How 3 Korean Chefs Make 10,000 Office Workers' Lunch Boxes Every Week | Big Batches | Insider Food

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @huntakilla1234
    @huntakilla1234 Год назад +1729

    Everything made from scratch, freshly cooked, beautifully seasoned. For 5 bucks. Absolutely incredible

    • @chronos13
      @chronos13 Год назад +51

      It's closer to 25 usd - the narrator said 30,000 krw and did the conversion terribly wrong

    • @ibuyfriends4467
      @ibuyfriends4467 Год назад +57

      @@chronos13 Probably $5 per meal $25 for 5 for the whole week.

    • @killrate3432
      @killrate3432 Год назад +38

      No they made an error in the description, it’s 7000 won which is 5 bucks

    • @tatarcavalry2342
      @tatarcavalry2342 Год назад

      @@ibuyfriends4467 it's in the description

    • @Vincent_de_Paul
      @Vincent_de_Paul 6 месяцев назад

      There's no effing way it costs $25. Even in restaurants it doesn't cost half of that.
      Are you kidding me? 😂
      ​@@chronos13

  • @namastyle
    @namastyle Год назад +2053

    A tiny but extremely telling detail of how much thought and care go into preparing these meals is at 1:41 where the chefs wash the *intact* packages of tofu, as they will be slicing into the top packaging, causing the tofu water to mix with potential contaminants on the plastic lid and back into the contents, similar to how the top of cans get dusty. Even though this ingredient is likely stored in much more sanitary conditions as it requires refrigeration, they realized the potential for contamination and took steps to maximize cleanliness.

    • @xymzk
      @xymzk Год назад +143

      This is actually lax for Korean food hygiene. There are food factories where they look like they are working at NASA with the same sorts of procedures/outfits.

    • @u32481
      @u32481 Год назад +22

      They rinsed the package before cutting

    • @blzt3206
      @blzt3206 Год назад +24

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ repent and believe in Allah. Or Budha. Or Thor.

    • @mozzarella1781
      @mozzarella1781 Год назад +3

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ Amen!! God bless you!!! ❤️
      Philippians 4:19 KJV: But my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.

    • @pudanielson1
      @pudanielson1 Год назад +5

      @@blzt3206 This is the way

  • @governmentlab6162
    @governmentlab6162 4 месяца назад +57

    I am South Korean, and there was a debate about the price in the comments, so I searched the company. The name of the company in Korean is '무까 도시락' and it is located in '대구광역시'. The price of one lunch box is '7,000원'. As of August 17, 2024, it is calculated to be 5.19 dollars. Therefore, it is correct to 5 dollars. The cheapest lunch box from the company costs $4.81.And this company achieved the top spot in the Korea Customer Satisfaction Index in 2021.

    • @governmentlab6162
      @governmentlab6162 4 месяца назад +7

      I think that they can afford such low prices because they deliver in bulk to companies. In Korea, unlike the company in the video above, there is a lunchbox franchise company that receives small orders and deliveries from the general public. They also make fresh lunchboxes like the one in the video above, and they cost about $4 to $10 per lunchbox, but they require a minimum order of $20 to receive delivery.

  • @content-consumer-max
    @content-consumer-max Год назад +3073

    It is mind boggling that they do not use machines to chop veggies at this scale. Hats off to the chefs to do the whole process by hand!!

    • @paulinejackson5861
      @paulinejackson5861 Год назад +60

      They are on camera, of course they will show you that

    • @curiousgeorgevs.winniethepooh
      @curiousgeorgevs.winniethepooh Год назад +17

      That area of the world the machinery is cheaper because they basically make everything device

    • @amityFinder2099
      @amityFinder2099 Год назад +302

      @@paulinejackson5861 they seem dexterous with a knife for it to be "just for the camera"

    • @cristsan4171
      @cristsan4171 Год назад +1

      And that is why they are all unsanitary regardless

    • @tanishupreti5767
      @tanishupreti5767 Год назад +99

      @@paulinejackson5861 Yea buddy it's easy to tell you have never cooked a proper meal on your own before

  • @ephemispriest8069
    @ephemispriest8069 Год назад +2556

    The variety of ingredients in this is mind boggling. It's more than I typically get in an entire day cooking my own food. Insane.

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад +7

      he he. you call this big ? in India there are kitchens which makes meals for upwards of 100k people a day and that is free for all. this is like puppet in front of them.

    • @ephemispriest8069
      @ephemispriest8069 Год назад +172

      @@amazingdude9042 You sound like a damn Texan. I'm talking about variety. I'm familiar with what you're talking about, and those meals don't have half the ingredients these do.

    • @marcobaek1378
      @marcobaek1378 Год назад

      @@ephemispriest8069well Indians ARE the Texans of Asia and Chinese the MURICANS of Asia

    • @xlaff659
      @xlaff659 Год назад +101

      ​@@amazingdude9042 so?
      lets compare to how clean they make food instead lmao.

    • @TheRealWinser
      @TheRealWinser Год назад +1

      I get about half of this variety in a full days menu.

  • @sadomaz0
    @sadomaz0 Год назад +142

    Major props to the amazing chefs. The amount of prep alone is amazing.

  • @LivxLaughxLove
    @LivxLaughxLove Год назад +6762

    $5 for a meal of that quality is no joke. I have never had tofu before, but I'd be willing to try that for $5. The head chef is a boss...all that hand mixing and chopping. To be able to turn out dishes this high quality, nobody can afford to slack off and from the looks of it they don't

    • @laerwen
      @laerwen Год назад +478

      30k won is about US $22, so I suspect that number may be in error :( but it is true the meals are very high quality.

    • @jdkgcp
      @jdkgcp Год назад +131

      Tofu just takes on the flavor of whatever the sauce is. It's actually great and Mapo Tofu is really good.

    • @PoppyCorn144
      @PoppyCorn144 Год назад +296

      @@laerwen maybe it’s 30k per 5 day working week - that’d be about $5 per day, which would be incredibly good value.
      I’d definitely subscribe if that service was available to me, even at twice that price.

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme Год назад +26

      ​​@@jdkgcp tofu has it's own distinct flavor actually unless you get really bad one and don't prepare it well

    • @fireblossom8544
      @fireblossom8544 Год назад +27

      @@jdkgcp As mentioned by someone above tofu has its own distinctive flavor. East asians can well recognise the characteristic 'bean protein' flavor of tofu since we are adapted and sensitive to the taste, for myself I really like the flavor of tofu

  • @TungNguyen-gr6hu
    @TungNguyen-gr6hu Год назад +165

    The fact that he's still using the finger technic when making rice even for big batches like that shows he's really good asian chef

  • @jhhhj6648
    @jhhhj6648 Год назад +993

    it's amazing that they even rinsed the tofu packets. incredible attention to cleanliness

    • @puteramalaya6457
      @puteramalaya6457 Год назад +5

      I know right

    • @FireBIaze
      @FireBIaze Год назад +4

      I was just thinking same looking at that.

    • @jvaria9797
      @jvaria9797 Год назад +51

      The thing about that is we koreans once experienced deadly diseases after the korean war, especially with bad hygiene in kitchens that supply big batches of food to schools, military, etc. That lead to the act of 'hunting down' dirty kitchens. You just don't get complaints from the customer here. You may be a nationally wanted murderer for supplying food poisoning to a school.

    • @puteramalaya6457
      @puteramalaya6457 Год назад +9

      @@jvaria9797 i see, its a great practice, we salute them 👍🏻

    • @gabelogan5877
      @gabelogan5877 Год назад +5

      French chefs that work in children schools wash the packages as well to lessen The risk of pathogens getting into the food.

  • @syren4731
    @syren4731 Год назад +46

    All that work and the kitchen is PRISTINE! Thank you hard working people 🙏🏽

    • @Belbecat
      @Belbecat Год назад +2

      Rofl so true - meanwhile most make more mess at home cooking for only 1-4 😆

  • @athenaenergyshine7616
    @athenaenergyshine7616 Год назад +163

    I can’t believe that it’s done by hand. This is truly a labour of love.

    • @kaspersteenlarsen9527
      @kaspersteenlarsen9527 10 месяцев назад

      more like slave labour korea is known for terrible labour conditions

  • @blissfullyunhinged2316
    @blissfullyunhinged2316 Год назад +37

    I really appreciate seeing videos like these as it shows all the hard work that goes into making these delicious lunch boxes! They pour all of their energy on a container that once it is consumed, it gives back the energy needed to press on and do what needs to be done. Thank you very much!

  • @gustlightfall
    @gustlightfall Год назад +538

    For a high tech setup, the finger technique is still used when cooking rice. Mad respect!

    • @JohnnyJQuest
      @JohnnyJQuest Год назад +31

      Using the hand for scaled up accuracy!

    • @RustedCroaker
      @RustedCroaker Год назад +8

      What "high tech setup"? Did I miss something?

    • @dons889
      @dons889 Год назад +6

      @@RustedCroaker maybe he meant high efficiency

    • @randomyoutubebrowser5217
      @randomyoutubebrowser5217 Год назад +32

      @@RustedCroaker maybe they meant high volume and more industrial/commercial level set up. From the basic $10 budget rice cooker to the 21X50-serve-chamber industrial cooker, its still using the finger/hand technique.

    • @fameless0
      @fameless0 Год назад +2

      @@RustedCroaker yeah go back and rewatch the whole video and let us know if you figure it out.

  • @kibblesmcknob617
    @kibblesmcknob617 Год назад +57

    I just love this culture… how nourishing and thoughtful for companies to provide meals like this. I really wish I could eat like this every day. ❤

  • @vikramparihar4244
    @vikramparihar4244 Год назад +416

    I love watching this big batch series, always intriguing how they manage it all and deliver quality meals

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад

      he he. you call this big ? in India there are kitchens which makes meals for upwards of 100k people a day. this is like puppet in front of them.

    • @husky4890
      @husky4890 Год назад +15

      ​@@amazingdude9042 but not really clean. India has to improve a lot on hygiene level

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад

      @@husky4890 go and see Akshay Patra kitchens, you will know what a sophisticated large kitchen looks like.

    • @badnbauji1207
      @badnbauji1207 Год назад

      @@husky4890 you obviously get your information from reels and content online. @Amazing Dude is talking about large scale temple, gurudwara kitchens which encourage hygeine as the food is a blessing of God

    • @punapartaman
      @punapartaman Год назад +8

      @@amazingdude9042 Is it your lifes mission to disagree with everyone who thinks this is big?

  • @--Voltz--
    @--Voltz-- Год назад +69

    *I can't get over how CLEAN their kitchen is , like WOW!! It's so immaculate! Also, seeing the office workers eat together in the break room was very heartwarming to me because the ladies we're eating so like, diligently! I just absolutely love Korean life styles, EVERYTHING!*

    • @BearingMySeoul
      @BearingMySeoul Год назад +3

      Well, people work WAY too much there. So it's highly likely that team will be eating dinner together too. :(

  • @AuskaDezjArdamaath
    @AuskaDezjArdamaath Год назад +1696

    For $5, that’s an amazing deal! And so much healthier than any fast food that would be 4 times the price.😮

    • @hteacave
      @hteacave Год назад +51

      If you buy this at school, it would be like cold pizza for $15

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme Год назад +79

      30k won is 22 USD

    • @bobroberts7308
      @bobroberts7308 Год назад +55

      @@itsgonnabeanaurfromme I think the won amount is incorrect. Korean food is generally cheap

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад +5

      he he. you call this big ? in India there are kitchens which makes meals for upwards of 100k people a day and that is free for all. this is like puppet in front of them.

    • @briannyaanga5857
      @briannyaanga5857 Год назад +55

      ​@Amazing Dude so ?

  • @shankararhuddlan270
    @shankararhuddlan270 Год назад +313

    I would gladly pay $20 to $25 to just try one of those boxes the quality and the craftsmanship and the effort that went into making those meals is amazing and I would be honored to taste that

    • @kevinwpatterson
      @kevinwpatterson Год назад +9

      This is how it started to get messed up for everyone 😂

    • @2iiAaron
      @2iiAaron Год назад +18

      well youre in luck. 30,000 won is in fact 23 USD. I dont know what the narrator was smoking when she said its 5USD. Dosirak of this spread is definitely gonna be expensive.

    • @warp1174
      @warp1174 Год назад +2

      @@2iiAaron yeah I was also surprised by when the lady said that it costed 5 USD; had to go google the exchange rate and fact check that because there was no way 30,000 Won is close to 5 USD.

    • @2iiAaron
      @2iiAaron Год назад +2

      @@warp1174 i think she meant to say 13,000 won, which is usual for a dosirak in Korea, but in which case its still gonna be around 9USD.

    • @peteru18
      @peteru18 Год назад +22

      @@2iiAaron there is a note in the description saying that 30,000 was an error in narration, and the price is actually 7000 won.

  • @seank997
    @seank997 Год назад +369

    I respect these cooks. 4:30am is no joke
    $5!!!!!!!!!!!!! The bargain of the century, looks fantastic

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад +2

      he he. you call this big ? in India there are kitchens which makes meals for upwards of 100k people a day. this is like puppet in front of them.

    • @AJ-rc5lr
      @AJ-rc5lr Год назад +20

      actually 30,000 Yen is equal to 22.5 dollar, i am not sure why the editor says 5

    • @imdino_fit8358
      @imdino_fit8358 Год назад +79

      @@amazingdude9042 not trying to be rude, but Indian always make it about them when its clearly showing others. Like sort of main characters. We get it. Asian countries cook more than European and Americans. Stop being desprate

    • @MimiMangetsu
      @MimiMangetsu Год назад +24

      @@AJ-rc5lr this is korea, not japan

    • @AJ-rc5lr
      @AJ-rc5lr Год назад +6

      @@MimiMangetsu sorry, i was meant to type Won, but instead i typed Yen, but it's still correct, 30,000 Won is 22,5 dollar

  • @vinnieg6161
    @vinnieg6161 Год назад +16

    I love how clean and proper everything looks, that brings me even more joy than the food

  • @jaideepsingh2405
    @jaideepsingh2405 Год назад +63

    That 1 second lag in between big and batches during the intro really made me smile. Fantastic attention to detail!

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад

      he he. you call this big ? in India there are kitchens which makes meals for upwards of 100k people a day and that is free for all. this is like puppet in front of them.

    • @DanielLamando
      @DanielLamando Год назад +5

      ​@@amazingdude9042 those Big Batches videos are also excellent, it's nice to see inside the different types of big kitchens on this channel :)

    • @dnichl
      @dnichl Год назад +8

      @@amazingdude9042 ingredient prep, number of ingredients, attention to cleanliness, precision and all the different cooking techniques. you're comparing apples to oranges.
      give me a dozen helpers, a giant pot, some rice, flour, ghee, vegetables, garam masala and chutney and i can say i cooked for 200k 🙄
      it's not a competition.

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад

      @@dnichl go and see Akshay Patra kitchens, you will know what a sophisticated large kitchen looks like.

  • @iliketacos6067
    @iliketacos6067 Год назад +6

    I cannot thank you enough for producing/publishing this video. I love this

  • @heretocomment2337
    @heretocomment2337 Год назад +243

    For people talking about the price: the video description corrected the error and said it is around 7,000 Won which is around 5US$, but for those saying it is cheap for the quality: you can't compare it like that. You have to compare like for like.
    The average wage for an office administrator is $14 USD an hour so 5$ is just over 20% of one hour's worth of working. According to Numbeo, a meal at an inexpensive restaurant in a major like New York, is $25 USD, which is over 4x that of a same comparison in Seoul, a capital city. Everything in South Korea is comparatively cheaper when compared to a country like the USA with higher costs of living and wages. By this standard, food is even cheaper in India, Thailand, Indonesia etc but if you move there and get a local job, your wages will also be lower.
    I just hate it when people talk about how cheap something is without considering the local context.

    • @birphon
      @birphon Год назад +14

      i mean, though you are not wrong in terms of not considering local context, a lot of people will still just compare it to what they have had in their life. So getting this for $5 is a bloody good deal. Is it accurate the Won to USD ratio in terms of pricing? Nah, I'd expect this to be more expensive in the likes of America due to ingredient sourcing which will bump the prices up a bit

    • @DoHyunKil
      @DoHyunKil Год назад +5

      Comparing New York's price is an even more of overshoot, though. In most big cities across the world the a meal at an inexpensive restaurant is more like around $15. South Korea is a relatively developed nation with a fairly strong currency. $5 in Korean currency is mostly similar in value with $5 in France, Italy, Japan etc.

    • @TheSultan1470
      @TheSultan1470 Год назад +1

      Pfff, you think people think about context

    • @heretocomment2337
      @heretocomment2337 Год назад +4

      @@TheSultan1470 If they don't, they should. There are just too many people making comments like "how can someone not afford XYZ when it only costs $50" and forget the context of the video is set in the 1960's, or those travel videos that say "buffet lunch for just $3" and the catch is it's $3 USD when people in the local place survives on something like $10 a day.
      Of course this doesn't apply to this video, this video is great, but I am referring to people in the comments who forget they have to fly there first, or the difference in population and wages and currency.

    • @heretocomment2337
      @heretocomment2337 Год назад +2

      @@DoHyunKil I am not comparing New York, a large city in the USA to Seoul, a large city in Korea. Since people are saying how cheap $5 USD is for a meal, I am comparing 5 US Dollars in New York, a large city in the home of said currency, and the costs of other things in the same city, vs the equivalent South Korean currency, the Won, in Seoul, a large city in their own home country vs costs of other things in Seoul.

  • @Jimux
    @Jimux Год назад +16

    I remember growing up in Hong Kong. Every school will have 3rd party companies that has a kitchen staff like this to make different lunch dishes everyday for the kids at every school. You get a menu the month prior with 4-5 different choices per day to choose from for the next month. I believe it only cost my parents around $400-$500 HKD per month, which is around $23 HKD per day or $3 USD per day. I think the Hong Kong government also has programs to help kids with financial needs as well. This was honestly the star of the day for me. It was what kept me excited to go to school every day. Kept us well fed, well nourished and engaged. Then I came to the states and I had a single slice of pizza for lunch everyday...

  • @darcyspencer4279
    @darcyspencer4279 Год назад +38

    The price becomes even more amazing when you realize that there's no tipping culture in South Korea, so no extra costs added to that except delivery fee. And in Korea, delivery fees can go as low as dollar fifty if travel distance isn't too far. You can further reduce the fee by ordering multiple boxes at the same time and divide the fee. So, technically, you can have the lunch box delivered to your place at less than 6 dollars, everything included.

    • @thalanoth
      @thalanoth Год назад +1

      seeing as how it's based on subscription prob delivery cost is included

    • @a.melanoleuca2247
      @a.melanoleuca2247 Год назад

      The "tips" are already included in the price.

  • @AnnapolisGirly
    @AnnapolisGirly Год назад +19

    It’s so beautiful to see this is all done by hand. It surely makes the food taste better.

  • @Gaookami
    @Gaookami Год назад +18

    The chefs and the rest of the kitchen crew do an amazing job. Watching the whole process while each step was explained wants me to try my hands on the cucumber and chive salad🤤

  • @c4li
    @c4li Год назад +20

    I love how some of their processes seem super inefficient. Like chopping everything by hand, wok frying individual batches but I bet the quality is at restaurant level or better, awesome dedication to bringing people better lunches. I would pay a lot more than 5$ for this

  • @peter_parkour
    @peter_parkour Год назад +17

    They still use the finger method to cook their rice. I trust these guys with my whole belly.

  • @moderneducationalstandard
    @moderneducationalstandard Год назад +2

    The level of cleanliness is absolutely unreal.
    I would try their food at any time.

  • @dantran6190
    @dantran6190 Год назад +18

    I love even when cooking an ungodly amount of rice in an industrial rice cooker, he's using the finger tip technique our Asian moms taught us 😅

  • @BioYuGi
    @BioYuGi Месяц назад +1

    I love how much everything is measured properly. "We use 40 bricks of tofu a day. Here's the ratios for our sauce, etc." And for rice they still do the Asian method of 'just put your finger in the water'

  • @thetruekhanofkhans
    @thetruekhanofkhans Год назад +123

    I’m not sure what Claudia said about the price in the end but I heard 30000 won. That’s not 5 USD, that’s almost 23 USD (1 USD = 1330ish won). Even if it’s 13000, that’s nearly 10 USD.

    • @chungj7081
      @chungj7081 Год назад +70

      its 7000won currently
      she said it wrong

    • @thischubbyboislife7871
      @thischubbyboislife7871 Год назад +9

      too many mistakes made in this video to take it too seriously, and you heard correctly

    • @fi0nne
      @fi0nne Год назад +1

      exactly what i heard as well lol

    • @Whatever611
      @Whatever611 Год назад

      ​@@thischubbyboislife7871 Schleich di du Lauch

    • @chrischihoonhwang6787
      @chrischihoonhwang6787 Год назад +10

      7000won is correct. That is the “good” price in Korea.
      Thanks to these people, people can choose between cooking and eating out.
      I can’t think about eating out here in US much.

  • @TraciPeteyforlife
    @TraciPeteyforlife 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm always deeply impressed by large scale cooking. These gentlemen do excellent work. I'm deeply impressed. I hope they get a decent lunch break.

  • @jauipop
    @jauipop Год назад +87

    Super impressive operations. All fresh ingredients.
    Only thing that makes me cry is the plastic waste of those containers. Wish they would add another element of having a system where containers would be washed and reused, especially for offices that have long standing orders.

    • @ohsharon94
      @ohsharon94 Год назад +46

      if it makes you feel better the recycling in SK is much more robust than in the US. Most likely those containers are all recycled after use.

    • @cderwithc77
      @cderwithc77 Год назад +23

      They recycle almost everything in Korea. They even pay a fee for leftovers food.

    • @freek0001
      @freek0001 Год назад +7

      Recycling is great, but reuse is even better!

    • @thany3
      @thany3 Год назад +7

      @@ohsharon94 Recycling still wastes energy. Reuse wastes almost no energy.

    • @Ferios
      @Ferios Год назад +13

      @@thany3 Ppl gonna still talk about water usage and waterwaste. They gonna find negativity in anything

  • @MaxPartridge146
    @MaxPartridge146 Год назад +7

    Great video! You can tell that those chefs take a lot of pride in what they do and it shows.

  • @ranithesheepful
    @ranithesheepful Год назад +78

    30 000 krw is definitely not 5 usd 😂 Props to these amazing workers for prociding such fresh, healthy and delicious food!

    • @SillyScribe263
      @SillyScribe263 Год назад +40

      they corrected their error. its actually 7'000 won

    • @kulled
      @kulled Год назад

      before Tsujioka family taxes its five dollars. do your research pls.. google does not know everything..

    • @mailinglist2451
      @mailinglist2451 11 месяцев назад

      You’re right. It’s not. But generally speaking, prepared food in SoKo is far less expensive than it is in the US.

  • @Luna.3.3.3
    @Luna.3.3.3 Год назад +9

    What dedication to their craft! I loved seeing all the hand chopping, mixing, frying - instead of machines. Fresh ingredients. No cartons of liquid eggs there or frozen (except the buns, but that's ok).
    ~Beautiful food that I'd be happy to pay double the paltry $5! - I refused to even try ma po tofu when I was a kid, now I love it.

  • @OriginalCovfefe
    @OriginalCovfefe Год назад +16

    It’s impressive. Looks like they took what they learned from being cooks in the Army into their business. Very smart!

  • @WilburGarysMum
    @WilburGarysMum Год назад +4

    Those meals looks absolutely delicious!
    Love how it’s all made from scratch. Real quality right there!

  • @EhCloserLook
    @EhCloserLook Год назад +8

    I LOVE it when food is prepared cleanly!!! LOVE IT!!!

  • @MallardCreative
    @MallardCreative Год назад +3

    Even with the amount of the rice they make, the time old measurement of rice to water with the knuckles remains true. Fantastic...

  • @darkthoughts1688
    @darkthoughts1688 Год назад +95

    Mapo Tofu is a very well rounded dish. Spicy, super savory with bits of pork, and the tofu absorbs all the flavor. Heavenly!

    • @ImSimplyChilling
      @ImSimplyChilling Год назад

      I’m not sure I understand adding pork to a tofu dish because the whole point of tofu is that you aren’t eating meat. Either way though its quite an amazing dish.

    • @justahyundai
      @justahyundai Год назад +8

      @@ImSimplyChilling Tofu is a supplementary protein and is a good base for absorbing flavor quickly unlike meat. Outside of america noone is that picky about their food.

    • @CharnelWhispers
      @CharnelWhispers Год назад +8

      ⁠@@ImSimplyChilling “the whole point of eating tofu is that you aren’t eating meat” Interesting take but that’s actually a Western concept. Tofu is a very versatile ingredient in Asia and we have a lot of cuisines/dishes where we mix tofu with different kinds of meat. The dish featured is Mapo Tofu which is of Chinese origin and if you know China, you’d know that they love meat especially pork.

    • @kimhornhem5399
      @kimhornhem5399 Год назад +3

      ​@@ImSimplyChilling A meat-eater enjoys the best of both worlds, not very hard to understand eh

    • @jtris01
      @jtris01 Год назад +2

      ​@@ImSimplyChillingTofu is not a meat substitute. Weird idea.

  • @Stuff_I_Watch
    @Stuff_I_Watch 17 дней назад +2

    Subscription boxes for offices is such an awesome idea. Much better than paying £15 for a sandwich & a drink in London!!

  • @Keeblor
    @Keeblor Год назад +3

    Look how clean they keep their kitchen. Amazing

  • @FallenDemon29
    @FallenDemon29 Год назад +15

    Huge applause for the crew, I bet the food is delicious & well made with care 🙏

  • @sophiaisabelle027
    @sophiaisabelle027 Год назад +34

    This process is just mesmerizing to watch. Hats off to these workers. We hope they continue to work hard.

  • @emilaubry6856
    @emilaubry6856 11 месяцев назад

    The quailty and care in food prep in Korea is impeccable. Their kitchens are spotless. Shows how advanced their work ethic and culture is

  • @usamaepekonis
    @usamaepekonis Год назад +11

    1:54 That one tofu: "adios"
    Or should I say "annyeong"

  • @divyaa155
    @divyaa155 Год назад +2

    I am always amazed with the Korean style of cooking. So much varieties of veggies in one meal!

  • @zrayii9649
    @zrayii9649 Год назад +14

    4:20 Love how even in this huge kitchen, the chef's put their hands in the water when cooking rice haha

    • @AllenHanPR
      @AllenHanPR Год назад +1

      Its much easier, Doesn't matter how much rice you cook if you put your palm in the middle as long as your fingers are all covered, it's the perfect amount of water.

    • @zrayii9649
      @zrayii9649 Год назад +1

      @@AllenHanPR yes! it's how I do it as well, just fun to see the tried and true method being used to make 1000000 times more rice than i do ^^

  • @jasminedubois6711
    @jasminedubois6711 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm amazed it's just the three of them. So much work and dedication.

  • @thegoodbyegirl27
    @thegoodbyegirl27 Год назад +16

    I absolutely love this series especially with Claudia’s voiceover

  • @Marie-v4p
    @Marie-v4p Год назад +1

    I bet there's no small talk in this kitchen! Such an intense job, with all the chopping you gotta be focused and on the ball. Looks yummy!

  • @Alex-956
    @Alex-956 Год назад +60

    That looks better than most restaurants we have here 😭😭

    • @rahulnishadxd
      @rahulnishadxd Год назад +1

      What do you mean by here xD 😅

    • @FVCKTHEMALL
      @FVCKTHEMALL Год назад

      PAKISTAN OR AFGANISTAN

    • @drewh3224
      @drewh3224 Год назад +3

      Here is where? A third world somewhere?

    • @Alex-956
      @Alex-956 Год назад +7

      @@drewh3224 most 3rd world countries have better food than 1st world

    • @rahulnishadxd
      @rahulnishadxd Год назад

      @@Alex-956 WTF U WANNA SAY? 🤔

  • @MoeTea4U
    @MoeTea4U Год назад +3

    Wow!
    I might never get to eat their lunch boxes but I'd like to thank the Chef's and team that make them everyday!

  • @goudagirl6095
    @goudagirl6095 Год назад +7

    unbelievable amount of food they prepare every day AND unbelievable how many varieties of foods the workers gets too, wow! Extremely commendable!

  • @sunghyunhong1898
    @sunghyunhong1898 Год назад +4

    30,000won is about 25 US dollars, but these lunch boxes would usually go for 5~8 dollars. thankyou for the video! this is a typical lunch I get, and I have more respect now :)

    • @musanyathi2298
      @musanyathi2298 Год назад +1

      Maybe he meant 6000 won. Min order is 5 boxes so 30000.

  • @protolanhan9824
    @protolanhan9824 Год назад +7

    9:10
    30,000 won is NOT 5 usd
    For quick maths: 1,000 won ~ 1 usd (think of the comma as the decimal point)
    For preciseness: 30,000 won is 22.41 usd

    • @caithemburrow5569
      @caithemburrow5569 Год назад +1

      Over a working week of 5 days it’s £5

    • @frosttree1873
      @frosttree1873 Год назад +1

      read editor note in description

    • @kvntree
      @kvntree Год назад

      They made a mistake in the video and each box actually costs 7000₩

  • @baoblub
    @baoblub Год назад +3

    I am in awe that even with larger rice quantities the hand measuring technique works for cooking rice 😂👍

  • @FMFvideos
    @FMFvideos Год назад +20

    This requires some serious physical conditioning. Standing all day, moving the arms non stop, carrying big quantities of food, staying close to the heat. It must be harder than going to the gym everyday.

  • @ztp913
    @ztp913 Год назад +3

    i only just now realized those are cooking SHOVELS. even when i worked in kitchens, they just had giant paddles, but not THIS big. right tools for the right job lol

  • @inyoung2cho385
    @inyoung2cho385 Год назад +24

    I searched the Mugga Dosirak 무까 도시락, and found out they provide several types of Dosirak with different prices. And that one is about 5$ if subscribed. 30,000₩ (=23$) thing should be more fancier than the one in the video.

    • @kvntree
      @kvntree Год назад +12

      They made a mistake in the video and each box actually costs 7000₩

    • @PrideDefiler
      @PrideDefiler Год назад +4

      I think KRW 30,000 is for 5 day subscription, by one meal is KRW 7,000

  • @joshuahashem6094
    @joshuahashem6094 11 месяцев назад

    A nice added touch was the use of the blow torch at around 2:30 to add that smokey sorta flavour to the pork that you usually get from traditional wok stir frying

  • @originalpost1925
    @originalpost1925 Год назад +7

    Whenever I see anything related to my home country, I'm always intrigued to watch it. Respect to my Korean brothers who fuel the dedicated workers behind SK's industries.

  • @OurHereafter
    @OurHereafter 3 месяца назад +1

    look how clean and futuristic that kitchen looks. its fancier than a Louie Vuitton outlet store

  • @BigMuff75
    @BigMuff75 Год назад +7

    I would love to try their food some time. It looks so delicious.

  • @banealsmanana3672
    @banealsmanana3672 6 месяцев назад +1

    The kitchen is cleaner than my own room. Damn respect this guys

  • @amandameredith
    @amandameredith Год назад +4

    So effective and efficient. Looks delicious too.

  • @nursetazzi
    @nursetazzi Год назад +1

    Asia is known for fresh meals like this. I can remember as a child, mu mother ordering food from a restaurant and it would be delivered in a "hot box" on serving plates, and several hours later someone would come back to collect the empty plates. The food was always outstanding and fresh.

  • @jeonghwankim8174
    @jeonghwankim8174 Год назад +6

    😂 this gave me flashbacks from when i was doing my service in the rok army. They're using the exact same equipment used by the korean army.

    • @hazelmint6671
      @hazelmint6671 Год назад +1

      What equipments do they use which is same as they use in the army?

    • @jeonghwankim8174
      @jeonghwankim8174 Год назад +3

      @hazelmint6671
      The oversized woks, the rice cookware, the rice cooking ovens, the shovel looking non-shovels...
      It felt exactly like walking into the kitchen of the HQ mess hall

  • @alexxbloomwork
    @alexxbloomwork Год назад +1

    The best thing is when you make something out of love and people like it and they become healthy because of it ❤ it's so cute makes me happy

  • @gonnagetya1433
    @gonnagetya1433 Год назад +9

    Assuming they would have a varied menu from day to day, Would really love to have had this available where we lived even at twice the price.

  • @anggaprananta
    @anggaprananta Год назад

    Delicious and mind blowing too... Doing it manual by hand, they must be fully trained with no jokes experience... Good job cheff..

  • @liamfoxy
    @liamfoxy Год назад +3

    You cant even get a meal at McDonald's for 5 bucks anymore. This is absolutely amazing, and looks delicious

  • @landuit8577
    @landuit8577 11 месяцев назад

    It's inspiring to see just how much care is put into the creation of these meals, large scale as they may be. Where I'm from, half of this work would be done by machines, and half of the ingredients would've been substituted with corn syrup.

  • @serhii_himself
    @serhii_himself Год назад +5

    0:16 seems a lot more than "three chefs"

  • @spartahill
    @spartahill Год назад +2

    This interesting video serves a similar function as travel toward tolerance, understanding, and cultural appreciation. I'm pleased to have stumbled upon this channel. Thanks for the time and effort that go into creating value-added content.

  • @maxinenall9950
    @maxinenall9950 Год назад +3

    WOW everything looks delicious 😋 and it only cost $5 😘 Incredible chefs that take the time to hand chop the veggies 🥰

  • @ikiruyamamoto1050
    @ikiruyamamoto1050 9 месяцев назад +1

    It's amazing that these big kitchens haven't automated the cutting prep. Cutting things into cubes would be child's play for a machine. The only thing is, the machine would have to be designed for easy disassembly and cleaning.

  • @yannikin
    @yannikin Год назад +7

    Amazing how much pride these guys have in what they do.

    • @MINIMAN10000
      @MINIMAN10000 Год назад +1

      I'm surprised no one mentions it. 3 people for 1400 meals in a single day? They ain't getting paid enough for that no doubt. The only people willing to take that job are doing it for the same reason companies tell you to take their job making art "do it for the exposure, do it for your passion" because there's no way they are getting paid enough to make 1400 meals in a day that number is genuinely insane.

  • @soko889
    @soko889 10 месяцев назад

    Every thing is so freshly prepared, lots of vegetables all made fresh and healthy.

  • @todorrusinov9149
    @todorrusinov9149 Год назад +6

    working in the same type of kitchen, this is possible only because it's ordered in advance, and in large amounts.. but for me it's impressive how clean is everything, no matter how hard i try to keep it clean, when the time is pushing me i always drop something here and there on the tables while i fill the boxes

  • @nishthagupta1357
    @nishthagupta1357 5 месяцев назад +1

    Love this channel so much❤

  • @hamchannell
    @hamchannell Год назад +3

    That is a great meal for only $5. Impressive team there.

  • @gregorylandon8524
    @gregorylandon8524 Год назад +1

    I love it how even with big batches, the dip your finger/hand to measure the water level method still gets used

  • @TolstoyPlastic
    @TolstoyPlastic Год назад +7

    those are some happy happy office workers! :)

  • @karmaneh
    @karmaneh 8 дней назад

    An industrial kitchen that has my mouth watering.........well done chefs!

  • @delafontaine
    @delafontaine Год назад +4

    These chefs cook fresh, even for big batches. If I go to our Restaurant, everything is convenience food. They only have to heat up veggies and fry fries.

  • @mike48084
    @mike48084 11 месяцев назад +1

    The US really needs this kind of service. The closest thing we got is door dash, or large companies will sometimes have their our cafeteria with varying levels of quality. If there was a company making huge quantities of box lunch in large metropolitan areas like NYC, chicago, SF, I feel it could work as well.

  • @stynerca
    @stynerca Год назад +4

    well, I live in Korea and I was hoping if I could order from them for my lunch. 1.They only deliver within Daegu where I don't live at. 2. You have to order minimum of 5 lunch boxes per a order.

    • @Brodragon2225
      @Brodragon2225 2 месяца назад

      why you want them.I will work in food industry can you please tell me i will regard your motive behind taking these meals

  • @ProfessorChomsky
    @ProfessorChomsky Год назад

    Incredible grafting there and the end product looks absolutely fabulous.

  • @MrAjayvmr
    @MrAjayvmr Год назад +4

    Creating these huge kitchens, providing perks so far it's awesome. I feel absurd about companies who start perks initially and then hold them back due to cost cutting. Simply destroying culture and Confirming the blindness in long vision

  • @SkyGandalf
    @SkyGandalf Год назад +2

    Watching this while working at a job that offers half-off meals for team members, but the entree's start at $25-35. Taking a break means you get behind on work.
    I've spent the last 5 months living off of homemade trail mix and protein bars/shakes.

  • @BeeRich33
    @BeeRich33 Год назад +5

    Apply a tiffin application and make the trays from stainless steel. Used, returned, washed.

    • @gwot
      @gwot 8 месяцев назад

      Korea does have places that deliver regular plates and bowls with saran wrap, and they'll come pick up after you're done.

  • @RobinMarconeCassidyRN
    @RobinMarconeCassidyRN Год назад +2

    Much respect for these guys. That's a lot of work! They probably forgot how to make a meal for 2 people.

  • @markjasonasingua8227
    @markjasonasingua8227 Год назад +5

    I hope that food insider will feature more regional eats. Featuring some traditional foods, unique foods, national foods, and exotic foods or cultural foods.

    • @amazingdude9042
      @amazingdude9042 Год назад

      he he. you call this big ? in India there are kitchens which makes meals for upwards of 100k people a day and that is free for all. this is like puppet in front of them.

    • @veena_got7igot7
      @veena_got7igot7 Год назад

      As an Indian, don't want to claim the abv guy.... Hard work should be appreciated coz it's better than typing mean youtube comments

  • @patrik9328
    @patrik9328 Год назад +1

    Everything looks so clean
    I like this

  • @ethandaniel8123
    @ethandaniel8123 Год назад +5

    The sanitation protection and food safety they have is top notch as well. 👌🏼🙌🏼

  • @anonymousname8833
    @anonymousname8833 Год назад +1

    Extremely suprised by how much manual work they do. They could probably start work at 7pm instead of 4:30pm with some cutting machines and stirring tools. But hey, what do I know. Mad respect for doing everything the hard way.