And if you arrange the removed xylem in order of thickness and length, you can strike them with a hammer to produce a sound; this instrument is known as a xylemphone.
I've never tried rolling it with pressure as shown in the vid, but I do love to make a little crack from one side to the other and just peel it. I don't really believe this trick would work tho, since in all the carrots I've disassembled, the inner side has like little spikes like a cactus that go into the outer side. If you separate them too fast they break and look ugly, but if you do it slow and steady you can be left with the outer side full of wholes and the inner full of these little spikes
my favorite part of eating carrots as a kid was separating the outer part from the inner part and saving all the inner parts for last, like a dessert. it’s so much sweeter than the outside, it’s delicious!!
I wish, I always ate the outside of carrots first as a kid because I like the flavor and texture of the center more... Baby carrots would be 100x better if they were just the core lol
me too! i was searching for that comment! i used to do it very carefully trying not to break those little branches off of it. took forever to do. it tasted a lot sweeter than the outer layer as well... guess i was a weird kid 😂
the xylem and phloem are actually arranged together in little bundles around the outer edge, they look like little holes in this video. most of the carrot is made up of storage cells that store starch and sugar! (storage parenchyma) the xylem are like little straws that suck up water and that have nothing living inside them, and the phloem is a bunch of goo that transports sugar to all the storage spaces!
The middle part is the best man. I had no idea you could get it out though- I always just ate the outside until just the middle was left so I could enjoy the best for last
as an avid carrot eater, i cannot confirm the names or separation method, but i can confirn that carrots do have a weird core structure inside of them that is distinct from the rest of the carrot.
And the 'xylem' and 'phloem' part are true too, the difference is, that one brings water and nutrition to the leaves and the other one transports stuff in the other direction. This is the same in all kinds of 'roots', if you can call it that in English 😅
so you seperare it to 2 parts that practically taste the same and have the same texture. for any eating purpose you can seperate the carrot any other way but all you will get is pieces of carrot.
Once I was a kid I was eating a carrot and noticed that there are two separate parts I thought that the inner one would be sweeter so I first ate the outer one. When I started eating the inner part, it was less sweet as compared to the outer one. So, from then on, Whenever I used to eat these two parts of carrots separately, I would first eat the inner one (less sweet) and then the outer one (more sweet).
@@tumatauenga6433 Sometimes I eat the phloem off of carrots before the xylem. They do separate fairly easily, just not as easily as he does in the video.
Tumatauenga is correct! Plant species have xylem and phloem. The "nonsense" in this lil video is being able to seperate the two and remove "like a cork" (this is fairly obvious). The two make up the vascular system of the plant. They are like our veins and arteries, just with different rules. Xylem are tubular structures that allow water and nutrients to travel from the roots to the rest of the plant. The phloem is a living network that allows water and sugars (made from the photosynthesis taking place in the leaves, stems, etc) to move throughout the plant. Little extra for you: the portion of the carrot we eat, is a tap root. Not all plants have a tap root, but some (many trees and root veggies for example) do. It is, essentially, an anchor for the plant, then the roots can grow and branch out from it as the shoots grow from the top forming stems, leaves, reproductive systems, etc. Every thing we eat, whether a plant or animal, is just a piece of another creature. Potatoes are food storage nodules for their plant. All fruits are care packages for that plants offspring (and often the offspring, too). Beans are escape pods, containing the offspring. And on it goes... Weird to think about, huh? Life feeds on life feeds on life feeds on...
I'm an agricultural student at the university of Prussia in Uruk, and small caveat that this doesn't work with all carrots. Only big carrots have cells big enough to be ruptured in that way to separate the xylem and phloem. Otherwise with a small one, you'll just be jerking your carrot around all day without anything happening.
I used to chew around the outer layer of the carrot and try to leave the interior part intact just to see if I could. Never knew you could just roll it. The center is sweeter. 😊
why would it be false? edit: oh, i see, he probably just cut out the xylem from a different carrot and put it inside this one so it would be loose enough to actually be possible to slide out
First, they take the carrot seed and rub it against the grumbo to activate the schleem. The schleem is then repurposed to coat future carrot seeds. Next, they plant the schleemed seed in some dirt and do a ceremonial dance around it while chanting to the carrot gods. This allows the xylem to properly form as the sprout emerges - it's very important because the xylem is what delivers water up to the leaves for photosynthesis. A couple weeks later, a schlami shows up and rubs the tiny carrot tops while spitting a special enzyme juice on them. This enzyme helps the phloem develop properly to transport all the food the plant makes down to the root. As the carrot root grows, they have to constantly prune away any fleeb tendrils that try to wrap around it. If the fleeb gets its juice on the carrot, it's ruined. When it's full-sized, they cut off the greens and pull the whole carrot up, making sure no dinglebops are stuck to the phloem. Back in the day, every household had a xylem installed to display their freshly harvested carrots. Finally, the blamfs rub the carrot against some chumbles to polish it up nice and orange. And there you have it - a regular old carrot, ready to adorn your xylem!
The proper term for this is xylemdectomy. I had to do one only last week in the vegetable ER. A carrot was rushed in with an inflamed xylem. It was touch and go for a while but once the xylem was out we filled the hole with vitamin E and stitched his top back on and job done. For those wondering,he's doing well now and should be able to go home next week. He'll have to have to take vitamin E supplements every day for the rest of his life but he's just grateful to be alive. I love my job.
Doctor? We have a bruised banana that requires a peel in curtain 4. And that rotten tomato is back, saying he's full of seeds. You want me to call psych?
It's true. I remember in elementary when we got baby carrots as a midday snack and I'd take so long trying to separate the outside carrot from the "xylem" with my teeth. I always tried telling my friends about it but they never understood what I was doing. Glad to know I wasn't just a delusional child 🤣🤣
Yeah, i sometimes eat off the outside too, but rolling it to remove the uneven core im skeptical about. I cant imagine it sliding out unless you get a freaky smoth one.
@@cHAOs9 I get that. I only did that with baby carrots and with my teeth and it wasn't as easy as it seems here with a giant carrot. Most of the other information seems right though 😁
You know baby carrots are just carrots that were too ugly to sell in stores so they cut them into baby carrots. They don't grow like that and don't have xylems
Fun fact: the xylem is a vein that transports nutrients and water from the soul up to the leaves, while the phloem brings glucose and oxygen down to the roots of the plant.
He is, mostly, right. Xylem and phloem are really two parts of the vascular system of most all plants. Of course, you can't remove the inner portion of the carrot, quite the same as he shows, but essentially this video is made up of more than half truths. 😊 Not an idiot, and your gut/instincts were on point!
My dad was a semi driver. I used to stay in his truck on weekends and summers while he drove. We stocked up on snacks before his shift and big carrots were always a staple. He always said the middle of the carrot is the best, but you have to eat the outside first to get to it. He was right, the inside is much sweeter and pleasant to eat...but I thought he was trying to trick me into eating carrots and succeeded.
My mom used to cut the crust off my bread in sandwiches. One day, I asked her why I couldn’t whistle loudly like my dad and brother could. She said it’s because I don’t eat the bread crusts. So from then on I ate them for months…after 6 months, I complained that I still couldn’t whistle like them, and she told me it was a joke…🥺
Xylem is the tissue that takes water and nutrients from root to rest of the plant and phloem is the tissue that transports glucose and oxygen from leaves to the rest of the plant. The real cool thing is that most of it is done without any moving parts or effort. Like the water flow in the xylem exists due to osmosis pressure. Water is lost at the leaves causing low pressure and moist soil has higher pressure, so the water moves up gradually ❤
This reminds me of my childhood days when I would eat the outer bit first and then the inner just to see if there was any difference in taste or texture. It was always satisfying to get an inner bit removed smoothly because it was so cool to see how the two attached
For some unknown reason eating raw carrots became a bit of a craze at my school. Everyone had brown paper bags with a kilo of loose, raw carrots in. The local corner shop must've wondered what the hell was going on! Anyway... It was discovered that you could nibble the outer layer off leaving a pristine, inner carrot behind. If you nibble with just the right pressure you get an inner core much neater than yours. You seem to have ripped off the small branches that join the two layers. It lasted maybe a month & as is the way with all fads it stopped as abruptly as it arrived. I remember seeing the guy in the corner shop scratching his head looking at a back room stacked high with sacks of carrots he couldn't sell, poor bloke! It must've been 1978 or 79. Very strange times! 🥕🥕🥕🥕
Cool story 😂 I’m proud to be one of the maybe 40 people that read it 👍 I got a carrot story when I was in kindergarten my bitch ass teachers wouldn’t let us have water when we were on a field trip and were running I saved and snacked on the carrots from lunch for some hydration 😂 Unrelated but they would also drag “bad” students to the principles office or lock you in a room 💀 they were awful people
Carrots feel the most pain out of all the vegetables. If you want to be completely ethical about your diet, eat goldfish. No, not the goldfish crackers. No, not the infamous super villain from the Mike Meyers film "Austin Powers: Goldfish". I mean literal goldfish - you can usually source them from carnival games or your neighbor's decorative koi pond. Goldfish only have an attention span of 5 seconds, which means by the time you've put them in your mouth and swallowed them whole: they've already forgotten what the outside world is, and that they once knew a life that wasnt the inside of your stomach.
I used to do this as a kid. I'd eat the bit in the middle because it's really sweet, and I'd give the outside to my dog, which he loved! He'd follow me around waiting for it 😂
Playing with my food as a child allowed me to figure this out at an early age. I loved the sweeter taste from the centre! EDIT because I just woke up to carrot core corps comments and you've all made my day, I love my carrot core people
YES!! its so fun to separate them using tiny bites and when it separates a big chunk its so satisfying!! i knew i wasnt insane for thinking the "core" was sweeter lol
i remember when i was younger i would purposefully eat the outer layer cause i figured out there was a better tasting “carrot” on the inside that i could eat afterwards
Theres not that much space, but you could split it to make it a ”boat” and if that’s not good enough you could carce the inside and use it for another food but give me some credit if this becomes famous😂😂
The inner part is not "core", it' called stele. And it indeed has xylem tissue in it, as well as the phloem. So the outer circle is not phloem but parenchymal ground tissue called cortex. Cortex has less supporting polymers in its cell walls, that's why it's less crunchy.
@@searchingforasecret nobody cares about you. Your parents wanted to have an abortion because your mom didn’t swallow that day. He dad wouldn’t let her tho.
Botanical student here. For those wondering what the xylem and phloem are, they are basically the "veins" inside the parts of the plant. For a tree, the xylem will push the raw sap from the roots up to the top of the tree, whilst the phloem will pull it back down to the roots after it transforms into tree sap in the leaves. In the carrots case, the xylem will push the nutrients up to the leaves, and then the phloem will pull it back down and grow the carrot in size
@@alexehlke707 Of course. The transformer at the top changes 600 volt sap into 24 volt. For a tree it hardens into wood glue, which is spread around the solid inner trunk making it larger. The veins for the raw sap are constantly being pushed and shoved outwards during the growing season. If they get hurt, they are expelled to the outside and become more tree bark. Now for carrots it's completely different. The little pale orange lines around the outside result from a closely guarded secret, known only to master carrot spirit devas.
its half true, get a carrot and gently nibble around and u can lever off the outside and see the core. As a kid id do that till all i had was the core and it has a bunch of spiky bits lol. Id then eeat the core its like a reward. Big end to small end cause small end is the best
You are slightly off with your plant anatomy here. This is first year uni biology stuff, at least where I go. It is actually the endodermis that separates the cortex of the carrot from the central area, called the stele, it in the stele that you find the vascular tissue (xylem and phloem) the endodermis has a waxy lining to restrict movement to the stele from the cortex (thats why you can seperate the parts). If a carrot were a shoot, and had secondary thickening though, you would be right. As, in gymnosperm and dicots secondary thickening occures in the procambium between the xylem and phloem, thus somewhat giving them seperate parts, but this does not occure the same way in roots, due to roots not having the same kind of vascular bundle structure. 😊 Cool vid though.
Yup, I thought I was bugging out when watching this, because the xylem and the phloem are supposed to be right next to each other not surrounding it, but the actual phloem is microscopic in view in order to be seen clearly
When I was a kid my nickname was “Baby Carrot” because I used to pull the core from the carrot… to me it tasted the sweetest. Thank you for sharing this, good memories.
Don't do that! I saw a lady on 1000 Ways To Die, that died from a "hair," fiber on a unpeeled carrot going in to her bloodstream or something. Just buy a real freaking toy. They make inexpensive ones.
First they take the dinglepop, and they smooth it out with a bunch of schleem. The schleem is then repurposed for later batches. They take the dinglebop and push it through the krumbo, where the fleeb is rubbed against it. It's important that the fleeb is rubbed, because the fleeb has all of the fleeb juice. Then a schlomi shows up, and rubs it, and spits on it. They cut the fleeb. There are several hizzards in the way. The blamphs rub against the trumbles, and the plubus and grumbo are shaved away. That leaves you with a regular old plumbus.
A lot of people don't know that the vegetables and the fruits that you eat usually look like the organ that the vegetable or fruit benefits. 😊 like carrots have vitamin A which the body uses for Eye Health grapes look like the lungs they're good for your lungs and so forth, mushrooms are good for the ear. And of course all of these are good for a lot of other things in the body too Amaze your friends with knowledge 😊
After you have removed the xylem bore a hole in the side at the bottom and you have an excellent "Chillum" substitute for smoking hash with friends. I trick I learned 55 years ago, and haven't used since... If you have a lot of friends, use a large parsnip...
I love this middle part! It's so sweet. I use to bite off outside and leave only full middle part to enjoy it!!! We had amazing childhood without gadgets!❤
@@lizoliver6193who mentioned electronics? She (3195) said gadgets. But since you brought up electronics, Kids nowadays, they don’t know how to use their imagination anymore because all parents do is shove electronics in their faces to hush them up🤦🏻♀️ As kids we already knew this carrot trick, but instead of rolling it, we used to tap it on the table until the inside loosened up we used to pull it out and shove peanut butter in it. Then we freeze the carrot and our mom used to take it out of the freezer and cut them into a little circles and we’d have peanut butter stuffed carrots. ✌🏼
I noticed this as a teenager in cooking class so the teacher used it as a teachable moment for everyone to learn about it. I had chosen a carrot where it was starting to dry a bit and there was a clear "inner carrot" when I cut the top off. Very cool to learn all these interesting things about our food!
I love carrots, when i was about 12 my parents thought i had some liver problem because because my eyes and skin took on a yellow tone, it turned out it wasn't jaundice it was carotenemia because i was eating too many carrots, anyway all this to say I'm quite familiar with carrots, and i can assure you this isn't true. Which is disappointing because both the core and main flesh of a carrot have distinctly different flavours both are fantastic but the option to eat them one at a time without the hassle that it actually separating them would be a game changer.
And if you arrange the removed xylem in order of thickness and length, you can strike them with a hammer to produce a sound; this instrument is known as a xylemphone.
👌
you mean the xylemphloem?
I can't not read this in his voice
😂😂😂😂😂
@@gramwra *applauds*
The urge to actually try this is tempered by the fact that nothing this guy says can ever be trusted, like those damn eggs....
i know that its totes possible to get the inside part to kinda separate from the rest; but im prty sure ya cant do that without destroyin the outside
Right what happened? We need answers
I've never tried rolling it with pressure as shown in the vid, but I do love to make a little crack from one side to the other and just peel it. I don't really believe this trick would work tho, since in all the carrots I've disassembled, the inner side has like little spikes like a cactus that go into the outer side. If you separate them too fast they break and look ugly, but if you do it slow and steady you can be left with the outer side full of wholes and the inner full of these little spikes
I'm still waiting with bated breath to hear what happened. It's like waiting 3 years to see Sherlock again or something 😅
I used to eat the phloem away from the xylem.
my favorite part of eating carrots as a kid was separating the outer part from the inner part and saving all the inner parts for last, like a dessert. it’s so much sweeter than the outside, it’s delicious!!
🤨🤨
Omg same! I did that too
The inner part is difficult to digest hence should not be eaten raw🙏
I still do this. I'm 39.
@@kroguegaming8891why am i being weirdchamped what part abt this was sus
I’ve said it a hundred times before, this man’s editing skills are extraterrestrial.
What??
dude, thats not even editing, its just a cut
Dude the vídeo is Just mid. Chill
i can’t tell what’s real anymore
Welcome to internet
You and me both now I’m going to buy a carrot just to have something to believe in
I mean the inner/outer bit is real, I always eat carrots by eating off the outer layer first
@@janpipiko wut
Google says its real
This is how baby carrots are born.
I know this is a joke but i know by experience that there is Xylem inside baby carrots.
honestly, i think the reality of a carrot lathe shaping baby carrots is more ridiculous.
I wish, I always ate the outside of carrots first as a kid because I like the flavor and texture of the center more... Baby carrots would be 100x better if they were just the core lol
Wait so then where does baby corn come from
Nah that's when you put the xylem back in and wait
I used to always eat around the outer layer as a kid because the middle looked interesting. Didn’t know they were actually separate parts.
Lol
me too! i was searching for that comment!
i used to do it very carefully trying not to break those little branches off of it. took forever to do. it tasted a lot sweeter than the outer layer as well... guess i was a weird kid 😂
Same
I did the same
Bro so fr me too
the xylem and phloem are actually arranged together in little bundles around the outer edge, they look like little holes in this video. most of the carrot is made up of storage cells that store starch and sugar! (storage parenchyma) the xylem are like little straws that suck up water and that have nothing living inside them, and the phloem is a bunch of goo that transports sugar to all the storage spaces!
Nibbling the carrot until it was just the rod in the middle was the shit
Bro I thought it was just me!
Buggs?
That’s what she said
Childhood memory unlocked
fr
"How's your carrot want to be?"
"Boneless"
Nice
why do I find this actually funny😂 thank you
How is your carrot want to be,nice english 😂
😂😂😂😂 best comment
O
Instructions unclear. Carrot broke his neck.
The middle part is the best man. I had no idea you could get it out though- I always just ate the outside until just the middle was left so I could enjoy the best for last
"Every carrot has a secret. And that secret, is more carrot."
Underrated comment, well played~nyan😂🦁🦁
@@princeleo6776what the cat femboy be saying after he took them apart:
@@TylerTMG what about us puppy femboys 😢
@@Nawmps *headpats and scitches*
This hack helped me to replace a faulty xylem in my second edition carrot. Thanks!
😂😂
Most underrated comment.
😂UNDERRATED!
@@RealSheepShoop or a one inch carrot.
Top comment
😳😳😳 I did not know this. I love carrots - raw, cooked, juiced.. thanks for the heads up my man 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
This is like Nature played a James Bond move on the carrot, all this time.
as an avid carrot eater, i cannot confirm the names or separation method, but i can confirn that carrots do have a weird core structure inside of them that is distinct from the rest of the carrot.
It tastes sweeter too
And if my memory serves, it has spikey things too.
How many carrots have you eaten today?
And the 'xylem' and 'phloem' part are true too, the difference is, that one brings water and nutrition to the leaves and the other one transports stuff in the other direction. This is the same in all kinds of 'roots', if you can call it that in English 😅
so you seperare it to 2 parts that practically taste the same and have the same texture. for any eating purpose you can seperate the carrot any other way but all you will get is pieces of carrot.
Imagining folks rolling and rerolling carrots on their counters trying to do this makes me smile.
Damn your life sounds absolutely miserable
"WHY ISNT IT WORKING?!!!" 😳😡
Why? You just sound annoying, and like you have a really sad life
It does work tho 🤨
You sound sad
Once I was a kid I was eating a carrot and noticed that there are two separate parts I thought that the inner one would be sweeter so I first ate the outer one. When I started eating the inner part, it was less sweet as compared to the outer one. So, from then on, Whenever I used to eat these two parts of carrots separately, I would first eat the inner one (less sweet) and then the outer one (more sweet).
This was a lot more distressing than I thought it would be 😂
I know it's nonsense, but I still buy it for some reason
Because it's steeped in half truths the carrot really is made up of 2 main parts known as the xylem and the phloem
@@tumatauenga6433 Sometimes I eat the phloem off of carrots before the xylem. They do separate fairly easily, just not as easily as he does in the video.
@@donnytrapnell5780it really is a fun way to eat carrots, two parts also taste different
@@donnytrapnell5780true, the xylem is sweeter
Tumatauenga is correct!
Plant species have xylem and phloem. The "nonsense" in this lil video is being able to seperate the two and remove "like a cork" (this is fairly obvious). The two make up the vascular system of the plant. They are like our veins and arteries, just with different rules. Xylem are tubular structures that allow water and nutrients to travel from the roots to the rest of the plant. The phloem is a living network that allows water and sugars (made from the photosynthesis taking place in the leaves, stems, etc) to move throughout the plant.
Little extra for you: the portion of the carrot we eat, is a tap root. Not all plants have a tap root, but some (many trees and root veggies for example) do. It is, essentially, an anchor for the plant, then the roots can grow and branch out from it as the shoots grow from the top forming stems, leaves, reproductive systems, etc. Every thing we eat, whether a plant or animal, is just a piece of another creature. Potatoes are food storage nodules for their plant. All fruits are care packages for that plants offspring (and often the offspring, too). Beans are escape pods, containing the offspring. And on it goes...
Weird to think about, huh? Life feeds on life feeds on life feeds on...
I'm an agricultural student at the university of Prussia in Uruk, and small caveat that this doesn't work with all carrots. Only big carrots have cells big enough to be ruptured in that way to separate the xylem and phloem. Otherwise with a small one, you'll just be jerking your carrot around all day without anything happening.
I’m sure some people might jerk their carrots all day, for (you know) the science.😳🤣
What if your carrot is slightly smaller than average but really looks average and might even be considered big in another country/culture?
I hate it when that happens.
Story of my life...
ayyyy someone who plays ace attorney
On the the more important facts:
I tried it and the outside is better, the inside isn’t as crunchy
The xylem allows water and nutrients to travel up to the leaves, and is also known as a carroted artery.
This is so underrated.
I used to chew around the outer layer of the carrot and try to leave the interior part intact just to see if I could. Never knew you could just roll it. The center is sweeter. 😊
ID DO THE SAMEE
SAME 😭
😅@@Yutaaaaaa
Me too
all of you might have adhd, just saying :D
My brain says this is false but my heart knows it's true.
why would it be false?
edit: oh, i see, he probably just cut out the xylem from a different carrot and put it inside this one so it would be loose enough to actually be possible to slide out
😂😂😂😂
Yea its true I’ve done it before by just shaking a small carrot bag
It's actually opposite, think again😅
@@priyanshupatel233 its real dont just spout off bs
Surprisingly this can actually work with a cooked carrot
First, they take the carrot seed and rub it against the grumbo to activate the schleem. The schleem is then repurposed to coat future carrot seeds.
Next, they plant the schleemed seed in some dirt and do a ceremonial dance around it while chanting to the carrot gods. This allows the xylem to properly form as the sprout emerges - it's very important because the xylem is what delivers water up to the leaves for photosynthesis.
A couple weeks later, a schlami shows up and rubs the tiny carrot tops while spitting a special enzyme juice on them. This enzyme helps the phloem develop properly to transport all the food the plant makes down to the root.
As the carrot root grows, they have to constantly prune away any fleeb tendrils that try to wrap around it. If the fleeb gets its juice on the carrot, it's ruined.
When it's full-sized, they cut off the greens and pull the whole carrot up, making sure no dinglebops are stuck to the phloem. Back in the day, every household had a xylem installed to display their freshly harvested carrots.
Finally, the blamfs rub the carrot against some chumbles to polish it up nice and orange. And there you have it - a regular old carrot, ready to adorn your xylem!
I always wondered how Æh- carrots got made.
Wait, so a plumbus is a carrot?
underrated
@@mzmendy*astronaut meme*
Always has been.
Rick and Morty reference
The proper term for this is xylemdectomy.
I had to do one only last week in the vegetable ER. A carrot was rushed in with an inflamed xylem. It was touch and go for a while but once the xylem was out we filled the hole with vitamin E and stitched his top back on and job done. For those wondering,he's doing well now and should be able to go home next week.
He'll have to have to take vitamin E supplements every day for the rest of his life but he's just grateful to be alive.
I love my job.
Godbless your beautiful soul! 🫡
Oh godbless you honey, you saved that carrots life ! /j
Doctor? We have a bruised banana that requires a peel in curtain 4. And that rotten tomato is back, saying he's full of seeds. You want me to call psych?
@@roddo1955 Yes sir, but the asparagus is back complaining about itchy head, he needs a shave
I just got diagnosed with a rare disease. This comment made my day 🥰
I always knew this and I loved eating that part in the middle as a kid, it was sweeter!
I beloved this for wayyy too long 😭
My parents were so confused lmao
I'm waiting for the carrot update to come out so I no longer need to remove the Xylem myself.
You're waiting for the DLC too😱
Hopefully they don’t paywall it like they did the seedless grapes update…
I like some Phloem with my Xylem..
Jeez that feels so double entendre 😮😊
@@timofaucette1087 gotta gamble for the DLC.. but they "don't approve of minors gambling" either.. 😂
If you use vpn you can get it for free, they removed the paywall in some areas of the world@@elixygaming
It's true. I remember in elementary when we got baby carrots as a midday snack and I'd take so long trying to separate the outside carrot from the "xylem" with my teeth. I always tried telling my friends about it but they never understood what I was doing. Glad to know I wasn't just a delusional child 🤣🤣
So now you're just a delusional adult cool
Yeah, i sometimes eat off the outside too, but rolling it to remove the uneven core im skeptical about. I cant imagine it sliding out unless you get a freaky smoth one.
Nah, they were just dumb
@@cHAOs9 I get that. I only did that with baby carrots and with my teeth and it wasn't as easy as it seems here with a giant carrot. Most of the other information seems right though 😁
You know baby carrots are just carrots that were too ugly to sell in stores so they cut them into baby carrots. They don't grow like that and don't have xylems
The homie unlocked carrot skeleton 💀
Fun fact: the xylem is a vein that transports nutrients and water from the soul up to the leaves, while the phloem brings glucose and oxygen down to the roots of the plant.
I believed it, then I thought I was an idiot for believing it. I then googled and now I don’t know what reality is anymore
He is, mostly, right. Xylem and phloem are really two parts of the vascular system of most all plants. Of course, you can't remove the inner portion of the carrot, quite the same as he shows, but essentially this video is made up of more than half truths. 😊
Not an idiot, and your gut/instincts were on point!
Thing is, I *have* had them separate...on slices of a cooked carrot. So now I can't quite entirely disbelieve you couldn't manage it on a raw carrot.
@@rolmodel12.you can do exactly what he did in the video, done it many time, works better with big carrots.
You have to very firm with the carrots or they'll run amok!
@@MillillioN Growing carrots need boundaries. It's a healthy thing.
My dad was a semi driver. I used to stay in his truck on weekends and summers while he drove. We stocked up on snacks before his shift and big carrots were always a staple. He always said the middle of the carrot is the best, but you have to eat the outside first to get to it. He was right, the inside is much sweeter and pleasant to eat...but I thought he was trying to trick me into eating carrots and succeeded.
That's a nice story😊
My mom used to cut the crust off my bread in sandwiches. One day, I asked her why I couldn’t whistle loudly like my dad and brother could. She said it’s because I don’t eat the bread crusts. So from then on I ate them for months…after 6 months, I complained that I still couldn’t whistle like them, and she told me it was a joke…🥺
😂
You missed explaining the part of how this applies to any of our lives
And then what?
Inner Core ❌
Inner Medulla ✅
Aren't you the guy who lied to us about the avocado pit having more avocado in it?
Xylem is the tissue that takes water and nutrients from root to rest of the plant and phloem is the tissue that transports glucose and oxygen from leaves to the rest of the plant.
The real cool thing is that most of it is done without any moving parts or effort.
Like the water flow in the xylem exists due to osmosis pressure. Water is lost at the leaves causing low pressure and moist soil has higher pressure, so the water moves up gradually ❤
finally someone who understans Botany!
The ingenuity of evolution in nature!
I was half expecting someone to explain transportation in plant before me. And I'm glad it's a brown person.
@@vinadevdutt4542 our desi minds be thinking the same lmaoo
It’s also an inactive or dead tissue!
This reminds me of my childhood days when I would eat the outer bit first and then the inner just to see if there was any difference in taste or texture. It was always satisfying to get an inner bit removed smoothly because it was so cool to see how the two attached
Same
I just wrote the same comment few sec ago
@@letalgame64 hahaha, glad to see there are so many with this shared memory
YESSSSS
The inner core was more juicy
This feels like a tutorial on how to make a Plumbus
Ah, the carrot bone.
Why does this sound like an interdimensional cable cooking show lmao.
came here to say this
I always wondered how plumbusses got made
Hahaha my thought exactly. Vegan plumbus
The weirdest part is xylem and phloem are actual terms that you learn in your first year of college for botany
You beat me to it 😂😂😂
For some unknown reason eating raw carrots became a bit of a craze at my school. Everyone had brown paper bags with a kilo of loose, raw carrots in.
The local corner shop must've wondered what the hell was going on! Anyway...
It was discovered that you could nibble the outer layer off leaving a pristine, inner carrot behind. If you nibble with just the right pressure you get an inner core much neater than yours. You seem to have ripped off the small branches that join the two layers.
It lasted maybe a month & as is the way with all fads it stopped as abruptly as it arrived.
I remember seeing the guy in the corner shop scratching his head looking at a back room stacked high with sacks of carrots he couldn't sell, poor bloke!
It must've been 1978 or 79. Very strange times! 🥕🥕🥕🥕
i used to eat the outside first them the inside
Lololol we did this in school too
bugs bunny has that effect on young people
Cool story 😂 I’m proud to be one of the maybe 40 people that read it 👍 I got a carrot story when I was in kindergarten my bitch ass teachers wouldn’t let us have water when we were on a field trip and were running I saved and snacked on the carrots from lunch for some hydration 😂 Unrelated but they would also drag “bad” students to the principles office or lock you in a room 💀 they were awful people
@@graysonmichael8335pretty sure this was it. It was when I started school like 15 years later
YSAC's vids are the best!!❤
We learn every day! Seen the core but never thought about rolling the carrot.
i showed this to my brother and hes been at it for an hour now.
this is the funniest thing ive done all week.
😂😂😂
I'm gonna need an update on this week's Sibling Shenanigans, please and thank you 🤔😂
Thank you, this is so useful for everyday life. I don't know how I went 23 years without this level of knowledge
😂😂😂
😅
I've never knew what they were called, but I've discovered this as a young child. The inner part is sweeter and more tender
A lot of people don't realize a carrot has the same basic structure of most plants?
I believe it. I know I shouldn't believe anything he says, but I do.
bruh just go yoink a carrot and try it out, they're way easier to steal than sweetrolls
It is mostly true. And the core is sweeter than the outer layer.
It is mostly true. But it is impossible to remove inner core by rolling it like he showed
The inside is called the soul of the carrot.Actually if you are vegan you should not eat carrots.
You can always eat the Phloem which has no soul, it's what the redheads are made of.
Solution: don't be vegan.
Carrots feel the most pain out of all the vegetables.
If you want to be completely ethical about your diet, eat goldfish. No, not the goldfish crackers. No, not the infamous super villain from the Mike Meyers film "Austin Powers: Goldfish". I mean literal goldfish - you can usually source them from carnival games or your neighbor's decorative koi pond. Goldfish only have an attention span of 5 seconds, which means by the time you've put them in your mouth and swallowed them whole: they've already forgotten what the outside world is, and that they once knew a life that wasnt the inside of your stomach.
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Strangerbut the 5 second thing isn't true :(
Just cause it’s called that doesn’t make it true
I used to do this as a kid. I'd eat the bit in the middle because it's really sweet, and I'd give the outside to my dog, which he loved! He'd follow me around waiting for it 😂
This can be a useful culinary technique. Thanks
Playing with my food as a child allowed me to figure this out at an early age. I loved the sweeter taste from the centre!
EDIT because I just woke up to carrot core corps comments and you've all made my day, I love my carrot core people
That's me. I used to love eating the outside first and the sweet core at the end.
YES!! its so fun to separate them using tiny bites and when it separates a big chunk its so satisfying!! i knew i wasnt insane for thinking the "core" was sweeter lol
YAY IM NOT THE ONLY ONE
SAME I’d eat the outer shell first then the sweet inner one. I thought everyone knew this
I was EXACTLY going to write this down! So true!!
i remember when i was younger i would purposefully eat the outer layer cause i figured out there was a better tasting “carrot” on the inside that i could eat afterwards
Same, the inner part tastes really good!
Same here 😅
Can confirm.
Extra spitty nibbled on inner carrot 🤢
Me too, save the best for last.
Giving me flashbacks to GCSE Biology.
“I’ll Take The Uh Boneless Carrot Please”
WE MAKING STUFFED CARROTS WITH THIS ONE 🔥🔥🔥
That was my first thought, but what would you use?
@@KarlTFaceCarrots.
@@KarlTFace hummus
Mashed potatoes and left over roast ❤😂
Theres not that much space, but you could split it to make it a ”boat”
and if that’s not good enough you could carce the inside and use it for another food
but give me some credit if this becomes famous😂😂
"Anyways, that how I lost my vegetable license!"
😂😂😂😂🎉
Am I the only one who eats carrots, starting with biting the shell off, then eating the core 😂😂 I've been doing this my whole life.
YESS this just unlocked a memory of me eating around the core as a kid so that I could be left with the middle piece to eat last 😂
I guess my grocery store only sells xylems
Aka baby carrots! Ur not wron!
The inner part is not "core", it' called stele. And it indeed has xylem tissue in it, as well as the phloem. So the outer circle is not phloem but parenchymal ground tissue called cortex. Cortex has less supporting polymers in its cell walls, that's why it's less crunchy.
Go create your own content. Byeeeee!
Thank you
@@searchingforasecret nobody cares about you. Your parents wanted to have an abortion because your mom didn’t swallow that day. He dad wouldn’t let her tho.
I thought the same cause that is not how xylem and phloem works
@@searchingforasecreti don’t care anything about you or your rudeness fkoffrightnow.
As a kid, I loved carrots. I’d eat the outer layer saving the inside for last. No electronics back in the day so this was entertaining. Lol😅
I was today years old when I learned carrots wear buttplugs
Botanical student here. For those wondering what the xylem and phloem are, they are basically the "veins" inside the parts of the plant. For a tree, the xylem will push the raw sap from the roots up to the top of the tree, whilst the phloem will pull it back down to the roots after it transforms into tree sap in the leaves.
In the carrots case, the xylem will push the nutrients up to the leaves, and then the phloem will pull it back down and grow the carrot in size
Are they different besides directionally
@@alexehlke707
Of course. The transformer at the top changes 600 volt sap into 24 volt. For a tree it hardens into wood glue, which is spread around the solid inner trunk making it larger. The veins for the raw sap are constantly being pushed and shoved outwards during the growing season. If they get hurt, they are expelled to the outside and become more tree bark.
Now for carrots it's completely different. The little pale orange lines around the outside result from a closely guarded secret, known only to master carrot spirit devas.
The real question is, did the trick actually work?
For a second I was confused and amazed, then I remembered what channel I was watching 😂
its half true, get a carrot and gently nibble around and u can lever off the outside and see the core. As a kid id do that till all i had was the core and it has a bunch of spiky bits lol. Id then eeat the core its like a reward. Big end to small end cause small end is the best
I also was confused and interested, then realized the channel, but now I'm still just confused
So a lot of people don't know you can actually just eat the carrot😂
4 hours into RUclips shorts and here I am. I think it's bedtime.
You are slightly off with your plant anatomy here. This is first year uni biology stuff, at least where I go. It is actually the endodermis that separates the cortex of the carrot from the central area, called the stele, it in the stele that you find the vascular tissue (xylem and phloem) the endodermis has a waxy lining to restrict movement to the stele from the cortex (thats why you can seperate the parts). If a carrot were a shoot, and had secondary thickening though, you would be right. As, in gymnosperm and dicots secondary thickening occures in the procambium between the xylem and phloem, thus somewhat giving them seperate parts, but this does not occure the same way in roots, due to roots not having the same kind of vascular bundle structure. 😊
Cool vid though.
Heh??
I didnt understand much besides this video is like 50 percent BS and I definitely appreciate the information.. I have a lot of words to Google now.
Ok, I had no clue this guy did satire, but I'll leave up my comment cos its informative on plant anatomy and why the stele *actually* can be seperated
@@carrotiesyt I didn't mean anything rude by my comment, basically that I didn't understand the guys video but your comment actually helped.
Yup, I thought I was bugging out when watching this, because the xylem and the phloem are supposed to be right next to each other not surrounding it, but the actual phloem is microscopic in view in order to be seen clearly
When I was a kid my nickname was “Baby Carrot” because I used to pull the core from the carrot… to me it tasted the sweetest. Thank you for sharing this, good memories.
no you didn't
@@obnoxiouspedanthe did, i was the one to give him said nickname
@@bizzarz6302 no you didn't
I have that same cutting board, my son made it for me in shop class when he was in high school! I've been using it for 28 years now!!
This guy is a great storyteller
If it didn’t work for you, you are not rolling long enough. Keep doing it!
And if it still doesn’t happen, you need better pictures to look at that stimulates you!
Instruction unclear : my carrot is now flat
You really gonna make me go buy a damn carrot ? 🥕
This hits hard after having a biology test lmao
I knew that only because I ate it like a scientist dissecting something when I was younger lol
This is why it's more versatile to have a carrot instead of a cucumber on your nightstand.
I hope that what I think you meant is wrong, since I know I'm dirty minded. Please tell me I'm wrong.
@xanathar4246 you're goddamn right
I'm sure you're on point! 😅@xanathar4246 carrots make great dil.s
Don't do that! I saw a lady on 1000 Ways To Die, that died from a "hair," fiber on a unpeeled carrot going in to her bloodstream or something. Just buy a real freaking toy. They make inexpensive ones.
@@gabrieladerre2862I remember this oddy enough, and it was an edge being too sharp. God that show had some gruesome ways in it.
First they take the dinglepop, and they smooth it out with a bunch of schleem. The schleem is then repurposed for later batches. They take the dinglebop and push it through the krumbo, where the fleeb is rubbed against it. It's important that the fleeb is rubbed, because the fleeb has all of the fleeb juice. Then a schlomi shows up, and rubs it, and spits on it. They cut the fleeb. There are several hizzards in the way. The blamphs rub against the trumbles, and the plubus and grumbo are shaved away. That leaves you with a regular old plumbus.
I always wanted to know how plumbus' were made.
Everyone has a plumbus in their home
Is this a politician's explanation of how to win an election?
@@dexterpoindexter3583 no it's rick and morty
@@hollokutya1315😂😂😂 @ Ricky and Morty
The fact that i am going to forget this in a few hours unintentionally 😂
This is the most believable one yet
The best part of this is when he says why this is important.
The inner part tastes bad 😊
information is important only if you give it importance
Easy diy fleshlight.
@@hamucatno it’s sweeter apparently
@@I_cReAtE_and_YoU_hAtE It's both, depending on the carrot. in some, the inside is yuck, in others, its sweet.
THANK you. This is so much easier than trying to eat just the outside part. This is so much more satisfying
A lot of people don't know that the vegetables and the fruits that you eat usually look like the organ that the vegetable or fruit benefits. 😊 like carrots have vitamin A which the body uses for Eye Health grapes look like the lungs they're good for your lungs and so forth, mushrooms are good for the ear. And of course all of these are good for a lot of other things in the body too Amaze your friends with knowledge 😊
I didn't realize I had these parts 😂
I recognized that voice immediately and just started laughing.
Fun fact: *The Xylem is the sweest part that gives carrot it's sweetness.*
Both parts are kinda sweet. The core is just a little more sweet.
The inner core is so sweet!
After you have removed the xylem bore a hole in the side at the bottom and you have an excellent "Chillum" substitute for smoking hash with friends. I trick I learned 55 years ago, and haven't used since... If you have a lot of friends, use a large parsnip...
I love this middle part! It's so sweet. I use to bite off outside and leave only full middle part to enjoy it!!! We had amazing childhood without gadgets!❤
What does this have to do with electronics?
@@lizoliver6193your childhood
@@lizoliver6193who mentioned electronics? She (3195) said gadgets. But since you brought up electronics, Kids nowadays, they don’t know how to use their imagination anymore because all parents do is shove electronics in their faces to hush them up🤦🏻♀️ As kids we already knew this carrot trick, but instead of rolling it, we used to tap it on the table until the inside loosened up we used to pull it out and shove peanut butter in it. Then we freeze the carrot and our mom used to take it out of the freezer and cut them into a little circles and we’d have peanut butter stuffed carrots. ✌🏼
I noticed this as a teenager in cooking class so the teacher used it as a teachable moment for everyone to learn about it. I had chosen a carrot where it was starting to dry a bit and there was a clear "inner carrot" when I cut the top off. Very cool to learn all these interesting things about our food!
The xylem is also the sweetest part! When I was a kid I always ate the phloem first, just like my big sister taught me to, lol!
can't wait for this to show up on a lifehack article/video list
I spent so much as a child using my teeth to separate the parts 😂
The core is the best bit. I still eat around it and save it till last. It's so much sweeter. I'm going to be a sucker for this hack.
Let’s all appreciate the time this man took to peel that carrot core
Oooooo when I make stuffed carrots! This is very helpful! Alhumdulillah
I love carrots, when i was about 12 my parents thought i had some liver problem because because my eyes and skin took on a yellow tone, it turned out it wasn't jaundice it was carotenemia because i was eating too many carrots, anyway all this to say I'm quite familiar with carrots, and i can assure you this isn't true. Which is disappointing because both the core and main flesh of a carrot have distinctly different flavours both are fantastic but the option to eat them one at a time without the hassle that it actually separating them would be a game changer.