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Don't trust grocery stores when buying this

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  • Опубликовано: 24 мар 2023
  • Check out recipes on the blog: jeanelleats.com/
    #groceryhaul #filipinofood #purpleyam #ube #purplesweetpotato #ubehalaya #ubejam #uberecipe #foodandtravel #shorts #sweetpotato #yam
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Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @Jeanelleats
    @Jeanelleats  Год назад +8115

    🍠 Does anyone know where I can get real ube root in the mainland US? I would like to plant some thank youuu

    • @MASTERLinkYT96
      @MASTERLinkYT96 Год назад

      Search for ñame(niame) lila its the same thing i think.

    • @suzugina
      @suzugina Год назад +1585

      Ube is considered invasive that why you can't get fresh uhe in the US. Fresh is banned.

    • @primetimehome
      @primetimehome Год назад +685

      check if you can grow them in your state since its considered to be invasive by some, and check your hardiness zone, it can only be grown in zones 9-11, see if anyone is offering any tubers or bulbils

    • @fikilemkhize5776
      @fikilemkhize5776 Год назад

      They know what ube is, they are just scamming people

    • @LakshmiVigil5334
      @LakshmiVigil5334 Год назад +130

      Tri Ocean Market in Denver has what I believe is real ube but is called Purple
      Ñame. It looks just like real ube!

  • @hateraidfree9392
    @hateraidfree9392 Год назад +19481

    The frozen ones are usually actually ube, especially if it’s product of the Philippines. Any fresh “ube” I know outside of the Philippines is just Okinawan sweet potato

  • @thisistheaccountname
    @thisistheaccountname Год назад +3611

    The US has been calling yams "sweet potatoes", and vice versa for decades.

    • @she-sheshares9924
      @she-sheshares9924 Год назад +104

      Some people don’t know the difference as a black woman we know it’s mostly yt people who are confused

    • @trinidad510
      @trinidad510 Год назад +532

      ​​@She-She shares lol black people get them mixed up all the time too what are you talking about

    • @triarb5790
      @triarb5790 Год назад +55

      You also see kumara confused with sweet potatoes here in Australia. They are neither a yam nor a sweet potato. Native to New Zealand,they are the tuber of a vine and taste really similar to roast chestnuts.

    • @MollyHJohns
      @MollyHJohns Год назад +25

      ​@@triarb5790 I'm 0 years old today learning what a kumara is. Never heard of it as I'm from SE Asia. Greetings

    • @gariden
      @gariden Год назад +26

      @@triarb5790 kūmara is sweet potato… the confusion is that sweet potatoes aren’t related to potatoes. kūmara also isn’t native to new zealand, it was introduced by polynesian settlers.

  • @honeybee6002
    @honeybee6002 Год назад +2265

    I never knew purple things like this existed. It's so pretty. This world is so wonderful

    • @DiGi1992
      @DiGi1992 Год назад +67

      And the purple veggies are packed with nutrients so thats another bonus. Purple carrots, potatoes, asparagus, cauliflower, rice, ect

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Год назад +35

      Ok but the world also has just as many god awful things.

    • @malcador
      @malcador Год назад +3

      🧢

    • @zimzimph
      @zimzimph Год назад +12

      What about red cabbage? It's purple

    • @joshuawilliams4314
      @joshuawilliams4314 Год назад +5

      @@malcador how there nothing op could of lied about

  • @Babitoswold
    @Babitoswold 11 месяцев назад +426

    In Nigeria, there's a fruit we call Ube. It's usually purple in color too. Interesting!

    • @dera_giselle
      @dera_giselle 10 месяцев назад +14

      My fellow Nigerian😍

    • @royabrown8774
      @royabrown8774 10 месяцев назад +6

      What does it taste like?

    • @ericwogbe
      @ericwogbe 10 месяцев назад +50

      ​@@royabrown8774a mix between an avocado and a pear. It can be roasted or boiled. Its buttery and savory in flavor.

    • @noblepepple191
      @noblepepple191 10 месяцев назад +17

      A Nigerian from Opobo town in Rivers State in da building and we also call it ube, thought ube is the igbo name for that thing, we use it to eat corn, whether boiled or roasted.

    • @franceschukwukere209
      @franceschukwukere209 10 месяцев назад +11

      Our own dear Ube. Eat ube with ọkà (maize). Yummy. Full of healthy oils. ❤️❤️❤️

  • @ddbob1
    @ddbob1 Год назад +492

    That's because in America yam and sweet potatoes are used interchangeably. A lot of people don't realize that they're 2 different things.

    • @mancooldude9723
      @mancooldude9723 Год назад +16

      Yeah I searched it up and it said what she called a sweet potato is a yam so I’m confused now 😂

    • @ronnielyn19
      @ronnielyn19 Год назад +36

      Sweet potato DOES NOT taste anything like ube. I'm saying this as a Filipino myself. They smell very different too.
      Also, you can't turn sweet potato into ice cream.

    • @neomawzz
      @neomawzz Год назад +5

      Oh thats strange! I know yam is a type of sweet potato, but considering we dont even call them that here in NZ that sounds so confusing 😭

    • @sandcrab3188
      @sandcrab3188 Год назад +18

      @@neomawzz Yam is not a type of sweet potato. they are two different plants.

    • @mariyalawrence1899
      @mariyalawrence1899 Год назад +4

      I don't like yam because it's bit bland but i love sweet potato🥰but its first time seeing purple ones

  • @InedibleMuffin
    @InedibleMuffin Год назад +237

    It's so easy to mix them up unless you grew up knowing ube, or learned it from someone who did. Because even when I google up "ube" I get images of purple sweet potato. I needed to have a filipino colleague confidently tell me what was an ube

    • @cyberglutzz.3450
      @cyberglutzz.3450 Год назад +1

      Yeah, I’ve noticed this too, as a Nigerian google does this with fufu all the time. From my knowledge, my mom says the airport doesn’t allow us to bring real fufu into America for whatever reason, so no one I’m America most likely for legal reasons have ever really eaten fufu, unless they went to Nigeria to get the real deal. For some reason however, everyone on TikTok will post videos of poundo (or pounded yam) and whatever soup and call it fufu. I can confirm this bc I know the look, texture, and taste of fufu, fufu is like a yellow metallic color and it is smooth and tastes sour, but the people who’ve tried “fufu” all describe it to be fluffy, cloudy white like mashed potatoes, and tastes similar to potatoes, so they’re obviously been eating pounded yam. Also when I search on Google, it would show me a picture of pounded yam and call it fufu and I’m like “nooo that’s wrong”, my friend googled fufu and tried to tell me that I was wrong about what fufu was and I was like slow your role there bud, I’m a Nigerian through and through, born and raised, and google doesn’t know EVERYTHING about us, our languages, our culture, or really about any other culture that isn’t taught explicitly in the history books of the larger nations as intensely as they want you to think, also just bc something isn’t on the internet, or wasn’t recorded down in history, doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist or never happened.

    • @Toomuch4tv
      @Toomuch4tv Год назад

      @@cyberglutzz.3450 you’re right, I had a friend tell me the same thing about fufu being banned here. That means it must be good for your body if they banned it. They banned marijuana & made you think it was bad for you but it’s the total opposite being the first ALL IN ONE antibiotic, pain reliever and happy pill made “BY NATURE”

    • @jocelyndagon4710
      @jocelyndagon4710 10 месяцев назад

      Have you seen a ginger grows? It's like a deformed species. Ube grows like that but the size is big that can reach up to five kg. or more in just one dig. The skin's rough and thin. When you pinch it and wounded like blood but in deep purple colour. It's flaky and dry texture when it's cooked. In my place got white color inside but sweeter than purple ube. Some people call yam when it's purple in colour. Got another yam they call it but the leaf is big and look like ornament. Unlike sweet potato and ube, both grow same as like vines. For me it's totally different and once you see it.

    • @user-dg2jz1gi5s
      @user-dg2jz1gi5s 10 месяцев назад

      But ube looks VERY different from a sweet potatoes.
      Ube like all yams have blob shaped tubers unlike sweet potatoes whose tubers are pointed at two ends.
      Yams and sweet potaties are different genus of plants.
      Even the vines look very different.

    • @johnnier.o.d4746
      @johnnier.o.d4746 23 дня назад

      a real ube grows really good in bohol island where i grew up .... that's why, i've been eating it since i was a kid ..... we make ube to a snack thing that we fry & put sugar on it when it's cooked ... we also boil it then put some caramel sugar on it ... we make ube candy & it taste really good ... we also make ube jam as a dessert serve during a party or during a town fiesta .... & 1 of the latest creation of ube in our island is "ube calamay" ,it taste pretty much the same as ube jam,but they kind of modernized it a bit (if i were the one say it) taro & ube are closer when it comes to taste, it's just ube is 100X better (for me) .... taro (which we called gabi in our island) grows really good there too .... & lastly,sweet potatoes, there's a different of kinds of sweet potatoes in our island, there's a white one,a yellow one,an orange one & the purple one, that a lot of knuckleheads here on youtube called ube ..... you should try "ube calamay" when you visit bohol island .... bcuz it's nice ..... 😂🤣😂🤣-🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪

  • @jeredmelendez6184
    @jeredmelendez6184 Год назад +85

    That is an okinawa sweet purple sweet potato. A japanese variant sweet tater. They also get labeled as hawaiian as well

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin 5 месяцев назад +1

      Not to be confused with "purple sweet potato" which also has purple flesh but a darker reddish brown skin vs. the lighter "Okinawa sweet potato" tan skin.
      **Both** of which are not to be confused with Ube, apparently.
      It's ... confusing. ;) Still haven't found anywhere that sells actual Ube, here locally. though I know of at least one place you can get both Okinawa & Purple sweet potatoes.

    • @Hrairoo555
      @Hrairoo555 3 месяца назад

      Okinawan sweet potato as a staple among Okinawans is thought to be a contributor to their longevity.

  • @maryjovellesantiago6199
    @maryjovellesantiago6199 10 месяцев назад +10

    Aetas, an indigenous group in PH, would plant them and we would buy from folks who directly get it from them. Ube is a LOT heavier and bigger. Like 1kg of Ube would sometimes be just 1 piece of giant ube lol

  • @ibvghgfvbnbc
    @ibvghgfvbnbc Год назад +338

    I think ita good if you also include links about Erwan Heusaff's video about UBE, and the importance of protecting its Philippine legacy, because it tends to get watered down when it is not from the Philippines

    • @kaitlinsaide6897
      @kaitlinsaide6897 Год назад +5

      i love that video! actually cited a lot of it for my term paper i just did for my botany elective.

    • @gordonchristophertubo3164
      @gordonchristophertubo3164 Год назад +2

      @@kaitlinsaide6897 you cited a RUclips video as reference?

    • @ansellouie9100
      @ansellouie9100 Год назад +9

      ​@@gordonchristophertubo3164 you could actually do that. I also cited one for mine. Just make sure that your video is credible.

    • @gordonchristophertubo3164
      @gordonchristophertubo3164 Год назад

      @@ansellouie9100 i mean, i could technically eat raw pork but i wouldn't do it though 😂

    • @xxrandomgamerxx810
      @xxrandomgamerxx810 Год назад +1

      @@gordonchristophertubo3164 ? Makes no sense

  • @fall22123
    @fall22123 Год назад +33

    I don't think I could ever trust a stranger to select my produce.

  • @heinrichmaneuver6871
    @heinrichmaneuver6871 Год назад +2

    So you ordered the most specific and uncommon thing and are surprised they got it wrong

  • @raditewismantoro7834
    @raditewismantoro7834 Год назад +123

    thanks for letting me know. I thought ube was purple sweet potato. It sounds so similar to ubi in indonesia. ubi = sweet potato. 😥 So I had a reason to be wrong. 😄

    • @ana_day7
      @ana_day7 Год назад +10

      Philippines could be distant relatives with Indonesia and Malaysia. Some of our words are similar in meaning 😊

    • @MelodyAlf
      @MelodyAlf Год назад +11

      Fellow indonesian here. I thought ube was the same as ubi too! Now we know that ube is purple yam and ubi is sweet potato in any color including purple.
      But that got me thinking.......... so what do we call yams in Bahasa Indonesia?

    • @ellesie423
      @ellesie423 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@MelodyAlfyam= keladi/ talas

    • @marleylove510
      @marleylove510 11 месяцев назад +2

      You’re right, for being wrong, lol ☺️.

    • @ColoniaMurder20
      @ColoniaMurder20 11 месяцев назад +9

      sweet potatoes with different color including purple we called it "kamote"

  • @evelytle1011
    @evelytle1011 Год назад +270

    Here in the US we use yam and sweet potatoes interchangeably honestly most people here don’t know the difference between the vegetables for a long time I thought yam was just an old term for sweet potato 😅

    • @apriljk6557
      @apriljk6557 Год назад +18

      I thought this too until rn

    • @AhHereWeGo
      @AhHereWeGo Год назад +14

      Literally thought that until she brought it up.
      “This isn’t a yam, it’s a purple sweet potato”
      Ma’am…… you just said “it’s not that because it is”

    • @awsomnessnoveiws
      @awsomnessnoveiws Год назад +14

      Yam is just another term for sweet potatoes. You are correct there is literally no difference. Kind of like how turnips are also called rutabaga.

    • @Levacque
      @Levacque Год назад +3

      The funniest thing to me is that everyone in North America calls them "sweet potato fries" except when I was working in a kitchen, because "yam fries" is a much easier order to shout during a rush hahaha

    • @Levacque
      @Levacque Год назад +22

      ​@@awsomnessnoveiws you're not correct on either of those. Genetically and culturally there are differences between yams and sweets, AND between turnips and swedes. What a strange thing to choose another incorrect example to try and prove your point.

  • @nicolle2126
    @nicolle2126 Год назад +864

    Really wish the philippines would have like a PDO with ube products like in the EU and Japan, especially since it's such a culturally significant product. Kinda disappointing our government doesnt put resources towards it, especially when NGOs and academic bodies do so much with researching and protecting different endemic ube strains

    • @kuyaleinad4195
      @kuyaleinad4195 Год назад +102

      Even in the Philippines you can’t be sure if you’re buying Ube products. I recently went to Baguio and bought ‘ube chips’ but they’re actually just purple kamote so not the real deal.
      We do need to have some sort of Authenticity seal for Ube and Ube extract products I think especially since it’s also getting mainstream in the International food scene

    • @nicolle2126
      @nicolle2126 Год назад +41

      @@kuyaleinad4195 diba 😭 i think its because real ube is a lot harder to cultivate compared to other root crops, but theyre much more marketable compared to say kamote etc....its such a shame!

    • @aleckcain4142
      @aleckcain4142 Год назад +14

      The Philippines has a lot more to focus on than protecting a root vegetable's integrity

    • @nicolle2126
      @nicolle2126 Год назад +70

      @@aleckcain4142 its true, but at the same time if we just wait for the big problems to get solved first then the little problems would never get attention 😔
      It's like saying our ube farmers don't deserve attention and help because other farmers in the philippines dont even have proper land and farming equipment. We could always try to prioritize both

    • @Moss_piglets
      @Moss_piglets Год назад +22

      @@aleckcain4142 well, I guess you wouldn't mind other countries to start growing them to make a profit. Other Asians stamp their mark on their products but Pinoys fail in that field.

  • @sweet93553
    @sweet93553 11 месяцев назад +13

    Those purple yams are delicious! I love the beige colored Japanese sweet potato as well. It’s like eating sweet potato pie but without all the sugar. Awesome healthy snacks

  • @lukebecker9204
    @lukebecker9204 Год назад +75

    Dude like me workin at the store just saw they looked similar and did his job to his best degree 🤣 then goes home and wonders why some lady came up to him asking for purple yams 💀

  • @Ohshinystars
    @Ohshinystars Год назад +80

    The purple sweet potato is so delicious and sweet! I eat it with condensed milk. So delicious

    • @delicateghoul
      @delicateghoul Год назад

      I make biscuits with them, so good 🤤

    • @SC-cb2pg
      @SC-cb2pg Год назад +3

      How do you prepare it, that sounds amazing?

    • @SkiiDreamr420
      @SkiiDreamr420 Год назад +1

      You ought to use it to make sweet potato casserole. I think it will work. We use orange sweet potato 🍠. Boil or bake till fork tender.
      You just put butter and I think a little condensed milk could def go in . Mash mash mash. Then put in deepish baking dish
      Top with pecan brown sugar crumble. ( Butter brown sugar, pecans), nice and thick! Make sure pecans are pieces. Not whole.
      Bake 350 for 30-45 mins covered with foil, uncover for last 7-10 mins.
      Thanksgiving 🦃🍽️ is served.
      Sorta😂

  • @zerokiryuu3387
    @zerokiryuu3387 Год назад +16

    That's just what my mom teaches us. We're Dominican but a lot of our sweets have different ingredients. So my mom made Jalea de Batata last month. But unfortunately she had to dump the whole caldero/huge pot of it! Because they sold her the wrong Sweet Potato! She had cooked it and everything 😭😭😭❤️‍🔥
    P.S. The way you opened that purple sweet potato reminded me of the way my mom has us break open Yucca to check if it's good 😂

    • @katstephenson8493
      @katstephenson8493 11 месяцев назад

      Excuse my ignorance but Yukka??? You can eat Yukka..like the tree I have in my garden??? 😳🤔🤔😲🇬🇧☮️

    • @zerokiryuu3387
      @zerokiryuu3387 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@katstephenson8493 No worries, actually it's the Yucca Root. "Yucca" is what we call it in Spanish but actually it's a type of Cassava Root (from the Cassava Plant or manioc)!

  • @douglasbowker2468
    @douglasbowker2468 Год назад +25

    Ube purple yam is both purple, outside and purple inside. What she has is commonly known as 'okinawan' purple yam. Grown in Hawaii. Most importers get real ube but it's likely to dry to grow when you get it. Most importers use ube powder. However depending on the season you might get real ube.

    • @user-dg2jz1gi5s
      @user-dg2jz1gi5s 10 месяцев назад +2

      But that is "Okinawan" sweet potato' not yams.
      Yams like ube are a different genus altogether. The roots of yams are big and shaped like blobs. Their leaves are pointier than sweet potatoes and are not edible unlike sweet potato leaves since they have more cyanide in them. Yams are also aerial vines that cling to trees. Sweet potatoes stay on the ground like true potatoes.
      Why america calls sweet potatoes "yams" is very weird. It's like calling an apple "orange".

    • @Xessa82
      @Xessa82 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@user-dg2jz1gi5sHonestly I think its just a lack of knowledge. I'm American and I do hear people use them interchangeably. I have no clue why people do this other than they just don't know there's a difference between the two.

  • @kyrie_just_kyrie
    @kyrie_just_kyrie Год назад +131

    Yep, Many people are getting confused by ube and sweet potato but if you're a gal that lives in a province like me, you'll easily identify the difference between those two lol

    • @BakedBuddy
      @BakedBuddy Год назад +1

      Whats the difference

    • @raerohan4241
      @raerohan4241 Год назад +9

      ​@@BakedBuddy She literally says it in the video

    • @BakedBuddy
      @BakedBuddy Год назад +2

      @@raerohan4241 you right

    • @Jang7457.
      @Jang7457. Год назад +1

      ​@@raerohan4241 Ube taste ALOT better

    • @princesse.561
      @princesse.561 Год назад +3

      ​@@BakedBuddy Ube has a darker shade on the outside that it should looked like a lighter shade of the soil ;)

  • @evelynhaase2665
    @evelynhaase2665 Год назад +142

    In Hawaii the purple sweet potato is called ʻuala and it’s one of my favorites!

    • @CallemJayNZ
      @CallemJayNZ Год назад +4

      Kūmara in New Zealand Māori 😊 Just a little random fact for you, Kūmara or sweet potato are originally from South America, it puzzles scientists who can see through our Polynesian genetics that we are descended from South East Asian, hence why our languages share similar traits to Tagalog and especially Malay.
      I have my own theory that our ancestors were searching for new lands and happened upon some South Americans who they traded with. This would've been during the peak of the Polynesian Maritime era, before Māori in New Zealand blocked ourselves off. (I suppose without the ability to go back in time, we'll probably never know how the Kūmara got to Polynesia) I don't know if other Polynesian people cultivated the Kūmara to the extent that Māori did. It was a staple food for the Māori while other pacific nations cultivated the taro as a staple. While the taro grew albeit a heck of a lot more slowly in our cold climate and was primarily reserved for Ariki or chiefs. Coconuts, Pineapple, Breadfruit and Maika were also unable to be cultivated due to the frosts of Winter and Spring cold.
      Cultivation techniques were developed to help preserve food over the cold winters we get here. They were stored in pits that were hollowed out in the shape of a hockey stick which would keep them aerated and dry throughout our wet winters. Some tribes were called Kaikiore or Rat eaters which was perfectly safe because the Polynesian rat (As well as the Polynesian dog) both had vegetarian diets. Did Hawaiians eat Kiore and Dog as well? I know Tongans and Cook Islanders did but I've always found it hard to find Hawaiian history in ebook form, do you know of any good books I could read? Preferably written by Kanaka Maoli but it's okay it's been written by Pākehā/Haole. Sometimes they were better equipped to record history, though I far prefer reading the works of Native writers, especially where Genealogy is concerned.
      Shit so sorry for going off on a tangent 😂 I've got a strong desire to preserve our culture and encourage all Polynesian people to participate in the preservation of our languages and the oral histories told by our old people who were in turn told by their old people and so on and so forth going all the way back to when those events transpired 😊 ❤

    • @patrickbueno3279
      @patrickbueno3279 Год назад

      ​@@CallemJayNZ wait, new Zealand have winters? I thought it's tropical in there, due to them being always pictured as sunny

    • @CallemJayNZ
      @CallemJayNZ Год назад +1

      @@patrickbueno3279 Yup it doesn't snow in the North Island unless you live right up by the mountains (Which sadly I do 😂) but if you live in the southern part of the South Island there's usually always some snow in July/August and sometimes even as late as October. When I was living in Auckland, the winters were very mild while the summertime heat could become a little overwhelming. Despite how small our country is, there's about three different climates. The far north is semi sub tropical. Then you have the alpine climate in mountainous areas and the mild oceanic climate in the majority of other places

  • @ging9019
    @ging9019 Год назад +5

    some comments here says they are interchangeable but why?! they don't taste the same, I cant imagine a purple sweet potato jam even though it's my favourite variation (orange sweet potato is the 2nd). Ube is just different, it will always be my favourite cake, shake or ice cream flavour

    • @SpiderMan-ni8ek
      @SpiderMan-ni8ek 10 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed. How the hell is Ube the same as the average sweet potato. Ube also have a different texture. I like Ube more than sweet potatoes so I know how strikingly different it is.

    • @ragiingtomato14
      @ragiingtomato14 10 месяцев назад

      they aren't even closely related, ube and yams in general are more closely related to a grass than a freaking sweet potato 😂

    • @ging9019
      @ging9019 10 месяцев назад

      @@ragiingtomato14 i had to search for different kind of yams because i didn't know they exist, I only know purple yam which is also called ube lol

  • @marybell8995
    @marybell8995 11 месяцев назад +4

    My guess would be to go in person to get such a specialized food because as you said even the store doesn’t know what it is. I know as an instacart shopper I’d be clueless but I’d also research it to get it for my customer.

  • @Margoth195
    @Margoth195 Год назад +197

    As a plant biologist, I feel your pain. This is why scientific names are important, as it cuts ut this kind of silliness

    • @theuniverseisme432
      @theuniverseisme432 Год назад +7

      No ones putting scientific names on packages. I think you just wanted a chance to mention you’re a plant biologist. 😂😂

    • @patrev
      @patrev Год назад +6

      well I hope they simplify scientific names. Scientific names are hard to pronouce, hard to memorize, hard to spell.

    • @InappropriateShorts
      @InappropriateShorts 11 месяцев назад +1

      it identifies as ube though. ube is a spectrum

    • @pv7133
      @pv7133 11 месяцев назад +5

      I'm a farmer and I share your pain.
      I grow ube for the local market in the Philippines and actually the one who constantly comments on RUclips videos that what they're eating is not ube but purple sweet potatoes instead.

    • @Margoth195
      @Margoth195 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@theuniverseisme432 They do actually put Scientific names on things if you know where to look. A lot of herbalists and seed sellers use them. herbal teas also commonly include scientific names. I'll grant you that doing this for all products would be difficult and overkill. my point was more I hate getting the wrong thing because of common names overlapping which has happened to me a bunch of times (For instance there are two main types of Chamomile used for tea: Roman and German and they are not only different species but different genera.)

  • @tiphneewestry3129
    @tiphneewestry3129 Год назад +10

    I definitely understand this, because as an African-American, we sometimes make yam pies, and sometimes we make white sweet potato pies.. they’re not the same lol… in addition, when I buy plantains through grocery delivery, I cannot tell you how many times they bring me a fucking unripened, Chiquita banana! And I am so pissed off because that is not what the hell I asked for😂

    • @shannonrickard8605
      @shannonrickard8605 Год назад +3

      Most people working in the produce department of the store, and especially the people who pick the orders for pickup, have no clue the difference between a plantain and a banana or a yam and a sweet potato. If it's labeled as a plantain, that's what you're getting. It's more a problem of suppliers mislabelling products which I tend to believe often happens because a product is in demand and they don't have it, so they send some purple sweet potatoes labeled as ube knowing nobody will know the difference.

  • @annesand7157
    @annesand7157 11 месяцев назад +4

    It is called Okinawa Sweet Potato. Very delicious and healthy. Makes a good mash potato as well.

    • @unknownph537
      @unknownph537 5 месяцев назад

      It's the same thing in Ube in the Philippines

  • @risaandjesus
    @risaandjesus 3 месяца назад +2

    Ube has such a beautiful, deep and gorgeous purple!

  • @Ookamikage13
    @Ookamikage13 Год назад +241

    So I keep getting confused because my dang asian grocery ALSO gets it confused. Thank you for explaining clearly bc now I know the real ube got the rougher darker outside and is super purple once cut

    • @deeb.9250
      @deeb.9250 Год назад +23

      ube root is also 100x bigger than all sweet potato varieties. Not hard to differentiate at all

    • @Deathdealer141
      @Deathdealer141 Год назад +2

      I have been lied too all these years ate what I thought my asian grandmother called purple "sweet potato" but it was actually ube all this time lol

    • @DJbassrevolution
      @DJbassrevolution Год назад +3

      ​@@Deathdealer141 sweet potatos are yams this lady is just dense

    • @shexsolidxtrustx
      @shexsolidxtrustx Год назад +4

      @@DJbassrevolution definitely not - YOU the one sounding dense family ::: potatoes (all kinds) have usually lighter but always smoother skin and yams (all kinds) have usually darker but always rough like tree bark skin .. It Is That Simple

    • @ldawg7117
      @ldawg7117 Год назад +2

      ​@@DJbassrevolution the irony in your statement... Holy shit ..

  • @anthonybirch6291
    @anthonybirch6291 Год назад +161

    Most people don't know that sweet potato and yams aren't the same thing. You can't expect them to know the difference between ube and a purple sweet potato.

    • @crachhit6
      @crachhit6 Год назад +8

      Correction, all yams are sweet potatoes

    • @thesharinganknight9859
      @thesharinganknight9859 Год назад +3

      Yes, yes they are, but at the same they’re not. All yams are sweet potatoes, but all yams aren’t sweet potatoes

    • @jobieheiser443
      @jobieheiser443 Год назад +2

      ​@@crachhit6Yes, but not all Sweet Potatoes are Yams

    • @user-fs3gv6sm7i
      @user-fs3gv6sm7i Год назад +7

      @@thesharinganknight9859all yams are sweet potatoes but all sweet potatoes aren’t yams?

    • @DarkR0ze
      @DarkR0ze Год назад

      same with taro

  • @yulnikita
    @yulnikita Год назад +5

    I've been wanting to try ube for awhile now. I think my options to get something from a place next to me would be an ube mochi, donut, or drink. On the listt.

  • @TheAzorg
    @TheAzorg Год назад +1

    literally never heard of ube and never seens purple sweet potatoes but i'm glad i learnt something

  • @aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa790
    @aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa790 Год назад +611

    They're not getting it wrong. The problem is that you're looking for a specific species, Dioscorea alata, but the word "yam" is a catch-all word for various kinds of vegetables that fit the mold. Anything sweet potato like is a yam, including ube, sweet potatoes (Ipomoea batatas), taro (Colocasia esculenta), oca (Oxalis tuberosa), and konjacs (Amorphophallus konjac). These are plants that aren't necessarily closely related, but they can all be called yams. Any purple variants or breeds would therefore be called "purple yams". A yam is just a word for any vegetable that's got a tough potato-like exterior with a starchy potato-like inside but isn't an actual potato (well, I haven't seen blue potatoes called yams yet. I wonder if there are inner-red or orange variants that have?)

    • @IShipGuys
      @IShipGuys Год назад +20

      Wow your so knowledgeable🤯🤓🧐

    • @luvya143ful
      @luvya143ful Год назад +15

      I was thinking the same, Yam is Sweet potatoes right?

    • @snoozyq9576
      @snoozyq9576 Год назад +3

      Oh I always thought yams were just those little red things lol

    • @Annie.747
      @Annie.747 Год назад +6

      Wow I need this for the next party I’m at when I’m feeling socially anxious

    • @vshgUwU
      @vshgUwU Год назад +2

      ​@@luvya143ful Similar, yet not the same. Ñame (Ube, purple yam) has a rough outside like cassava. I do get why it's said that it is the same but it is a bit different, there's a lot of different vegetable roots

  • @dwightkurtschruteiii4491
    @dwightkurtschruteiii4491 Год назад +46

    “Ma’am im just a shopping cart clerk”

  • @GinsuSher
    @GinsuSher Год назад +2

    if it makes you feel any better, most markets /grocery stores in the Philippines don't actually have ube too. most are also purple sweet potato.

    • @blueraven147
      @blueraven147 Год назад +1

      Purple yam (ube) are commonly seen and can be purchase in local market which freshly coming direct from the grower in the phillipines.

    • @romeocivilino6667
      @romeocivilino6667 Год назад +1

      I beg to disagree, maybe if it's out of season, of course you can't see it, unless it's not really produced in your localities or not usually consumed by folks in that certain marketplace, which is common in Cities and urban areas far from it's source farms, like Metro Manila Cities whose usually consumed Ube Products that's already processed into powder, liquid extract or jam.

  • @SitioLumbia
    @SitioLumbia Год назад +2

    My grandfather planted some purple yam. It rooted many large tubers that we sometimes just use it as pig feed.

  • @jeroldbarrioslanticse1849
    @jeroldbarrioslanticse1849 Год назад +4

    Fun Fact: Ube, meaning tuber in Tagalog, is a purple yam originally from the Philippines. Different than the purple sweet potato, it has an even sweeter, more mellow taste than its orange relative.
    I Hope you can find one 🇵🇭

  • @jomsies
    @jomsies Год назад +11

    Fun fact. People just use purple sweet potato or “gabi” to make ube halaya with flavoring.
    Ube is just very rare to find in the wet markets and groceries. So businesses use alternatives.
    It doesn’t even matter since the taste is identical. 😋😋

    • @chryssesandchaos
      @chryssesandchaos Год назад +2

      That wasn't gabi though, it was kamote, right, gabi or taro aren't that big.

    • @GamingGardener
      @GamingGardener Год назад +2

      hell nah it doesn't taste the same.

    • @cjnem7243
      @cjnem7243 10 месяцев назад +1

      taro ay gabi, iba pa ang purple na kamote which this vid talking about sweet potatoes at ang ube ay ube they calling yam

    • @bons244
      @bons244 20 дней назад

      bruh they don't taste the same.

  • @kimberlysmith7311
    @kimberlysmith7311 11 месяцев назад +3

    Cool. I've heard that purple sweet potatoes may be partly responsible for some people in a blue zone that live longer then anyone else. 😂❤ They look yummy anyways

  • @bealojero5245
    @bealojero5245 Год назад +8

    Finally, someone speaks the truth 😍 I grow up eating these foods so I know the difference and taste. It irritates me when they mislabeled the names. Saying it's the same when it's too different in texture and colors.

    • @royabrown8774
      @royabrown8774 10 месяцев назад

      What about the taste? Are they the same?

    • @user-dg2jz1gi5s
      @user-dg2jz1gi5s 10 месяцев назад

      Ube is way tastier than ANY sweet potato variety.
      It's very nutty and sweet in flavor and becomes chewy like sticky rice when ground up and cooked. And the aroma is very delicious smelling.
      Sweet potatoes are bland and tends to be grainy and dry when cooked.
      There's a reason ube is expensive in the Philippines and sweet potatoes are mostly fed to pigs as fodder. Everyone in the Philippines see sweet potatoes as the stereotype for cheapness or bad quality and Also prejorative terms "kamote" "kinamote" or "nakamote"
      And before you say that certain sweet potatoes are superior like the Japanese yellow or purple varieties, then you would be laughed at here in the Philippines since those varieties are also widely cultivated here. Those are not even the tastiest varieties since the Philippine orange sweet potatoes are sweeter. Those have the white skin and orange meat and they are sweet, but Never as sweet or aromatic as ube.

  • @CoolSerafin
    @CoolSerafin Год назад +26

    It's called 'Ketela Ungu' in Indonesia. It has much beta carotene in it and very healthy.

  • @SunnyRawka
    @SunnyRawka Год назад +8

    Its amazing how ill informed some produce merchants can be 😅😂

    • @crispypoliticians6180
      @crispypoliticians6180 Год назад +3

      It’s probably not them not knowing what it is but trying to bank on the popularity of ube when fresh ube is banned in the mainland United States due to it being crazy invasive

  • @CallemJayNZ
    @CallemJayNZ Год назад

    That sound you make when trying to snap the Sweet Potato "Hooooah" 😂

    • @CallemJayNZ
      @CallemJayNZ Год назад

      I literally watched it fifty times just to hear it again 😆

  • @2beauti4ify
    @2beauti4ify 11 месяцев назад +2

    Yes, those are known as Hawaiian sweet potatoes. The Asian grocery stores in my area name them accordingly. There are many variations of purple yams and purple sweet potatoes throughout Southeast Asia. The name Ube was given by the Philippines

    • @MGmirkin
      @MGmirkin 5 месяцев назад

      AKA, "Okinawa Sweet Potatoes." Which are themselves different from "Purple Sweet Potatoes" which have a darker skin than "Okinawa Sweet Potatoes" but basically the same deep purple flesh when cooked. And both of which are different from Ube, apparently.

  • @LintheKumofan
    @LintheKumofan Год назад +12

    Working in produce and being a fan of taro, ube, and purple sweet potato for different dishes made me go deep diving for info so I can better inform people who come looking. 😅

  • @sassyghost_8
    @sassyghost_8 Год назад +1

    I think the reason for the grocery store mixup is that “yam” and “sweet potato” are often used interchangeably in the US. Even looking up the difference between a sweet potato and a yam, you’ll find opposing results from many US based sites. Bon Appétite had a good article about the differences though, if anyone reading this comment wants to learn the basic differences.

  • @DudeEM
    @DudeEM Год назад +1

    This problem is not exclusive to places outside the Philippines. Some vendors either underestimate the consumers’ intelligence or they lack intelligence themselves.

  • @ActualLadyLuck
    @ActualLadyLuck Год назад +38

    In Virginia, I'm over here sitting on my butt wondering how sweet potatoes can be purple inside. Have I been lied to half of my life? 😭

    • @asmrwithtinyhands
      @asmrwithtinyhands Год назад +7

      No, you just happen to be across the planet from Asia

    • @ActualLadyLuck
      @ActualLadyLuck Год назад +1

      @@asmrwithtinyhands That makes so much sense 💀

    • @SaxonBloom
      @SaxonBloom Год назад +2

      Hello fellow Virginian!

    • @user-zj7kf6mg7x
      @user-zj7kf6mg7x Год назад +5

      Sweet potato has at least 3 colors. White, yellow and purple

    • @chickie8252
      @chickie8252 Год назад +1

      Just the fact of the way you worded this, saying I'm sitting here on my butt, made me laugh. That sounds so much like something I would say, here in Jersey, and I would be proud to call you friend....🤣🤣🤣 you are awesome and it sounds like you grew up around here!😊 keep being you!

  • @MackerelCat
    @MackerelCat Год назад +4

    I love that nature provides such colourful foods

  • @permafrost7875
    @permafrost7875 9 месяцев назад

    I find there to be something beautiful and gentle about the princess you bring the vessels to, it's almost kind, and serene. It's beautiful in a way

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead Год назад

    ooo look at that colour it looks outstanding

  • @ikuyimii8415
    @ikuyimii8415 Год назад +44

    People who said Ube is from the Philippines, it's between Yes and No. Ube can be found in other Southeast Asian countries but Filipinos created Ube HALAYA, the one people mostly used for desserts. Technically Filipinos created the Ube flavor, not the tuber itself but we must protect it before other countries claim the flavor as "theirs" now that Ube is becoming more popular. Our Government never cares a thing :/

    • @yelanchiba8818
      @yelanchiba8818 Год назад

      There are more important things today that need more attention than a root crop.

    • @ikuyimii8415
      @ikuyimii8415 Год назад +28

      @@yelanchiba8818 that root crop has been part of our culture for hundreds of years. Just because it's not important to you, it's not important for anyone else. The Aitas deserves recognition for the hardwork they put into these crops.

    • @spoon7053
      @spoon7053 Год назад +16

      @@yelanchiba8818 this is such an unhelpful thing to add to a conversation. I could name any problem and you’d say “oh but there’s a bigger problem”
      So what???

    • @namjoonsshysmile5777
      @namjoonsshysmile5777 Год назад +2

      Hello i'm from Indonesia idk where these tubers originality comes from but in Indonesia we have it too, for the first one with black skin in my Region it's called Hui pronounce (Hooe) and the second one is called Ubi or in the Philippines Ube, I'm from Sundanese one of the ethnic group in indonesia the word Hui is from Sundanese while in Indonesian we call it Ubi Ungu (Purple Ubi) while Ubi in Sundanese we call it Mantang we have so much Varieties of ubi theres yellow, white, and orange atleast that's what i know maybe much more. the difference is that Hui bear fruit on trees that vines above the trees while Ubi are underground and yeah in my Sundanese Region we have one popular Ubi "Ubi Cilembu" or they usually call it Honey Ubi it's ordinary Ubi with orange flesh like honey they bake it in the oven it's so sweet with the chewy texture
      Sorry for grammatical error English is not my first language my mother tongue is Sundanese

    • @ikuyimii8415
      @ikuyimii8415 Год назад +5

      @@namjoonsshysmile5777 oooOh it's interesting there are other Ube in different colors as well ^°^
      I know they're in other countries, I did said they're from other countries like Southeast Asia, we don't want credit for the tuber itself but the "flavor" of Ube. The Ube that was mostly familiar with ( either by desserts like ice cream, cake, cookies, bread etc. ) the taste, it's richness and ingredients came from the Ube Halaya jam.

  • @AnarchyStockers
    @AnarchyStockers 10 месяцев назад

    That “HWAGHHH” after talking so calmly was so funny to me for some reason

  • @gardnerwebb3749
    @gardnerwebb3749 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for teaching.

  • @whitneywilliams9057
    @whitneywilliams9057 Год назад +8

    To be fair in the US, they don’t know the difference between yams and sweet potatoes in the store. Yams are always sweet potatoes when you buy them from the store.

    • @mrmacho41
      @mrmacho41 Год назад

      That's a 100% false statement. 😂😂😂

    • @j.decole5372
      @j.decole5372 Год назад

      @@mrmacho41speak for yourself

  • @Boredgasm
    @Boredgasm Год назад +28

    In America, yams are sweet potatoes. And ube is just purple yams, ie, purple sweet potato 😂

    • @lasagnasux4934
      @lasagnasux4934 Год назад +1

      In America yams are not very sweet. Sweet potatoes are very sweet. Yams are another thing entirely.

    • @komentarista5759
      @komentarista5759 8 месяцев назад

      Same in Canada. One vlogger I watched before said they call Sweet Potatoes as Yams. :) he defended himself after the Filipinos went after him for claiming he has easy access to ube... Then shows off his canned yams! LOL!

  • @minamur
    @minamur Год назад +54

    the nice thing about going to the grocery store yourself is you only get the wrong thing when *you* get the wrong thing.

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 Год назад +2

      That's why I don't do pickup. I don't want the produce someone else picks. I want to pick it out myself. Amongst other issues I have with it lol 😊

    • @DreadlyKnight
      @DreadlyKnight Год назад +2

      tbf she says it was raining and she was too lazy to go herself. Idk why people criticize when someone decides to pay for a service and gets screwed.

  • @TheMoonlightMage
    @TheMoonlightMage Год назад

    I'm obsessed with this stuff

  • @lisadunham3845
    @lisadunham3845 Год назад +25

    Many workers don't know the differences between yams and sweet potatoes. They haven't ever tried them.

    • @LacyLynLabret
      @LacyLynLabret Год назад +7

      It's crazy to me how often this gets messed up. I work at a grocery store in the front end department but I've worked produce before so I always notice when they mix yams and sweet potatoes. At one point someone thought Serranos were Jalapeños, that was pushing it lol

    • @rs-mt6kl
      @rs-mt6kl Год назад

      ​@@LacyLynLabret that's because most grocery stores don't carry both ya dingbats lmao

    • @Inuyasha619
      @Inuyasha619 Год назад +3

      Also because they don't grow it. They order it from Farmers or suppliers who say this is UBE sell it as such and so they do.

  • @christinac6710
    @christinac6710 Год назад +5

    You are lucky to get purple sweet potatoes. I can’t find it here in the Midwest. Never seen one in person. Still waiting to make a purple sweet potato pie. Goals.

    • @sapphirelane1714
      @sapphirelane1714 Год назад +1

      They’re so delicious! They taste buttery and sweet, almost like a pastry (imo). They stopped stocking them after March2020 😔 I miss them.

    • @Electromagneticplutonium
      @Electromagneticplutonium Год назад

      Literally purple sweet potato is better than any other root vegetables fk the ube sht

  • @susant9962
    @susant9962 10 месяцев назад

    Love the purple color💕

  • @BearJoyner00
    @BearJoyner00 Год назад +1

    Especially in the US, there's a big conflation between yams and sweet potatoes.

  • @L33W41K41
    @L33W41K41 Год назад +5

    I love it when my mom could get her hands on some. We used to work in the same building and she would steam em up for us to eat on the way to work or in the cafeteria. Perfect breakfast!

  • @ndd1232
    @ndd1232 Год назад +2

    Ube is very common in south India too. Especially in the state called kerela. Locals grow them in their yard. And it can also be bought from markets too. And it is consumed in many ways. It is known as "kachil" if I'm not wrong.

    • @kittenoutinspace
      @kittenoutinspace Год назад

      Although kachil is also a purple yam in India, it is still different from Philippines' ube purple yam. There are distinctions actually, from taste, color, texture, and size and shape of the yam itself. For one, kachil are rounder than ube, and are frequently in white to purple color. While authentic ube are more cylindrical and are in pale purple to deep purple.

  • @vjakx6590
    @vjakx6590 2 месяца назад +1

    Most Americans have never seen really yams. We are incorrectly taught red sweet potatoes are yams,

  • @starr.kiillerr
    @starr.kiillerr Месяц назад

    one of my favorite sweets as a child was ube daifuku, so this was very interesting to watch !! thank you 💕

  • @Cali_DetroitConnect
    @Cali_DetroitConnect Год назад +30

    I love Ube ice cream! I’m thinking of making ube cookies for my husband. We stumbled upon Ube out of one of our Boksu boxes and haven’t looked back since! 🎉🎉🎉🎉

    • @JCSAXON
      @JCSAXON Год назад

      I wanna try that ice cream!

    • @transcendent_9
      @transcendent_9 Год назад

      Try Ube cake too. It's the best. I didn't use icing on the cake. I used Ube jam. 😋

  • @taygang8068
    @taygang8068 Год назад +3

    Are yams and sweet potatoes not the same thing?😭

    • @sianais
      @sianais Год назад

      No, hun. Yams are more odd-shaped and bulbous in appearance, and can get freakishly huge. Their flesh is way easier to cut with a knife than a sweet potato, it's marbling is kinda like meat (even when it's white) and the texture is kinda slimy when raw and really light and fluffy when cooked. When digging them out you have to be careful and if you ever planted one of the damn things you'll constantly find random vines springing up in odd places.

  • @Mikedeela
    @Mikedeela Год назад +2

    If you’re getting home delivery, you are depending upon the shopper to know what he or she is doing. If they’ve been doing it for a while, they probably are pretty good at it, but everyone makes mistakes. This is a case of if you want it done right, you’re going to have to do it yourself.

  • @jessicaabranches7060
    @jessicaabranches7060 11 месяцев назад

    It also can be Postioness! Most stores WORLD WIDE don't know about this!

  • @pek5117
    @pek5117 Год назад +15

    Purple is my favourite colour and sweet potato is my favourite veggie so I always get purple sweet potato if I can get it. I roast them letting the natural sugars caramelize.

  • @Spacey7
    @Spacey7 Год назад +5

    Never even heard of Ube here in the UK. I'd love to try some purple yam or purple sweet potatoe 😊

  • @jaredpitchford2953
    @jaredpitchford2953 Год назад

    Your voice when trying to break the sweet potato is supper cute.

  • @clsemper
    @clsemper 2 месяца назад +1

    the states always calls sweet potatoes yams. not sure why. thankfully in the Caribbean and Asia we learned about our food at a young age, so we know what we're eating.

  • @milktea2422
    @milktea2422 Год назад +3

    Those purple Okinawa sweet potatoes are my favourite. Their sweetness and the colour is amazing. Honestly, I kinda hoped that Ube was like that before I learned that ube is kinda just an earthy bland root plant.
    Frfr tho, they’re more expensive than regular sweet potatoes but imo worth it.

    • @user-dg2jz1gi5s
      @user-dg2jz1gi5s 10 месяцев назад

      >ube us bland
      >purple sweet potatoes are sweet
      You have NEVER eaten real ube or even know sweet potatoes.
      The sweet variety of sweet potatoes are from the Philippines, they have white skin and orange meats. But even then, sweet potatoes are considered low quality and a stereotype for cheapness and often fed to pigs as fodder in the Philippines.
      And before you say that I don't know what I'm talking about, know that those "Okinawan" sweet potatoes came from the Philippines brought by ilocano and kapampangan immigrants to Hawaii along with Gabi(taro) and pineapples and almost all of the stereotyped Hawaiian farm plants you know today. Those Filipinos are the bulk of the immigrants who farmed there after all.
      There's a reason ube is so expensive compared to the more than 30 varieties of indeginous Sweet potato varieties here in the Philippines.

  • @wyntersteele1a
    @wyntersteele1a Год назад +3

    I think in one of her previous videos she stated that the Ube she cut open was going bad. Mold or something. So, how do you know what part of the yam is safe to eat?

  • @user-iv5ox3qn7p
    @user-iv5ox3qn7p Месяц назад

    You got me at the heugghhh 😂

  • @marialourdesgiannetta1253
    @marialourdesgiannetta1253 7 месяцев назад

    that’s true. same here in connecticut asian store

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Год назад +3

    You are right! They call sweet potatoes YAMS. But I did a search of Yams and they are generally larger with rough skin.
    Black Americans adopted Sweet Potatoes as it is similar to Sweet Potatoes. Yams, not Sweet Potatoes is native to Africa. It is not common in America. So they started calling Sweet Potatoes, Yams!

  • @evelynesophiaa5444
    @evelynesophiaa5444 Год назад +12

    Maybe go to an asian market/supermarket, not only east asian but all inclusive asian because ube is a staple in a lot of southeast asian countries. Here in Indonesia, ube isn't only purple but people only know purple ube because it's the most interesting color. There are lots of ubes here and we just call them purple ube, orange ube, yellow ube, or just the original ube which is white ish 👍

    • @g7enn89
      @g7enn89 Год назад +2

      Maybe those are other types of yams, but ube only ranges from dark to light purple, and taste different/unique from other yams.

    • @Alibadbad
      @Alibadbad Год назад

      And fact is ube is only found in the philippines

    • @ColoniaMurder20
      @ColoniaMurder20 11 месяцев назад

      that's not Ube.. we called it "Kamote" with different color here in the PH.

    • @cjnem7243
      @cjnem7243 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@ColoniaMurder20oo kamote yung ibat ibang colors sweet potatoes in english. Ang ube ay ube lang

  • @passerine7325
    @passerine7325 10 месяцев назад

    Ooof the way mchenry handled that gavel reminds me of me when I’m silently mad or when I use my slippers to slam down on a cockroach

  • @Detroitstarlight
    @Detroitstarlight Год назад +1

    Perception is more important than reality and sadly this is how most of the world works in all areas. I’m a pastry chef ( worked at restaurants and groceries)and I confronted and argued with management and corporate over false names and descriptions on a variety of products and they didn’t care . They basically said they are banking on the fact that people are stupid and don’t know things. This has been a similar view at both small independent places and large corporate businesses. The people that actually know and care are few.

  • @PrincessPineapple92
    @PrincessPineapple92 Год назад +4

    ❤❤❤ looks like an amethyst crystal! 🔮 I wanna try 😍

    • @djroguefireify
      @djroguefireify Год назад

      They are honestly so pretty fresh. Careful not to get stained though! 😄

  • @annettefujii7331
    @annettefujii7331 Год назад +7

    The cost is different so the store is scamming it’s patrons,

    • @troll1321
      @troll1321 Год назад +1

      ^-^ I work in a grocery store. The whole food distributor we work with actually lists it as Okinawan Purple Yam so that has always been what we listed it as. We have never referred to it as Ube and don't advertise it as Ube. When a customer comes and asks for Ube we will tell them we don't sell Ube.

    • @Spellbook
      @Spellbook Год назад

      @@troll1321 technically those are ube.

    • @troll1321
      @troll1321 Год назад

      @Spellcaster I don't even know anymore to be honest. Different suppliers list it as different things. Google is helpful sometimes but not always.

  • @-TetSui-
    @-TetSui- Месяц назад

    My Lola used to make halo halo with ube ice cream for me and it was really good

  • @Electrichead64
    @Electrichead64 Год назад

    Never seen it, and yes, we have looked, too. My wife still likes the purple sweet potato for other things but even that is seasonal. For real ube we have to buy it frozen in Houston where our nearest Filipino market is.

  • @noelibaysomera1978
    @noelibaysomera1978 Год назад +6

    Hi, I’m from the Philippines, we called that kamote; it’s called ube yam.
    Boil the purple potato then smashed it then you’ll have your ube yam.

    • @chellemirra7505
      @chellemirra7505 Год назад +7

      No. I live in the Phil and we never call ube as kamote. Ube is ube. We may have purple kamotes but never called ube as kamote.

    • @ragingtomato04
      @ragingtomato04 Год назад +2

      Who calls kamote, 'ube yam'? 😂

    • @romeocivilino6667
      @romeocivilino6667 Год назад +3

      ​@@ragingtomato04Yeah right😅, I think the right English term for Kamote is Sweet Potato.

  • @s4mEEeeE
    @s4mEEeeE Год назад +5

    This video was so confusing for me, because our family (Chinese) eats ube all the time, but we call it a purple yam just cause. I didn’t know there were actual purple sweet potatoes 😅

  • @marionetteproject508
    @marionetteproject508 Год назад

    im tongan, and the yam here is pretty similar, it's also purple on the outside and inside. They kinda get confused with purple sweet potato and purple yam

    • @ColoniaMurder20
      @ColoniaMurder20 11 месяцев назад

      Ube is native in the Philippines.

    • @marionetteproject508
      @marionetteproject508 11 месяцев назад

      @@ColoniaMurder20 bro I know. I was talking about the yam lol

  • @rosemaranan
    @rosemaranan Год назад +1

    Thanks for bringing this to everyone's attention ❤😊

  • @chubear8244
    @chubear8244 Год назад +15

    So satisfying to see this. I hate how us based influencers make ube content with purple sweet potato. Watching them share Ube information tidbits while showing/holding purple sweet potato makes my blood boil tbh

    • @lunarssecond
      @lunarssecond Год назад +3

      like i’m all for the facts but i’d just sit there going “sweet potato sweet potato” 😭. like come on y’all clearly did research for tidbits you couldn’t search what they looked like?

  • @Menuki
    @Menuki Год назад +9

    The ppl with the intrinsic and meticulous knowledge to differentiate the 2 aren’t the typ of ppl that would work as a personal shopper or in a fulfillment center.
    It’s the rough equivalent of asking a random stocker in a market

  • @user-vz8bq4lh3l
    @user-vz8bq4lh3l Год назад

    Ube is a type of purple yam a subspecies evolved to live in very hot dry climates so less juice and what is inside is very concentrated because it’s not watered down the colour the flavour everything but yes less sugar because sugar is made from photosynthesis the ube uses almost only photosynthesis to feed itself as there’s not a lot of water sweet potato stores the sugars. Some trees like maple store extra sugars into a syrup because they have to live in freezing temps and syrup doesn’t freeze so basically if you grew ube outside of its native lands or even in its native lands but without natural enviroments (with extra water) it becomes much more like a purple sweet potato. Imported versus locally grown is the basic difference

  • @ifemif2430
    @ifemif2430 Год назад +1

    Ube looks like cassava on the outside. As someone who loves cassava (yam) and doesn’t care for sweet potatoes I would have to agree with Jenelle, there’s a difference!

  • @score2high
    @score2high Год назад +3

    Mahalo for letting people know about the mistake that Asian grocery stores make calling the Okinawan sweet potato a purple yam. Ranch 99, County Market, and Oto come on, get it right!

  • @ging9019
    @ging9019 Год назад

    purple sweet potato is my favourite among the variations

  • @FreeThePickle
    @FreeThePickle Год назад +1

    Yeah, there’s a lot of false advertising/mislabeling of ube. It’s quite annoying

  • @NikiLivi5
    @NikiLivi5 Год назад

    We don’t have any of those things you showed. But I love trying new things.

  • @beingpallavi3272
    @beingpallavi3272 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for showing ❤

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube Год назад

    Reminds me of when I went to a grocery store in a small town near me looking for matzah. They had no idea what that was. That surprised me, as they have no issue with that in my neighborhood only about 20 minutes away.