【圣骑字幕】Marco Pierre White意式肉酱-Ragù Bolognese

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @evilsigh86
    @evilsigh86 Год назад +5082

    I just wanted a bolognese recipe but now I'm questioning my own existence and the misteries of the whole universe

    • @martinp6926
      @martinp6926 Год назад +28

      😂

    • @snakuvudu
      @snakuvudu Год назад +14

      Totally.

    • @Zaccfear
      @Zaccfear Год назад +52

      Marco is annoyingly philosophical 😂

    • @namenotfound34
      @namenotfound34 Год назад +73

      Same I just wanted to cook some spaghetti now I'm not sure if I even exist

    • @kameff_
      @kameff_ Год назад +119

      I got home today and attacked my stove. No more intimidation.

  • @Joa_DB
    @Joa_DB Год назад +602

    Why waste 4 years in university majoring in philosophy when you could binge Marco's videos on RUclips.

    • @costatre9648
      @costatre9648 4 месяца назад +2

      Great!!❤

    • @Sycon-X
      @Sycon-X 2 месяца назад +2

      This comment should get at least 10k likes in a few years

    • @fredrikjaensson7350
      @fredrikjaensson7350 2 месяца назад +4

      Marco must be one of the best chef/teacher in the world. So much passion👍

    • @ikon8275
      @ikon8275 Месяц назад +1

      That's why he's my all time favorite chef. The things he says while cooking is borderline philosophy.

    • @dandare1001
      @dandare1001 27 дней назад

      That's the eternal question.

  • @rotcehlobo8311
    @rotcehlobo8311 Год назад +1034

    Red wine. It’s optional.
    Proceeds to empty an entire bottle in.😂

    • @Killemedkeps
      @Killemedkeps Год назад +46

      That cracked me up. Obviously not optional.

    • @rotcehlobo8311
      @rotcehlobo8311 Год назад +23

      Why is everything he says and does poetry?

    • @joaogrrr
      @joaogrrr 11 месяцев назад +7

      hey at least he didn't say it was 2 shots or something lol

    • @thatgoldenmotherfoxer
      @thatgoldenmotherfoxer 10 месяцев назад +18

      You decide how much red wine to add in: it's your choice. XD

    • @mclovin6039
      @mclovin6039 10 месяцев назад +27

      ​@@thatgoldenmotherfoxer I like to make my own wine out of knorr stockpots. It's my choice really 🤷🏽😂🍷

  • @DannyMercer1993
    @DannyMercer1993 9 месяцев назад +156

    He loves teaching more than he loves cooking. It’s become so clear and it’s lovely.

    • @BOBMAN1980
      @BOBMAN1980 4 месяца назад +16

      I cooked professionally for over 20-years.
      Something I decided early in was that If a Chef doesn't love teaching -- if he doesn't love sharing his knowledge, passion, and even opinions -- then he isn't a 'chef' at all.

    • @Theheathenvamp
      @Theheathenvamp 4 месяца назад +7

      Marco is a treasure.

  • @Alien_nation
    @Alien_nation Год назад +1518

    I was a boy when I started this video. Now I’m a man. Let that sink in. Think about it, digest it. You’ll know it’s true.

  • @TheMissingLink1
    @TheMissingLink1 Год назад +696

    Marco is without a doubt the Yoda of the cooking world. I go into his videos for a recipe and come away learning about life and myself.

    • @benknowsbest1
      @benknowsbest1 Год назад

      Marco is without a doubt the most pretentious asshole in cooking

    • @ryanwebb5082
      @ryanwebb5082 11 месяцев назад +11

      The man is on a different plain of life. I merely just listen to capture any small nugget of wisdom from , let’s face it, a f**king genius

    • @mrmojopictures231
      @mrmojopictures231 9 месяцев назад +1

      He's like Sun Tzu and Bob Ross combined

    • @dabin88
      @dabin88 4 месяца назад +1

      he trained Gordon Ramsey of course haha he made him who he is

    • @giggstrafford1
      @giggstrafford1 20 дней назад

      A cows tit 🤪​@@dabin88

  • @jimmea6317
    @jimmea6317 4 месяца назад +140

    Im currently watching this while drunk and depressed and it’s making me feel a little bit better

    • @godzilladestroyscities1757
      @godzilladestroyscities1757 3 месяца назад +9

      Watch his videos while you are drunk and slightly hungry. You'll get real creative on the delivery food you order.

    • @jonnynoakes9070
      @jonnynoakes9070 2 месяца назад +3

      Feel you brother ❤️

    • @1984isnotamanual
      @1984isnotamanual 2 месяца назад +1

      What’s got you down?

    • @gorjax8533
      @gorjax8533 2 месяца назад +6

      @@1984isnotamanual I worked in some of the best restaurants in Britain, front of house. I was told by a Michelin starred chef that I could be one of the best in the world. I bottled it at age 20, I'm now 32. I think about those times, and where I'd be if I persisted. I imagine that this story is similar to what this guy is going through writing that comment.

    • @BBCBOY919
      @BBCBOY919 Месяц назад +2

      @@gorjax8533 Ups and downs, my friend. Your ups will come again :)

  • @sword916d
    @sword916d Год назад +250

    it's not about impressing your customers, it's about feeding them. thank you!

    • @m3gAnac0nda
      @m3gAnac0nda Год назад +9

      Or not, that's your choice

    • @sword916d
      @sword916d Год назад +1

      @@m3gAnac0nda thank you for the sacrifice! lol he he!

    • @incarnateTheGreat
      @incarnateTheGreat Год назад +3

      ​@@m3gAnac0nda(plops in Knorr Stock Pot)

    • @GhostGrind
      @GhostGrind 7 месяцев назад +4

      And feeding them well.

  • @Keiren1
    @Keiren1 Год назад +907

    This guy always makes me think I could cook if I really wanted to.

    • @stashzero8300
      @stashzero8300 Год назад +134

      you absolutely can and always could've, but don't feel bad about it. cook what you want to eat.

    • @NarutoGeek411
      @NarutoGeek411 Год назад +63

      That's the point of a lot of Marco's teaching. He wants you to gain the confidence that you need to succeed.

    • @VDA19
      @VDA19 Год назад +10

      Cooking is really simple once you have the recipe, the right tools and quality ingredients.

    • @DavidBrown-ts2us
      @DavidBrown-ts2us Год назад +17

      Anyone can cook, have you not seen ratatouille?

    • @lnm4444
      @lnm4444 Год назад +4

      You can.

  • @gamingforcasuals6072
    @gamingforcasuals6072 Год назад +63

    Marco Pierre cooking is like Bob Ross painting. Just perfect and relaxing.

  • @wickywills
    @wickywills Год назад +427

    He looks happier now that his sentence with Knorr has finished.

    • @iain075
      @iain075 Год назад +31

      I was waiting for that, like a dog of Pavlov. Delighted to see that shackle broken.

    • @pricey4566
      @pricey4566 Год назад +3

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @giovanniamore7532
      @giovanniamore7532 Год назад +8

      knorr or maggi are a good starting point.. theý helped me a lot in the beginning.. (i started to tune them up and after some time mý tuning was better than the seasonmix..)

    • @TheGodYouWishYouKnew
      @TheGodYouWishYouKnew Год назад +15

      He was right about smearing the stock pot on a boneless chicken breast though. It really is one of the best seasonings.

    • @razmatazz9310
      @razmatazz9310 Год назад +7

      @@TheGodYouWishYouKnew That just barely offsets him putting a stock pot directly in the pasta water to cook spaghetti.

  • @Cam882000
    @Cam882000 Год назад +36

    Playing this back 10 times on 0.2x speed to see if he moved the pan. He is true to his word.

  • @scottbonehead
    @scottbonehead Год назад +594

    I remember when he was interviewed by someone who asked if it was true he made Gordon Ramsay cry “Gordon chose to cry, I didn’t make him!” 😂 legend!

    • @ancogaming
      @ancogaming Год назад +11

      Yeah, and he said that with a look in his eyes that made me want to jump up a tree. :D

    • @bigalxyz
      @bigalxyz Год назад +23

      You can cry, or you can not cry. It’s your choice.

    • @iandouglass7004
      @iandouglass7004 Год назад +3

      He knows his Epictetus

    • @DecimusTheThinker
      @DecimusTheThinker Год назад +6

      He didn't make Gordon Ramsay cry. He made himself cry. It was his choice to cry.

    • @johntrains1317
      @johntrains1317 Год назад +2

      I mean, he's not wrong

  • @daboss3116
    @daboss3116 4 месяца назад +22

    Some humorous comments on here but the truth is this man is one of best chefs/cooks this world has ever produced. He makes it so simple… listen, look, smell, feel and taste. Sounds simple enough but if you can master the importance of using your senses you can cook well

    • @MarinaZh777
      @MarinaZh777 4 месяца назад +1

      Как же Вы правы!❤

  • @Macwylee
    @Macwylee Год назад +116

    The lack of stock pots has me questioning if this is the real Marco

    • @declangaming24
      @declangaming24 7 месяцев назад +1

      There's no Real Recipe just vegetables water and Stockpot

    • @TheHiddenNarrative
      @TheHiddenNarrative 6 месяцев назад +4

      Marco has now transcended the need for stockpots.

    • @declangaming24
      @declangaming24 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@TheHiddenNarrative he's a home cook now not a pro cook

    • @happzy
      @happzy 4 месяца назад +3

      Seriously though, no salt?

  • @donutmike
    @donutmike Год назад +26

    "Now, red wine is optional."
    *Proceeds to empty a whole bottle

  • @cameronbutton2573
    @cameronbutton2573 Год назад +55

    This is more profound than a philosophy lecture I never attended. I’m SO here for it.

    • @peen2804
      @peen2804 Год назад +4

      Maybe to someone that doesn’t actually cook. He’s literally just regurgitating base level knowledge, half of which is objectively incorrect. Like cooking onions to reduce the acidity. That is entirely just some shit he made up. Onions aren’t particularly acidic lol. You don’t cook carrots to reduce water content and bring out sweetness, they’re already sweet. You cook carrots because the texture of raw carrot in a cooked dish sucks, along with just adding a broader base of flavor (what we use aromatics for in general). Root vegetables don’t even contain much water relative to other vegetables. Literally half the crap he says is either wrong or is using actual toddler logic.
      Even just things like saying the sizzle sound of browning beef comes when the fat has rendered. Incorrect, this ironically enough is because of the reduced water content from cooking, as when there’s significantly more fat than water what happens? That’s right, you get a nice sizzle because you’ve transitioned to the point of basically frying.
      Knowing what you’re doing and knowing why you’re doing it are 2 very different things.
      Rant over, and I apologize for making you the target of it 😂

    • @cameronbutton2573
      @cameronbutton2573 Год назад +2

      @@peen2804 don’t apologise, I’ve been there. As an IT professional, sometimes when I watch a video of someone who doesn’t have as much skin in the game as me, talk about sh!t they barely understand, a RUclips rant helps. Hope it made you feel better ❤️

  • @Alfaromero-wh8yk
    @Alfaromero-wh8yk 2 месяца назад +1

    No wasting my time, no intro, no outro, thank you very much, thank you seriously.

  • @questionmark9819
    @questionmark9819 Год назад +192

    I have been grating vegetables for years and cooking mince the same way for decades and people thought I was too fussy a cook. I'm glad there are other people who are the same.

    • @Stephen-bu9cm
      @Stephen-bu9cm Год назад +11

      It's a great hack for amateur cooks without sufficient knife skills, although I like leaving the carrots in little cubes for presentation. Then again, it's my choice.

    • @Rizal96able
      @Rizal96able Год назад +1

      As Marco always advocates, think about what you’re doing. There’s always a reason. Sometimes you don’t even know why, but it just works. I.e, prior to finding out grating vegetables or cutting them finely enables them to dissolve and get absorbed into the evaporated meat, fusing the flavours and intensifies them. Whatever the method, it is the cook’s way of cooking. Unless it tastes awful, it’s not wrong, just different.

    • @Konqy
      @Konqy 11 месяцев назад +1

      what would sufficient knife skills change about the process? @@Stephen-bu9cm

    • @frankmerlino336
      @frankmerlino336 4 месяца назад

      YES! Nobody wants thick chunks if veggies in a bolignese, they are essential to the flavor profile of the dish, not to mention they add some nutrition but it must be done PURPOSEFULLY

  • @annekedebruyn7797
    @annekedebruyn7797 7 месяцев назад +17

    What I love about Marcos teaching is that he explains what happens and why he does it.

    • @xgreenjacket
      @xgreenjacket 2 месяца назад +1

      Exactly. There are few tv chefs that give people the reasons and when people don’t understand why it’s necessary. They don’t do it. Same for cookbooks. They never tell you why. Never had one of marcos. I wonder if his do 🤔

  • @ruialves3058
    @ruialves3058 Год назад +632

    "Having 3 Michelin stars doesn't mean you're a great cook, it just means you understand the system"
    Only Marco, who is a great cook and an even greater philosopher could say that quote

    • @VDA19
      @VDA19 Год назад +19

      People should post that whenever someone says Gordon can do no wrong because he has a bunch of stars.

    • @captainwin6333
      @captainwin6333 Год назад +20

      @@VDA19 There was a TV program with Gordon Ramsey where he, being a chef, would cook something and a different cook each week would make their version then it would be served to a group of people and they didn't know who made which. They had to choose which one was best and nearly every week, the cook beat the chef.
      Too meany chefs serve up pretentious food, over seasoned and way too fancy. They live in a bubble that the rest of the world doesn't live in. Great food doesn't come from chefs, it comes from great cooks and they don't need to have had any training whatsoever.

    • @VDA19
      @VDA19 Год назад +5

      @@captainwin6333 Yeah, of course. Gordon is famous because a bunch of TV shows started saying " Look at this guy he's an amazing chef ". He's a celebrity chef. If you saw his Carbonara or Grilled Cheese video it's pretty clear he's not God's gift to cuisine

    • @drefrazier4266
      @drefrazier4266 Год назад +14

      @debestekeuze5471 what's wrong with that?

    • @brandonkjamessr4109
      @brandonkjamessr4109 Год назад +3

      ​@@captainwin6333 the show you speaking of is F Word

  • @Massacretalitor
    @Massacretalitor Год назад +82

    I've really put a lot of work into making my ragu as good as possible, but this one definitely had some amazing tips that no other chef has been able to provide and I know already they'll make it even better. Marco is always inspirational.

    • @49notout
      @49notout 11 месяцев назад +2

      if you want Bolognaise don't use garlic or herbs, you just allow the dish to cook for 3 hours for the flavours to work together in a magical way. Real Bolognaise is easier and if you tried it you would find out how beautiful it is.

    • @DaDaDo661
      @DaDaDo661 3 месяца назад

      ​@@49notoutwhat are you talking about? Almost every Italian uses garlic in their bolognese. Some Bolognese in the South of Italy are made with a large amount of garlic and onions

    • @49notout
      @49notout 3 месяца назад

      You are not correct

    • @puckfigs9902
      @puckfigs9902 2 месяца назад

      Because one thing I've seen from MPW, he doesn't seem to gatekeep

    • @gregc1331
      @gregc1331 12 дней назад

      Marcella Hazan’s recipe doesn’t include garlic and I’m like what Italian sauce doesn’t have garlic? That said, I plan to make it strictly following her recipe but I’ll try it a second time sautéing the pasta with some garlic and then the bolognese but only adding the garlic to the pasta, NOT Hazan’s sauce. (Too many people thinking more garlic always better). Will report the result later.

  • @peaches3840
    @peaches3840 Год назад +282

    who else will never cook this but just loves listening to marco?

    • @JambalayaJimmy
      @JambalayaJimmy Год назад +28

      You should cook it! It's not super hard and it's really good.

    • @adammchugh5456
      @adammchugh5456 Год назад +1

      my recipe is better, but he cooks it better.

    • @peaches3840
      @peaches3840 Год назад +8

      @@adammchugh5456 recipe is just theory. only practice matters, so what you're saying is myn in my dreams is better, but his is better?

    • @hanschenklein8124
      @hanschenklein8124 Год назад +14

      Why would you not cook a Ragu Bolognese?

    • @stianaslaksen5799
      @stianaslaksen5799 Год назад +4

      I cook this all the time. It's great.

  • @lyg1487
    @lyg1487 9 месяцев назад +16

    white的言语真的很有深度,翻译的很好

  • @MeliodasssESO
    @MeliodasssESO Год назад +87

    I love thay marco explains eveything he does in sensible detail. Whenever i see a gordon ramsey video he just says 'we do this to make it nice and beatiful and tasty'

  • @Elmo914
    @Elmo914 2 дня назад

    There is something special about these chefs talking about their moms, they really loved their moms and their cooking. Me and mother never got along, but her cooking, there was always something special about it.

  • @Tonyc_1987
    @Tonyc_1987 Год назад +38

    Marco Pierre White - You are the Yoda of cooking. I salute you! This video alone teaches so much about cooking and flavour.

  • @fredrikjaensson7350
    @fredrikjaensson7350 2 месяца назад +2

    This guy is a genius. Give him the Nobel Prize for best Food experience😋👍

  • @dannykal
    @dannykal Год назад +19

    This guy is a philosopher I love him

  • @xeikai
    @xeikai 4 месяца назад +19

    He's absolutely 100 percent right about making it ahead of time. Just 2 days ago i made a Bolognese sauce with beef and pork and it was sensational out of the pot, but i had some today and it's 10x better. The more this matures the more intense the flavor gets. It's absolutely amazing

    • @BreezerVsTheWow
      @BreezerVsTheWow 2 месяца назад +1

      You just keep it in the fridge? Will it stay good ?

    • @xeikai
      @xeikai 2 месяца назад +1

      @@BreezerVsTheWow generally you want to eat it before 2 weeks passes any longer and just freeze it

    • @xgreenjacket
      @xgreenjacket 2 месяца назад +7

      @@xeikai2 weeks? Fucking hell mate 😂 I’d say 3 days in the fridge and freeze after 2 unless you want to shit your pants unexpectedly one morning.

    • @fakename6658
      @fakename6658 Месяц назад

      That's because of olfactory fatigue.
      You got used to the smell of the food while cooking it.

    • @hatherlow
      @hatherlow Месяц назад +1

      He doesnt season it? Or did I doze off

  • @xxluvxx6013
    @xxluvxx6013 Год назад +130

    The part where he talks about his chef telling him to not be scared of the stove but to attack it is so relatable I went through a very similar experience working in a kitchen where I just felt defeated and incompetent and my chef said something so similar and that’s been something I’ve definitely taken in

    • @DaveMoth
      @DaveMoth Год назад +12

      I wouldn't be surprised if he literally attacked it. With a sledgehammer or something.

    • @LaymansWords
      @LaymansWords Год назад +5

      The stove is a metaphor as well

    • @kaceywatts7308
      @kaceywatts7308 Год назад +3

      Olive garden can not be that hard. Cojones my man, cojones

  • @kazmanscoop
    @kazmanscoop 10 месяцев назад +2

    Never has a cheerful little Italian musical intro seemed so out of place with the dark, foreboding content that followed it

  • @SashaCretu
    @SashaCretu Год назад +10

    The more i age, the more Marco becomes a great teacher... i loved the alegory about mariages...

  • @willrueb9573
    @willrueb9573 11 месяцев назад +2

    "We live in a world of refinement, not invention", is one of the handiest mottos I've ever heard just nonchalantly dropped.

  • @TheKoosterify
    @TheKoosterify Год назад +19

    damn, I came for a ragu recipe and left with a philosophy degree

  • @kalzaz
    @kalzaz Год назад +33

    My husband watched this video 1 week ago and I am finding pots of Bolognese sauce in the fridge and my stove damaged like it’s been attacked.

  • @GordiansKnotHere
    @GordiansKnotHere Год назад +30

    If you cook your Ragu Bolognese just right,
    you just may achieve the conscious out of body state...
    Thanks Marco!

  • @tomastorasen9164
    @tomastorasen9164 3 месяца назад +1

    The way he explains everything in this video is absolutely amazing to me. Theres no fluff or bs whatsoever. I wish there where more videos like this for more dishes.

  • @MichelLinschoten
    @MichelLinschoten Год назад +9

    The man is extremely passionate and definitely poetic in a way. Absolutely fan of chef Marco. Always so well spoken and gives me something to think sbout .

  • @patricklarry6645
    @patricklarry6645 4 дня назад +1

    Whispery Marco is so much more addictive to listen to.

  • @parkerbliss529
    @parkerbliss529 Год назад +11

    People walk in when I am cooking and wonder why I am always asking "What's happening? What's Happening"

  • @chumleyk
    @chumleyk 11 месяцев назад +1

    Ruthless. No doubt he is communicating warnings to his culinary enemies with the mince.

  • @cellardormant7488
    @cellardormant7488 3 месяца назад +12

    My mum asked me to turn the volume down on this video. I didn't allow myself to be intimidated, and on Monday I attacked her. Remember, mums and recipes are just guidelines, never allow them to dictate.

  • @xgreenjacket
    @xgreenjacket 2 месяца назад +2

    I can’t find the comment but I saw one asking about the cartouche.
    I think it may be to help stop it burning on top in the oven. as I’ve watched other marco videos (knorr one) where he doesn’t do that, and what I don’t like about the oven is that any oil comes to the top and if you aren’t careful it burns on the top layer if you don’t stir every 20 mins it also has a much more oily texture also compared to simmering on the stove. If you cover with a lid in the oven, then there is too much moisture from the steam and the sauce doesn’t thicken as nicely so I think the cartouche is to help with this. For anybody wondering.

  • @Rizal96able
    @Rizal96able Год назад +4

    This guy drove himself into a corner of anger, mean, and manic, to pursue perfection in his culinary arts and achieved 3 Michellin stars, and produced 3 legendary Chefs. Now that those heavy burden is relieved, we have this chill, fatherly, humorly, yet stern when necessary, Marco Pierre White.
    Sometimes, pain and suffering is needed to temper the soul. And when given the chance, everything just changes to serenity.. looking for a chance to unburden others that which have once been a burden to oneself.

  • @samsara6317
    @samsara6317 Год назад +16

    There is truly nothing more to say after such a lesson. Thank you, Chef!

  • @EPICFAILKING1
    @EPICFAILKING1 Год назад +7

    Truly one of England's last gentleman scholars.

  • @anthonyrichardson8770
    @anthonyrichardson8770 Год назад +4

    This is absolutely the BEST way to make Bolognese. Thank you chef.
    With utter respect.

    • @raymond15101984
      @raymond15101984 4 месяца назад

      That is not ragù alla bolognese 😅

    • @anthonyrichardson8770
      @anthonyrichardson8770 4 месяца назад +2

      @@raymond15101984 yes it is.

    • @raymond15101984
      @raymond15101984 4 месяца назад

      @@anthonyrichardson8770 i'm telling you,i'm a chef graduate from Bologna, that is not ragù alla bolognese but if you want to believe it is then I leave you in your ignorance!

    • @freddieelias6794
      @freddieelias6794 26 дней назад

      @@raymond15101984there is the italian version and british version of bolognese . A British version will use more tomato and italian version will be predominantly meat. They are both considered bolognese in a lot of peoples eyes. So dont rain on our parade please

  • @thebaconcruesader
    @thebaconcruesader Год назад +15

    Marco makes cooking an art form, not just a "ooh tasty meal" .. the way he does things brings every taste possible out of every ingredient

  • @annonymousvector1690
    @annonymousvector1690 11 месяцев назад +1

    This video was more than just a recipe about Bolognese sauce, it teaches a lot about work ethic. What a watch

  • @aidanmccabe1981
    @aidanmccabe1981 Год назад +6

    That's perfect... but let's not forget, in 3 days time it will be even better.
    The king!

  • @stonecutter2
    @stonecutter2 4 месяца назад +2

    I don't know how this found me, but I've learned to question everything, not move my pan, and have my food give insight into the world I was born into.

  • @SpacePlan10
    @SpacePlan10 Год назад +4

    I made this yesterday with what I had and it turned out very nice. Didn’t have the luxury of letting it mature but this is now my go to recipe/technique for bolognese.

  • @hamsicle
    @hamsicle Месяц назад

    I don't think I saw him add salt in this recipe which was interesting. But the thing that really got me thinking was how he prepared everything. He wasn't using the oven to cook anything down. He was using the oven to cook the sauce to intensify flavors. I love that.

  • @DrWakey
    @DrWakey Год назад +59

    Fascinating to watch how divergent Marco and Gordon have developed.
    Marco went from beeing a pissed off silent maniac to become a calm thought provoking teacher and grand connaisseur.
    And Gordon went, at least thats the impression he left for me, from beeing a rising star to beeing a shouting maniac, speed demon and meme.
    RUclips gives us the ability to watch how personalities developed.
    What a time to be alive!

    • @brianvu8175
      @brianvu8175 Год назад +5

      Not even one bit wrong, especially will all the Gordon RUclips shorts

    • @occultnightingale1106
      @occultnightingale1106 Год назад +17

      Gordon's a lot more calm and reserved when he's not dealing with haughty, self-obsessed chefs on Hell's Kitchen, or delusional, dangerous chefs on Kitchen Nightmares (America specifically). The impression I've always gotten from him is that he gets more angry in proportion to how much the person he's chewing out *should know better.*

    • @brianvu8175
      @brianvu8175 Год назад +1

      @@occultnightingale1106 ngl, I definitely see it now, especially if you read his short memoir and his thought about being on HK Uk vs HK US. Just different approaches to how he goes about dealing with different groups of contestants.

    • @jacem879
      @jacem879 Год назад +18

      What you’re seeing is Gordon is at the stage Marco was before he gave the industry the middle finger. In this video MPW says “to have 3 stars in Michelin doesn’t mean you’re a good cook, it means you know the system” Gordon is at the top of his game, but he’s still playing the system.
      Marco has proven himself, the ego has gone back in and the passion comes back out. He’s cooking to cook, Gordon is amazing, but he’s cooking to impress.

    • @toniownez
      @toniownez Год назад +2

      Gordon sold out, Marco didn't. I'd still prefer having Gordon's bank account though.

  • @natassiasampson1849
    @natassiasampson1849 Год назад +6

    This is the first time I'm looking at his channel but I absolutely love it...he speaks in such a calming way, his aroua is amazingly beautiful.

  • @Arkanses
    @Arkanses Год назад +50

    Recipe: Marco Pierre White's Ragù Bolognese
    Ingredients:
    1 onion, grated
    2 carrots, grated
    2 celery stalks, grated
    2 cloves of garlic, minced
    1.5 pounds (700g) dry-aged beef, minced
    Olive oil
    Fresh thyme sprigs
    1 cup red wine (optional)
    2 cups passata (or chopped tomatoes)
    Salt and pepper to taste
    Instructions:
    Step 1: Grate and Prepare Vegetables
    Begin by grating the onion, carrots, and celery. The grating helps these vegetables dissolve into the sauce as it cooks.
    Heat a large, oven-safe pan over medium heat and add a drizzle of olive oil.
    Add the grated vegetables to the pan and cook, stirring occasionally, to remove their moisture and intensify their flavors. This may take some time, so be patient.
    Step 2: Cook the Beef
    Push the cooked vegetables to the sides of the pan to create space in the center.
    Add the minced dry-aged beef to the center of the pan.
    Allow the beef to release its water content and let it evaporate. Then, start breaking up the beef and let it caramelize for a rich flavor.
    Continue cooking without moving the pan too much to avoid boiling the meat. This step is crucial for flavor development.
    Step 3: Drain Excess Fat
    Once the beef is well-browned and the moisture has evaporated, drain excess fat by tilting the pan and carefully pouring it off. You can save this fat for later use.
    Transfer the beef to a separate bowl.
    Step 4: Deglaze with Red Wine (Optional)
    If using red wine, pour it into the pan to deglaze, scraping up any flavorful bits from the bottom.
    Reduce the wine by 90% to remove acidity and alcohol while intensifying the flavor.
    Step 5: Add Passata (or Chopped Tomatoes)
    Return the cooked beef to the pan.
    Pour in the passata (or chopped tomatoes) and stir to combine.
    Simmer the sauce and bring it to a gentle boil.
    Step 6: Cartouche and Oven Cooking
    To reduce evaporation during cooking, make a Cartouche: Cut a piece of parchment paper to fit the pan's diameter and place it directly on the sauce.
    Cover the pan with a lid.
    Preheat your oven to 140°C (285°F).
    Place the covered pan in the oven and let it cook for about 1 hour to 1 hour and 15 minutes. This slow cooking helps the flavors meld and mature.
    Step 7: Final Touches
    After oven cooking, remove the pan and carefully lift off the Cartouche.
    Taste the ragù and season with salt and pepper as needed.
    Step 8: Serve and Enjoy
    Your Marco Pierre White-inspired Ragù Bolognese is ready to serve. It's even better if allowed to rest and mature for a few days before serving.
    Enjoy this classic Italian sauce with your favorite pasta, and savor the rich flavors developed through this meticulous cooking process.

    • @modev4163
      @modev4163 Год назад +1

      Thanks for this!

    • @VladimiruYmiru
      @VladimiruYmiru Год назад +2

      There should be a bot for all of these videos. Thanks bro

    • @GreatToastMigration
      @GreatToastMigration Год назад

      Thank you so much! I'm gonna have to give it a go.

    • @oxey_
      @oxey_ 10 месяцев назад

      goat

    • @k-lab3824
      @k-lab3824 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'm confused why you have written it out differently to the steps he takes in the video?

  • @anthonyfong4922
    @anthonyfong4922 11 месяцев назад +1

    I can listen to and watch Marco all day...truly a living legend

  • @kmart6026
    @kmart6026 3 месяца назад +1

    Chef Marco showed me the way to question and listen

  • @giorgosarifoglu953
    @giorgosarifoglu953 Год назад +4

    Albert Roux, a true legend and to hear a tough Knut Frenchman give anyone that advice..just imagine a table surrounded by Albert Roux, Michel Roux, Marco Pierre White, koffman.....❤

  • @mahsheenman
    @mahsheenman 29 дней назад

    I just love what he talks about. Perfection.
    Understanding.
    Atracking the stove!
    Refinement.
    😂

  • @cozza819
    @cozza819 Год назад +9

    Pierre is so over the top it's always been so comical to me. He deserves an Oscar for this performance 😅 Turns cooking into this over the top philosophy drama lol.

  • @DANNYxBOY9089
    @DANNYxBOY9089 11 месяцев назад

    Love mpw. An absolute maestro but simplifies cooking and doesn't gatekeep.

  • @williamyoung9401
    @williamyoung9401 Год назад +48

    There's an Italian restaurant near me that makes amazing Spaghetti Bolognese. Marco knows what he's talking about.

    • @joeb1den114
      @joeb1den114 Год назад

      Shut up..

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass Год назад +11

      Bolognese is even better with tagliatelle or pappardelle.

    • @normcharlesowen
      @normcharlesowen Год назад +3

      Spaghetti and Bolognese don’t go together. Any native Italian will tell you that emphatically.

    • @user61920
      @user61920 Год назад +9

      ​@@normcharlesowenI'm sure there are Italians who mix the two. You realize that the food history of Italy is crazy complicated and suvject to change by city or even village? I like rigatoni with Bolognese, if an Italian says that that's crap they can bugger off. It's FOOD, not rocket science.

    • @normcharlesowen
      @normcharlesowen Год назад

      @@user61920 Fine. But if you want to celebrated Italian food, then celebrate Italian food, not your version of it.

  • @ProspectstudiosCoUkBFD
    @ProspectstudiosCoUkBFD 4 дня назад

    I don’t even like bolognese or pasta. But I’ll watch a passionate artist do their thing all day!

  • @sharkalucka
    @sharkalucka Год назад +8

    Commenting for the algorithm to give me more content exactly like this! Thanks for all the incredibly valuable info and advice in one video, Marco! 🙌

    • @Macwylee
      @Macwylee Год назад

      Where is the stock pot?

  • @ZsebtelepHUN
    @ZsebtelepHUN 3 месяца назад

    Its so relaxing to watch Marco cook. I mean all the Gordon Ramsays and the Jamie Olivers are like they are on cocaine or something, buzzing and busy and have like 4 separate things happening simultaneously and shit, and their editing makes it even worse.
    Cooking is supposed to be relaxing. So good to see Marco just standing there, chilled out, having time to talk properly, without the constant "switching between shots every 3 seconds" editing that gets me nausea.
    This is how i wanna cook

  • @kratis
    @kratis Год назад +4

    I’m getting a cooking lesson and a life lesson - Marco’s the BEST!

  • @giggstrafford1
    @giggstrafford1 20 дней назад

    Marco is the prog rock of cooking.. Amazing Chef !

  • @mattshu
    @mattshu 8 месяцев назад +4

    2:56 can’t help but think I’m being scolded

  • @BiggusNickus
    @BiggusNickus Месяц назад

    "We live in a time of refinement, not invention."
    What a fantastic quote.

  • @canbb3814
    @canbb3814 Год назад +7

    bruh all i wanted was a ragu now i got kickstarted into my midlife crisis

  • @PlumpHotdog
    @PlumpHotdog Год назад +1

    Light up a spliff, listen to Marco and just enjoy life.

  • @albundy5228
    @albundy5228 Год назад +14

    I came here for a Bolognese recipe, and walked away with a life lesson.

  • @gc9017
    @gc9017 Год назад

    He’s definitely no1 top chef of chefs, a masterclass made by following his instructions.

  • @bonhomiegal
    @bonhomiegal 11 месяцев назад +5

    I'm about to make this for the second time in a week. I feel like I've finally learned the proper technique for cooking mince. This was a great instruction on how to do it and not end up just boiling it in its own juices. In my opinion it was reflected in the final taste. For the first time in a long time I've actually really enjoyed eating mince. Thanks Marco!

  • @MartsMcfly
    @MartsMcfly Год назад

    Every single aspiring cook should watch this video. It is SO MUCH more than a ragu Bolognese recipe!

  • @dbsk06
    @dbsk06 Год назад +12

    I’m a good amateur chef and philosophy lover and this video is so much more than a recipe video to me ❤ 7:16

  • @jean-jacqueskaselorganreco6879

    the same principles than Chef Jean Pierre, the same quality of reflexion...excellent

  • @raymondsantiago29
    @raymondsantiago29 Год назад +7

    I made Bolognese 2 weeks ago... I set it out in the sun for 7days .I waited til it grew afew mold spots, then served it to my guests. They absolutly loved it..🍝

  • @karoldzupa2177
    @karoldzupa2177 Год назад +1

    Marco is level on his own. there are great chef but more i watch him the more I am convinced that he is the best chef in the world

  • @derekjeter3654
    @derekjeter3654 Год назад +9

    This man has become a poet at the edge of his retirement

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Год назад +5

      He is like Myamoto Musashi, retiring from the battleground to devote himself to art and philosophy.

  • @RenegadeVile
    @RenegadeVile 11 месяцев назад

    I like how he teaches you to think about why you're doing a particular step a certain way. It's a massive help for home cooks who need to improvise with leftovers in the fridge for example. Makes it easier to whip something nice up with limited time and/or resources.
    Also, I'm going to be a complete child for a minute: Work your beef.

  • @spikedmo
    @spikedmo Год назад +12

    What Marco was saying about moisture content is some of the most important cooking advice you can have. I'd say Moisture content and heat contact are two of the least talked about but most important elements of cooking, more important than ingredient quality. Why buy a Porsche if you can't drive a Nissan?

  • @richardswan4051
    @richardswan4051 3 месяца назад

    My mum always said to leave it to mature for 2-3 days. Its always been phenomenonal. I have had less patience. I think patience is one of the greatest attributes of a cook.

  • @icecold1197
    @icecold1197 Год назад +8

    I made this today and I am truly blown away. I was making a similar traditional bolognese sauce but the taste of this recipe is amazing. I suggest finely chopping the carrot and selery after grating them because you really want it to be fine so it is not visible in the end result. Huge respect to this phenomenal chef!

    • @peddaz55
      @peddaz55 Год назад +3

      How do you know how many onions, garlic, how much wine etc. he uses? Do you have the full recipe? What about seasoning?

    • @icecold1197
      @icecold1197 Год назад +1

      ​ @peddaz55
      1 big onion, 1-2 selery, 1-2 carrots and at least 3/4th of a bottle of wine. You really want to reduce the wine by 90%. seasoning: only a bit of salt and pepper, 1 bay leaf and some thyme / rosemary

  • @mindseye4914
    @mindseye4914 11 месяцев назад

    God this man is a fkn legend. He talks and I get hypnotized and start to go into this deep trance like inner inquiry about my life on so many levels...which feels absolutely beautiful!

  • @dnmurphy48
    @dnmurphy48 Год назад +4

    Quite fascinating. Spag bols is one of my favourite dishes, since my university days. It wont taste as good as this though

  • @mattleccese
    @mattleccese 11 месяцев назад

    Ragu bolognese properly done is on another level, a king of meals. So nice to see I’m not the only one who takes such pains to get this right.

  • @HerbertDuckshort
    @HerbertDuckshort Год назад +7

    Work your beef. Always good advice.

  • @truthminister5828
    @truthminister5828 11 месяцев назад

    Wow this was great. The best I have ever seen Chef White. Bringing out the legend in him

  • @OffCut-Greens
    @OffCut-Greens Год назад +12

    “Don’t make Bolognaise to serve today.. make it to serve 3 days later, it’s sensational” 😁✔️

  • @Toguse
    @Toguse 4 месяца назад

    I tried it, and it is the best spaghetti bolognaise that I ever had.
    No wonder my late father used to be love watching this guy. I used to sit join him and watch him cook. But I was a child didn’t understand anything. No amount of 40 years old.

  • @ArthurSymington1
    @ArthurSymington1 Год назад +7

    He really is a strange cat indeed.

  • @Mwang12
    @Mwang12 11 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing that this was all made without a single Knorr's stockpot

  • @GEOHHADDAD
    @GEOHHADDAD Год назад +6

    Great recipe. Great lessons. The emphasis on the time with the meat and grating the vegetables is wonderful. Critical. It’s a meat sauce. This is very close to how I cook bolognese but I use more herbs and I have never seald up my pot when it goes in the oven. I’m going to next time. Never used a non stick pan though - just iron. Wondering if I’m missing an opportunity. Favorite part “red wine is optional”

    • @tomrope8614
      @tomrope8614 Год назад +6

      follows it by emptying the bottle and ends it by: "and choose a decent bottle" :)

  • @1346crecy
    @1346crecy 5 месяцев назад

    The only two chefs I go to on RUclips , Marco and John Kirkwood. Their recipes are always spot on and delicious. When he emptied the whole bottle of wine in there and said "and choose a decent bottle" I found myself shouting "get in there my son"!

    • @racey1979
      @racey1979 5 месяцев назад +2

      Try Chef Jean Pierre. He’s fantastic.

    • @1346crecy
      @1346crecy 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@racey1979 Ill have a look thank you for the tip.

    • @racey1979
      @racey1979 5 месяцев назад

      @@1346crecy I’ve been cooking for 25 years, I discovered his channel a few years back. Nobody has inspired me to cook more than him, he’s the absolute polar opposite to MPW, as he teaches you to make cooking fun and not take it so seriously, he’s a retired chef who has been teaching cooking for decades. He’s amazing and a great character, and very funny. You will learn a lot from him choose what your ability.

    • @fpvx3922
      @fpvx3922 4 месяца назад

      @@racey1979 eah Chef Jean Pierre is amazing as well...

  • @gerrypeacemaker9407
    @gerrypeacemaker9407 Год назад +6

    Think he needs to lay off the Marlboro lights 😂😂

  • @Beldoras
    @Beldoras 2 месяца назад

    The great philosopher Marco Pierre White treats us to a cooking lesson. U luv to see it.

  • @paulvontarsus729
    @paulvontarsus729 Год назад +6

    This man is a food philosopher.