🍝5 Spaghetti Dinners From Around the World

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июн 2024
  • For 70% off with HelloFresh plus FREE shipping, use code BERYL70 at bit.ly/3D5oj8k
    Thank you so much to Carlo, Lineke, KeShawn, Orana, and Andrea for sharing your stories with us!
    Artist today is Imogen Marsteller
    Website: www.imogenmarsteller.com/
    Instagram: / negomi.imogen
    Link to Buy Filipino Spaghetti Sauce: bit.ly/3Nqr6Ok
    My earrings today were all from GinzaCreations she gave us a discount code: Berylfun15 for 15% off at her shop!
    www.etsy.com/shop/GinzaCreation
    RECIPES
    Pasta c'a Muddica Atturrata: www.nasuki.guru/pasta-ca-mudd...
    Filipino Spaghetti: panlasangpinoy.com/jollibee-s...
    Crispy Spaghetti Nests
    Ingredients:
    2 cups cold leftover spaghetti
    1 ½ cups grated cheddar or grated white cheddar.
    1 egg, beaten
    3 Tbsp fresh herbs of choice or 1 Tbsp of dried herbs
    Salt to taste
    Butter as needed
    Directions:
    Mix together the first five ingredients, trying to make sure all the spaghetti gets egg on it. It is okay if some of the spaghetti strands stick together. Just make sure the eggs and cheese gets everywhere. Spin some of the mixture on a fork to create the nest shape. Heat a pan with butter to melt it. Place the nested spaghetti in a pan on high heat with the butter already melted.
    Press down with a spatula so the cheese can melt the spaghetti together. Flip and fry on the other side. Adding more butter for frying is better as it gets more crispy pieces. Serve hot as is or with some fried bacon bits or sun-dried tomatoes!
    Super Savory Sapidly Salty Pasta
    Ingredients:
    8 oz any long pasta, spaghetti or angel hair are great
    4 or so anchovy filets in olive oil (and the olive oil from the jar/can)
    Garlic cloves
    Red chili flakes
    Juice and zest of a lemon
    1 Tbsp capers
    Fish sauce
    Extra olive oil
    Spinach, kale, or another green (optional)
    Tinned tuna or sardines (also optional)
    Directions:
    Cook pasta according to package instructions.
    Heat up the olive oil from the anchovy jar on medium high, plus some extra if needed to make about 1/4 cup total. Dry the capers well, and fry them in the hot oil.
    Once they get a little crispy, drain them on a paper towel. To the now-very-seasoned oil, add the garlic and chili flake, along with the anchovies. Bring the heat down to medium and let everything cook out together.
    The anchovies will kinda disappear, that's what you want. If the garlic is going too far, bring the heat down some more. If you're using tinned fish, throw that in with the garlic and chili.
    With anchovies disappeared and fish warmed through, add a bit of pasta water and stir on medium heat until a nice emulsified sauce is achieved.
    Off the heat, finish the sauce with the lemon zest and juice, along with a few drops of fish sauce. Taste, and if you need more fish sauce, go for it.
    Top the pasta with the sauce, and sprinkle on the fried capers. Voilà!
    Pink Beetroot Pasta
    Ingredients:
    8 oz any long pasta
    Cooked beets (fresh or canned)
    2 Tbsp nut butter
    Onion, sautéed
    Garlic, sautéed with the onion
    Lemon zest & juice
    Dill
    Milk
    Directions:
    Cook pasta according to package instructions. Purée all remaining ingredients together to make a smooth sauce. Toss pasta with the sauce and garnish with more beets, herbs, or other garnish of choice!
    CHAPTERS
    00:00 Intro
    00:16 Italian Pasta c'a Muddica Atturrata (Pasta with Breadcrumbs)
    02:07 Trying Pasta c'a Muddica Atturrata
    04:05 Today’s artist, Imogen Marsteller!
    04:25 South African Crispy Spaghetti Nests
    05:37 Trying Crispy Spaghetti Nests
    08:58 USA Super Savory Sapidly Salty Pasta
    11:15 Trying Super Savory Sapidly Salty Pasta
    13:16 Australian Pink Beetroot Pasta
    15:03 Trying Pink Beetroot Pasta
    16:40 Filipino Spaghetti
    18:21 Trying Filipino Spaghetti
    _________________
    Where I get my earrings with a little discount code! shrsl.com/32k14
    Pops of Color aka the Microgreen kit I swear by: shrsl.com/32k93
    Here are Some Links for things you see often in my videos!
    A VERY similar Glass Pot to the one I have: geni.us/Z9V1jo
    My little red blender: geni.us/DPIkH
    Bamboo Cutting Board: geni.us/F0T2ZC
    Colorful Ceramic Bowls: geni.us/EuAsnn
    Mini Whisk That Is the Best Whisk: geni.us/sNA9H7c
    Silicone Brush: geni.us/P9TDJ
    Small Silicone Spatulas that I Love: geni.us/qBgs
    Wooden Spoons: geni.us/0N17A
    My Favorite Board Games Right Now
    Dominion: geni.us/4HlP
    Ticket to Ride: geni.us/fAcAcJ
    Carcassonne: geni.us/p4Ldfr
    7 Wonders: geni.us/TgSw
    Wanna mail something?
    Beryl Shereshewsky
    115 East 34th Street FRNT 1
    PO Box 1742
    New York, NY 10156
    Follow me on Instagram: / shereshe
    Support me on Patreon: / beryl
    #pasta #spaghetti #easycooking #pastanight #pastarecipe

Комментарии • 998

  • @linekefarrell
    @linekefarrell Год назад +509

    If anyone makes the Crispy Spaghetti nests, please comment and tell me if you enjoyed it. I would love to hear about it.
    I had so much fun being part of this video. I highly encourage everyone to send in recipes to Beryl!

    • @BerylShereshewsky
      @BerylShereshewsky  Год назад +32

      Yesss they were so fun! 💜💜

    • @birgitp.6782
      @birgitp.6782 Год назад +31

      Hi, I'm from Austria and we make these nests with just spaghetti, egg and parmesan, with a side of cream cheese with fresh herbs and chopped pickled vegetables. And we love them :)

    • @chamanigunasekera8345
      @chamanigunasekera8345 Год назад +2

      I really wanna try this! such a good idea

    • @tootles444
      @tootles444 Год назад

      Will definitely try this!! Looks so good! Your mom is a genius!!

    • @hadyanfakhri5967
      @hadyanfakhri5967 Год назад +11

      In Indonesia we have same concept with this dish, but we use instant noodle as substitute of the pasta, and use the package seasoning for substitute of the herbs. The dish called Omelet Mi

  • @carlopipitone6191
    @carlopipitone6191 Год назад +2838

    Guys I need to add a CORRECTION to my statement about the 'authenticity' of the Italian pasta tradition. I meant that I do prefer and will always use Italian techniques and recipes for pasta, but it goes without saying that everybody can, and is totally entitled, to cook whatever they want in whatever manner. I love to follow traditions in the kitchen - and try to do it also with recipes from other regions and countries - I just don't like to do what seems odd to me. Everybody is free to do - and to state - what they want, I believe, as long as no offense is raised. Enjoy! 🙂

    • @kates7277
      @kates7277 Год назад +116

      You're a legend :)

    • @nita1596
      @nita1596 Год назад +124

      Ciao Carlo! I will try this recipe and I loved the suns in your wall 🌞

    • @LillaIgelkotten
      @LillaIgelkotten Год назад +113

      It's ok Carlo, we understand 🙂

    • @ChaniRiaseta
      @ChaniRiaseta Год назад +51

      Thank you for sharing your favorite recipe! ❤

    • @nat4288
      @nat4288 Год назад +30

      I havent tried anchovies yet and the way they are used in italian recipies (like the one you told us about) or in tomato sauces definetley make me want to try it out. It looked yummy, thanks for sharing!

  • @carlopipitone6191
    @carlopipitone6191 Год назад +1279

    Furthermore... I will always be very happy to try whatever pasta dish I will be offered by anybody, no matter how "strange" it may look to me. I just stick to the tradition when I cook my pasta 🙂

    • @R3I3ELLI0N
      @R3I3ELLI0N Год назад +25

      can't believe you're actually here!

    • @ruthmorrison163
      @ruthmorrison163 Год назад +22

      I would love to have you at my table, Carlo!

    • @zanza4965
      @zanza4965 Год назад +6

    • @ginismoja2459
      @ginismoja2459 Год назад +22

      I'm not Italian but I also always prefer the authentic recipes, even if I have tried many improvised non-Italian pasta dishes.

    • @nicolettepeters1565
      @nicolettepeters1565 Год назад +11

      I've made this pasta before it is delicious. I used to live on a street named Palermo street but it's in Cape Town😂

  • @sherrytangirala8590
    @sherrytangirala8590 Год назад +416

    I'm a lover of all pasta but it was Carlo's wall of suns that I really love!

  • @theresahoward7216
    @theresahoward7216 Год назад +361

    My grandparents came from Sicily. They lived in a Sicilian and Italian neighborhood in America. That said everyone from different regions, towns, villages all had their own riff on "Sicilian/Italian Classic dishes". We had to adapt to what was available- and even for new flavors and ingredients that we like better. There will always be pride in our dishes- but there is also room for everyone at the table.

    • @bleachnbones7107
      @bleachnbones7107 Год назад +2

      As an Italian I love that spirit. Actually, I believe most people in my country would agree that experimenting with food is great. I think that the only problem we have with it is when people do their own thing and try to pass it off as authentic (or claim it to be better than the traditional way) and give it the name of the original dish when it has basically nothing to do with it, like Gordon Ramsay did with his mushrooms, peas, cream, and bacon "carbonara". But generally, as long as you don't disrespect or mock the tradition, you're good to do whatever you want.
      Also, I need to correct your terminology because I see a ton of Americans making this mistake. There's no "Sicilian and Italian". Sicily is just one of the many regions of Italy, it's not a separate entity, and Sicilians are Italians like any other. Making that distinction doesn't make sense, it would be like saying "Americans and people from Oregon". I think the reason Americans have come up with this separation is because the vast majority of Italian immigrants came to the US from Sicily and the rest of the South, while the notherners generally emigrated to Switzerland, Germany, and South America

  • @cutetears09
    @cutetears09 Год назад +274

    Somehow I knew the Filipino spaghetti would be part of this video 🤣
    For a sweeter sauce, we actually put banana ketchup and some sugar in addition to the premade spaghetti sauce. My grandma's secret ingredients for her spaghetti (which I crave every occasion) are actually some cream and liver spread (it adds a little umami).
    I'm also happy that you mentioned Maria Orosa in your video! I feel like she doesn't get enough recognition in our country. She was a very important figure in WWII by inventing a magic soybean powder supplement to keep imprisoned soldiers healthy.

    • @b1k2q34
      @b1k2q34 Год назад +3

      Yuck

    • @aaangelll12
      @aaangelll12 Год назад +33

      @@b1k2q34 wow don’t knock it till you try it

    • @lyndrasangabriel8948
      @lyndrasangabriel8948 Год назад +15

      @@b1k2q34 it's delicious 😋 try it!

    • @marvinureyantiquina8818
      @marvinureyantiquina8818 Год назад +7

      I'm Filipino and I don't like the Filipino-style sweet spaghetti. It's too sweet for me. I make my own sauce using meat, tomatoes, and other vegetables and spices + cheese. Hard pass on hotdogs, pre-made sauces, condensed milk, ketchup and sugar.
      I edited this comment to remove the offensive part. I did not mean to offend anyone. Thanks to the people who called me out.

    • @elainemalit5521
      @elainemalit5521 Год назад +22

      Yesss, Maria Orosa FTW! I definitely agree she needs more recognition among Filipinos.
      And I don't understand why people gotta leave "yuck" and "disgusting" on a video/channel about appreciating recipes all over the world. Even Beryl, who admits to not liking some of the stuff she makes, remains open-minded and positive.

  • @annettec9399
    @annettec9399 Год назад +140

    Those pasta nests look like frittata di pasta! It’s something that we traditionally make in southern Italy as a way to recycle leftovers and for picnics! Just mix pasta and eggs according to the amount of pasta… it’s delicious 😍

    • @nodezsh
      @nodezsh Год назад +8

      This is more or less a thing in my family as well. I don't think I have any Italian heritage, but I do distinctly remember a tomato sauce mixed with fried onion, carrots and tiny cubes of beef together with the pasta, then turning the whole thing into a sort of "omelette" that looks like this. (Do the tiny beef lego-sized bricks, the texture is fabulous and the spaghetti manages to hold it regardless). The sauce lost most of its flavor once it got fried up onto the egg though, so i added more on top. (The egg did become much, much tastier but it didn't taste like tomato sauce anymore.)
      The fried pasta that was in contact with the pan got all crunchy and crispy ughhhh i need to make this again, it's been years.
      I think my mother wanted to study high cuisine. And high fashion. She also wanted to be a nun. It was all ruined once she got married, of course. I'm gonna learn from her mistakes, marriage is overrated anyways.

    • @toBe8ere
      @toBe8ere Год назад +5

      So interesting. Both the frittata di pasta and the crispy spaghetti nests that Lineke made in the video also reminds me of Japanese okonomiyaki.

    • @toBe8ere
      @toBe8ere Год назад +3

      ​@@nodezsh thanks for sharing your story and recipe!

    • @randomaccount6387
      @randomaccount6387 Год назад +2

      I actually like to brown leftover pasta in butter for a bit& then add some beaten eggs, scramble and top with cheese (optional). Not Italian, but it's a dish that just kinda always has been around when I was a kid.I think I picked it up from one or several of my grandparents. Great comfort food btw.
      (I live in Belgium but my family is from Ukraine originally and I've seen several similar dishes around Central/Eastern Europe)

    • @littleblackcar
      @littleblackcar Год назад +1

      Yeah, I do this to use leftover noodles or rice. I'm not even remotely Italian, though--I just like carbs.

  • @hassanas4816
    @hassanas4816 Год назад +14

    As a Nigerian, we have classic recipes like Jollof rice and Rice and stew. Somehow spaghetti came to Nigeria, and now we make Jollof spaghetti and spaghetti and stew. This was wayy before RUclips and the internet. Of course, we wouldn’t even be aware of traditional pasta recipes. We will just adapt it to our own tastes, our own ingredients and spices. It was until the arrival of social media and RUclips that we started watching these authentic traditional recipes. But really it’s important to understand that different cultures will adapt foreign ingredients to their own context, especially because being far away from Italy, we only are just recently learning of the traditional pasta recipes. Its interesting to try original recipes, (and might not be nice to change an original recipe and still cal it an original recipe) but I will always love Jollof spaghetti and Spaghetti and stew that I grew up with.

  • @keshawnivory7900
    @keshawnivory7900 Год назад +182

    Thanks so much for making the 4S pasta Beryl!! You're so right, a dab will do ya with fish sauce. Also I do see the growing chorus of frustrated Italians, so I'll add that I do typically add some conserved pasta water when finishing the pasta in the sauce BUT I promise the sauce has so much going on it's going to be great no matter what!!

    • @blackvelvet3795
      @blackvelvet3795 Год назад +28

      Can I just say I loved hearing you talk about your dish? You have such a nice way of telling it like a story, it was really nice to watch your video clip ❤

    • @keshawnivory7900
      @keshawnivory7900 Год назад +5

      @@blackvelvet3795 thank you so much!!

    • @unstoppabletaboo
      @unstoppabletaboo Год назад +10

      Your segment was so warm and feel-good, you have a lovely presence ❤

    • @keshawnivory7900
      @keshawnivory7900 Год назад +2

      @@unstoppabletaboo I appreciate that deeply!

    • @gregmuon
      @gregmuon Год назад +14

      I'm an Italian American and I'm not frustrated. Your dish was pretty classic actually. Capers, garlic, anchovies, etc.. Fish sauce is still used in Italy. Ancient Roman recipes pretty much all have fish sauce in them.

  • @alejandrocorrea8243
    @alejandrocorrea8243 Год назад +44

    I totally agree with Beryl’s sentiment about traditional food vs creative interpretations. I think food should be tailored to be enjoyed by the person eating! And it’s just a natural progression that dishes morph as they travel between cultures and people. The only time I have a problem with people not eating something as it is traditionally prepared, is when the dish claims to be authentic or traditional but it isn’t 😊

    • @trishayamada807
      @trishayamada807 Год назад +3

      Agreed. I can’t eat fish. So I’m so sorry I can’t use anchovies it’s not that I don’t care about tradition or culture, I just want to live. I’ve found olives can take the place of anchovies.

  • @jouseldechavez4631
    @jouseldechavez4631 Год назад +19

    Putting up the Filipino style Spaghetti in the finale of the video is the best way to finish the topic. Thanks.
    From a Filipino.
    👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @danigirl7171
    @danigirl7171 Год назад +39

    The pasta with anchovies, garlic and breadcrumbs is so simple and delicious! Next time you make it, try transferring the pasta directly from the pasta cooking pot to the pan using tongs instead of draining it into a colander so that some of the pasta cooking water goes in as well. The pasta cooking water will add a bit of moisture and emulsify with the garlic and anchovies and make a slightly creamy sauce that will contrast nicely with the crunchy breadcrumbs!

  • @wildsquirrelswildsquirrel7286
    @wildsquirrelswildsquirrel7286 Год назад +165

    Beryl, a good tip about pasta water is take a ladle of it & add it to the sauce you're making whatever it has to make it creamy the starch from the pasta adds the thickener. Always reserved some pasta water for the oil or cheese or whatever.......it's perfection 😁

    • @jonnekejorissen
      @jonnekejorissen Год назад +6

      Look at the channel from Pasta Grammar to learn everything about this!!!!

    • @amandalarissavieira7428
      @amandalarissavieira7428 Год назад +20

      Yeah, it kinda saddened me that she never added any pasta water to the recipes.
      I hope she tries to do it from now on, as I believe adding pasta water to your pasta is one of the best things you can do to improve homemade pasta dishes.

    • @sarahlew1168
      @sarahlew1168 Год назад +19

      Lol I thought I was the only one triggered by her pouring the water down the drain instead of using some in the sauce

    • @sharonadlam3195
      @sharonadlam3195 Год назад +7

      @@sarahlew1168 ditto, I was like 'oh no' 😒😒 Such a waste of flavour and silkiness

    • @wildsquirrelswildsquirrel7286
      @wildsquirrelswildsquirrel7286 Год назад +1

      @@jonnekejorissen I already watch both Pasta Grammar & Vincenzo's Plate. Mamma mia 🤦

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Год назад +110

    We admire Berly for posting a lot more consistently. All the blessings to her.

    • @ruchi750
      @ruchi750 Год назад +1

      Yes!!!

    • @SR-mv2mf
      @SR-mv2mf Год назад +6

      She posts more shorts only which are boring

    • @priscillad8
      @priscillad8 Год назад +1

      It's a lot of work, right?? I appreciate a lot too

    • @priscillad8
      @priscillad8 Год назад +8

      @@SR-mv2mf I think it's a unnecessary comment, maybe if you knew the work it is to stay in the views and monetize to have a financial return, maybe you would understand that RUclips and Instagram forced to make this type of content

    • @b1k2q34
      @b1k2q34 Год назад +1

      Berly? Llolololol

  • @jncchang176
    @jncchang176 Год назад +58

    I love Carlo! Bringing authentic, fundamental can be delicious. I have never heard of this breadcrumb pasta. What a great way to pass tradition! Go, Carlo! Your presentation was educational, informative and delightful.

  • @ItsHammer
    @ItsHammer Год назад +33

    😁I love when Italians get all worked up about “their foods & ingredients” that most certainly didn’t start in Italy.
    Noodles - Central Asia
    Tomatoes- Central & South America
    Garlic - Central Asia
    Basil - Southeast Asia

    • @marac.2503
      @marac.2503 Год назад +3

      Noodles didn't come from Central Asia. Due to an old advertisement t's a common misconception that it was invented in China and brought in Europe by Marco Polo. Its origins can be traced back to the Mediterranean area centuries before Polo instead

    • @ItsHammer
      @ItsHammer Год назад +6

      @@marac.2503 Wrong. My assertation has nothing to do with that old chestnut, & everything to do with archeological evidence. Found in a Bronze Age dig aged to roughly 4,000 years ago. The oldest Chinese written evidence dated to around the third century A.D., while the Talmud describes a type of noodle several hundred years later. What you are referring to, longer semolina noodles described in writings by Syrian physicians doesn’t come for several hundred more years.

  • @nuclearseahorse
    @nuclearseahorse Год назад +45

    KeShawn's pasta is very much a pasta putanesca with Spinach and fish sauce instead of cooked tomato and olives. I would love to try it tbh

  • @notactuallymyrealname
    @notactuallymyrealname Год назад +69

    I don't think that interpretation is the enemy of authenticity, but I think we also lose a lot when we don't really understand the source we're interpreting. The first time I make a recipe I always follow it to the letter: I treat the recipe like a gift from the person who has given it to me, and I want to recreate the exact thing they have given me. Because they have worked so hard on it, because they have made it over and over again, and because there is always something new I can learn from it that, without paying careful attention, I could otherwise let my ego and my assumptions run over. This is how I become a better cook. After that, all bets are off and I take what I have learned from my own experiences, what I have learned from other recipes, and what ingredients I have at hand, to work on my own. But from there, it's rooted in respect for the ingredients and the culture it comes from as it branches out into new dishes and new experiences in diaspora.

    • @mariannasargsian582
      @mariannasargsian582 Год назад +13

      This. Food is CULTURE. And respect and understanding is critical.

    • @angelawossname
      @angelawossname Год назад +9

      I always adapt a new recipe. My family and myself can't always afford "authentic" ingredients, plus myself and my son have multiple food intolerances, but I'm happy for you that you have the privilege to do so. Just acknowledge that it's a privilege.

    • @notactuallymyrealname
      @notactuallymyrealname Год назад +3

      @@angelawossname I'm sorry I wrote a comment that came off as exclusionary, and I appreciate you checking me on it. I'll clarify that I wrote that not to shame people who *can't* follow a recipe due to health or resource constraints, but rather for people who have every opportunity in front of them and still *won't*. No punching down in my house; that nuance is important.

    • @carlopipitone6191
      @carlopipitone6191 Год назад +1

      @@mariannasargsian582 Ditto!

    • @sweetiepielarae
      @sweetiepielarae Год назад +5

      At the end of the day, I'm going to make and eat my food the way I want it. Food should be enjoyed, and "rules" make things thoroughly unenjoyable. This mindset is... quite stiff and pretentious.

  • @claudiahenry6656
    @claudiahenry6656 Год назад +11

    I love the anecdote at the end about Filipino spaghetti 🍝 so happy to know about the beginnings of Filipino spaghetti

  • @Couryielle
    @Couryielle Год назад +16

    Filipino spaghetti sauce made from scratch hits different because you get to control the ratio of the tomato sauce vs banana ketchup. In my family we also add condensed milk instead of cream and melt the cheese directly in the sauce to make it creamier!

  • @Junes.dreams.uk_
    @Junes.dreams.uk_ Год назад +118

    Ahah. My mum is from northern Italy and she actually does the “South African” spaghetti nest and it’s apparently a tradition where she is from, so I grew up with it too 😂.
    Btw I think Carlo was misunderstood, I think he ment pasta as a side “like rice” is wrong to him and it should be glorified and eaten with sauce the “Italian” way even if it’s a Philippine recepe 🙃

    • @ruchi750
      @ruchi750 Год назад +3

      Crazy! Is the recipe similar?

    • @Junes.dreams.uk_
      @Junes.dreams.uk_ Год назад +11

      @@ruchi750 it’s exactly the same ! I think mum calls it “Pasta a frittata” because it’s basically fried pasta in an omelette like batter.

    • @annettec9399
      @annettec9399 Год назад +4

      Omg i’ve always thought it was a very Neapolitan thing, glad to know it is known and loved also up north!

    • @carlopipitone6191
      @carlopipitone6191 Год назад +12

      Ahahah Giuliana my mother used to make "pasta frittata" too. She used the spaghetti left over from a meal, mixed them with an egg and some grated cheese et voilà. It was also a way to cook one dish in abundance and use it for two meals 🙂

    • @thecinnamonpeelerswife
      @thecinnamonpeelerswife Год назад

      We always had pasta frittata as a snack on the go made with our leftover pasta. My family is also from the north :)

  • @simonecunsolo8259
    @simonecunsolo8259 Год назад +89

    I'm Italian and I'm not offended 😂 yet indeed I would definitely try the spaghetti pancakes and the four S spaghetti dish - the latter being pretty appealing and amazing 😍 of course just one tip would be to use a bit of starch water to avoid eating glue pasta but as we say "de gustibus" so enjoying is fundamental :)

    • @lukemclellan2141
      @lukemclellan2141 Год назад +5

      I'm not Italian but was offended at the state of that dried-out pasta!

    • @rhynemusic4101
      @rhynemusic4101 Год назад

      Nice, now lets talk about pineapple on pizza then.....

    • @rini9325
      @rini9325 Год назад

      @@rhynemusic4101 yum!

    • @bellenesatan
      @bellenesatan 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@rhynemusic4101 oh no! other people? Enjoying their food?! Heinous!

  • @bobdylanisalie
    @bobdylanisalie Год назад +34

    When you mentioned in your previous video that you'll be doing a video on spaghetti dinners, I KNEW you'd feature Filipino spaghetti lol

    • @Shairyl93
      @Shairyl93 Год назад +1

      I thought the same hahaha

    • @ronberi7773
      @ronberi7773 Год назад

      samedt. I was like, waiting until end of video. I was not disappointed 😅 either way, Beryl will always be my favorite cook 🥰

  • @mysbhyv1707
    @mysbhyv1707 Год назад +17

    Beryl, if you're going to feature Macaroni pasta, please give Filipino Sopas a try 😀 both kids and adults enjoy this dish.

  • @xoxventura
    @xoxventura Год назад +34

    One of my favourite channels.. I’m also super passionate about culture and the relationship between culture and food. Thank you for doing what you do Beryl.

  • @cmh8fl
    @cmh8fl Год назад +5

    I agree with you about authenticity. I've been looking at paella recipes and I feel authenticity doesn't come from the country itself, but rather from the various people in the country. Whatever is authentic and traditional to one family may be totally different from the family that lives next door. So I decided to make everything to my liking and not get stuck on this is the way it HAS to be!

  • @placebo141
    @placebo141 Год назад +13

    Coming from the UK to live in spain I saw how the cultures had similarities in terms of the savory pastries that they eat. Like in the uk there's the scotch pie and cornish pasty whereas in spain there are empanadas with many different interesting fillings like octopus or cod and raisins. I'd like to see an episode with savory pastries from around the world, it would be really cool

    • @maeannengo4908
      @maeannengo4908 Год назад

      Octopus Empanadas are a thing?! I so wanna try it.

  • @Sosoosooo
    @Sosoosooo Год назад +12

    I'm quite impressed at how KeShawn's own creation resembles very traditional Italian recipes, it's like a mix of several recipes. It looks delicious, Im definitely going to try this héhé!

  • @maggieveri
    @maggieveri Год назад +11

    My mom makes those spaghetti nests whenever we have leftovers, but we call them "tortitas". Super yummy! And we're from El Salvador.

  • @cindym5302
    @cindym5302 Год назад +15

    I love sautéed shredded carrots with a bit of garlic and red pepper flakes and lots of toasted breadcrumbs over spaghetti. I’m not sure if this is an actual “dish” or just a creation from my mind, but I think it’s delicious! Great episode, Beryl!

  • @dreamer110ful
    @dreamer110ful Год назад +50

    I totally agree with Beryl regarding food authenticity. In my opinion, as long as you enjoy the process of preparing and consuming your food, it is great. 😀I'm not a chef, and I don't have the knowledge to properly prepare/use some ingredients. But I don't care (😆) because I have fun preparing my "weird creations" inspired by some other cultures. That's why I love Beryl's channel as I always get many inspirations! Greetings from Warsaw, Poland. ❤❤BTW, today I will have spaghetti with scrambled eggs, sausage and ketchup. 😆

    • @lukemclellan2141
      @lukemclellan2141 Год назад +5

      Two different things in my opinion. Eat whatever you like, just don't add cream to carbonara and still call it carbonara!

    • @carlopipitone6191
      @carlopipitone6191 Год назад +2

      @@lukemclellan2141 Exacly. One thing is preparing a dish with what you have and what you like, another one is preparing a traditional, standardized recipe. When there is a tradition for certain dishes in a country it is obvious that people in that country sticks to tradition: not because they're "fundamentalists" (I regret I used that word), but just because they were raised with those recipes and they love 'em.

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme 10 месяцев назад

      Where are the rules set in stone for a specific dish? How far does it go? To the measurements?
      Everyone has their version of something like carbonara because of the availability of ingredients.
      Traditionalists value tradition more than progress.
      Same energy as "you two men or two women can get in a relationship, but you don't have the right to call it a marriage. That's MY term."
      Show me your patent or copyright if you want to gatekeep a term or be quiet.

  • @seldakaya0414
    @seldakaya0414 Год назад +4

    I'm 46 now and at the time my friends and I started moving out from our homes in the mid 90's we had this tradition to meet at one of the others' home to make Orana's dish, just without the nut butter, milk and dill (which sounds very yummy!). We used to call this dish "barbie pasta" and we always topped it with some cooked grated beets, a little horseradish and parmigiano. Wonderful memories..
    Now I'm hungry.

  • @charmsz566
    @charmsz566 Год назад +5

    I wish I lived with KeShawn during quarantine!!! if he's able to whip that up in the kitchen (with such a fun name!) i feel like he would be the best roommate ever! tasty times for sure!

  • @alisadventures152
    @alisadventures152 Год назад +5

    I love both authentic dishes and trying new combinations. In my day to day I like to experiment and just throw together things I have or things I’m in the mood for, even if they don’t ‘go together’.

  • @SuperBrieBear
    @SuperBrieBear Год назад +4

    All the people giving recipes for this video were such wonderful presenters. They have great stories about coming up with their recipes and they're people I would genuinely want to hang out with.

  • @TheTruthHurts6666
    @TheTruthHurts6666 Год назад +3

    I didn't like Filipino spaghetti at first. The sweet taste was weird to me. But I found the more you eat, it kinda grows on you

  • @suechristy363
    @suechristy363 Год назад +10

    I agree with you, Beryl, in regard to creativity with food... and I'm Italian 😉

  • @Lindsey.g
    @Lindsey.g Год назад +6

    Beryl! The pink pasta recipe got me thinking... You should do a Colorful Recipe episode!!

  • @annbrookens945
    @annbrookens945 Год назад +2

    So much fun! All these personally developed recipes showcasing their creators tastes and available ingredients!

  • @JessicaCale8
    @JessicaCale8 Год назад +6

    I make a pink sauce for my fish dishes (and sometimes pasta). It uses a lemon beurre blanc recipe, but I add red onions instead of white and it comes out a beautiful shade of pink. We have had it on tilapia, redfish, crab cakes, shrimp pasta and more!

  • @Justbleed434
    @Justbleed434 Год назад +5

    I hope you do the Filipino sopas. Macaroni chicken soup with milk, veggies at sausages/hotdogs!

  • @BethMDowney
    @BethMDowney Год назад +5

    If there is ever a part two, you should try a standard at every Southern potluck and church supper...chicken spaghetti! It's a creamy and rich dish, the sauce usually made with a cream soup, cheddar cheese (or Velveeta), and peppers. Some people use jarred pimentos or roasted red peppers, others used canned tomatoes and chiles. It's a comfort food that can be easily made with pantry ingredients, and great for when you forgot the potluck is today and you have to whip up something fast!

  • @jeffreyinouye2233
    @jeffreyinouye2233 Год назад

    This is such a great topic. I hope there are future videos that explore more traditional recipes that aren’t well known and recipes passed on through family generations. Keep up the fun subjects!

  • @drisshansfreetime453
    @drisshansfreetime453 Год назад +5

    My mom’s Filipino style spaghetti sauce is creamy. I think she also put milk in it.
    It also has sugar, banna ketchup and ground pork/beef. ‘Tender Juicy’ hotdogs is a must.

  • @RadenWA
    @RadenWA Год назад +6

    The funny thing is Pink Pasta looks familiar to me because the Japanese Mentaiko Spaghetti made with fish roes also look pink! It’s one of the most common western Japanese cuisine, maybe you can feature if you’re making another episode of this 😊

  • @ninovillegas9837
    @ninovillegas9837 Год назад +8

    As expected, filipino dish spaghetti would be included in this video 😊 thank you! 🇵🇭

  • @noralsdaughter
    @noralsdaughter Год назад +2

    Shout out to KeShawn for the Buc-ee's bag in the background all the way in Nashville, TN! 🙌

  • @lylacardoso2535
    @lylacardoso2535 Год назад +14

    The pasta with breadcrumbs reminded me of "macarrão com farofa" (pasta with farofa)🤤 it's not people's first choice when it comes to pasta, but I love it😋

  • @insightful_fairy8743
    @insightful_fairy8743 Год назад +5

    The Filipino one is very similar to the “spag Bol “ (spaghetti bolognaise) which is wildly enjoyed around the uk! :) although it’s an Italian dish, it’s very popular amongst most British families (especially with children!) it was the very first dish I learnt how to cook and is such a comfort food on those days when your super hungry!

  • @aslandn8937
    @aslandn8937 Год назад +7

    I tried combining Carlo’s dish and KeShawn’s dish like you said and WOW. A few tweaks and omissions, I didn’t have fish sauce, and I only had anchovie paste in a tube so I probably didn’t end use as much as I should have (definitely going to be picking up a can of anchovies or two next time I’m at the store) but the lemon juice and garlic and capers with the bread crumbs… 😍 this is definitely gonna be on rotation for a while

  • @hokagesama3394
    @hokagesama3394 Год назад +1

    Beryl. I love you so much. You're my absolute favourite food creator. Thank you for changing the way I view food, history and culture.

  • @DuckieT
    @DuckieT Год назад +4

    I understand food authenticity when it comes to specific dishes but I also appreciate how some ingredients like pasta & rice - have made their way around the world and melded with other cuisines. And they're all good!
    For example, my top three pasta dishes come from all over - a pesto gnocchi at the Vatican cafeteria, an Irish/Asian Lol Mein Stir-Fry Fusion in Northern Ireland, and a "mexican spaghetti" from a tex-mex restaurant in Delaware where the chef had originally trained in a fancy Italian restaurant and merged techniques with Hispanic flavors.

  • @DForDelecTable
    @DForDelecTable Год назад +5

    The spaghetti nests and pink sauce one are so much fun! 💕

  • @TashJansson
    @TashJansson Год назад +1

    love the little backstories for each dish ❤

  • @voodoosleeper
    @voodoosleeper Год назад

    Your videos are so joyful and fun and wholesome, thank you so much for all the love you put into this channel, it really shines through.

  • @ABirdOnTheMoon
    @ABirdOnTheMoon Год назад +4

    I wholeheartedly agree with Carlo. I know we prepare all kind of yummy delicious pasta fusion dishes but by far, the best pasta I ate was in Italy. They are on another level and nothing I ate anywhere in the world will come on bar with it. I still day dream of those pasta dishes and crave them to this day! It is a whole sacred world .. similarly to baked goods in France. You can't compare anything to the original cuisine imo. I would say the same about any other cuisine, actually. I prefer authentic food and I find it always enjoyable to try the dishes as they were made to be ..

  • @justrhuna2263
    @justrhuna2263 Год назад +4

    For filipino spaghetti, you can add sugar if u like more sweet and we eat spaghetti with a lot of sauce or mix all the sauce in the pasta. You can also add tomato paste and nestle cream for creamier spaghetti. Actually there's a lot of various spaghetti in the Philippines but over all taste is sweet 😂😂

  • @scottrhodes8160
    @scottrhodes8160 Год назад

    I have really enjoyed these first two entries into pasta week-good going. Looking forward to the rest.

  • @SorbetCitron17
    @SorbetCitron17 Год назад +2

    I'm from Switzerland and it's not a recipe from my country but the pasta that impressed me lately, where with morrocan pickled lemons (in salt saumure, I think) finely minced, nuts, olive oil and garlic.

  • @CAMarg-zs1xq
    @CAMarg-zs1xq Год назад +4

    ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ still watching but the notification made me so happy! I don't understand how this channel doesn't have millions of subscribers it's absolutely amazing!

    • @louisejohnson6057
      @louisejohnson6057 Год назад

      Yet. Doesn't have millions of subscribers YET. ✌️from 🍁🇨🇦🍁

  • @juliam.8147
    @juliam.8147 Год назад +3

    A pro tip I got from my gandma for cooking beets: If you want the colour to stay the deep pink/red colour you are not allowed to bring it to a boil, but keep it at a very slight simmering or even less, otherwise the heat will "beach" the colour☺️ Lots of love from germany🥰

  • @calliope2589
    @calliope2589 Год назад +1

    One of the most open minded and respectful content makers in this side of RUclips! Thank you so much Beryl! 💓

  • @lenalyles2712
    @lenalyles2712 Год назад +2

    Play with ingredients and pasta shapes, it's fun to experiment with food. Things you think don't sound good together are really good. I was lucky and got to travel the world being in the military and saw, tasted and helped prepare food for many countries.

  • @nurseprac.nikki513
    @nurseprac.nikki513 Год назад +5

    Ha! I literally just made pasta with bread crumbs for dinner last night! This is something I grew up on as my grandparents were from Sicily(Gf) and Naples(Gm). I omit the anchovies bc I’m not a fan, neither are my kids but it is delicious nonetheless. Thank you for including this recipe Beryl! ❤

  • @riawhetstone3725
    @riawhetstone3725 Год назад +3

    I can’t wait to combine Carlo’s & Keesean’s recipes as I already have most of the ingredients 😊 Also gonna add some of that precious, precious pasta water to create a silky sauce 😋

  • @danyalfian6774
    @danyalfian6774 Год назад +2

    YES loving pasta week so far - one of my favourite carb dish!!! Thanks Beryl for this :D

  • @promisedjubileedaniels
    @promisedjubileedaniels Год назад

    This is what I needed in my life today!!!! 🤩 Thank you everyone that shared your deliciousness with us!

  • @angelamarin7989
    @angelamarin7989 Год назад +8

    Im from Colombia and at home we used to have a pasta dish that also had breadcrumbs, the recipe included also milk, hard boiled eggs and butter, finally the breadcrumbs for the "crispyness" on top. I dont know if the breadcrumbs are used all over Colombia for this kind of pasta dish, but my family did, it tastes great haha my childhood memories.

    • @LillaIgelkotten
      @LillaIgelkotten Год назад +2

      Reminds me of something my mom did, baked macaroni with a lot of stuff and topped with bread crumbs, but we didn't use boiled eggs. I am from Bogotá

  • @lindyralph8792
    @lindyralph8792 Год назад +5

    OMG, KeShawn, I have been making this kind of take on aglio e olio for years, the only thing I don't use is fish sauce. I also make it with broccoli instead of spinach sometimes and it was always something I could get my son to eat when he was young. The first time I ever had authentic (made by a chef I worked with in the 90s), it changed my world: how can something so simple be SO delicious! It's also good with salami added and Beryl, I also add lemon juice to mine as well. Yuuuuuum

  • @Mimiroo
    @Mimiroo Год назад +1

    One of my friend kept recommending beet root pasta to me and I was a bit sceptical but now I’m convinced I have to try it! It does look delicious

  • @teriyakitaki
    @teriyakitaki Год назад

    I was talking about how this is a channel about how everyone uses the ingredients we have, and then you addressed it and even if he didn’t mean it like that or even if he did, i’m glad it was addressed and you are fab! Thank you!

  • @pcsingh89
    @pcsingh89 Год назад +4

    I was really hoping someone would submit Korean style pasta with cream sauce, perilla leaves and nuclear-ly green pickles and yellow pickled daikon on the side. I was surprised how much the internet derided the pickles with pasta thing that's so common in Korea, because I find it all delicious in combo 😋

  • @warriorbard
    @warriorbard Год назад +4

    Had my first taste of Filipino pasta when I went to Jollibee and omgosh it was delicious! I fell in love. 😍😍🥰🥰

  • @baumgrt
    @baumgrt Год назад +2

    The pink pasta made me immediately think of Eastern European beetroot soups and it may indeed be originally be inspired by them. For example, there’s a Latvian cold beetroot soup (aukstā zupa) that ends up with a very similar colour due to its dairy base mixing with the beetroot juices. After having tasted it when visiting Latvia, I often recreate it or a version of it (due to some substitutions) in the summer months when it’s hot.

  • @HeatherValentineMsFoodie
    @HeatherValentineMsFoodie Год назад +1

    It’s so funny. I took the first man’s comment on traditional and authenticity, being this is the way he prefers, not the way we should only do it😂😂😂 ❤❤❤

  • @AdrianNgHK
    @AdrianNgHK Год назад +3

    Dunno if you are gonna feature this tomorrow but in Malaysia we have a Laksa from a state called Johor, which is made from spaghetti. The story goes the sultan married a caucasian and this dish was made for her. its not easy to find though

  • @carolin9697
    @carolin9697 Год назад +15

    When I see pink pasta, I think of Mentaiko or Tarako (spicy cod roe/normal cod roe) pasta, which is a common Pasta sauce in Japan. It's usually mixed with mayo, which makes it pink-ish. (There is a non-mayo version though, then it's more a reddish color I guess)
    In any case, pink pasta sauce is very common in Japan, and it's popular with kids and adults alike.
    Will definitely try this beetroot sauce though! :)

    • @Narnendil
      @Narnendil Год назад +2

      Oh mentaiko pasta, it's so delicious

    • @toBe8ere
      @toBe8ere Год назад +1

      That is my favorite pasta next to my own homemade meat sauce pasta. And the only store bought pasta sauce I buy lol. Tried to make it once and was so disappointed I never tried again. But I'm thinking of trying once more considering the inflated prices recently.

  • @deeya
    @deeya Год назад +2

    Gatekeeping is the silliest thing that -came from- was intensified by the internet.
    Ancient Chinese noodles inspired pasta, the Aztecs were the first to cultivate tomatoes. Passata is hardly an innovation that no Aztec cook ever thought to smash some tomatoes together. Evolution of the craft brought out Italian cuisine. I really like how Asian's have 'taken back' pasta and created new dishes based on this, like the Japanese mentaiko pasta and napolitan spaghetti.

  • @giovannaguilar
    @giovannaguilar 9 месяцев назад

    my family makes pasta c'a muddica with the fennel branches inside and I think it makes the dish a bit more lighter and floral, it's my favorite pasta dish and I love that you tried as it's unknown to a lot of people outside Italy

  • @samchapple6363
    @samchapple6363 Год назад +5

    I find It’s good to know how an ingredient is used before inventing an alternative, sometimes the natives know a thing or two. Italian pasta as you showed in another episode is a great example.. or 🌶 chilies 😅 and yet..

  • @kalizahira1
    @kalizahira1 Год назад +3

    Great episode. It would be cool to see a colourful food episode. Squid ink, spinach, blueberry, beetroot etc bound to be a bunch I have never heard of before.

  • @julietbowden6189
    @julietbowden6189 Год назад +1

    I make the same anchovy pasta but I add cappers and squeeze fresh lemon over the top. Will try it with just the anchovies and breadcrumbs to taste the difference. And will be trying the second anchovy pasta as well!

  • @kylie-anneconnell4350
    @kylie-anneconnell4350 Год назад +1

    The editing is fantastic!

  • @priscillad8
    @priscillad8 Год назад +4

    In Brazil, pasta with sausage was once a thing, especially in public schools.

  • @noemiemi7213
    @noemiemi7213 Год назад +4

    The second recipe isn’t something new, but I wish it was much more popular.. it’s a simpler version of frittata di pasta, which is pretty popular in Italy, southern in particular Naples, but I grew up eating it in Abruzzo too. It is just a very easy way to repurpose leftovers.
    Carlo from Palermo said you are supposed to cook pasta a certain way every time, but really most Italian dishes are traditional today but were an absolute “play with your food” kind of thing.
    Frittata di pasta was the thing you made with leftover and cheap eggs, timballo was a way to use scrappy portions of many different things to make one hearty dish (and Italy alone has SO. MANY. VARIANTS!), meatballs were a way to cut meat with cheaper stuff because it was scarce and precious… I mean, we are talking about things your mama did in the kitchen to stretch food, not gourmet and set in stone😌

    • @carlopipitone6191
      @carlopipitone6191 Год назад

      Noemi I agree totally with you. Yet I can't see which words of mine you (and others here) think are set in stone.

  • @genieb3823
    @genieb3823 Год назад

    Love anchovies to give a big kick of umami to pasta sauce. Spanish anchovies in particular are AMAZING. Love the anchovy pasta dishes. Keshawn’s pasta will be going onto my must try list.

  • @veethomson6179
    @veethomson6179 Год назад

    This is the first video of yours I've seen, instant follow. Love the way you presented all these dishes ... even though there's no amounts in the actual video you can see what's going in quite clearly.

  • @Mystearicia
    @Mystearicia Год назад +13

    I was going to riot if Filipino spaghetti didn't appear HAHAHA. Also you should defo try the UFC Banana Ketchup if you can find it. It's my preferred one and there's also a spicier version which I like the best

    • @bradhart2
      @bradhart2 Год назад +2

      me too, especially since i just watched this while at JolliBee in Seattle

  • @adelepioppi9940
    @adelepioppi9940 Год назад +72

    As an Italian, I am sorry to see how many people are intimidated and scared of our judgment regarding our food traditions being revisited abroad. A lot of us can definitely try to be more open minded and be grateful that so many people appreciate dishes which are so near and dear to us.
    At the same time, I think it should be recognized that our traditional food is the result of a very long history, so there is often a good reason why things are done a certain way. And of course that goes for the traditional food of every country.
    So there is a lot of wisdom in how we make these dishes, which I firmly believe can be learned from to elevate anyone's cooking.

    • @carlopipitone6191
      @carlopipitone6191 Год назад +9

      I couldn't agree more.

    • @RadenWA
      @RadenWA Год назад +10

      Yes, the point everyone is free to create innovative food as long as they don’t sell it as an “authentic” version of something traditional. So if I order a Carbonara, I’d want it to be done the right way with the right ingredient, but if I order a fusion Japanese mentaiko spaghetti then I’d still enjoy it the same with the new ingredients.

    • @shaportueng7156
      @shaportueng7156 Год назад +2

      I couldn’t agree with you more. Well said.

    • @inmydarkesthour2278
      @inmydarkesthour2278 Год назад

      Ben detto 👍🏼👍🏼

    • @JonathanB824
      @JonathanB824 Год назад +4

      pasta originated in asia

  • @VreniEni
    @VreniEni Год назад +2

    As a sort of marriage between the Italian and the "American" dish, I always make a spicy or "piccata" version with olive oil, garlic, capers, chili flake, lemon juice or a splash of apple cider vinegar and honey. With parmesan on top it's a perfect weeknight dinner.

  • @tinyrhino153
    @tinyrhino153 Год назад

    Beryl you stated my sentiments exactly, the right way to make a dish is the way YOU like it.

  • @louisejohnson6057
    @louisejohnson6057 Год назад +4

    So Beryl, do I get 20 points if I guessed both Maggi and Kewpi? I agree with you about branching out with pasta. I make a pasta, one skillet dinner with ground beef, Campbell's tomato soup, mushrooms(in cans 👍), lots of garlic, both raw, and roasted, a lot of worcestershire sauce, and a little hot sauce. I also add both Chinese 5 spice and a store bought Garam Masala, so, not exactly traditional. I use a craggy pasta, one with nooks and crannies. I've named it "What The Neighbour's Ate", and it's delicious. ✌️🍁🇨🇦🍁

  • @Dana-ig2im
    @Dana-ig2im Год назад +7

    Beryl, you have to try spaghetti Persian style. its basically Spaghetti bolognese but after the pasta and meat sauce are cooked, it's combined and layered to make the FAMOUS Persian tahdig with the spaghetti. I die for this recipe. the bottom layer of the spaghetti crisps up and you then flip it so it essentially looks like a spaghetti cake with the top layer crispy just like the South African one. It's so so good!

  • @kristieamaya3365
    @kristieamaya3365 Год назад

    Carlo & his wall of suns & his speech & his self are so cute!!!

  • @deeess3305
    @deeess3305 Год назад +1

    I 100% agree with you about food being a unifier. thanks for saying what needed to be said! :)

  • @Jasmine_breeze
    @Jasmine_breeze Год назад +3

    As I love creative cooking I found cute that Carlo called himself "the fundamentalist" . It was humble and funny, but a firm statement of "the pasta religion" as well 😃

  • @theReniWatanijotMe
    @theReniWatanijotMe Год назад +3

    Tip: when making a Filipino spaghetti, put it all purpose cream if you are not a fan of too much sweet taste in the spaghetti sauce. It will make the sauce creamier and perfect

  • @lydiakies9053
    @lydiakies9053 Год назад

    I love all the Home Kitchen recipes. It reminds me of the pasta dish I ate growing up! My family called it gorp. Elbow macaroni, a whole jar of red pasta sauce (like Prego), and a pound of (browned) ground beef. My father always dumped both the unheated jar of pasta sauce and the cooked hamburger meat into the giant pot with the overcooked elbow noodles.

  • @chelbel_
    @chelbel_ Год назад +6

    I love Carlo! He really told us to step up our pasta game!!!

  • @chamanigunasekera8345
    @chamanigunasekera8345 Год назад +2

    Beryl! I hope you make kimchi pasta. I believe the Aaron & Claire channel on YT has a recipe for this! Its AMAZING!!!!