Guy Fieri 'Has A Ball' Trying Out Traditional Scandinavian Dishes | Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
  • Subscribe to Food Network UK for more great clips: goo.gl/j1XN9a
    Guy visits a Norwegian food truck in Portland, Oregon, that really impresses him. Later, he learns what a 'big dill' is while helping out at an Iranian joint in Florida.
    🇬🇧 Catch full episodes of your favourite Food Network shows on discovery+: bit.ly/41DFZTB
    From season 37 episode 3.
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Комментарии • 21

  • @FoodNetworkUKTV
    @FoodNetworkUKTV  Год назад +1

    Subscribe to Food Network UK for more great clips: goo.gl/j1XN9a

  • @R_CA
    @R_CA Год назад +4

    this woman Scandinavian inspired food truc, just wow! 😋 How did she came up with the idea?!

  • @TrevorVlogs754
    @TrevorVlogs754 Год назад +2

    The jokes 😂😂 Guy's a whole vibe

  • @Miles__50
    @Miles__50 Год назад +2

    That gravy can go on anything

  • @pakistanifoodslover
    @pakistanifoodslover Год назад

    Nice ❤

  • @iftekhar77
    @iftekhar77 Год назад

    8:05 guy n his puns LMAO
    the guy is like huh

  • @e.m8784
    @e.m8784 Год назад

    Surely nothing was funky in Guy's younger days in France!

  • @richyrich11
    @richyrich11 Год назад +13

    As a Scandinavian I'm very confused about most of this.

  • @takirosh
    @takirosh Год назад +2

    Lefse is more Norwegian Tortillas, and that food is not very Norwegian at all.
    Also the ost part means cheese. It's like calling it chai tea.
    Would you have some coffee coffee with cream cream?
    Also those meatballs were swedish.

    • @WakurayaGreen
      @WakurayaGreen Год назад

      THAT'S WHAT I THOUGHT!! Because as a Swede, when I heard them say the name of the cheese at 1:16 I thought to myself "doesn't look bad at all- ...wait a minute! Do they mean "getost" ?! 😂That would mean that the man just said a Norwegian cheese named "goat cheese "

    • @WhatThisVideo-WTv
      @WhatThisVideo-WTv Год назад

      I got the chai tea reference but didn't got what you mean by ost part. Can you pls explain one more time?

  • @pmophy17421
    @pmophy17421 Год назад +2

    Why they try to say getost rather than just say goat cheese escapes me.

    • @shirox11
      @shirox11 Год назад

      Because it’s Norwegian cheese, hence it’s in you know….Norwegian

    • @pmophy17421
      @pmophy17421 Год назад +1

      @@shirox11 Getost literally only means goat cheese (get = goat and ost = cheese) and is just a type of cheese that exists pretty much everywhere, it’s not a Norwegian cheese or a specific brand of cheese like say Brie, Chèvre or Camembert cheese. But please feel free to tell me more about what’s Norwegian which you clearly know much more about than me…

    • @theablanca17
      @theablanca17 Год назад

      ​@@pmophy17421 that type of goat cheese is a bit unknown outside of Scandinavia. Also called "brunost" in Norwegian, since it's well brown. Called "mesost" in Swedish. Just made with goats milk. Never seen it outside Sweden and Norway. It's not made like a regular goats cheese is made.

    • @MrDuckyart
      @MrDuckyart Год назад

      @@shirox11 Honestly, chances are they probably said it to make it sound more foreign and exotic

  • @Corsair721
    @Corsair721 Год назад +1

    There is notting Scandinavian about this, but creds for the attempt

  • @FruhstuckausOberhausen
    @FruhstuckausOberhausen Год назад

    Very interesting! I have a cooking channel too, if you're interested) But it's small)

  • @Biring1
    @Biring1 Год назад +1

    The only Norwegian thing about that wrap is the geitost gravy

  • @Reereereedeer
    @Reereereedeer Год назад

    Re