Are My Sashimi And Raw Fish Safe To Eat? | Talking Point | Full Episode

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  • Опубликовано: 26 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 458

  • @themacker894
    @themacker894 Год назад +396

    Steven is the best host you have, and he's quite hilarious. I also think it's funny that your team gives him the worst assignments - be a Grab driver for a day, climb around in people's dirty spaces to discover dangerous water heaters, try renting a car for a month during the rainy season, "Here Steven. See if this fish is okay to eat." :) Edit: You guys need to pay him more. He's driving the oldest car on the road by far.

    • @madamcuriouss
      @madamcuriouss Год назад +19

      exactly exactly as a viewer myself i can confirm how sadistic we are watching poor steven being a guinea pig haha

    • @Cinimod105
      @Cinimod105 Год назад +6

      Not sure if pun intended (being a parasite “host”) 😂😂😂😂

    • @naan000
      @naan000 Год назад +2

      He's like a guinea pig istg 😭

    • @faithzzzzzzz
      @faithzzzzzzz Год назад +4

      He is indeed one of my limited favourite too. All the best, Mr Steven.

    • @richardchak696
      @richardchak696 Год назад +2

      In my younger days during the early 60s tapeworms were common parasites found in kids from that era. Most of us will have taken some medication where by you go to the toilet like having diarrhoea where by you past out stools, where by we will past out long worms. Tapeworms infection was common may be that why in 60s most of the kids were skinny.😂😂😂

  • @dooms8870
    @dooms8870 Год назад +15

    Thats why i always eat cooked food, You cant expect every handler/worker at every occasion to be able to detect the bad sashimi that ends up in your plate.

  • @alanlovebeer7952
    @alanlovebeer7952 Год назад +40

    Dear steven, had seen you once in supermarket....can feel u r a down to Earth kind of person.....hope yr employer treat u well...lastly really enjoy yr program 👍😁

  • @hahaharithz
    @hahaharithz Год назад +55

    These CNAInsider videos really remind me of the Canadian CBC News Investigative Journalism bits that I love to watch ever so often. So thankful to have highly applicable localised content that is of the same nature here in Singapore. And to have a host like Steven, WOW

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Год назад

      Lies again? Suzuki Car Soccer Club

    • @sekar9901
      @sekar9901 Год назад +1

      CBC Marketplace?

    • @SkeeeTDepp
      @SkeeeTDepp Год назад

      ​@@sekar9901 😅ñmmmmmmmmm, 2:11

    • @theinquisitor7191
      @theinquisitor7191 Год назад

      Eat sushi and you may say "Tenoheka Banzai" 🥲

  • @a.l6135
    @a.l6135 Год назад +17

    Steven is informative and entertaining. Amazing Steven! ✨💯

  • @hilaryb8807
    @hilaryb8807 Год назад +55

    In Canada, health code requirements are that sashimi is frozen before consumption. Sushi is very popular here, and I’ve never heard of anyone getting parasites from it.

    • @cdnsilverdaddy
      @cdnsilverdaddy Год назад +11

      because they do not have the same quality of those in Japan. In Canada, most Japanese restaurants are Korean owned...

    • @Layjun
      @Layjun Год назад

      I remember reading about someone going to the hospital once in the news a few years ago (in Canada). The article mentioned it was the first time it ever happened

    • @f.s.monster3765
      @f.s.monster3765 Год назад

      You can be infected without knowing where it came from.

    • @moniquewrites9046
      @moniquewrites9046 Год назад +6

      @@cdnsilverdaddyI think they’re saying the freezing process is mandated by the Canadian government which HELPS kill parasites which is a good thing imo. Even in Japan I would not eat raw meat.

    • @beethao9380
      @beethao9380 Год назад +2

      keyword is "heard." Person with same mentality as, "hunger doesn't exist because I've never been hungry."

  • @eliseww13
    @eliseww13 Год назад +9

    Steven Chia is the best host in SG. Thank you for your contribution Steven -- all your programs are highly informative and fun! We need to protect national treasures like Steven! :)

  • @ShirtPapa
    @ShirtPapa Год назад +65

    Steven, u deserve a bonus for all these hard work. Been enjoying contents u hosted.

  • @fc7307
    @fc7307 Год назад +29

    I am a simple person. I see Steven I click. I see Steven eating I click 2x fast.

  • @ezracerez920
    @ezracerez920 Год назад +24

    I totally avoided the mentioned sushi takeaway store and its restaurants after I gotten serious food poisoning after consuming their food. It took me weeks to fully recover from diarrhoea.
    Now I goes to those reputable sushi outlets for my sushi fix.

    • @z.h.2216
      @z.h.2216 Год назад +1

      What's the mentioned sushi takeaway store?

    • @ezracerez920
      @ezracerez920 Год назад

      Can tell based on the packaging

    • @pludgooey9331
      @pludgooey9331 Год назад

      Which is that? Ex**ess?

    • @lingth
      @lingth Год назад +2

      @@z.h.2216 Woman finds parasitic worm in sashimi rice bowl from Don Don Donki. 'We may not be able to remove them': Don Don Donki puts up sign warning customers of worms in sashimi

    • @lingth
      @lingth Год назад +3

      Salmon #8 is from a budget joint, eeks.. i usually dun trust budget sushi outlets for raw stuff, maybe can eat their cooked items. but frankly if sashimi is what you love. go for a place which is more reputable and even if its cost more, its probably worth it.

  • @brucelee5576
    @brucelee5576 Год назад +5

    Fish must be freeze below 31 F for 24 hours before consuming raw .
    In the US it’s not a recommendation it’s the law.

  • @andytoh-toh6488
    @andytoh-toh6488 Год назад +4

    Another great video from CNA. i enjoyed watching Steven hosting style and his vintage Merc!

  • @jim.pearsall
    @jim.pearsall Год назад +26

    Mebendazole 100 mg tablets (6 doses) are available at 7-Eleven in Thailand if you suspect you might need to de-worm after eating raw seafood.

    • @jim.pearsall
      @jim.pearsall Год назад +3

      The cost for a pack of 6 tablets is only ฿35 (or almost US$1). Besides the name of the over-the-counter medication and pictures of 5 types of worms, there is no English, so here are the instructions: 1) for round worms - 1 dose (1 tablet); and 2) for other types of worms - 6 doses over 3 days (1 tablet every 12 hours), with a follow-up 7th dose 2 weeks later (I guess in case of eggs). 👍🏻

    • @evildude2135
      @evildude2135 9 месяцев назад

      @@jim.pearsallThanks this is good info

  • @SuperSushidog
    @SuperSushidog 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm a retired sushi chef. I would always cure my salmon with salt and then vinegar in addition to freezing it at zero degrees F for at least 72 hours. If in doubt, ask your chef what precautions he takes. If he's hesitant to say or doesn't know, I would not be comfortable eating there. This is sushi 101. A good rule of thumb is that if the sashimi or sushi is significantly cheaper than the going rate in the area, there is a reason. They are either using an inferior grade of fish or their chefs are not properly trained and supervised, and they are cutting corners. High quality fish is expensive, and so are skilled, experienced sushi chefs. There's no guarantee that expensive sushi will be safe, but I can guarantee you that it's unlikely that super cheap sushi will be. You pay your money and take your chances.

  • @Kkhhuw5xz
    @Kkhhuw5xz Год назад +6

    Love watching this reporter, very well presented.

  • @kakaboom55
    @kakaboom55 Год назад +9

    At 7:00 the inspection team actually touches the coolbox exterior edges that came straight from the airport then molests the fishs.. yucks..

  • @123blah543
    @123blah543 Год назад +12

    Steven is a National treasure

  • @rhot2012
    @rhot2012 Год назад +18

    Interesting topic. I have read that the Japanese typically did not use local Pacific salmon for sashimi because it is prone to parasites. The Japanese began using Norwegian farm raised salmon because Norway promoted it and farmed raised salmon is parasite free.

    • @Der_Kleine_Mann
      @Der_Kleine_Mann Год назад +4

      I wouldn't be to sure about them actually being parasite-free, since I once watched a documentary about this specific norwegian farmed Salmon.

    • @trentbateman
      @trentbateman 7 месяцев назад +1

      @qweqwe9678that’s just green propaganda. Fish farms are a great compromise to overfishing and are healthy choice

  • @coffeetimewithchloe
    @coffeetimewithchloe Год назад +1

    Thank you for making the video. Very good content!! And the host were very well presented. Looking fwd to seeing more such good content.

  • @popcorn6931
    @popcorn6931 Год назад +37

    How can Singapore claim stringent standards when some vendors don't even deep freeze their sashimi?

    • @tanhql
      @tanhql Год назад +13

      Japan even more so, Japanese chef put freshness of the fish over everything else, they may faint if they are told they have to deep freeze their fish.

    • @jamesmichaeljean7840
      @jamesmichaeljean7840 Год назад +12

      Sushi is a scam. It's how a business man sell you uncooked food and charge you 4x the price for it.

    • @tanhql
      @tanhql Год назад +9

      @@jamesmichaeljean7840 Same goes for salad, and that's just uncooked vegetables.

    • @TubersAndPotatoes
      @TubersAndPotatoes Год назад +6

      ​@@tanhql I thought larger Japanese fishing vessels (especially Tuna) deep freeze their catch on board.

    • @RonLarhz
      @RonLarhz Год назад

      THIS!!!!!!
      Should make those who dont want to deep freeze do similar process as the one that got interviewed.
      The sushi chef talk n saliva flying....nv wear mask!!!!

  • @ahse0w
    @ahse0w Год назад +4

    Why wasn't the one with listeria not named? Quite dangerous right?

  • @hotspotzk
    @hotspotzk Год назад +2

    anisakis is pretty common for wild fish and mostly harmless but you will get bad stomachache, if you put your fish in the freezer for hours or days the anisakis will die by itself and safely to consume.

  • @yo2trader539
    @yo2trader539 Год назад +9

    If you want real Sushi in Singapore, go to ones owned/operated by Japanese Chefs. They usually fly their fishes directly from Japan.

  • @denverlambino6738
    @denverlambino6738 Год назад +5

    Here in Philippines we also eat raw fish we mix it with salt, vinegar & lemon/calamansi it's called kinilaw.

    • @Plainejan
      @Plainejan Год назад

      much safer

    • @idontknowwhatimdoinghere
      @idontknowwhatimdoinghere Год назад

      As a Filipino, I have never tried this before. I wanna try it now after ‘hearing’ about this from this comment - does anyone know any restaurants that serve it? If so, where are they?

    • @ivanyu3930
      @ivanyu3930 Год назад

      What about this? I reckon these guys may be getting a bunch of parasites. ruclips.net/video/kUUhbmsgxKw/видео.html

  • @aspiringmodernistchef
    @aspiringmodernistchef Год назад +1

    So here's the thing. Unless you like dry cardboard fish cooked to a core temperature of at least 63°C for 15 seconds to kill parasites, eating fish cooked to optimal textures like in high end restaurants require a much much lower temperature in the low 40°C. For example, salmon cooked at 43°C results in a very soft and buttery texture but at that temperature, bacteria grows the fastest and parasites don't die. So unless you like dry cardboard fish which is how most people cook their fish to (yucks), you might as well eat the fish raw. Therefore, the advice is really just get the freshest fish you can and eat it at whatever temperature you like. As such, deep freezing should actually be made mandatory instead of just a guideline; and if it's just a guideline, can we say SFA is strict?

  • @logical_evidence
    @logical_evidence Год назад +1

    You need to worm yourself regularly if you have dogs, cats in your house or family members. I had mine few days ago and make the whole family take the tabs. It’s something I’ve grown up with my mum did it when I was younger.

  • @rickastleysmicrophone7544
    @rickastleysmicrophone7544 Год назад +4

    Informative as always, Steven!

  • @Xynic48
    @Xynic48 Год назад +2

    This is nothing new. Even in Japan, this happens often. People who eat sushi regularly are known to have more parasites than the average person.

  • @Bagellatte
    @Bagellatte Год назад +2

    i have not eaten any raw food since many years ago for fear of the bacteria that grows in my stomach especially since i am a nurse.more so in our humid singapore weather bacteria can grow worms and parasites. my husband is a Korean and they are known to eat raw food but they eat deworming medi every half a year to deworm the stomach. since then we don’t eat anymore raw sashimis… 😅 no more!

  • @robw1927
    @robw1927 Год назад +10

    the wormy sahimi comes from a welll known japanese thrift shop. They can sell cheap because they source cheaply. I've been told that cheap farm fish are raised in polluted water and parasitic infection is normal when fish is reared in closely packed cages and bad sanitation. Next thing to worry about is the uncontrolled antibiotics used to kill parasites.

    • @YXL36
      @YXL36 Год назад

      It's antiparasitic agents that is used to kill parasites.. antibiotics are meant for bacteria only. Is ironic how the Singaporean stringent FDA will allow some companies to import farmed fish kept at only 4 degrees while their guideline recommended otherwise

    • @twlamSG
      @twlamSG Год назад +4

      You mean the worm found in Don Don Donki? Those sashimi is from wild salmon. So it is well know that those sashimi will have worms. And Don Don Donki is not a thrift shop, their stuff is not cheap.

  • @C.u.d.s
    @C.u.d.s Год назад +8

    Almost all tuna is deep frozen. So I don’t know what he means by different texture. The problem is usually defrosting and then refreshing again.

    • @Vivace1810
      @Vivace1810 Год назад +1

      yeah, I am wondering the same thing

    • @dd-dd2co
      @dd-dd2co Год назад +7

      Just a BS excuse these retailers like Re&S in this video gives to skip deep freezing.

  • @animeminagaming
    @animeminagaming Год назад +5

    If the results of these food tests that Steve’s bought from various stores turned out to be bad, will the affected shop be penalize/flagged?

  • @WineCaviar
    @WineCaviar Год назад +14

    Mr Steve Chia, Greetings & we watch this documentary investigation yesterday. Its a good informative documentary. Would like to pose the question of possible benefits (if any) of accompanying meals with moderate consumption of alcoholic beverages - if these may serve as a protection defence. We learnt that in Medieval Europe, wines were often accompanying meals (given that then water purification techniques were not as available & accessible) - leading to impression that wine was a "safe" beverage & "must have" with meals.. In Japanese culture - most Japanese would pair sushi, sashimi with sake (or beer). In Korean cuisines, beer &/or shochu. In mainland China, rice wine (or beer or grape wines too these days) - been an accompaniment with meals. Was wondering if there may be a latter investigation in this area. Of course, consuming alcoholic beverages in moderation are what are recommended & perceived "beneficial".

  • @daneurope9167
    @daneurope9167 Год назад +2

    in europe all sushi restaurant must have a freezer with killer parasite temperature or else closure ..

  • @kc-st
    @kc-st Год назад +3

    Steve's talking point is one of my favorite shows these days.

  • @jonlim555
    @jonlim555 Год назад +3

    Can you please reveal the 2 sources that had dirty salmon, pm me pls.

  • @gmohney
    @gmohney 8 месяцев назад

    Super informative thank you!!!

  • @siripornchartpanich4170
    @siripornchartpanich4170 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for this very informative and useful video.

  • @muhamedd
    @muhamedd 9 месяцев назад

    This is informative and takes away the fear of eating raw fish and getting sick

  • @elilo5867
    @elilo5867 Год назад +6

    The correct way to eat sashimi is to check every slice of fish under a microscope . Be sure to bring a unit when you go to japanese restaurants

  • @Theoryofcatsndogs
    @Theoryofcatsndogs Год назад +8

    I don't usually eat raw salmon because it is known to have parasites. Salmon is born in fresh water and move to sea to grow. That means it will live in fresh water, and fresh water fish is common to have parasites. That is why Japanese usually eat cook salmon and until recently they rare eat it in sushi/sashimi.

  • @glovesem8204
    @glovesem8204 Год назад +4

    why didnt SFA take any action against Don Don Donki ?

  • @raynmaker
    @raynmaker Год назад +1

    steven is my favorite guy on cna :)

  • @IamME-h5w
    @IamME-h5w 4 месяца назад

    While many people say only wild salmon should be frozen for 10 days, fresh or farmed, mine goes in the freezer. Never had an issue.

  • @TheKoeko
    @TheKoeko Год назад +1

    Weather, handling issues. Better take worm removal medicine in regular basis if you are raw meat eater

  • @trickedouttech321
    @trickedouttech321 7 месяцев назад +1

    Sashimi is only as safe as the chef if they spot parasites the chef must throw it out. Tapeworms are also commonplace in fish, so the supplier and chef must be honest.

  • @the3rdid485
    @the3rdid485 Год назад +1

    So basically the fact that I'm making my own sushi out of frozen farm raised fish turns out to be a good thing lol

  • @bingebinge3722
    @bingebinge3722 Год назад +1

    Checking the firmness and freshness of the fish meat does nothing for checking the parasites. Parasites can live very happily in a live fish body, and a fish can live reasonably happily with parasites in them. Think about it...

  • @w8ngr
    @w8ngr Год назад +14

    Surely the Japanese have something the international community can do

    • @vietnamesebeauties
      @vietnamesebeauties Год назад +7

      My father say the Japanese secret is to drink sake while eating raw fish.

    • @lobstershrimp
      @lobstershrimp Год назад +6

      Submerge in wasabi or as my father (80) has always done... fresh grated ginger with vinegar which is my favorite.

    • @YXL36
      @YXL36 Год назад +1

      ​@@vietnamesebeauties there's no secret... I'm not surprised that there are cases of infected patients who dined in Japanese fine dining restaurants in Japan

    • @MrLanternland
      @MrLanternland 5 месяцев назад

      I've heard that before and i USED to do it - drink liquor with raw fish. I will start doing it again.

  • @jakekatelin
    @jakekatelin Год назад +2

    So meaning that next time I eat sashimi, I have to practice roti prada style first?

  • @lightchaser2k6
    @lightchaser2k6 Год назад +4

    lol....1stly salmon isnt a staple fish source from Japan, its Norway actually.
    But for it to be sent, its always or mostly deep-frozen, except for the farmed salmons which we have locally.
    2nd, most food in Singapore are taken for granted 'good' and 'well-regulated' but its actually not.
    Cos if its a real regulation, it should applies to all companies nationwide, not leaving out any.
    Thus this is also why we got so many issues in this small country.

  • @nathanlam9884
    @nathanlam9884 Год назад +1

    Thats the one fish i don't eat is farmed salmon. I had it at sushi train and ended up in hospital for a few days! I aways make sure i check my fish when making raw fish plus i catch them myself i dont trust the shops

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Год назад +2

    Don’t buy gas station sashimi

  • @jk71192
    @jk71192 Год назад

    Love the cna insider documentary program

  • @pohun
    @pohun Год назад +2

    So where is sample 8 and 11 from ?

  • @yackawaytube
    @yackawaytube Год назад

    Such high standard of food processing is not found anywhere in America. In fact, the food industry actively fights any attempt by government to introduce safer standards.

  • @DarkWizardPrince
    @DarkWizardPrince 10 месяцев назад

    I learned a lot from this video. Thanks.

  • @beethao9380
    @beethao9380 Год назад +1

    Thumbs down for drinking the koolaid thinking popularity equals creditability.

  • @iseeflowers
    @iseeflowers Год назад +1

    I have seen worms in salmons bought in stores before 🤢. But we never eat it raw, always cook it.

  • @gzSING
    @gzSING Год назад +1

    Never buy raw fish online and delivery. The delivery process itself on your grabfood etc on a bicycle through the streets to your doorstep it's perfect for bacteria and larva to hatch. Eat it fresh from a restaurant where it's prepared and sent to your table immediately for consumption.

  • @jiweili1242
    @jiweili1242 Год назад +6

    This is reassuring for sashimi lover like myself. Thank you😊

  • @vietnamesebeauties
    @vietnamesebeauties Год назад +7

    Unbelievable that even in developed Singapore, sashimi has worms at times. I can't imagine the ones sold in my country, Vietnam 😢😢 guess I am giving up eating raw fish 😢😢

  • @VernonSim
    @VernonSim Год назад

    Marie, its "the", not "thee". (before words which begin with consonants)

  • @bstaznkid4lyfe392
    @bstaznkid4lyfe392 Год назад +1

    Once I find a parasite on my fish, I'll throw it away..

  • @AlanSmith88888
    @AlanSmith88888 Год назад +4

    great. I just bought a sushi platter from supermarket and ate it without checking for worms lol

    • @iseeflowers
      @iseeflowers Год назад +2

      Got to be careful. I found worms in salmons several times from biggest wholesales retailer in the US(not want to name it here).

    • @MrLanternland
      @MrLanternland 5 месяцев назад

      Name it!

  • @eastcoastsailingcenter7768
    @eastcoastsailingcenter7768 Год назад

    awesome episode !

  • @joesr31
    @joesr31 Год назад +1

    2/15 isn't very good odds tbh, kinda thought none would be positive

  • @democrazy9546
    @democrazy9546 Год назад

    Chinese already started eating raw finish 鱼生 since Qin 秦 dynasty ~200 BC... but most Chinese provinces not eating raw fish anymore since our ancestors know the danger of eating raw fish... Chinese cuisine is one of the best in the world with so many varieties... but Japanese on the other hand... since they lack resources, many ingredients and spices their cuisine is quite basic and sushi sashimi are good examples since these food rely on the original taste of the seafood... same holds for Korea as well...

  • @Amybnuy
    @Amybnuy 7 дней назад

    I wonder how they stored your samples until they were tested etc

  • @jerryji
    @jerryji Год назад

    "Like flat pasta" -- Right, down to the color.

  • @prometheus36999
    @prometheus36999 Год назад +16

    i'm here to watch steven chia eat salmon for 30 days to see if he kena parasite.

    • @dolan-duk
      @dolan-duk Год назад +1

      I wish my workplace would sponsor me 30 days of sashimi "for work reasons".

    • @Steven.Chia.Singapore
      @Steven.Chia.Singapore Год назад +2

      somehow I'm not sure if that was a compliment or if you were actually hoping that I "kena!" 😆

    • @Player-fg4ub
      @Player-fg4ub Месяц назад

      @@dolan-duk thats actually not as safe as mercury poisoning can be fatal

  • @rontheoracle
    @rontheoracle Год назад

    Of course these sashimi are safe to eat. Because, even if they are contaminated, their prices overshadow the root of the issue.

  • @tommybulyan
    @tommybulyan Год назад +1

    i dont like eat raw fish, even raw vegetable i don't like it.. too many bacteria and parasite around..

  • @austingode
    @austingode Год назад +3

    Eating that farm salmon 🍣 is more dangerous than the bacteria 🦠

  • @beese2559
    @beese2559 3 месяца назад

    was the sound effect necessary after steve ate the sushi

  • @yvonwheel4943
    @yvonwheel4943 Год назад +1

    What about micro plastic that you can't see?

  • @Tommashelbyeee
    @Tommashelbyeee Год назад +2

    another solution is, be a vegetarian. if you think you can be safe by eating meat, think twice and look at past historial disease/infection data

  • @mrx-yc9vn
    @mrx-yc9vn Год назад

    Have you informed relevant authority for the sample which didn't pass test?

  • @mellow-jello
    @mellow-jello Год назад

    Stick to eating sushi & sashimi at restaurants, and right away when served to you. Worse ways for food borne illness is delivery, as it could be sitting in room temps in the restaurant, and improperly carried by delivery drivers.

  • @JS-ev4xc
    @JS-ev4xc Год назад +1

    Just put it in freezer then consume it. I like raw salmon but not a die-hard fan, actually cooked salmon is better.

  • @GHC3
    @GHC3 Год назад +1

    Even though only 1/15 did not pass, the statistixal chances of getting sick from eating sushi is 1/7, that is is why i am staying away from it. I have family that love it and with alcohol like sake. The last two times i ate it at this particular resarurant they have been gkibg to for around 20 years now, really upset my stomach and had loud, painful gastrointestinal issyes, inckyding bloating and diarherra🤮

  • @Cglkk12
    @Cglkk12 Год назад

    As long as it need to queue, it feel good.
    As long as it is cheap, it feel super good.
    As long as it's free, it feel super, super great.

  • @testusersg
    @testusersg Год назад +1

    How did the parasite survive the stomach acid if consumed by human?

  • @OLDMANTEA
    @OLDMANTEA Год назад

    Fish will always have parasites. Fish wholesalers have light tables to remove them from large fillets. Freeze your raw fish prior to consumption.

  • @Lololol555x
    @Lololol555x Год назад +15

    This is a love hate episode, love it caz informative but now I'm more fearful of eating my favorite sashimi already 😅

    • @ooXChrissieXoo
      @ooXChrissieXoo Год назад +3

      definitely avoid small or budget friendly choices. Small restaurants usually don't have the proper equipment to handle their food, especially raw.

    • @RonLarhz
      @RonLarhz Год назад

      I would say avoid the chain start with U.....
      Their sushi quality is worse than 争鲜....imho...

    • @Frivals
      @Frivals Год назад

      They must be forced to deep freeze fish

  • @kingseiryu929
    @kingseiryu929 Год назад +1

    Steven always putting himself at risk - will my water heater blow up, will i die from eating raw sashimi haha. Steven the daredevil

  • @thomaslau2362
    @thomaslau2362 Год назад

    Good content.... SfA allows for early identification and intervention.

  • @danielyeung7765
    @danielyeung7765 Год назад

    Very very good 👍👍👍

  • @monkeyguy80
    @monkeyguy80 Год назад

    Nice Vid 🍣🙂👍🏼

  • @zendude123
    @zendude123 Год назад +7

    I will literally never look at sashimi and sushi the same again 🤢🍣

  • @firstlast5296
    @firstlast5296 Год назад +3

    Budget food chain package should be ntuc or don donki

    • @Lololol555x
      @Lololol555x Год назад +1

      Nope that is under supermarket

  • @princevaliant
    @princevaliant Год назад

    Interesting to know which budget joint sell contaminated sushi... They so get frequent visits by NEA/SFA.

  • @AllSpace
    @AllSpace Год назад +1

    dont care for what ever seafood...Cant beat a Grilled Medium rare Rump Steak!

  • @lowwastehighmelanin
    @lowwastehighmelanin Год назад

    Where are the auto-captions????

  • @MyleVinat
    @MyleVinat Год назад +1

    Yikes. Sneaky sushi indeed.

  • @heythave
    @heythave Год назад

    No, of course not.

  • @JanBanJoovi-ol1qv
    @JanBanJoovi-ol1qv Год назад

    Oh my God, now I can’t take it off my mind. I don’t know if I could still eat sashimi. I love sashimi but now, I don’t know if I could still eat it.

  • @stocktradinglive510
    @stocktradinglive510 Год назад +5

    US & Japan have regulations on raw fish.... it has to be sashimi grade.. which means frozen below a certain temperature for 7 days.....when you eat raw seafood at chinese or thai places... there is a risk as the seafood is fresh not frozen

    • @maria-wu7us
      @maria-wu7us Год назад

      Sushi grade is just a marketing term in the U.S. Just like in Singapore, I believe that the FDA regulations for freezing to kill parasites is just a guideline at the federal level. Not law. It depends on the state and city. In NY for example, it is law. Farm raised fish does not have to be frozen because regulations in the U.S. mandate that feed must be parasite free (although i have only seen this confirmed by another youtuber). And from what I've read, there is even less regulation in Japan, freezing is not something they even recommend. It's up to the suppliers of fish. The thing is that based on data, ( the U.S. doesn’t have much and still references Japan) infection rate is very low. It is likely that most places use farm raised fish anyway. Regardless, in the U.S. i would not recommend getting cheap sushi from the gas station like you might do in Japan. People don't usually do that. People either buy their fish or go to restaurants.

  • @Chris-rs4so
    @Chris-rs4so Год назад +2

    Nice car steve

  • @hahahuhu9828
    @hahahuhu9828 Год назад +2

    salmon was not traditional sushi ingredient.
    Tuna is the traditional sushi ingredient
    Norwegian succeeded to convince Japan to accept farmed salmon
    Salmon in pacific Ocean was famously parasitic.
    It is different to farmed salmon which are lived in controlled environment
    1 of 15 samples is a big number. imagine it is a big number from 15000 will make 1000 fail. that 1000 can upset 1000 people