’s unreal how powerful the mind is in creating delusions.
12:30 And this is why I like Kenji more than 90% of other chefs.
That timestamp there shows that he is more than just an amazing chef, he is a damn good human being.
Extra dirty, extra dry martini's are the BEST! Never had it with MSG but I'll try anything once!
One of my “other mothers” as
my mom always said was a Vietnamese woman whom I love dearly. She cooked with MSG out of a baby food jar and I love that.
My Polish granny used MSG in many/most of her recipes. They don't taste right if the MSG is removed. Sister has old Polish cookbooks that specify MSG. Perhaps Polacks are immune... 🤣
Kenji says around 17:50 that he's only cooked with this wok on an induction cooktop. I trust him, but how does that make any sense? Woks are made to be ripping hot, which you can't do with induction if the wok is in the air half the time you're using it. Is he just stirring instead of using the motion of the pan to help the food evaporate moisture? Or is he just letting the pan cool off while it's in the air? Curious if anyone else has experience cooking with a wok on induction.
Kenji's also a killer violinist! Nice to see him back at America's Test Kitchen.
I'm an old and remember when Kenji would enter from off camera for ATK recipe demos. And I'm Korean and handing your kid the violin at a young age was a big thing for Korean parents.
@@tiacho2893 Kenji is not Korean he’s German American and Colombian
Not correct. J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is Japanese American. Feel free to look him up on Wikipedia . ❤️😬🤙🏾
@@patrickmurray4418 Kenji is Kenji. Period.
@@Hannahorse715 his wife is Colombian, but not him.
Full circle, im glad this collaboration can happen
2:54 As a kid, like 4 or 5, when something was more than delicious, I called it _TOO-LICIOUS!_
Maybe that's a word that would do?
That is so cool! I love it!😊😊😊😊👍👍👍💓💓💓
Great episode; however, I've always wondered, who decides how far the line under the subject goes at the beginning of each episode? Weird question I know. But it's never the same.
It's to keep you on your toes
This is one of my favorite episode. Kenji and Dan nailed it! Thanks for clarifying MSG is safe. I knew most of the snacks have Msg that's why its delicious! Great episode! 👍
I prefer Vlasic kosher dill pickle brine. For a hangover, I would save the stuff and leave it in the fridge. Perfect hangover cure in the morning. A few swigs and good to go!
Unfortunately, they changed their brine recipe when they removed dyes. At least it doesn’t taste the same to me. It tastes like you mixed old Vlasic brine with Claussen pickle brine.
I LOVE chili crisp on ice cream. Vanilla is fantastic, but it's also amazing on black sesame ice cream with toasted coconut.
Wow, sounds amazing. Can you buy this or do you have a link to recipe?
Omg love the chemistry aspect of this.
I eat all these foods but I still don't understand what "umami" is supposed to taste like. Not sure if it's super subtle, or my taste buds are broken, or if I'm just a big dummy. Maybe I need to do a side-by-side taste test to really "get it." Great video!
Umami refers to savoury flavors.
It’s fascinating to see Dan’s nerdiness ending at Maths Problems 😂
Haha, I'm a scientist that can't talk Star Wars with my coworkers
He's seriously so geeky it's hott AF
@@calebkent2737 That seems both ironic and plausible 😂
@@maggotbitch I second this motion.
All while disregarding the chemistry problem at hand (maybe I missed it, though).
I thought they wanted to control for sodium. So you would need to know the 'sodium to rest' weight ratio in MSG to find out how much salt to add after fixing the amount of MSG
That was a great and enjoyable episode. Kenji has so many insights, and it was great to see you use olive brine for your martini. I use it in a clamato ceaser drink. and the chili crisp i will be trying that out with ice cream. Well done!!
Dan and Kenji! Great combo!
*I follow Kenji on Instagram and was surprised last week when in a discussion about what wouldn't he eat he wrote "I do not see anything wrong with eating dogs. Pigs are just as smart and emotional". I'm still thinking about that!!*
Well, yes, but often people in the Americas and in Europe want to police what the rest of the world should be eating
Yay! Two of my very favourite science foodies together on one video!!!!! What could be better! Please do this again soon!!!
Hi-Great show! Can you tell us the brand of Wok Kenji is using? I know he said it was fairly new. Thanks!
I find these combos really help when cooking with bitter/ sulphurous compounds - especially veg like broccoli, kale, cabbage, brussel sprouts etc. I've had so many people say 'Oh, I hate '. It's so fun to see their eyes widen in shock and awe when they try it 'my way'! :D I'm glad that the research around MSG continues to grow. It still has a bit of a stigma from that 'Chinese Restaurant Syndrome' article, of course. It's good that people understand that it occurs naturally in so many different foods.
I have some leftover pork tenderloin and now I’m going to make fried rice. Thanks Dan your videos are always so interesting and informative.
For those of us allergic to peanuts, should we just leave them out, or should something be substituted for them to maintain the crisp?
There are chili crisps without peanuts. Leaving it out should be fine.
Another great episode!
Brian David Gilbert's recipe for pepcorn uses Lao Gan Ma - I haven't tried it but it looks tasty.
I love Piri Piri seasoning + cinnamon on vanilla ice cream, so I imagine this might be similar: the kick of the spice and the cool of the cream complement each other well.
I need to become so good at Asian cooking that I need a 'Travel Wok'. GREAT episode btw :)
Enjoyed watching you both cooking and explaining. Thank you 🕊
Love this video! My only critique would be the word “placebo”. Placebo describes a positive psychological effect from an inert substance. In contrast, a “nocebo” is , essentially, a placebo that one perceives to cause harm.
The two of you had great chemistry (😏) would love to see more collabs in the future!
His voice is just chefs kiss
Chili Crisp is awesome on Hummus… there are Japanese versions that use sesame oil which really take things to another level 👍
Amazing episode! I learned so much! That fried rice looks sooooo good!
Outstanding episode! Thank you!
Just on a lark, last week I added a spoonful of chili crisp to some egg salad I was making for lunch and oh my goodness was it amazing.
Kenji, you mentioned that wok was used on an induction -- what kind do you use for a rounded bottom wok?
I believe he has an induction burner with a rounded depression in the middle. Somewhere I saw a video of him packing his book tour case and it showed the burner. You can get them online.
In his book “the wok” I’m pretty sure he said not to buy a round bottom wok. Period. Allegedly they were only good for legit wok burners. The quote: “Unless you have a custom insert in your range you want to avoid round-bottom or induction woks”.
I’m curious about what Kenji said about using that wok on induction. I notice he’s using a round bottomed wok. Does he use that on a flat induction or a wok induction burner which has a concave shape?
It's the latter. The wok sits right in the bowl shaped induction burner.
Kenji's foodtube media tour has been awesome.
How can this wok be used on an induction cooktop as you mentioned? How is the round bottom stabilized on a flat cooktop?
ATK's old science guy and ATK's new science guy in the same vid!?! Awesome collab.
Can you please post the full information on how to find the articles you show in the video? I am interested in reading the full text. Thank you.
I love Dan so much! thx for all these vids!
I would like to know where Kenji got his wok!! ❤️
Chili crisp is excellent with peppermint ice cream. Being a New Englander, Brigham's, of course.
Great episode as always Dan. What I want to know that no one seems to talk about is how to use the nucleotides more in cooking. Like with the Doritos, is there a powdered form of the inosinate and guanylate available for consumers that I could/should have on my counter just like my MSG that I could be adding? Or a perfect ratio they've figured out that I could mix up to have a seasoning salt with weighed out salt, MSG, disodium inosinate, and disodium guanylate? I would love to use something like this to be able to kick foods like fried rice up to another level of savoriness without having to add ingredients that have a lot of their own flavor like bonito flakes
Should have applied chemistry to make sure that the moles of sodium were similar across the samples ie account for molar mass of MSG and NaCl. MSG is 3x more massive per molecule/mole.
My first brush with the malaise of misinformation.
90’s me was warned about the dangers of this “horrible” ingredient.
Only years later did I find out how wrong I was; and how big a moron I was for not fact checking an urban myth (the internet wasn’t a thing, information moved slowly).
Now I proudly keep a full jar of the magic in my cabinet at all times.
I made homemade chicken soup awhile ago, and found just a small splash of soy sauce made it come alive! Not too much, you don't necessarily want to turn it into a Chinese dish (maybe you do), but just enough to change the color slightly...AWESOME!
Black pepper corn in your chicken soup will give it a nice color and flavor too!
If often use a dash of Worcestershire sauce for the same reason .
Fish sauce or dashi powder will also do that without changing the color.
No sooner than Dan says there's not many places you wouldn't put chili crisp, the first words that popped into my brain was " Ice Cream, you wouldn't put chili crisp on Ice Cream" as the most absurd combo to pop into MY mind and lo and behold, the next image to appear on the screen and the next words out of his mouth is Ice Cream!🙄
Quote of the Day: “Don’t call people liars.”
Even if they are?
@@kenmore01: Not if they are talking about food preferences. As Kenji points out, the reason why someone has an aversion to a particular food is irrelevant. So maybe it’s not an allergy; maybe they simply don’t like it. That doesn’t matter. What matters serving people food they can eat and enjoy without having to justify their choice.
These two men rock my world!
OK that cut to get audio sync 10:54 was pretty sweet.
❤ wow! I just tasted the ice cream and boy did it fire up all my taste glands!🎉 ❤ thanks for this! 👍
Chili crisp and vanilla ice cream is amazing!! I love your videos Dan!
22:26 everytime i see that jar my head will be imaging john xina making a smile and yelling LOA GAN MA! zao shang hao zong guo wo you bing chilling 😅
Crispy chilli oil is one of those things that I can eat straight out of the jar. Sometimes I make real food as an excuse to eat more of the chilli oil
I'm curious about the categorization of tastes, as related to the location of taste sensors on the tongue.
(1) Isn't MSG a variant of the taste "salty" (sodium), rather than a separate taste category?
(2) And what about the taste "astringent?" While maybe in western cuisine astringent isn't consideted a food taste, but in some other cuisines (Thai, for example) astringent is definitely considered a food taste, and a desirable one that is sought after.
MSG doesn't taste "salty." I think what you're calling astringent, most people would just call sour and astringent would probably fall under sour in the hierarchy anyway. I could be wrong about that but I'm sure MSG doesn't taste "salty."
YT won't let me delete this comment.
MSG is delicious and highly underrated as a cooking ingredient
I'm freaking out about how great this show is. Can anyone provide a non-vague answer about oils used for wok cooking and if different what is used for to season.
Oils for wok cooking need to be resistant to burning at high temperatures in order to avoid too much bitterness or burnt flavors. Oils for flavor should taste good cold or warm; these can be natural or infused with some other tasty food/herb.
Love watching Kenji’s channel
Love watching Dan’s channel
@@whatsupdate What channel is Dan’s? I may already be subscribed.
Featuring Lao Gan Ma. A man of culture there.
The reason for the movement is that water evaporates faster then without. Think of it as deep frying.
Wonderful, informative RUclips video. Appreciate your videos. Great job!
I've been waiting for this episode since seeing Dan's Instagram story about the chili crisp on ice cream. I was so intrigued (and, admittedly, a little put off!) by the idea then, but after watching this, I would try it. This is one of my favorite episodes--it definitely ranks up there with the pancake episode. Love seeing Dan's unscripted interactions with his guests (even when it is trying to solve math!). Thank you, Dan!
Thank you, Anna!
The chicken soup tasting sooo reminded me of that episode of Ab Fab when Eddie and Patsy are at the wine tasting in France. 😂 so funny.
So informative...kenji is awesome...as is Dan.
There's a restaurant in Chicago, Duck Duck Goat, that at one time served a dessert that was sort of a crepe filled with ice cream and chili crisp. Definitely a complex combo to process but overall I liked it.
Excited that MSG is getting a comeback story arc.