Thank you all for a fun & rewarding 2022. There is already a lot of cool stuff in the works for 2023 ✊ Here are some of the links I mentioned during this video: 🌶Newsletter Sign up - www.ethanchlebowski.com/newsletter 🌳Community Interest Form - forms.gle/19FnsYAe7igdnqtE7
@alanmartin67082 жыл бұрын
Try grillong techniques for chicken, fish & beef.
@Peanutfry2 жыл бұрын
Hey can please try to look into lesser known cuisines from smaller countries? Also maybe more local dishes of known cuisines? It would be super unique!!!
@Wannabewhookosmember2 жыл бұрын
Glad to have you with us in the new year! Thanks for the fun and informative videos. My favorite stuff this year has easily been the deep dive and food science stuff. Like testing to see if San Marzano's are really worth the price, or they types of flour and which is best. They are fascinating and I really enjoy them. Here's to a great year my dude! Thanks for what ya do!
@eMCiKey2 жыл бұрын
I have no favorite video for 2022, let's hope 2023 will get better.
@guderian5572 жыл бұрын
Please use standard units of measurement. Only like 3 countries in the entire world use "fahrenheit", "inches" and those kinds of arcane obsolete units of measurement. The other 98.5% of countries use standard units of measurement.
@BuildinWings2 жыл бұрын
I'd like to see a series on often-hated foods and why they're hated: Brussels Sprouts, Cilantro, Liver, etc. Between culture & biochemistry, there's a lot to talk about. You could even share preparations that overcome common objections to those foods.
@adridoesthings2 жыл бұрын
collab between ethan n adam ragusea would be a cool way to do this ! maybe even internet shaquille :]
@cassielawyer872 жыл бұрын
This is so smart! I agree!
@kmorri92 жыл бұрын
Great idea! The change of opinion on brussel sprouts is particularly wild. I know I absolutely HATED them, but also as a child of the '80s and '90s, I think they were almost exclusively boiled at that time.
@Fgurs2 жыл бұрын
i think there was a particular thing with brussel sprouts where genetic modifications to the plant from the 80s to the 2000s improved their flavor??? but i agree that'd be a fun video series, especially with things like anchovies!
@MinistryOfMagic_DoM2 жыл бұрын
There is a problem with Cilantro. Super tasters know it to taste like soap. You can't fix that because it's genetic.
@jordananwar75742 жыл бұрын
I’d love to see a weekly grocery shopping deep dive. What you buy, how you break it down into your daily meals and then the cost per meal/total cost per week.
@TekSC Жыл бұрын
yes
@SilentFlatulence2 жыл бұрын
The deep dive on canned tomatoes was probably my favourite video from last year. Other deep dives that would be cool to see done or expanded on are: Rice brands / types Marinades (when to use them, and variations) Turkey/Chicken Stuffing (best cooked inside the bird, on a stove top, etc) Steak cooking methods (grill vs pan fry vs sous vide) I'd also love to see more done with spices, especially ones that are less common.
@natalie.helm.2 жыл бұрын
Agreed!! This is how I found you and will always have a strong canned tomato game now 🍅 Ty!
@ericgodtier11062 жыл бұрын
Correct - the tomato video was unbelievably enlightening. The deep-dive videos are absolute top-tier content. A deep dives I'd love... Asian cooking sauces/liquids - history, what's what....man like what is the difference between light and dark and chinese and japanese soy sauces???
@Brandoncepeda2 жыл бұрын
Came here to say the canned tomato video as well. But i watch all his videos, they're all great
@drcbeartooths2 жыл бұрын
Yes, exactly. Thanks for that notion and list.
@leahmonterroso24722 жыл бұрын
I agree. I really wanted to know if the premium I was paying was worth it but instead found out I’d been duped by the “San Merican” ones. I see that can in so many cooking shows so I thought it was ok. Plus, their brand name on all the grocery store apps near me (and on Amazon) is “San Marzano”. I don’t know how they are able to brand themselves like that but when I saw the video I went straight to my pantry and saw the small print. They got turned into salsa and I restocked with the good stuff. Thank you😂
@therealgrandmaster69602 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy the "worth it" videos. I would love to see one on the different price points of olive oil!
@jayraje4222 жыл бұрын
I personally get the most value out of your quick weeknight meal videos. Especially when you break down the macros. A series of videos of high protein, quick, healthy, and tasty videos would be great! I know you have done these videos before but every time you do it I just keep wanting more!!
@Snowfrog2 жыл бұрын
Second this. There seems to be two worlds- "normal" recipes that have zero dietary concerns and will use 5 cups of oil if it makes it taste better, and "bodybuilder" or "fitness" meal prep like chicken, broccoli, brown rice, tilapia etc. There's a serious lack of resources for a good middle ground- health conscious recipes with smart substitutions. You have such a great wealth of taste and food science knowledge that I'd be very interested in seeing how to make high protein /lower calorie versions of meals for fat loss.
@jayXIV2 жыл бұрын
The “is it worth it” series is great, the canned tomato episode is one of my favorites on your channel.
@sandrabackus748211 ай бұрын
3:57 I absolutely love the video from the tomatoes and the flower because it helped me to make good strong decisions when I have to use cans and when I am doing my baking so I'm with you those were the most informant and useful to people who already do copy cat recipes
@abosrox2 жыл бұрын
As someone who struggles to keep weight off, I would love to have more healthy meal recipes! I really enjoy making extremely satisfying meals that are actually good for me
@susugam30042 жыл бұрын
first step is forgiving yourself and loving yourself despite past mistakes as long as food is your emotional support system, keeping weight off is impossible.
@0ThrowawayAccount02 жыл бұрын
Eat at a caloric deficit. Literally impossible to gain weight when you eat at a caloric deficit.
@mattbettinson45762 жыл бұрын
Check our Josh Cortis
@GerackSerack2 жыл бұрын
@@susugam3004 Sometimes, people gain weight cause we just really like to eat xD
@bryce68082 жыл бұрын
Check out Zach - flexible dieting lifestyle. Absolutely crushes the healthy options!
@NadarCosainAmber2 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a series on Indian cuisine, including a discussion of N vs S, how they are similar, how they are different, the spices, etc
@filmsarefriends19502 жыл бұрын
Hey Ethan! Would love a deep dive about butters! European, cultured, farm fresh, etc. There’s a lot more options now than there ever was. Some other deep dive ideas: Rice Different vinegars and how to use them Olive oils/all cooking oils for that matter
@AdamTrackIT2 жыл бұрын
As someone who try to like and cook more with vinagar that would be a great video !
@NateHotshot2 жыл бұрын
three great topics!
@TwistedRootsVanVelzerPress2 жыл бұрын
if you do the butter - there is a huge nutritional / health difference from store brand butters and fully grass fed cows AND even A2 A2 protein in the milk !!!!
@madrox2312 жыл бұрын
Dude ya! That’d be awesome. Good idea. I was sitting here like man idk any ideas I’m bad at that lol. But this is a great suggestion
@madrox2312 жыл бұрын
@@AdamTrackIT you might already know, but lots of Korean dishes use pickled vegetables and stuff. So maybe look into those if you’re interested.
@KingTobi19242 жыл бұрын
15:42, J Kenji Lopez Alt makes a great point of this, and you alluded to it towards the end of your answer Ethan: always be consistent with the way that you salt when cooking. If you use a certain shaker, continue to use that shaker. If it comes straight from the box, sprinkle it from the box every time. If you grab a pinchful and sprinkle, do that every time. Consistency is key to mastery!
@milearares37642 жыл бұрын
Your deepdives are definitely the most interesting, but I get the most value out of the quick weeknight meals videos. Also, would love to see more mexican recipes from you!
@alyssajohnson58032 жыл бұрын
Deep dive into brining/pickling. Showing the different methods to pickle things and how they affect longevity of storage.
@gypsyjill68322 жыл бұрын
My fav was the vanilla comparison, really all the comparisons including tomatoes, and such. I like that you give the information in a way that we can choose based on your experience instead of telling us which we "should" buy. I now have both real and imitation vanilla for the different uses as you described the benefits/best uses for each.
@thomasdawson38602 жыл бұрын
I love watching the food science videos. I’m just starting as a home cook and they’re extremely useful and interesting. I’d love to see more on home cooking and ratios testing for things like breading for fried chicken. How does the cornstarch to flour ratio impact the end result? Also how to remember easily all the ratios for your recipes! A fried chicken video from around the world would be cool too, like a comparison of this to Korean fried chicken.
@redamansy76532 жыл бұрын
1) Love all of your day in the life videos where you put together meals from leftovers in your fridge. Helps to see what you think about when making daily meals. Also they always have nice vibes and weirdly make me feel like I wanna be productive. 2) Was gonna say olive oil but realized you already made a video on that. 3) More Indian food please! You've got a few up already but they become my go to recipes often. Thanks! Keep up the great work.
@Teezyqt2 жыл бұрын
The instant mayo marinade for chicken thighs was a game changer for me, really opened up so many options for quick meals!
@jordanian44772 жыл бұрын
Mayo marinade is my go to so much flavour in short time
@kaspervankan5832 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the deep dive into the canned tomatoes and flour. Would love to see some more videos on Asian cuisine!
@laurenwomack56582 жыл бұрын
I love all of your healthy meals videos, especially because you are cooking portions for just one or two people. They've not been recipes that make so much food I have to eat the same leftovers for days and days. So helpful!
@shauntucker99652 жыл бұрын
You should explore Vietnamese food more. It is often a healthy, light, and very fresh tasting type of food due to the amount of veggies. Specifically the Vietnamese bag salads may be something you'd enjoy
@alfred98052 жыл бұрын
It was one of the countries I wanted to mention too, I tasted incredible stuff in Vietnam and never really had them outside of Vietnam ever again
@andenp82332 жыл бұрын
The chimichurri and pickled onion videos changed mine and my partner's condiment game so much! If you find another condiment/side that you're passionate about in 2023, be sure to share it with the rest of us :)
@maxr3362 жыл бұрын
Go for turkish ezme if you like it spicy
@ckannan902 жыл бұрын
I don’t have a specific video, but anytime you do a “meals I made in a day” video I’ve really enjoyed those. Seeing you throw together pastas has given me the confidence to just find ingredients and make pastas rather than solely relying on recipes or sauces.
@samanthaschuck50362 жыл бұрын
My favorite videos have been the ingredient comparison- like the San marzano video and the why (blank/takeout) is better than homemade and you do a deep dive into what makes it taste better. The Why deli sandwiches taste better than homemade video changed my whole sandwich perspective
@alexglanowski6952 жыл бұрын
I like the product comparisons. I'd personally like to see fresh herbs vs dried, when to properly use each, and does it matter if I don't have fresh when the recipe specifically calls for it. Great videos overall, I'm learning a lot I didn't know mattered, keep it up 😁
@jamesfleming11552 жыл бұрын
Second!
@BigHenFor2 жыл бұрын
Buy your herbs from places with a high turnover, so they're as fresh as possible, as flavour in dried or fresh herbs (or spices) dissipates the longer they hang around. Buy little and often for the same reason. Store dried herbs in a cool, dry place. Sunlight and air destroy the essential oils that provide flavour. For dishes that are uncooked, like salads, dried herbs won't work very well. Heat and liquid, and fats all extract flavour from herbs the best but, I would add dried herbs towards the end of the cooking process. When can you sub dried for fresh? When it won't impact the texture or flavor of the finished dish. For instance an omelette aux fine herbs, needs fresh herbs, because the dried herbs don't have the time to rehydrate properly in the egg.
@kevinjackson25282 жыл бұрын
Love the bouillon video idea! Your deep dive videos have been my favorite this year. I also like the healthy meals/meal prepping videos as well
@softmilk11962 жыл бұрын
I loved your deep dives on canned tomatoes and flour. I think it's a nice change of pace in the cooking space where it's mostly recipes. Learning about why and how variations of common food products are the way they are is super interesting to me. I think deep dives like that on rice types, marinade types, dried vs fresh herbs, instant/powdered food like milk, mashed potatoes, noodles, spices and how they compared to their whole counterparts would be cool videos to see. Seeing more Southeast Asian or Middle Eastern food would be great as well!
@saltnova73172 жыл бұрын
1. ANY And all your deep dives are my favorites 2. id love to see a deep dive on pesto 3. anything curry related would be amazing (ps i love you man keep on with the amazing content
@edjarrett31642 жыл бұрын
Ethan. I love the research you do to make your videos. It’s obvious you have extensive background in cooking, but you don’t mention that in any of your videos unlike most other cooking YT videos. What really impresses, that you do most of the ingredients on air vs prepped ingredients for everyone else. The last, yet most important is how you show people how clean as you go is foundational. You do it every video to show how kitchens should be maintained. Keep up the great work!
@axel89122 жыл бұрын
1. All the food science ones, it's a topic that always interest me 2. Can you put in herbs and spices in pasta, pizza and regular dough to up their flavour 3. Italy
@badmeatbrowniesthoughts13272 жыл бұрын
My favorites are the inexpensive to expensive comparisons .Don't get me wrong , all your content is well thought out and well executed. And these "faster than deliveries " are becoming a strong 2nd place of your content. But as I've mentioned, your entire approach to any content you release, is commendable and welcomed 🙏 great job brother 👏 👍
@languagechefcorey2 жыл бұрын
Yessss to long-form content, can't stand short food videos, the longer the better!!! (And def yes to a podcast!)
@MrAznBagel2 жыл бұрын
Favorite 2022 Video: Döner Kebab Deep Dive I'd love to see: Rice types Travel: Would be awesome to see you go to Japan or Korea
@elisabethmurray33232 жыл бұрын
I loved the canned tomato deep dive. I’ve tried all of those brands but never all at once so it was great to hear the side-by-side comparisons. My favorite episode was your knife sharpening episode. So important and helpful. I’m waiting for my new honing blocks to be delivered. Thanks!
@belleharris20592 жыл бұрын
Please make the “Sunday braise” a series! I love this idea and would like more meats \ recipe ideas! ❤️
@heylookataco2 жыл бұрын
The best video for me was the comparison of the different fat percentages in beef to make the perfect burger. Transformed my at-home burgers. A close second was the bacon cooking method! Blew my mind that water makes such a difference. Your videos always leave me with something to be excited about in the kitchen! Keep it up brotha!
@salliemorrill2671 Жыл бұрын
You've got this! 2023 will be good. You develop & produce good, educational content that is well edited. Besides, you have the knack for making our mouths water.
@MichealBacon2 жыл бұрын
This really is the best food science and recipe breakdown channel on YT. Good job, Ethan
@bethappel4070 Жыл бұрын
LOVE the deep dives into ingredients. The real time cooking is also fantastic.
@iamthestoat2 жыл бұрын
my favorite video from you probably has to be the döner kebaba video, it was very interesting and well made.
@EthanChlebowski2 жыл бұрын
I mention it later on in this one, but that was one of my favorites as well. Definitely will be making more in that style this year!
@IraRadchuk2 жыл бұрын
I really love the deep dive/food science videos, I usually don't watch the other stuff. My favourite overall is about acheiving crisp sweet potato chips and my favourites from 2022 are the importance of the dice size and why restaurant vegetable dishes taste better. I have a garden which I cook a lot from, and these videos helped me enjoy my produce way more through adjusting and improving my cooking technique.
@harpoonmcfierce96972 жыл бұрын
Would love to see Indian cuisine. It's so diverse with so many flavor profiles
@BryanBagehi2 жыл бұрын
Gonna be hard without a rice cooker!
@shirinjain46182 жыл бұрын
@@BryanBagehi Most Indians do not use rice cookers
@cletushatfield88172 жыл бұрын
@@BryanBagehi Certain authentic stuff can't be made without camel dung.
@joshwhite57302 жыл бұрын
@@BryanBagehi why? And why don’t you have a rice cooker they’re like twenty dollars and the best and easiest way to cook rice
@Banom7a2 жыл бұрын
@@BryanBagehi pulav and biryani don't need one, you just need a one big pot (pressure cooker maybe) :)
@jadedlotuz5095 Жыл бұрын
Like your channel. Like these "can you do it better and faster then fastfood"-series. But to give something completely different, have you ever tried Swedish food? And I dont mean just classics like IKEA Swedish meatballs and potatoes, mashed potatoes or stewed macaronies. I Mean stuff like "Palt", "Makaronivälling", "Flygande jacob" och "Kalops" (among others). Sweden also often make "swedish" versions of other cultures, like Pizza and Kebab, and also mix different cultures into various frankenstein dishes. Food-wise Sweden is inspired by a multitude of countries, almost to a level that classic Swedish food is forgotten or abandoned. Just a thought. Cheers.
@KatarzynaJania2 жыл бұрын
you should definitely go to Poland and introduce your audience to some more of our delicious polish recipes
@nowjustanother2 жыл бұрын
+1!
@GPoh_992 жыл бұрын
+1 and I would also love a video that includes Kasza.
@valf1561152 жыл бұрын
Tak!!! Genialny
@floraly887 ай бұрын
Not just this series but the long form content in general is very appreciated.
@alanward98062 жыл бұрын
I'd like to see a meal prep video where you make 5 different lunches with same protein on Weekends to eat during the week. That is real for me. Thanks for your awesome content!
@ericmtz2 жыл бұрын
Favorite video: How To Meal Prep... the Sunday braise is so awesome!
@hacim722 жыл бұрын
Deep dives and healthy meal videos are my favorite! Any healthy meals are always appreciated, and I think a deep dive on vinegar differences (is expensive worth it?) would be amazing.
@JamanMosil2 жыл бұрын
Ethan - this was a most enjoyable video to start my Monday morning with! Got a few points/questions/suggestions... 1) Firstly, this was the most relaxed "can I make this faster" video I've ever seen. Loved the chill vibe, good music, good and thoughtful answers...and the fact that even you were trying to make something fast, you weren't rushing around madly, but just did your thing and didn't get flustered when Popeyes beat you with their "sitting on warming rack" chicken in 21 minutes.. 2) Would def appreciate a video on BtB! I've just started using this lately and have appreciated the boost it gives and so would definitely like to see more ideas in how to use it. I forget where I got this hack from, but recently made some taco meat for burritos. Before I've tried mixing all my own spices together (standard onion powder/garlic powder/cumin/paprika/cayenne/pepper/salt/etc) but it just lacks the pungency and depth and deliciousness that the McCormicks (or whoever) packet gives. So other night, used my spice mix but instead of salt, added a tablespoon of beef BtB and it was delightful!! That stuff is where it's at (although maybe I should use low-sodium one next time hah) 3) I follow a few food youtubers and you're definitely in my top 5! You're also the only one I enjoy who is also a fellow Texan, so I appreciate seeing HEB products pop up and your references to things I'm also familiar with. That being said, would love to see some videos on things that are more Texas/local specific. Maybe visits to some genuine taquerias and an analysis into what makes a great breakfast taco (me and my friends have had so many debates on this. We have come up with three pillars - fillings, tortilla, and homemade sauce/salsa. If a taqueria excels at 2 of the three, it will be a great taco.) Also on that same point, would love to see a deep dive into the green sauce that so many taquerias make. I know you had a great multi-part series on hot sauce (which I greatly enjoyed!!), but the green sauce here is its own animal (not fermented but actually oil-based and...very addictive). I've spent countless hours doing my own experiments to fine-tune a recipe to try and mimic a local Mexican restaurant here in Houston and I'd be interested to see your approach. Anyway - more Texas content and things that we do here that most other places don't...and that I'm sure people would be fascinated to see! That all being said, this is far longer a comment than I meant to make. One more thing before I close. Have really appreciated your deep-dive videos into ingredients and questions that I always wonder. Especially the ones on tomatoes and vanilla have been huge for me, as I use these things all the time and now I'm actually aware of what I should be looking for when I'm at HEB. So...very much appreciate the insight and education your videos have been giving me. Appreciate you, man!
@misslindsey2352 жыл бұрын
I had a Moroccan dish while on vacation last week and realized I need more of that in my life. The seasoning and spices, my GOSH
@robotruubz2 жыл бұрын
Your pasta/italian ingredient deep dives really struck a chord with me. I changed to bronze-cut risotto style pasta and also oven-fried about every leftover vegetable I’ve come across. I like the way you analyse and deconstruct a problem, and aren't afraid to test hypotheses on camera. Travel-wise i'd love to see you give your take on some quirky North-European dishes (Flemish stew, Germany’s Knödel & Spätzle, UK’s pies, Polish pierogi, Swedish Janssons frestelse).
@youdeservethis2 жыл бұрын
I love that this is real time. Also love that you are including cleaning in your time! Plus basic ingredients that I already have. I'm hungry! OH! You can make a cup of buttermilk with 2TBS white vinegar and then add milk up to the one cup mark. Wait ten minutes. VOILA!
@emptywords95692 жыл бұрын
I'd like see more of broths in general. Thanks have a great year!
@RealMisterDoge2 жыл бұрын
My favorites were probably the spices video, kitchen essentials, cacio e pepe, the onion video, the “is ___ worth it” series, and this series! You’re doing great man, keep it up!
@theresabroeren1348 Жыл бұрын
Love love all your videos! My fav last year was the pizza flour comparisons….so good. Would love more pizza ideas for making your own thick crust, to quick vs cook sauces to top and how to make your own pizza sausage (bring on the fennel and/or marjoram). In addition, i am growing my own fresh herbs and would love a better understanding of when to use fresh vs dried. Marinades…..i’d really like to know more about different kinds for different types of meat - and how to use different types of wines in cooking. Lastly, it would be cool to do a deep dive on bones….how can we use them to get more flavorful soups and more nutritious broths/stocks. Keep up the great work!!!
@PinkTigger332 жыл бұрын
Agreed. HEB is the best grocery store ever. I really miss Texas because of HEB. My favorite videos are the really in depth ones comparing specific ingredients like the parmesan cheese episode or the canned tomato one. I do really love these can you make it faster videos too. Those are my favorite styles that you've done so far. I would love to see you cover African foods, Mediterranean foods such as Lebanese, Turkish, Iranian, or even Urkanian, Czech or Polish dishes. Those areas I know hardly anything about.
@ChristopherKummetz2 жыл бұрын
I am so much like you in that I prep and clean as I go. Many professional chefs that post videos have plenty of helpers to make it look presentable. You show us the importance of doing the cleaning WHILE cooking makes everything better. I’ve learned to lay my ingredients out according to how, when, and where I’m going to clean up.
@koopmanjl2 жыл бұрын
My fav videos were the ingredient deep dive comparisons. I think it would be cool to expand that to recipe experimentation/comparisons. Like for chocolate chip cookies, finding out what is the right amount of butter, whether it is different if browned, different bake times/temps.
@audimeabsvertigo80892 жыл бұрын
Would be great to see an allergy series where you do weeknight meals with a certain allergy in mind, my girlfriend has an egg allergy so I’ve been trying to find easy meals that are still healthy to make after long days
@FunctionallyLiteratePerson2 жыл бұрын
I love this idea. Maybe more broad e.g. food sensitivities or dietary restrictions. I have a severe food allergy and multiple people I care a lot about in my life have Celiac's. Can be hard to cater to all of our stuff sometimes and I'd rather not have to rely on Facebook groups rife with nutrition and/or allergy misinfo.
@1029blue2 жыл бұрын
@@FunctionallyLiteratePerson A video in celiac disease would be especially challenging and potentially problematic, if one doesn't do one's research. A lot of people think that just staying away from foods with gluten in the ingredients is enough, but cross-contamination is a *big* issue with celiac disease. Ingredient statements can look fine, but companies aren't legally required to disclose whether their food is made on shared equipment with gluten ingredients. The FDA doesn't even consider gluten an allergen that needs to be declared, only wheat, so it's up to the company, whether they list something like barley malt as an ingredient. It's messed up and dangerous. Then, there is the whole issue of most oats not being purity protocol, even when the package states that the product is "gluten-free". Example: General Mills uses sorting methods for their "gluten-free" oat products, and they have had to recall cereals because they contained too much gluten. In Canada, Cheerios aren't even allowed to be labeled as gluten-free, because of the cross-contamination risk. Plus, some people with celiac disease don't seem to tolerate oats because of the avenin in them, and no one knows which celiacs tolerate them and why or how much is safe. Anyway... I could go on for hours. Long story short: I'd rather not have people who don't have celiac disease or who aren't medical professionals with extensive knowledge make a video on gluten-free foods.
@johnlarson42542 жыл бұрын
That is an awesome idea
@jtkelley18732 жыл бұрын
Love these breakdown videos! I have become such a better home cook because of you. It’s important to understand why which you explain and show. I’d love to see healthy alternatives. Such as using whole wheat instead of any white flours. Butter alternatives like oil and Greek yogurt. I’ve experimented over the past few years and know it can be done. For example, I made perfect sandwich loaves every week using ONLY whole wheat, yeast and water with some added gluten to compensate for the whole wheat grains - NO salt OR sugar! It’s NOT needed. I also do 50/50 oil/Greek yogurt in place of butter and it’s a beautiful moist result. Love to see you approach this!
@katihaynes29362 жыл бұрын
I really liked the ingredients videos. Especially the difference in canned tomatoes and Parmesan cheese. I’d love to see you do this for olive oil - I used to work in the industry and there’s so much that people don’t know! Sicilian hand-picked olives vs California machine-picked, quality vs quantity, cooking with olive oil, etc. It’s my favorite topic among foodies and I’d enjoy seeing your take on it.
@genjiglove61242 жыл бұрын
Love the chill vibe of all your videos man. I think the Food Tube scene is full of too much crazy stuff and I just appreciate the laid back vibe of your channel. Keep it up thanks learned a lot from you
@leoswe20952 жыл бұрын
I would love to see you travelling to Japan. Maybe you could do a series about why Japanese food is so healthy and even present us some everyday meals for the different times of the day (breakfast, lunch, snacks, dinner) Happy new year btw ✨️
@16xthedetail762 жыл бұрын
Japanese food is not healthy at all. At least the common stuff.
@SolarusFFXI2 жыл бұрын
Favourite videos: Hard to pick just 1, in general I really like the ingredient deep dives and food science videos. Over time I've found those sorts of videos a lot more interesting than straight recipe videos (although the kind you do are really good too, where you dive into the reasons why each ingredient works and cover possible variations, like the pasta videos you did earlier in the year). These fast food videos are great for some lighter content too, a good way of showing quick and healthier home fast food, to stop me ordering as much takeout. If I had to pick one though, maybe biased from recent memory, the meal prep video you did a couple months ago was really useful, and helped me re-evaluate how I make food for the week. Future ingredient videos: Oil might be an interesting one, you've touched on the ideas in past videos, and gone in depth on olive oil but a deep dive on the whys and hows of using different types of oils would be good. I see lots of videos and articles talking about high smoke points and how olive oil shouldn't be used for frying, but then a fair number who say it's overblown and doesn't matter so much. Blind taste tests of different oils for deep frying, roasting, stir fry, salad dressings etc might have some obvious results, but maybe not as much as we think. Other cuisines: I was going to say Mexican, but then I remembered you did that a couple years ago. I'm a big fan of Asian cuisine, US chefs often miss a lot of the details when doing recipes and videos, while native chefs and people can be a bit overly traditionalist about there only being one right way to do it, with ingredients that aren't readily available in the west. I think you'd do a good job of balancing between the two, explaining why they use certain ingredients and techniques, what effect they have, and how we can best replicate it in our kitchens. So my vote would be for Thai or Japanese. Love what you're doing, I've learned way more from these sorts of videos than most other cooking channels. Definitely agree on the long form content vs the trend of more short form videos on KZbin and other social media these days.
@brianjavorsky23402 жыл бұрын
I love the deep dives, with the flour one probably being my favorite. I think they set you apart from a lot of other channels. Maybe you could do something on different kinds of butter. ie: Regular, Uncultured American (maybe even salted and unsalted), vs Cultured Butter, vs a higher-end butter like Kerrigold or Smjor or something even fancier, vs something plant-based; with taste tests of just butter on toast, and in a sauce like a buerre blanc, and maybe something baked? Or maybe one comparing different types of chocolate... That being said, the most useful single video for me was the healthy weeknight meals video with the spicy garlic noodles recipe. I've made that several times for myself and others and it's been great each time. (I even bought the noodles you advertised with your code.) I have several other recipes from your weeknight meals videos I'll be trying in the near future. Thanks for all of the great content!
@QuinSexton2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, you put out such good work that it’s really difficult to pick a favorite episodes. Anything from the fast food versus at home longform videos, and the comparison videos were awesome.
@RocketWisdom72 жыл бұрын
Keep the videos longer, your content is like no other channel! Which is why your so successful! Your the JRE of cooking channels!
@valf1561152 жыл бұрын
For me i loved your videos that were healthy versions of delicious foods, i also loved seeing the thjngs you throw together on a real week with bits and pieces of food you already have left over. These felt rly relatable
@pedroFOY2 жыл бұрын
Hi ! Best wishes for 2023 and thanks you for your work. I wish you had a "sauce" série, with the science of texture, emulsions, balance of taste (acidic/bitterness/...), Spices combinaisons,... I know its a big thing but the sauce science is for me the big step up for a home cook
@pedroFOY2 жыл бұрын
And the best videos were bacon science, and steak science (ok i admit it, i am a science guy ^^')
@EthanChlebowski2 жыл бұрын
The Science of Sauces is something I've been thinking about. I need to figure out a framework to best explain them all.
@pedroFOY2 жыл бұрын
@@EthanChlebowski thanks for the answer if i have concrete Idea i will put it in this thread. The quick Idea i have is the trouble i have to use easily the acidic ingredient
@Tonya_Kraan2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making longer videos. I really hate all the short clips that are flooding YT. Your bacon frying video was the best. We now always fry our bacon with some water in the pan. It's amazing. Perfectly cooked every time. Thank you!!!
@hairo3x32 жыл бұрын
Really loved the "How to Meal Prep" video. I hate meal prepping and have a hard time eating, and that video really helped me. Also, would love to see you go to Japan! The cuisine is so interesting and diverse and would love to see your take on it. Thank you for all the great videos this year, Ethan!
@TwistedRootsVanVelzerPress2 жыл бұрын
yes to Japan !!!!
@soratoninx2 жыл бұрын
My favorite video from you are the quick and easy weeknight meals. For a long time since winter break, I was in a slump from cooking and meal planning. I decided to finally watch your video that was in my watch later for 6 months, and I was so happy to finally try it out! I made the edamame salmon bowl and I enjoyed every bit of it. I also made garlic noodles and they were so easy to make. Overall, these recipes will absolutely go into my weekly rotation of meals. Huge appreciation for you for helping me out of this slump :') You make young adulthood a lot more manageable! Going forward, I would love more tips and tricks for deep frying things, and exploring more Asian dishes such as Vietnamese or Korean. Super excited for your channel Ethan!
@ChoccyMewk2 жыл бұрын
I loved the deep dives & doing things faster than X restaurant. I’d love to see some more Greek cuisine, I feel like it’s not very represented on KZbin but it’s so good ❤
@Nono464. Жыл бұрын
I like your longer form content and your deep dives thank you so much for making them. No suggestions still sorting through your content just wanted to thank you.
@marieevebujold2 жыл бұрын
The episode about the galette de sarasin and the one about tomatoes were my faves. I would like to see you going in details about legumes or pulses. And lastly, I would like to learn more about the cuisine of some more remote places or smaller countries.
@Crudelordchubbs Жыл бұрын
I would love a MSG deep dive, when and where to use it, good ratios, etc.
@NameName2.0 Жыл бұрын
I think one of my favorites was the Katsu, it has so many uses, if you take the time to actually trim the chicken afterwards into squares, you have some chicken strips on the side for snacks.
@BosssHog2 жыл бұрын
Love the long-form deep dives, would like to see more
@CardinalTreehouse2 жыл бұрын
I don't know about other people, but I think it would be really beneficial if you did videos surrounding certain diet plans (Mediterranean for example), their pros and cons, and some example recipes for what a week of those meals would look like.
@jacaran54422 жыл бұрын
Hi Ethan, I've been enjoying your videos for the past few months while also learning a lot from them, so thank you so much. What I love about your contents is : - how we can learn so much about daily cooking on a fundamental level (it allows me to truly understand the ingredients and apply the principles as I see fit) - how there is little to no preprep/post edits and you just show how you typically do stuff (which is super helpful as we get to see and learn the whole process of cooking and kitchen maitainece itself not just the recipe) - how your explanations are clear and organized (you seem to really enjoy your work and care about the quality of the infomation shared) The content I enjoyed most are : (in order of enjoyment) 1. ingredient deep dives (especially the tomatos and parmesan reggiano) 2. faster then series (its really persuasive on how easily you can replicate fast food and how far better it could potentially be) 3. and of course weekday meals (these feel more lighter and I just get to enjoy seeing you cook something new) What I would love to see added are : videos on how you maintain your stock (having a small family makes maintaining various ingredients all at once a hard task ; When I want to cook something there's always a couple of ingredients missing, when I buy the various ingredients for things I want to make I end up with leftovers which a large part of gets bad before use) I imagine seeing how you do it would be of tremendous help. eg) How do you manage your fridge/pantry?, What are the staple ingredients that you always have ready?, How do you store large portions for the longer run?, etc. Maybe even a small tour of your fridge/pantry will help me grasp a general idea on how to deal with mine! That's all for my extra long rant :D Thanks and keep up the great work!
@ra03332 жыл бұрын
1-you’re tomato comparison 2-(ok I forget the question). 3-I’d love to see you tackle more Mexican or South American cuisine Love the channel, keep up the hard work
@wrfx0rz2 жыл бұрын
The San Marzano tomato comparison was something I was wondering about for years.
@ra03332 жыл бұрын
@@wrfx0rzand I was so (over) confident that I knew what would be the best, and what was important. Really eye opening. I was so angry about those San mericano, or whatever they said. I’ve been fooled for years
@MehodofMadness Жыл бұрын
I'd like to see a deep dive on pastas, fresh vs boxed n stuff like that. You're stuff is so approachable n easy to understand. It's helped me a lot
@Wunder2 жыл бұрын
Canned tomato and olive oil explainers/investigations were awesome, but I also still go back to the meal prep and pantry essential videos (not sure if that was in 22!) I’d love to see more Indian or Chinese cuisine videos if possible.
@15drasedrase2 жыл бұрын
Favorite Videos: the "3 weeknight chicken methods" and the newer videos about how you cook during a week using quick meals, it has changed how i look at cooking in a fantastic way. Cuisine to learn about: would love to see some like thai or korean or southeast asia cuisine.
@buttersquids2 жыл бұрын
I think my favourite video has to be the parmesan video. Seeing such an in-depth video, with such rigorous tests, really brought me back to your channel. Edit: it was actually the canned tomato video that brought me back, but I loved the parmesan video too
@justacrystal5679 ай бұрын
I really enjoy your longer videos especially if it has recipes and tips with the deep dive.
@HFC7862 жыл бұрын
Do this with five guys
@fransbauer8382 жыл бұрын
If he would do this with 4 more guys it would be incovenient. They wil constantly bump into each other
@ffwast2 жыл бұрын
No, one guy is enough
@SevenHunnid2 жыл бұрын
Im a regular hood dude doing food reviews on my KZbin channel 🥷
@palmtop_studios2 жыл бұрын
@@fransbauer838 I believe you have been misinformed. He's actually going to cook the five other guys. Though it'll take a while to season abd cook every single guy with one stove.
@Schiffon2 жыл бұрын
@@fransbauer838 Lolol 😂
@jasonmartinez29742 жыл бұрын
Fav was probably the Cacio e Pepe video... loved how deep into the food science that one went. For the future, wouldn't mind seeing a cheap wine vs expensive wine for cooking vid. Would love to see the advice of "Only cook with the wine you would drink" get put to the test.
@PandaPotPies2 жыл бұрын
Id like to see a deep dive on chili secret ingredients like: yeast, dark chocolate, coca cola, etc and the different types like Cincinnati chilli, texas
@anabittenco2 жыл бұрын
I’m very inspired by your channel, and started to cook fun and healthy things for myself. I’m also struggling with some weight gain and plan to make cooking healthy meals a steady practice. Would love to see more content on healthy, practical recipes and strategies!
@supeguero02 жыл бұрын
I think a deep dive into air frying would be a interesting topic. Maybe cover things like how it compares to traditional frying, the benefits, the cons, what all you can use it for etc.
@Mark-jq6en2 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see some deep dives and comparisons on what happens if you do this vs that similar to your process for the bacon vid. Suggestion 1 being breading, not just different breadings but also issues that happen and how to diagnose, as well as 2) frying like what happens if you do the two batch fry Vs low temp Vs high temp, how to keep the breading from coming off and burning in the oil. 3) More things that can be prepped and made ahead that reheat or freeze well.
@ChrisValencia2 жыл бұрын
It'd be cool to see a flour video (AP, wheat, cassava, almond, coconut, etc) and try to find the best recipe for each respective flour for bread/pastries. This is for people trying to make health-conscious choices + people with allergies.
@CC-travels Жыл бұрын
I agree, Chris! These are becoming more prevalent and there's a large audience experimenting with alternative flours.
@kharnival78732 жыл бұрын
You should try visiting Scandinavian countries, for example Norway, to see the cuisine, it isn't very the main focus of the culinary world but would be interesting to see it explored from your point of view. Loved all of the videos been a blast to watch
@SS-wi4tm2 жыл бұрын
There are a million internet recipes for protein fluff and NO one explains science. What actually makes it fluff (coldness, pectin, type of mixer etc etc)
@chasewallace2314 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see more on what types of peppers fit with certain cuisines and spices. I love cooking with fresh peppers and understanding how to combine different peppers into recipes would be awesome.
@stephanieswitzer456310 ай бұрын
I don’t think answering viewer questions WHILE you’re making the food works as well, because you aren’t announcing things/ingredients step-by-step. Maybe incorporate a Q&A session at either the beginning or the end where you answer questions - it detracts from the videos, if viewers are legitimately watching to learn recipes rather than just for entertainment purposes
@camilleg71382 жыл бұрын
Happy New Year Ethan! Your channel has taught me so much. The canned tomato video blew my mind but I get the most value out of your meal prep videos. In terms of travel, Mexico, India or Vietnam!
@CriticalEatsJapan2 жыл бұрын
Favourite video? Your burger analysis was great!👍
@drthreevil Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure how useful this will really be for future planning, but I just wanted to say I really enjoy your content. It's really good to hear you enjoy this because I love watching the whole thing and I feel like I really get a lot out of it.
@louiscastro27012 жыл бұрын
My favorite videos: the one you did about different brand and types of canned tomatoes was really informative, because it's such a common ingredient and it's something I've always wondered about. The crunch wrap supreme challenge was the most entertaining. If you havn't made a deep dive video on different types of hot peppers I think that could be really interesting.