Why Japan is Changing its Most Popular Food

  Рет қаралды 237,493

Matthew Li

Matthew Li

Күн бұрын

Onigiri (or riceballs) have existed in some form in Japan for over 2,000 years. Across the centuries it has served different purposes and roles in Japanese society. I traced onigiri's history to the present, to taste traditional onigiri at a restaurant called Onigiri Bongo. However, at the same time, the role of onigiri might be about to change again. Let's explore onigiri in the 21st century, where old and new onigiri co-exist.
Subscribe for more videos in the future: bit.ly/3Jz0f2c
SOCIAL MEDIA:
Twitter - / itsmatthewli
Instagram - / randomchino
Credits:
Producer - Matthew Li
Production Assistant - Mana Chuabang
Script Supervisor - Russ Medcalf
Special thanks:
Louis Govier
Yusef Iqbal
Yeevonne Lim
Dylan Payne
Onigiri Bongo
Tanagokoro
Music from Musicbed
SOURCES:
Matcha - matcha-jp.com/en/1635
Britannica - www.britannica.com/topic/onigiri
Onigiri Association - www.onigiri.or.jp/history
Timestamps:
0:00 - why is onigiri so important to Japan?
1:26 - what is onigiri?
2:21 - how onigiri existed for 2000 years
4:59 - trying 7-eleven onigiri
6:16 - onigiri bongo
8:02 - onigirazu
9:03 - trying onigirazu

Пікірлер: 562
@tysonristau4995
@tysonristau4995 4 ай бұрын
5:41 he didn’t explain the reason for the special packaging. The seaweed is packed separate from the rice and so it’s still crunchy when you open and eat it
@alexzanderblough6264
@alexzanderblough6264 Ай бұрын
Yeah i heard the crunch, and was confused.
@waldemarrequena5315
@waldemarrequena5315 Ай бұрын
Easy to unwrap, keeps the seaweed crispy
@jillvasquez1010
@jillvasquez1010 Ай бұрын
Great! Cause don't like nori
@goldHydrangeas
@goldHydrangeas Ай бұрын
Well it only works IF the outer isn't impeded with tape by dumb clerks.. those who don't know & put price labels & sticky sht over where you pull tab to easy opens it up.
@Sliceof_lyfeedc
@Sliceof_lyfeedc Ай бұрын
@@jillvasquez1010 I think you missed the point
@balduccirichard
@balduccirichard Жыл бұрын
Great video, just one side note: tuna with mayonnaise doesn't sound weird at all, it's one of the best combinations for canned tuna 😍
@CBD7069..
@CBD7069.. 11 ай бұрын
Right? A tuna salads main ingredients are canned tuna and mayo lol. And that’s eaten commonly throughout the world.
@angellover02171
@angellover02171 11 ай бұрын
I make Mac salad with tuna and mayo
@phillyjones3028
@phillyjones3028 11 ай бұрын
JAPANESE MAYO BTW, cuz American mayo is garbage
@baghabit7696
@baghabit7696 10 ай бұрын
Tuna mayo jacket potato
@angellover02171
@angellover02171 10 ай бұрын
@@baghabit7696 like a tuna melt with potato instead of bread
@anthonybottigliero8336
@anthonybottigliero8336 Ай бұрын
The whole "food for the people" aspect is exactly what I love about "street food".
@mikec518
@mikec518 28 күн бұрын
Not to be a naysayer on general street food, but I don't like how unhealthy street food usually is. Luckily, onigiri seems like a nice exception
@gerferies
@gerferies 11 күн бұрын
​@@mikec518it's only unhealthy if you eat it regularly.
@jackpagn8424
@jackpagn8424 Ай бұрын
Like Italians have 2k+ forms of pizza, Japanese ppl have 2k+ forms of rice + seaweed
@Lnclt-tc3ln
@Lnclt-tc3ln Ай бұрын
or Germans with their 3200+ types of bread
@inthefade
@inthefade Ай бұрын
Onigiri is just basically the equivalent of a sandwich in the West. Just something filling and easy to eat during the day.
@vitriolicAmaranth
@vitriolicAmaranth Ай бұрын
2k+ forms of pizza, yet if an italian-american makes a neapolitan style pizza and calls it new york style it's not a valid pizza.
@nilsbrown7996
@nilsbrown7996 Ай бұрын
That’s cause the heathens put parmigiana on it . Joke🤣 I’m having an by argument about that on another video.
@nilsbrown7996
@nilsbrown7996 Ай бұрын
Italians have those amazing little sandwiches, tramazzini. Actually these new rice sandwiches and their fillings look VERY similar.
@Sacto1654
@Sacto1654 11 ай бұрын
I think _onigiri_ changed to the modern style for one reason: easier to make by machine. The older style _onigiri_ , which you can still get pretty easily in Japan, is hand-made and is fairly labor-intensive.
@Zabzim
@Zabzim Ай бұрын
It’s the prepackaged sandwich from the nation that never really go into growing wheat.
@schweinebauchsandwich1606
@schweinebauchsandwich1606 Жыл бұрын
As a half japanese person who grows up in europ is onigiri a childhood memory food I know it's not the best food in Japan but for me it is the taste of the mother's love
@edwardfletcher7790
@edwardfletcher7790 25 күн бұрын
That's a beautiful memory, thank you for sharing it 👍😁
@RoxieMarquez_marroxeli
@RoxieMarquez_marroxeli 10 күн бұрын
It's the first Japanese food that my grandma showed me how to make. So many good memories of school lunches and road trips. Comfort food
@aggressive_pizza1279
@aggressive_pizza1279 Ай бұрын
It would've also been worth mentioning that onigiri comes from the verb nigiru (握る), meaning to "grasp"/"hold", because of the way you have to mold the rice into its usual triangle shape whereas onigirazu literally means "without grasping" because you don't mold the whole thing into a ball. That's why nigiri also refers to the flat-bed type of sushi (握り寿司) as opposed to the "maki" sushi roll (巻き寿司) where maki means "to roll up" 😄
@daltonz
@daltonz Ай бұрын
Onigiri can be gluten free, but it typically isn’t when gotten from Japanese convenience stores. The gluten comes from the soy sauce used in the filling which is typically “cut” or bulked up with wheat.
@mxBug
@mxBug Ай бұрын
depends on the filling ! that tuna mayo one is gluten-free, for example.
@Toastybees
@Toastybees Ай бұрын
It is not bulked up with wheat, wheat is a traditional completely expected ingredient of soy sauce.
@xmeowcatx6939
@xmeowcatx6939 Ай бұрын
As @Toastybees said, wheat is a normal ingredient important in the making of soy sauce. Professor Ryoichi Iiono cites the 6th century C.E. document, the Qi Min Yao Shu's instructions for making the predecessor sauce for soy sauce "The Seimin-yojutsu [Qi Min Yao Shu in Japanese) details a recipe for soybean sho that has been summarized as follows: Mix steamed black soybeans with white salt, kona koji (powdered wheat kneaded with water and formed into a dough...." Citation: www.kikkoman.com/jp/kiifc/foodculture/pdf_01/e_012_015.pdf Tamari is a gluten-free soy sauce typically fermented without grains and is a great alternative for those who need it. Cook's Illustrated did a taste test of soy sauces and found that there was a trend in which tamari lacked balance, taste, and sweetness that soy sauce fermented with wheat has. Citation: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jmG0h6ure9yprrssi=zUxmkWVEQ2mUgFvy&t=246
@RabahJam
@RabahJam Ай бұрын
japanese soy sauce is made with both wheat and soy beans which means it naturally contains gluten, contrary to tamari sauce which is only soy beans or for example a korean soy sauce which also doesnt use wheat. wheat is an integral part of japanese soy sauce.
@VeryInteresting369
@VeryInteresting369 Ай бұрын
Is it the Gluten or the Glyphosate that’s destroying peoples guts? My guess, it’s the Glyphosate, since Japan has the lowest usage rate of it in the developed countries.
@JoellePretty
@JoellePretty Ай бұрын
I've been slightly obsessed with making onigirazu for breakfast (in the U.S.) the past couple months. I didn't realize it was such a recent evolution. Thanks for this video.
@somefishhere
@somefishhere Ай бұрын
Which rice brand do you like the best!!!
@JoellePretty
@JoellePretty Ай бұрын
@@somefishhere I don't have a favorite. Right now I'm using Lundberg Organic California sushi rice.
@toxiccity97
@toxiccity97 Ай бұрын
@@somefishhere i use kokuho rose its a really nice firm fluffy medium grain white rice, you can get it at any asian grocery or whole foods
@fearsomefiredragon
@fearsomefiredragon Ай бұрын
Me too! I’m starting clinical rotations at vet school soon so I started making onigiri last month as a way to help me actually get a lunch in me, oftentimes we are eating on the run and rice is so cheap and easy to make
@r.coachman3499
@r.coachman3499 23 күн бұрын
@@somefishhere THANK you for asking this! I’ve been lost on what rice to use~!
@osherfein3117
@osherfein3117 Ай бұрын
The Bill Wurtz “history of japan” reference made me laugh out loud
@samsanimationcorner3820
@samsanimationcorner3820 Ай бұрын
A legendary video for sure.
@bananadad9228
@bananadad9228 Ай бұрын
His reach is infinite
@riffzifnab9254
@riffzifnab9254 Ай бұрын
Glad I'm not alone (: Also lulzing about "asking"
@misheruzinho
@misheruzinho Ай бұрын
same
@vianabdullah2837
@vianabdullah2837 Жыл бұрын
Makes sense that there's bargain bin sandwiches that you take at the local convinience store, but also gones that are a genuine meal. No reason onigiri can't be the same.
@muquietto3764
@muquietto3764 Ай бұрын
Thank you for the video. Here onigiri is usually served in japanese restaurant as a starter for ramen, getting a window to the history and concept behind the food is actually much appreciated.
@oopsneyt
@oopsneyt Жыл бұрын
I really like the concept your videos! At first, I thought you were a big channel already. Hope you keep producing these gems.
@cepahreinholt8710
@cepahreinholt8710 11 ай бұрын
Same I was surprised the first video was only 4 month ago.
@JTFandBEYOND
@JTFandBEYOND Ай бұрын
I grew up in Yokohama in the mid 1960’s. Salmon filled was my favorite!
@aby110
@aby110 7 ай бұрын
I love making onigiri at home. I usually go with tuna-mayo and black sesame seeds as filling/flavor.
@thecollector5243
@thecollector5243 5 ай бұрын
Gonna try the sesame seed. Thanks for the tip. 👍
@Menuki
@Menuki Ай бұрын
Mentaiko all the way for me.
@inthefade
@inthefade Ай бұрын
It is maybe more Korean, but my Filipino friend got me into fried Spam inside mine. I thought I hated Spam until he made me try it sliced and fried. It's just like a sandwich, so whatever you want will work.
@Lurksmore
@Lurksmore Ай бұрын
@@inthefade Spam musubi in Hawaii
@n0etic_f0x
@n0etic_f0x Жыл бұрын
Honestly, I love these and thought it was more convenient than even a sandwich. I could buy a fifty-pound bag of rice that would never go stale and cost about 20% of what I would pay for even poor-quality bread so that is what I did. Plus a bad of rice that massive was only really sold at an Asian grocery I knew and so I got to pick up stuff not found in a typical grocery.
@Emeraldwitch30
@Emeraldwitch30 4 ай бұрын
This video makes me feel better about how I fill my onigiri at home in the US as an old white lady, lol Of course, tuna mayo is a given, but my hubby is not into fish or strong tasting fish/ingredients I've put a slice of ham and cheese and scrambled egg for him. Or bacon and egg My other favorite is opening a tin of smoked kippers or smoked herring/mackerel and mashing it a bit for the middle. Smoky oily fish really goes well in the salty rice. Sometimes nice ripe kimchee goes right in the middle, too! I don't always have big sheets of nori so I tend to pack them naked and bring a few packages of korean gim snacks to wrap them in so it's still crispy. The trader joes teriyaki flavor is really good on the outside. Left over teriyaki salmon or chicken also goes well in there. I never claim its authentic lol But my half Japanese brother in law absolutely loves the smoked kipper ones. If we go out fishing for the day, I've been asked to bring double if he's going lol. But he brings the beer 🍺 😂 and edamame beans. Oh and occasionally a huge bag of deep fried salmon skin. Better than corn chips 😅
@cck6740
@cck6740 Ай бұрын
I need to live with you! Sounds amazing.
@atsukorichards1675
@atsukorichards1675 Ай бұрын
Your comments make me so happy! Bacon or ham and egg onigiri sounds delicious, and I love to try the those kipper and herring/mackerel ones. As a Japanese, my favorites are rather traditional (ume-boshi, konbu, okaka, Tsukuda-ni, salmon, and plain with salt), but there are so many kinds of onigiri we can choose out there. There are no limits for filling, mixed-in, topping, or wrap with. (Oh, the salmon skin (my case is the grilled one) was one of my father's favorites!)
@jimmylin7233
@jimmylin7233 Ай бұрын
Onigiri is food for the people. There's no such thing as an "improper" onigiri. Fill it with whatever your heart desires! Your onigiri honestly sound very delicious!
@atsukorichards1675
@atsukorichards1675 Ай бұрын
@@jimmylin7233 Only not "jam," please...
@jimmylin7233
@jimmylin7233 Ай бұрын
@@atsukorichards1675 Hey, it’s their kitchen, their fillings
@royliuhm
@royliuhm Ай бұрын
If you think of the term, Onigiri 御握り literally means "Honorable handful". "razu" らず turns it into a negative term. So Onigirazu means "Honorable (not) a handful" which would mean an Onigiri that is bigger than a handful, implying more value for money. As well as being a hip and trendy term of course.
@timaga
@timaga 27 күн бұрын
O is just an honorific as in ohashi obento ojyousama. Nigiri means shaped by hand. Onigirazu means “not shaped by hand” since each half is pressed in a form.
@artsho
@artsho 25 күн бұрын
hahaha you are so wrong!
@larry8lo
@larry8lo Жыл бұрын
Onigirazu really reminds me of Spam musubi. Of course they both came from onigiri, but still interesting to see the convergent evolution.
@Menuki
@Menuki Ай бұрын
Well, a region/historical name for onigiri is omusubi. Hawaii had a huge Japanese influence. During WWII, there were fear that ethnic Japanese were spying and meeting the military to transport intel. So the USA barred all fishing on Hawaii. With fish no longer being available, an alternative needed to be found. American military bases had surpluses of Spam and soldiers got tired of it, so became quickly available to the public (note places like South Korea and the Philippines on the popularity of spam coinciding with American military bases). Spam musubi was born. No mistake on how it looks like a giant piece of nigiri sushi.
@Lurksmore
@Lurksmore Ай бұрын
@@Menuki Not to mention, it is a shelf stable meat in a tropical environment.
@davideriksen9086
@davideriksen9086 Ай бұрын
Hard to tell if Spam Musubi made it to Japan in Post-War Period or via Japanese tourists coming much later to Hawaii. I personally think the timeline and the onigiri sando evolution are more born from the Hawaii timeline.
@Menuki
@Menuki Ай бұрын
@@davideriksen9086 the spam musubi requires military bases with a surplus of spam. As the main resupply point in the pacific, Hawaii was overloaded with the spam. You see spam popularity In similar places like South Korea or the Philippines Okinawa was the main military base in japan and incidentally the focal point of the onigiri sando, but it not as closely related as you think. Musubi was a product of Japanese utilizing what they had available. The onigiri sando is a convergent evolution of separate factors. US soldier infamously take rations to locals to cook, just for the sake of diversity. Korean Military stew is legendary in that respect. Locals will also change local cuisine to attract US servicemen. Nachos have that history. You can see how a culture without bread might improvise a sandwich in that way. That being said their difference is that musubi was made by locals for locals whereas the sando was made by locals for Americans.
@sfong9633
@sfong9633 Ай бұрын
​@@MenukiSupposedly, a local woman of Hawaii and Japanese descent created spam musubi, either Barbara Funamura or Mitsuko Kaneshiro.
@drunkredninja
@drunkredninja Ай бұрын
production quality is casual yet top notch, you deserve more subs my boi
@cedricletherisien4363
@cedricletherisien4363 11 ай бұрын
Onigiri comes from the verb, "nigiru" which in this case means to mold or to form. Same origin as nigiri sushi. Onigirazu is a "pun" where the verb is conjugated to a negation, meaning "to not mold/form". So if onigiri can be seen as "formed rice", onigirazu is "non-formed rice" which I thought was pretty clever.
@buudorobuudronovich1507
@buudorobuudronovich1507 Ай бұрын
nigeru (nigete) from this video and this comment
@special_summon
@special_summon 4 ай бұрын
once I started using short grain rice and learned the proper technique, I couldn’t stop making onigiri! Tuna mayo is the best, I like making it spicy with this tabasco sriracha I’ve been loving 😋
@calvinsperberg3714
@calvinsperberg3714 Ай бұрын
remember to wash your rice good and soak it for at least 30 minutes
@nathangamble125
@nathangamble125 Ай бұрын
Tuna mayo is an extremely common sandwich filling. I really like it with sliced cucumber.
@Tzizenorec
@Tzizenorec 11 күн бұрын
Yeah, I got to that part and I thought, "Who eats their tuna without mayonnaise?"
@vitriolicAmaranth
@vitriolicAmaranth Ай бұрын
My favourite kind of rice doughnuts are the ones that have a little bit of seaweed as a glaze and sour plum salty jelly filling. Canned fish jelly is alright too. Furikake sprinkles always liven up a doughnut!
@nackedgrils9302
@nackedgrils9302 Ай бұрын
I remember seeing this as a kid while watching the dub of the first Pokémon season and thinking that Japanese doughnuts were super weird but I still wanted to taste them.
@lurid_phaesporia
@lurid_phaesporia 7 күн бұрын
That legit sounds good though
@vitriolicAmaranth
@vitriolicAmaranth 7 күн бұрын
@@lurid_phaesporia yeah, because it's literally onigiri, the king of snack foods
@kylegarcia2454
@kylegarcia2454 11 ай бұрын
Instant subscribe. I love that while there you're digging in depth in a way even some Japanese youtubers haven't bothered.
@thepathtomaine7187
@thepathtomaine7187 Ай бұрын
I was stationed in Japan for 3 years with my family and I loved onigiri. I just started making them at home and it’s almost nostalgic now
@chuchuchuchia
@chuchuchuchia 9 сағат бұрын
2:36 The fact that Japanese nobles held celebrations for their servants is a pretty mind blowing concept
@joshuae7887
@joshuae7887 Ай бұрын
I lived off of those 7/11 onigiri in Japan 😂. So good. I liked the shrimp ones.
@AzraelThanatos
@AzraelThanatos Ай бұрын
You know, it looks a lot like the onigirazu is more of merging onigiri with more european style sandwich fillings.
@fedorkochemasov4533
@fedorkochemasov4533 Ай бұрын
I love the naming convention - "onigiri" is a noun from the verb "nigiru" to grasp, and could mean "a handful", so the onigiri has the connotation of being eaten somewhere on the go, as a handheld food. But onigirazu is is the negative form of that verb, and so the connotation of eating on the go disappears.
@mitchelljarmellmiller6102
@mitchelljarmellmiller6102 11 ай бұрын
I love the information you offer in your videos. Very, ah, nourishing. Great work.
@WillGallagher1
@WillGallagher1 Ай бұрын
Love it! Live near an Asian market in Chicago and have them all the time as a meal or a snack 😅 they’re great and much more filling than they appear.
@spinnever
@spinnever Жыл бұрын
I remember the first few times I tried to unwrap convenience store onigiri and failing miserably 😅 Another fascinating video! I would never have guessed that onigiri had such a long history.
@fongdimbulator
@fongdimbulator Жыл бұрын
My mind was blown when I realised there were numbered tabs on the wrapper
@ChrisJohnsonCJs-Kitchen
@ChrisJohnsonCJs-Kitchen Ай бұрын
The only problem is, the label sometimes keeps the #1 strip from tearing properly. It's pretty genius how they wrap them so the nori doesn't get soggy.
@2GunsUpZ
@2GunsUpZ Жыл бұрын
Your vids are so good! Glad I was here in the early days.
@davids7009
@davids7009 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of the Sushirrito sushi burrito craze in America a few years ago. Hopefully if these new trendy Onigiri become trendy we'll get to see it here too.
@DanielDeadweight
@DanielDeadweight 9 ай бұрын
Onigiri is everywhere in the US. Lol
@fanofallaroundaudreyandjus544
@fanofallaroundaudreyandjus544 3 ай бұрын
@@DanielDeadweightNot here we don’t have any Japanese food here. To be honest we don’t have any authentic Japanese, Chinese, or Korean food here. I live in a small county and we don’t get anywhere new here ever. It took until like 2017 until we even got our first and only Chick-Fil-A.
@calvinsperberg3714
@calvinsperberg3714 Ай бұрын
are you sure about that? lol plus on top of that, the onigiri available in the US is typically mediocre at best too, even from any Japanese supermarkets >< Trust me you must live in an area where there are actually a higher population of Japanese, because if you don't live in such an area there is 0-5% chance you have any onigiri....lol The only chance you have onigiri is depending on the amount of Nihonjin that live in your area, or maybe unless you got super lucky someone opened a shop. I'm from Green Bay, Wisconsin and Chicago has a quite large Japanese population and even there outside of the couple Japanese markets it is almost impossible to find onigiri outside of a few places that might have it on the menu...lol Sounds like you probably have a Mitsuwa or some other Japanese market nearby you or something....lol
@kenreynolds1000
@kenreynolds1000 Ай бұрын
We've got a bulgolgirrito joint near work. beef, spicy pork, chicken, seafood. huge portions and busy. Makes me happy. I'd love to see a western take on onigiri too. Like the Poke chains popping up.
@lanechasek5560
@lanechasek5560 Ай бұрын
Biggest mistake: Getting onigiri from 7/11 instead of Family Mart.
@zanruos88
@zanruos88 Ай бұрын
really great video , its helping me with my reasearch for my trip.
@PauseandSelect
@PauseandSelect Жыл бұрын
I didn't know even know you made this channel shift; interesting stuff my dude, keep it up!
@omgleowtf
@omgleowtf Жыл бұрын
First time in this channel, great content dude! Subscribed!
@pipkinrahl7264
@pipkinrahl7264 9 ай бұрын
We just learned to make these at home, it's wonderful.
@johan8676
@johan8676 14 күн бұрын
ppl often dont think about that onigiri is related to how rice in japan holds a similar place in food as bread does in europe / many other places. the onigiri is equivalent to a sandwich. the cheap-ish base staple (rice or bread) with other staple fillings (in japan more seafood, ie tuna onigiri, elsewhere more dairy and meat, ie ham and cheese sandwich) and, if you can afford it, some fancier fillings to make it tastier. then both the sandwich and onigiri are easy to bring when travelling or eating on the go - rice is wrapped by nori and the fillings wrapped in rice, the sandwich bread wrapping the fillings inside. a fancy onigiri or fancy sandwich, a cheap onigiri or a cheap sandwich, its all the same.
@Campernicus
@Campernicus Ай бұрын
3:48 "when the U.S. 'asked' japan to open the country" 🤣 come on
@TheKathept
@TheKathept Ай бұрын
I love onigiri!!! I wish it were all over the place in Seattle, USA. I could eat it every day. Thanks for the GREAT video! I loved all the history. Makes me love onigiri even more.
@ChrisJohnsonCJs-Kitchen
@ChrisJohnsonCJs-Kitchen Ай бұрын
Me too. At least we can get them at Uwajimaya. I really love them with tuna mayo or salmon, they also make a musubi that is chicken asado or adobo or something, that I like a lot.
@Gruff_rift
@Gruff_rift 29 күн бұрын
This really cool because this was the first time i actually ate onigiri and me and my family had so much fun eating and figuring this out so thanks
@lqfr8813
@lqfr8813 Ай бұрын
thank you for your video. its entertaining to know that culture in food can change over time but its still can become a hype on old staple food
@enigmatmz
@enigmatmz 18 күн бұрын
This is what I took in my lunch pretty much every day when I was in elementary school, with umeboshi. Every road trip we took, my grandmother made rice balls the night before for our travel snacks.
@Patrick-nv5ug
@Patrick-nv5ug Ай бұрын
When I was young a rice ball was just that...a ball of moist rice with ume in the middle, totally wrapped in nori. They don't even exist anymore, I think. I grew up with them. Likewise cone sushi and Hawaiian style maki sushi (makizushi) is disappearing. I note that the specialty restaurant had Hawaiian style poke fillings along with some more Japanese, and that the modern ones were basically variations of Spam or Hotdog Musubi first served as cheap snacks or lunch on Kauai. For many years, Japanese tourists were intrigued by the Hawaiianization of Japanese food, and are strong consumers when on vacation. It is sad for us to see the flavors we grew up with disappear.
@feyza1831
@feyza1831 Ай бұрын
I'm so glad I came across this video, great subject matter and I love your way of creating and telling a story
@G8tr1522
@G8tr1522 Ай бұрын
3:50 thanks for referencing literally the only education i ever received on the history of Japan.
@Sphagetti__
@Sphagetti__ Ай бұрын
It was so smooth as well
@mspirits9911
@mspirits9911 Ай бұрын
In the world of food, the small innovation is what makes people excited. Therefore, in the case of Onigirazu, that would be the case.
@MadCapybaraRX
@MadCapybaraRX Ай бұрын
I can assure you home-made onigiri is tastier. Even the simplest salted onigiri. That is because love was put into it! Mom and grandma's cooking is the best in the world after all. Nothing beats it!
@RoxieMarquez_marroxeli
@RoxieMarquez_marroxeli 10 күн бұрын
True that, everyone's bachan made the best onigiri
@maxinsignia
@maxinsignia Ай бұрын
This video is so well done i was genuinely surprised how low the subcount is 💀. High quality content compared to even bigger youtubers, W fr
@jackyj.5949
@jackyj.5949 Ай бұрын
This is really high-quality video! I can't believe you only have 14k subs. It's only a matter of time before your channel gets big!
@azuldream
@azuldream 11 ай бұрын
Very promising and informative channel. Keep it up!
@SgtRocko
@SgtRocko Ай бұрын
When I was stationed in Japan, breakfast was Miso soup, lunch was 2 or 3 Onigiri (my favourite stand, the lady made the most AMAZING Rafuke Onigiri that I still dream about... she also made bacon & scrambled egg ones that... again, I still dream about & have never been able to recreate). Now that I have a tonne of Korean in-laws, we eat Samgak Kimbap (it's Onigiri) and Kimbap (sooooo close to Onigiri in versatility) several times a week. LOVE it. Tuna/Mayo, Umbeboshi, Curry beef, Lox/Avocado... Dang, hope the rice cooker isn't empty right now!!!!
@MarlosCartinez
@MarlosCartinez Ай бұрын
Fuck yeah
@kronos319
@kronos319 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic content! I visited Japan a while ago and was astounded at how good 7-11 is; the food and snacks are pretty good for a convenience store!
@percivaltcg
@percivaltcg 11 ай бұрын
Great video. Really nice production and an interesting topic. I was really surprised when I saw the sub count. Keep up the good work! You made it onto my home page.
@spongygames
@spongygames 11 ай бұрын
Nice "history of japan i guess" reference.
@eddiestilll
@eddiestilll 11 ай бұрын
man... i haven't had onigiri in so long and this vid has brought back my love for its taste actually on top of its simplicity! :D
@philosophysics8150
@philosophysics8150 Ай бұрын
Onigarazu actually got its start from a very long-running cooking manga called Cooking Papa. The story goes that the mangaka's wife was in a hurry one day and adapted onigiri to be more akin to a rice sandiwch for ease of creation. So he adapted the instructions to show off in the manga. It's very popular in Hawaii for potlucks.
@NoRecipes
@NoRecipes Ай бұрын
This was an excellent video. Nice job researching the history and presenting a well rounded picture of this classic. Another reason why onigiri are moving towards onigirazu is the high protein trend currently sweeping Japan, the form factor allows for more protein (like a whole slab of chicken teriyaki) to be stuffed inside.
@eduardochavacano
@eduardochavacano 11 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Very informative.
@nickacca
@nickacca Ай бұрын
This was great. Congrats 👏🎉
@Activated_Complex
@Activated_Complex Ай бұрын
A natto rice ball and a can of Boss Black coffee was my usual breakfast in Japan, and easily powered me through the day up to lunchtime or even late afternoon. The hand-made onigiri you tried out look amazing, but also, I couldn't get over their size. They're huge! I get that there's a generous amount of filling, but it looks like there's also a donburi order's worth of rice there.
@yakitatefreak
@yakitatefreak 11 ай бұрын
I remembered seeing another video ages ago on another major channel (Brothers Green Eats, now rebranded as Pro Home Cooks) and I like the concept.
@RaskylC
@RaskylC Ай бұрын
thats amazing to know that this food i have been eating for convenience has such a long history and evolving from that
@treebush
@treebush 11 ай бұрын
Omg so this what you’ve been doing nice to see you do KZbin again lol
@wendellsmith1349
@wendellsmith1349 Ай бұрын
I learned a lot.. thank you.
@PrtSc
@PrtSc Ай бұрын
The "History of Japan" reference at 3:46 made me laugh. Thank you for the insightful video!
@justinasvd
@justinasvd Ай бұрын
Amazing quality! Subbing!
@SomeNoob
@SomeNoob Жыл бұрын
Only just gone and done it again another Banger!
@johncliffalvarez6513
@johncliffalvarez6513 Ай бұрын
I know I’m late. But this was the most informative video I’ve seen on Onigiri. It’s one of my favorite Japanese foods, and boy, do I miss it!
@kekchanbiggestfan
@kekchanbiggestfan Ай бұрын
What a well made video!
@ChrisJohnsonCJs-Kitchen
@ChrisJohnsonCJs-Kitchen Ай бұрын
What a great video, I'm glad I stumbled across it today. Thank you for sharing the history of the onigiri, it's very interesting. It seems like the advantage of onigirazu would be a more even distribution of the filling. What is your favorite filling for them so far?
@ChickensAndGardening
@ChickensAndGardening 11 ай бұрын
Cool! I've only recently discovered onigiri here in the Boston area and since I've only found it at one Japanese grocery 15 minutes away, I've been learning to make it! Can't wait to get to Japan and try those onigiri specialty shops. Bonus points because I'm trying to get away from wheat (esp. gluten) and an onigiri sandwich sounds like a good solution!!
@doggodoggo3000
@doggodoggo3000 16 күн бұрын
wow this was a really good video
@johnnzboy
@johnnzboy Ай бұрын
This was really enjoyable, fun and informative - I don't however know if it's quite accurate to say that America 'asked' Japan to open up the country to outside trade; large warships are not generally employed when making a friendly request ;)
@WolfsToob
@WolfsToob Ай бұрын
I absolutely love onigiri!! (I live in the US) Whenever I am making some sort of short/medium grain white rice dish, I always make extra rice so I can have onigiri for lunch the next day. It’s so fun and easy to make, and I can experiment with fillings/flavors. I have had my eye on onigirazu for a while now, that unagi one looks absolutely delicious! I am going to have to pick up some unagi the next time I go to my local Asian grocery store.
@inazuma3gou
@inazuma3gou 14 күн бұрын
What's remarkable about that Onigiri shop is that it has a sign that says "New Peperoncino Pasta on Menu"
@jif.6821
@jif.6821 21 күн бұрын
Born in Japan, Raised in Hawaiʻi since age 7. The onigiraza reminds me very much of Hawaiʻi`s very popular Spam-Musubi which has evolved into teri-chicken musubi, tamago musubi, hot-dog musubi etc. The original shape of the Spam musubi was dictated due to the shaped of the Spam slice between the two rice layers, and wrapped in nori. Thought Japanese in origin, it has become a very Hawaiʻi thing. If youʻree ever in Hawaiʻi you should try it. Hawaiʻi 7-11 stores always carry a nice variety.
@ZiriO
@ZiriO 14 күн бұрын
I shouldn't have watched this just before bed, now I'm starving!
@clay2889
@clay2889 Ай бұрын
Very interesting! I had no idea Onigiri was such a huge staple
@scoobysnax8127
@scoobysnax8127 17 күн бұрын
Although I like the convenience store version (usually tuna-mayo or salmon), I discovered a little onigiri outlet in Shinjuku station when I was very hungry and on a short work break. I’m pescatarian and it’s not always easy to find dishes that don’t add meat pieces. Their onigiri were so fresh and tasty and came in a ‘lunch set’ with miso soup. Perfect. And it’s very healthy. I want some now. 🍙🍙🍙
@Lavszera
@Lavszera Жыл бұрын
11:27 I had the same feeling one day when I was eating a bento on the street in my county's (Brazil) Japan Town the other day 😅
@bobbydavis3777
@bobbydavis3777 18 күн бұрын
Yo cool video bro cultural history on evey subject needs to be recorded! Also going to get some rice balls in diet
@Faze-2
@Faze-2 Ай бұрын
Very well done video
@thecollector5243
@thecollector5243 5 ай бұрын
Tuna-Mayo Onigiri are soooo good, not boring at all. I make them myself and put a generous amount inside of the rice ball. Sometimes, I live dangerously and add a bit of onion. 😁
@Emeraldwitch30
@Emeraldwitch30 4 ай бұрын
I like a bit of finely chopped dill pickle in my tuna mayo too. If you like eggs try a slice of hard boiled egg in with the tuna mayo onigiri. It's almost like having an egg salad and tuna mayo sandwich together, lol. Sorry I just like to eat and share lol. Not everyone in my family is as fascinated with food as I am lol.
@dieseltu1035
@dieseltu1035 3 ай бұрын
Put a little pickle relish when you mix the tuna mayo. Then you're be on the wild side.
@DouglasRosser
@DouglasRosser Ай бұрын
Almost 30 years ago, while serving for the United States Air Force in Misawa, Japan, I remember even us Americans would buy onigiri more often than not. EDIT - Of course, when we weren't eating all the ramen, sushi, yakitori, yakiniku, tempura, curry, etc....
@Lord_Shmesh_The_Squishy
@Lord_Shmesh_The_Squishy Ай бұрын
6:51 DAYUM THAT WAS SMOOTH!! LOOK HOW FAST THAT WAS!
@ginaquinzani6488
@ginaquinzani6488 5 күн бұрын
Enjoyed youe video. I live onigiri. To 2,000 more years!
@Nathannbo
@Nathannbo 27 күн бұрын
We have a restaurant in Baltimore called Ekiben and it is insanely good. Now I know the history of the name. So thanks for that
@TheBeatles..
@TheBeatles.. 7 күн бұрын
Unfortiantely, there food/packaging has nothing to do with ekiben. Im guessing they just picked the name. Food is average tho.
@DarkChaosMC
@DarkChaosMC Ай бұрын
If you’re looking for the song at 7:25, it’s “Delicious!” by Kokonoku, Or the original of the song, but that is the remix I have in my playlist.
@handyhippie6548
@handyhippie6548 Ай бұрын
we call tuna mayonnaise, tuna salad and add dill pickle relish and onions. i eat it as a tuna salad sandwich. an easy cheat is to add canned tuna to tartar sauce, since it's mostly mayo, cream of tartar, and pickle relish.
@davideriksen9086
@davideriksen9086 Ай бұрын
If it’s not still warm, the best option is with umeboshi-the pickled plums. Sweet, tart, and with the wetness to bring a cold onigiri back to life.
@tofu_golem
@tofu_golem Ай бұрын
Onigiri is simple. My mother is Japanese, and onigiri was one of my favorite Japanese snack foods. She couldn't always get the right kinds of things to put inside of it, and had to make weird substitutions, but it was one of my favorite "taste of Japan" things while living in Germany, America, etc. So naturally, I'm going to be a cranky curmudgeon about any change to it. Well, changes after the 70s, 80s, etc.
@Narconia
@Narconia Ай бұрын
I have always loved onigiri and miss it....when i was little my parents were stationed in japan and we live there 3.5 years ....the onigirazu sounds like it would be yummy and possibly make it easier for work lunches ect.
@cmonmabase
@cmonmabase 13 күн бұрын
I get if it seems kinda boring to someone who lives in Japan but man, when I visited, convenience store onigiri were one of my favorite things to eat. I was going to Family Mart almost every morning and picking up several of the tuna mayo, salmon, and wasabi ones. Not for convenience, I was just addicted to them. I'm craving one now...
@Mytinhalo
@Mytinhalo 2 ай бұрын
I just came back from 10 days in Japan, and I miss them so so much! 😢 I loved the tuna mayo, and the bbq pork or chicken.
@jadedoddity
@jadedoddity 11 күн бұрын
This video is making me hungry.
@Menuki
@Menuki Ай бұрын
A point you’re overlooking is how much social media has influenced food culture. As much as we like to mock ppl who take pictures of their food, it has spread ideas and innovation throughout cooks. Because recipes can’t be copywritten, it has accelerated evolution of dishes. Think back before all the online food photos, how would ppl know what ppl at in other countries. It was the strict narrative of tradition and cookbooks, the side ppl wanted ppl to think about a country. The Pokémon being a prime example. Say it’s something else rather than explaining what really happening. This has led to a cultural exchange of food ideas and concepts. They boundaries of what food can or has to be are breaking down and it goes both ways. Like a paella onigiri in Spain or a Cajun onigiri filled with crawfish. The spam musubi, an onigiri descendant, has taken on a life of its own and is now spawning its own progeny. My personal favorite: rice crispy treat spam musubi.
The Japanese Food You Never Heard Of
13:53
Matthew Li
Рет қаралды 64 М.
Why this Noodle is so Important to Japan
14:58
Matthew Li
Рет қаралды 12 М.
Always be more smart #shorts
00:32
Jin and Hattie
Рет қаралды 32 МЛН
Получилось у Вики?😂 #хабибка
00:14
ХАБИБ
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН
THEY WANTED TO TAKE ALL HIS GOODIES 🍫🥤🍟😂
00:17
OKUNJATA
Рет қаралды 3,1 МЛН
Жайдарман | Туған күн 2024 | Алматы
2:22:55
Jaidarman OFFICIAL / JCI
Рет қаралды 895 М.
Throw Away Your Ramen Packets And Make This Instead
11:04
ThatDudeCanCook
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН
【Day in the Life】27-year-old woman, Owner of Onigiri shop【Japan】
9:59
How To Make Delicious Onigiri At Home (With Recipe) | Aoi's Magical Recipes
10:44
Aoi's Magical Recipes - Japanese School Lunch
Рет қаралды 7 М.
5 mins each 🍙  6 Easy Onigiri recipes for beginners! Japanese Rice ball
9:21
80 Year Old serves only EDO Period food at 162 Year old Restaurant
12:07
Japanese Food Craftsman
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
3 Reasons WHY Samurai Wore Slipper-like Shoes | The History of Waraji, Zori, and Geta
14:33
Let's ask Shogo | Your Japanese friend in Kyoto
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
What My Japanese Wife Eats in a Day
9:46
Paolo fromTOKYO
Рет қаралды 3,6 МЛН
Always be more smart #shorts
00:32
Jin and Hattie
Рет қаралды 32 МЛН