I cooked the whole mash from the arrowroot instead of just the starch like I did last time. It was still a bit bitter and could have had a few more rinses in water but was ok. Interestingly I found a "dead" eel down stream of the processing area but when I came back the next day it was gone. Then I saw the same eel further upstream. I think the poison may also stun fish but am not sure of it. If so it could be used as a fishing poison as well.
@WichalRangai4 ай бұрын
Hi, how many times did you rinse, bro?
@keith37614 ай бұрын
Any chance you could take your mash and get it nutritional tested? It would be nice to see the Calories expended Vs nutrition gained for the entire process. It would give us some math to work with.
@lolxdmdrlmdr4 ай бұрын
Can you grow some ? I remember you had your little garden on the previous land, is it something you are planning to do again ?
@CrypticThings4 ай бұрын
Well, that's an interesting result. I'm always excited to watch your food related vids. I was wondering if you'd ever considered a video on primitive food storage/preservation methods?
@mimikal75484 ай бұрын
In a lot of your projects, especially those with bricks involved, you do a lot of carrying things around. Could a primitive wheelbarrow be of use? Of course, a functional turning wheel is not trivial to make, the wheelbarrow could not have one, and be basically a basket on a frame that can be dragged along the ground.
@keving27264 ай бұрын
"The pot is filled with water again to wash away more poison." Not gonna lie John you're not really selling me on this arrowroot stuff.
@nathanielreichert46384 ай бұрын
Lol I’d be afraid to eat it no matter how many rounds of flushing.
@Aleph-Noll4 ай бұрын
@@nathanielreichert4638 arrowroot powder is used in tons of foods, as a binder similar to potato starch and stuff
@joetibbles16884 ай бұрын
@@Aleph-Noll They are totally different plant to what John is using here.
@TheGreatAtario4 ай бұрын
It should pair will with fugu
@w_ldan4 ай бұрын
Such investment for a meal, ngl make sense why people back then have alot of kid, because they can just told one of them to do chores.
@PetWessman4 ай бұрын
”After 3 days it doesn’t taste bitter” and ”but I didn’t get sick” - really puts into perspective the amount of work and perseverence ancient humans did. Today we know taccalin is in the tubers. Back then it must’ve been ”We ate it and old Granny died, but I just had a stomachache and threw up a lot. So this time we rinsed it and the stomachache wasn’t so bad. Big brother says his stomach didn’t hurt at all. If we rinse it more, maybe my stomach won’t hurt either”.
@kevintessier37604 ай бұрын
The taste would certainly help a lot with judging how dangerous it would be to eat, as bitter tastes are typically associated with poisonous plants. It's just that some poisons, like caffeine, are able to be safely processed by our bodies in the levels that plants can manufacture it.
@dolsopolar4 ай бұрын
we have sense of taste for a reason lol u don't just eat anything till you get sick to find out.
@SKy_the_Thunder4 ай бұрын
@@dolsopolar At least if you have the luxury to choose. But starvation often was a real threat, so sometimes trial & error was the only viable option...
@IcchiNutz4 ай бұрын
Or they had other foods and were just experimenting with the possibility of these tubers as another food source. Not every human invention was created out of sheer desperation you know. That might be how your finest moments occurred but older humans were probably more mundane
@tyroon.Q4 ай бұрын
😂
@mglenadel4 ай бұрын
That's the most "well, it's food" face I've ever seen.
@Par-Crom4 ай бұрын
So true 🤣
@ragnkja4 ай бұрын
“Could have done with one more round of leeching.”
@dkoppenol4 ай бұрын
Exactly 😂
@tulipalll4 ай бұрын
Just a friendly reminder to turn on your closed caption subtitles! He uses those to explain what he is doing in lieu of speaking.
@teebob214 ай бұрын
The staring blankly into the void while eating a meal that took 4 days to process but will feed you for an evening.....that spoke to me.
@snedaja14 ай бұрын
Don’t forget turn on captions!! He details every aspect of what he is doing. The goat!!
@jwlavasse4 ай бұрын
Thanks, I never realized this 🤦♂️
@Fummy0074 ай бұрын
I like to watch without them to try and figure it out myself. subtitles for the future rewatch when im bored.
@snedaja14 ай бұрын
@@Fummy007 haha me too. I only just realized that he adds captions on the last video lol
@salsa78804 ай бұрын
now i gotta rewatch every single video i had no idea lol
@MichaelSkinner-e9j4 ай бұрын
No🤦🏻♂️ I like it better without words
@tintruong93334 ай бұрын
This guy must be one of the most beloved creators on this platform. No drama or anything alike, just straight up knowledge.
@trucid24 ай бұрын
He is. Many copycats, but he's the OG.
@KitaJabig4 ай бұрын
Does he fap?
@tiglishnobody87504 ай бұрын
@@trucid2 And some are frauds but he is no fraud and he even once showed himself doing this in speed up in video to prove he is genuine and not using modern technology or extra manpower to help him
@Solko4 ай бұрын
He has been one of the first top KZbinr with millions of followers ever. He has even launched a trend of videos on YT and definitely made history in directing techniques for this format. Wish many followed him more in some details.
@Alpenmilch3 ай бұрын
you are joking right?, he has been trash talking other genuine primitive channels on social media, yes he isn't the only real one, but seeing how other barely speak any english and don't respond most people just believe him when he lies about others.
@Fogmeister4 ай бұрын
“I didn’t get sick” is the highest compliment. 😂
@Sa300dvideo4 ай бұрын
They get sick because of fast food 😉 No one has ever been sick from natural food 🙂
@ydahshet94284 ай бұрын
@@Sa300dvideo Raw meat is natural. fairly certain it could make you sick.
@custodeon4 ай бұрын
@@Sa300dvideotell that to raw cashews
@robblequoffle84564 ай бұрын
@Sa300dvideo fast food causes a different kind of sick. Natural food (and even fast food on a few occasions) could carry toxins or pathogens in them.
@Sa300dvideo4 ай бұрын
@@robblequoffle8456 We don't have such rubbish in Russia 😄
@jamesmin12394 ай бұрын
"... but I didn't get sick" LOL. I love how nonchalant that line is. You are the ONLY primitive technology master!!!
@greateagle20764 ай бұрын
I keep forgetting he adds subtitles.
@beeemack4 ай бұрын
I've been watching these for so long not realizing there were subtitles...
@axellmoncada22293 ай бұрын
A lot of people may imitate what this man is doing but he will remain as the original survival vlogger. He is the epitome of pure dedication and has been true to his content ever since. I will never get tired of watching his videos. Solid fan here since 2015.
@frithfiver3 ай бұрын
I love how your content is the antithesis of the over-the-top, fast-paced content that is so popular today. We need this now more than ever
@esteriistiel3314 ай бұрын
really puts in perspective how important agriculture and selective breeding was to just be able to eat enough every day
@amogusenjoyer4 ай бұрын
Yeah, 2h for just a few tubers! Like I'm sure food was super plentiful in the absolute back then, but so hard to actually collect just because nothing was actually concentrated anywhere. It makes hunting seem almost easier in comparison 😅
@someonesome-h8f4 ай бұрын
Part II kzbin.info/www/bejne/l4LIkq2qjbebf68
@common-peasant4 ай бұрын
@@amogusenjoyer hunting is better than foraging in every way, it might take 48 hours of hunting to run a deer down but you bring 100 pounds of nutrient dense food back, but while your men are risking life and limb hunting the women need to feed themselves and the kids while waiting for the hunt to return. and steak is always better with french fries.
@vulpesvulpessapiens4 ай бұрын
Depends where you are. Here where I am in the mountains there are wild cherries, Saskatoon's, raspberries, elk, deer, moose, plenty to eat.
@Grubgotkicked4 ай бұрын
agriculture was only developed in extremely harsh climates out of necessity. there was no need for agriculture and domestication in areas of the world filled to the brim with food.
@spaceymonk18244 ай бұрын
In traditional Polynesian practices, Tacca leontopetaloides (Arrowroot plant in the video) has been used to capture eels. The toxic properties are utilized by placing crushed or processed plant parts into water sources where eels are present. The toxins irritate the eels, causing them to surface or become easier to catch.
@hackmedia77554 ай бұрын
interesting, it might even work for spear fishing as well.
@Mardikuz4 ай бұрын
explained! look at his comment (primitive technology's one)
@lordfriedrick79113 ай бұрын
Double ration! Great!
@jak0x6223 ай бұрын
interesting, there is a native Australian plant called the soap tree (Alphitonia excelsa) that aboriginals use to knock out/stun fish
@akar27554 ай бұрын
"Dad, can we have hash-browns for breakfast?" "Sure, that'll be 3-5 business days."
@anarchosnowflakist7864 ай бұрын
well, at least a large part of the time in the process comes from waiting for the water+mash solution to settle, so you could harvest a few each day and eat those you harvested a few days ago
@darkside7913 ай бұрын
Remeber this man was one of the first ones that did primitive videos on youtube. All others imitiate after. Legend.
@fostermoody4 ай бұрын
This makes me so thankful to the hundreds of generations of ancient peruvians who selectively bred the potato from a bitter, poisonous tuber fit only for desperate times into the delicious butter delivery system it is today.
@alttabby36334 ай бұрын
Just make sure they are non GMO potatoes.
@antonliakhovitch83064 ай бұрын
@@alttabby3633All potatoes are genetically modified, eg through selective breeding. The closest thing to wild potatoes is the sort of plant you see in the video.
@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger4 ай бұрын
@@antonliakhovitch8306Selective breeding is not GM. GM is artificially induced, such as by way of CRISPR, and has less favorable end-goals such as herbicide and pesticide resistance so as to make ample usage safe for crops (but devastating for local ecosystems/potential long term health consequences thanks to the amount of residue we're constantly consuming). Selective breeding/hybridization, processes which can occur in nature by way of basic cross-pollination or selective planting, are not the same as GM (semantics matter to the people who care about these things).
@antonliakhovitch83064 ай бұрын
@@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger You say semantics matter, but I think you have a lot of semantics confused. Selective breeding (also known as artificial selection) is an artificial process, done by humans. When it happens in nature, it's called natural selection. Selective breeding is a type of genetic modification. It is *also* used to improve pesticide resistance, among many other things. It seems like you might actually be referring to genetic engineering, another type of genetic modification. Genetic engineering can do everything that selective breeding can, but it's faster and a little bit more powerful. Both selective breeding and genetic engineering are capable of producing abominations that are harmful in one way or another, and both of them can also be completely safe. Genetic engineering itself is not the problem.
@immnottellingyouwho8204 ай бұрын
@@Your-Least-Favorite-StrangerThe "Selective" in selective breeding is not just there to take up space. What is your idea of naturally occurring? If something is selected by any criteria of ours, it would only be a natural occurrence if you were to use the logic that since humans are "natural"; thus all resulting events must be. (Semantics matter to the people who know what they're talking about). Accurate username
@DavidLeeKersey4 ай бұрын
2 hours to collect 10 tubers, and now you know why farming was such a game changer.
@trucid24 ай бұрын
And three days of rinsing afterwards, which was not enough as it still tasted bitter.
@matthewnardin73044 ай бұрын
Not to mention you'd have to travel further and further as you depleted what was nearby until you pick up and move somewhere else.
@chrisjager53704 ай бұрын
What farming did was allow for cities (high population density sedentary societies) near particularly fertile land. Hunting, herding, foraging were all better alternatives at low population densities, or medium non-sedentary population; and the only possibility in land unsuitable for farming. But sedentary living allowed for investing a lot of time into tools and structures, such as brick buildings and libraries. Thanks to millennia of selective breeding, we've upgraded our domesticated plants and animals and made farming much better than it was during the last ice age. Also thanks to modern knowledge of crop rotation and fertilizers we hardly ever need to let land lie fallow to recover its farmability, and irrigation projects meant poor weather no longer randomly eliminates farming as a viable food source for those years.
@frederickheard20224 ай бұрын
Hunter-gatherers actually spend less time and effort on feeding themselves than agricultural societies. Agriculture creates storable surpluses, but it doesn’t make life easier.
@JustinKoenigSilica4 ай бұрын
@frederickheard2022 what? Of course it makes life easier - for the 99% that aren't farming, they can concentrate on anything else. Why do you think societies have advanced as far as they have?
@anonony90814 ай бұрын
I just pulled a whole bunch of creeping vines out of my yard and realized I have all the material to make my own baskets so here I am weaving baskets in the middle of my house thanks to you. Cheers!
@ragnkja4 ай бұрын
Good on you for turning an unwanted (presumably invasive) plant into something nice and useful! 😊
@dimitar4y4 ай бұрын
my man!
@anonony90814 ай бұрын
@@ragnkjaDefinitely invasive. They killed all of the grass in my yard and were starting to kill the trees. It's crazy how strong these vines are and how good they are at climbing things.
@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger4 ай бұрын
@@anonony9081Same! Neighbor planted chinese wisteria that overtook the fence and tried eating my oak tree - baskets, tomato trellis, working on a chair or end table now.
@stasi02384 ай бұрын
@@anonony9081to be fair grass is also an invasive species.
@escapist834 ай бұрын
That's a ton of work for a single meal. I genuinely amazed how early humans survived.
@FiltyIncognito4 ай бұрын
We survived just like any other animal. Arduously, doing what was needed to survive with whatever was on hand. But it's the reason we have the technology we do today. With new tech brings more time freed to do other things, slowly but surely improving resource production, securing survival and improving quality of life.
@adb45224 ай бұрын
Hunter-gatherers probably would not went out there for just the tubers, they would gather othere plants as well as cheking/ setting up traps.
@tiglishnobody87504 ай бұрын
@@adb4522 But he is just one man when our ancestor and modern hunter-gatherer was in the group We are a social animal
@videovoer81303 ай бұрын
Because primitive humans work in a group, so a task like this could get done faster
@Kjv_believer73 ай бұрын
@@FiltyIncognitodisabling the average American so that one day when they shut off the grid and AI takes over they can decrease the population.
@rp6programmer4 ай бұрын
Do you know what I like best about your channel? You don't speak. You just show. I can make my own thoughts about it and just sit and relax. I'm impressed by your skills. Watching your videos is very relaxing to me as a person, who is always surrounded by modern technology. Thanks for your work!
@tommerker80633 ай бұрын
have you turned on subtitles? ;)
@00Krohnos4 ай бұрын
Can't believe he's so close to developing the silicon microprocessor
@vitorcristovao40374 ай бұрын
Hahhaahha😂
@BGTech14 ай бұрын
He’s already 10 years ahead of moore’s law
@-NGC-6302-4 ай бұрын
Can't wait for the video about using CRISPR to increase the production from iron bacteria
@hatman444 ай бұрын
I'm pumped for the particle accelerator
@wildekek4 ай бұрын
The endgame is melting sand to convert the power of the sun into consciousness.
@Linoran854 ай бұрын
"After 3 days it doesn't taste bitter" Don't know why but this made me lol
@Ottee24 ай бұрын
Needs salt. 😀
@lemonke81324 ай бұрын
The effort required for the simplest things lol
@DanielPereiraSantista4 ай бұрын
In Brazil we make this recipe from maniçoba and it needs 7 days to be consumable without poison.
@kaliitka39064 ай бұрын
@@Ottee2 and meаt :D
@Par-Crom4 ай бұрын
@@DanielPereiraSantista wow nice ! maybe you should inform him directly under his pinned comment, that's good knowledge.
@Nahyoudontgetthat4 ай бұрын
8:48 he has the look of "well.... I made it.... may as well eat it I guess..." when you burn your pancakes
@stolenstarz4 ай бұрын
It was then that a Domino's ad burst through my KZbin screen to interrupt. Yes, KZbin, I would rather eat pizza. 😂
@gierasole4 ай бұрын
this is one of my favorite videos youve made yet, agriculture and foraging is something ive always been interested in
@ivanivanow46424 ай бұрын
After your last video I got to thinking, "Man, this channel used to be more diverse and interesting, now it's always about fire and clay. I wish there was more food or farm videos." And there it is
@Btburkhardt4 ай бұрын
“Look. Iron prills. Iron slag. Furnace. Iron prills. More slag. Clay. Fire. Mosquitos. Iron slag.” It was getting annoying, sorry to say 😮
@Leo.232323 ай бұрын
@@Btburkhardt i want to him to advance to the iron age though
@zyaicob3 ай бұрын
Don't get me wrong I appreciate the 50 slightly different kinds of blower forge and kiln as much as the next guy, but I did really miss the variety
@nathanielreichert46384 ай бұрын
I like how this one uses a combination of many disciplines that you’ve touched on: fire making, forced air furnace, foraging, and functional pottery
@jannec90054 ай бұрын
Don’t forget the water powered hammer.
@imDarkensei4 ай бұрын
i feel like you leaving "cooking" out of that list was intentional
@nathanielreichert46384 ай бұрын
@@imDarkensei haha nah I was trying to make a big list and forgot cooking XD
@morgan33924 ай бұрын
I think, after all his videos, it's become taken for granted just how crazy good he is at making a friction fire. He showed the whole process taking mere seconds for him. Normally? Spinning a stick in your hand like that can take half an hour to make a fire, or even hours in wet conditions. Guy's cracked.
@dimitar4y4 ай бұрын
i know, it's so cool
@johns60144 ай бұрын
Get him on Survivor, keep him around until the final three (despite his utter silence), and then watch him flex on the entire fire building challenge by scoffing at the provided flint and steel, and using a pair of sticks instead.
@fizzlebug4 ай бұрын
Half an hour? Nonsense, for two reasons. First: If a spinde/hearthboard combo actually works, it is a matter of minutes before you have an ember, provided that you have the endurance to spin it. If the combo is not got, then rarely will retrying ad infinitum work. You fix that by finding something that actually gives you an ember instead. Secondly: I can absolutely assure you that nobody has the strength in them to spin a handdrill for thirty minutes straight or more. Even if you did, you typically wear through the board in two or three attemps tops. If you spun a spindle for thirty minutes in a notch you would be drilling earth for twentyfive of those minutes.
@ChauNyan4 ай бұрын
John explained that he does it manually (without tools) to keep himself refined
@malte2914 ай бұрын
By now, doesn't he have the "means" to make a char cloth? Feels like that would make for much better tinder
@philb64164 ай бұрын
Don't know if it's by design, but the short intro without any captions is super helpful and gives a second to click it on without missing anything.
@KarolOfGutovo4 ай бұрын
There is a caption at the very beginning though
@CatacombsBC4 ай бұрын
i haven't heard this man speak a single word in 9 years and i'm not sure i want to ruin the mystery
@JoAnnAbbott-d8v3 ай бұрын
He doesn't smile much either...I would love to see him smile, just a little.
@cameronvanatti2 ай бұрын
Use captions, he explains what he's doing and sometimes makes jokes
@sundown6806Ай бұрын
I like to imagine he sounds like runforthecube
@wizzourd4 ай бұрын
so good to have you back bro, keep uploading and doing your thing, we never forgot who was the OG primitive technology.
@NoPersona4 ай бұрын
PLEASE do more cooking videos like these! I cant find them much of anywhere on YT. Keep shining mate!
@capitancoolo14 ай бұрын
Les Stroud has a show called "Wild Harvest" on his channel.
@NoPersona4 ай бұрын
@@capitancoolo1 oouuuuuu, I'll check that out. Thanks🥰👍🏾!
@vsart63294 ай бұрын
For outdoor cooking you can look at some popular Matthew Posa videos, makes me hungry every time.
@NoPersona4 ай бұрын
@@vsart6329 I'll check the person out as well. Thanks🥰!
@scribbfish4 ай бұрын
LiZiqi has good cooking with nature content.
@happycryingcat31014 ай бұрын
I love that You delicately dig around the plant to pluck the part you're going to eat, while leaving the rest of the plant undisturbed so it can regrow.
@Nighthawkinlight4 ай бұрын
Thanks! Love seeing the primitive agriculture stuff.
@thepizzaguy84774 ай бұрын
Its awesome to see someone make something from the ground up also hi mr supermaterial man
@lessgoofyone4 ай бұрын
Not enough paraffin wax 🤷♂️
@primitive.and.ancient4 ай бұрын
You make it look effortless, but I truly understand the time and dedication it takes.
@torontobug14 ай бұрын
Finally a video not related to iron smelting, bricks, kilns!🎉
@Keln024 ай бұрын
Foraging for food back then must have been a truly time consumming task. Ever thankful for the gifts of civilisation.
@LtFoeHammer4 ай бұрын
Three or four hours per day on average. That includes hunting, which is more calorically rewarding, and does not include the prep and cooking time. People get to know the region they live in pretty well and can gather pretty efficiently.
@opendstudio71414 ай бұрын
A product of famines. I consider how many people died before getting it right. 🤢
@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger4 ай бұрын
Location location location; knowledge of local edible plants passed down by generations, nomadic movement through the seasons, a lot of drying and caching of ample harvests as well as planting as you go so you can return to promising spots later. The shift to agriculture actually dominated more of our time and energy than hunter gatherer did; when you know what most everything in your area is, you arent picky about food and eat as you go. Foraging is great because you can basically load up while you enjoy nature; nap whenever and wherever you feel is safest, no responsibilities outside life.
@dherman00014 ай бұрын
We ate far more meat unless times got bad.
@nyalan83854 ай бұрын
All animals spend their entire day foraging for resources. Whether that’s foraging for food of patrolling/securing territory or securing a mate. Us humans wake up, get ready (action to gain or keep social standing which is a resource), make and eat food (resource), travel to work (foraging), work 8-9 hours a day for money which is equivalent to resources, go shopping for food (resources), then cook said food, then possibly socialize (again a social resource), and then sleep. We have not progressed at all in this aspect and likely never will, it just looks different
@zhengbq4 ай бұрын
Watching this makes me appreciate the necessity of modern agriculture so much more...The amount of effort it takes to find and prepare 10 tubers is insane.
@jamiescott38144 ай бұрын
It always amazes me as to how people thought about doing this all those years ago. Oh look a plant, let's eat its roots!. If it was so bitter, you'd think they'd not touch it again, but someone has thought of a process and a way to make it better. Incredible, love to see more like this!
@LtFoeHammer4 ай бұрын
Only need to figure it out for one kind of food and then try it with everything. Soaking out tannins and other water-soluble toxins is common in many parts of the world (it's done with acorns, for instance). If you're hungry enough to try eating something new and notice that the awful taste leeches into the cleaning water it isn't crazy to see just how much can be washed out.
@someonesome-h8f4 ай бұрын
Part 2 kzbin.info/www/bejne/l4LIkq2qjbebf68
@primordial_platypus4 ай бұрын
Just think of how many failed experiments there were in harvesting, preparing, cooking, and eating various things over time. A lot of upset tummies and even deaths all in the name of progress.
@gaslitgames4 ай бұрын
Those discoveries are also going to be driven by "well if I dont figure out how to eat this, I will starve". Necessity is the mother of invention here too.
@wwaxwork4 ай бұрын
Starvation is a great motivator.
@BabvBlues4 ай бұрын
I was going to say that I was JUST binging your videos and saw that you posted, but i binge your videos pretty much every day
@mainmarketplacestore4 ай бұрын
Чел просто показывает нам как же хорошо мы живем
@vittoriosandoni70644 ай бұрын
It's almost midnight where I live, i just had a stressfull day at work, and tomorrow will be the same, but I'll be damned if that makes me ignore a primitive tecnology notification! Than you for the awersome content!
@cynanevna4 ай бұрын
i love the noise the tubers make when dropped into the pot
@RageXBlade4 ай бұрын
Can't wait for the edm remix of tubers hitting a handmade pot in a few months!
@GrunkaLunka4 ай бұрын
it's my new message received alert sound
@GerardMenvussa4 ай бұрын
4:04 The closest we've ever been to hearing his voice :p
@Bostonrain4204 ай бұрын
ROFL
@antoniogiordano19894 ай бұрын
@@Bostonrain420 hawk tuah that thing!
@Mardikuz4 ай бұрын
he has talked in video already, if im not mistaken the only time ive heard his voice was in that youtube rewind where he was the main star EDIT: Fake news here guys im sorry, my ADHD mixed memories up there, thats why i wasn't certain "if im not mistaken"
@Par-Crom4 ай бұрын
@@Mardikuz Since nobody on Earth ever watches YT Rewind, it's safe to say that you were the only person who ever knows his voice haha
@Jimjolnir4 ай бұрын
@@Mardikuz You made me look through YT rewinds... I did not find him talking, only making a YT rewind tablet out of clay, in 2018.
@dogomancer4 ай бұрын
Love these videos on plants and food, it's fascinating getting to see what early primitive agriculture and foraging might have been like. Keep up the great work!
@BloodyIron4 ай бұрын
I still love that to date I've never heard your voice. There's a certain peace to these videos with just the sound of nature, visual instruction and demonstration. Someday I'll probably hear your voice by accident or something, no worries. But I am glad that you've been so consistent with this content. :)
@Lonewanderer304 ай бұрын
0:02 That house is holding up well.
@madiskruusmann3024 ай бұрын
If you compare it to the original video though, you can see how one side of the building has sinked a bit along with the ground beneath it. I'd give it a few more years until he gets into problems and has to renovate or build a new house. Especially considering that wet seasons can have extremely heavy rainfall there.
@keith37614 ай бұрын
@@madiskruusmann302 does he need to dig down to bedrock or does he need to find a way to build a harder foundation?
@NightKnight3474 ай бұрын
@@keith3761 pylons will save the day
@madiskruusmann3024 ай бұрын
@@keith3761 Well I'm no building expert, but I doupt all modern buildings are dug down to bedrock. If I remember correctly (watched the original video a while back) then he just built the hut on the ground (a portion of the walls a bit underground). With the wet seasons, the ground has clearly moved and eventually the hut will get damaged (if it hasn't gotten already). I don't know how proper foundation is built for houses, but I'm pretty sure he's house is lacking one. Maybe there is somebody who works in construction and can provide some insight. Nevertheless I think it is amazing and this channel is one of the best on YT. The man is a living legend.
@counterfeit60894 ай бұрын
If left undisturbed I can definitely see that house being still recognizable even if a ruin a few centuries from now
@myopicolympian70204 ай бұрын
I used to play bass in Polynesian Arrowroot Hashbrown
@oz_jones3 ай бұрын
No way! Your first album is still all killer, no filler
@josuearana590Ай бұрын
Dude I love ska!
@Craftmasters44 ай бұрын
I love how you put all that effort in for us to learn and sit back and relax!
@PhilipMurphy8Extra4 ай бұрын
This guy is a excellent channel and shows what good KZbin content creators can do
@bernardomotard4 ай бұрын
Always turn on CCs for this channel's video!
@lostandlast28294 ай бұрын
In Portuguese it's called 'Araruta'. I never knew about this plant. I searched about the processing of it, and they do exactly as you do, but with a cottom sack, cleaning the liquid with the Arrowroot with water. After that they give the residual water to other plants, as it is rich in phosphor and help them bear fruit. Just one thing, i could not find any information about Arrowroot saying that it is poisonous, even without any processing. Thank you very much!
@joaovitorvaz24124 ай бұрын
My brother recently planted araruta in his site. The tube is more like carrot-shaped, it grows everywhere after the first harvest. The flour made with it is called polvilho and is used to bake brevidade, an antique bakery sweet, very light and crunchy and dry yet soft
@vavassor4 ай бұрын
(pulls up to drive thru) "Can I get uhhh ... Polynesian Arrowroot Hashbrown"
@noob190874 ай бұрын
"Sure dude, come back in 3 days once I've rinsed off the poison."
@bofa9873 ай бұрын
@@noob19087 "sorry man we gotta go forage for more. check back in a month when we have rinsed enough"
@noob190873 ай бұрын
@@bofa987 Imagine eventually you do get your food and a guy in shorts just comes from the kitchen and starts making your Polynesian Arrowroot Hashbrown. He doesn't say a word, but his friendly interpreter explains in detail what he's doing. Finally he drops the patty on your plate and leaves. I mean I'd pay for that.
@bofa9873 ай бұрын
@@noob19087 that would be great, until you make the mistake of asking for ketchup (2 years of cultivating tomato plants)
@noob190873 ай бұрын
@@bofa987 "This year's harvest failed, you're going to have to wait for next season."
@hermaeusmora48744 ай бұрын
"Tubers superficially resemble potatoes" My man's just roasting his colleagues like that 💀
@fenrirrising1314 ай бұрын
🤦♂️
@jonpopelka4 ай бұрын
Straight up frenchfried em.
@hermaeusmora48744 ай бұрын
@@jonpopelka I see what you did there, very clever 😌🤌🏻
@malte2914 ай бұрын
+2
@minerxen4 ай бұрын
Man just roasted so many
@chroniquesindependantes20385 күн бұрын
Learning that Taccalonolide is also used to treat cancer is amazing. I just love your channel.
@wexaztor93944 ай бұрын
still the most consistent and one of the best channels on this questionable site.
@Muritaipet4 ай бұрын
At 9:03 we get the perfect representation of human food history, and how we got where we are today. "It could have done with more rinsing cycles in the creek, but I didn't get sick"
@KorbAgain4 ай бұрын
He is the human! For some reason this realisation does something to my brain, so i like this channel even more. He looks, moves and makes things in the most human-like ways. I'm not even sure if i've seen anyone else being like that... I mean, we live in a human society, seeing people everyday, but he looks exceptional. He is what the human is in a good way.
@thecianinator4 ай бұрын
@@KorbAgainyou just discovered formalism! If you enjoyed realizing that, check out the writings of Plato
@ramblezreader80194 ай бұрын
the look on your face while eating that reflects volumes of despair
@dxb3384 ай бұрын
damn, I just sat down to a dinner of chicken fingers i dug out of the freezer and air fried, with baked sweet potato I reheated in the microwave. I put this on and watching you dig tubers out of the ground with a stick while I eat my dinner really made me appreciate how easy I have it.
@jameshowarth48014 ай бұрын
Always a pleasure to watch these videos!
@primitivetechnology95504 ай бұрын
Much appreciated!
@tamasmihaly13 ай бұрын
I’m actually kind of envious of your cookware. It’s such a huge accomplishment to be able to make your own quality cookware.
@mglenadel4 ай бұрын
The whole process is very similar to what some Amazonian tribes used to do before the 'discovery' of the Americas (and still do to this day). They used yucca (cassava) roots, which are poisonous unless prepared in a way that is similar to your arrowroot processing. The main difference is that they used to grind the root more coarsely (the final consistency being similar to grits, with visible grains instead of a smooth powdery starch), and instead of relying solely on time to decant the starch, they used a 'tipiti', which is a woven contraption much like a very large Chinese finger trap, but with loops on the ends. They filled the tipiti's with the wet mash and, by pulling the ends, squeezed the water away. Rinse, repeat (literally). The final product is a coarse-grained starch that cooks very much like your arrowroot hashbrown, just a little bit less translucent and with a crunchy outer layer (from the starch grains that dry out with the heat before they gum-up with the rest of the biju (the name of the cake they make). Tapioca, in short. It's not just little balls that can become a pudding, but many things, like a fine powder starch, much like cornstarch; a coarse meal that is dried up and used to thicken stews or roasted with fats to make farofa, a very typically Brazilian dish.
@jetinho4 ай бұрын
I'm wondering if cassavas are indeed so similar, can't he just boil it like a cooked cassava? Won't it make the poison evaporate too? The grind process seems to take a lot longer than just cooking it
@mglenadel4 ай бұрын
@@jetinho the poison in cassavas is not boiled away, but rather chemically reacted away with the heat when they are cooked.
@pscheidt4 ай бұрын
Like the way he cleans out the junk when harvesting so that it is easier next year.
@stamasd85004 ай бұрын
Thank you. I am using arrowroot starch in my cuisine, it's a specialty starch used in baked goods precisely because it becomes clear when it cooks (as you demonstrate) which makes for nice glazes. Until today I didn't know where it comes from, now I do. It is in many ways - as you mentioned too - similar to cassava starch/tapioca.
@BartJBols4 ай бұрын
you can use the white goop to make paper by mixing it with fine wood pulp, bark snippers, or just as is and pessing it then fire dry it. The starches dry and glue everything up.
@TheTribeOfBenjamin4 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this one, John! Thank you for showing the process. It is definitely a calorie game out there in the woods. This plant looks like a good option to know. All the best! Ben
@CssHDmonster4 ай бұрын
3 days to process out the poison is actually insane
@hamjudo4 ай бұрын
It makes me appreciate the thousands of years of farming that gave us crops without so much poison.
@CssHDmonster4 ай бұрын
@@hamjudo ive seen somebody make flour out of common wild grass, it was insane how inefficient it was, like 10kg of plants for like 100g of flour, thank god we figured out selective breeding
@lemagreengreen4 ай бұрын
Acorns take days to process in this way as well don't they?
@johno15444 ай бұрын
@@lemagreengreenyes basically the same exact method of cold water leeching too. You can speed it up by boiling the water with acorns.
@islanoliveira4 ай бұрын
In Brazil we have a food that you need to cook cassava leaves for seven days to get rid of the poison.
@juliajs17524 ай бұрын
I like this view on the whole gatherer lifestyle - it's not just going to a well-tended garden and plucking some carrots from the ground. It's walking through woodland ("open" up for debate ;)) and looking for some wilted leaves, then digging into the ground to get one smallish tuber. And then getting up and starting to look for the next wilted leaves. Thanks for this dose of reality!
@bobboukie4 ай бұрын
As soon as he ate that hashbrown, I seriously thought he was going to say "Yeah, Nah..."
@BonesyTucson4 ай бұрын
If this channel isn't in the top ten of coolest youtube channels every.. then I would be sorely disappointed. This is the truly marvellous shit that the internet should be all about. Thank you!
@Peter_S_4 ай бұрын
Remember to turn on CC for all the descriptions!
@NotOnLand4 ай бұрын
"It took us 3 days to make this potato salad. 3 DAYS!"
@COLDCHEMICALpresents4 ай бұрын
I guess it's a good thing they hadn't made Polynesian Arrowroot salad.
@alliebean32354 ай бұрын
so much respect for the austronesian folks who figured out how to process this plant into food! from what i've read it was most commonly eaten as the starch (shown in the previous video by PT on this plant) mixed into a mash with coconut cream, and steamed in banana leaf to make puddings (if you've ever had hawai'ian haupia this is what it was originally made with!). I can't find much information on Aboriginal use of the plant - most sources say it wasn't used extensively outside of low lying islands and atolls because of the laborious preparation it requires, but i'm sure if it was there it would've been eaten, if only during a bad season when nothing else was available. the berries are also edible, and the starch is used to stiffen fabric and make things like tapa cloth
@HuckleberryHim4 ай бұрын
So much of what people knew about plant foraging and processing is completely lost. Even today in the age of information, barely a trace survives of many plants and their uses, and there are probably many plants whose edibility hasn't been considered at all that were used extensively by people in the past.
@jrobbin244 ай бұрын
Still the best channel on KZbin
@misojang77474 ай бұрын
This channel shows how human civilization has evolved. This person is more skilled than most special forces survival experts.
@chefjeff10004 ай бұрын
Fascinating. I never really thought about where arrowroot comes from and I’m a retired chef/baker…
@kcraig514 ай бұрын
His expression said volumes on the taste. LOL
@samsmith97644 ай бұрын
ikr? he tasted it and only went :| Says it all
@Gandhi_Physique4 ай бұрын
Shockingly, eating a plant with no seasoning whatsoever doesn't taste amazing. Who would've thought?
@thepizzaguy84774 ай бұрын
@@Gandhi_Physique you'd be surprised how far the "i made this myself" factor can increase ones enjoyment of something kinda bland. And, lots of one flavoring ingredient foods are pretty alright, consider most grains, or something like bread. though unlike the last time he made arrowroot he didn't wash it enough so it was bitter, so this time we didn't even get a nice little head bob
@Gandhi_Physique4 ай бұрын
@@thepizzaguy8477 fair enough lol
@goclbert4 ай бұрын
Imagine this was all you had to work with. "Hmm I feel like pancakes." "Time to harvest some roots, peel them, grind them and then put them in water. Over 3 days I will filter out the bitter parts by pouring off the top layer of water and adding more water after. Finally I will have batter to make 2 pancakes. Mmm, yummy, only a little bitter"
@Soli91114 ай бұрын
LoL!
@xiraoit93424 ай бұрын
Pedant!
@almostthere37334 ай бұрын
Actually Julia Child talks about using arrowroot starch for cooking instead of corn starch because arrowroot will not make the broth cloudy. It is a more clear thickening agent for cooking. Trouble is, you can't find it unless you're a rugged natural explorer and chemist like John. :)
@michaelwarnecke3474Ай бұрын
Primitive Technology is my favourite Tuber KZbinr
@ThesaurusDinosaurus4 ай бұрын
between this, the other potato videos, the bread, and the shrimp, we might a primitive technology cookbook
@nathanielreichert46384 ай бұрын
It’s almost a proper Fourth of July barbecue. 😂
@TheHoaxHotel4 ай бұрын
The starchy goodness flows
@joshuagenes4 ай бұрын
I cooked up an arrow root pancake the other week as an experiment. Got my arrow root starch at the store.
@kellyroup42623 ай бұрын
Really like the way you used what looks like a roofing tile with cross cuts in it to peel those roots. That would work well on potatoes and other tubers as well as washing clothing.
@ilyaholt86074 ай бұрын
Wow, your ingenious use of roof tiles was grate to see!
@mrbones93324 ай бұрын
I was PRAYING you had some kind of spice plant near you, but just going in on the forbidden potato patty, unsalted? What an absolute unit.
@nathanielreichert46384 ай бұрын
Yeah I was wondering that too. Maybe a relative of the cinnamon tree grows around there? But I can’t think of anything else
@UngodlyFreak4 ай бұрын
@@nathanielreichert4638 At least salt could be acquired by evaporating seawater, but I'm not sure if he is anywhere near the sea.
@EdsEnemy4 ай бұрын
flavouring would change the perception of the relative bitterness
@nathanielreichert46384 ай бұрын
@@UngodlyFreak that’s true. He may have to do some primitive chemistry to make it then :o
@GrunkaLunka4 ай бұрын
you would think so aye. surely there's some kind of oniony or/and peppery wild herb around. and salty minerals. maybe a bit of animal fat and a hotter pan.
@ARLOCAMP4 ай бұрын
He cooking!!!🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@r.awilliams98154 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's my impression of most wild foods...'edible' does not necessarily mean 'tastes good'. I think I'd have to be pretty hungry to go through all that for a rubbery pancake.
@lemagreengreen4 ай бұрын
Does in many cases though! think wild berries, wild alliums etc. Out of season though... I often wonder what the hell people ate pre-agriculture where I live since I can't think of much that could sustain people, nothing like arrowroot etc as far as I know.
@squidwardo70744 ай бұрын
@@lemagreengreen Hunting probably... dunno where you live but you hunt a single bison and that could feed you for months, that's what people did where I live.
@bojackhorseman41764 ай бұрын
That's why the spice trade was so profitable. Made bland food more bearable
@LordDragox4124 ай бұрын
@@bojackhorseman4176 All them good folk needed was some alliums and they were happy with the spicy flavors. But nooo, them posh people had to go and get spices 'cause they were scared of garlic! Thems rich folk are bloody vampires, I tell you!
@reliantncc18644 ай бұрын
@squidwardo7074 After methods of food preservation were invented, maybe. Meat does not normally last months. If hunting just for yourself, you'd hunt something much smaller and less wasteful. Of course a tribe could benefit from a large kill.
@jaspa.j4 ай бұрын
so cool, i love your farming/hunter/gathering vids the most. i fondly remember the shrimp one
@kezza5964 ай бұрын
I hope you do more food related videos. I've always been curious about the survival that works alongside the technology.
@karolol1274 ай бұрын
5:46 at first i read it as "after 3 days it doesn't taste better" and felt pretty sad xD
@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger4 ай бұрын
I appreciate that you only take one tuber from each plant - not only sustainable, but respectful to the plant which gave you a meal.
@andersjjensen4 ай бұрын
He wants to harvest them again next year. So instead of killing them he just taxes them. You can think of that as respectful if you like :P
@ironboy32454 ай бұрын
@@andersjjensenTAX EVASION IS A CRIME VERGIL
@knabdank4 ай бұрын
@@andersjjensen yea liberals are weird, its just an efficient way of harvesting without needing to re sow.
@reliantncc18644 ай бұрын
Why would anyone respect a plant? Might as well say you respect zinc.
@Interdiffusion4 ай бұрын
@@reliantncc1864 Plants are living breathing organisms. Zinc is an inert substance. There is a difference. Life may seem abundant here on Earth, but throughout the universe it is vanishingly rare.
@jakobraahauge72993 ай бұрын
6:05 as a trained military medical assistant I just wanna massage his feet and give them a oil scrub, make him rest his feet elevated, and ask if he would care for a refreshment 😂
@Gounesh4 ай бұрын
Everytime i watch this guy, i’m amazed by how we’ve survived as humanity!
@Convolutedtubules4 ай бұрын
The gelatinous mass you have created is like the Polish dish called "kluski śląskie". They are like dumplings but solid without filling. Made of starch and potato, shaped into balls with a big divit, and boiled. Usually served with meat and gravy.
@babungo60904 ай бұрын
I just read “arrow” on the notification and for the whole video was confused to how a tuber could assist in the process of arrow fabrication
@Wyi-the-rogue4 ай бұрын
Lmao
@Bubben2464 ай бұрын
Can't make very many arrows when your tummy's rumbling, now can you?
@Wyi-the-rogue4 ай бұрын
@@Bubben246 yes
@redstar00014 ай бұрын
Вкусно, вкусно... Не по вкусу вкусно, но по сути вкусно...
@yourhighschoolenglishteach84054 ай бұрын
somebody put "Polynesian Arrowroot Hashbrown" on your trendy restaurant's menu. i would order that from the name alone.
@felixmervamee78344 ай бұрын
Other comments suggest arrowroot is actually used in some recipes!
@jaydenkerr9124 ай бұрын
The amount of skill and effort it takes to start a fire by friction is crazy but somehow this guy makes it look easy he has my respect
@aretech04 ай бұрын
Its interesting how many people wrote this video made them appreciate agriculture and the modern legumes but this video made me just want to go out and forage. Looks fun also that pulp pancake looked delicious.
@lancista914 ай бұрын
My guy needs salt, spices, and oil like nobody else today.