Pro CHEF Reacts... To Uncle Roger HATING Jamie Oliver's Butter Chicken!

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Chef James Makinson

Chef James Makinson

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Hope you guys enjoy this! *Become a Patreon and have a say in what I make!* www.patreon.com/chefjamesmakinson
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa 2 жыл бұрын
he can make fried rice without soy sauce and msg. he can make ramen without ramen noodles. he can make green curry without any green at all. and now he can make butter chicken without butter at all. I can't wait what he will mess up next
@w1zpir779
@w1zpir779 2 жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa Jamie Oliver cooking Asian cuisine is like a recurring nightmare for Uncle Roger.
@SpiritSlayer1
@SpiritSlayer1 2 жыл бұрын
Hello! :D
@justinanselm
@justinanselm 2 жыл бұрын
Chef, please check this kzbin.info/www/bejne/iHyxoJqNl6acrLs
@nathanafoa6579
@nathanafoa6579 2 жыл бұрын
Jaime is a bad cooker
@ksaunders4362
@ksaunders4362 2 жыл бұрын
As someone said to me recently, “it’s hard to believe, isn’t it, that the English practically conquered the world for spices…..then never learned how to use any of them!” Oh, the irony…..
@benjim8462
@benjim8462 2 жыл бұрын
Omfg I love that 😂
@chrisjohnson6138
@chrisjohnson6138 2 жыл бұрын
For women. That's the purpose of war and invasion. To take them and provide for their jezebels back home.
@walnut5617
@walnut5617 2 жыл бұрын
The usage of spices back then was to throw things on bland food such as meat or fish because there was no refrigeration system at the time, meaning that any spice regardless of usage would make the meal a lot more flavorful.
@darkolli
@darkolli 2 жыл бұрын
Its because the more common the spice got the less fancy it became, so the rich stopped using them.
@walnut5617
@walnut5617 2 жыл бұрын
@@darkolli spices never got more common, the price of them drastically reduced during the age of exploration.
@luisozuna6456
@luisozuna6456 Жыл бұрын
Considering Uncle Roger is actually a character created by a comedian and not an actual chef, it’s impressive to see how much professional chefs agree with his critiques
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
He has a few chef friends that help him
@shawbrothersgirl2740
@shawbrothersgirl2740 Жыл бұрын
Actually you're wrong even though he is a character Uncle Rodger he still is a real chef and a comedian at the same time
@maxp918
@maxp918 Жыл бұрын
@@ChefJamesMakinson Plot twist: you are one of those chef friends
@GradertJ
@GradertJ Жыл бұрын
You don't have to be a chef to know how to cook very well. I grew up watching the cooking channel and guy like Anton who taught the science chefs formally learn about cooking.
@regentvoo
@regentvoo Жыл бұрын
Uncle roger is malaysian. We have high percentage of indians here so i do eat indian food like 3-4times a week cause it's readily available. So we know what a tandoor looks like too
@saikatbond2009
@saikatbond2009 2 жыл бұрын
As an Indian, I can vouch that this is the recipe for "how not to make butter chicken"😭
@akp3097
@akp3097 2 жыл бұрын
Definitely./ and if you see someone making this type butter chicken then please remember “do not eat”
@DrBrunoRecipes
@DrBrunoRecipes 2 жыл бұрын
I guess I make a better version 😃😃
@randomgirlgtxq6421
@randomgirlgtxq6421 2 жыл бұрын
not an Indian but I have been to an Indian restaurant and I agree, This is no butter chicken.
@whiteblack549
@whiteblack549 2 жыл бұрын
I mean "UK" people prefer to not have buttery and oily food. So it's understandable that he cooked it that way oh and did I mention they absolutely hate spice? Jamie should just cook vegan food cause that's what he's good at
@-tree2177
@-tree2177 2 жыл бұрын
@@whiteblack549 then why did they even invade India for something that they hate?😂
@Mamacat1357
@Mamacat1357 Жыл бұрын
That 10-minute marinade stunned me. Growing up, I was taught that poultry and pork are dense meats and should be pre-seasoned at least in the morning (for dinner consumption); over night preferred.
@WaitAMinute1989
@WaitAMinute1989 Жыл бұрын
a 10 minute marinade is like ketchup on chips.
@Mamacat1357
@Mamacat1357 Жыл бұрын
@@WaitAMinute1989 Chips as in Fish and chips? I am from the USA, so chips are different here.
@WaitAMinute1989
@WaitAMinute1989 Жыл бұрын
@@Mamacat1357 French fries, you know what they called French Onion soup in France... soup.
@I_AM_BAYTOR
@I_AM_BAYTOR 8 ай бұрын
^ wouldn't it be onion soup?
@francescameldrum1649
@francescameldrum1649 Жыл бұрын
As a British person I can honestly say there isn't many people that like what Jamie Oliver does
@TominatorGaming
@TominatorGaming Жыл бұрын
Or like him in general....he's the Greta Thunberg of cooking.
@TominatorGaming
@TominatorGaming Жыл бұрын
@@PlayerSlotAvailable you sure it's not the other way around? I don't think I know a single person outside of the 'Slacktivists' I know who like her.
@darkness74185
@darkness74185 11 ай бұрын
@@TominatorGaming ​Greta at least enjoys the luxury of meme status on people that's impartial to her views and stuff. The Uncle Roger videos plus Folding Idea's "Jamie Oliver's War on Nuggets" video almost guarantees most non-British people's first impression of him is an elitist asshole who butchers any foreign food (not even exotic ones, just foreign) wherever he goes
@MrIlleism
@MrIlleism 11 ай бұрын
He's worth £250m though
@josephmother2659
@josephmother2659 9 ай бұрын
@@MrIlleismprime example of being wealthy does not equal being an expert in all the areas you claim to be… he’s an expert in being dramatic, cooking a lot of things (quantity doesn’t equal quality), and making money. Classic TV chef
@Maistro69
@Maistro69 2 жыл бұрын
It’s kinda hard to call it “buttered chicken” when there is no butter in it.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
yeah it is, its in the name!
@npatch
@npatch 2 жыл бұрын
Perhaps not buttered, but battered. xD.
@ralphanthonyespos9417
@ralphanthonyespos9417 2 жыл бұрын
@@npatch Chicken gonna file domestic violence claim.
@npatch
@npatch 2 жыл бұрын
@@ralphanthonyespos9417 we're approaching uncle roger's type of humor.
@thebigitchy
@thebigitchy 2 жыл бұрын
I mean, he made “ramen” using soba noodles, and didn’t seem to season the broth…. That’s like saying you made ravioli using won tons…
@prakharshukla7710
@prakharshukla7710 2 жыл бұрын
Butter chicken was basically reusing left over tandoori chiken in a Tomato puure. It's a relatively new dish. To save the over night chicken from dryness, the cream and butter was used. There is no way you marinate chicken for 10 minutes , not use butter at all and call it butter chicken. Just call it "I made a new chicken dish". As an Indian this dish makes me sad.
@trishah4785
@trishah4785 2 жыл бұрын
Heyyy dear, that's ok atleast he tried it 😊
@ma.2089
@ma.2089 2 жыл бұрын
@@trishah4785 tried what? Making shit? Anyone can do that. He’s supposed to be a chef tho. Next r u gonna say “oh the pilot crashed the plane killing everyone on board. But that’s ok, at least he tried it” If you’re being sarcastic, add a /s. Text doesn’t communicate it if you’re not going to over exaggerate
@basteala525
@basteala525 2 жыл бұрын
That actually makes a lot of sense. The Butter Chicken being a recipe to make use of older chicken, not the Jamie Oliver attempt.
@TrappedinSLC
@TrappedinSLC 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting. Most Indian restaurants around me seem to just cook the chicken in the sauce, they don't cook it in the tandoor first.
@app5387
@app5387 2 жыл бұрын
@@TrappedinSLC really? I don't know how it is made outside India but here in India sauce is always made seperately.
@DSxlNintendo
@DSxlNintendo 2 жыл бұрын
It's fun to see other reactors just losing their shit at Jamie's feats, but it's also very amusing seeing a professional who just keeps his cool and analyzes everything with a smile on his face and always such a calm tone. Great video man
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
thank you very much!
@shantiasnani7065
@shantiasnani7065 2 жыл бұрын
Just call it Jaime’s butter chicken, then it’s correct! I am Indian, this is not Indian at all. Sorry! 🙏🏻
@daguaishouxd
@daguaishouxd 2 жыл бұрын
My feeling exactly
@barondracniil6061
@barondracniil6061 2 жыл бұрын
@@shantiasnani7065 Jamie's Chicken, you mean. I am butter and this has no butter at all.
@Sulfer_99
@Sulfer_99 2 жыл бұрын
Nah bc jamie actually doing it’s wrong and call it “traditional”. Jus like thai green curry, im not gonna be mad if he call it jamie thai green curry but he did wrong and have the audacity to say it original
@jaserror
@jaserror Жыл бұрын
I like how even on his best try to explain, Chef James is still speechless by the mango chutney.
@AMD7027
@AMD7027 4 ай бұрын
That’s the absolutely weakest critique, two teaspoons (10 ml) is not going to overpower anything…..hardly a profound comment by either “chef”
@Momokaintgiveashit
@Momokaintgiveashit 4 ай бұрын
​@@AMD7027 is that so? because chef james himself has tested this same recipe and he mentioned this specific mango chutney brand to be particularly very sweet. I don't know why you felt the need to be rude by not saying it's a weak critique but that it's the WEAKEST critique, and even going the extra mile of putting quotation marks on "chef" as if he isn't a literal professional trained chef. yikes.
@m.o.4240
@m.o.4240 4 ай бұрын
Just checked his homemade recipe he adds 400 grams of sugar
@alanhill769
@alanhill769 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you. You just confirmed that Uncle Roger does know what he is talking about. Also he is a funny bugger. I enjoyed your commentary also.
@MrGalaktick51
@MrGalaktick51 2 жыл бұрын
Most of the time people don't take uncle roger too seriously, but it's kinda nice to see that Chefs actually agree with him !
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
He does he's research before!
@maattitudemamemento8325
@maattitudemamemento8325 2 жыл бұрын
He is Malaysian, where Indian cuisine is a big deal here.
@evangelionmann
@evangelionmann 2 жыл бұрын
in all fairness.. no one takes him seriously, but he IS usually correct. very rarely does he call anyone out on something that he's wrong about.. its just also usually never as big of a deal as he makes it.
@tripwire8457
@tripwire8457 2 жыл бұрын
@@evangelionmann Yes, but making a big deal out of it, is what makes it so entertaining 😂
@vespasiancloscan7077
@vespasiancloscan7077 2 жыл бұрын
@@evangelionmann I feel slightly the opposite: yeah he's usually ~correct (would have to be a massive fool not to do superficial research when his whole schtick relies on him being right) but people *do* take him seriously on things criticisms he's absolutely wrong about.
@TheKitchenNinja
@TheKitchenNinja 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a chef with 30 years experience in the industry. Here's my take on Jamie Oliver and dishes like this. He comes off like he's done little to no research on the dishes he's preparing when it comes to "ethnic" cuisines(Asian, south Asian, Italian) and just plunges on ahead with his own idea of what those dishes/cuisines should be. This is really an old school way of doing things that was a hallmark of the late 90s/early 00s Food Network era cooking. There was a lot of interest in multicultural cooking back then, but there was also a lot of whitewashing. That doesn't fly nowadays in a world where savvy enthusiasts have access to vast amounts of knowledge and cultural exposure and are looking for authenticity in the foods they consume and prepare. It shows up personalities like Jamie Oliver and Gordon Ramsay as dated and out of touch. No disrespect to either chef; they both hustled hard to build their fortunes. And I'm all for making a dish your own way if that's the way you love it, but if you're going to put yourself out there and say "This is how you make this", then these days I think there's a lot of responsibility to be well researched and, if you aren't going for authenticity, you should at the very least cite your reasons for why you aren't doing 'traditional dish x' the way it's supposed to be done.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, I agree with you. With the amount of money that is involved with making any of these videos, you would like that someone would do a bit of research beforehand. It's not like someone making a video just for KZbin that's not famous. I grew up watching Ramsey and Jamie, I would have to say that after working for Ramsey chefs the food that we made in London had nothing to do with authenticity. We did mostly French and Italian cuisine mixed with English. However, it was delicious and made a name for one of the top restaurants in London.
@sajadamjad4752
@sajadamjad4752 2 жыл бұрын
I mostly agree with you, but you got the Ramsay part wrong. He has multiple series dedicated to travelling through one country at a time and really learning and embracing their cooking techniques and not in the white washed bs televised version but he really wants to learn. I highly encourage you go see some of his work, because people forget that yes Jamie Oliver and Gordan Ramsay are both TV cooks, one of them had a 3 star resturant before becoming famous on tv. Ramsay is a true cook at heart.
@RurouTube
@RurouTube 2 жыл бұрын
I don't really have any major problem with someone like Gordon Ramsay. When he did his own take of a food, at least he got the basic right. With Jamie tho... I feel like he need to learn more. Like adding that much water to the sauce or to a fried rice, just squeezing the tomato, 10min marinate, making ramen using soba, etc. The resulting dishes probably still taste good, but it can be a lot better if he actually know what he is doing and do more research. So basically, unlike Gordon, there are something that I would actually consider wrong with Jamie's cooking even if it is his own take of a certain dish and if people followed his recipe, they will not get the best version of the dish from that recipe, far from it.
@brancorocks
@brancorocks 2 жыл бұрын
Totally agree with your points about how it's an old school way of thinking but in Gordon's defense he actually puts in an effort at times when it comes to multicultural cuisines it might be just for the sake of profit no idea about the ins and outs of being a celebrity chef but I respect Gordon because of the effort and research he puts in when it comes to Indian cuisine atleast from what I have seen over the years
@brancorocks
@brancorocks 2 жыл бұрын
@@RurouTube oh yeah that's where Jamie's cooking for me starts getting annoying like I welcome his take on European and french techniques of cooking but when he starts going global that's where his lack of knowledge and research starts to get tiresome
@Kagaru15
@Kagaru15 2 жыл бұрын
My poor husband cringed so hard when watching this episode of Uncle Roger roasting Jamie Oliver, as he’s from India and partly trained in a professional Indian kitchen. He said it was painful to watch this dish being called “butter chicken”, when a more apt name might be just Jamie’s version of fusion curry chicken.
@akp3097
@akp3097 2 жыл бұрын
Indian boys are always trained for lil bit cooking… i used to help my mom in kitchen after school time which now help me in CANADA… mom’s recipe is always best
@tanmaypanadi1414
@tanmaypanadi1414 2 жыл бұрын
@@akp3097 ❤️
@spilltea4241
@spilltea4241 2 жыл бұрын
@@akp3097 no they r not
@HGeorge1993
@HGeorge1993 2 жыл бұрын
Your grandparents are cringing at you
@TominatorGaming
@TominatorGaming Жыл бұрын
​@@akp3097 I remember walking into my Indian mates house and feeling like I'd just walked into a gas chamber whenever she was cooking chilies
@alystairmabloch401
@alystairmabloch401 2 жыл бұрын
Funny thing : I once asked an English friend living in France what dish he missed more from home. He said curry. :) It's amazing how much of the Indian cuisine is now part of English culture.
@Burning_Dwarf
@Burning_Dwarf Жыл бұрын
Same for the dutch and indonesian food. The food i miss most from home when abroad is Rendang.
@Sunshine-Dragon
@Sunshine-Dragon 11 ай бұрын
Same for me the food I miss from home is Döner 😄
@nurainiarsad7395
@nurainiarsad7395 9 ай бұрын
for real - The best Indian place I've ever been to is a little restaurant in some hamlet a little way out from Newcastle. And I'm Malaysian, plus have been to India LOL
@thesourav13
@thesourav13 7 ай бұрын
they looted approximately 40 trillion dollars from INDIA during their so-called "colonization" which still now greater the US whole GDP so nothing to be amazed if some cuisines are part of their culture and also they are now governed by an Indian 😂
@mememaster695
@mememaster695 6 ай бұрын
We had massive numbers of Indian immigrants back in the days of the British Raj, and especially after World War 2, and a lot of them found that their most marketable skill was their cooking. At this point, a group of houses doesn't count as a village until it has an Indian takeaway.
@bridgetrodriguez4643
@bridgetrodriguez4643 7 ай бұрын
I love how calm and chill u are. My husband's a chef and your way of explaining and teaching actually reminds me a lot of my love 🥰 He's the calmest, most chill chef I've ever seen and I think its because he's confident in his ability. I love how you break things down and explain. I've turned to KZbin to help me become a better cook and am happy how much I've learned from professionals like yourself
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 7 ай бұрын
I'm glad to hear that! chef life can be very stressful
@bridgetrodriguez4643
@bridgetrodriguez4643 7 ай бұрын
@@ChefJamesMakinson Without a doubt it can. Currently we work in Chinese food and that's 6 - 12 shifts. We move around the country and there always very busy. Most are between 150 to 430 tickets a day. A lot of people don't realize there making sauces per order and that it takes time to make correctly. What u said about a chef doing it in 10 minutes but it taking longer for someone still learning is true. When I try to cook it always takes me longer.
@iansclone
@iansclone 2 жыл бұрын
"This is his take, it's for him and his family" I'd agree, except this was broadcast by the BBC under the guise of "professional cook" status. Oliver was, additionally, cooking this for the viewership. The end result is a healthy portion of viewers thinking that butter chicken doesn't need butter, the chicken can be breasts, the seeds should be popped out of the peppers, etc. All I'm saying: dude sets a bad example for people genuinely interested in IMPROVING their cooking. Can't wait for a Jamie Oliver v Uncle Roger cook-off...
@piemiller4433
@piemiller4433 2 жыл бұрын
VS nobody , Chef… Uncle Roger do not know how to cook!
@minhuang8848
@minhuang8848 2 жыл бұрын
So freaking what? It couldn't have been more obvious that it is his personal take, if you went into the history and etymology of any dish, cooking videos on any platform wouldn't run below thirty minutes. It'd be interesting, but Jesus Christ, how about folks just use their own brain for half a second and google "butter chicken authentic recipe" or something? If you can't manage that, no disclaimer or text on-screen will help you in your futile quest to becoming a decent homecook. Blame JO for some of his silly takes, not for his audience being too lazy to grab a pan of their own in the first place.
@Madkklown
@Madkklown 2 жыл бұрын
@@piemiller4433 Uncle Roger cooks. He aint that very good at it but he cooks. Jamie cooks but puts his own version of it. Which is really disturbing to look at 😆
@tinluu7364
@tinluu7364 2 жыл бұрын
I agree brother. He is broadcasting and get the name of each dishes such as Thai green Curry... and nothing about it considered to be Thai ingredients. You can improvise food, dont get me wrong, but you cannot called Thai Green Curry, and nothing about it to be Thai ingredients, its disgusting. How about just say Jamie Curry or some other shit, nobody judge him for it.
@iansclone
@iansclone 2 жыл бұрын
@@minhuang8848 so freaking what? Chicken butt. I guess you're right - people aren't entitled to opinions anymore and reality is a meaningless concept. Time to post my peanut butter and jelly recipe that uses mayonnaise and sardines, because it's "my take." For a moment, it almost seemed like you knew what you were talking about. You'll get there, sport.
@SiddhantPradhan22
@SiddhantPradhan22 2 жыл бұрын
As an Indian, I agree with Uncle Roger. Jamie should stick to butchering British food and not ruining our beloved butter chicken. If you don't have a tandoor or grill, stick the chicken in the oven with the marinade and then smoke it with coal. Gives you a similar flavour before it goes into the gravy. Also why the hell does he put rubbish in it like cashew butter and mango chutney?
@siliconhawk
@siliconhawk 2 жыл бұрын
brits have food ? other than fish and chips ? and maybe bread
@Thalaranthey
@Thalaranthey 2 жыл бұрын
@@siliconhawk british breakfast is really good. But yeah, british cusine doesnt exist beyond that
@RealAngelOfMusic
@RealAngelOfMusic 2 жыл бұрын
@@Thalaranthey Sunday roast with Yorkshire pudding is pretty good too. and the desserts. and tea time is iconic
@eldolor7322
@eldolor7322 2 жыл бұрын
@@RealAngelOfMusic I hope we can spend time for some tea time in the future🌹🌹🌹
@sulemax9907
@sulemax9907 2 жыл бұрын
Had a butter chicken 2 days ago and it was delicious, now i understand why people mad at jamie.
@EricMilward
@EricMilward 2 жыл бұрын
It's funny to just hear Uncle Roger talk trash because what do I know? I'm not a chef. But to hear an actual chef validate his remarks just makes it so much funnier 😆
@TheYoungMindz
@TheYoungMindz Жыл бұрын
You don't need to be a Professional Chef to talk trash over someone who trashing your culture cuisine. I'm not Chef yet know every basic what my culture cuisine to prepare it, how it should be and look. In other words, stop butchering other cultures cuisine!!
@WrestleGermainia
@WrestleGermainia Жыл бұрын
@@TheYoungMindz Or mainly just tell your audience that it's not traditional and has been bastardised. Sometimes it's good to freestyle and change things up/experiment, just can't go around introducing that version as the original. Bastards aren't always bad, you just have to introduce them as one or people are going to be blindsided.
@Nezmco
@Nezmco Жыл бұрын
@@TheYoungMindz It's perfectly fine to butcher culture cuisine, at home, without advertizing it. As a Chef, making a video, it's how we end up with Carbonara having cream in it around the world, except where carbonara comes from. :(
@TheYoungMindz
@TheYoungMindz Жыл бұрын
@@WrestleGermainia That's the problem, every cooking show from the west keep butchering Asian cuisine and the judges talks as if they know better. Look at what happened years ago when He(Masterchef judge) criticized Malaysian national food Nasi Lemak Rendang, he said the chicken ain't crispy enough like WTF!? It's like saying why the Pasta ain't crispy. This is the problem with Western cooking shows/contest.
@TheYoungMindz
@TheYoungMindz Жыл бұрын
@@Nezmco it's fine when you do it yourself without advertising it or make it a content. And inform the audience that it's not the original but altered/fusion style remake. If you did not do that and claimed it original that's disrespect.
@Cryozymes
@Cryozymes Жыл бұрын
As a fellow chef I love your reactions with Uncle Roger because I feel your pain 😆. Your cooking videos are good as well for brushing up on knowledge of things I don't get to do often at my job.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! I used to ask why we make things this way or another a lot, as most of the time it's just. Do as I tell you! haha
@paulsvehla2253
@paulsvehla2253 Жыл бұрын
Chef James you are awesome at explaining all the interesting history and technicalities of cooking. thank you!
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
thank you! :)
@F1fan4eva
@F1fan4eva 2 жыл бұрын
What amazes me is that uncle Roger, a Malaysian comedy KZbinr living in Britain, knows more about this quintessential Indian dish more and better than Jamie Olive Oil. And James‘s (a professional chef's) points here all agree with uncle Roger!!!
@Ingridfire
@Ingridfire 2 жыл бұрын
Malaysia is a hot pot of culture. It does come naturally to know at least a few things about each other, especially food!
@F1fan4eva
@F1fan4eva 2 жыл бұрын
@@Ingridfire I like the way you think! Also we have the same first name 😂
@roxdu
@roxdu 2 жыл бұрын
I saw a an interview with Uncle Roger and he says he does very thorough research beforehand, he does a call out on Instagram or something about the recipe then he selects experienced chefs with good background on the subject, who reached out to him, and pays them for their time to find out all the info about the recipe, then he prepares very well the video before shooting it. He takes it very seriously.
@asharahmad1068
@asharahmad1068 Жыл бұрын
@@F1fan4eva uncle Roger is a Malaysian and in Malaysia Indian food is common
@hidayahumar6174
@hidayahumar6174 Жыл бұрын
Because he is Malaysian. Malays Indian and Chinese were the biggest ethnic in Malaysia.
@whadatmowfdu7320
@whadatmowfdu7320 2 жыл бұрын
I LOVE seeing the confusion spread across yours and Uncle Rogers face simultaneously when he added the mango chutney. Gold!! 😂😂😂😂😂
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
😂
@domeplsffs
@domeplsffs 2 жыл бұрын
Very much so! Thats basically the whole reason i watch these videos. James is very genuine and it's very enjoyable to see his reaction to ehm.. this kind of creativity, lets just say. xD
@S_047
@S_047 Жыл бұрын
Jamie and his jam.... Like Uncle Rodger said.. his name has jam in it. Doesn't mean you have to always use .. *cough* same with the olive oil
@Thechillilover
@Thechillilover Жыл бұрын
Trust me, all indians had that.
@91rummy
@91rummy 2 жыл бұрын
As an Indian vegetarian, usually Paneer(cottage cheese) is a replacement for any meat.. charring paneer will do.. Don't have to charr tomatoes.. and no need to remove skin.. you sauté onions, ginger-garlic paste, chillies, spices, chopped tomatoes and let it cook down until soft and then grind it and sieve it to get smooth creamy paste.. And no turmeric in the marinade.. hayya...
@A1BASE
@A1BASE Жыл бұрын
For tandoori chicken at home I agree a tandoor and then grill are the first two options, but before frying it I suggest roasting it. Get your oven as hot as it'll go and spread your chicken pieces out on a tray and roast for about 15 or 20 minutes. This is a recommendation in Madhur Jaffrey's old book 'Madhur Jaffrey's Indian Cookery' that accompanied the BBC tv series by the same name back in 1982. It''s still my go-to Indian cookery book.
@kachokako
@kachokako 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your kind words and reactions 😊 And the extra knowledge throughout the video, as well 😄😄
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!
@bmshan
@bmshan 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like James used uncle Roger as his anger translator 😂
@insomn1ous
@insomn1ous 2 жыл бұрын
I finally tried making my own butter chicken not too long ago, everything from scratch. Highly recommend anyone to try a proper yogurt marinade with 12+ hours given before using, the results are absolutely worth it.
@Oldlard
@Oldlard 2 жыл бұрын
What brand of mango chutney did you use?
@shadebinder3599
@shadebinder3599 2 жыл бұрын
@@Oldlard I prefer chili jam, you can get it in Whole Foods
@Throbtometrist
@Throbtometrist 2 жыл бұрын
@@shadebinder3599 best response
@katherinestojanovski6734
@katherinestojanovski6734 2 жыл бұрын
@@Oldlard 😂awesome comment!
@seansandberg5580
@seansandberg5580 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who's about a year into my professional culinary journey I just wanted to say thank you. I learn so much from your videos. So informative and eloquent. Keep killing it, Chef.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
thank you so much!! let me know if you have any questions about chef life!
@QuadHealer
@QuadHealer Жыл бұрын
I really like that you acknowledge the skill and style of other chefs, and don’t have an “it is my way or the highway” attitude. Your courteous way of critiquing and giving advice teaches people to cook better regardless of their level, and you leave it up to the viewer to decide which is best for them. My only issue with your videos is that I get so hungry 😊. Thank you very much for these videos.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@JTMMTV
@JTMMTV 2 жыл бұрын
You deserve more subs. Your information is what makes you so enjoyable. Just found your channel but will be binge watching this week.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@NeedleDrops
@NeedleDrops 2 жыл бұрын
I did my stage in an Indian restaurant. It was one of the most fun foods to cook I've ever done. I'll tell you what, though, If it was presented on a menu as butter chicken, it would have butter in it. If you're going to call it a recipe that's well known, it has to stick to the format and flavor profile in my opinion.
@timhonigs6859
@timhonigs6859 2 жыл бұрын
I've been a mid level chef for 20 years. Everything from dishwasher to sous chef. Every chef I know, will look at a recipe and tweak it. Add their own spin. But! If it's the national dish of your own home country, sticking to the main ingredients would be a helpful first step. Chicken breast--lots of restaurants use the breast only, so I can see this in a restaurant revamp, but for a home cook....a pak of chicken legs is cheaper than breasts. Butter-- come on. At least add in a good quality butter, if not clarified butter, or ghee. (It's still Indian...) Chilis-- Here, make it to the palates of your guests. (I'd still add at least 5 times the amount that Jamie did. It's the reason it's in a cream sauce. Marinade-- Enough said. (Yogurt does have the enzymes which will help break down the chicken, which will tenderize the meat....overnight, not 10 min) Rice--Basmati. Nuff said. That's my take. If I was to enhance this dish in any way, it would be to switch out the chicken for duck (NOT breast!!) Or even game hen halves. It's a tweak, not a rewrite.
@Eren-da-Jaeger
@Eren-da-Jaeger 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, we should not butcher a well known dish be it from any country. Just follow the traditional method of that country.
@beastgaming7879
@beastgaming7879 Жыл бұрын
​@@timhonigs6859 Mr. Chilli jam didn't just tweek the dish. He destroyed it 😂
@jellosapiens7261
@jellosapiens7261 2 жыл бұрын
James's subdued yet astute reactions are honestly really refreshing in a genre filled with over-the-top reactions designed to garner as much attention as possible
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
thank you very much Jello! This is one of the nicest comments that I have every received!
@calebkeanu23
@calebkeanu23 2 жыл бұрын
Uncle Roger seems to know so much ,it's cool see a professional chef actually agreeing and adding to what his saying
@jatidiri9739
@jatidiri9739 Жыл бұрын
Uncle Roger once fought an AI in an egg fried rice recipe. And he won. Naturally he knows how to make Asian food, and he just wants the authenticity of the food to remain. He doesn't want a chef class who should be able to try to make exactly the same dish, to be the exact opposite and to make matters worse, mess him up. But I salute the several chefs he has roasted, actually met and learned from him. They got better and Uncle Roger will always be like that.
@RS-zp6hb
@RS-zp6hb 3 ай бұрын
but jamie never claimed that it was authentic, thats how he likes to make it. how do you think cuisines evolve? ill give you a hint, it was not by paying attention to snotty gatekeeping losers.
@edjarrett3164
@edjarrett3164 Жыл бұрын
I watched and understood the food discussion. The dialogue on what our community believes in is essential. Right, wrong, whatever, the discussion makes us all better. This is a wonderful forum to discuss what we do, why we do it and our hopes for the hopeful expedited result. 15 year cook hoping always for the best for our industry.
@MahiMahi-yu5jo
@MahiMahi-yu5jo 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, to me Jamie Oliver is like the greatest comedian in History. Most of his cooking videos make me laugh so hard I nearly choke to death... However, love your insights regarding the dishes.
@trishah4785
@trishah4785 2 жыл бұрын
u r right actually 🤣🤣🤣
@yotjha
@yotjha 2 жыл бұрын
We can really tell that Chef James is one good cook that paid attention in every food history class. He knows so much about where ingredients come from and make a good use of it. Respect!
@TheYoungMindz
@TheYoungMindz Жыл бұрын
I hppe this is a joke statement. Because he got the knowledge but bad at putting it to practical. Always butchering Asian cuisine. 🤣
@ejaalias9159
@ejaalias9159 2 жыл бұрын
For me, its okay to change and make it his owned. But.. he need to explained more about the original version and what did he changed to make it his own to show that he is a chef with knowledge to respect the authentic recipe. Great reaction video btw, i love how u explained and try to understand first, before judging. ❤️🇲🇾
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
thank you Eja! :)
@MacyTheGoatGirL
@MacyTheGoatGirL 4 ай бұрын
im an indian and i dont think its ok. We dont go and try to change european dishes ok
@maddyc2412
@maddyc2412 6 ай бұрын
I like how you tell us how things should actually be done properly instead of just criticizing, it's very helpful
@floodgates182
@floodgates182 8 ай бұрын
10:48 That's so true! I've seen that with Oliver a lot, he burns the food and then scrapes the burnt bits into his sauce! You're better off undercooking your meat and sticking it in a low oven to finish while you make the gravy or sauce. You can still add any juices from the oven pan at the end.
@pringlebatch
@pringlebatch 6 ай бұрын
He seems to love his char! I wonder if he has pica or something 😜
@plumokin5535
@plumokin5535 2 жыл бұрын
It's also important to note that British chutney and Indian chutney are very different flavor wise. Indian chutney tends to be more savory and spicy, whereas sweetness is more popular in British chutney
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg 2 жыл бұрын
Not really india has sweet chutneys , too mango ,tomato and ruit chutney ,. Chutney is a generic used for ground up dips ,sauces ,jams and sometimes pickles , .for eg many jams are called chutney , middle eastern hummus is also a type of chutney , srilankan sambol either dry or wet is type of chutney, Italian pesto is chutney in indian context even things like salsa or vegetable mashes can be considered chutney 👍 hope u understand
@ohwiseone5995
@ohwiseone5995 2 жыл бұрын
@@Anmolnegi-yw7hg you're right. But you see, 'chutney' in isolation usually infers to a savory and spicy condiment. When it has a sweet profile, just as you referred it, we call it a "meethi chutney" or sweet chutney...
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg 2 жыл бұрын
@@ohwiseone5995 yep but if u mention chutney it can mean anything , In my region we name the specific chutney but I will say the word chutneys means a lot more to us , I mean we have traditional karela chutney with roasted and chopped karela with herbs onion and mustard oil , for other person it might seem like salad but in my state it is called chutney
@kabir3510
@kabir3510 2 жыл бұрын
Wouldn't a spicy or sour chutney be achaar? Chutney can sweet or sweet and spicy
@spilltea4241
@spilltea4241 2 жыл бұрын
@@kabir3510 Chutney is cooked Achaar is pickled.
@eliseannmifsud2972
@eliseannmifsud2972 2 жыл бұрын
Butter chicken with no butter, is like having a birthday party but the person who has the birthday doesn't show up
@mokes01
@mokes01 2 жыл бұрын
I feel you Uncle R... I'm still recovering from the shock I got from watching video how Jamie Olivier made Gado-gado (a famous Indonesian salad) a few years ago. Yes, I'm still recovering even after all these years 😭
@BoiledCh1cken
@BoiledCh1cken 2 жыл бұрын
Gado-gado using peanut butter? terrible😭
@mithafox
@mithafox 2 жыл бұрын
I remember it and still can't believe he did that.. 🥲🫣
@fachrifatahlukman9773
@fachrifatahlukman9773 2 жыл бұрын
peanut butter gado gado ? astagfirullah 😑
@musti12312
@musti12312 Жыл бұрын
As you said, Indian food is very popular in the UK, and you can get it in almost every small town. Of course the Indian restuarants have adapted to local tastes, and there are even some additions like Chicken Tikka Masala (allegedly invented in Scotland) or very regional dishes not heard of elsewhere in India (or the subcontinent) like Balti which is specific to Baltistan (to prevent a comments' war, I'll say in contested territory); reflecting migration patterns to teh uk I think Jamie is more closely following the butter chicken recipes available in England/UK as opposed to the authentic Indian recipe
@JJOOKER
@JJOOKER Жыл бұрын
In Japan too , theres a flood of indian and nepalese restaurants, and i really love indian food i already eat green curry , butter chicken , curry masala , mutton curry, shrimp curry ,tandori chicken the other yellow chicken dont remember the name, samosa and obviously nan and cheese nan.
@dyrtybarstud5261
@dyrtybarstud5261 Жыл бұрын
Something i have found works pretty well when you do not have a tandoor oven handy is to use a deep tray with an airing rack in the oven to cook your chicken skewers. Just crank up the temperature to 250C and cook them for about 6-8 minutes.
@loblawbomb1532
@loblawbomb1532 2 жыл бұрын
Regarding tandoori chicken sans grill or tandoor, you can just broil the chicken in your oven on high, making sure the meat is on the top rack. You're looking for the yogurt to just begin to char, then turn it over. Make sure to tent the meat and let it rest for a few minutes before you do anything with it!
@anthonycubechester8961
@anthonycubechester8961 2 жыл бұрын
I don't know anything about cooking but it's fun to see a professional give Uncle Roger some legitimacy
@minhuang8848
@minhuang8848 2 жыл бұрын
To be fair, Uncle Roger's routine tends to go way overboard with the nonsense food prescriptivism I hate so much in the industry. Especially here where JO makes it perfectly clear that it is just his version of the dish, the only way for him to get actual cooking legitimacy would be for him to cook the dish and taste it before judging the results. Not that Jamie comes up with a great deal of nonsense here and there, but I mean let's face it, nobody here would chuck anything he made because chances are, all of it is still really good. He is right about some things, but he is just milking some needless nuances for his routine too. Like, people complain about chickpeas in rice, but what with it being an actual dish and having a pretty good idea of what it would taste like... why the hell not? I'd rather have someone have me come up with neat ideas for a dish than drill old, established wisdoms into my head about dishes I already know or can just look up, even if it ends up coming out mediocre.
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg 2 жыл бұрын
@@minhuang8848 oh finally I met my companion😭 I always find uncle Rogers roasting overboard , considering I have been cooking food , when I was 10 years and I also do a lot of research on different cuisine ., and I think he really needs to do a little research on foods he react , I mean if a person is a good cook or even food blogger who has eaten food from around the world would be less surprised by new combinations and won't hate on petty difference in cooking like rice is cooked in pot or rice cooker. I know that he is making vedios but people get pretty polarized through his vedios. Food can be made many ways with many ingredients except for fixed recipe dishes 👍
@mrslamb1807
@mrslamb1807 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Chef James, really enjoyed your video and your respectful and fair comments! You really cracked me up when you tried so hard not to laugh but agreed with Uncle Roger.
@mmj1342
@mmj1342 Жыл бұрын
Chef James and Uncle Roger hit on a theme about cooking dishes from other cultures that I've also learned from Italian cooking (see Italia Squisita) and French cooking (watching classic Julia Child vids): The names of the dishes actually mean something--a traditional, specific, actual recipe. In the US (I'm American) and perhaps the UK, there's a newer tradition of fusion and constantly modifying dishes that is a contradiction to traditional cuisines. My takeaway is that it's okay to modify a dish, but just don't call it the traditional name (e.g., Butter Chicken is Butter Chicken; Spaghetti Carbonara is Spaghetti Carbonara--NO CREAM; instead just call it "a chicken dish inspired by butter chicken" or "pasta inspired by spaghetti carbonara"); it's like telling an American your cooking a cheeseburger and then pan-frying tofu or turkey and topping with cheese and placing in a bun; almost no American would recognize it as a true cheeseburger. Otherwise, none of us learn what the traditional dish is actually supposed to look and taste like.
@ngsomeguy
@ngsomeguy 2 жыл бұрын
I'm questioning how Jaime is considered a professional chef. He's ruined so many basic foods
@halycon404
@halycon404 2 жыл бұрын
To be fair, this isn't his wheel house. He's a classically trained french chef. What he's famous for isn't the book versions of classic dishes though. He's from england and some of the stuff that grows in southern france doesn't grow in england. Can't be sourced locally, especially back when he was starting to gain recognition. So his claim to fame is working around what can be found in england to create something new, a blend of english and french. To Jamie everything is malleable to what you can get. That's really his style. French underpinned cooking techniques married to whatever can be easily found. Nothing is traditional, but everything is recognizable. Oh, and why the english like him so much is he heavily changes dishes from home use to his restaurants. Stuff like this is simplified to what can be found at a local corner grocery store or shop from what he'd serve in one of his places. He makes a strong demarcation between the two. He's got videos of what his restaurants recipes are like, and they're another world of complexity. Jamie was one of the first to get on TV and be, "Look, this is what to do if you've got 10 minutes on a weeknight and want something great.", instead of, "This is going to take hours.".
@kacangajaib1563
@kacangajaib1563 2 жыл бұрын
lmao yes especially traditional asian dish (whether its chinese or indian or any other asian dish), he ruined my indonesian traditional dish one time so i dont respect him anymore
@sameeremerald
@sameeremerald 2 жыл бұрын
My 10 year old daughter can cook better than Jamie , proud Asian father
@chelseafc2108
@chelseafc2108 2 жыл бұрын
@@halycon404 If it's not his wheel house why not study the cuisine, do proper research before making a youtube video "recipe" that millions of people will watch? If you didn't know how the hell to fix your car, would you make a video on how to fix a car?
@kakefisk
@kakefisk 2 жыл бұрын
He's not a chef. He used to cook professionally, but that does not make him a chef.
@markblacoe7725
@markblacoe7725 2 жыл бұрын
Jamie’s not making it for his family. He’s making millions of pounds selling his recipes and lies to us all
@BleedingOnion
@BleedingOnion 2 жыл бұрын
I felt my soul fly away when he added that mango chutney. That should never even have been near it!!!
@ajiththomas2465
@ajiththomas2465 2 жыл бұрын
Mango chutney...I thought this fool Jamie Oliver was making butter chicken, not dosa or ghee/ney roast. 400 years of spice hoarding, this is what the British people come out with. Every time I watch a Jamie Oliver cooking video, I feel like he's doing a Colonel Dyer to my heart and soul. Jamie Oliver is colonialism on cooking personified. Someone stop him.
@annak8755
@annak8755 2 жыл бұрын
@@ajiththomas2465 I'm not Indian, but it is sad to see a "professional" make a dish that looks worse than a Tesco £3 meal.
@keepdancingmaria
@keepdancingmaria 2 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate your calm, smiling, explanations. I learned much from you about food and cooking today.
@pandamilkshake
@pandamilkshake Жыл бұрын
I love the "Españoladas" you throw in the middle of an English sentence like "a ver" and such
@starkingkirito2212
@starkingkirito2212 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who grew up eating Indian Food, I am pretty sure that any Indian Chef would go insane when they see someone adding Mango Chutney (That Sounds VERY wrong) to a Butter Chicken. And yes, you are right about the Fact that 'Indian Cusine is popular in UK'. I do think Jamie should not get so much Criticism though. I mean, His cooking techniques and methods are VERY CURSED but maybe, with the traditional Recipies and Tips, he can make a propper Dish (I wish...).
@jayjohnson8403
@jayjohnson8403 2 жыл бұрын
Jamie deserves all criticism.
@whydoineedanameiwillneverp7790
@whydoineedanameiwillneverp7790 Жыл бұрын
I am an Indian, and honestly, the recipe doesn't sound half bad. _As long as I think of it as a "British curry" and not "Indian" or "butter chicken"_ Except the massive amounts of water he poured in - it sounds like a decent enough British curry. The charred tomatoes and chillies would introduce some of the same smokiness to the dish that you would get from chicken cooked in a tandoor. I would probably char them on an open flame though. There's nothing fundamentally wrong about cooking with a chutney - achari chicken/paneer/ is a legit thing in restaurants in India, it's just the thing is too bloody strong for a _butter_ chicken. Cashew butter is just shelf stable cashew paste. Together they can balance out the acidity of tomatoes nicely. The chicken breast isn't my favourite cut, but it's very British/western and with enough rich gravy slathered on, it'll be juicy enough. All in all, not a bad recipe at all - it's just not _butter_ chicken.
@Ogema-1
@Ogema-1 2 жыл бұрын
Part of cooking is economics, you adapt the food to what's available, and you prepare food that fits the local taste if you're selling something. Flour Tortilla is just as "authentic" as corn tortilla if you understand that it was originally a regional thing, but when it comes to "making your take" it has to make sense why you are substituting ingredients and they should relate to each other for example replacing pine nuts in pesto with almonds. Pine nuts cost an arm and a leg and are a sort of nutty protein. Honestly, I would have been happy if Oliver at least demonstrated a base understanding of the original recipe, you're supposed to do X but I am doing Y. If people follow his take they come out misinformed on what Buttered Chicken and how it suppose to taste.
@jarbeefis
@jarbeefis 2 жыл бұрын
The worst "Buttered Chicken" experience I had was at a local restaurant. They literally just deep fried a chicken thigh, and poured tons of melted butter on it and served it to me. I didn't wanna waste the food and so I tried it, and it was the nastiest flavor I've ever tasted. Chicken barely seasoned, and so it tasted like I just bit into a stick of butter. Never going back there again.
@jarbeefis
@jarbeefis 2 жыл бұрын
@@mustwereallydothis They're still in business, but had to change their chef. Turns out he lied about being a culinary school graduate and the owner of the place didn't do a proper background check. A friend told me about two food poisoning complaints a couple of days ago though. They served out scallops that went bad. They're definitely gonna go out of business soon.
@ghost_1176
@ghost_1176 2 жыл бұрын
They took the name butter chicken too literally 😂
@luciep.4949
@luciep.4949 2 жыл бұрын
@@jarbeefis I feel like I need to know the name of the restaurant - just so that I can avoid it! Hope it's not in London? Very sorry for your experience!
@jarbeefis
@jarbeefis 2 жыл бұрын
@@luciep.4949 If you're worried about this restaurant being in London, then worry not. It's actually half a world away, so you're gonna be fine.
@luciep.4949
@luciep.4949 2 жыл бұрын
@@jarbeefis glad to hear that. Not that there are no bad restaurants around here one has to dodge:-/
@catalyst1659
@catalyst1659 Жыл бұрын
Chef James I think you're being way too humble of Indian cuisine's knowledge, coz everything you mentioned was so on point. And I'm thoroughly impressed now sire 😊 P.S. I love your subtle laughs at Uncle Roger's comments 😂
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you
@deirdredowling-mv6bs
@deirdredowling-mv6bs Ай бұрын
When Jamie Oliver always uses the word pukka 💁🤦‍♀️🤣. Enjoy your channel James. Uncle 🤣🤣🤣love from Dublin, Ireland 🇮🇪💚
@Joshiwelu
@Joshiwelu 2 жыл бұрын
Even though its for his own tastebud, still he's a chef, he must stick on what's the ingredient or how to cook it right. We can't just justify the reason of because that's what Jamie wants.
@lillyess385
@lillyess385 2 жыл бұрын
His audience won't eat the original though. I would, if I ate chicken, but all of the people I grew up with won't touch it because it's too spicey. He cooks for his consumer base. 🤷🏻‍♀️
@LilianaKali
@LilianaKali 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah. He should at least tell people when he differs so they don't think what he's doing is authentic and explain why he made the choices he did. Like, "I'm going to put mango chutney - now normally chutney is served as a side but my kids and I like adding some sweet fruity flavour and since this is for me and my family this is how we're going to do it today. If you were making this authentically you can put the chutney on the side as an option". Something like that, maybe?
@Joshiwelu
@Joshiwelu 2 жыл бұрын
@@lillyess385Yeah, but, to think that he tells his audience that this and that are the process and the ingredients, is incredibly wrong. He should have a disclaimer that he is making his own version, but he didn't. He's like making a kimchi without the kimchi being spicy and sour. It defeats the purpose and the taste of the food.
@Joshiwelu
@Joshiwelu 2 жыл бұрын
@@LilianaKali Yeah, he should have made a disclaimer about his version, it that's what he really wanted to do.
@vukkulvar9769
@vukkulvar9769 2 жыл бұрын
@@lillyess385 Just make it less spicy but still prepare it creamy and buttery.
@anetteavenido
@anetteavenido 2 жыл бұрын
This is a very educational reaction review to a reaction review. You get an educated knowledge and explanation from a professional chef on why Uncle Roger is reacting on how he is reacting. This makes me think how on Earth did Jamie Oliver became a professional chef? uhmmm…sad…as an aspiring chef, myself, this opened my eyes (and brain) to study and RESPECT other countries cuisine first before doing it and sharing it to others, even though it’s your family…especially, your family. As a Chef, you are your family’s food teacher with other countries food/cuisine/delicacies. Food Education.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!! it means a lot! :) after traveling and working in France, Spain, the UK, and back in the US, I have learned a lot that I would not have if I stayed in one place. if you have any questions about cooking or working in a professional kitchen don't hesitate to ask!
@anetteavenido
@anetteavenido 2 жыл бұрын
@@ChefJamesMakinson Wow! I am shook! Yes, Chef! Will definitely ask questions on techniques and dos/donts. Thank you 🙏🏽
@ZarathosDaimaoh
@ZarathosDaimaoh 2 жыл бұрын
I'm all for poking , even trashing him on videos where he actually makes mistakes ... But i doubt he got there by accident and without talent . A more likely scenario is that with ever increasing fame , (especially around the idea that everything he cooks is supposed to be healthy ) inflated his ego and made him believe then , that any recipe with the Jamie Oliver branding , is great .
@ghosty918
@ghosty918 2 жыл бұрын
One explanation I saw for why Jamie Oliver got big is because he took classic French cuisine and made some adjustments to use local British ingredients to replace the French ones that are less available in Britain. Noone respects the French or cares about changing their traditional dishes. So Jamie Oliver's style is 'British misunderstand of [X] foreign dish'
@ZarathosDaimaoh
@ZarathosDaimaoh 2 жыл бұрын
@@ghosty918 Even then it warrants and requires some talent . I'd just say that it's not a field where you can just stop learning , stagnate and rest on your laurels . And to me it feels that he just did that . He likely did not always "sucks" . At some point he probably started caring more about being a tv and public personality , than a top tier chef .
@roteberg1
@roteberg1 2 жыл бұрын
Me and my parents make butter chicken quite a lot, we seldom prepare the marinade and chicken beforehand, but we put a lot of yoghurt in the marinade which also allows for some extra creaminess in the finished product, but it gets to marinate for about 20 minutes before going into the pot. Then we make the makhani sauce separate and add it to the pot after the chicken is finished cooking.
@everydaydreamer1
@everydaydreamer1 2 жыл бұрын
Nigel is so cute when he falls out the character of uncle Roger and smiles
@bazman32
@bazman32 2 ай бұрын
A professional chef critiquing a comedian critiquing a celebrity chef! Chef James' reactions makes funnier than the original :P
@PotatoPirate123
@PotatoPirate123 2 жыл бұрын
I'm convinced this is either a piss-take from Jamie or he's so completely obsessed with his image that he can't bring himself to put something as unhealthy as butter in his butter chicken (after notoriously attempting to nuke unhealthy school dinners in the 'Jamie's Dinners' series). The addition of chick peas in his rice points to the latter. It's also possible that after years of having his ego massaged, years of commercial sponsorship with his name on everything from knives to pestles and mortars, and with everyone telling him how great he is - it's possible that he genuinely thinks that his way is best, and tradition be damned. I don't know the guy but it's hard to respect recipes like this when he doesn't at least open with a disclaimer that they are not in any way traditional and that it's just a dish his kids like. I'm all for folk adapting their recipes however they please, but people will - rightly or wrongly - trust the food from celebrity chefs like Jamie as a good starting point when learning to make butter chicken. For this reason they are going to end up with a completely inauthentic experience, so it's good that people are calling him out for things like this.
@cdb5001
@cdb5001 2 жыл бұрын
I don't care for Jamie's cooking, but in fairness, the beginning of the video literally says "Butter chicken my kinda way", meaning Jamie's version. So technically, he did exactly that. This recipe is not as bad as many of his butcherings. I'm Portuguese, and had to watch him make "Piri Piri chicken" (which by the way, in Portugal is like the 500th most popular dish, not that popular), and had to watch him make bland rotisserie chicken that was as Portuguese as Uncle Roger.
@ssrbgangimaribotan6thofthe12
@ssrbgangimaribotan6thofthe12 2 жыл бұрын
@@cdb5001 That "butter chicken my kinda way" is also a lie tho, there is no butter at all in the dish. so its more like "slight spiced yogurt chicken with tomato gravy"
@amanita8397
@amanita8397 2 жыл бұрын
@@ssrbgangimaribotan6thofthe12 People can have personal take on dishes but I think Jamie too frequently cross the line that defines the dish
@bareng-an221
@bareng-an221 2 жыл бұрын
The unhealthy food series is rather funny. I remember the part when he made nugget, and rather than being disgusted I was intrigued since it's a nice way to use all parts. I mean, we already breed and kill the chicken to eat them. Using all parts including cartilage and not usually eaten stuff are great way to not waste stuff.
@cdb5001
@cdb5001 2 жыл бұрын
@@ssrbgangimaribotan6thofthe12 agreed, most of Jamie's cooking is a lie, lol.
@saby8765
@saby8765 2 жыл бұрын
Chef James, you say you're not an expert in Indian cuisine, but I saw your other video, where you said, Indian food uses a lot of tomatoes but tomato is not indigenous to India. That is 100% correct. Tomato came to India with Britishers. That's why older Mughlai dishes have no tomatoes.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Many other ingredients came to Europe after Columbus, chocolate, potatoes, corn, and many more! I love Indian cuisine, I really want to visit and try other dishes and curry's that we don't normally see here!
@HendrayatnaTafianoto
@HendrayatnaTafianoto 2 жыл бұрын
@@ChefJamesMakinson And the most important one (well, from the asian perspective anyway): Chili. It's hard to overstate how chili has transformed dishes across Asia. No chili, no curry :D
@shirokun4742
@shirokun4742 2 жыл бұрын
Tomato come after Portuguese navy 😓😓🚫🚫not east india company
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg
@Anmolnegi-yw7hg 2 жыл бұрын
Old indian dishes uses , youghurt , kokum ,tamarind ,sour buttermilk ,lemons ,sour plums, dried mango and different things as souring agent , as the first tomatoes in india were used as souring but nowadays we hae both sweet and sour ones , but many dishes use tomato in india like Italian food but it is choice also except the recipe is exact or based around tomato itself like butter chicken
@salempasangasp
@salempasangasp 2 жыл бұрын
@@ChefJamesMakinson yeah before tomatoes most used ingredients for the sourness were tamarind in the South and achar/dry mango powder and yogurt in the North. You can still see this in some authentic South Indian recipes where they don't use tomatoes at all. Also ota the same with red chillies , recipes usually have black pepper
@joshlovesfood
@joshlovesfood 2 жыл бұрын
I really like how clear and factual your advice is, golden! Thank you for posting! A home cook like me, this is super awesome! I also really respect your respect for other people's cooking, so classy and mature! You are a cool dude in my books!
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much! 😊
@mohsinkhan-bn3gb
@mohsinkhan-bn3gb 2 жыл бұрын
First of all tandori chicken or butter chicken doesn't need sugar or sweetness all the required Sweetness comes from tomatoes (specially the ripe one) secondly if you dont have tandoor or grill the recipe become kind of a handi or karahi which is also another famous dish its like making ramen without noodles. But anyway overall it's good to know you people also love this
@abhishektripathi8457
@abhishektripathi8457 2 жыл бұрын
The gravy is made by blanching onion, tomato and cashew which are then blended. Sauté the blended gravy with whole spices, ginger and garlic
@martinsmith7418
@martinsmith7418 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are getting better and better chef! I really enjoyed this video and your explanations!
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@nokturn882
@nokturn882 2 жыл бұрын
Then he shouldn’t call it “butter chicken” it looks more a chicken tomato sauce. It’s like making a pepperoni pizza without using any pepperoni at all.
@CaulkMongler
@CaulkMongler 2 жыл бұрын
I think a lot less people would be bothered by Jamie Oliver if he were just a bit more accurate with what he was trying to accomplish, rather than marketing it as closer to what the traditional dish actually is, or pretending like you don’t have to take care of what you actually put into your dishes. I just worry that some poor viewer would make a genuine mistake in believing the dish they’re making is anything similar to what it’s supposed to be, and it offends or puts someone off.
@elizabeth3230
@elizabeth3230 Жыл бұрын
I’ve never seen your videos before but I think I lost a lung when you said “it’s all about learning” with THE most sarcastic face ever!😂😂😂😂
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
😂
@Dexter69941
@Dexter69941 Жыл бұрын
Love this guy how he still give heart this video is 1 yr old still he giving heart to everyone ❤
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
🤣 I try!
@Dexter69941
@Dexter69941 Жыл бұрын
@@ChefJamesMakinson yup but you're better than any youtuber here man really love you ❤️
@DisillusionedAcronym
@DisillusionedAcronym 2 жыл бұрын
good video, chef. unlike other react videos, you actually add value. thank you.
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that, thank you!
@manalittlesis
@manalittlesis 2 жыл бұрын
To become a chef put random ingredients into your cooking and call it your own version. Congratulations, you're officially a Chef now 😝
@nayannbg6314
@nayannbg6314 2 жыл бұрын
Don't forget to put something random and call it a secret recepie
@namelessone5968
@namelessone5968 2 жыл бұрын
for Jamie, random is a compliment
@saifon2007
@saifon2007 2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha
@HomerSparkle
@HomerSparkle 2 жыл бұрын
The best recipe I ever tried for murgh makhani was by Harpal Singh Sokhi. Although when I make it now I cheat by using passata rather than cooking out the tomatoes (it's way faster and easier, and frankly the tomatoes we get here in the UK are garbage, so tinned Italian passata is actually better). About the only thing Oliver got right was the garam masala. The main thing that's missing, other than the obvious lack of any actual butter, is mirch, a.k.a. Kashmiri red chilli powder (the proper mild variety, not the variety grown in the Punjab). The ginger and garlic is also supposed be be ground to a paste, or simply bought as a paste, otherwise the makhani gravy won't be smooth. Unless he's going to blend and pass the gravy, which he didn't. And yeah, the chicken is meant to be tandoori chicken, on the bone. Sokhi's recipe uses a slurry (not quite a roux) of gram flour, added to the curd marinade and other spices, and the addition of mustard powder. It does make a difference, as does the green cardamom and blades of mace in the makhani gravy. The result is sublime, easily one of the best dishes in the world. Contrast that with Oliver's plate of ... God knows what it is. It looks bloody awful. I get that everyone has different tastes, but Oliver just doesn't seem to understand food at all, which is pretty astonishing given how much influence he has.
@RKNancy
@RKNancy 2 жыл бұрын
8:41 it's not that he's squeezing with hands that's disgusting. It's the fact that he's squeezing at all. Us South Indians have an elegant way of eating with hands - never let it get on your palms, only the fingers. Squeezing gets all the juices on your palms.
@salk-e8346
@salk-e8346 8 ай бұрын
15:15 love the sudden spanish phrases like "Es lo que hay" (it is what it is) or "A ver" (I mean/Let's see)
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson 8 ай бұрын
😂
@ShiroKage009
@ShiroKage009 2 жыл бұрын
While I hate what Jamie did overall, I don't think he's wrong in using the fond (assuming it's not burnt). In a tandoor oven, the caramelized surface of the chicken doesn't get stuck to the pan so you have these flavors to impart into the gravy later. However, when making it in a pan, you're going to lose much of these flavors to the pan. So I'm guessing deglazing is the better choice if you had no choice but to use a pan. If you're at home, however, just use the broil setting on your oven 🤷‍♂
@ohdaUtube
@ohdaUtube 2 жыл бұрын
No issues serving whatever he wants privately. But to put this on public consumption and calling it butter chicken without going over what the traditional way should be, is misleading the public. I don't think he'd get roasted as much if Jamie made that adjustment. People do enjoy knowledge. He should learn it if he doesn't know (if he doesn't, shame on him)
@python27au
@python27au 2 жыл бұрын
Bollox, there are literally hundreds of recipes online that claim to be traditional if thats what you want. He said at the start it is his take on it not a traditional one.
@luqman2626
@luqman2626 2 жыл бұрын
Dont call this butter chicken in the first place if you miss the main ingridients.
@lone6718
@lone6718 2 жыл бұрын
I love Uncle Rodger, especially when he breaks character. 😂
@jackrobbins963
@jackrobbins963 Ай бұрын
Premature marination? The best line ever. The question is, can uncle roger actually cook? He is, after all, a comedian. I hope he can.
@hannahmore9118
@hannahmore9118 2 жыл бұрын
I am allergic to peanut so use cashew/ sunflower blend. Yum. My mom made her own chutney. She had at least twelve little jars of completely different chutneys in the frig when I moved in. I braved opening one and realized she hadn't used them in a long, long while. They were all rotten. I, however, despise chutney. I tossed them with glee.
@frozencloudzzful
@frozencloudzzful 2 жыл бұрын
Its always so weird to me that people like jamie and gordon make food like this. They have travelled the world, they know they are doing it wrong, they just dont seem to care.
@nikkiofthevalley
@nikkiofthevalley Жыл бұрын
It's a remnant of the 90s-2000s way of "multi cultural" cooking, where a lot of it is just British or American (depending on where it's being made, of course) food, with slight hints of the other culture(s). These chefs are just out of touch.
@salempasangasp
@salempasangasp 2 жыл бұрын
Also the name butter chicken comes due to the smoothness of the gravy not the actual butter, squeezing the tomatoes itself made the dish go far from butter chicken
@AmanShaikh-fy9cb
@AmanShaikh-fy9cb 2 жыл бұрын
I too am a chef by profession and an Indian. Butter chicken or Murg Makhni is one of my most favourite dishes. N this really made me cry. Its so disgusting 😑
@lunarscribe8995
@lunarscribe8995 6 ай бұрын
Just an addition...Honey will also tenderize the meat extremely well, if you are making a dish with a sweeter flavor profile.
@hariharpuri1362
@hariharpuri1362 Жыл бұрын
As a indian who is also late to watch this video 😅 but uncle roger and you correctly pointed out the mistakes that jamie made and I can’t tell you how much cringey it was to watch even my mother got angry after seeing that 😂 But great review ❤ love from india 🇮🇳
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! 😀
@hariharpuri1362
@hariharpuri1362 Жыл бұрын
@@ChefJamesMakinson by the way, you are amazing 🤩 brother
@ChefJamesMakinson
@ChefJamesMakinson Жыл бұрын
@@hariharpuri1362 Thank you!
@cathymartens7478
@cathymartens7478 Жыл бұрын
Hello. I'm from Durban South Africa, we have a large Indian population. I know their cuisine differs from Indian cuisine, but it is incredible, and addictive. I thank my lucky stars I live in Durban and can enjoy their delectable cooking, and NO sweet chutney!! Much respect, Cathy🇮🇳🇮🇳🇿🇦🇿🇦🇮🇳🇮🇳 ps, have you heard of our Bunny Chows😋😋
@salempasangasp
@salempasangasp 2 жыл бұрын
For the info there are chutneys which are cooked more like a sauce/curry like the bombay chutney(which goes very well with idlis) , cooked chutneys are more common in South especially beetroot chutney, brinjal chutney, ridge gourd chutney are some specialities these are home recipes and almost never found in restaurant or street food. But to know chutneys are usually stand alone dishes unless very rarely some are used as part of curries/what we call kormas. But that too is almost not always in a meat based curry.
@ssrbgangimaribotan6thofthe12
@ssrbgangimaribotan6thofthe12 2 жыл бұрын
That "butter chicken my kinda way" is a lie tho, there is no butter at all in the dish. so its more like "slightly spiced yogurt chicken with tomato gravy" dish, Jamie Oliver way.
@justæspectator
@justæspectator 2 жыл бұрын
It is overcooked tomato and peanut flavoured chicken, with added diluted mango sauce .. Butter chicken isn't here in any version. By the way do add onions while making the tomato cream along with garlic and ginger and ofcourse use ghee( purified butter )
@lakshmikrithika2521
@lakshmikrithika2521 8 ай бұрын
Right? Isn’t makhani sauce onions paste fried and tomato purée fried together until oil separates?
@justæspectator
@justæspectator 8 ай бұрын
@@lakshmikrithika2521 indeed, why r u even doubting urself...we r Indians, we invented this whole concept.
@NumberOneGeek
@NumberOneGeek 2 жыл бұрын
From what I read there is a major difference between Indian home cooking and British Indian Restaurant (BIR) cooking. Some restaurants apparently do use chutney as a sweetening ingredient, they can also use store bought Indian spices (like Pataks), but obviously wholesale.
@yazhiniaravindan
@yazhiniaravindan Жыл бұрын
I’m not a chef but a home cook! An Indian! Yogurt really quickens the marination but yes 10 mins is really very quick marination! Yogurt can’t help! I’m so sorry! This isn’t a Butter chicken! And mango chutney in it! As uncle roger says “our ancestors are crying”. I think Tomato’s sweetness is enough! No need of sugar even!
@lroke2947
@lroke2947 2 жыл бұрын
I'd like an Indian chef do a blind tasting of Jamie's dish and then guess based on personal experience and palate what it is.
@python27au
@python27au 2 жыл бұрын
Real indian food is so hot it will strip your taste buds off. I have an indian mate and I can’t eat the stuff he feeds his kids.
@reaper-ev1ll
@reaper-ev1ll 2 жыл бұрын
@@python27au if you don't start sweating the moment you put a bite in your mouth then , it's not indian food or the the chef fked up
@AlexLapugean
@AlexLapugean 2 жыл бұрын
@@python27au Not all dishes are like that, for example butter chicken really is not, it's quite mild, even for European standards. Although, to be honest, plenty of european people mix hot with spicy. They taste a dish with a lot of spices in it, and they perceive it as hot, even though it doesn't actually have chillies or anything hot in it. They're just not used to so many spices I guess...
@fatb1rd
@fatb1rd 2 жыл бұрын
@@AlexLapugean true, I can eat hot things(lot of spice in it) but for some reason I can't eat anything that contain chilies, not a fond of spicy things. Though my family can eat spicy food normally
@wlsarpsngfcet1452
@wlsarpsngfcet1452 2 жыл бұрын
Not really there are many non spicy dishes.one amazing thing is we have 29 states and each state has its own cuisine and dishes. And each one varies from state to state
@amaadkhan2123
@amaadkhan2123 2 жыл бұрын
Jamie made something which may or may not be tasty, but definitely it is not butter chicken. For butter chicken gravy, you use loads of butter and sauté onion, tomato, few cashews, red chilli, turmeric, few whole spices and then add a bit of water, seamer and blend it to a puree. For chicken, normally over night curd based marination and if one doesn't have tandoor, add a bit of oil in the marination and get it smoked by coal just before grilling. Also, use chicken with bones. Then again with the help of butter in a new pan, marriage is made between grilled chicken and gravy. Finishing it with honey, cream and dry fenugreek powder.
@guyjackson1763
@guyjackson1763 2 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed watching your amusement and other facial expressions - pretty sure very similar to the reactions of most of your viewers and commenters below. Will take a look at your cooking videos. I sold my Spanish Tapas restaurant in Bangkok a few years ago after a dozen or so years of it and now enjoy cooking for the kids at home. Always interested in finding family-friendly recipes and ideas to refresh our sometimes jaded palettes!
@munirabanu8730
@munirabanu8730 2 ай бұрын
The tomato charing is an age old traditional way of Indian cooking....my grandmother used that method.... It brought out the flavor of tomatoes without the taste of rawness.... Also mango powder is used a lot in Indian cooking called amchoor. Jamie used the fresh mango... Green chutney is just poured and it adds an extra zest to the recipe.....
@hariomsinghal5536
@hariomsinghal5536 10 ай бұрын
2:38 it supposed to be not sweet even a little it's supposed to be spicy only
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