Hoi Tod: How War, Money, and Chinese Mythology Created a Thai Street Food Classic

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OTR Food & History

OTR Food & History

Күн бұрын

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@OTRontheroad
@OTRontheroad 10 ай бұрын
Locations: Daeng Racha Hoi Tod: maps.app.goo.gl/qTSgBoyV9YHhiPUY6 Nai Mong: maps.app.goo.gl/WNdfmerbwke6oTgq5 Heng Hoi Tod Chaw Lae: maps.app.goo.gl/T232SjFget7ARqpn9 Yim Yim: maps.app.goo.gl/7SFYrTEAPzp9RuoC7 Yod Pad Thai: maps.app.goo.gl/7rx3YThQjtEaFqcd8 And here's the Chinese Sausage place where I detoured: maps.app.goo.gl/S2L6u3zg97FigMZcA
@keepcalmlovedinosaurs8934
@keepcalmlovedinosaurs8934 10 ай бұрын
Quality content as always! 👍 All these years I've heard of hoi tod but never got around to trying it (mind you I'm not a fan of mussels) but when I went to a monastery after a blessing hoi tod was available and I was given some and was blown away over just how aroy it was! Its perfect for a breakfast dish.
@eddyyin1980
@eddyyin1980 9 ай бұрын
this is not thai food, just as misrepresented as saying "muffin" is american
@OTRontheroad
@OTRontheroad 9 ай бұрын
FFS watch the video before making a useless comment.@@eddyyin1980
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF 10 ай бұрын
OMG that bird nest soup shop at 24.17 was my grandma restaurant from the 1940s till the 90s, it was sold when she passed away. We use to have the best hainanese chicken rice in Chinatown, ask any old local there. Chicken rice stall in the middle, my uncle would sale flat noodles on the right stall and my mum would sale por pia tod and som tum on the left stall. She was one of the very first to sale som tum in the restaurant in Chinatown back in the late 70s. Thanks for showing my grandma old place, brings back lots of memories.
@Bpaynee
@Bpaynee 9 ай бұрын
That sounds awesome! I wish I could try their food! There's really something special about Hainanese chicken 😊
@mrmrmr139
@mrmrmr139 8 ай бұрын
Are your chicken rice opening elsewhere now?
@ankhpom9296
@ankhpom9296 4 ай бұрын
Small world is an old saying.
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF 4 ай бұрын
And now that Lahn Mah is out, I've been thinking about her even more. Every scene in the movie resonates with that restaurant. The one that got me was when Amah told M if he misbehaved she was gonna come back as a ghost to haunt him, my grandma used to say the same thing. And the teochew lullaby, OMG, I haven't heard that for at least 40 years, when I heard it in the movie, I cried.
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF 4 ай бұрын
@@mrmrmr139 I was in BKK 2 years ago and heard that the chicken rice shop was relocated but still in Chinatown, Also at night (back in the 90s) my uncle would rent out his noodle stall and the "Kao tom pla" guy would be selling his stuff at night. He has relocated to yaowarat Rd. I went there 2 years ago and the guy still remembers me after 40 years (I went with my cousin, he knows my cousin)
@rocky171986
@rocky171986 10 ай бұрын
To be honest, your body of work here surpasses the requirements for getting a PhD in food anthropology in any reputable university. This a scholarly level content right here in this channel.
@patradingjournal
@patradingjournal 10 ай бұрын
THIS!
@nav-aid
@nav-aid 9 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more
@KevinWJenner
@KevinWJenner 9 ай бұрын
Why? Your mockeries will be delivered to justice.
@JBW-Phuket
@JBW-Phuket 9 ай бұрын
Correct. Well researched. Must take a lot of time. Amazing.
@fluffiness100
@fluffiness100 10 ай бұрын
As you said, oyster omelets are popular whereever there is a large Fujianese population, which is the case in Taiwan also, where I'm from. It's a staple in the night markets everywhere, and especially in the southern regions where most oysters are farmed.
@jojoanggono3229
@jojoanggono3229 10 ай бұрын
My father migrated from Fujian. He loves oyster omelette so do I. Would order one whenever I see it and have a space in my stomach. Though I never tried the soft goey version, always the well fried version, with plenty of pork lard, and chives. I think this is the Fujian style.
@jiayaw
@jiayaw 9 ай бұрын
蠔烙 - traditional street food from Fujian and also teochew people too.
@jim.pearsall
@jim.pearsall 10 ай бұрын
The first time I had Hoi Tod was at a Thai restaurant near Washington University in St. Louis (where I went for grad school). Fast forward a few years later at home in Houston, I missed it and decided to make my own Hoi Tod at home. It was so satisfying! Now retired in Bangkok, I can easily buy it on the street - but, I’m tempted to make it myself again. 😊🙏🏻🇹🇭🤤
@JayKughan
@JayKughan 10 ай бұрын
People do like it when they get a lot of oysters in their omelet. Never heard someone complain about too many oysters. You just overdid it all on your own. Frankly, I'd love to have been you. Oyster omelets rock! 😍
@wooyyeah
@wooyyeah 10 ай бұрын
Coming from Hokkien (Fujian) speaking Penang Malaysia, we have a version as well, slimy, not crispy. The crispy version is more popular in capital Kuala Lumpur. We call it the same as that traditional Chinese restaurant, Oh Tsien.
@angelocardoc
@angelocardoc 10 ай бұрын
I came to Bangkok because of your videos. Loving it here in Sukhumvit
@OTRontheroad
@OTRontheroad 10 ай бұрын
Wow that’s awesome! Hope to bump into you sometime here in the city.
@angelocardoc
@angelocardoc 10 ай бұрын
@@OTRontheroad It's only my 2nd day here, so I'm still a bit jet lagged. I've been eating at the Emsphere Mall. Nice mall but food court cuisine gets tiresome quickly. Hoping to hit some of the restaurants you've mentioned.
@ankhpom9296
@ankhpom9296 4 ай бұрын
Instead, go to the restos where the natives eat. Avoid the corporate food places.
@genoeckley3442
@genoeckley3442 10 ай бұрын
Hoi Tod is one of my wife Sukanya's favorites. As we wait for our house to sell and move to Thailand she promises me that this will be one of the first dishes we will eat when we get there too. We have enjoyed all your videos in our preparation for moving back to her home. Although it has been approximately 40 years since we both have been there you have only reminded us of one of the things we love about Thailand. Spoiled and being married to a Thai for over 34 years, living in Honolulu for 20 years, then Southern CA and now GA this was one piece we have been able to share with our kids, and friends. You do a fantastic job not only highlighting the food we love but it is the back story that we enjoy too. Happy New Year and have a GREAT 2024
@MasterShake9000
@MasterShake9000 10 ай бұрын
Daria out here not eating a single oyster but still taking one for the team. Hope she was rewarded with curry puffs!
@MikeLimTravel
@MikeLimTravel 10 ай бұрын
The quality of OTR videos, the content, history is superb. These videos will be episodes on a food network or travel network in no time. Just dont change the style of your work, it is very entertaining and enjoyable from start to finish.
@ryang628
@ryang628 9 ай бұрын
THANK YOU SO MUCH for this video. Just before the pandemic I did a food exploration trip across Southern China and tracing the evolution of this dish from Chaoshan to Fujian and Kinmen (Taiwan) was a key thread. I’m familiar with how this dish varies across Taiwan, Malaysia and Singapore, and your video is providing key insights, plugging in gaps and revealing connections hitherto unbeknownst to me.
@thefolder3086
@thefolder3086 10 ай бұрын
I love this dish and I have it usually at least every week. I knew it is likely Chinese but wow I never could have guessed it has so much history behind it
@lifeisbeautiful_nz
@lifeisbeautiful_nz 10 ай бұрын
Lucky you can have this dish every weeks. I never taste this for over 25 years or more. I must go one or more of these lists next Visit Th. ❤Thank you
@thefolder3086
@thefolder3086 10 ай бұрын
@@lifeisbeautiful_nz or you can try cooking it yourself 😉
@lifeisbeautiful_nz
@lifeisbeautiful_nz 10 ай бұрын
@@thefolder3086 Good ideas...will do .Thank you
@plantafantasma2060
@plantafantasma2060 10 ай бұрын
Most enjoyable food reviews on KZbin. Excellent exploration into culinary history. I look forward to each new episode & have gone back to watch several over again. Cheers!
@OTRontheroad
@OTRontheroad 10 ай бұрын
Cheers and thanks!
@AncientAesthetic
@AncientAesthetic 10 ай бұрын
I’m a native Teocheow Bangkokian and I learned a few things from your video today. Great job. 👍🏻
@pauljh6478
@pauljh6478 2 ай бұрын
Every time I watch an OTR video from Bangkok I find new places to go, food to eat and fascinating historical insights. I absolutely love this channel
@nnf9431
@nnf9431 10 ай бұрын
Just came back from a visit to the Chaozhou region - the oyster omelettes were out of this world. Would love to try the Thai Chinese versions and see how it compares.
@lgwkevin1
@lgwkevin1 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video OTR team! I'm definitely team Heng Hoi Tod Chaw Lae. Having tried the Singaporean, Malaysian, Thai and Taiwanese variants I must say they all have their pros, but the Thai crispy version together with the sweet and spicy chili sauce is really an easy one to get behind. Similar to Adam I'm not a big fan of the softer version as the gooey texture gets to me. And I must say I'm not a fan of the bean sprouts that comes with the omelets. Side note to Adam: I did a 3 shop Hoy Tod run in a day once sometime last year and they were not kidding about the manliness part.
@strataman
@strataman 10 ай бұрын
The Thai version follow very closely to the Chinese version (the original) except without sweet and chilli sauce.
@haruzanfuucha
@haruzanfuucha 10 ай бұрын
The Thai version is basically the Teochew version.
@iROChakri
@iROChakri 10 ай бұрын
Thai people always know how to improve and make food to taste better.
@Jumpoable
@Jumpoable 10 ай бұрын
I have to say the Thai-Chinese make the most appetising versions! Modern Chaozhou/Teochew has styles ranging from crisp to deep-fried crunchiness, & usually has to be round, like a pancake. Even within Fujian, the styles are different from each city/ village. Xiamen, Quanzhou & Putian all serve up slimy scrambles using only sweet potato starch without any egg, the oysters are the stars. Zhangzhou uses a mix of sweet potato starch with rice or wheat flour, plus egg; the batter is the star. Malaysian Hokkien makes the omelette part first, then stir-fries the oysters afterwards & combines it. Taiwanese is a gloopy hot mess with the LEAST amount of oysters; not my favourite. LOL.
@mickbotcast
@mickbotcast 10 ай бұрын
as a Thai-Teochew, this makes me want to experience all those variants. visit the ancestor place would be an interesting journey.
@lofu32
@lofu32 10 ай бұрын
I didn't know there is so much variance from China. Usually all oysters omellete are introduced from teochew cuisine. Never seen it in south east Asia. Hokkien style in Malaysia or usually penang is an adaptation from the teochew oyster omelette- it is an adaptation by the hokkien.
@hc8714
@hc8714 10 ай бұрын
@@lofu32 never seen it in SEA?! its everywhere along Malaysia and SG, and all the chinatown in Thai, PH, Indonesia etc
@crowdemon_archives
@crowdemon_archives 9 ай бұрын
​@@hc8714 as a Singaporean, I can concur the oyster omelettes vary wildly no matter where I go. (Malaysia has some really good ones, especially at that one hawker center in Batu Pahat lol)
@patradingjournal
@patradingjournal 10 ай бұрын
Great video, you are truly doing every dishes justice by blending the history, the story telling and the cinematography in an intimate yet unique way! Never stop doing these!
@oatmeal255
@oatmeal255 10 ай бұрын
Holy shit another upload on my day off and its about oysters (greatest seafood on planet earth) Love you guys keep up the good work and happy new years from Canada! going back to Thailand at the end of February and I spent hours google maps pinning all the restaurants in your videos, can't wait!
@jontheb123
@jontheb123 10 ай бұрын
I live in Taiwan and oyster omelette is kinda seen as old people food out here. You would probably find the best Taiwanese varieties in the city of Tainan, which is incidentally where Koxinga fought the Dutch and built his capital.
@Packet37
@Packet37 10 ай бұрын
Yea but here in Thailand we made it so delicious that is so different from other places. Thus it’s is being recognized for most best version of it.
@cat09644
@cat09644 10 ай бұрын
No,蚵仔煎 is a traditional food,like stinky tofu,if you think 蚵仔煎 is old people food then all taiwanese food are old people food.
@Packet37
@Packet37 10 ай бұрын
@@cat09644 they are
@jw7268
@jw7268 10 ай бұрын
You can still respect the origin of the dish and still call it a Thai dish. The Fujian story is probably the truth, they do love their oysters.
@尹同学
@尹同学 10 ай бұрын
​@@jw7268这是蚵仔煎,是中国的原创
@bobbrian1641
@bobbrian1641 10 ай бұрын
One of my favorite dishes. So cool to have a whole half hour dedicated to it!! This channel rules! 🔥
@GenAznX
@GenAznX 9 ай бұрын
i really appreciate how you dig into the origin of each food you introduce.
@CrusaderA
@CrusaderA 10 ай бұрын
I cant wait for this channel to explode, yet another masterpiece by the OTR team!
@doubleunderfire7964
@doubleunderfire7964 10 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Going to increase my hoi Tod consumption. I usually pass the pad Thai stalls and look for essan food but now I’ll take advantage of the huge skillets and start eating more oysters! Good stuff. Thanks for the in depth research. It was fun seeing your excitement in the old school Chinese restaurant.
@aquabluesweater9014
@aquabluesweater9014 10 ай бұрын
Amazing video OTR! I just ate Hoy Tod at a restaurant over this new year and it's cool to see a video going into details on this local dish. I love how you explore the various aspects and history of this and look forward to more!
@DroneBeeStrike
@DroneBeeStrike Ай бұрын
My new favorite channel, thank you for all you do, I wish I could support you more but I'll like and comment all I can
@coon155
@coon155 8 ай бұрын
OMG! My friend’s family is the owner of Yim Yim!!! And my family (my grandfather, specifically) used to open a Cantonese restaurant near by Yim Yim which used to be rivals!!
@KilanEatsandDrinks
@KilanEatsandDrinks 10 ай бұрын
Happy New Year, OTR! 🎉 Great video, as usual, although I have to admit that I never get the hype surrounding oyster omelette. Sure, Thai _hoi tod_ is popular worldwide, and no visit to Taiwan is complete without trying out their version. Mind you I’m also familiar with _oh chien_ in Malaysia and Singapore. But for me it’s all just… meh 🤷‍♂️ Even in Indonesia you will have people from both North Sumatra and West Borneo gush about whose version of the Chinese Indonesian equivalent to the dish is the best one. I myself prefer preserved radish omelette to oyster omelette, so I don’t really bother with all the fuss 😁 But what I can appreciate is the creativity of these Thai places in developing their own recipes, each creating a fresh take on a classic recipe. 👍 And it’s nice to see you found the taste of “home” at Yim Yim.
@EarlKuOnly
@EarlKuOnly 10 ай бұрын
by far the most informational youtube video i have seen today ... keep it up
@jnhkz
@jnhkz 10 ай бұрын
at 15:53 the sign said "To our belove customer. If it's delicious, please invite all your loved ones to eat here. But if not, please tell us about it quietly then bring the one you hated to eat here and make them feels bad!"
@hollish196
@hollish196 10 ай бұрын
Yim Yim sounds like a truly wonderful gem. Thanks for sharing all this history, and the beautiful food. Loved the sausage detour!
@hlim431
@hlim431 9 ай бұрын
What a Gem... brilliant story Adam!!!
@mdbizzarri
@mdbizzarri 10 ай бұрын
I am really enjoying your "history of ..." style of videos. You should work with the travel industry for sponsors, as I am trying to find the cheapest way to get back to Thailand. You inspire not only wanting to cook the food, but wanting to go and try all of the different places you visit. Hopefully you create a list on your website of must try dishes and restaurants.
@OTRontheroad
@OTRontheroad 10 ай бұрын
Really cool to hear. Thanks! And yeah some day I'll aggregate my personal Google Maps into something public or at least for Patreon. Daria keeps suggesting it, I just haven't had time
@IdeaStudioBKK
@IdeaStudioBKK 10 ай бұрын
Great video! Hoi Tod scared me when I first got here. but after I got brave enough to give it a try I was hooked and now its one of my all time favorites. Trying to explain this dish to friends when they come to visit from the states never goes well, they never want to try it. lol
@永寿金剛
@永寿金剛 10 ай бұрын
I had been to Yim Yim since I was a kid. Quite surprised that the restaurant got introduced in your channel! Anyway, my favourite is the raw fish, served in thin slice. You should try that too!
@aniwee17
@aniwee17 7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this excellent video. I really like the Yim Yim restaurant version of the oyster pancake.
@MB-hx9sz
@MB-hx9sz 10 ай бұрын
Another amazing video! and very helpfull for my next visit to Thailand, Thank you so much!
@jeraldbaxter3532
@jeraldbaxter3532 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video! Happy New Year!😊
@hiddenbunny7205
@hiddenbunny7205 10 ай бұрын
Grew up in Taiwan, and the first origin story is what I have heard. The Taiwanese Oyster Omelet is very similar to hoi tod and is one of the representative Taiwanese street food.
@schellmann
@schellmann 10 ай бұрын
Another fantastic episode
@jacobpeterson6509
@jacobpeterson6509 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for such an epic story behind such a humble dish! The next time I have an oyster omelette I’m going to rewatch and eat along 😂
@weekdaycycling
@weekdaycycling 10 ай бұрын
There's quite a range of Hoy Tod dishes, and personally, I tend to opt for fried mussels over fried oysters. Pairing it with Sriracha chili sauce takes its flavor to the next level!
@stevegand
@stevegand 10 ай бұрын
Another absolutely great video. 💯👍
@AlexTangBang
@AlexTangBang 10 ай бұрын
After watching this video I have been going around the northeast USA looking for hoi tod on Google maps. Two observations I found: 1. Instead of oysters, mussels are used instead. If I go to Thailand one of these days, I will need to try authentic hoi tod! 2. There's not a lot of restaurants that serve it here in the states.... I have to really research and when I find it, they may have it on the menu but now it's sold out or not being served anymore as no one bought it. With the places found that serves it, it's really good but I don't have a comparison to the real thing. I do know that in Chinese restaurants, you can ask for oyster pancakes but it's different as I feel that it's more egg-ie than hoi tod here in the states. Anyway I typed too much! Thanks for this video, introducing me to the world of hoi tod!!!!😋
@adamjoachim-b2k
@adamjoachim-b2k 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for showing me the real hoi tod. I watched it being made on the street several times during my first visit to Bangkok. I tried it once and threw most of it away. It was to greasy to handle 35:50 . Plus I'm not a big fan of mussles. I do however love oysters. I will be back in Bangkok tonight and having the real deal for breakfast. Thanks again Adam and team OTR. I really enjoy your videos.
@Lyndonology
@Lyndonology 10 ай бұрын
Happy New Year OTR team, what a great video to start the year. Guess if we see another video, you survived eating so many oysters 😂❤🙏🏽
@jnc07res
@jnc07res 10 ай бұрын
I had never tasted or even remember reading about this dish, but I'm glad I did this morning. I absolutely have to try making this dish now (and I can already tell what my 'style' might be). Thanks for posting the video, very entertaining!
@jakoblarok
@jakoblarok 10 ай бұрын
34:37 - Highlight of the video: "I've never been at a point where I've had a hundred oysters in my system at once" [classy Uncle gives thumbs up of approval] - great editing!!!
@astroboy2345
@astroboy2345 10 ай бұрын
The origin of Oyster omelette is probably not as fantastic, but the version that exists in Taiwan and Thailand today most likely came from version 1 of the story - Ming Era Konxinga's war to driver out Dutch East India Company settlement in Southern Taiwan in the 1660s. Oyster Omelette is a traditional Minnan dish most likely pre-dating the 1600s. It exists as a cheap stable for seafairing people in Minnan regions such as Southern Fujian, Chiaozhou in Guangdong, and island of Hainan. The original version is probably closer to Chiaozhou and Jinmen Island (Taiwan controlled small island off Southern Fujian) version were it consists of Oysters, eggs, and veggies. The addition of starch to the Oyster Omelette most likely occurred in 1661 Ming Navy campaign in Taiwan as a filler replacement for rice for the sailors due to a lack of grain and supplies during war time. The starchy version of Oyster Omelette likely spread to Thailand by Minnan labors, who were hired and migrated with the British trade in the 1800s. Note Koxinga Ming Navy settlement of Taiwan, rice remains a scarce commodity through Japanese occupied Taiwan in WWII, afforded only by the wealthy; therefore all kinds of starches were added to traditional dishes as rice replacement This can be seen in modern "traditional" Taiwanese snack foods today. Modern eaters developed a taste for starchy, chewy texture in food in Taiwan and throughout East Asia.
@p5gBand
@p5gBand 10 ай бұрын
A very Happy New Year to the entire OTR crew. Thank you so muh for the content. I always enjoy them very much.
@detectivecampbell
@detectivecampbell 10 ай бұрын
Finally someone made a video on this! Centuries in the making ~
@fariesz6786
@fariesz6786 9 ай бұрын
ermergawd this made me go to Bangkok. not that i will any time soon and it saddens me that by the time i might be able to (if ever since i'm poor and disabled) i will probably have forgot most of the things i learnt from your channel. but yeah. when i went to Japan many years ago i absolutely fell in love with fried oysters and i am certain all those versions of hoi tod would be right up my alley! i want to try all of them. i love gooey, i love crispy.. i want to eat at Yim Yim too (and as you did not just the oyster omlet but all the other food)
@Icy_Igloo
@Icy_Igloo 10 ай бұрын
Just subscribed, thank you for a great video, and great content! Sadly, we had just returned from Bangkok when we saw this video and missed out on some of those great places you showed in this video. Lastly, we NEED to know the effects of the 10 dozen oysters you consumed! Don't leave us hanging!
@poomsiraprapasiri8448
@poomsiraprapasiri8448 10 ай бұрын
I spent 10 years in the US for school and work. And every time I came home to Bangkok I would go to my favorite hoi tod places, near Rachawat Market (Sawadee Padthai-Hoi Tod and Mae Prayoon). It would be one of the first things I ate after arriving home.
@mmhuq3
@mmhuq3 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video great content
@bourbakis
@bourbakis 10 ай бұрын
Didn't expect the history lesson on how Thai food was transformed, thx to the Chinese immigrants who went to there for importing rice! You earned a subscriber for the thoroughness of the research and the presentation style.
@markjones2781
@markjones2781 10 ай бұрын
Glorious KZbin. The rare gem found amongst the dross that makes it all worth it. Simply glorious.
@rmarkcorkery
@rmarkcorkery 10 ай бұрын
UVA I see , I'm from the Noke living in Phuket. Love your work, keep it coming please!
@OTRontheroad
@OTRontheroad 10 ай бұрын
Ah awesome. Spent tons of time in that part of the state. I grew up outside Charlottesville (and partly near Asheville, so a few hours further down 81).
@twinflowerfioretta
@twinflowerfioretta 10 ай бұрын
Happy and prosperous new year 2024 OTR Team 🎉🥂 thanks a lot for everytime fascinating content on food History 👍 this time is one of my fav. dishes, oysters are incredible delish, i had the best oyster omlete in a unknown sidewalk restaurant ! but i love oysters raw as well, i had very good ones in Thailand (f.ex. Prachuap Kiri Khan) 💝✌Yummy video with great topic
@aerosuffly
@aerosuffly 10 ай бұрын
Great episode! I also prefer the old style gluey soft version. I still remember my dad taking us to a local Chinese restaurant run by Teochew people, and we would always get that. Sometimes we would get the fish head hot pot with taro in it. Yum! Teochew people also bring the Teochew opera and the Chinese banquet to Thailand. I hope that you will be able to go to one in the future (try searching for งานงิ้ว โต๊ะจีน). That would make a great episode. I am still waiting for a Hainanese chicken rice episode, but I will give you sometime :).
@XcluziveAZN
@XcluziveAZN 10 ай бұрын
I grew up on mussels version. I didn't even know it supposed to be oysters. Another awesome Video OTR!
@Cyberoverdose888
@Cyberoverdose888 10 ай бұрын
Have to try the last restaurant with the Chinese version! Great vlog! Thank you.👍
@antespajictwo
@antespajictwo 10 ай бұрын
happy new year peeps! wishing you an awesome year ahead and thank you once again for making these, I love your videos, you keep making them interesting, fun and educational. Can't wait to do a tour in Bkk following some of your footsteps 🍖💛💚💙💜
@benpeng3948
@benpeng3948 10 ай бұрын
Happy New Year OTR
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF
@ObviouslySeriouslyDGAF 10 ай бұрын
When we first moved to Melbourne Australia from Thailand back in 1984, the price of scallops was $2 a kilo and my dad would make hoy tod with scallops. Hoy tod with scallops is the best.
@lucasbarefski351
@lucasbarefski351 10 ай бұрын
I prefer the soft version because of the texture and it tastes less greasy. Pour a bit of black vinegar and chili sauce on top and you’re in heaven😇There’s local restaurant near me in Rangsit that I’ve been eating at for more than 20 years. As for those shops I’m team Dang as well😄
@winteryolive
@winteryolive 10 ай бұрын
Were you okay the next day? I ate a bad oyster once. Not fun! I also prefer the crispy hoi tod talay like what you showed at the end of the video to the fluffy omelet-style oyster hoi tod, and it never occurred to me that it's because I'm American, but that may be true!
@ErdingerLi
@ErdingerLi 10 ай бұрын
Ain't it amazing that this little animal; the oyster, ended being the saviour in so many historical accounts? From famine in ancient China to the early days of the US (from what I read they used to be really cheap street food).
@fernandolim1500
@fernandolim1500 Ай бұрын
Thank you very much. I love history and foods and YUMMY TIME.
@howardzhang6391
@howardzhang6391 10 ай бұрын
i like how humble this guy is.
@bluemuffin6160
@bluemuffin6160 10 ай бұрын
In Thailand Hoi tod typically uses mussels (crispy) whereas oyster variant is light and soft and it is called “Or Suan”.
@encycooper
@encycooper 10 ай бұрын
The best oyster omlette has gone, used to be next to Robinsons. Like kai jaew oyster on rice for B60.
@rvp976
@rvp976 9 ай бұрын
Hoi Tod is one of my all-time favourite dish, that I get everytime I visit Bangkok. My most frequent spot is at Hoi Tod Chao Lae, due to it's relatively easy to find and never a wait. However, when it comes to absolutely the best flavor/quality, Nai Mong is its own class and a step above them all.
@essdeekay654
@essdeekay654 10 ай бұрын
I feel like his Thai pronunciation is getting better every video
@mynameisbenz.7265
@mynameisbenz.7265 10 ай бұрын
Very delicious from Thailand 🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭 confirm 👍👍👍
@advasity339
@advasity339 10 ай бұрын
didnt expect to come across a gem today, here's my sub
@donaldgrove2249
@donaldgrove2249 10 ай бұрын
I adore the texture of the fried batter which varies from crispy to mushy and tender in the same dish, almost always. It's fun to know about what you cover, and interesting to learn that the dish isn't quite as standard as I thought, but the versions you show seem kinda gourmet compared to what is generally available all over Thailand! I get it everywhere I go, from Loei to Krabi and it's pretty much the same. Delicious.
@AnonChiranukulpipat
@AnonChiranukulpipat 9 ай бұрын
Pad Thai is like the princess of Thai food that foreigners know the most. Likewise, Hoi Tod (fried oysters) are like The prince of Thai food that foreigners never mention about it. Even though it's food that comes together complement each other's flavors on the Thai food carts selling Teochew recipes on the Thai streets. When you eat Pad Thai and Hoi Tod together in same time. It's a combo blow your mind to Yaowarat Thai food from Teochew cuisine. Like you eat moo grob (crispy pork) 😂
@superjoshie
@superjoshie 10 ай бұрын
If you ever have the opportunity to visit Malaysia, come to Penang where many Chinese from Fujian province settled over the last 100 years. We have oyster omelets as well is is pretty similar to the Thai version yet different. I have tried Singaporean, Thai, Taiwanese versions but I still love the Penang version!
@fahmraktnul4279
@fahmraktnul4279 10 ай бұрын
Could you please recommend a good place for this? I've been to Penang more than 10 times, but always ended up eating Char Kuay Teow, chicken rice and Dosa. I have to start branching out.
@firecracker739
@firecracker739 10 ай бұрын
My favorite during high school times (10+ yrs ago) was กระทะร้อน (krata ron/hot pan?) hoi tod with sweet chili sauce. I don’t remember the name nor the style and I rarely eat Hoi tod since then. Hoi tod is usually too oily/greasy (in term of taste, maybe should use richness instead?) for me so the cooking sauce that cooked/thicken/burned on the hot pan gave me the flavor that I liked. Comparing to other typical Hoi tod I’d say they’re far more spicy/hot and also sweet so you might say it differs away from the original quite a lot because my memory of the dish is spiciness (three spicy ingredients I remember are white pepper and their cooking sauce while having sweet chili sauce/sriracha on the side). I think they mainly used mussels but there might be oysters in the mix I’m not quite remember. It looked like your last one but on a hot pan with cooking sauce (sweet-spicy-salty).
@dondobbs9302
@dondobbs9302 10 ай бұрын
WoW ! WoW ! WoW ! Love it! So........how did the plumbing do after that? Thank you for your sacrifice. I had the soft version 1st and it turned me off the dish for a while until I noticed the crisp version being made on a big, flat pan like that. Incredible! There's a Hoi Tod Chaw Lae in Chiang Mai and, though far away from the sea, it's fine!
@luin6788
@luin6788 10 ай бұрын
the uva hat had my distracted the whole intro. thanks for reminding that classes start tomorrow
@OTRontheroad
@OTRontheroad 10 ай бұрын
Hah! Eh I don't think my own attendance or academic record is good enough to say anything on that subject. Go if you want. Or watch the football game at Mellow Mushroom and sleep in (do people still go to Mellow?)
@thunderconcerto9807
@thunderconcerto9807 10 ай бұрын
I keep reaching out to the like button only to find that I already did😅 great job guys❤
@foashly7400
@foashly7400 10 ай бұрын
Watching this as someone with a shellfish allergy is so painful. I love omelettes, and all of these look amazing.
@RouthCND
@RouthCND 10 ай бұрын
great street food documentary
@brendanhoffmann8402
@brendanhoffmann8402 10 ай бұрын
I'm going have to try to make this myself. I love mussels and oysters. I always have a few cans of them in the pantry.
@bwenyin8333
@bwenyin8333 10 ай бұрын
well done. ur research great!!
@Ajhmee
@Ajhmee 10 ай бұрын
Please make an episode of Moo krob. The best ingredient that make any dish better.
@woolfel
@woolfel 9 ай бұрын
as a kid, my dad would take us to the street markets in Taipei and oyster omelet was very popular. it's definitely a popular dish in Taiwan.
@Your.Uncle.AngMoh
@Your.Uncle.AngMoh 10 ай бұрын
In late Georgian- and Victorian-eras London, oysters were the food of what would now be referred to as the "working poor" as people used to forage for them along the banks of the Thames because they couldn't afford to buy "proper" meat. They'd lose a lot of their lustre as a gourmet food if they're one of the few things you have to eat. This would be the same scenario in famine-ravaged Fujianshi. The traditional restaurant needs to be cherished. Creating new adaptations of traditional recipes is all fine and good, but we can't lose the history of where dishes come from. If I can mention another YT channel here, Gregory Leow does videos on iconic dishes in Singapore. I think he has done a video on Teochew oyster omelette. The last dish you ate here is more of a complete meal with the bean sprouts. My oyster joke is that oysters are a bit hit-and-miss as an aphrodisiac. I ate a dozen of them the other night but only six of them worked. I love researching things and food is a favourite subject of mine. Thank you for all your work in putting this together. Xin nian hao from Australia. Garry "Your Uncle AngMoh"
@methik38
@methik38 10 ай бұрын
Love the Singaporean version with the vinegar element in the chilli
@chronos996
@chronos996 10 ай бұрын
“Coating it with flour and deep fry with …I dont know just go with it” you got me there. Lol.
@stefpatrickson5771
@stefpatrickson5771 10 ай бұрын
and happy new yr :)
@patbamm4926
@patbamm4926 6 ай бұрын
I’m Thai and I say that your documentary is very interesting. Better that we do it ourselves.😂😂😂
@rungsarnsuthithanin8415
@rungsarnsuthithanin8415 10 ай бұрын
Ahhh, you have made it to the famous local food alley! Deang Racha is the best!!
@cryisfree510
@cryisfree510 10 ай бұрын
Adam can create a new village after consuming 100 oysters
@JillpapI
@JillpapI 3 ай бұрын
I've been (a very casual) Buddhist all my life and I've wanted to purchase vegetarian oyster sauce for a while now (mostly out of curiosity) but never knew that it's been okay to consume, vegetarian or not, all along. Very interesting.
@scotthammond460
@scotthammond460 10 ай бұрын
Amazing again ppl. I lived in Taiwan long ago and loved oyster omelets
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