the hawkers are dam honest with their answers here. respect for the honesty and help they offered the team. really respect to them as it helps with the research and adds to my knowledge (i'm gonna make some changes to the food i consume)
@vedd26034 ай бұрын
Why are they named hawkers?
@Lena-vw6ye4 ай бұрын
@@vedd2603 makeshift stalls and cheap fried street food
@JamelCantrell-k7e4 ай бұрын
Lol u actually believe that
@harryharrison3624 ай бұрын
@@vedd2603 They are selling hawks
@JoyJoy_Life4 ай бұрын
@@IendleasereitRespect? what about feeding customers of cancerous stuff for a long time, is it "respectful" ?
@kirksulu4 ай бұрын
People are concern about oil being reuse multiple times, but when the oil is changed everyday, they complain why food prices have gone up.
@Choveck4 ай бұрын
Are these people in the room with us right now?
@projekt844 ай бұрын
@@Choveck Have you read restaurant reviews? All people do is complain about price
@lars28944 ай бұрын
People complain about price because restaurants generally act shady and refuse to disclose reasons behind them. You don't see a single person complaining about restaurants that they TRUST, when managers openly and calmly lay out the reasons and are willing to answer further questions. Besides, in order to change habit, they first have to acknowledge to the public that they were knowingly practicing all this unhealthy stuff for years and years. And most business owners have no interest in admitting fault.
@DTYY9414 ай бұрын
Govt is able to subsidize and help on this. It is about health
@CST19924 ай бұрын
Businesses use cheaper oil where they replace it more often, and vice versa. Cheap oil has its own issues though e.g. trans fats, higher quantity of omega-6 fatty acids, and so on. This is what happens, unless the restaurant only caters to the upper class.
@beedeebee1794 ай бұрын
To be fair, many fast food restaurants reused their oil as many time as well. So, not exclusively hawker fried food. If that is a concern, cook at home , avoid eating out.
@grettzmendoza9514 ай бұрын
No wonder why so many fat people
@RL-fj9jg4 ай бұрын
the difference is, fast food restaurants change their oil every night.
@Iendleasereit4 ай бұрын
Mos burger, long john silver, i got a shock when i saw my cheese black recently and it hit me they reused their oil like crazy
@Iendleasereit4 ай бұрын
@@RL-fj9jg they also have extremely high volume
@OCK19954 ай бұрын
@@RL-fj9jg I used to work in KFC many years ago. and nope, at least KFC definitely doesn't change their oil every night. filter then yes.
@helloworld124 ай бұрын
I worked at a Japanese restaurant as a tempura guy. We changed cooking oil every end of the shift even if there was only single order of tempura for the whole day. Not only change cooking oil but wash the entire deep fryer until everything looks brand new and rinse out numerous times. The first thing I did at the beginning of the shift next day was refilling the cooking oil and heat it up. I thought every businesses were like this.
@poom3234 ай бұрын
How much the food cost there?
@xcel52034 ай бұрын
I guess you guys don't have inflation.
@helloworld124 ай бұрын
@@poom323 it was just a normal Japanese restaurant that normal people can afford. Definitely wasn’t a fancy place and was owned by a couple in their 50s.
@helloworld124 ай бұрын
@@xcel5203 we do have inflation. Every economy has inflation. Without inflammation, economy wouldn’t be advancing. Rapid inflation is what society is trying to avoid.
@zerase844 ай бұрын
@@poom323 katsu curry rice cost less than SGD $10 or 1100 yen. dont believe just watch some videos, they have most of the ingredients home grown. sg imports everything, as long it isn't stuff from malaysia or indonesia its expensive.
@KCC222114 ай бұрын
These hawkers contribute to a smaller percentage. I like to know about the bigger restaurants and fast food chains like McDonald’s, BK, Popeyes and KFC
@Iendleasereit4 ай бұрын
EXACTLY! the mos burger and long john is scary!
@bloodlove934 ай бұрын
you don't wanna know... some clips we've gotten occasionally are micro demonstrations in how horrid it is...don't eat there
@li53214 ай бұрын
I used to work in McDonald's and the oil can get quite dark like in the videos with the hawkers, but generally it gets changed a few times a day as there are different vats of oil to use so it's easier in that way. Also, it's more high tech so it drain the oil itself, the worker just needs to add new oil to it.
@MarioMariaMario4 ай бұрын
They're no worse for sure. These joints change the oil multiple times a day and have probably cleaner kitchens than the hawkers. On the other hand their ingredients are toxic af. Avoid both and live better and longer :)
@arsenal_844 ай бұрын
Can include old Chang keng as well.
@bunchklesy4 ай бұрын
Wow! Kudos to Diana for actually trying the hand grime thing. Such professionalism. 👍👍👍
@apexcapital13284 ай бұрын
As someone who has been in the food industry for over 2 decades I’ll share some thoughts. Oil is expensive and you’ll be lucky to see them change it out once a week. With that said the most dangerous part is the chemicals used to clean out the fryer if not used correctly, so keep that in mind.
@gnz8v4 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Cleaning those thick greases require some strong special chemicals. Rising with water only won’t really wash off. Scary.
@aaronlimeuchin73524 ай бұрын
@@gnz8v I second your comment. I once work at a five-star hotel kitchen. Every day sharp at 3 am, the cleaning team would come to clean the whole kitchen. They use potent and corrosive chemical detergents (more potent and corrosive than the brand Chlorox detergent) to clean the kitchen machinery like deep fryer, the steamer, the wok, etc. The hot water vapor plus the chemical would get my eyes red and itchy if I get close to the vapor.
@simonk55714 ай бұрын
why do humans eat fried food?
@lostandwastedtime4 ай бұрын
@@aaronlimeuchin7352 can confirm. Worked same industry and you definitely don't want to breathe it in
@cyclopsvision63704 ай бұрын
If you expect a hawker to change the oil in the deep fryer after 3 orders, you are sadly mistaken
@inisipisTV4 ай бұрын
My only criticism of this documentary is that they defined what they refer "Single use" of every Fry cycle. Does it mean cooking one batch against another batch of food or does it mean cooking multiple batches then stop cooking then reheating the oil again for another round cooking. Or, does it mean you fry one single chicken, for example, then cook another single chicken instead of cooking a dozen chicken at the same time... etc. The documentary doesn't even point out the different kinds oil used. Every oil has different smoke point temperature than other. Olive oil is the most healthiest but it has one of the lowest. Peanut and Avocado have a high smoke point. The doctor didn't specify that just because it's smoking in one oil doesn't mean it will be equally bad with another oil that's also smoking. There's also the point in regularly cleaning a deep fryer. Most fast food restaurants use harsh degreasers to clean the fryer. These cleansers are sometimes more harmful than old oil if used regularly since not all of it can be thoroughly washed away and would leave tiny residue, specially in a rush time of only half a day.
@it56173 ай бұрын
Absolutely, even I was thinking the same. The scientist should have mentioned the time period a batch of oil can be heated continuously to be considered as one use. Also, oils have different colours naturally, for example mustard oil is naturally darker.
@milanthakkar94933 ай бұрын
Agreed, also they should have done a baseline measurement of the amount of cancer causing compounds in oil that has not been fried at all.
@443DM3 ай бұрын
I also questioned what they meant when they said that the smoke point goes down 10% with "each use". I hope they meant Kelvin, but for all I know, they're talking Celsius. I assume most of the cleansers are strong alkalis. Certainly hazardous to the worker with poor PPE, but once it's rinsed (it's definitely water soluble) and the vessel is filled up with oil again and up to frying temperature, it will quickly create soap with the residue. Not the greatest to eat, but wouldn't say harmful relative to the amount.
@TheBooban3 ай бұрын
Yeah what is “one” use? Fry one French fry doesn’t count. Depends on amount of oil and quantity of food, so each use is different. As the scientist said, look at the color!
@pandakitchen51852 ай бұрын
They didn't mention there are cooking oil quality test strips that measures 0, 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, & 2.5 % FFA (free fatty acid). Perhaps they mean the number of heating cycles, assuming most restaurants aren't open 24x7....
@willmorris81984 ай бұрын
As someone who has worked in a restaurant and worked fry station, we reused our oil for 3-4 days before changing it and deep cleaning the fryer. However, every night we would drain the oil into a compartment below the fryer and do a light cleaning of the fryer (just getting all the food particles out), then there was a mechanism that sucked the oil through a filter which filtered out all the food particles and sucked it back into the fryer. Then the compartment would be taken to the dishwashers where it was cleaned and the filter changed. This was done on every night except for 2 days of a week on which we would empty and discard the oil, deep clean the inside of the fryer, and fill it with new oil.
@CST19924 ай бұрын
That is a good mechanism, however the oxidation of the oil will still happen even with the filter.
@sankun79702 ай бұрын
We want cheap, how can he change oil daily but at least he is doing something.
@jeegupopli18712 ай бұрын
yeah the oil used in the first place isn't ideal either you all wouldn't be doing anybody any favour even if you changed it after a single use hahahahah and that is stretching it
@harmindersingh4442Ай бұрын
But this fryer cost a lot not many restaurants willing to buy
@NazriBuang-w9v21 күн бұрын
Lies again? Gun Oil Grab Food
@-RockOn-2 ай бұрын
What is more amazing is all of their honesty and courage to be on TV and showcase this.
@zuckmedic4 ай бұрын
Love the fact they mention it is safe to reuse and giving tips on how to do it properly. Alot of other channels just straight out say discard the oil after single use. Not everyone is willing to throw away their money like that, yk?
@Vikingsroar4 ай бұрын
Well better to throw away the used oil 🪔 than to harm our health right? In our house 🏡 we throw away any used oil after one use 😅
@juliangrinblat9554 ай бұрын
@@Vikingsroar it's not only about the money, it's also about wasting perfectly usable oil. You know, it's a limited resource...
@gemmameidia84384 ай бұрын
@@Vikingsroarit would be different case when you use it in home scale compared to bussines one, like imagine thworing away a lot of oil in a day from bunch of hawkers
@brendon16894 ай бұрын
@@juliangrinblat955 what do you mean by that? i think you're confusing cooking oil with fossil fuels cooking oil of all types are produced by plants
@juliangrinblat9554 ай бұрын
@@brendon1689 lol no, you're right, finite was not the right word there I guess, although technically we are limited in how much cooking oil we can produce, we can produce enough of it for everyone. All I tried to say is, no point in wasting perfectly usable cooking oil
@solver554 ай бұрын
this needs to be on every new channel in the world
@jag40644 ай бұрын
Dont blame the hawkers…. The cost of changing the cooking oil too frequent, is a bomb.
@warilban4 ай бұрын
The cost is one thing, like the first guy said, he'd have to reheat a new freaking tub of oil every like 5 orders. That is completely unfeasible
@britneychong-i6m4 ай бұрын
Nobody blaming is just doing a research and hawkers are honest enough to reply… How about fast food? Like KFC, McDonald’s ,Aston etc all those restaurants?Will they be as honest as hawkers to reply?Which I don’t think so…
@JoyJoy_Life4 ай бұрын
@@jag4064 yes, blame us too cheapo eat at hawker center. Not hardworking enough like those Atas people only eat at reputable restaurants
@SanGeet05104 ай бұрын
blame the corrupt regulators or lack of regulations. If cost is more, the price will be more and the consumption will be less; so the general health will improve and you save on medical expenses. But then who wants strain their brains reasoning?!
@beedeebee1794 ай бұрын
@@warilban Cooling down is another 4 hours. Not feasible at all.
@Creamypie6264 ай бұрын
Once a week is child's play. I once worked at fastfood. We replace our oil once a month. We cook several hundred batches of chicken in our fryers but we only change our oil once a month. We keep the oil "clean" by adding a filtering powder into it and then running it through the filter in our machine.
@gamingdude79599 күн бұрын
Wtf
@jiaxing42114 ай бұрын
Diana ser is the real mvp. working at an NH to experience it, scraping out the oils together with hawkers. kudos to her!
@EverythingArchitecture2474 ай бұрын
Not afraid to get her hands dirty. Kudos. 👏 👏 👏
@EverythingArchitecture2474 ай бұрын
Not afraid to get her hands dirty. Kudos. 👏 👏 👏
@JoyJoy_Life4 ай бұрын
@@jiaxing4211Some of these store got grade A, B...... Big slap to HSA, food hygiene department.
@gnz8v4 ай бұрын
If you are a journalist you will really know how impressive she is. It’s almost impossible to get stubborn and mostly unfriendly hawkers to even talk for a start. She’s really really good in persuading.
@Dell96kill4 ай бұрын
real journalist work unlike other journalists going drama not talking about everyday life
@That7Days794 ай бұрын
Worked in Fast Food Restaurant before.They filter their oils every night but changing the entire batch of oil, no. They just add more if it's lesser in the fryer. For hawkers ,its cost. With rising rental, raw materials cost, they wont be able to change oils after few times of frying. Like the brother in the video say, if customers willing to pay abit more, he dont mind changing the oil frequently. But increasing prices wont go down our throats that easily with the already increasing cost of living in singapore.
@crosbyong4 ай бұрын
An interesting, honest and fair report. Thank you, hawkers and Diana.
@Iendleasereit4 ай бұрын
agree. the hawkers are super super honest here. really respect to them
@JorgeMoron-x3q2 ай бұрын
Thank you for reporting this Please keep us informed on all other health matters
@eva31s4 ай бұрын
To be safe, just ignore fried foods. OR fried your food at home... Hawker's still need to control costing...
@yapj00024 ай бұрын
Think again. Hawkers scoop the oil from their frying oil pot to cook. They also never use fresh oil to cook.
@saupin0024 ай бұрын
You are definitely not bright at all. Avoiding it isn't a solution. It's the same as telling people to avoid going out due to the fear of getting hit by cars or other moving vehicles. Can't believe your logic still exists!!
@lingfengge66664 ай бұрын
Or avoid eating at such food stalls. Eating fried food at a decent restaurant is much better.
@theotheleo68304 ай бұрын
@@saupin002 wtf are you on about? You have the ability to choose what you eat, do you not? The only person who is forcing you to eat fried foods is you. Talk about not being bright.
@theotheleo68304 ай бұрын
@@lingfengge6666 "Decent" restaurants also reuse their oil.
@ptg014 ай бұрын
Fascinating... so educational ! Thanks ! I've always wondered about the best way to store used oil at home, besides a dark corner... That's one of the reasons I do not deep fry anymore.. the messiness of handling and storing used oils !
@Tansel974 ай бұрын
i still feel that the hawkers were honest and upfront about their practices. Now since the authorities have these information in hand, they can work together with frying machine suppliers to allow easy oil change frying machines for the sake of the health of consumers and the lower cost of hawkers. We hope that this will bring some light to what we are eating.
@rutooru367Ай бұрын
But one of the hawker made a good point. If i only had to fry 4 orders it doesnt make sense for me to count it as 1 time.
@mysisterisafoodie4 ай бұрын
I worked at a restaurant we changed our oil once a week. And these were HUGE deep frying machines. But we would have a dedicated fryer for separate things, to avoid flavor mixing. Two fryers for French fries and potatoes only, one for fish, two for chicken, one for beef/lamb and one for vegetarian stuff
@KatJade2694 ай бұрын
Frankly, how many hawker will change the oil after each round of frying. Just avoid deep fried food when eating out as much as possible.
@Vikingsroar4 ай бұрын
U r absolutely right..deep fried food in itself is already very unhealthy 😅and I'm sure we've seen some oils that are black too ! Lol those for sure will turn us off eating their deep fried food altogether lol
@BlackCat-fg2zw4 ай бұрын
But it's a shame for the sellers if no one buys, many of them support their families from the proceeds of their sales, sometimes the profit from sales is so thin that it's not enough to cover the capital.
@BarkhatnieTyagi3 ай бұрын
@@BlackCat-fg2zwif no one buys they should switch their business to healthier options
@itsalltakenup4 ай бұрын
This is a great and balanced approach to the story.
@SaBoTeUr20014 ай бұрын
My dad used to keep a perpetual deep fat fryer. We'd skim the debris from it every time we used it, and if the oil level looked low, added more oil. That oil never got changed! Anyway, after he died (heart failure, no surprise), I retired that frying pan. I almost never deep fry anything now, just air-fry or oven bake.
@ant713m3 ай бұрын
Air fryers also release harmful chemicals due to high heat so not a good option. Oven bake or grill is better. Also eat more steamed or fresh vegetables and salad
@lizxu322Ай бұрын
Wow that sounds really unhealthy....and I bet a lot of these hawkers lied and actually do the same as your dad once did
@zoickn4 ай бұрын
I always have this question. This video makes me salute to Ms. Ser
@noproblematallmate4 ай бұрын
As a western hawker to all other hawker, please filter and boil out your fryer everyday. Oil no need to change everyday. But filter and boil out is a must. No sludge in your oil please for the good of public health. I myself filter using cloth bag everyday. It is easy if you have the right process.😊
@arshjordan54553 ай бұрын
It's beyond economic feasibility to regularly change as oil is the most expensive component of food industry. Eating at home is the only option for concious people.
@kingeling3 ай бұрын
Steaming and boiling are by far the healthiest cooking methods afaik
@captainlockes23446 сағат бұрын
@@kingelingAnd our body probably hasn’t evolved to eat fried food. Our ancient ancestors just cook their food over fire.
@UberBaby1684 ай бұрын
Do we know how many times oil is reused in McDonald’s, KFC, BK, Four Fingers, etc? Their frying volume is enormous.
@annelin63764 ай бұрын
i actually think the big fastfood chains probably change their oils more frequently because they are big companies with more economies of scale and more quality control in place
@Ahmed-gg4oz4 ай бұрын
@@annelin6376 Their oil is also used a lot compared to others
@JoyJoy_Life4 ай бұрын
@@annelin6376 really you think they are safe. There is a listed company selling curry puff , go and check their oil, then you will be shocked
@paparoti40064 ай бұрын
Sure got foteign trash RMs from mec kfsee watching this. Can comment or afraid lose job ?
@RizkhyDestatama4 ай бұрын
it should be daily. also they fried at lower temperature because they use pressure fryer.
@eyebeebak4 ай бұрын
I used to work for McDonalds and I worked at the french fry station. Trust me, when the oil level was low, I just poured new oil in. That means the oil that was already in the frying machine was never changed and it could be years old and been reheated for thousands of times.
@Logic8074 ай бұрын
Aarghh…. Vomit
@bukannpdbukanbpd90122 ай бұрын
😢
@TheRattyBiker4 ай бұрын
Also... I've spoken to a local takeaway before and it turns out "oil purifiers" are a big money business - these are basically multilayered filter systems, black oil goes in clean "new" oil comes out - in actual fact it's just heavily filtered well burned oil.
Baik ah Haryadi. Tak sia2 email CNA suruh buat investigation..👍🏻
@rikiyaaragaki4 ай бұрын
his name is very indonesian, i've met someone who's named haryadi aswell
@Dimden-j6g4 ай бұрын
@@rikiyaaragakiso?
@rikiyaaragaki4 ай бұрын
@@Dimden-j6g I'm just saying tf
@wileamyp4 ай бұрын
Here in Indonesia, we joke around reused oil (minyak jelantah) and fried foods in general. Have you heard about adding plastic bags to make the fritters crispier?
@bettercallzaul4 ай бұрын
@@wileamyp siak ah!!!🤮
@Rickodonleon3 ай бұрын
I love the honesty on this video
@alleneng4 ай бұрын
theres not one single restaurant/kitchen on this planet that uses oil just once, that would be stupid
@everykneeshallbowzao4 ай бұрын
True. But changing your oil once a week is insane.
@SmartDumbNerdyCool4 ай бұрын
Once is the cleanest
@t-.-t.4 ай бұрын
In India they change once a year and clean once in hundred years 😂
@everykneeshallbowzao4 ай бұрын
@@t-.-t. nonsense.
@shiraishi14 ай бұрын
Real bro@@t-.-t.
@noonynoonynoo4 ай бұрын
Excellent segment. It's so well researched and presented, and I love that it shows everyone's different perspectives--business standpoint of the hawkers, consumer health, and even includes practical safety techniques and tips from a professional chef. More journalists should aspire to be this balanced, fair, thorough, and helpful! I will definitely use a thermometer now when deep frying!
@kohzhixiong39324 ай бұрын
Worked part time in fast food during my schooling days. They aren't any better
@user-qe4dw8dy9i4 ай бұрын
One of my earliest food memories is from when I was about 4 years of age. I was bought a cup of chips (French fries) at a school fete and I asked my mother why they didn’t have black speckles on them like the ones she made at home. She obviously reused her oil many times. 😱
@janicehooihuan3 ай бұрын
Haha you’re the only one that outside food is healthier than home cooked food 😂
@wakingmoments20234 ай бұрын
Kudos to the hawkers for being honest. Big fast food chains change the oil 3-5 days later. I was told directly by the operation manager when my fish burger was very very dark, prior to Covid. After that incident, I cut fast food down drastically.
@seisopheapanya75282 ай бұрын
Truly appreciate this sharing.... I could not be more thankful. Very very informational.
@anonanon72354 ай бұрын
Back in the early 1990s, I used to work at McDonalds. They used to have a special guy come in every MONTH to drain the oil vat and refill with new hydrogenated oil. During that month, we just ADDED oil as needed (there was a minimum oil line). Oh, and don't try to see the smoke at the fry station, above it is a VERY powerful exhaust fan, and it just hurls any smoke out VERY quickly. But I will tell you this, the oil color is quite dark.
@vivagusto10724 ай бұрын
I have to put up with smoke spewing out of the kitchen exhaust of a popular fast food joint every time I use the park 😖
@peter65zzfdfh4 ай бұрын
In the 1990s I worked there. We didn’t use oil at all, it was all beef tallow.
@xcel52034 ай бұрын
That's quite incredible - that means the sediments in the fryer are being not repeatedly fried but actually continuously fried . That means you're frying carbon - I shudder to think what will be the chemical composition of the sludge at the bottom of the fryer .
@443DM3 ай бұрын
Hydrogenated oil will oxidize less ----> fewer aldehydes. Replacing those double bones with more hydrogens reduces the potential points of oxidation. Of course, the hydrogenation process creates trans-fats...
@uttpiew2 ай бұрын
@@443DM Fully hydrogenated oil means no double bonds, trans fat cannot exist.
@rjj479Ай бұрын
The most important thing is moving away from deep frying as a whole Grilling and shallow frying is better
@amyschneidhorst13844 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for this report! I have often wondered how many times it is safe to use oil in home cooking. Discerning the quality of fast food is much more difficult. As we cannot control the cooking conditions, it is up to us to limit our consumption.
@munafbhaiji36463 ай бұрын
Too good,very informative experiment & survey. 👍🏻
@u2ng-ny2us4 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for filming this, no more deep fried food for me when eating out lol, not to forget outside food is so salty/ sweet, I don't know if I'm eating food or seasonings
@blacklight6836 күн бұрын
Reasonable answers. It's not like a black and white case. It is a case of multiple factors that go against each other(as far as we know) so it is a balancing act that most restaurants find. It is not a 1to1. As you can see most of them tend to lean on the safe yet not healthy side.
@iambeiam4 ай бұрын
Since I learned an about the effect of reusing oil a few years ago: we don’t reuse our oil or if we do no more than twice. Yes always filter oil if you are reusing and oil store in jars. But over all we also significantly reduced the number of times we cook deep fried foods
@codeofethics12 ай бұрын
seriously.. a perfect video with great details and a lot of useful information, thanks a lot ...
@vivagusto10724 ай бұрын
I learned from video that oil can be "cleaned" with cornstarch and water; to judge oil degradation by its color is unreliable but what options other than to make our own or abstain from fried food altogether.
Can't blame the hawkers. Managing cost is the key to their business survival. As a consumer just don't consume fried food regularly and only order them as a treat once in a while. Also if you can see into their kitchen or fry station, pick the hawkers who fry different dish in different fryer, rather than those that fry every dish in the same wok / fry station. If you are a regular customer and you know the owner very well, you can always ask him his oil change schedule and pick those fresh-oil-day to order his food.
@ab-hi-sh-ek-l4x4 ай бұрын
Oil reuse wasn't defined at all. I think cycling the oil cold to hot to cold counts as one use. Not frying each batch of food.
@SVURulez4 ай бұрын
I thought that too. If it's constantly in use then that has to count as one use.
@peter65zzfdfh4 ай бұрын
@@SVURulezyeah for sure, otherwise why would 1 chip be as bad a 1 thing of fish etc. I think places like this should change with every heat cycle. Every 2 pieces of food would be absurd and wasteful.
@brendon16894 ай бұрын
i'm not going to agree or disagree but here is an explanation for all of you let's say you have 2L of oil you don't actually have 2L of oil, instead you have whatever millions of molecules of chains of sugar when you cook, just like when you eat, you break open these sugars to release energy so whenever you have any heat exposure, you are using these up even if the liquid volume has not changed that much the oil as a whole becomes weaker and weaker as you use it up and as the amount of impurities increases this is why oil is labelled with directions to store it in a cool and dry place
@Xidanyu4 ай бұрын
the amount of food you cook with the oil is the most important factor, if you cook the same amount of food in one day as someone else in five days. the oil will turn out to be about the same quality after.
@kizarumelon24774 ай бұрын
Nah. We change it based on color. When it gets dark change it. If not dark keep it
@OldTimerGardenАй бұрын
I believe when they say they change after 1-3 uses, they are referring to days. For best tasting and healthy food, eat there the day after an oil change.
@richardmurphy5554 ай бұрын
I still remember when i used to work in a bubble milk tea shop at my town i have this experience. Since the shop does offer fried food like fried hotdogs, fried calamari squids, etc, we change the frying oils when it turns cloudy or dark depending on how much we use it. Typically, if there are not many fried orders (since we only fry it when the customers order it), we change the oils once every 7 to 14 days, usually on Mondays since there is not a lot of fried food orders during that time and most orders are on the weekends, so the oils get darker quicker on the weekends. But on certain rare occasions where the customers order fried food constantly, we might change the oils after 2 or 3 days. I do find that fresh oils tend to cook faster, and the food is more fragrant, but the overly used oils tend to take an extra few minutes to fry the foods properly. Side note, we only turn on the frying stove when used, so it might take a while for the fresh/used oils to be heated up properly. The seniors of the shop taught the newbies a trick to use starch flour (while the oils are boiling) to collect the residue from previous frying when we are cleaning the frying stove or whenever we have free time and no fried orders. The starch collects some of the residue that is floating and the ones that already sunk down. We only clean it on cleaning day. This trick saves us a lot of time cleaning the sediment gunk 😂
@Iendleasereit4 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing
@judychuang12414 ай бұрын
You mean throw starch flour into the hot oil?
@alwaabdrashid86444 ай бұрын
Do you mean just drizzle starch flour all over or starch flour that has been mixed with water?
@xcel52034 ай бұрын
Won't that cause the starch to get fried ?
@DukeShanks3 ай бұрын
Diana Ser is my idol, lovely voice, character, behaviour and most amazing persona. ❤
@Livelovelaughes4 ай бұрын
This open my mind i will not want to eat fried stuff as often anymore 🤮 🤢 the uncle is very nice showing us such a shocking tideous process of cleaning oil
@ianuy33463 ай бұрын
So have you actually avoided fried food? Or have you forgotten 😂
@Riza204623 ай бұрын
Tedious*
@gcc2313Ай бұрын
One of the worst restaurant activities i hated cleaning fryers.
@xWabbli20 күн бұрын
Im trying my best to avoid fried food now too. It's gonna be super hard since I LOVE fried food.
@JLeeLovesYou4 ай бұрын
i love how you document and the story telling style, very FAIR AND PROFESSIONAL!! a big respect to the hawkers and Diana!!
@matt94454 ай бұрын
9.46 looked like I could see to the bottom of the stove. Didn’t know it was a reflection of the ceiling😅
@xcel52034 ай бұрын
Nice 😊
@stavros69324 күн бұрын
Great episode very well presented - I believe this is one of the reasons Air fryers are so popular these days as it is a great alternative to cooking some deep fried foods.
@NavyBlue20204 ай бұрын
Honestly, I don’t want to make my problem their problem. They’re running a business, after all. If you’re not willing to take the risk, cook your own food or choose something else to eat instead.
@saupin0024 ай бұрын
You are definitely not bright at all. Avoiding it isn't a solution. It's the same as telling people to avoid going out due to the fear of getting hit by cars or other moving vehicles. Can't believe your logic still exists!!
@NavyBlue20204 ай бұрын
@@saupin002 Yeah, I must be really dumb for getting into NUS. Clearly, you're the smart one here. By the way, the solution I described is actually considered accommodating, not avoiding. I guess you know it better.
@JoyJoy_Life4 ай бұрын
@@NavyBlue2020 it is your telling us to keep our mouth shut?
@kees0913.4 ай бұрын
@@saupin002Yep you are the brightest guy here. Go get a license and be a hawker and then use oil only once and charged accordingly. Let's see how it works out for you. Just be realistic businesses need efficiency and profit. Especially hawkers which depend on customer flow, more frequently a transaction is done more profit for living. Cheap and quick is the only way. Just avoid it if u can, if you can't just ignore it. Otherwise provide solutions not problems for hawkers. Solutions that keep them living not only u getting healthy. U are such a "bright" guy should have solutions right ?
@aaronlimeuchin73524 ай бұрын
@@JoyJoy_Life he is being logical here, who so salty with his answer? And yes, you should just stfu, no offense, man.
@PeaceInDunia4 ай бұрын
Omg.. I thought the 30-40time was too much use. Then i heard "every Friday" "twice a week" 300 batchs😨😨
@luisfernando59983 ай бұрын
Imagine the reused oil in Uranus?
@gary198807093 ай бұрын
First time?
@lucretius80504 ай бұрын
Pity they didn't compare tupes of oil as well, i think the higher smoking point oils should fair better i think.
@mdpal71663 ай бұрын
A very good documentary..Thanks❤
@pierreti4 ай бұрын
Great investigative journalism. But what's defined as used once or twice or three or 10 times? I think it might be a combination of how long the oils been heated, at what temperature, and how much volume of foods it has been used to cook.
@peter65zzfdfh4 ай бұрын
It’s both the temperature and the number of cycles. But yes, the piece implied 1 use was one piece of food which would be absurd.
@RafaelUnplugged3 ай бұрын
11:27 respect to that perspective.
@BTjs3214564 ай бұрын
"Food Scientist" Mr Richard did not give an accurate enough explanation on why the oil used to fully cook the fried chicken wings has higher concentration of harmful substances. The oxidized fatty acids which contributes to arteries blood clots & harmful cancer-causing aldehydes formation are driven mainly by chemical reactions between water molecules(H2O which also maybe vaporizing into its hydrogen & free radical oxygen atom form when heated) & fatty acids(oil) in the presence of heat. The chicken wings need to be cooked & exposed to heat longer to be thoroughly cooked compare to his potato chips which is sliced thin & needs a shorter cooking time. The key culprits that determines the resultant concentration of harmful substances are the amount of water(including presence of other chemical additives you use in your seasoning, batter etc.) present in your volume of food which is available to leak into the deep fried oil for more massive chemical reactions & the duration you are heating your oil on high heat(bringing it nearer to the smoking point thus more unstable reactive breakdown temperature of your oil) to completely cook your food of choice. Oh & FYI, whether it is the delicious fried food smell everyone loves or the rancid smell of old oil can be broadly referred to as aromatic carbon ring compounds, the aldehydes mentioned in the program are aromatic carbon ring compounds.
@xcel52034 ай бұрын
Very interesting and disturbing.
@sadafmo73634 ай бұрын
this was so helpful, thank you for typing it up!
@wileamyp4 ай бұрын
Aldehydes (characterized by R-CH=O) normally don't have carbon rings. Try getting a refresher on organic chemistry...
@BTjs3214564 ай бұрын
@@wileamyp My bad. Thank you for pointing out my mistake.😜 I should have instead said that the bulk of the harmful compounds that remained after repeated high heat smoking point reactive process should be the more stable aromatic carbon ring compounds which include the food-aroma compounds like aldehydes.
@FODOR002 ай бұрын
I used to work in a restaurant. We have been told to change the rapeseed oil twice a week in the deep frying machine which we used only to fry vegetarian falafels in it. The main reason was that changing the hot oil would take too long time as you need to wait for it hours to cool down. Also it is expensive to buy and have to be disposed via collection only.
@jaaz55314 ай бұрын
Those who care for their health will avoid eating out on regular basis especially cutting out on deep/fried items, and those who care less like the host(in her closing statement), will continue eating out those fried foods.
@DomDollx3 ай бұрын
This is done so well and with so much openness that I am surprised but got an idea of Singaporeans and how they operate. Or maybe it's just this channel and how they set up this whole thing. Great job appreciate all the directness and how well the public research was done. You guys literally tested researched and did a social experiment all in one.
@FelonMusk20214 ай бұрын
Why target hawkers? What about fast food restaurants?
@nicekit4 ай бұрын
because they probably wasnt given permission to film...... major fast food restaurant require a lot of permission
@AbsoluteFidelity4 ай бұрын
Fast food chains will NEVER change their oil after 1-2 times of usage. In fact, it is a well known fact that used oil produces better tasting fried chicken.
@itsbonkerjojo90284 ай бұрын
It's not a target thing here . They were very gentle with there approach and whole bit. This was an interesting watch considering how honest hawkers were with their filthy oil.
@celestialstar1244 ай бұрын
This is because the person asking want to know hwaker. What have this got to do with fairness? Just some low class people mindset to drag others down. 😂
@felixchan20814 ай бұрын
Simple answer. You'll go to hawker center to eat more than at fast food chains, daily.
@Pan00000-tАй бұрын
Quick note… the one guy said “portion” is probs on the healthier side. Since the hawker centers there kinda focus on carbs over proteins. So it’s closer 50-100 portions per dip.
@moonstarsun6334 ай бұрын
Should investigate those pasar malam stalls' cooking oil. That's really next level!
@Mao2Di24 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree! I don’t buy deep fried foods or cooked food in general from pasar malam stalls. The oily smell is nauseating most of the time unless they change the oil.
@moonstarsun6334 ай бұрын
@@Mao2Di2 the vadai, the chicken skins, chicken wings, finger food are big no no
@moonstarsun6334 ай бұрын
@@Mao2Di2 I'm not surprised the vendors don't change oil until the event is over!
@HurricaneBacklash4 ай бұрын
@@Mao2Di2 Yeah, on top of that, you can literally smell the reused oil without even entering the pasar malam
@wanemy144 ай бұрын
Dr Jue selalu nasihat bahaya aldehyde dalam minyak recycle. Punca keradangan, punca penyakit 🔥 Thank you CNA buat kajian pasal minyak ni ❤️
@zarahcastro36014 ай бұрын
The first hawker is honest, the others hedging. We know the cost is lower to reuse the oil as many times as long as the taste & quality is maintained. Too much reusing will change the taste... Just don't eat too much fired take out food and eat vegetables to clean up the inside of the body.
@eymaslacker4 ай бұрын
Does the type of oil affect this? Like soya bean, corn, peanut, vegetable? If there is a more effective oil, the hawkers might be more open to changing to that type. This type of video information is the type that really helps and we can see effort was put into it
@uttpiew2 ай бұрын
Usually highly refined oil is preferred for high heat deep frying due to its neutral properties. Soy bean, corn, peanut, sunflower, palm, coconut, olive do not matter. It can be a blend too.
@Lee.S4 ай бұрын
Thank you for the detailed video with samples and examples. It was really helpful. What was more beneficial was when you took additional measures to communicate the results of your tests with the food hawkers and also see the challenges they face if needing to change oil. I'm from India , and the situation is quite similar here too. I would be more careful when buying deep fried items but useful practices to follow when cooking at home.
@monto394 ай бұрын
I doubt there's a single restaurant in Singapore that fills a fryer, uses it for 2 orders, then dumps the oil and puts in new (at least one that stays in business more than a few months). SO....I'm pretty unclear what they mean by "used more than 5 times". 5 orders? 5 days? A decent amt. of degradation happens just by keeping it hot all day. Really important is also how often they filter it, and how finely so. Great Video!! ((BTW - when I worked in a Bistro we filtered our oil and cleaned out sediment every day (we filtered it hot, the DANGEROUS way! But French food values safety of chefs very little over quality of food). We put in fresh oil as needed - which was at least 2x/week))
@AgentOffice3 ай бұрын
Yeah definitely days
@monto393 ай бұрын
@@AgentOffice good video though - acrolein is nasty stuff
@pandakitchen51852 ай бұрын
Another factor to consider is - home frying usually heats the oil from the bottom. Loose food particles are thereby also heated until it's filtered or changed out. The special construction of commercial fryers heat oil in the middle, allowing food particles to fall below the heating element as well as even oil circulation. A valve at the bottom allows drain out.
@dk_mrkz4 ай бұрын
Interesting Topic! I love to cook and I sometime reuse oil if used for mild-tasting food, really informational indeed
@JamilaJibril-e8h4 ай бұрын
Probably leaving emails is the aim I would have them wrong but nah 🙂
@KP-xi4bj4 ай бұрын
This documentary is an eye opener.
@toyoyoyo1044 ай бұрын
3 decades ago I worked in a western restaurant. We changed the oil every 2-3 days. The used oil I heard were sold to other food vendors.
@PsychoDude4 ай бұрын
Yo what
@htetnaingoo863 ай бұрын
this why I love talking point. talking point is very educational. singapore is good country. hope more educational documentary will be air .
@semerahpadi44844 ай бұрын
My mom also reuse the cooking oil. Some sediments still okay. I never had stomach upset from eating home cooked food. As long as it doesn't turn bad, still okay.
@Iendleasereit4 ай бұрын
stomach ache is not a good gauge of whether it is harmful
@theotheleo68304 ай бұрын
The issue is the build-up of cancer causing agents, not upset stomachs.
@celestialstar1244 ай бұрын
This have nothing to do with stomach upset or unhygienic food. It is related to cancer and inflammation.
@epicka4 ай бұрын
What does 5 times mean, like 5 batches of fries? What is the standard?
@edvigadias94476 күн бұрын
I like their honesty.
@shuu48694 ай бұрын
Part of this problem can be avoided using saturated fats (palm, coconut, tallow, even lard) but also i think something that was missed was the factor of heating time. The potato chips are fried for 3-5 minutes per batch, the chicken is fried for almost 20, unless they were previously frozen pre-fried, which would already have a lot of aldehydes in it. I appreciate the video, and the honesty of everyone involved. Very high quality.
@willyougamewithme53912 ай бұрын
Insightful. Also the type of oils used are important too. Some seed and flower oils are definitely not good to be used for frying.
@Jello_HelloJLOL3 ай бұрын
Thank you for tackling this issue
@wnose4 ай бұрын
Can you guys do an investigation into man made oils like canola oil, corn oil, etc versus natural oils like coconut oil and peanut oil? Dr. Kate Shanahan claims that man made oils, after exposure to high heat, are toxic to the human body. She says it's worse than smoking.
@Iendleasereit4 ай бұрын
i second this
@jonathanpeters42404 ай бұрын
The best oils to fry in are animal fats. Vegetable oils are heavily processed poly unsaturated oils that oxidize quickly. It’s this that causes them to destroy your arteries and build plaque. Canola (rapeseed) oil was initially used as a substitute for whale blubber in lamps. Because it’s toxic it had to be heavily processed. Cottonseed oil is also toxic and must be processed. Corporations once had to pay to get rid of seed oils as waste products, so they decided to make it food and profit off of causing heart disease. There’s a reason why studies show eating more causes earlier death.
@YellowBunchofBananas4 ай бұрын
Canola and corn are plants, same as peanuts.
@wnose4 ай бұрын
@@YellowBunchofBananas Nightshade and castor beans are also plants but not so good for you.
@YellowBunchofBananas4 ай бұрын
@@wnose I totally agree. Naive appeals to nature suggesting natural is better represent a fallacy. However, you were the one that drew the distinction by suggesting that seed oils were "man made" and not "natural". Care to explain yourself?
@nandakumarsubashАй бұрын
Appreciate the honesty of the owners. I pretty sure that you would have not got a similar respknse from big chain of restaurants.
@rielfamily4 ай бұрын
CNA : "Uncle, your oil how long you change?" Uncle: "about 2 - 3 days.." Me : "Uncle, your oil how long you change?" Uncle. "Bloody hell, you trying to be funny is it??! You want buy then buy la, ask so much for what!"
@ggg9gg4 ай бұрын
Can you pretend to be CNA too
@AkPK3694 ай бұрын
Singaporean hawker or kopitiam dishes includes kaya toast, chilli crab, fish head curry, laksa, roti prata and Hainanese chicken rice, which is widely considered to be one of Singapore's national dishes
@RadityaRasyid-ym2nx2 ай бұрын
Rich people complaining about healthy foods not considering how expensive they are for the poor people to afford daily. And I believe most people who eats fried food daily already adapted to it, they already building a better immune system in their body for generations in order to survive. I've witnessed these kind of rich people in the past getting stomachache just by eating a slice of fruit straight fresh from the trees. I believe it's because their body is too spoiled with freshly fresh healthy food too often.
@zanaros2606Ай бұрын
I always shoot vomit from my mouth whenever I eat fresh avocado and papaya together
@EngieVid3 ай бұрын
I work at a deli and we use our oil until it turns dark, which is about two weeks. We do add new oil into the fryer when it gets low and that lengthens the time of changing oil. There were a few times we had to continue to cook with overused oil because our shipment of new oil didn't come in.
@Jeb92214 ай бұрын
Oh dear, this is so shocking. I had no Idea they changed their cooking oil only few times a week or even once a week!
@celestialstar1244 ай бұрын
Scary that some only change after more than 10 days.
@JoyJoy_Life4 ай бұрын
@@Jeb9221 Too late.....for the last 3 years lock down, all of us happily order and eating this KFC, hawker food....many kena cancer in this year 2024.
@Jeb92214 ай бұрын
@@JoyJoy_Life I work in oncology and there are, indeed, more and more people getting cancer. We have teenagers walking into our clinic 🥺
@TEXAS24594 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT DOCUMENTARY !!!!👏👏👏👏 Also, that oil change segment was GORY AND CREEPY A F EWWWWW!!! (more than any of the most violent & explicit dirty movie i have ever seen)
@Mi_Mi19904 ай бұрын
Why nobody tested on MacDonald oils? I guess it should belong to the 57% of reusing more than 5 times of oil category 😮😮😮😮
@afrozasultanakakon4 ай бұрын
Thanks for this informative documentary.
@tarunleft1234 ай бұрын
It is unbeleivable that this episode has come out so late in Talking Point series despite being how prevelant deep frying in oil is in our food these days. Thank you and keep up the good work on making the public more informed about the choices that they have as consumers.
@jayoshree76554 ай бұрын
Really informative video
@MrRazorteeth4 ай бұрын
McDonald's also used the oil until it turns black like kopi-o
@Adiyat_CotoАй бұрын
I'm new to this fact 😂
@savannawind7 күн бұрын
That isnt true in most western countries they are strictly regulated to get consistency from the chips.