So many of these foods deserve to be in the "so expensive" series over the "risky business" series. I hope their work gets good compensation and recognition they deserve.
@KrazyKaiser8 ай бұрын
They definitely are repurposing stories from other videos, the first story even has the "so expensive" call at the beginning of it.
@vervinbayani4145Ай бұрын
Exacly
@LaineyBug20208 ай бұрын
It still floors me that the people doing the dangerous work aren't the people making the most money.
@stardustlights75904 ай бұрын
😊. 😊 😅 😅😊😊. 😊😮 😮😊😮
@ingloriousbetch43024 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, that's solely because of colonization. They ALWAYS think the locals are beneath them and ALWAYS use them for the labor and profit from them, always refusing to pay any of it back to the people doing the vast majority or all the work. Sometimes, it's literal slave labor. But the people who buy the products lile the cheaper prices so they will refuse to pay more so the locals get more money or they'll refuse to pay the locals for the products they sell directly because it can cost more. Usually, among locals prior to colonization, many of the products, like panela, are simply traded or shared.
@MinervaAlvarez-dx3jc3 ай бұрын
eating dirty shellfish can cause hepatitis
@MrMigueldelaO3 ай бұрын
Surprise!!!!!
@BigRedNutcase9112 ай бұрын
That's mainly because without the logistics and processing that happens after them, the product is basically worthless. A product only has value is 1) it is processed into a consumable form, and more importantly 2) it is transported to a location where people actually want to pay higher prices for the product.
@heinzyketchupy41752 ай бұрын
The fact that they get paid for the season $600 and stores sell a soup for $100 is criminal
@Voodoorai3 ай бұрын
I imagine the birds coming back and it's just like me in a store parking lot looking for my car. "I could have sworn I left my NEST right here. Where is it? Did someone steal it?"🤔🐦
@laoaganlester172811 ай бұрын
Here in the Philippines, similar process of extracting sugar from sugar cane as the panela but instead of using horse to turn the mill we use carabao or water bofalloo are called differently depending on the region like tagapulot, panucha, moskovado and etc.
@Takusman11 ай бұрын
to the unknown viewer, what the indigenous people in Colombia have in their hands is a container for the coca leaves, they chew the leaf for energy and tradition
@lsophial9 ай бұрын
Just like in Peru, the people must get coca leaves to climb the mountains and be there for safety reasons.
@husainihusai87547 ай бұрын
It's stupiddddd.. can he just talk like a normal people without chewing something.. wtf wrong with you people
@julitosnijders36233 ай бұрын
Define normal.
@chloekhamxox2 ай бұрын
@@husainihusai8754whats wrong w you lol
@casanova6005911 ай бұрын
The Panela sugar is called jaggery and you can buy it for $4/lb in any store that sells Indian grocery in the US.
@mrblurblur200311 ай бұрын
I think Indian jaggery no quality
@rajatdhawan334111 ай бұрын
@@mrblurblur2003Come to Punjab bro..
@sagarnegi946411 ай бұрын
And why is that? @@mrblurblur2003
@ringojensen775211 ай бұрын
@@mrblurblur20030😊
@greatbalance11 ай бұрын
@@mrblurblur2003I think you have no knowledge. Jaggery has been used for thousands of years in India and it is the best quality. There are many varieties some of them are soft as butter and melt in the mouth and so rich and deep flavour.
@nerd_alert92711 ай бұрын
Panela reminds me of Gurr, in Punjab, India (known as jaggery in other parts of india). It's made the same way. Gurr is the only sugar we use at home. It's made in literally every village there. I've watched the process the last time I visited India. If you're American or Canadian, or anywhere there is an Indian store you can buy it for a pretty good price.
@rugan072311 ай бұрын
That's the same thing I thought. I sounds just like Jaggery. And it isn't that expensive in the states.
@Anuitu2u10 ай бұрын
Pamela=jaggery, if made from sugarcane. Sometimes, jaggery also made from palm sap, that's the only difference. Hence, the sugarcane type used made the difference in taste. But, every jaggery/panela making always questioned in term of higiene. Especially, I'm sorry, in India, they cool it in pit under sandals level.
@itpatil4 ай бұрын
Exactly. And jaggery is not at all expensive. The producers of this video did not research jaggery. Poorly done, in this specific case.
@Green_Globe_z3 ай бұрын
@@Anuitu2u I think bad views spread faster on the internet. For example, Americans eat processed food which is completely chemicals and carcinogens which surely I would never eat. However when I visited the US, I found really great food.
@gbriank12 ай бұрын
Sugar cane saps the soil of minerals and nutrients. I hope they aren't like other countries and rotate their crops
@mahavirgadhvi11 ай бұрын
The official Minimum Wage in India in 2023 is literally less than $5 and a big majority earns even less than that.
@Kwijiboi8 ай бұрын
They say that it can be stored longer than honey, but honey can be stored for thousands of years and stay edible. I imagine jaggery could be stored longer due to lower moisture content, but proper honey storage should outlast many generations. High humidity would hurt jaggery as it could honey, as they are both hygroscopic.
@melissaharris33896 ай бұрын
It think it's just easier to store (and transport) since it's a solid. Honey can also be crystallized or boilded down to a hard solid but it takes more honey; which traditionally would be harder to get as it had to be foraged from wild hives.
@scottunkefer37532 ай бұрын
Yeah. "Insider News" isn't exactly National Geographic as far as factual information.
@dioad173911 ай бұрын
They probably don’t have diabetes where in North America it is rampant because we are consuming so much corn syrup which is in everything we eat.
@spencers412111 ай бұрын
Active lifestyle, little to no over processed food.
@jackiesmith132510 ай бұрын
@BOGDAN SERBANNor very clean. Nastiness must help too.
@jacobjochem8 ай бұрын
You should go down there and live like they do. I'm sure it's super fun and relaxing.
@khangto78865 ай бұрын
Spend 10 hours a day on your feet and it doesnt matter what you eat. Americans are fat because you sit on a chair since morning, in a car for another 2, then in bed for the last 8.
@ftmrivas30434 ай бұрын
They do have metabolic syndrome. You can take a look at their genetics. Being skinny is not equivalent to being metabolically healthy. Of course they do not over eat.
@Drigeolf3 ай бұрын
I like how the editor put limes after the coconuts.
@kolonarulez52222 ай бұрын
So we don't mix it all up
@PotooBurd11 ай бұрын
This is so informative! Great job, fantastic reporting!🌻🌼🐝 Keep it up 🙌
@lsophial9 ай бұрын
Indeed, I really like this channel, I joined it and upvoted.
@saranga2.0 Жыл бұрын
That first thing cost only 1 us dollar in my place, we call it guud (jaggery) every morning we eat it with tea .
@InfoTrekker-023 Жыл бұрын
Yes bro it’s a very common thing and it’s cheap 😂
@ceylonhd301711 ай бұрын
In sri lanka you can buy 1kg for 1 dollar
@dapper_gent11 ай бұрын
When you go there it's $800
@TonymanCS3 ай бұрын
Did you even watch the document? It's like bragging how cheap your ordinary yellow melons are vs Japanese Yubari melons.
@techdevofficial8709Ай бұрын
@@TonymanCSthere is no difference between both. Oversmart idiot
@lechonmanok12511 ай бұрын
Guy directing the mule: 10,000 steps, easy
@Smokie15234 ай бұрын
A 5 billion dollar bird spit industry?!?! Also, these folks out here climbing cliffs and trees barefoot. Meanwhile, my tenderfoot feels the absolute smallest of stones, and im wincing in pain for 3 minutes..
@segads4 ай бұрын
Worst than a rock is a lego piece
@Smokie15234 ай бұрын
@segads come on, man... why you gotta cause my ptsd to flair up like that? Lol
@segads4 ай бұрын
@@Smokie1523 a power plug is another good one, that thing can hurt
@enlightenedrabbit-y3u3 ай бұрын
The things people do for a living... it's fascinating!
@julitosnijders36233 ай бұрын
Its been a long time that i did not find such a good video. Thank you. Very interesting.
@lornapecaoco64689 ай бұрын
We have Sugar cane Plantations in the Philippines in Antique Province ..my Ancestors makes Brown sugar from sugar cane as i Remember 1955 ..
@SizzleStreetsАй бұрын
🍃 The story of wild vanilla sugar and how the indigenous communities in Colombia preserve their traditional techniques is truly inspiring. Respect for their dedication and effort to keep this craft alive! 💪💚
@zyxw20009 күн бұрын
Panela, not vanilla.
@heathkill482111 ай бұрын
The honey on cliffs is called MAD HONEY they are gonna trip balls, that is not a trip for food, its a trip for a trip😂
@Ruruschannel11 ай бұрын
In the northern part of the Philippines, where Ilocanos like me resides, we call the panela "tagapulot".
@paradiso87633 ай бұрын
Same ba sya ng process kapag? Parang asukal na niluto lang ulit ung tagapulot or iba?
@pepposano420010 ай бұрын
I don’t think I will ever buy coconuts… $5 a day is not a livable wage for anyone. Sure, paying for kids education is alright, but not all of them have kids. This doesn’t justify taking advantage of people for $5 or $10 a day… One coconut is already $5. They can definitely afford to pay their employees high wages.
@CuckItUP2 ай бұрын
thanks white knight. americans
@learningmaster806011 ай бұрын
In my state in India, traditionally we used to use coconut oil, and we had never heard of heart attacks or strokes at those times. Then doctors and dieticians came up with a new theory of how coconut oil is bad for health and promoted refined oils. Many people believed the doctors and stopped consuming coconut. They all got heart problems and died at an earlier age. Those who traditionally consumed coconut oil had no health issues. Pharma companies spent millions on mass campaigns to criminalise coconut oil, but now people are realizing the real face of these pharma companies and their puppet doctors.
@janzbedny524111 ай бұрын
You never had heart attacks or strokes because people died without being diagnosed. Like saying that in the past there was no cancer... It was aleays there...
@learningmaster806011 ай бұрын
@@janzbedny5241 No dear. Most people lived till the 90s and 100s, but after the introduction of refined oil, many died in the 50s and 60s. After the COVID vaccination, heart attacks and strokes in the 20s and 30s have also become very common. In the olden days, in my village, typical deaths used to happen during childbirth, drowning in ponds and rivers, and snakebites. Every family used to have 4 to 12 children, and it was common that 2 or 3 die of snakebites and drowning before reaching 10. Now with most snakes killed, no more swimming in rivers, having only 2 children and so much special care given to them, child death reduced considerably, hence the average life increased to around the 70s. Most deaths happen due to heart attacks, strokes, and diabetes. Very few survive after 80s. Almost 50% of the population die by 60s and 70s.
@learningmaster806011 ай бұрын
@BOGDAN SERBAN Dear, I was talking about normal people, who were mostly living with farming.
@6627403711 ай бұрын
Some says coconut oil is good but not using it for daily used. We cooked vegetables using fresh coconut extract and its so delicious.
@learningmaster806011 ай бұрын
@@66274037 Coconut oil is Coconut with water and fiber removed). You will be healthier if you drink 2 tablespoons of uncooked coconut oil daily.
@lsophial9 ай бұрын
Great informative videos. Thank you.
@MrMigueldelaO3 ай бұрын
The Filipino family is absolutely BEAUTIFUL. I did a screen shot!
@ChristopherPark-q4v10 ай бұрын
Panela reminds me of Gurr, in Punjab, India (known as jaggery in other parts of india). It's made the same way. Gurr is the only sugar we use at home. It's made in literally every village there. I've watched the process the last time I visited India. If you're American or Canadian, or anywhere there is an Indian store you can buy it for a pretty good price.
@cheronomercy04072 ай бұрын
I hope their work gets good compensation and recognition they deserve.
@duratoke2 ай бұрын
Ah "Panela" SugarI It sounds like she's saying "vanilla" and that's what CC goes with too.
@UmeshKumar-qt4cm11 ай бұрын
Panela is made in every village in India and is known as organic Jaggery😂😂
@Yes-sw8gh25 күн бұрын
See the difference, though... these people have maybe less than some Indian villages, but atleast here it is clean and I would actually eat any thing they give me, I wouldn't eat anything rural India.
@0animalproductworld558Ай бұрын
It's October and it's still hot.
@Sean85Laney10 ай бұрын
Andean Blueberry juice and panela, a must have!
@prasadcandaАй бұрын
Jaggery in India and Panela in South America: A Comparison Jaggery in India Jaggery, often referred to as "gur" in Hindi, is a traditional unrefined sugar made from cane juice or date palm sap. It's a staple sweetener in many Indian cuisines and is known for its rich, caramel-like flavor and nutritional benefits. How Jaggery is Made: * Extraction: The sap of sugarcane or date palms is extracted. * Boiling: The sap is boiled until it thickens and becomes a dark, viscous liquid. * Setting: The liquid is poured into molds or allowed to cool naturally, where it solidifies into blocks or cakes. Panela in South America Panela is a similar unrefined sugar product commonly found in South America, particularly in countries like Colombia, Mexico, and Ecuador. It's also known as "rapadura" in some regions. How Panela is Made: * Extraction: Sugarcane juice is extracted. * Boiling: The juice is boiled down until it becomes a thick syrup. * Setting: The syrup is poured into molds to solidify. Similarities and Differences Similarities: * Base Ingredient: Both jaggery and panela are made from sugarcane juice. * Unrefined: Neither is processed or refined, retaining more of the natural nutrients and flavor. * Nutritional Value: Both are rich in minerals like iron, calcium, and magnesium, and contain antioxidants. Differences: * Taste: While both have a caramel-like flavor, jaggery often has a slightly stronger and more complex taste due to the addition of other ingredients during the production process. * Texture: Jaggery can have a more granular texture, while panela is often smoother and softer. * Regional Usage: Jaggery is more commonly used in Indian cuisine, while panela is a staple in many South American dishes. In essence, both jaggery and panela are natural, unrefined sweeteners with similar nutritional profiles and distinct regional flavors. They offer a healthier alternative to refined white sugar and are prized for their unique taste and cultural significance.
@furgy6678 ай бұрын
If I worked in that environment, the jungle with white clothes, I would stick out like a sore thumb. I don’t know how to keep their clothes so clean.
@angelnme111 ай бұрын
I think Antonio chewing Coco leaves...when he speak...can feel.
@cindybrodie976911 ай бұрын
This is a very informative and engaging video.
@IpadHouse-kf9ek2 ай бұрын
Honey literally never goes bad 😂
@dirtyearthypotato6 ай бұрын
even the orange tree isn't safe from being gaslighted by us into becoming a seedless lime tree😆😆
@stoned_kitty2 ай бұрын
They're the people who's been feeding us. Let's all be grateful.
@roxythespringer67792 ай бұрын
Imagine working out and sweating like crazy in order to pick fruits so someone can have a fancy pre workout snack
@cesarguaje11 ай бұрын
Guys, isnt true: Panela production is a sophisticated industry in Colombia. Sierra Nevada is one of the many regions where it produce. Exist industrialiced priductors.
@damasodelgado454211 ай бұрын
panela is pretty much the same in all Latin America, what makes this panela from the Sierra Nevada of Colombia is the altitude and the rich soil of those mountains, gives a special conditions for the sugar cane to grow.
@-crazypants-31994 ай бұрын
As far as I’m concerned, native medicine is spot on. And with science has been proving it. Native people have been using the plant that contain the chemicals that we use now to create modern medicine. For thousands of years.
@phosphophilite113011 ай бұрын
Rare kind of honey was an understatement, it was a man's dream😂😂😂😂😂
@athenachristinemusic2 ай бұрын
Going from panela to birds nests in soup was definitely a shock 😆
@sshukla79752 ай бұрын
Panela = jaggery (gud) of india... Same process and made in iron woks (that can hold upto 100 liters of sugarcane juices)... boiled and stirred until it is hardened... It's amazing how different we all are yet so similar...
@juju453811 ай бұрын
That is normal sugar cane , dem fellas making the process look hard
@user-nx8vp5sy5d2 ай бұрын
vanilla is an orchid, they are making raw sugar from sugar cane
@DeeP_BosE10 ай бұрын
in Bengal we have 10 different varieties of Panela/Guur/Jaggery in addition to Palm sugar. & the amount of available freshwater in Bengal being 1 of the highest globally ensures this will never stop
@casanova6005910 ай бұрын
Patali gur, nolen gur, et al.
@sarmiyahyuliansyah127410 ай бұрын
My daughter and I always use virgin coconut oil for cooking and also for personal care. We have not faced any health problems during this time. Trust me, virgin coconut oil has many good benefits for your body.
@FrostedNut10 ай бұрын
Quite bold to attribute your good health to THIS ONE SIMPLE SECRET: COCONUT OIL, EXXXTRA VIRGINITY
@dostagirl95512 ай бұрын
I’m torn on the birds nests. On the one hand, they do seem to try and maintain sustainable harvest, but I can’t believe that it doesn’t still have an impact on how many swiftlets are successfully hatched when their nests are taken repeatedly.
@lambertois1111 ай бұрын
In reality, super foods do not exist ! There are very few if any, per-review scientific studies, on so-called super food ! Super foods are a creation of Internet influencers Vloggers. These Internet influencers are financed by powerful business group !
@Chipotlefoos11 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right
@Yes-sw8gh25 күн бұрын
Every food is a super food! you would die without any of it. Super foods are a scam, and if they truly was one type of food that was "super" we would have known for thousands of years by now.
@VireaksethaKongАй бұрын
Wonderful and hard work! In Cambodia, we have palm trees that we have the process of getting palm sugar almost the same. I used to visit the village that we form the community for certified as an organic community.
@MarvinFuraque-nu8vp2 ай бұрын
I'm watching every night before going to sleep even though I'm not interested on the topic, I just love hearing her voice😂
@bentley249510 ай бұрын
YO where can I order some straight from the villagers? I'd happily pay them above market for some.
@thelifeanddimension11 ай бұрын
It's very common in India called jaggery😅😅😅 or Gur....😂😂😂 Fooling America is easy
@1rstTry11 ай бұрын
I bet you also work in one of those phone scamming farms “fooling” Americans, don’t you?
@godofliberty366411 ай бұрын
... so what, then why more & more Indians want to go to America and settle down? In some villages in Gujarat there are minimum one to two persons settled in America
@thelifeanddimension11 ай бұрын
@@godofliberty3664 Gujarat is a very orthodox hindu extremist region...jinna who made Pakistan was Gujarati, gandhiji was Gujarati..and people who brought British in India also were Gujarati...a very rich people of Gujarat who only live for money... even in Africa u will find Gujarati 🤓
@FrostedNut10 ай бұрын
One place I would never want to go: India. Keep your jaggery😂
@thelifeanddimension10 ай бұрын
@@FrostedNut modi is world leader
@Faouzia-472 ай бұрын
Very interesting.
@aonea160511 ай бұрын
India called it jaggery ❤❤❤❤
@omggiiirl207711 ай бұрын
Bird spit soup....yeah I'll pass.
@isla24162 ай бұрын
it's just like jello...
@witchHunterRN2 ай бұрын
Oooooh!! Panela Sugar makers should meet our Muscovado Sugar makers.
@processinsider68Ай бұрын
amazing processs!!!
@Seekay-oe3qz11 ай бұрын
Sugar cane was 1st cultivated in ancient India in the Indus. The raw sugar extract we call goor/ jaggery is this panela. India also cultivates sugar beets because the Indian market is the largest consumer of sugar in the world & it's art was mastered 1000's of years ago. The term sugar loaf derives from the Indian art of crystallizing liquid sugar that was also taught to those 2 Chinese Buddhist monks that stayed in India to learn civilization which they took back to feudal China's.
@helloicanseeu210 ай бұрын
tyty great content
@sivatj11 Жыл бұрын
The first thing is just jaggery😂
@PhantomAssassin-jl8cx11 ай бұрын
What's so funny about it?
@aditisharma56711 ай бұрын
@@PhantomAssassin-jl8cx because you can find good jaggery for less than 1$ in india.
@davidk.84614 күн бұрын
The finger nails is the secret ingredients. Kidding aside, I'm amazed on their dedication to do their job despite the great hazard
@inthenameofcontractlendmem9832 ай бұрын
In Myanmar you can buy the first one for around half a dollar for a kilo. We call it "Kyan Thagar".
@rockwelaj8 ай бұрын
$20 says that tobacco, sugar and cocoa in this region are slave crops. We sometimes forget that slave traditions came and grew in Mexico also. Now, the people...they are there also but somehow people never hear about the Afro-mexicanos
@melissaharris33896 ай бұрын
Super cane was indeed introduced by European colonists and slave labour was heavily used in its production. The Cacao tree and tabacoo are native to the America's. Cacao has a long history of consumption by pre-Columbian peoples in South and Central America. Tobacco is considered a sacred and medical plant to North America indigenous peoples.
@littleboyblue7073 ай бұрын
Im Just Happy that the Philippine(Tagalog)translation is somewhat on point
@vervinbayani4145Ай бұрын
Thats so risky i feel scared for them because they risking ther lives to get the material they need i have no fears me fearles
@sennsir11 ай бұрын
28:15 worker threw that coconut on the ground & I’m 100% positive that they just threw it back in! 🤮
@krazyjay794511 ай бұрын
Damnn you watched that far
@Sailorlluna10 ай бұрын
Why would the throw it away when it’s just going to sit in a bath of water to begin with???
@My1Appy11 ай бұрын
Panela? We got cane sugar and cane syrup all over the South!
@Matthew_Ssali11 ай бұрын
This comes from a SPECIFIC BREED OF PLANT AND SPECIFIC REFINING PROCESS.
@My1Appy11 ай бұрын
@@Matthew_Ssali how is boiling it in a kettle here any different than boiling it in a pot there? And we have several different breeds of sugar cane here too, white, purple, red, yellow. The only thing I see different is there's a banana leaf under his bricks instead of a wood form
@ambergriffin9110 ай бұрын
Yes, I’m watching this entire video. No, I don’t mind it at all 😊
@mrlee9213Ай бұрын
I ate some mad honey once and I went to my bed and got under my blanket. I felt dizzy and then let off some powerful flatulence. Once the smell hit my nostrils, my eyes rolled back and I went mad. I passed out soon after
@KarunaSri-f6e11 ай бұрын
Pamela. It’s jaggery in India. It’s been here for hundreds of years.
@chubear97043 ай бұрын
Damn get any of their kids a scholarship for rockclimbing bc that's some steep climb
@MrBalloonHanzАй бұрын
Fresh honey, with the comb (you must chew the comb) is such a _superfood_ 😂
@zyxw20009 күн бұрын
Not enough nutrients to make a difference, just liquid sugar.
@Inkay2572 ай бұрын
In my country we call "Piloncillo" to the Colombian Panela.
@tomorinki2249 ай бұрын
The panela sugar is called Gur in our country In our country we not only use sugarcane we also use date juice to make Gur or you can call it jaggery
@blessme-ng9gu3 күн бұрын
The Title u have given is very Misleading & Scary for us Viewer as if 2 Caution us people Not to Eat for Dangers 2 Health & Life of human the people. . . Warning viewers to be Careful. Do plzz Change de Title Early Kindly with Immediate effect 🎉 ThankU
@tedschwartz214211 ай бұрын
IN INDIA THEY DO THIS SAME THING IT IS CALLED JAGGERY AND IT IS VERY CHEAP THAN FROM SOUTH AMERICA
@mrlox95769 ай бұрын
Panela was soooo good as a kid. But I can't get it anymore. 😢 Some countries are very poor in some ways, but lucky in other ways. 😊
@killero002 ай бұрын
Not what I thought when they said “dangers of popular foods”
@ainuriszakiyah2039 ай бұрын
Panela sugar in indonesia we call it gula batok
@bluelagoon19806 ай бұрын
Thank you, Insider, for trying to hire narrators who can pronounce the local words and names of things correctly.
@CalamityCannon2 ай бұрын
I can't believe that my searches for coconut harvesting and ethics yields nothing but concerns about primates other than _humans_ Im all for treating monkeys ethically too, but something is broken here (societal ethics and/or search engines and the internet). Actual professional researcher here. That's wild
@sanjeevchauhan361310 ай бұрын
COME To Uttar Pradesh in India. During winter harvesting season you will find these Panela (Jaggery making units) every few hundred meters. Since it sound more exotic as a name and beautiful background, the author decided to go to Columbia.
@loveyourselfprogram11 ай бұрын
Coconut is not as good as butter because they dont have them😂
@Rihardololz2 ай бұрын
33:02 same association who promotes the gutter oils called the seed oils.
@npgaming7790 Жыл бұрын
Proud to be nepali 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵
@Peter..Griffin Жыл бұрын
Only a nepali deals in absolutes
@npgaming779011 ай бұрын
@@Peter..Griffin yes came to Nepal try nepali deals
@Peter..Griffin11 ай бұрын
[Palpatine voice] good... let the hate flow through you...
@Xanitrit_Zeo7 күн бұрын
The first one, Pamela sugar, is just cane sugar that hasn't been refined. Modern mass-produced sugar is mostly made with sugar beets which is cheap because the beets are much easier to grow and work with than cane sugar. Otherwise, cane sugar shouldn't be anymore expensive than around other parts of the world. Want to know why it's actually expensive? You can look towards the middleman and exotic branding that makes it so.
@aktanukiАй бұрын
I’m only 2.5 delicacies in but it infuriates me how these people’s livelihood are being endangered by greed.
@noego47989 ай бұрын
Big up the People.....❤❤..👍🏾👍🏾
@rebeccabarnhart48377 ай бұрын
very good
@bryanobrien272611 ай бұрын
The classic American dish , bird's nest soup ...
@carstenkh2 ай бұрын
It's always the worker who earns the least! It really annoys me, that the big companies earn the most - it should be the other way around.
@hardiyansah387810 ай бұрын
Like same in Indonesian palm sugar/brown sugar... 😊😊. I think the tree like a palm tree...
@ConstantChaos111 ай бұрын
Legitimately has anyone ever heard of the first one? I sure as hell havent
@gersonguzman846510 ай бұрын
Un tipo raro de miel. Este es un video muy informativo y atractivo.
@lynnleigha5803 ай бұрын
As long as the money goes to them and not a middle man, the price is worth it
@CC-kl4nhАй бұрын
I never take food for granted. Now that the grocery bills are higher due to inflation, it is another added stressor to our lives. Nuts.
@Voldemorts_Mom2 ай бұрын
Bro who is ur camera man, they always go in deep
@atomictraveller Жыл бұрын
you should have hit west papua, except it's occupied by indonesia so the u.s. can mine gold so it's a big secret plus like 1.8 million dead so far kids. 3 days until december 1st, but still no news where you live.