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@StephenCoorlas2 жыл бұрын
Don't you love when KZbin selects the perfect clip for the thumbnail video preview? Great video, presentation, and content per usual 🤘
@hellmen4882 Жыл бұрын
Knife gang
@gvcvbbhvbbccxcvn Жыл бұрын
I find it funny how this comment has only 22 likes, despite being immediately pinned
@PoiSonSonic Жыл бұрын
If there was a row of 20 dislikes, I'd click each one of them.
@Catfish2048 Жыл бұрын
The only time I use fork is for pasta noodles and others spoon or chopsticks.
@SiberiaMCNuggets2 жыл бұрын
Using 2 forks as chopsticks is ultimate power flex
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
please send vid of this
@oldcowbb2 жыл бұрын
how about using one chopstick like a fork
@animeshpatra5106 Жыл бұрын
I flex by twirling pasta/noodles with fingers
@theperfectbotsteve4916 Жыл бұрын
no holding to people who don't want to be there still with only your finger and using there hands as chopsticks
@latetodagame1892 Жыл бұрын
No! Shut up!
@tielessin Жыл бұрын
Not only are eating utensils shaped by our food, but our food is probably also shaped by our eating utensils. So many dishes in one culture would be really hard to eat with another tool than the one that culture uses to eat. So the food and the eating utensils seem to adapt to each other over time and not just one to the other. Which would make the introduction of a new way to eat even harder since the food being eaten is already designed to be consumed with another tool in mind.
@CordeliaWagner Жыл бұрын
I love precut food. So I go for spoon and chopstick.
@SetuwoKecik Жыл бұрын
Based on my own observation, in culture where people commonly eat with their bare hands, their food usually have bigger chunks compared to the ones with chopsticks, as the latter will made their food already at bite sizes so its easier to be picked with chopsticks. But in fork&knife culture, its also big chunks except its usually being made so the harder parts like bones were already removed before serving, making it easier to cut. Meanwhile spoon is everywhere since every culture has their own version of soup and porridge.
@SetuwoKecik Жыл бұрын
@@CordeliaWagner Nah, its probably because you never washed your hands. You're so dirty you dont even dare to touch your food.
@katm3428 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. I think that some foods just require the use of a knife, like a steak or schnitzel etc, and cultures that use chopsticks simply dont eat this kind of foods at all.
@Nibmus Жыл бұрын
@@katm342890% of the Japanese cooking videos I see they precut the steak for the customers so they don't have to worry about handling a knife
@dionium54622 жыл бұрын
As a Filipino it's kinda weird to think of people eating rice with chopsticks or fork as it could easily fall off. Thus we use spoon to get more rice at once and it doesn't fall off.
@longvo4714 Жыл бұрын
You missed the whole point of the video. "Eating with chopsticks" isn't a weird action, you feel weird about it just because in your culture, people eat rice with spoons.
@Sofiaode18 Жыл бұрын
If you’re eating loose rice, yeah. If it’s sticky east asian rice then it’s very doable.
@dimensionalmagic Жыл бұрын
maybe the problem is that different types of rice are used in different regions since some rice are stickier and hold form better than others, it kind of depends culturally which rice they rely on the most. so both are correct, its just the type of rice which we need more context on before judging.
@PequenaNoobAmaPudim Жыл бұрын
Yeah in Brazil we eat lots of rice but eating this type of it is impossible with chopsticks, I used either spoon or fork+knife. But now living in Japan, I also can't imagine eating japanese rice with spoons. Really interesting to notice those differences.
@danielch6662 Жыл бұрын
@@PequenaNoobAmaPudim That's what you think. I eat noodles with a spoon. Spoons for everything. It's the best utensil of them all.
Revanced app has Sponsorblock aswell Dont give yt money
@skyfeelan5 ай бұрын
his overall video is good but I think the ad read is bland, the only youtuber who I don't skip the ads is Map Men
@rel124c41a5 ай бұрын
Always skip the AD.
@TooLittleInfo Жыл бұрын
As a Malaysian person growing up a culture that’s a blend of Malay, Chinese, Indian and western, i am adept at using hands, chopsticks and fork+knife! It’s cool to be able to use all of them and enjoy different cuisines, and eating them the way it was intended adds to the experience
@SewolHoONCE Жыл бұрын
BTW, in Texas, I eat burritos with my chopsticks, tearing the tortilla with my fingers chapati style.
@Ashgrey0 Жыл бұрын
You rule, Utensil Avatar! Eating foods with their culturally appropriate tools add so much to both the experience and the respect we give for each other's cultures
@TooLittleInfo Жыл бұрын
@@Ashgrey0 All right I'm stealing Utensil Avatar for my next username just fyi
@arthurlau9811 ай бұрын
It depends. As another Malaysian, I only use my fingers at fast food. I like food wetter. For indian food, eating with a spoon and fork makes scooping those curry easier compared to using a hand, which I gave up using after I turned 13. For Chinese food, most Malaysian Chinese use chopsticks only for noodles. For rice based cuisine and communal family dinner, a fork and spoon is the way to go. It reflects more western influence among Malaysian Chinese, who move from eating from a bowl to eating from a plate, in which the presence of a spoon helps A LOT on wetter food and a western spoon that is flatter will control the amount of food you put in your mouth compare to a Chinese style spoon which is only good for spoon (does not fit your mouth well). And for using hands, it depends on the settings. You look very very very uncivilized if you use hand in a Western or Chinese setting. People will look at you weird. By will not bat an eye if you do it in Indian cuisine only setting.
@TooLittleInfo11 ай бұрын
@@arthurlau98 of course la, it's common sense to choose what to use depending on the situation. It would be silly to use chopsticks to eat nasi lemak or my hands to eat curry laksa.
@fischele57902 жыл бұрын
I think in your comparison you didn't really acknowledge that one can use a fork without using a knife with many dishes. When you pick up fries they may give you a tiny fork but no knife. And many other classic italian or european dishes, such as pasta, do not requite a knife at all
@Crokto2 жыл бұрын
sorry who's eating fries with a fork
@MaticTheProto2 жыл бұрын
@@Crokto american spotted
@jesuschrist75032 жыл бұрын
Nathan’s moment
@krombopulos_michael2 жыл бұрын
Or why spaghetti is impossible to eat with chopsticks while noodles are easier
@kyledexheimer65482 жыл бұрын
@@krombopulos_michael it is multi factoral. In western culture lifting the plate off the table is improper etiquette and so is slurping in a noodle. It also has to deal with how the sauce and food in with noodles. Again culture informs which is "better".
@AZunon Жыл бұрын
Let’s be honest. The most versatile utensil, is the spoon. It’s that support item you always get no matter what build you go for.
@jek__ Жыл бұрын
versatility improves with added utility. A challenger approaches: the spork
@sarahyip2825 Жыл бұрын
@@jek__The spork already exist happy to say. Imagine a spoon where the scoop is split into 3 wide-based tines instead of the usual 4 long pointy tines of a typical fork. I use it for a meal of fried rice with cubes of meat and tofu. Scoop and/or stab. Smaller scoop capacity than a spoon but why hurry...
@Eric-qi9us Жыл бұрын
until you eat spaghetti
@iamsohandsomeindeed Жыл бұрын
Try having any noodles with a spoon?
@lastyhopper2792 Жыл бұрын
@@iamsohandsomeindeedjust cut the noodles with the spoon first
@naineshsaidane21882 жыл бұрын
Very Interesting! In India, we believe that eating with your hand (most of us use only one hand) allows us to experience the food through the sense of touch before we consume it. It prepares your system for the food that is about to enter your mouth. It also helps you judge if the food is too hot or cold and avoid burning your tongue. The practice also ensures we wash our hands more often and before and after every meal which promotes hygiene. And of course, it is the most sustainable way to eat.
@reeeyou2 жыл бұрын
@hit_alive because noodles and spaghetti arent really a staple nor traditional cuisine in India. Of course they eat with appropriate utensils depending on cuisines. Just generally, their Everyday foods are eaten with hands.
@MiguelGarcia-vj7oo2 жыл бұрын
"promotes good hygiene"..... With the Indian tourist I've smelled a mile away, lack of water with 70 percent of the population, and everyone bathing and pooping in the holy river....... I think that ship has sailed long ago ........
@woahthere541 Жыл бұрын
that is so disgusting.
@Aeiouaaaaaaaaa Жыл бұрын
@@woahthere541Do you eat your chips with a fork and knife?
@chisomo8088 Жыл бұрын
@@woahthere541 you sound ignorant, please get rid of this elitist mentality
@fluffernutter9420 Жыл бұрын
Another aspect of the forks vs. chopsticks debate is the typical application of both utensils. Forks puncture the piece of food while chopsticks simply pick it up. Forks can interfere with the structural integrity of the item (e.g. sushi, layered foods, etc) or cause some loss of moisture (losing the soup inside a soup dumpling, applying pressure on pieces of meat, letting the juice dribble out, etc.) while chopsticks don't run into these issues because the user only applies pressure to the sides of the item.
@seanmalloy7249 Жыл бұрын
You can also make the argument in the other direction, as slipping the tines of a fork under an item to lift it can be easier than catching it between two chopsticks. I'm reminded of rice noodle dim sum I've had at Chinese restaurants, which both violate the common 'small pieces' theme of Chinese dishes (being too large to eat gracefully as a single bite) and being slick enough that they're difficult to hold with chopsticks (then, too, so are ice cubes when I fish them out of a glass of water). On the other hand, it's easier to lose pieces of food into something like a hot pot by slipping off a fork, or being harder to fish back out afterward if it doesn't want to be lifted by the fork and has to be impaled.
@greenmachine56006 ай бұрын
@@seanmalloy7249 lifting the item up that way with a fork is not smart, a spoon would serve better there
@drillerdev46246 ай бұрын
@@greenmachine5600 some foods are easier to "hunt" trough the plate with forks vs spoons, and also the amount of sauce you catch is different. Besides, with a fork you can both stab and lift with a single utensil
@robinthrush96725 ай бұрын
I agree with juicy dumplings, but I've crush way too many sushi roll segments in my chopsticks when they feel slippery to agree on that one. I've also cut up stromboli and would not want to try to pick that up with chopsticks as I can already see the bread, slick meat, and veggies fall apart while they can be speared together with a fork like a shishkabob.
@kennethferland55794 ай бұрын
Indeed the chopstick is generally intended to do zero breaking down of the food pieces, all that responsibility is transfered to the kitchen where all food must be broken down into bite size or at minimm bite-able pieces. A Fork on the otherhand still retains a minimal role in the final breaking down of food between the plate and the mouth. When paired with a knife this role is obvious, BUT many people do not realize how much knife like action a basic fork is capable of and how much western cuisine relies on the fork to chop with it's side, fluff, stir or in other ways breakup food prior to actions of stabbing-lift or scoop-lift to actually put it in ones mouth. Soft meats like a filet of fish is one of the areas where you see forks behaving as psudo-knives a lot. Western cuisine has a lot of foods which fall in this grey zone, not tough enough to require a knife, but too large and tough for a chopstick to be able to be effective.
@HatchetHaro Жыл бұрын
I think one thing people often overlook with chopsticks is the bowl that it is paired with. Often, when we eat rice, it's just plain white rice, which is sticky enough to be picked up with chopsticks; we pick up the bowl closer to our face so the chopsticks don't change their angle or lift the rice as far. When there's not enough rice in the bowl to easily pick up, or with non-sticky rice like fried rice, we just put the bowl of rice to our face and shovel it in with the chopsticks. In those instances, the bowl is also a utensil. It's more often seen in Chinese communal meals where the bowls are small enough to be easily held, and the chopsticks serve a dual purpose of grabbing meats and veggies from the plates into your own bowl as well. For myself, I often find myself resorting to the spoon when it comes to Japanese dons, as those bowls are a bit too big and unwieldy to hold with one hand. Sometimes, if rice dishes are served on a plate like with Thai rice or Japanese curry rice, or if it's fried rice, I also use a spoon. On the other hand, I like eating spaghetti with chopsticks, just to piss off the Italians. Use chopsticks to avoid Cheeto fingers. In fact, you can use chopsticks for all sorts of chips. You're welcome.
@oddoneout183510 ай бұрын
Also popcorn. Avoid butter on controller. Or, ya know, snack and wash before TV or games. Kinda takes time though.😗 ...seeya.👍
@dutchmilk4 ай бұрын
這也要看你怎麼吃。
@HatchetHaro4 ай бұрын
@@dutchmilk 用口吃
@dutchmilk4 ай бұрын
@@HatchetHaro 中华文化不懂的话,就不要做个白痴。宋朝的时候就开始, 在重要场合或者是有背景和文化的家族,一般不会把碗端到脸前, 而是把碗稍微提高离桌面一点,再用筷子夹米饭上来。夹食物也会用分别的碗盘来装。他们用的筷子也比较长。 所以这要看怎么吃。建议你好好读一下有关中华饮食文化的书。还有,we do not shove it in our mouth. 请你自重。
@HatchetHaro4 ай бұрын
@@dutchmilk lol 你呢個戇鳩仔唔識食飯唔好講嘢啦
@antiskill20122 жыл бұрын
The feedback loop between utensiles evolving to suit popular dishes and dishes being crafted to be eaten with the culture's standard utensiles is fascinating. While this isn't really a problem in the case of food, I imagine there must be situations where someone has come up with a new, more optimal solution for a problem, but there are too many tools and systems built to work with the old, clunky solution for anyone to change it.
@WinstonSmithGPT Жыл бұрын
Metric in the US.
@limazulu6192 Жыл бұрын
That's B2B Software in a nutshell. Not only does the more "optimal" option require everyone to relearn already acquired skills but the amount of effort you'd have to put in to replace the old software with the newer one will take a ridiculous amount of time and resources which in most cases hurt the company more than it would benefit it in almost all aspects even if the new tech is genuinely better.
@jgvtc559 Жыл бұрын
@@WinstonSmithGPTgasoline engines
@DawnDavidson Жыл бұрын
The QWERTY keyboard is a great example. It was created to SLOW DOWN the typist to avoid jamming keys together. Now that there are no keys to jam, other keyboards could make more sense. But none have ever taken off, because of everything associated with the current layout.
@jgvtc559 Жыл бұрын
@@DawnDavidson I think the time it'd take to get as proficient on a different layout would be counterproductive
@wuerhyueh Жыл бұрын
As an Asian, it's really hard for me to imagine eating any food without chopsticks. Although my fingers do hurt when pinching some big food lol but chopsticks can prevent the food from escaping. I can't catch any food at all with just a spoon or a fork. I even use chopsticks when eating chips. Just the right amount of force to never ruin the food and at the same time your hands are still clean!
@Jacob.D. Жыл бұрын
As an Asian, I only use spoon when dining. Saying that being unable to catch food with spoon make me doubtful Spoon is the best
@duitk Жыл бұрын
It's all a matter of practice and what you are used to. I am the opposite I eat all foods with a fork even other culture foods. When I try to use chopsticks it hurts my hands. It's all about what you are comfortable with.
@laviwastaken9845 Жыл бұрын
@@duitk Some may even call it skill issue.
@DccAnh Жыл бұрын
@@Jacob.D.nah you’re just a noob lol, in my country kid stop eating with spoon by 10.
@fj2995 Жыл бұрын
as an "Asian", it's really easy for me to imagine eating a food without or with any utensil.
@reisatee55042 жыл бұрын
My go-to example of a food that's easier to eat with chopsticks is sushi. A fork would destroy the roll, but just picking it up with chopsticks is perfect. Although personally, my favorite utensil is the spoon. Simple, intuitive, and as far as I know, universal.
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
It is more or less universal. Every single culture that I researched had invented the spoon in some form or another. I'm sure there are a few cultures that don't use it though
@tonyzhu1687 Жыл бұрын
You can eat sushi with your hands, and thats part of edomae sushi tradition. The better example I think is hot pot. Theres no way you eat that with anything other than chopsticks.
@ukyoize Жыл бұрын
Skill issue. I can eat them with a fork perfectly fine.
@Ealsante Жыл бұрын
It might surprise you to learn this, but sushi is NOT meant to be eaten with chopsticks. You are supposed to eat it with your hands.
@Im-BAD-at-satire Жыл бұрын
Traditionally, back when sushi was bigger, eating it with your hands was the norm with sushi and even today it's still valid to eat sushi while using your hands.
@freescape08 Жыл бұрын
5:45 Love that this was missed in your proofreading and that you actually said it out loud without skipping a beat.
@julioareck Жыл бұрын
I've lived in both the American and the Asian continents, so all I can say, having studied different cultures, is: specific utensils are meant for specific types of food, so there's no universal "the fork is better" or "chopsticks are better". Burritos are meant to be eaten with your hands, so trying to use either forks or chopsticks wouldn't be as practical as just grabbing the burrito with your hand. If you get a Western steak, of course using fork and knife would work better, but East Asian food, as mentioned in the video, usually comes already cut in small pieces, so using chopsticks is usually easier. Moreover, utensils are adapted to specific tasks and cultures. For example, chopsticks are different in China, Japan and Korea. Chinese people many times put a big plate in the center of the table and people serve themselves to their plates, so longer chopsticks are useful. Japanese people don't do that, so their chopsticks are shorter; they eat more fish, so their chopsticks taper and are more pointy so it's easier to grab raw fish with them. Korean chopsticks are flat and usually made of metal, because in ancient times they were believed to detect poison easier than wooden chopsticks. In many South East Asian countries, having their local cultures influenced by China and Western colonization, you'll se that, for example, rice usually comes with a spoon (not fork), while noodles are considered a Chinese thing, so they come with chopsticks. I currently live in Taiwan where, just like in China, if you order "noodles" they will give you chopsticks by default, but if you order "Italian noodles" (i.e. spaghetti) they'll give you a fork. Of course, you can actually use etiher utensil because it's basically the same food, but utensils are culturally asociated to either Asian or Western origin. Furthermore, combining utensils is becoming increasingly popular in Asia. For example, if you get let's say a curry rice with a pork cutlet, it may come with chopsticks AND a spoon, so you use one hand to grab the pork pieces with the chopsticks, while getting the rice with the spoon in your other hand. This is specially common with noodle soups, of course: one hand with the chopsticks for the noodles and the other hand with the spoon for the soup.
@eduardochavacano Жыл бұрын
You stated nothing scholarly in spite the lenght of your text. I guess you never papers on Asian Studies arguing the sophistication of the chopsticks. Let that be something to contemplate on. The chopstick was used an arguement to prove the concept of the Superiority of the Chinese Civilization.
@julioareck Жыл бұрын
@@eduardochavacano I never intended to say anything scholarly in this simple comment on a KZbin video; it's obvious that I was just giving my impressions on the topic. If you want to read something scholarly, I suggest you can consult an academic journal.
@squidwardstesticles59145 ай бұрын
@@eduardochavacano one of the most pretentious comments I’ve read in a while. Stfu
@internationaldaily98204 ай бұрын
You're wrong. The way you put it is like China colonized South East Asia. Of course, China never colonized South East Asia. Also, Chinese chopsticks are not tapered or sharp not because of what you said but because the Chinese do not want to be reminded of the battlefield with daggers, arrows, etc. and according to John, Confucius said that knives belong to the slaughterhouse. For Japan, the Samurai probably prefer the sharp pointed chopsticks. There are different lengths of chopsticks to suit different occasions and usage in China. Chinese chopsticks are more varied and diverse because of the nature of the country. It is just a vast country with so many provinces and people in the north, south, east and west are different too. Japan or Korea is like a province of China only. Chopsticks are definitely the best. The food you eat comes in small bits and pieces, so it aids in the digestion. You don't see a large chunk of beef, like steak. So the Chinese and East Asians are not as fat as the Americans. And it is the healthier option. Chopsticks are also more hygienic and easier to produce, just two twigs will do or two bamboo sticks, cheap and almost instant. Just need a while to figure out how to use them only. It improves dexterity of the hands and fingers, and this is good for the brains. Moreover, the energy from the food works its way to the head and brains instead of down the stomach and so it makes one smarter too. This is no coincidence. It is deliberately designed that way. So, chopsticks are probably the cleverest invention ever.
@itsaUSBline4 ай бұрын
@@eduardochavacanoyou stated nothing scholarly despite your arrogance.
@racool911 Жыл бұрын
I've seen many people including myself who are used to forks struggle with chopsticks. I've never seen someone used to chopsticks ever struggle with a fork. This could either be cause chopsticks are harder to use or forks are so much more widespread due to a factor other than ease that everyone couldn't avoid getting accustomed to it.
@hellowill Жыл бұрын
While it's not as common, I have seen Asians who say forks are harder to use for certain foods. And I can say the same after learning chopsticks properly. Example - dumplings.
@jiaxuantan9714 Жыл бұрын
@@hellowill hi yes thats me. I eat all kinds of noodles way faster than with forks. I even eat pasta with chopsticks in my own privacy lol. I think chopsticks are just way easier to pick up food with especially when dishes are shared. i only use forks when im eating steak or when chopsticks arent provided
@seraby7151 Жыл бұрын
Chopsticks are just harder to use. Once you have arthritis or any hand problems, you wont be able to use it anymore. While forks and spoons can be used... Toddler/caveman style.
@GruntSquad92 Жыл бұрын
Using chopsticks is something you need to learn. It is difficult in that regard, but once you have it down, it's actually easier to use than forks. It is quicker too. Sure, I can grab a fork and start eating, and it is not difficult to use. But once you know how to use chopsticks, eating with a fork feels like walking around without knee joints. It's not difficult, just very restricting. And slow. Paradoxically, I also need to use more mental effort with forks, because now I have to consider physics. With chopstick you just grab stuff. No food bouncing off the fork, or destroying the structural integrity, or stuff falling into pieces. Stuff like that is annoying.
@racool911 Жыл бұрын
@@GruntSquad92 Honestly the best utensil is your hands. Very versatile and easy to use. Been in India for a week and haven't used anything else the entire time.
@milady_kazuko Жыл бұрын
I think I have to disagree that chopsticks forces you to eat slowly, to me at least it makes me eat faster. My family is japanese so we have a lot of small bowls, when eating with them we tend to pick up them with our left hand and use the chopsticks with the right, this way we can lift the bowl and basically eat faster. Also if take ramen for example, it meant to be eaten in around 10min max or the noodles will get soggy
@zongzi_1715 Жыл бұрын
That's true. Chopstick force u to eat slower only works when u r not really good at using it.
@Delgen1951 Жыл бұрын
Lol, it was the wives who insisted that thier husbands use the fork in the left hand and knife in the right and the act of changing hands slowed down the men so the wife could talk to her husband at meal time.
@PeaknikMicki Жыл бұрын
I would say chopsticks Encourages eating more slowly by taking smaller bites. That is if you don't bring up the bowl to the face and shovel it in. Despite being Western I generally prefer eating with sticks thanks to the better pace. And if eating soup, I like to pick ingredients and put on the spoon and then pill with bit of stock. That includes noodles that I ussually pick one or cpl at t atime and coil it up in the spoon. Makes for a more enjoyable way of eating in my opinion
@milady_kazuko Жыл бұрын
@@PeaknikMicki That's an interesting perspective! I don't want to jump on stereotypes, but maybe this happens because people on the west usually don't grow eating with chopsticks, so maybe chopsticks don't first come into mind when thinking about a practical and easy to use tool, which creates this cycle (chopsticks are difficult to use and different, so maybe I should slow down when using it)
@zongzi_1715 Жыл бұрын
@@milady_kazuko I actually have a friend who don’t know how to use fork to eat noodles but he can do it pretty well using chopsticks. It turn out that he bring his own chopsticks everywhere including spaghetti store😂😂 It’s pretty unfair when people say that chopsticks aren’t easy to use when people in the west growing up using fork🫨🫨
@swelihlembhele9748 Жыл бұрын
In Zulu culture (I'm from South Africa). When eating with people in the same bowl we use two hands, however they serve two different functions. Say you are eating baked beans for example, one hand will be used to pickup food from the bowl then you'll pour your food to the other hand, which will be used to take food to the mouth. The hand that takes food to the mouth doesn't come in contact with the bowl and the hand that takes food from the bowl doesn't come in contact with the mouth. This rarely happens now because spoons are popular and everyone uses their own bowl.
@newbie4789 Жыл бұрын
Woah. That's a new style. I have never heard about anything like that before. And it sounds fun. As an Indian, touching food with my left hand kinda feels a little weird but if there are people who do this traditionally, it has to be good
@zyaicob6 ай бұрын
I like this system a lot
@kekesmavuluvul60996 ай бұрын
So people can eat from the same bowl without stained by others saliva?
@kennethferland55794 ай бұрын
I don't think their is a single hand-eating culture which dosn't make similar 'right hand touches only X, left hand touches only Y' sanitary rules, X is generally the food going into your mouth, but Y could be different things which need to not get cross contaminated with X. Generally such rules assume right-hand dominance and for conformity will suppress left handed people from simply swapping the setup.
@nil_90 Жыл бұрын
As an Indian I've grown up using hands/fingers to eat. During my young adulthood I also have heavily used spoons while living away from home. After some time, what I discovered is that, if the food is not desirable to me and I just somehow have to eat it, I'll mostly pick a spoon to eat instead using hands. Using a spoon for me meant detachment to the food. I always wondered about an interesting research idea studying amount of food waste in places like Hostel Mess, while using hands vs spoons. (the detachment hypothesis)
@FloridaTrini Жыл бұрын
I'm Trinidadian (mix of East Indian, West African, Native American, and Latin culture) and I've noticed that many roti shops in my country have the option of wrapping all the curry within the roti ( almost like a burrito) so it can be easily eaten with a knife and fork or they wrap a paper around it so you can eat it similarly to a burrito in public. I tend to not eat roti in public unless it's in this format to avoid using my hands while eating in public.
@wenbo5954 ай бұрын
Some asian foods are too hot to use hands. We dont have nang to insulate.
@lynettejwhite4 ай бұрын
Another angle on hands vs spoons, that is related to that detachment idea, is it possible that its easier to eat a lot of food fast with a spoon and thus overeating is much more likely. That's been my experience, and I suppose that's just a different type of food waste.
@thirteen265 ай бұрын
"Putting a spiky metal instrument in your mouth is pretty weird when you start thinking about it." Putting two dead tree branches in your mouth is pretty weird too.
@MC---2 жыл бұрын
Idk, I must be a master at using a fork. It can shovel anything except for soup or cereal if I cared about having milk with every bite. Never once had a problem with rice, yogurt, grits/polenta, ice cream etc. Rice in a bowl with a fork is like shooting a fish barrel with a shotgun. Using the side of the fork and you can cut most things aside from tough beef and pork. It is 98% effective for most things.
@Mr152008 Жыл бұрын
I don’t think you’re necessarily a master at using a fork, I think the fork itself is just an OP eating utensil 😂 🍴>🥢
@Ninjaananas Жыл бұрын
No, man. These people just have skill issues.
@aleisterlavey9716 Жыл бұрын
@@Mr152008using a fork is indeed a skill. I saw a grown man stab his face while eating. 😂
@Mr152008 Жыл бұрын
@@aleisterlavey9716 Nope? If you’re a fully grown adult & you can’t put a utensil in your mouth (fork, spoon, chopsticks etc.) then you have a motor skills problem. If that actually happened then something was wrong with him🤕
@aleisterlavey9716 Жыл бұрын
@@Mr152008 talking to much while eating was wrong with him. I was just glad, I was outside his reach, otherwise I may got stabbed too. Some people have incredible bad motor skills.
@kingofthefleetians Жыл бұрын
Chopsticks also work far better for foods originating in East Asia as its usually more broken down while forks for western food which are usually kept in bigger pieces. Try eating a sirloin with a side of asparagus using chopsticks
@RodoMars Жыл бұрын
not really. as an Asian i would just pick up my home cooked sirloin with chopsticks and give it a bite😂
@hiddlespearean Жыл бұрын
Or true to Asian aesthetics, the sirloin and asparagus would be sliced stacked and spread perfectly right upon serving so that the person eating it wouldn’t be required to be indelicately wrestling the meat to their mouths 😂😅
@Jacob.D. Жыл бұрын
Spoon is the best
@beyondfossil Жыл бұрын
The shape of foods are also influenced by the culture's prevalent choice of utensils.
@seraby7151 Жыл бұрын
@@Jacob.D.yeah... Spoon can work for asian and western food.
@Cainenghis2 жыл бұрын
Spork all the way
@NirmalveerSingh2 жыл бұрын
fork you
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
Sporks are kinda like the worst of both worlds imo
@ukyoize Жыл бұрын
@@Design.TheoryDepends on a spork
11 ай бұрын
@@Design.Theorysporks are good on survival knifes or for camping were you want a utensil that has the functions of a spoon and a fork to save space. 5 people camping is 5 sporks or 5 forks and 5 spoons.
@Allyfyn4 ай бұрын
@@Design.TheoryA well enough designed spork is the ultimate utensil, it covers for what forks can't do well, which is dealing with thin liquids.
@sususegar Жыл бұрын
5:12 for those unaware, this is why you DO NOT stick chopsticks upright into a bowl of food. All chopsticks-using Asian cultures sees this as a practice only for the dead, and it also resembles joss sticks in an ash bowl.
@libbyt9774 Жыл бұрын
as a British person who grew up in both the UK and then Malaysia, I went from using a fork and knife to using a fork and spoon the malaysian way as it’s far better for almost all dishes (bar steak). My favourite combo now is a spoon and japanese-style pointed chopsticks even for foods like salads or pasta. Somehow it feels like the food is more aerated.
@harshitboss2 жыл бұрын
I'm not a designer but I love watching these design videos!
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for checking it out :)
@UnderEuropa2 жыл бұрын
We're all designers at heart :)
@omkarmudras7562 жыл бұрын
I am also the content amazing
@KoongYe2 жыл бұрын
As an Asian, the best thing about chopsticks is that it's all we need. We can eat anything with it, including the thinnest soup. At some point I stopped using spoon. As for forks... I only use them when it's situationally awkward to use chopsticks. Like when I eat noodle pasta, cake, fried chicken. Or when it's necessary to use knives like when eating steaks(most of the times when we eat meat, we chop it up while cooking so we don't have to do the process during the meal).
@wednes3day Жыл бұрын
How do you do the thin soups? (with chopsticks)
@brandynamite3022 Жыл бұрын
@@wednes3day usually we would use a spoon or just drink straight from the bowl
@wednes3day Жыл бұрын
@@brandynamite3022 in this case I was asking about OP's strategy for using just chopsticks, but still thank you! .. maybe drinking it is the strategy for that since it doesn't involve anything but chopsticks?
@Xkittyloverr1997 Жыл бұрын
@@wednes3day You eat the chunks with chopsticks, and drink the broth straight from the bowl
@alteregobruh Жыл бұрын
@@brandynamite3022Using a spoon, so… Not just the “universal” chopsticks? Chopsticks are good at picking things up, and that’s it. Saying a thin soup can be eaten with chopsticks by drinking out of the bowl is like saying you can eat spaghetti with a knife by picking up the noodles with your hands. Like… No. You’re just wrong lol… I won’t debate whether chopsticks are the best or not but saying that they can be used on the thinnest soup by using another tool or not using it at all is literally just wrong lol…
@LittleNala Жыл бұрын
I saw a theory that chopsticks were preferred because Asian cultures didn't like the idea of putting metal implements in the mouth. I believed it until I visited S Korea, where metal chopsticks were the only type available in every restaurant I went to. The Japanese word for 'chopstick' looks identical to the word for 'bridge' in romanised Japanese, but it has a different kanji, and is pronounced slightly differently. Japanese isn't a tonal language, but there is a difference in where the stress comes in each word. It's hard for an English speaker to pin down the difference, but if you get it wrong, it sounds weird to Japanese ears.
@OzixiThrill Жыл бұрын
Considering that earlier european utensils were made of wood, the idea of not liking metal implements in the mouth doesn't really hold up. Nothing stops you from making a spoon, fork and knife out of wood.
@LittleNala Жыл бұрын
@@OzixiThrill Yup - it was a pretty dumb theory in the first place, but after what you say, it is even dumber!
@SetuwoKecik Жыл бұрын
Indians are asian. They dont use chopsticks.
@RedScareClair Жыл бұрын
Forks are really old though so looking at modern South Korea wouldn't really be a fair way to analyze if that is true or not. Apparently Confucius thought it was weird so that's probably the way many thought
@rainydaysatz Жыл бұрын
In korea, chopsticks were made of metal/silver initially to detect poison in food for royalty. However metal chopsticks are reusable so Koreans adapted to using metal chopsticks.
@py8554 Жыл бұрын
I find chopsticks to be more convenient in the sense that I can do more with chopsticks like picking up small pieces of food or lifting food securely without having to pierce it. Also I have lost count of how many times I improvised using two skewers or small sticks as chopsticks to help me move food (and some other stuff).
@orlando17-y1z Жыл бұрын
in italy we actually use forks to eat risotto or rice unless we are 3 years old, and we are not chasing any grain, we just crush them when they are few and they stick to the fork. easy peasy
@asdkotable Жыл бұрын
As someone who lives in a major cosmopolitan city, my philosophy is "do as the Romans", chopsticks at East Asian restaurants, hands at South Asian restaurants, fork and knife at Western restaurants. However, I do prefer eating rice at home with a spoon, even though I'm Chinese.
11 ай бұрын
yeah but chopsticks are shit and i just want to eat.
@GWT1m05 ай бұрын
Gitgud
@sarang_sheth2 жыл бұрын
I’ll be honest, eating with hands feels great too. I taste the food better, the fingers feel more confortable than metal cutlery, and you sort of taste the saltiness of your skin as you eat, which in a way helps add to its flavor… I also agree with Nainesh. You’re prompted to wash hands more often.
@SetuwoKecik Жыл бұрын
Another good part eating with bare hands is you dont have to worry about your food being too hot. Since if your fingers were able to touch it, then its already safe enough to enter your mouth.
@MR-_-KK Жыл бұрын
Ok. As an Indian I agree with that statement. But what is that salt taste man. Stop making shit. It doesn't give any salt taste. But eating with hands is way better in many ways in indian cuisine
@ghost21501 Жыл бұрын
I'm from Moldova, and traditionally, you'd have mamaliga, which is a type of polenta that is really sticky, with every meal. You'd just use it as a grab and dip tool for all the side dishes. We eat it on occasion now, and it is the most fun you can have eating. It also tastes better because you have a more intimate connection with the food you're eating. So I agree with you that your hands are the best tool.
@Squaretable22 Жыл бұрын
Damn now I know why the waiter in Dobrogea looked at me so weird when I had both bread and Mămăligă... It would be like having both bread and Crackers on a plate in England, they both serve the same purpose. 😅 I guess i need to get over the ick factor of using something sticky as a utensil the next time im in the region 🇲🇩 💛 🇷🇴
@ghost21501 Жыл бұрын
@Squaretable22 nah, my dad still ate bread with it as well. That was his Ukrainian side coming out.
@Blox1175 ай бұрын
moldova is discount romania
@igorporfiirio49156 ай бұрын
This whole video was made to say the burrito is a perfect food, and I can't help but respect that.
@zitaoqiu Жыл бұрын
As a Chinese who can use chopsticks with either of my hands (BTW, not every Chinese can do this). I choose spoon, because spoon is the best. But if we are allowed to pick SPOCK... Then spork is the best of the best, the most universal, "do it all" utensil today.
@ErOrNWi Жыл бұрын
The best utensil really depends on the food and the situation, but I’d say both forks and chopsticks can be often be substituted for one another. I’ve lived in Thailand and Korea. My preferred method for eating rice dishes is actually a fork and a spoon, pushing the rice onto my spoon using my fork. My preferred method for noodle dishes is chopsticks. I actually have no idea how people eat ramen without chopsticks. Watching Korean kids, it’s easier for them to master using a fork first and then graduate to chopsticks. I’ve seen Korean adults use chopsticks for Western foods at times, I think it depends on what you’re used to and what’s available also.
@seanmalloy7249 Жыл бұрын
"I actually have no idea how people eat ramen without chopsticks." From my usage, and from seeing others (admittedly with 'instant' bowl ramen, not a proper ramen bowl), it's usually the way we eat other pasta dishes -- rolling up the noodles on a fork, and drinking the broth when we've finished the noodles. With a proper ramen bowl, having other ingredients than finely-shredded freeze-dried bits, you're right.
@McCaroni_Sup5 ай бұрын
"I push rice onto a spoon using a fork" Filipino detected
@ErOrNWi5 ай бұрын
@@McCaroni_SupIt's a habit I picked up in Thailand but yeah it might more of an SEA thing.
@ravenderose Жыл бұрын
I always had rice with a spoon because it was the most practical. I lived in Taiwan for a while and I still think the fork is a better option. I see how much easier chop sticks are but they can’t be used for all foods whereas forks can. They can also be used as a knife so they serve multiple purposes.
@chelvo562 жыл бұрын
I mean, the Rice with Fork thing really depends on the type of Rice. I'm personally used to eating rice with fork and knife, but I also usually eat the long-grain variant. Though maybe I should start trolling in eating habits and eat western food with chopsticks and eastern food with knife and fork.
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
Very good point. Different kinds of rice lend themselves to different utensils. Probably not surprisingly, the rice that is grown in East Asia is a little bit easier to eat with chopsticks than with a fork imo.
@davidjohansson85632 жыл бұрын
@@Design.Theory In what way would it be easier to chase those grains of rice with two sticks and try to conduct a pincer maneuver on individual grains rather than scooping them up with a fork? plus that sticky rice that works well with chopsticks kinda tend to stick well on a fork aswell?
@tonyzhu1687 Жыл бұрын
@@davidjohansson8563 You scoop rice directly into your mouth by raising the bowl towards your face.
@ukyoize Жыл бұрын
@@tonyzhu1687ok fido
@NightPhoenix.Y Жыл бұрын
@@davidjohansson8563 there are spoons you know, the ladle like chinese ones in my opinion are superior to 'normal' ones
@eirikmurito9 ай бұрын
I agree eating with your hands is the best. Feels weird at first because you feel like your hand is dirty during the whole meal but after you get over that feeling the food does taste better
@jademonass2954 Жыл бұрын
honestly, it feels like forks are way more intuitive to use (as in, you dont see people googling how to use a fork) but chopsticks are SUPER versitile (can be used as a bunch of other utensils)
@WinstonSmithGPT Жыл бұрын
On the topic of using the right utensil for the right cuisine, I once watched a table of Asian tourists in Italy slurp their way through a plate of pasta with chopsticks they had brought with them. The huge sauce donuts around their mouths almost had me choking.
@pasty6092 жыл бұрын
I think hands are more limited than something like a fork since you can’t really eat hot food. Although I guess you can build up a resistance
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
in most cultures where people eat with their fingers, the food is usually served warm, but not hot.
@akashnba032 жыл бұрын
well if its too hot to touch, it shouldnt be going into your mouth
@pasty6092 жыл бұрын
@@Design.Theory Sure but I feel like a good eating tool is one that allows for any kind of cuisine
@pasty6092 жыл бұрын
@@akashnba03 For something like a stew or a pie, being able to separate a small portion so that it cools down faster is pretty useful. Wait until the entire meal is warm and you may end up with a cold dinner towards the end
@kyledexheimer65482 жыл бұрын
@@Design.Theory you've never eaten ugali.
@FrostFireTiger Жыл бұрын
Eating with forks, chopsticks, and hands are all good. But the one not mentioned on the video is the most superior, the spoon. A good metal spoon works with everything from soups, to pies, sauces, rice, meat, everything. When I eat out I'll use a fork. When I went I used chopsticks. 98% of the time I eat at home, I go with the spoon. It's just better.
@ДанилБулатов-ш7э Жыл бұрын
Spoon it's Al little shovel, and shovel is ultimate instrument.
@Jaguarkralle1 Жыл бұрын
As an European, one of my favourite uses of chopsticks is when earing potato chips or some other greasy snack when I'm at my comouter or something. It's super practical!
@AwokenEntertainment Жыл бұрын
love that conclusion.. the burrito is best food ever invented ❤
@waterbox4202 Жыл бұрын
In Peru, half of our dishes include rice, we use forks, it is the normal thing, opposite of what you say, we don't imagine chasing rice grains with two thin sticks. Nice video, cheers
@REDnBLACKnRED Жыл бұрын
A lot of the food culture in the Americas was influenced by the European settlers who brought forks with them. Forks weren't designed for rice, chopsticks were made by rice eating cultures specifically for that purpose. But the converse is also true. Rice dishes that come from non-asian cultures weren't made to be eaten with chopsticks. It's harder to eat rice with chopsticks when it isn't sticky like in Asia. The context of how and where a food evolves is just as important when looking at why people eat what they eat and the ways they prefer to eat it.
@goatontheroad7692 Жыл бұрын
@@REDnBLACKnRED I'm a peruvian as well, and yes, In asia the rice is much more sticky and starchy than our rice, while in here "the perfect rice" is that one that crumbles nicely. Dishes like Arroz con Pollo and Arroz con mariscos are usually served with big meat piece rather than bite sizes, making forks and knives the go tool to eat them. so yeah, the dishes are very different because of the way they are prepared.
@yohanesbobbysanjaya3541 Жыл бұрын
why not using.... spoon ? its clearly the best tool for rice, or any type of grains in general lmao
@waterbox42026 ай бұрын
@@yohanesbobbysanjaya3541 we won't use spoons for rice as it sits perfectly in place with ordinary forks, they simply do not fall, and some peruvians such as myself usually eat the rice in their sticky form of cooking. Spoons are for soups and spoorks are not popular here although we know about them
@waterbox42026 ай бұрын
@@goatontheroad7692the arroz con mariscos tend to be pretty sticky and I like it that way
@josephmao5077 Жыл бұрын
I eat nearly everything with chopsticks and a bowl-even fried chicken, pasta, pizza, and chips. I have a strong aversion to getting my hands dirty while eating, though, and I find that chopsticks give me the most dexterity when handling food, making it easy to rotate food as I need to (as with fried chicken or peeling shrimp with my mouth).
@jek__ Жыл бұрын
An underappreciated contender to the utensil game is the straw. Rigid enough straws can be used as chopsticks while also being able to bring liquids to your mouth without needing to rely on moving the bowl or a side spoon I have a soft spot for the spork as well, beautiful little misfit
@Leanzazzy7 ай бұрын
Hands master race 😤 Actually, I'm used to using all three. If I'm eating rice, paratha, idiyappam, bread, macaroni, tortillas obviously hands (and for most other things), but if I'm eating noodles, dumplings, momos, sushi or anything small enough to be eaten without cutting it first (i.e. bite-sized) I use chopsticks (which is what they're meant to be used for). If I'm eating anything large that needs cutting like steak or omelette or waffles etc I use a knife and fork.
@Eza_yuta Жыл бұрын
As westernized and easternized person I eat with fork for western food, with chopstick for oriental asian food, and with bare hand for middle eastern food.
11 ай бұрын
as a sensible person i use fork for western and Asian food. much easier.
@Eza_yuta11 ай бұрын
It's not sensible. Just lazy.
11 ай бұрын
@@Eza_yuta you could say that about flying/driving why not walk? it is becuse it is better in everyway.
@Eza_yuta11 ай бұрын
That's a stupid comparison. But ok.
11 ай бұрын
@@Eza_yutai just eaten a stir fry using a fork, yum yum so much easier, can put more in my mouth each time never drop anything all goes in belly in one go. you should try, much better.
@Lektuerekurs Жыл бұрын
The Spoon handles most stuff, a metal spoon can also cut (like a piece of cake).
@marcuspahlman20492 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video! You always bring so many great points to an, in this case, very ordinary thing! One quick and friendly tip for editing would be to change the sequence settings to the same fps as your main sequence before doing the scene edit detection, that way you eliminate those single frames that sometimes shows up of the next scene before the cut. Love your videos so this is coming from nothing but love:)
@iKnowReview2 жыл бұрын
I only found your channel a few weeks ago, but it‘s already one of my absolute favorites! Keep it up! Product Design is everywhere and this video shows that in a creative way!
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard! I'm so happy that you like the content
@bbyingji Жыл бұрын
I prefer chopsticks because they're basically two long proxy fingers. I have more control when picking up the food without dirtying my fingers. Stabbing the food with the fork (tho I can do that with chopsticks as well) might ruin the shape and they might roll away when you try scooping it.
@lazywallstreetnews7234 Жыл бұрын
My favorite thing about this entire conversation is that even before any of this, pasta was invented by Arabs after being introduced to noodles by the Chinese. They didn't have all the ingredients to make noodles so they made a variation and in turn they introduced that variation to the Italians as they interacted for commerce just as Arabs had interacted with the Chinese first. Then the Italians ran with it and turned it into something else entirely with cheese and meats and other things in their culture that we all know and love today. That's just one example of many of how cultural interactions drive innovations and ingenuity and as a result, we all benefit.
@jztouch Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the US hand after spending 18 months in Korea I have very little use for either small spoons or forks. Unless I’m eating a steak or pasta a big spoon or chopsticks works best for most foods.
@Asiandynamo2 жыл бұрын
Chopsticks are easier to cook with as well as a general great tool for food prep.
@dangpopups2 жыл бұрын
I saw a documentary about Victorian customs and how they helped popularize the modern fork. They wanted to feel civilized and remove any trace of our “animal roots”. They thought biting directly into food, leaving teeth marks, was too animalistic so they used forks and knives instead to cut pieces off and then have all the dirty work done behind closed mouths.
@xtaylorxboyx Жыл бұрын
What’s the name of the documentary? Is it on KZbin?
@isoboy2125 Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, the Chinese aristocrats moved away from fork and knife 2500yrs ago for similar reasons - that it's violent to bring stabbing and cutting into dining experience. 😅
@Delgen1951 Жыл бұрын
@@xtaylorxboyx probably cooking with mrs. somethinr or other, I cant remeber her name, byt she( her Character) was a cook at Victorian manor house. It is a BBC show on youtube. sorry best I can do.
@vanillablossom Жыл бұрын
@@Delgen1951 do you mean Mrs Crocombe from English Heritage channel? I didn't hear what you mention, but admittedly I didn't watch all their videos.
@eduardochavacano Жыл бұрын
@@vanillablossom still barberic though.
@iflime Жыл бұрын
I use spoons the most because I have soup for every meal 😅 Porridge, dumpling soup, spaghetti with veggie chicken soup (ok I eat spaghetti with a fork but I still use a spoon for the soup I eat with it) I also eat yogurt very often too, which a spoon is best for! 😋
@nguyentho6768 Жыл бұрын
Hello from Vietnam. Tbh this debate around the utilities of chopsticks and folks in terms of eating rice feels kinda weird, because ever since the spoons are popularized the kids here just hate using chopsticks, and a lot would stick with spoons all the way till their teenage. The spoons are great for scooping rice as well things that go well with rice, like sauces. Funny thing is the way chopsticks are used to eat rice in Vietnam is kinda similar to how you use a spoon. You hold the chopsticks close together, cut the chopsticks through the rice and press the tips of the chopstick against the bowl and form a concave between the chopsticks and side of the bowl (which is, essentially, a spoon), and then you scoop a chunk of rice out along the side of the bowl, and bring the bowl close to your mouth to eat. And when you eat rice that way, I don't think it makes any different if you use chopsticks or use a fol, especially when the rice typically sticks and clumps up in large chunk.
@geniuspharmacist Жыл бұрын
It is related more to the food and habit than anything else. There are certain cultures that eat almost everything with their hands. Try eating a steak with bare hands or chopsticks. Try eating sushi with a fork. Dips and curries sometimes have to be eaten with bread and no other utensil.
@prspth Жыл бұрын
In Chinese restaurants there is no serving spoon. Guests will have 2 pairs of chopsticks. One pair is to grab food from the dishes to your “plate” and the white one to eat the food. Even with one pair, you are supposed to reverse your chopsticks when grabbing the food so you keep the end with your saliva off the dishes.
@SetuwoKecik Жыл бұрын
Nah usually there's a place where they'll put all eating utensils in one place at your table, including fork and spoon, plus some spare chopsticks.
@Ninjaananas Жыл бұрын
Based.
@draekalloy3673 Жыл бұрын
That isn't a thing.
@npcimknot9587 ай бұрын
Uhhh thats wierd cause we have things called soup.. and they use big spoons called ladles lol
@Designotherwise2 жыл бұрын
Once again, great video! I understand and agree with the idea that designing for the way people actually think is better if you want to sell a product but i think there is a lot more nuance in this case - design and culture work together in my opinion. People dictate what products sell by buying them but the designs we put out also dictate what people buy and therefore would change their behavior. A very well known example is smartphones. 10 years ago we might have thought people would not adopt this type of device but in 2022 it is part of everything we do !
@darkairieal2 жыл бұрын
The early smart phones didn't require new behaviour from their users tho, they still carried a portable cell phone in their pocket before it just had a physical keyboard and you could only text or phone call. The smartphone was designed for where society IS circa 2007, using cellphones in this way the smartphone was a direct evolution of a product and behaviour users had been experiencing for decades. The new smart phones kept the same layout and "added" functionality without departing drastically. (Still used your thumbs, same button layout, still a physical device you were pressing on as-opposed-to a wonky stylus input, or bulky non pocketable device, or hand wavy input method.) As an aside, 12 years ago was 2012. smartphone sales had grown to 50% of the 1.6 billion unit phone market. (iPhone launched in 2007, (2007 cell phone sales number 1.15billion)) so in 5 years they had a steep adoption curve, most would have assumed that growth to continue.
@knpark2025 Жыл бұрын
8:47 Speaking of which, I am from South Korea and the way we use our chopsticks is probably more "intrusive" than other cultures. We eat kimchi all the time, and the leafy greens are rarely chopped into bite-sized pieces. They are plated in their big chunks chopped right from the whole cabbage by kitchen knives. The peak of chopstick skills in Korea is not being able to pick up individual beans or gently picking up tofu without squishing them; it is to split and tear kimchi from the size of your palm into bite-sized pieces. Our chopsticks being flat metal sticks also help us use its diverging motions to tear through vegetables along its grains without knives.
@mouaem1 Жыл бұрын
Spoon for cereal, fork and knife for steak, hands for cawfish boils, spoon and chopsticks for pho, fork for pasta, etc. Sometimes things are more practical but certain dishes are better with certain utensils. When you try different eating etiquette you get to really enjoy the food and taste it as it is supposed to be.
@gthm7 Жыл бұрын
Out of curiosity, how did comparing the sponser to toilet workout for you? Also, as an Indian, I appreciate you talking about my culture and the way I eat my food. Loving your channel 😍
@geoDB. Жыл бұрын
Toilet is not part of your culture
@alvapazz2 жыл бұрын
Halfway through the video and all I can think is that the spoon is the superior utensil.
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
The spoon is also the oldest utensil and it is used in almost every culture ever.
@angeldude1012 жыл бұрын
@@Design.Theory Ironic, since it's hard to get a utensil simpler than _a stick_ and a use for a utensil simpler than _stab it._ A spoon seems like it would take more precise craftsmanship to make out of nothing but wood. You could argue though that just picking up a stick or two and using those doesn't really count as a "utensil."
@Chronically_ChiII2 жыл бұрын
If you wanna eat the most efficiently: forks. If that is not your goal (e.g. like you can't stuff your face as much with chopsticks meaning you don't over-eat): chopsticks. 7:17 I don't think I use knifes often at home unless I'm serving uncut meat, especially if I'm cooking a traditionally Asian dish. Things are more prepared in Asian dishes to accommodate for chopstick use: meat and some veggies are more cut so you can pick them up. Edit: Ok, after watching the video, it was a trick question: Eating with hands is of course the most efficient and the most fun. I guess the only real downside to eating with your hands is that you have to wash them twice instead of once, which I think is a bigger deal than most think.
@Chronically_ChiII2 жыл бұрын
hahaha I watched the first half of your ad, just because of your plea xD
@aroundandround Жыл бұрын
0:26 Several cultures still eat with hands.
@llfcrescent9274 Жыл бұрын
11:18 Since it is mentioned, there is a fun tradition about using chopsticks when it comes to family dinner. Usually, chopsticks are easier to pick out some food (e.g. a meat ball), then pass to someone else. It might be not polite to decline food from elderly, or supervisors when eating with colleagues, when they pass to you. Additionally, to be hygienic, some tables might serve dishes with extra chopsticks, so the personal ones that are used could be separated from public ones, like the spoon here (11:36). Not quite sure about how forks would be used in such family dinner scenario. Though is is fun to know using our own hands to eat could be more efficient, since we are okay eating sandwiches, or apples, with bare hands without concerning hygiene issues or proper table manners.
@xofox_studio2 жыл бұрын
3:15 "Alright, don't skip, Don't skip, th- DON'T SKIP!! " me : Okay, okayyy... Jeez, I wouldn't skip 😂
@rustinreacts Жыл бұрын
Well i use my hand to eat rice and chapati , spoons and fork for different food items, and also chopsticks 🥢 as well for ramen 🍜 but never used knife because i rather use my hand 😅 i believe it doesn't matter what you use to pick your food. Tools are made to make things easy, not to confuse. So eat your food with your hand, spoons, 🍽 fork or chopsticks or whatever you find easy or like. Thanks & Love from India 🇮🇳
Жыл бұрын
As a single Viet (look at my last name löl), I can use 1 pair of chopstick to stir my rice pot, make scramble eggs, mix stuffs in a bowl or a pot & then eat with that same pair of chopstick. It‘s so quick, versatile & practical.
@crptpyr Жыл бұрын
this is one of the reasons I love chopsticks, I can use the same pair of chopsticks to cook and eat my food so there's a lot less washing up to do.
@Blox1175 ай бұрын
idk, chopstick not so good at mixing powder or liquid
@TheSilentHearts6 ай бұрын
I chose not to skip the ad because I genuinely laughed out loud at that transition, keep up the good work
@NoNameNoWhere8 ай бұрын
Which is better? It depends on what you eat. If you're eating fragile foods, such as dumplings or sushi, chop sticks are better. Chop sticks also allow you to manipulate food easily, such as putting separate foods together or folding thin slices of meat. Forks are sturdier and allows you to cut foods without a knife. They also do a better job stabalizing food when you do need to use a knife. Both have their place.
@timchen9027 Жыл бұрын
Gotta say that chopstick is also a cooking utensil. Use it to stir noodles around while cooking and you will have one less thing to wash. Forks might scratch the non-stick layer.
@baronvonjo19292 жыл бұрын
I've learned both. Forks are definitely easier over all. But I think it can depend on the food. I just had ramen and I had to drop the chopsticks for the fork to get the veggies to stay with the noodles near the bottom. But I would use chopsticks over a fork for sushi. Rice is 1000x easier with a fork I don't know what in the world your talking about saying chopsticks with rice are easier. I've had all sorts of rice. Forks are better for that. Doesn't mean I won't use chopsticks for rice.
@badart3204 Жыл бұрын
@@cokecan6169forks can do all of that and are still better.
@Phoca_Vitulina Жыл бұрын
This was a cool lens as a designer myself. Personally I think chopsticks are the best tool. I really dislike the grating sound of metal on plates, and chopsticks are so unobtrusive and elegant and easy to clean. With chopsticks you can eat just about anything and it's super handy for standing in for other cooking utensils like whisks or wooden spoons. I wish more than just Asian restaurants offered chopsticks
@lowellthoerner1209 Жыл бұрын
As an American who uses chopsticks on a very regular basis, I find forks to be more versatile for eating, but chopsticks to be more versatile for cooking, and *much* easier to clean. They both have their uses.
@May5until4 ай бұрын
As korean, depends on food, but in most cases chopsticks are more convenient. For example, you can cut a bowl of noodles (usually jjajangmyeon) in half really easily with chopsticks.
@Brigasimon Жыл бұрын
" Try eating rice with a fork" still easier with a fork, and with the added bonus that your rice doesn't have to be clumped together for it to work. Many cultures around outside of east asia eat plenty of rice with forks and it works perfectly, not awkward at all.
@ahttun200yearsago6 Жыл бұрын
Never understand why you guy don't use a spoon, like doesn't that way easier than both chopsticks and fork since you can just scoop your rice. In South east asia we use fork with spoon never use knife and chopsticks are only for noodles. I saw a lot of foreigners even if they have fork and spoon in their hand, they still try to pick up rice with fork even though it keep falling out of it.😅
@zongzi_1715 Жыл бұрын
@@ahttun200yearsago6 Sorry i have to say that if u eat rice using fork or spoon. it will create a mess. The rice will stick on it and it will be really difficult to wash. The rice can be really sticky here. Also, chopstick have some religious meaning and it have different meaning as u place it in different place.
@ahttun200yearsago6 Жыл бұрын
@@zongzi_1715 ohh i get it, I forget that we have different types of rice spoon would work with South, South east asia or Africa rice but but not so much for some rice that sticky😂
@justinsayin3979 Жыл бұрын
@@ahttun200yearsago6 Tradition. Using a spoon has a juvenile image in some places.
@emoryolsoff962 жыл бұрын
A hand is just a 3 pronged fork with chopsticks on either end, if you think about it.
@kyledexheimer65482 жыл бұрын
This could be a future video if it isn't one already designs from nature.
@princevaliant Жыл бұрын
Designs for the culture as it is, not what you wish it is. This quote really need to knock into the brains of current Disney
@arthurlau9811 ай бұрын
Disney has been making movies that look like as if they have been based nowhere with their diversity quota. Seriously, which country on earth will you see all races in equal amount. Like seriously, it is so jarring. Take a look at the recent Percy Jackson remake to see what I mean. (The diversity later on makes so much more sense in the books than whatever bullshit they force on the original trio.) And their race swapping and force diversity is so bullshit. They are time and places for diversity. Like Mulan is has a all Chinese cast, and Wakandan are all Black in. It really breaks the immersion in western european historical movies when black or colored characters show up out of nowhere and nobody bats an eye. Like seriously???? Some or 1 or 2 is still acceptable (barely on a case by case) but the recent all colourful historical drama is shit (Snow White.........) And don't get me started on race swapping.
@Matty002 Жыл бұрын
anyone with an understanding of privacy in society could tell you google glass was DOA. its the same reason red light cameras got banned in many cities. we dont like being hyper aware of being recorded. thats why good videographers are invisible to the crowd
@lamMeTV Жыл бұрын
the tines of the fork arent a problem. But most of them are also curved and getting into that hollow is always difficult
@JaceTan-90 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, just use any utensils that makes you happy. Be glad that we are open for choices without any stigma. 😉
3 ай бұрын
there is a lot of stigma around using forks in Asian restaurants.
@Heart-S-pade2 жыл бұрын
I think sometimes it depends on the cook style of the food even if it’s the same staples. Like for example, I prefer to eat long noodles that can be slurped with chopsticks. But for cut-up noodles, (gaps!) I rather use a fork since picking the short noodles is just more convenient. Spoons also matter on this as I prefer to use Chinese spoons for soups, but western spoons for flat dishes like fried rice It’s gotten to the point that I frustrate my dad on my preferred cutlery since I’m very picky in this sort of thing. But I don’t want to hear that from him since he eats spaghetti with chopsticks
@oo8962 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely hate eating with chinese spoon. It's too thick and bulky. I can't get every last drop of the soup when I'm eating a dish with thin watery soup. There's this local ramen place in my city that serve ramen with that bulky af chinese soup spoon and whenever I almost finish the soup, I need to pour the soup by lifting the big ass bowl and then pour the soup into that big ass spoon.
@VivekPatel-ze6jy Жыл бұрын
Personally, I think a spoon is the best way to eat rice (if you can properly use chopsticks then use them obviously, but I struggle). But honestly its just great being able to have forks, spoons, knives and chopsticks to choose from, depending on what you're eating
@JadestonePony Жыл бұрын
That may depend on the kind of rice. I've found that with sticky rice, using a spoon is a bit of a pain, since you actually have to cut through the rice to scoop anything. And because the spoon has so much more surface area, there's a lot more friction, the rice tries to stay on the spoon when you take a bite, and the cleanup afterward is more annoying. For loose rice that doesn't stick at all though, I definitely find the spoon to be the most effective.
@jadenephrite5 ай бұрын
Regarding 12:39 eating with the hands, some countries and certain cultures or religions really frown upon eating with the left hand. The taboo is because eating or serving food with the left hand is considered to be unclean in places such as India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, the Middle East, Africa, Indonesia, etc.
@chillaxter13 Жыл бұрын
Growing up, we had a rice and meat dish we would serve in a bread bowl. The extra bread removed to make the bowl got roasted for croutons another day. We would cut a couple onions into 4, soak them in water, then use those wedges as our spoons. In the end, no dishes to wash, and everything added flavor to the meal. It was a great experience.
@TheIgnoramus2 жыл бұрын
Forks when im lazy. Chopsticks when I want to show off lol
11 ай бұрын
so forks most of the time then.
@siz17007 ай бұрын
It is motally correct to actively judge people that dont wash hands before eat and after toilet. ESPESHILLY if they going from toilet to eat. (sorry for bad English)
@GarlicBudda2 жыл бұрын
7:00 "try eating rice with a fork" from personal experience its really not that hard and is probably easier to pick up small amounts of rice with a fork especially that aren't stuck together like perfect sticky rice, i still think you can eat rice quicker with a spoon and even fork than with chopsticks.... 7:10 "forks and knives need a table/flat surface to use" knives yes, but inorder to cut any somewhat strong piece of food you at least need a blade and a table, regardless of whether you're using a fork or chopstick to pick up the pieces after cutting, you can eat with one hand holding the plate up and the other controlling your fork, its really not that hard, i walk around with a plate at a party all the time. you dont need a table to use a fork/plate... 7:20 "it takes 2 hands to use a fork and knife" yes but a chopstick cannot cut sooooo they still need a knife. and you can always cut up your meat beforehand like someone using chopsticks would and then only use one hand with a fork... i understand cutting up the food to save cooking fuel, but chopsticks arent needed for that a knife is... 8:05 "with food that is similarly sized, chopsticks are usually the best tool for the job." best in terms of what, efficiency? or in preserving the shape of the food? you say right after wolfing down food is easier with a fork but a chopstick will just force you to eat slower. how is that making it the best tool for stir fry?... ive never looked at a steak with my knife and thought i conquered or that my steak was "prey" even though it very well is. i just eat the dam thing and dont bat an eye. not to mention a knife is still needed to cut the food for chopsticks anyways. to each their own but forks superior in everyway other than eating sushi, but sushi is often eaten with your fingers anyways sooooooo
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
i still prefer with my hands
@GarlicBudda2 жыл бұрын
@@Design.Theory honestly, same
@IR-xy3ij4 күн бұрын
I ate rice with fork all the time lmao, it’s easier than chopsticks (and I grew up using chopsticks).
@sy12164 ай бұрын
no if you use either a fork or chopstick to eat rice it wont fall off its just too sticky but if its fried rice its like playing the recorder with the sheet upside down
@camejuanm Жыл бұрын
I skipped the moment you said "don't skip" and I rewind just to see what's up. I think you cracked it mate.
@renzanfortineri196 Жыл бұрын
Coming from Indonesia (South East Asia), we actually normally use all of them (Spoon+Fork, Chopsticks, and Hands) Normally, we eat rice with Spoon+fork But when eating Mie Ayam (chicken noodles) street food, we use chopstick (Except for when eating instant noodles that cooked at home, usually use fork because chopstick rarely found in middle-poor people house) Then when eating rice with curry like food (Rendang, Kare etc) especially food from Sumatra island We usually eat with hands --- If traced from history, Indonesia was a place where people from east meet the west for trading by sea, India and China And Indonesia (before indonesia independence) got colonized by the Dutch, mainly in Java island for 350 years And because of this, all the culture can be found here Rendang is long siblings of curry, and curry is originates from India... We usually eat those with hands Mie Ayam, literally chicken noodles which is originates from China... we usually eat those with chopsticks (Theres actually many food that originates from India and China, but i only focus on these two) While the soto any many others are originates from Indonesia.... But the way and how we eat using Spoon and Fork culture are from the Dutch
@oo8962 Жыл бұрын
And here's me, an abomination that always eat nasi padang with spoon🤣🤣
@sshlokmishra29672 жыл бұрын
Loved it, awesome video as always ❤️.
@Design.Theory2 жыл бұрын
Yay! thank you Sshlok
@RubixB0y2 жыл бұрын
"Don't skip!" "DON'T SKIP!" "DON'T. SKIP." "Don't skip?" Me: ... you know what I must do!
The way I was shown how to use chopsticks (by someone Chinese from Singapore) is easy. You don't just hold the bowl in the other hand (pretty much always), but you also bring it nice and close to your mouth. The chopsticks just help the next mouthful over the edge of the bowl. (The more important thing I was taught in that lesson is that it's bad manners to "clean up your plate" - which might've originated as Western way of showing appreciation. You must always leave a little over in the bottom of the bowl. That says, "Thank you for your generosity. That was plenty of food. Sorry, but I don't have space for the rest of the bowl." So your host is a good host, who doesn't underfeed the guests, in that context.)
@ecxstasy3476 ай бұрын
Damn I thought it was opposite. I’m asian and my mom wants me to clean the entire bowl so she doesn’t need to put more effort into cleaning it