Bak kwa is such a beloved tradition during Chinese New Year, but the rising costs can be a challenge for many! 🍖✨ While making your own is a fun and budget-friendly idea, let’s not forget the hardworking local bak kwa businesses that have been a part of our festive celebrations for generations. 🇸🇬 Supporting them helps keep our traditions alive and strengthens our community. Who else is ready to back local and enjoy some delicious bak kwa this CNY? 🙌🧧
LUNAR NEW YEAR! Shame on you for being a journalism channel making content about various Asian countries/cultures but can't even be respectful and politically correct enough to call this MUTUALLY SHARED holiday Lunar New Year. In Mandarin, there is no such phrase that can be literally translated into CNY. Even Mandarin speakers call it Spring Festival. Do your homework before posting! Unsubscribing.
While I agree it is better to call it Lunar New Year, CNA is also based in Singapore where the holiday is listed as Chinese New Year in the various government Ministries such as Ministry of Manpower. Since CNA is owned by Mediacorp, who is owned by Temasek Holdings, who is in turn owned by the Singapore Government, I imagine CNA would change their position if the Singapore government changed the name of the public holiday.
It is Chinese new year in Singapore because in Singapore, the holiday they celebrate is specifically from Chinese culture and tradition. While other cultures celebrate their own version of New Year on the same day too, they are different cultures and different tradition. It is kind of racist to lump all East Asians together and pretend we are all a monolithic culture and ignore the differences in our cultures. I am no more offended by a Vietnamese or Korean calling their holiday, which lands on the same day as Chinese New Year, Vietnamese New Year or Korean New Year because it is about them talking about things specific to their culture and tradition which is different from ours. It is a coincidence that our holidays line up, but they are different cultures and traditions. Certainly Lunar New Year can be used to capture all the new years that fall on that day for people living in Western World who treat all of East Asian the same because "all Asian look the same". But in Singapore, the tradition of getting Bak Kwa is specific to Chinese New Year. The vast majority of us would have limited knowledge about Vietnamese or Korean (or any other culture) New Year that is celebrated on the same day.
Bak kwa is such a beloved tradition during Chinese New Year, but the rising costs can be a challenge for many! 🍖✨ While making your own is a fun and budget-friendly idea, let’s not forget the hardworking local bak kwa businesses that have been a part of our festive celebrations for generations. 🇸🇬 Supporting them helps keep our traditions alive and strengthens our community. Who else is ready to back local and enjoy some delicious bak kwa this CNY? 🙌🧧
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Yup
The dryness of jerkies are from food dehydrator, ovens cannot come close.
Lmao paying 75 bucks for 500 grams of grinded miscellaneous pork parts
Yummy Bakwa 🤤
I love your videos. This looks tasty. I will have to try with chicken
@@mike_hu chicken the taste just wrong. The beef version also lack the best aroma. Need use Pork.
tried before homemade version of chicken dried meat and it tastes really weird
Was looking at the mess behind them lol
Store bought tastier but expensive
Not enough weird dolls in there background😂
The kitchen and dining area very messy, untidy.
Mince pork with sugar? Just the thought makes me puke.
17 ingredients you cannot count 😊
That's like maple bacon ?
lol, like you've never had BBQ sauce with meat before
It's terayaki sauce. Have you ever tried teriyaki jerky?
wtf do you thing deng deng is made with??
LUNAR NEW YEAR! Shame on you for being a journalism channel making content about various Asian countries/cultures but can't even be respectful and politically correct enough to call this MUTUALLY SHARED holiday Lunar New Year. In Mandarin, there is no such phrase that can be literally translated into CNY. Even Mandarin speakers call it Spring Festival. Do your homework before posting! Unsubscribing.
it's simple CNY bcos people know it;s from China u morron
While I agree it is better to call it Lunar New Year, CNA is also based in Singapore where the holiday is listed as Chinese New Year in the various government Ministries such as Ministry of Manpower.
Since CNA is owned by Mediacorp, who is owned by Temasek Holdings, who is in turn owned by the Singapore Government, I imagine CNA would change their position if the Singapore government changed the name of the public holiday.
and? it's from China
It is Chinese new year in Singapore because in Singapore, the holiday they celebrate is specifically from Chinese culture and tradition.
While other cultures celebrate their own version of New Year on the same day too, they are different cultures and different tradition. It is kind of racist to lump all East Asians together and pretend we are all a monolithic culture and ignore the differences in our cultures.
I am no more offended by a Vietnamese or Korean calling their holiday, which lands on the same day as Chinese New Year, Vietnamese New Year or Korean New Year because it is about them talking about things specific to their culture and tradition which is different from ours. It is a coincidence that our holidays line up, but they are different cultures and traditions.
Certainly Lunar New Year can be used to capture all the new years that fall on that day for people living in Western World who treat all of East Asian the same because "all Asian look the same". But in Singapore, the tradition of getting Bak Kwa is specific to Chinese New Year. The vast majority of us would have limited knowledge about Vietnamese or Korean (or any other culture) New Year that is celebrated on the same day.