A couple important notes, then location pins. Usually, we go through several stages of the final edit- catching any accidental mistakes or issues and then fixing until it's ready to go. But our edit computer had some overheating issues and so we had to cut that process a bit shorter than usual this week, so there are two things that I want to quickly clarify, one major and one minor. - The big one first: I cut a segment from the Japanese ramen section after the story of Bodhisena, going through a few other origin stories of the dish. It was cut because I felt like it went on too long and started to drag (and this is a long enough video already!) but on re-watch I definitely want to make clearer that this was meant to be in an obvious mythology segment- which means I'm in no way trying to declare the Bodhisena story to be confirmed fact. It's a legend. It MIGHT be true- but the thing about Japanese history is it's so well recorded and preserved that sometimes it almost makes research harder; there are a lot of contradictory stories. It's also important to point out that there's a ton of misinformation published about ramen's origin, mainly because during the Edo period (17th to 19th century) the dish was widely rebranded as Chinese Soba. So when it shows up as Ramen again in the early 1900s, it's sometimes confused as a new thing. It wasn't. But the origins are muddy and there's compelling stories covering several centuries and since I cut the longer segment, I should have added a few lines back in at least making this more clear. - The small one: I understand that mispronunciations will happen, especially in videos like this where I'm trying to cover...I don't know, words in like 30 different languages (and I'm from Virginia- I don't even speak English correctly). But in the line about Spanish soup noodles, that's just the wrong word- it should be Sopa de Fideo, not Fideos. My mistake- would have fixed it if the computer could have handled another render. All that said, here are the pins: -Lanzhou La Mian: maps.app.goo.gl/6xjQh9hHawfX5csx6 -Tibetan Thukpa: maps.app.goo.gl/AQQm6pYKgWGJscac6 -Italian Pasta: maps.app.goo.gl/yADo5GGLuFY4mMCX8 -Persian Ash Reshteh: maps.app.goo.gl/smjPqMXhRUDDVHwQ8 -Amazing Ramen: maps.app.goo.gl/L2j9yc4BL5tSJUg18 -Less Amazing Ramen: maps.app.goo.gl/eA1QwbTo5CpAm9pW7 -and as always, our filming location (with the Pad Thai at the end): maps.app.goo.gl/6B1JPuiRLJJ8eXVx9 ...and as a bonus location, for anyone in Italy, here's Badr's Moroccan restaurant: maps.app.goo.gl/vquDMu7p6HkZX1hq8
@terrycuyler56592 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed the documentary I am at the moment making a Korean inspired noodle stew with pork Gochugang paste and pasta cause I dont have any ramen noodle
@vaffangool91962 ай бұрын
You missed another biggie: it's tonkotsu ramen, not tonkatsu. Tonkotsu is pork bone broth, tonkatsu is fried pork cutlets. Btw: love how you respect the various traditions and use disciplined research to debunk myths and stay above the tendency of cultures to compete with each other.
@ikakau2 ай бұрын
In Hawai’i we have a uniquely Hawaiian noodle dish introduced by Japanese immigrants to the islands in the 1800’s called Saimin, it is loosely based on Ramen but the noodles and soup base are different.
@edamael2 ай бұрын
For future reference, you don't have to cut out sections for fear of making the video too long. Those origin stories are why we are here
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
@@edamael Thanks! Yeah sometimes it just comes down to how it feels when I watch the first drafts- if I find myself drifting off while I'm watching, I assume everyone else will, too
@space38282 ай бұрын
an hour video on the history of noodles is exactly what i want to see on my youtube feed.
@RADICALFLOAT_95Ай бұрын
I'm actually also subscribed to the exact same channels as you.
@Niksg94242 ай бұрын
I literally just said to my wife "I'm trying to find something to watch, there's nothing" Then literally one minute after uploading, I saw this. Fantastic. I love yall
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
Ask and you shall receive
@Jordan-sy7my2 ай бұрын
Nothing like not being able to find ANYTHING to watch and finding an hour+, and of this caliber. Could easily be on a mainstream network, though I like that he has freedom!
@memarks11712 ай бұрын
@@OTRontheroad 谢谢我真喜欢你们的 videos please make one about milk
@AngkatanNamwaran2 ай бұрын
If you like history stuff, I also recommend the (Fall of Civilizations) podcast... my personal favorites are the episodes on the Khmer Empire and Bagan.
@tolpacourt2 ай бұрын
LeGiT LiTeRaLLy.
@marathorne68212 ай бұрын
I love the seamless way in which you simultaneously educate your audience about history, geography and food! It's a unique, winning combination. Thank you for posting such fascinating content! 🙏
@kurosujiomake2 ай бұрын
Im was born in the city of lanzhou and love that its regional foods are finally becoming more well known around the world. For reasons im not able to return to my hometown, so im always happy when restaurants serving the food i grew up with shows up outside of china
@ChineseKiwi2 ай бұрын
It is amazing how immigration influences local foods - the popularisation of Lanzhou noodles in Western countries follows exactly the same as the Cantonese and Fujian cuisine before it - first it was catering to the new immigrants and then the locals caught on. Same with how hotpot is getting popular in the West now.
@Isxiros1002 ай бұрын
Yep Lanzhou noodles are definitely becoming more popular here in Melbourne Australia, as well as many other regional Chinese soups/ dishes
@bigzbling2 ай бұрын
I’m also born in Lanzhou!
@ahnana8332 ай бұрын
Hope you get to visit back to your hometown soon. Home is best 😊
@kammonkam49052 ай бұрын
There are at least 4 different restaurants called Lanzhou noodle within walking distance from where I live in Toronto.😮
@RemnantCult2 ай бұрын
I love how people found ways to eat grain in so many different form factors for practicality, storage, and what I'd imagine for having something more exciting to eat. Oatmeal, porridge, bread, and of course noodles of a thousand types. We could just be boiling rice and wheat and calling it a day but nope and that's a wonderful thing.
@kammonkam49052 ай бұрын
When people have too much time on their hands they play with their food. Then good things happen. 😄
@elizabethlamont12462 ай бұрын
Beer is a way to preserve calories from grains too!
@danielzhang19162 ай бұрын
@@kammonkam4905 I prefer "creating" with their food, but still good things :D
@Ealsante2 ай бұрын
@@kammonkam4905 It's more that when you only have one grain to eat for most of your days, you will either make something new with it for variety, or you will lose your fucking mind.
@AHappyCub2 ай бұрын
Its because once your basic needs are fulfilled, in this case enough food to go around for a decent long time, people starts to experiment to make something new, either curiosity or by accident
@jonathanmas2 ай бұрын
Simply brilliant..what a top notch documentary…no words…. Complete . concise information no one has.. now we do..Thank you
@InsanePandaWanderer2 ай бұрын
I live in a Pakistani household, I'm eating ramen noodles atm and I put a bunch of random spices and bunch of random mexican salsas, dried green onions, dried onions, dried shrimp, and idk whatever the heck I found in the kitchen. The taste is absolutely delicious while I'm also high out of my mind, I fell down the rabbit hole of noodles and I am here.
@Clos93Ай бұрын
Watching this baked, got me eyeing my shin ramyun packets on top of my fridge lmao. I'm half Latino, and my Mexican fam would always cook fideos, which is angel hair pasta with tomato sauce, cumin, garlic, and chili powder. I personally don't like it, but most Mexicans love it! And here in West TX, most taco trucks serve a Mexican version of ramen, sometimes with brisket or birria meat.
@lilchinesekidchen2 ай бұрын
interesting! as a chinese speaker, I was always under the impression that noodles in chinese culture came first before bread, based on the fact that the word for noodle (Mian) is the base word for all wheat products, and all other wheat product names are compounds words that use the word “Mian”. for instance “mian fun” (literally noodle powder) = flour, “Mian bao” (literally noodle bundles) = bread
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
Well the first breads weren’t necessarily included as part of a category. Like 馍 is mo, not Mian mo. So it’s an interesting topic to explore
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
@@jiachen7865 that's the point
@hiway198912 ай бұрын
I assume the latter empire first got in contact with noodles instead of steam buns or mo. For example, one of the longest dynasties of China, the Tang Dynasty was not Han people (forgot the ethnic group though), and their culture heavily influenced the Japanese culture. Also, there was the Yuan Dynasty which was a Mongolian Empire instead of Chinese (Which the current country of Mongol is the successor). And then the Qin Dynasty wasn't Han people either, they were Manchurian.
@Road-tripper-wf6kr2 ай бұрын
ago @ hiway19891 It’s the opposite. Japanese culture was heavily influenced by Chinese culture during the Tang Dynasty. Chinese characters, calligraphy, brush painting, tea ceremony and flower arrangements, etc all came from China. You could do some research and get the facts.
@MrHellaBadass2 ай бұрын
someone failed english test
@frakspikes26192 ай бұрын
these video essays not ONLY help me witness the world in a whole new light but also help me better imagine things for fantasy worlds like "how does dish X,Y and Z, come to be in that world? who made it? what else did the dish's inventor/distributor do with their life?" and these kinds of questions help deepen the lore of those worlds, all thanks to the already deep forgotten lore of our own!
@aiforculture2 ай бұрын
This was wonderfully made - and once I was a few minutes in, I knew I was pasta point of no return :) Thank you for making it!
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
oof. Honestly what hurts the most is that I didn't think of that pun for the script.
@wbrennan22532 ай бұрын
No gift for floury language? I will show myself out.
@ShayneRiceNZ2 ай бұрын
Damn his story telling is captivating, not like anyone else, but like so many, who were good! Netflix needs your content!
@edotedy2 ай бұрын
This is much comprehensive than what I thought it would be. Been wanting a documentary like this for years. Thanks!
@dennisboulais79052 ай бұрын
This is by far the most interesting food documentary I have ever seen. Great job!
@sigiluvsu3 күн бұрын
Andy sent me here and I can't believe I haven't come across this channel before now! This is such a great comprehensive deep dive, thank you SO much
@OTRontheroad2 күн бұрын
Thanks for the nice words. Glad you found us
@annoyingbookgirl2 ай бұрын
This is the wholesome content that makes my day so much more peaceful
@CaravelClerihew2 ай бұрын
Always a great day when there's a new OTR video up
@KirkKiyosadaTome2 ай бұрын
As always, just an amazing piece of art. Thanks for forever delivering a quality experience. One minor note, though: Tonkatsu is the breaded, deep-fried pork cutlet, while Tonkotsu is pork bone broth. Both words use "Ton," which means pork, but the "katsu" is the Japanese shortened pronunciation of "cutlet (katsuletsu)", while "kotsu" is Japanese for "bone." So tonkotsu, which is so wonderfully full of umami, fat, and lip-smacking gelatin, derives its name from the pork bones that contributed all of those qualities to its creation.
@万恶共匪毒害中华2 ай бұрын
I was wondering if there's a new flavour called Tonkatsu Ramen 🤣
@castcrus2 ай бұрын
As a Chinese who makes gua mian(cut noodles), chow mien, pho, and fresh pasta with duck eggs at home, I thank you for the in-depth video of the history of these dishes I make.
@GingerAndZest2 ай бұрын
Wow. If you cook all those various noodle dishes, I'll happily clean dishes ! :)
@languagechefcorey2 ай бұрын
You're amazing man! The story about your first trip to Asia at the end brought a tear to my eye. Big ups from France.
@sea-ferring2 ай бұрын
This is an amazing journey. Better than any other so-called "professionally produced" documentary I have seen. Kudos.
@MlleFunambuline2 ай бұрын
Your research is amazing. The way you tell the story great. And I love love love that you take us around the world within Bangkok. It's a detail, but your channel changed completly my understanding of this city.
@Snailing_Suika25 күн бұрын
Thanks for beeing the first accurate noodle video (I've seen) to also mention Spätzle my Swabian soul can rest now! Finally noodle videos are at last complete with egg noodles and all the other noodle sorts mentioned.
@hyk-tp7oz2 ай бұрын
I've always interested in the history of noodles and watched countless videos and this one is by far the best, Thank you for helping me to understand the bachground of noodles.
@moneytsien2 ай бұрын
可惜他对中国历史认知错误的
@danielzhang19162 ай бұрын
@@moneytsien are you talking about Qijia culture or the timeline?
@victorwarner27342 ай бұрын
this is a historic treasure that you made
@DJBuglip2 ай бұрын
You are correct. I SO wish I were you right now, lol. That bowl of ramen with the salmon roe looked AMAZING.
@AnonymousCapybara20502 ай бұрын
Just started the video and I'm so excited for it. This channel is so underrated. I hope this is the vid that brings you into the spotlight that you deserve. edit: man I love noodles. Noodles = love.
@thebaldchef142 ай бұрын
New guy to your channel. While this was an amazing history of pasta. I learned so much from this incredible video. So I decided to drive your work. You are very good in which you do! Cheers
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
Cheers Colonel, just checked out your channel and look forward to testing out a couple recipes.
@noreenneu8372 ай бұрын
Wowza! What an incredible journey you have taken us on! Such an in-depth case study! Just sourcing the images used in the video must have taken ages. So interesting. Thanks! I love your channel. Can’t believe how much you ate.
@kristinwright66322 ай бұрын
In lieu of running out to my local ramen place you had me craving ramen so much I'm now finishing this video with a bowl of one of my favorite instants. Nissan's tonkatsu with black garlic oil.
@ugivemeacidreflux-DxA2 ай бұрын
I can only find it with a hot chilli oil now, I love the garlic oil more.
@anchoimaimai2 ай бұрын
1:02:41 my first experience of Cup Noodles was in 1979, in Guam, as a newly arrived immigrant to the US and thought it was amazing, so much flavor packed in a cup!
@Necrodermis2 ай бұрын
You can thank Momofuku Ando (invented instant noodles) for that. When he first saw how Americans were eating his invention by breaking the noodles into a cup and eating with a fork he adapted his product for them.
@@NecrodermisFirst of all, instant noodles first existed in China in ancient times, but his industry was standardized and he was Chinese but immigrated to Japan.
@Wann-zo7rn2qn4i2 ай бұрын
The Chinese has taken the instant noodle concept to a whole new level. Now you could even have freshly cooked chicken rice, all in a cup and you don't need hot water at all. The ultimate survival food which doesn't require a fire or an external heat source. I imagine that's what they brought up to the space station with them. The Chinese astronauts sure have a variety of freshly cooked food to eat.
@Necrodermis2 ай бұрын
@@Wann-zo7rn2qn4i what you're describing is an Flameless Ration Heater and has been around for a long time now. Developed by the U.S Army Natick Research the FRH has been in use as part of MRE's for the US military since 1993 and would eventually be adopted by many parts of the world. What astronauts use in space is something entirely different as flavor doesn't work the same in zero gravity.
@victorwarner3192 ай бұрын
this is one of the best videos on youtube need like 5 million views
@sureshot882 ай бұрын
Fantastic research. Fantastic subject. Fantastic food. My wife and I are over the moon that we found your documentary. Well done!
@charlesarmstrong52922 ай бұрын
As ever, hugely fascinating and filled with amazingly obscure tid bits of linguistics and culture. Thanks so much.
@haniemasakapa2 ай бұрын
The video I never knew I needed 😂 Very interesting bit about those breadfruit pasta in Sumatera!
@chatchaweewong10712 ай бұрын
I want to express my heartfelt appreciation to the team for their incredible dedication and thorough research in producing this one. This video is a true gem, offering fascinating insights into the rich history and cultural journey of Noodle across the globe. I'm genuinely satisfied with the depth of information and the engaging storytelling that went into this video. Thank you for making such an informative and captivating piece! you should get 1M sub already guys!
@denyswidjajaАй бұрын
The best comprehensive & detail explanation of history of noodle. Subscribe!
@jesshumphries37452 ай бұрын
So excited when the notification came up, especially after you spoke about this on the livestream!!
@DenisMaksymowicz2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the shout out to bang bang noodles. When I worked in New York City, my favorite lunchtime take-out was from a place called Xi'an Famous Noodles. The spicing was incredible, so different from the standard Chinese fare I grew up with. The Spice Road influence comes through with cumin and other "western" spices providing a flavor profile unlike any other
@dondobbs93022 ай бұрын
Really REALLY enjoying the new direction this series is going; choosing one ingredient and/or technique and chasing as many links down as one can! It really works. It's fun to hear the origin of specific dishes but, this pulls the whole world in. Reminds me of the old TV show 'Connections' with James Burke or Mark Kurlansky's books (which I'm going to guess you've read a few of.)
@JayKughan2 ай бұрын
It took me 3 days to complete watching this video. Great stuff! Thanks for taking the time & effort to put this together 🙏
@NessS3982 ай бұрын
I’m beyond psyched for this deep dive 💕🍜🍝💯‼️
@4Usuality2 ай бұрын
Your second video ive now watched, the rice video was awesome! Ive never seen such a deep dive on one simple topic, the available history is amazing. Im more of a history buff than a food buff but this scratches the itch perfecly. Keep it up!
@u2bst1nks2 ай бұрын
Thanks for helping to unravel this mystery. There seems to be so many myths and origin stories about how each country got noodles. It's nice to see something better researched than old wives tales.
@danielzhang19162 ай бұрын
back then it was all stories and myths, now we know they were created independently in both countries
@nouyilee49772 ай бұрын
haven't watched such high quality video for a long while. Thanks for all the hardwork.
@MarcHatePage2 ай бұрын
30:06 omg tasting history! we love to see it
@ThoraninC2 ай бұрын
OTR should guide max in Thai cuisine sometime, Dude want some primary Thai recipe from old time. Which is hard to come by. I believe that OTR has advantage of being in Thailand, which he could find primary food recipe on his way of adventuring.
@cliffwoodbury53192 ай бұрын
Everyone of your videos should be watched by anyone who eats, and this one was a home run like the rest. Like the video on rice, I can't wait for other videos on the origins of the staple foods as they are definitely must sees, so seeing the history of pasta was cool to see.
@iskandartaib2 ай бұрын
Another fantastic video. This "multiple origin" story reminds me of convergent evolution - there's an ecological niche (or in this case, an obvious culinary niche?) to be filled, so multiple creatures would evolve into what look like similar organisms. It's amazing how cosmopolitan Bangkok has become - no need to travel very far to find almost any sort of cuisine. That Iranian dish might be something I'd like to try the next time I visit. I just got back from Bangkok last week, and was looking for a Georgian restaurant in KL on Google Maps, after having tried the khatchapuri at AVRA in Bangkok. So far, no luck, but I did find an Uzbek restaurant (after watching several videos about Plov and Shashlik, I will definitely need to visit). LOTS of Turkish restaurants (four within a couple of miles from where I live, not all have Pide but one actually has Pide with egg - probably khatchapuri-like) and I found a "New York Pizza" restaurant that serves something called "Georgian Cheese Boat" 😁 (and also a "Gorgo-zilla Cheese Boat"..).
@danielzhang19162 ай бұрын
you know what they say, "necessity is the mother of invention", so many cultures developed similar things
@tulio17112 ай бұрын
Your videos are nothing short of brilliant! A fresh and groundbreaking approach to telling the story of food. The curation of restaurants is impeccable, showcasing the significance of cultural memory. An outstanding, entertaining, and culturally rich piece of work!
@TheSmokey15232 ай бұрын
Blondie in China, a food blogger in China, made a video about a type of instant ramen type noodle that she found in China that was supposedly used during wars as soldiers rations.
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
Maybe- but it’s absolutely indisputable that by the 13th century, dried noodles were still unknown in China. There is surviving writing of Chinese ambassadors shocked to see anything like it. So if it was soldiers rations, it would have been after that point
@kawaiiotaku15992 ай бұрын
There is the Chinese bagel predecessor, which was used by troops during wars
@cheungchingtongАй бұрын
@@OTRontheroad Guess I should add that, China is big, ancient China could be bigger depends on which period you are looking into, even in this informative era, people could still be knowing less about others in other regions of China, not to mention the ancient Chinese.
@ajarnwordsmith6282 ай бұрын
Fascinating and very clearly presented to camera. London had a wonderful Nepalese restaurant in the mid-1980s, The Laughing Gurkha, run by a former Gurkha (a Brit) army officer. Toukpah and mo mo featured on the menu.
@matthewglenguir72042 ай бұрын
This channel should be mandatory for school
@jaganath692 ай бұрын
Awesome video, Adam. In an ever decreasing pool of watchable content on this platform, your product is head and shoulders above most.
@FFVison2 ай бұрын
The first time I ever saw someone making hand pulled noodles was actually Jackie Chan in the movie Mr. Nice Guy where he plays a chef hosting an Australian cooking show. In the outtakes, you can see him screwing up trying to make the noodles.
@aragregorian60392 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the historical, culinary & linguistic lessons.
@mylesjude2332 ай бұрын
Looks like another banger video you got, nice. Say think you'll do a video in future about history of Soybeans or its products like Tofu or Soysauce.
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
Cheers! We did a big dive into that stuff in our Vegan food video (since they’re connected to Buddhist cuisine, which is actually mentioned in this video as well), but I agree it could use one of its own
@mylesjude2332 ай бұрын
@@OTRontheroad Neat 😁
@lillygirl72382 ай бұрын
Oh my goodness! An epic video about my favorite food. I am Asian and never really appreciated such a marvelous history of this simple food. Thank you, mahalo!👏🏼😎🍍💕🌺🥷🏝
@dutchyjhome2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for trying to explain what went to where and when and by whom... sometimes at multiple occasions at the same time, spread over centuries concerning a food called Pasta or any other given name locally, named by the Germans Nudeln, translated in English Noodles. Such a wide spread and accepted food which came to us via such a complicated way... While watching this stunning documentary; you simply just cannot zoom out for just a moment, because in your story you probably will be in another country, in another culture in another Pasta, or another Noodle... I never knew Noodles travelled this far from continent to continent, from continental countries to Island countries from culture to culture and that this all started so long ago... And there basically is no sum up possible, in fact this documentary is the sum up...
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the kind comment
@abuwarith12 ай бұрын
Poor boris. Another great video! Thanks I'm in the hospital and can't eat but I enjoy watching and learning!
@perhapsme9882 ай бұрын
Wonderful video. Between rice and wheat, the two main staples of humans, wheat by definition needs to be transformed to flour before cooking and eating in different forms. Rice on the other hand could be eaten straight out of the plant. Hence, noodles would originally come from regions of growing wheat and similar in cooler parts of the world. Rice noodles likely are copies of original noodles. Chopsticks, I am sure, were invented for NOODLE eating. Had Chinese civilisation started in southern China where rice rules, CHOPSTICKS might not have been used as widely today. I am glad that it's a Taiwanese that invented instant noodles.
@JoyCiticonti2 ай бұрын
Amazing video and visiting some of the places over the week. Thanks as always.
@BlueSkyBringsTears2 ай бұрын
Seeing your reaction to Ash Reshteh I immediately looked up to see where the closest place I could try it was, now I'm looking forward to the next time I head to Austin.
@mr.draper48542 ай бұрын
I first saw KZbin before Larry and Sergey. This is by far the most interesting video I have ever seen on this platform. I had the pleasure of frequently eating Lanzhou Lamian made fresh while staying in Shanghai for a year, but somehow did not encounter it when I stayed a year in the northwest city of Xi'an. Imagine my excitement when I discovered a Lanzhou Lamian restaurant in my California hometown at the end of COVID. Thanks for this fascinating account of this complex type of food. Now I'm hungry!
@AhmadIImaduddin2 ай бұрын
I dont know if you can call these noodles, but East Indonesians (Maluku, Papua, Flores, Timor etc) have a dish, made from sago starch called papeda. They usually eat it with some kind of fish soup, they called ikan kuah kuning. This papeda has glue thick consistency and usually eaten with some kind of chopsticks
@phillipsmith7702 ай бұрын
Sir, I amazed by the passion and dedication you show on your channel. It is wonderful. Thank you. I am also amazed that your Subscribers has not escalated more. I wish you much success in your endeavor here. Keep the faith that what you are doing is significant.
@CarlWitton2 ай бұрын
Great - really enjoyed this episode 🍜
@Benni7772 ай бұрын
Noodles have to be one of the best things on planet earth! Like u kept mentioning in the vid, it spans the globe, which is why so many ppl love them! I can’t imagine a world without noodles (or rice) Always appreciate these well-produced and researched videos! 😍🙏🏼🫕🍝
@krono5el9 күн бұрын
always thank my ancient cousins from the east when i eat rice, pasta, or noodles as i hope they thank my ancestors and their cousins from the western hemisphere for giving the them tomatoes and chili peppers.
@Georgee4gee8782 ай бұрын
the 55yr old me really enjoyed this foodie-docu. More pls of the historic background of the popular food we consider comfort food. thanks for the share
@susanmercurio10602 ай бұрын
48:45 "Like Italians have pasta at Grandma's house after church" - oh, how true!
@katharinakck75422 ай бұрын
I’ve just eaten dinner. I am not hungry - but I swear I could tuck into all those amazing looking noodle/pasta dishes. Absolutely fascinating and informative documentary . Thank you
@georgeghleung2 ай бұрын
If you haven't done the etymology history of mantou/manti/mandu etc, I think that will be a good topic.
@annamauroam8 күн бұрын
ABSOLUTE FREAKIN AMAZING video. So proud this stuff comes up on my feed. Fascinating and top quality content. Thank you!
@Aiyo89642 ай бұрын
That Lanzhou ramen in Hwai Kwang is my go-to place for affordable lanzhou ramen 😆 Didn't realised there is a Tibetan restaurant in Khlong Toei and that Persian restaurant is near to where I live
@berlintrash2 ай бұрын
So cute. At around 16 mins, daria seems so excited to eat… understandably!
@tarjei992 ай бұрын
Northern Norway has a form of noodles called kleppmelk (lumpy milk). I used to eat it as an evening meal (it was a treat), but it could be dinner. The lumps are a thick pancake batter made from milk, flour, eggs, sugar and salt.
@Billy-h5v10 күн бұрын
Sounds terrible
@AncientAesthetic2 ай бұрын
This is the most epic video on your channel to date. just wow!
@federicos.76712 ай бұрын
"Laina" (coming from the latin form of the greek laganoi) it is still a word used in Ciociaria (southern central Italy) dialects to refer to a specific kind of fresh pasta meant to be eaten in legumes stews. It has come a long way!
@federicos.7671Ай бұрын
@SecondTry45 The legume stew for the laina is usually made with chickpeas or beans, quite thick/creamy and it is eaten warm - but it is very good also cold, I can tell!
@awibs572 ай бұрын
I love that Ash Reshteh is in this. I also love your inability to avoid overeating the Persian food :)
@taotao981032 ай бұрын
I know Lanzhou noodles is famous, didn't know how much history it has. Amazing!
@w1ngnut42 ай бұрын
This is the best channel on KZbin
@GalaxyNewsRadio_2 ай бұрын
“How many bowls of noodles do we have to eat today” correction: how many bowls of noodles do I GET to eat today”
@stevencooper44222 ай бұрын
Gotta carb load before the big race!
@kiga142 ай бұрын
There is no way this video was shot in a single day. Yet he keeps alluding to the idea that he ate all of those meals in a single day.
@付宽-x2q2 ай бұрын
You really put a lot of efforts into this video and had done a lot of research, I've learned a lot, thank you!
@havencat93372 ай бұрын
Those Qinghai noodle are soooo good! if you can please go there to visit, its an amazing cuisine! Lamian its amazing in Western and north part of China
@intelligentcomputingАй бұрын
Thank you for your enthusiasm and hard work...and for sharing your knowledge with us, Adam!
@andrewdunbar8282 ай бұрын
Katakana is a written alphabet (syllabary actually) whereas Sanskrit is a spoken language which has been written in a bunch of writing systems, including Thai by the way. Sanskrit these days is most closely associated with Devanagari. Katakana is not related to Devanagari at all. Katakana are each a simplified form of a Chinese character. Devanagari is a member of a big family of writing systems that also includes Thai, Khmer, Lao, Burmese, Tamil, Bangla, Panjabi, etc, but not Katakana. Some believe Korean hangul may be partly inspired by Nagari but I don't think it's a majority view.
@OTRontheroad2 ай бұрын
Correct- the letters are based on Chinese/Kanji strokes, the alphabet and sounds assigned to each character is based on Sanskrit. Didn’t get too deep into the weeds on this specific clarification in a noodle video, but that is the distinction.
@andrewdunbar8282 ай бұрын
@@OTRontheroad Ah yes the gojūon - that's the order of the sounds and I forgot about that. Japanese kind of has two equivalents to alphabetical order. This one and radical/stroke order like Chinese. Sorry I'm a language nerd (-:
@rgsunderground2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this amazing documentary about Noodles, my mind is officially blown!
@ChineseKiwi2 ай бұрын
7:24 - Adam’s Mandarin speaking skills! 😮
@Riolande2 ай бұрын
I have never seen a Caucasian pronounce Chinese properly with the correct intonations and I mean... I still haven't.
@ChineseKiwi2 ай бұрын
@@Riolande Everyone has an accent in any language - Adam is doing fine.
@johnt77762 ай бұрын
Love this. Amazing work on this. It’s a long video but so good. Have you thought about breaking it in chapters like separate videos?
@userngot123622 ай бұрын
The first bowl of la-mian I had was in a restaurant beside the Lanzhou railway station about twenty years ago. I was on my way to Xinjiang on a nine-weeks backpacking trip in China.
@johnnymcinerney33172 ай бұрын
This is fantastic - I really appreciate how you note the complexity of the history of this staple food. Keep up the good work - can't wait to see a deep dive on seafood!
@eaglenoimoto2 ай бұрын
Sweet steamed buns are still called „Nudel“ in Germany today, much like steamed breads in Asia (however, they’re a local specialty even many Germans have never heard of).
@OMGaNEWBIE2 ай бұрын
Awesome history lesson on Pasta. I forwarded to all in by contacts list. Keep up the Great Work!
@woolfel2 ай бұрын
oh my god, that ramen looks amazing. It must taste like nothing else
@ahumanbeingithink2 ай бұрын
These documentaries that are food specific are great! Can you do one on bread?
@mm-yt8sf2 ай бұрын
it would be surprising if places didn't invent their own noodles, like if somewhere with grains never invented flatbread. but not everyone would invent alphabet pasta soup....it would probably have destroyed china 🙂
@DeanGilberryCrunch2 ай бұрын
I love these long documentaries on food staples that span multiple cultures
@jamieclarke3212 ай бұрын
What an unbelievably interesting video. Fascinating to learn that pasta/ noodles were invented due to the mixing of 3 unique cultures, Asians, Arabs and Europeans and without this cultural melting pot along the Silk Road this staple food wouldn’t quite be the same as it is today
@danielzhang19162 ай бұрын
it would be more accurate to say Chinese and Italians, but yeah from the original to different adaptations
@ttinova28 күн бұрын
This is an extremely well made foods history documentary. Thank you OTR Food &History.
@TealCheetah2 ай бұрын
I continue to have a love-hate relationship with this channel. 😂 All the food looks so good and I don't really have a way to taste most of it.
@prabharamanujan79332 ай бұрын
This was a standout video. Everything about this was so ell done. Food and history, yhe combination is such magic! I enjoyed this long form dive into culinary history! Bravo!