Bruh ... As a MALAYSIAN myself it is CHEAP like for real .. Im BROKE too BUT ... in my defense and EVERYBODY who said Malaysia is so cheap ....it infact is cheap compared to OTHER COUNTRY .. if you go to lets say , Korea or Japan ... a PLATE of simple fried rice could cost you RM40 average while us here still got Fried Rice for RM8
@@mustafa_moja Same, initially i didn't know she's Malaysian until i stumbled upon her old stream fully dedicating of speaking MY/ID and then this stream
It's true. As a Malaysian myself, as soon as my foreign friends came after semester break and landed in Malaysia, the first thing I asked them if they already eat or not. They immediately know that I'm going to take them to Mamak and they always looking forward to it. 😂
@TetsuyukiClips Mamak and Warung are two different things. Mamak usually opens at the corner lot of a building and operated by Mamak ( Indian Muslim originated from Pulau Pinang). Warung is more like a roadside stall or a small scale restaurant operated by either Malay, Chinese or Indians.
@@MYusri-xk9re Here in Indonesia we have usual Warung and specific Warung for Nasi Padang (from people originates from Sumatra, who cook Nasi Padang) Was it something similar like that?
@@TetsuyukiClips Hmm... In terms of food, Mamak has variety of food but mostly focused on Penang-oriented food and Indian food like Roti Canai, Naan and many more. Stalls usually in small scale but has variety of food as well. Easy to say, think of Mamak as the upgraded version of stalls.
@@TetsuyukiClips True. Something that runs by the local with their own, authentic Malaysian style cooking. I prefer them than those expensive restaurants, because the food quantity is bigger, cheaper and authentic as stated.
Can relate to that, i'm no Malaysian myself but living here in ID i get those experience where those type of "street food" feels a lot more authenthic than expensive restaurant
id say it depends which state you live in....for example in Kuala Lumpur although you can find authentic malaysian food the price is usually expensive.. ... compare that in penang you can find authentic malaysian food that is cheaper than food in KL....and fun fact clean restaurant doesn't mean bad food
You're right, it doesn't always mean bad food. However, it's always... standardized? Like, I feel these restaurants' local foods taste the same. In those hawker stalls, there's always some variety in how they taste that makes them unique.
@@syahmiwafiy2675 gerai is street vendor or food stall. Basically an even smaller place that sells food and usually doesn't provide table and chairs. It's kinda like fast food or street food. They are everywhere in Malaysia. Edit: gerai and warung sometimes used interchangeably. They just means place that sells food in general.
You see with the food here...Expensive and cheap food taste equally good so....but its also true that food price doubled in the period of 5 years due to inflation
As a people living in Malaysia , Be aware of the food ...anything that forms like a Soup or watery food will have much much fats and mixed ingredients...It will make u feel addicted somehow...it's just.. stay well to your diet~😊😅
The kind found it a guy Emma, i was here living early time my country too. Perhaps is different state Sabah Culture. But is also Same as Malaysia those too! USA people does not know who she is, but then "Oh she was a Malaysian guy". However some point a lot people got riots spreading massing through all stuff, so people actually take shout taking support of it!
Wait, i never know shes a local lol. Cant believe this js my last short before going to bed Also, as a local myself...i used to eat kuah dal just like that, stuff is delish cant blame me
Haven't tried Roti Canai myself. Initially i assumed that people mostly pour Dall into the bread (only know from the pictures alone) but after hearing what Emma said, that sounds like "okay that one is unusual" I'm glad you're having fun experience XD
My home country which is crazy but RM500 is too much... I get RM100+ from my job every each day but I'm part time Also there is a RM9999 HIGH QUALITY TV BRUH
@@naimharith4948 True. Emma asal Malaysia, Miori asal America There are clips of Emma speaking MY/ID and buying chocolate from a store in Malaysia, and also a standalone stream of her speaking MY/ID
Foreigners: EVERYTHING IS SO CHEAP!
Me, a Malaysian: Yeah... Haha- So cheap... *Sobs*
Yeah... to tourists maybe.
Bruh ... As a MALAYSIAN myself it is CHEAP like for real .. Im BROKE too
BUT ... in my defense and EVERYBODY who said Malaysia is so cheap ....it infact is cheap compared to OTHER COUNTRY .. if you go to lets say , Korea or Japan ... a PLATE of simple fried rice could cost you RM40 average while us here still got Fried Rice for RM8
As a Singaporean: damn
I can relate, fellow Malaysian.
*Cries in weaker currency*
An English clip but her saying nasi lemak with the most Malaysian accent give me a chuckle
@@mustafa_moja
Same, initially i didn't know she's Malaysian until i stumbled upon her old stream fully dedicating of speaking MY/ID and then this stream
It's true. As a Malaysian myself, as soon as my foreign friends came after semester break and landed in Malaysia, the first thing I asked them if they already eat or not. They immediately know that I'm going to take them to Mamak and they always looking forward to it. 😂
@@MYusri-xk9re
I'm curious,
I saw Emma said that Mamak are different but what's the notable difference between that and Warung?
@TetsuyukiClips Mamak and Warung are two different things. Mamak usually opens at the corner lot of a building and operated by Mamak ( Indian Muslim originated from Pulau Pinang). Warung is more like a roadside stall or a small scale restaurant operated by either Malay, Chinese or Indians.
@@MYusri-xk9re
Here in Indonesia we have usual Warung and specific Warung for Nasi Padang (from people originates from Sumatra, who cook Nasi Padang) Was it something similar like that?
@@TetsuyukiClips Hmm... In terms of food, Mamak has variety of food but mostly focused on Penang-oriented food and Indian food like Roti Canai, Naan and many more. Stalls usually in small scale but has variety of food as well. Easy to say, think of Mamak as the upgraded version of stalls.
@@MYusri-xk9re
Ahh i see. Thank you for the insight
True Authentic experience to any county is to avoid the expensive restaurant / stuff
Any suburban place is the true experience you'll need
And sometimes, street food can give more authentic experience
@@TetsuyukiClips True. Something that runs by the local with their own, authentic Malaysian style cooking.
I prefer them than those expensive restaurants, because the food quantity is bigger, cheaper and authentic as stated.
Can confirm Malaysian food is delicious.
- From a citizen of a neighbouring country
As fellow citizen from neighbouring country, i'm really curious about Malaysian food XD
🤤🤤🤤
Tbh the whole region got banger food ngl. Proof is we all got each others food in our countries.😂
you can only get AUTHENTIC Malaysian food from street hawkers or dilapidated sheds, rather than overpriced, clean tiles, air-conditioned restaurant
Can relate to that, i'm no Malaysian myself but living here in ID i get those experience where those type of "street food" feels a lot more authenthic than expensive restaurant
id say it depends which state you live in....for example in Kuala Lumpur although you can find authentic malaysian food the price is usually expensive..
... compare that in penang you can find authentic malaysian food that is cheaper than food in KL....and fun fact clean restaurant doesn't mean bad food
@@freezerfridge7486 no one said that clean/expensive eateries mean bad food. the food they serve cost a lot for a reason
You're right, it doesn't always mean bad food. However, it's always... standardized? Like, I feel these restaurants' local foods taste the same. In those hawker stalls, there's always some variety in how they taste that makes them unique.
Warung in English is hawker stall kind of. Food shop but not big enough to be called restaurant.
Ahh thank you. I was confused on what terms i should put there on the video so i only wrote the definition about Warung
What is gerai?
@@syahmiwafiy2675
Probably food vendor / stall
@@syahmiwafiy2675 gerai is street vendor or food stall. Basically an even smaller place that sells food and usually doesn't provide table and chairs. It's kinda like fast food or street food. They are everywhere in Malaysia.
Edit: gerai and warung sometimes used interchangeably. They just means place that sells food in general.
0:18 That sound effect brought me nostalgia
@@utatan887
Haha i'm glad you noticed it
🇲🇾 let's goo🗿
Malaysia is only cheap if your currency is strong than MYR.
😊
Which as a Malaysian, a lot of East Asians can afford.
Malaysian food is at all levels the goat✊ -singaporean
Really thick dhall, especially the mamak style dhall is real delicious man
Mamak is very good, glad Emma showed miori how good it is. Always look forward to it
-love from Malaysia
@@alphateam3326
Thanks bro, and i'm glad that both of em were having a fun day together
Dayum, she's back to the roots.
-The one was there when Mio debuted-
Mamak is the best introduction to Malaysian food, and most of them are pretty cheap as well.
You see with the food here...Expensive and cheap food taste equally good so....but its also true that food price doubled in the period of 5 years due to inflation
You should voice record everything next time, hahahah that would be a wholesome!!
@@shuw2931
Hahaha thanks bro
I'll see what i can do
I almost never go out to eat, so even fast food is a treat.
Browsing those street vendors sounds like a fun day.
It does, sometime it make you feel like "ah yes, i expect this food is available on street vendors" to "huh, never heard of this"
As a people living in Malaysia , Be aware of the food ...anything that forms like a Soup or watery food will have much much fats and mixed ingredients...It will make u feel addicted somehow...it's just.. stay well to your diet~😊😅
@@IssRise
Dude you got me in the first half, not gonna lie
@TetsuyukiClips im sorry for that 😅😬
@@IssRise
Nah no prob, it's all cool 🤣🤣
@@TetsuyukiClips yeap..have a well month~
Dhal is delicious tho, relatable
There's a reason it's called the country that never stops eating.
Come back home
People eat dhaal like that for years XD
3:34 man I love Mio 😂
Man, I miss our Boss
@@BoB-13
Same comrade
And while she's on hiatus, i want to bring the usual joy through clips i've made about her
damn this is awesome
@@Yoshikage-Kira_75
Welcome aboard!
The kind found it a guy Emma, i was here living early time my country too. Perhaps is different state Sabah Culture. But is also Same as Malaysia those too!
USA people does not know who she is, but then "Oh she was a Malaysian guy". However some point a lot people got riots spreading massing through all stuff, so people actually take shout taking support of it!
btw noticed that Emma's voice really close to Kaela ww
Wait, i never know shes a local lol.
Cant believe this js my last short before going to bed
Also, as a local myself...i used to eat kuah dal just like that, stuff is delish cant blame me
Dhal and noodles , dhal and rice , dhal and porridge
@@benjamintan6750
Wait dhal and rice, will those mix really well?
@TetsuyukiClips i love dhalcha , so i liked it that way
Man i haven't seen her stream in a while
Hey, i also ate Dall just like that😂.... its good
Haven't tried Roti Canai myself. Initially i assumed that people mostly pour Dall into the bread (only know from the pictures alone) but after hearing what Emma said, that sounds like "okay that one is unusual"
I'm glad you're having fun experience XD
@@TetsuyukiClips theres 3 ways of eating roti canai. dip a little/completely into dhal/curry gravy, and pour gravy all over the roti canai
@@EricWulfe kuah asing or banjir. Pick one.
@@jadynakistrife9884 banjir for quick eaters, kuah asing for slow eaters
what's the restaurant name? I'm curious right now
That part. She didn't specify on her videos
She only said that it's some sort of street food or something
oh... I would just eat the dhall on it's own if I could, really the roti is just an excuse for me to eat a good dhall
I just don't wanna waste the excess. Don't waste good food y'all.
My home country which is crazy but RM500 is too much... I get RM100+ from my job every each day but I'm part time
Also there is a RM9999 HIGH QUALITY TV BRUH
you never eat dhal just like that??? it's good
Ohh Emma is Malaysian?
@@healme69420
Yup she's Malaysian, and in my previous clip she also talked about buying a chocolate from specific store in Malaysia
You can find clips of her speaking malay
Yes, actually found it. I was living in Sabah Malaysia's dude!
I don't know you Malaysian
Malaysia BOLEH
@@ahmadfadzirj
Me? Nah, i'm not Malaysian
I'm from Indonesia but thank you though!
Ehh dia ni asal Malaysia ker. Ingat kan Murikan tadi.
@@naimharith4948
True. Emma asal Malaysia, Miori asal America
There are clips of Emma speaking MY/ID and buying chocolate from a store in Malaysia, and also a standalone stream of her speaking MY/ID
@TetsuyukiClips oo aku ingat dia Indo .