Rice truly is a global staple, feeding more than half of the world's population! Its versatility, ease of cultivation, and the way it complements so many dishes make it easy to see why it's so popular. Plus, it's the perfect canvas for a myriad of flavors from different cultures
@HobiAI11 ай бұрын
White rice + SPAM = so yummy!
@Voucher76511 ай бұрын
During World War II marines in the Pacific often ate Japanese rice to keep them going, Sometimes they were infested with maggots and other bugs in the Pacific jungles
@Voucher76511 ай бұрын
@aegyo9272 A product of WWII because Spam was popular in the Pacific Islands like Guam during that era
@Dell-ol6hb11 ай бұрын
Also you can harvest it twice within a year because of how fast it grows, it’s part of why China has always been so populous.
@faiziskandar736411 ай бұрын
Not to mention high in calories! From what I know, they are more efficient in feeding large amounts of people than other crops. This means you could feed more people with every square meter of rice paddy compared to other grain crops like wheat, sorghum, or malt. One of the reasons why East and South Asia has a higher population than any other parts of the world.
@autentik1911 ай бұрын
a story told by ...Carolyn "Beans". :)))
@kylebaguan433711 ай бұрын
😂
@tomquinto116411 ай бұрын
I was also gonna point out how appropriate that was lol
@dsheartnd11 ай бұрын
Rice and Beans go together 😂 Rice just wanted his wife to talk fondly about him
@ThootenTootinTabootin11 ай бұрын
Yeah, It got me as well
@archtansterpg424611 ай бұрын
So I'm not the only one who noticed that..😂
@Baylow9411 ай бұрын
Carolyn Beans does a video about Rice As a Nigerian, I find that coincidence hilarious. We eat Rice and Beans together as a meal, and sometimes they can be played as opposites to each other
@chobies538311 ай бұрын
Same with Mexicans, I've eaten rice with beans many times.
@patmugambo792911 ай бұрын
Lols
@vdkasdness11 ай бұрын
in brazil we eat beans with rice every day
@katkat345811 ай бұрын
In our country, we have some like pork and beans (which is like 99% beans). and I eat it with rice! it tastes awesome!
@legitimatefbr971411 ай бұрын
@@katkat3458are you talking about baked beans with mini sausages?
@KienTran-lt7vs11 ай бұрын
Rice is so important to us Vietnamese we also have different terms for it ▪︎ Rice crops - Lúa ▪︎ Young Rice crops - Mạ ▪︎ Unmilled Rice - Thóc ▪︎ Milled, uncooked Rice - Gạo ▪︎ Dried Rice crops after havesting - Rơm ▪︎ Cooked Rice - Cơm ▪︎ Cooked sticky Rice - Xôi ▪︎ Uncooked sticky Rice - Nếp ▪︎ Steaming (the rice) - Đồ ▪︎ Harden/Burned part of the rice - Cháy ▪︎ (Rice being) burned - Khê ▪︎ (Rice being) too wet, yet uncooked - Trương ▪︎ Broken, uncooked rice - Tấm ▪︎ Rice bran - Cám ▪︎ Rice husk - Trấu ▪︎ Rice cooking failure in a spectacular way - Trên sống dưới khê, tứ bề nhão nhoét
@tdman11 ай бұрын
Vietnamese is so fascinating. ☺️
@joshuataylor355011 ай бұрын
Is there a word for rice cultivation that causes climate change?
@thang114411 ай бұрын
@@joshuataylor3550yes, its câm mồm
@theregonbe0take211 ай бұрын
@@thang1144 Chịu :))))
@baotranchaungoc625411 ай бұрын
@@thang1144 Haha, hilarious.
@GaudiFanYAY11 ай бұрын
An additional possible bonus of using the "drain and flood" method this video advocates, is that it could also act as an alternative pesticide control. Nothing too amazing, but letting the fields dry out can kill off plants that only thrive in flooded areas, and flooding the area afterwards can kill whatever plants that took root when it was dry. Plus other small pests, like bugs, could also be killed by the flood if they aren't suitable flooded areas.
@dominique-valois11 ай бұрын
@RepentandbelieveinJesusChrist5 Jesus will help increase rice yeild if you convert. I call upon power of the holy spirit to multiply the grains of rice in this paddy field.
@sadanikadayarathna47357 ай бұрын
@dominique-valois😂
@NazriB7 ай бұрын
Lies again? NASCAR GrabCar Nasi Goreng
@k1j1j1j7 ай бұрын
@@dominique-valois hippie sky wizard will make your rice one bajillion times better with this one easy trick!
@ishaalimtiaz6715Ай бұрын
Actually you're wrong, the Jesus I read about in the bible is the sort of guy who would do nice things even for people who weren't christian. Not that I believe in the biblical version of Jesus, but shouldn't you follow the Jesus in the bible instead of the Jesus you made up in your own head?@@dominique-valois
@Sunflowersarepretty11 ай бұрын
As a asian rice is literally our staple diet. Can't live without rice. ❤❤ I didn't actually know that growing rice also hurts the environment. You learn something new every day.
@LtZetarn11 ай бұрын
Every farming hurt environment one way or another. There are no clean way to grow your foods.
@mrcat643311 ай бұрын
Rice has been grown for thousands of years. Fossil fuel burning is the main cause of climate change. Fossil fuel companies like to push the blame around to anything they like including something as simple as eating rice. We don't need to stop eating rice. We need to stop using billions of cars and thousands of ships and airplanes everyday.
@elitecol6911 ай бұрын
Enjoy your diabetes
@theenlightenedone128311 ай бұрын
Uncle Roger approves hiyaaa
@cardboard95211 ай бұрын
same (not the Asian part). Whenever I'm hungry and don't want to cook I eat 4 large bowls of rice with whats probably too much soysauce
@aldhieu.a.teodocio879611 ай бұрын
Rice is so important for us Filipinos we even have different terms for it ▪︎ Rice crops - Palay ▪︎ Rice grains - Bigas ▪︎ Rice grain - Butil ng palay/bigas ▪︎ Steamed Rice - Kanin/Sinaing ▪︎ Fried Rice - Sinangag ▪︎ Burned part of the rice - Tutong ▪︎ Foamy excess water from the steamed rice - Am ▪︎ Cold Rice - Bahaw ▪︎ Rice that has absorbed so much water - Malata ▪︎ Rice that's too dry, not yet cooked - Manigat ▪︎ Sticky Rice - Kakanin ▪︎ Way of cooking rice - Pagsaing
@elitecol6911 ай бұрын
Also the reason why they have such a high diabetes rate
@aldhieu.a.teodocio879611 ай бұрын
@@elitecol69 true lmao. a lot of oldies have type 2 diabetes
@Lotschi11 ай бұрын
Wow, amazing! 😄
@Lotschi11 ай бұрын
@@elitecol69How is this related?
@ai_rg11 ай бұрын
In Javanese of Indonesia too :v Rice Crop : Pari Rice Stem : Damen Rice Grain (Peeled) : Beras Rice Grain (Unpeeled From It Husk) : Gabah Rice Husk/Hull : Dedak/Dedek Smooth Rice Husk : Bekatul/Katul Rice (Cooked) : Sega/Sego Spilled Rice Grains : Upa/Upo Leftover Dry Rice : Karak Broken Rice : Menir Rice Drainage Water (After Washed) : Leri
@tsukuyomirai526411 ай бұрын
Rice is so important in Nepal that it has different names in every form. Sita- a grain of cooked rice Bhat-a cooked rice Chamal-an uncooked rice Dhan-a rice within a husk Bala-a dry fully ripped paddy Even so, it is also known as gold that grows and August 1 is a Paddy Day in Nepal. A small myth/superstition to add: It is said that, if you step over rice water, your eyesight will be poor when you grow old. So my mom would never dispose ricewater in an open area.
@shishirkarki578211 ай бұрын
What's august 1 , I only heard about ASAR 15
@dangerouscolors11 ай бұрын
in the tagalog language in the philippines we have similar words for different forms of rice too! palay - any stage of rice before husking/milling, whether its growing in the field or harvested bigas - husked uncooked rice kanin - rice in general/cooked rice tutong - burnt crispy rice on the bottom of the pot malata - mushy soft rice that was cooked with too much watef bahaw - leftover rice cooked yesterday (not spoiled! will probably be either reheated or turned into fried rice)
@nidhisawant431311 ай бұрын
Idk about other Indian languages but we have very similar words in marathi. Shita, bhaat, tandool, dhaanya, etc
We have similar names in Bangla and other Indian languages too
@soumyadeep511 ай бұрын
As an Indian Bengali, rice is so important food for us that we consume it in many different ways *Chaal* - Uncooked rice *Bhaat* - Cooked rice *Dhan* - Rice with the husk attached *Muri* - Puffed rice (Most staple Bengali light meal. You can mix n number of items with muri) *Chira (poha)* - Flattened rice *Khoi* - Popped rice *Murki* - Popped rice mixed in hot n sweet jaggery *Chal er gura* - Powdered new rice. *Pitha* - A variety of winter dessert made using powdered rice, milk, jaggery of khejur, coconut, etc. *Khichudi* - Rice and lentils slow cooked together *Payesh (Rabdi)* - Rice slowly cooked in milk and jaggery or sugar plus dry fruits *Panta* - Cooked rice left submerged in water overnight *Bhuna Khichudi* - A dryer version of khichudi with added dry fruits *Chal bhaja* - Fried uncooked rice *Gola* - Overcooked sticky rice *Maar* - The liquid starch of rice *Pulao* - Flavoured and spiced rice with dry fruits and nuts *Biryani* - Rice cooked with spices and meat *Atop* - A variety of scented rice *Gobindobhog* - A variety of scented sacred rice used for making prasad *Tulaipanji* - A variety of mild scented rice eaten best with meat *Basmati* - A variety of long grained scented rice *Dheki Chata (ঢেঁকি ছাঁটা)* - Brown rice, usually eaten by people who are sick *Tush/Khosa/Bhusi* - The husk of rice, used to feed cattle *Khor* - Straw or hay, used to feed cattle, & used in construction as insulator *Dhaner Seesh* - The pinnacle or sheaf of the paddy has always been traditionally used in numerous ways in our sanatani culture *Hariya/Pochani* - An alcoholic drink made from fermenting rice And the list goes on
@HAHAd211 ай бұрын
Professional yapper
@rodrozil654411 ай бұрын
You forgot about the one and only South Asian favourite, "Jaalmuri/spicy puffed rice"!!
@soumyadeep511 ай бұрын
@@rodrozil6544 Yes. Thank you :)
@vmvengsub381211 ай бұрын
So is Vietnam, and I suspect that so are countries with history of rice cultivation tbh.
@jumbojumbo686611 ай бұрын
dudes yapping rice
@HumbleAshe11 ай бұрын
Ah rice, so simple yet so iconic and important as a food staple. ESPECIALLY for Asian cultures and for people in my family and among many of my friends, rice makes up so much of the various foods we eat regularly.
@nikyabodigital11 ай бұрын
It has indeed become too much of a culture that looking at people who don't eat rice feels like an alien.
@derkaiser42011 ай бұрын
I am actually surprised they didn't mention how rice farmers get infected by parasitic worms at an alarming rate. They then contract some pretty terrible diseases as a result. Parasitic worms kill thousands of people a year in pretty horrible ways. I wouldn't be overly concerned with the methane distribution by flooding rice fields but instead making it a breading ground for worms. We should focus on draining these fields for the health of poor farmers because worms are very easy to get rid of by simple medications but most farmers cannot afford it.
@Kall_sta11 ай бұрын
Not just schistosomiasis etc, but also malaria in the African continent!
@boringbilal11 ай бұрын
It's amazing how this staple has been so integral to many culture cuisines for millenia!
@waterpark4911 ай бұрын
Rice are one of god's greatest gift to us. From one rice you can grow it to thousands of rice. Rice can be stored for a long time without preservative. You can cook and eat it easily without many process like wheat. It can blend it to any other dish. If you turn it to powder, it can be use to make many delicious cake and so on.. rice is indeed bringing life.
@windygrass980711 ай бұрын
So true! I dont know any better way to put it than this.
@Phlegethon7 ай бұрын
The people who discovered rice don’t believe in god
@Odia_bhaina11 ай бұрын
We plant rice during the monsoon rains. So mostly doesn't need irrigation and i think it actually helps prevent flooding by storing so much water in the fields.
@FajriSuryaPutra10 ай бұрын
Almost all Asians can't live without rice. You can eat anything from burgers to donuts, but eventually it feels strange not to eat rice for a day. So we still eat a bowl of rice at least twice a day even though it's just a small amount.
@papashield37 ай бұрын
Sounds like addiction
@gorilladisco910811 ай бұрын
The video didn't explain "why is rice so popular?".
@バンシアの8 ай бұрын
Flooding rice field is make able to grow without fertilizer, which means more rice, more population, so Many people make rice if they can.
@gemmeldrakes27588 ай бұрын
The simple reason is the yield. 1 cup of dry rice can become up to 4 cups of cooked rice, depending on the type. No other staple crop does that. A pound of wheat flour does not quadruple in volume when you make bread from it, neither does a cup of cornmeal become 4 cups of cooked corn meal when you cook it. It takes less rice to feed many more people.
@gorilladisco91088 ай бұрын
@@gemmeldrakes2758 But popcorn can double that. 😅... one spoonful of corn can become 4 cup of popcorn. 🤔 don't kill me, sensei 😰
@gemmeldrakes27588 ай бұрын
@@gorilladisco9108 I forgot about popcorn. But perhaps it is not as versatile? You can serve a lot of different entrees with rice.
@gorilladisco91088 ай бұрын
@@gemmeldrakes2758 I think so too. The expansion of popcorn was filled with air, while rice was filled with water. That gives rice more filling sense than popcorn.
@erinboateng596111 ай бұрын
I'm from Ghana and I love rice. We use it to make many different dishes but my favorite is Jollof Rice.
@sagirahmed160111 ай бұрын
As an Assamese, rice is what I eat for my breakfast, morning snacks, lunch, evening snacks and dinner. Sweets made during festivals and special occasions, called pitha are also made of rice and rice flour, called pitha-guri (pitha powder). Rice is so centric here that the expression "bhat khala?" (Have you eaten rice?) is often used in the place of "what's up" or "how are you?". In Assam there are museums displaying hundreds of native varieties of rice from Assam. Some of the popular varieties include: *Joha* - The popular fragrance rice that is also used to make Assamese payox/pah (rice pudding), pulao etc. At my home, we make biryani with joha more often than with basmati lol (basmati is a newly introduced imported variety here). *Bora* - The beloved sticky rice that's used to make all the Assamese sweet dishes. It's the rice that's pounded to make pithaguri. We can make quick payox also with it. *Boka/Kumol saul* - The magic rice Others include ahu, aijong, bao, boro, lahi and many more. There are many terms we use to refer to different forms of rice, such as: Dhan - paddy, unhusked rice Kothia - rice sapling Saul - husked but uncooked rice Bhat - cooked rice Sira - flattered rice Muri - puffed rice Akhoi - popped rice Xandoh - coarse powder of parched rice Hurum - another type of puffed rice Pithaguri - rice flour, used to make Pithas (Assamese cakes), some larus (ladoos). It's also often added in curries to make it thicker. Payox/Pah - rice pudding Põita bhat - rice soaked in water overnight, then served with various dishes. Summer food Pulao - rice cooked with meat or vegetables Xaz - rice beer Mar - liquid starch of rice Khud saul - broken pieces of rice Tuh - rice husk powder used to feed animals
@wrkris090511 ай бұрын
As a South Korean, that bibimbap thumbnail attracted me a little too much... that I actually didn't know the title until I started writing this comment😅
@SkyGuardianHelmet11 ай бұрын
I had thought everyone ate rice as a main dish when I was small. Then I realised that it was only in asia. In India bread was something sick people eat. And noodles was fast food. Chapati/Roti was made sometimes in my home but it wasn't like a daily food. Honestly I've seen paddy fields flooded full of muddy water, never thought about the environmental impact it has. I didn't even know why they flooded it. I visited my father's village and always hated walking in the thin wooden planks😅
@RoyMatzem11 ай бұрын
In Brazil rice and beans in the main food for everyone
@ai_rg11 ай бұрын
There are 2 types of rice varieties, flooded land rice and dry land rice. Flooded land rice variety needs lot of water during it cultivation, when the dry land rice is more resistant to drought than flooded land rice
@bletwort29208 ай бұрын
You must be South Indian. In Hindi, roti means bread. Rozi-roti literally "daily bread" means livelihood. Bread is more common than rice. Even Maharashtra eats more wheat than rice.
@SkyGuardianHelmet8 ай бұрын
@@bletwort2920 yes rice is used everywhere here. Daily rice with milk or curd, sweets made from rice, idli and dosa too. And also during functions like children's birthdays or marriages where they throw rice at them. But it's getting costly nowadays so more chapatis now😅
@spacetime-cc9eh3 ай бұрын
@@bletwort2920 In China, southerners also like to eat rice more, while northerners like to eat pasta more.
@deadsoulvamp11 ай бұрын
My grandfather had large rice fields in westen Nepal.. they used to alternate wetting the rice fields. Filling the fields with water, let it dry it out... and then refilling the fields again. And it is still being done that way, but not because of methane problem..
@missMcMartin11 ай бұрын
“Why rice is popular?” Turned into a lecture on its causing global warming 😖
@captlove87887 ай бұрын
Yeah the script is quite literally bad mouth rice for half its content. Coming from someone who probably hardly ever eat any rice their whole life, except a few times in Mexican restaurant.
@pkuvincentsu3 ай бұрын
Yeah, it doesn't feel right. The global warming issue needs to be talked about, but the bait and switch of this video feels very... racially charged.
@amanpathak876311 ай бұрын
Not just that, the way rice is cooked also varies a lot. In India (I'm Indian), the most go to way to cook rice is using a pressure cooker. In other Asian countries, rice cooker is used heavily. In the west, rice is cooked in an open vessel. Rice is love. Great video, very informative.
@TheAlchemist108911 ай бұрын
A pressure cooker is a new invention. Just cook it in a pot that's better. Even for khichdi or pulav it's better
@nidhisawant431311 ай бұрын
Everyone uses cooker today. We use pressure cooker. In east, southeast as well as west, they use electric cooker. Its a new phenomenon. Before that everyone used pots and open vessels. I still prefer using open vessels over cooker myself.
@YoungGandalf232511 ай бұрын
You know a video is going to be good when it starts with a Mitch Hedberg quote.
@paleoph616811 ай бұрын
A TED-Ed video on *rice* by a person whose name is *Beans.* Yep, checks out.
@BUTTERCUPJones11 ай бұрын
as a pacific islander, rice is life.
@HaluhalongPuna11 ай бұрын
rice is also death if you eat too much (diabetes)
@mechanikalbull562611 ай бұрын
Where does your rice grow? There's literally small countries like Tuvalu soaked underwater
@jumbojumbo686611 ай бұрын
@@mechanikalbull5626 they dont they just import rice because their land will be susceptible to erosion or waves from the sea but also their lands are small to even grow rice
@headlessspaceman568111 ай бұрын
In Louisiana they have figured out a way to raise and harvest crawdads in the rice fields while they are flooded. I don't know what kind of ecological impact this has but it seems brilliant to be producing a grain and a protein in the same place at the same time.
@angelheart170111 ай бұрын
In various asian countries, a similar practice exists where they raise koi fish in rice patties.
@morrismonet355411 ай бұрын
Crawfish Etouffee and rice. Perfect.
@curtisthomas26707 ай бұрын
In Trinidad and Tobago it was cascadura, a type of catfish that can even survive in mud alone
@BRZandaz10 ай бұрын
As a semi southerner (USA) we definitely have rice with a lot of meals.. my favorite being rice with chicken or hamburger steak and gravy.. Rice , tomatoes and okra is legit too 😋
@alarcon9911 ай бұрын
Never knew rice was farmed in South America. Thanks!
@toolbaggers11 ай бұрын
Rice is farmed on every continent except for Antarctica. Some rice has probably even been grown in a lab experiment in Antarctica.
@curtisthomas26707 ай бұрын
Talking about ancient times
@nathalia574311 ай бұрын
We usually eat rice and beans everyday here in Brazil. We just can't get enough! 🍚❤
@enacrt11 ай бұрын
Sempre tem um BR 😂😂🇧🇷🇧🇷 tamo junto igual arroz e feijão
@nathalia574311 ай бұрын
@@enacrt KKKKKKKKKK união do prato feito 💪🇧🇷
@VCT333311 ай бұрын
Proving once again that Rice and Beans is the ideal combination to provide nutritious meals!! Also, for all the different varieties of rice, there's only 2 species that are the progenitors: Short Grain (Oryza Sativa) and Long Grain (Oryza Indica). Short grain exudes starch when cooked so has more stickiness needed for Risottos and Paellas etc., and Long grain is better for making Pilafs and Biryanis where you want the cooked grains to remain separate and not get lumpy.
@Viewer-zs6xj11 ай бұрын
The word for eating food 吃饭 , is literally directly translated to ‘eat rice’ in chinese
@renatoafonsomaiacarneiro95011 ай бұрын
Here in Brazil, a meal without rice is no meal at all! Rice, beans, meat and salad is our standard lunch 😅
@parthoghosh413511 ай бұрын
I am an Indian Hindu and was not expecting to hear the word "annaprasan" .. great
@interferenzbrille_254211 ай бұрын
"Why is rice so popular and how can we reduce its carbondioxide emissions" is the real content ;) Nice!
@Cdroh11 ай бұрын
Every video on this channel seems to go this way, and their totally clueless there’s not a hope the way rice is cultivated will change go to these countries and you’ll see how poor rice farmers are they could not care less about greenhouse emissions
@toolbaggers11 ай бұрын
@@CdrohLearn when to use "they're."
@timmy-wj2hc11 ай бұрын
The Global South should sue US and Europeans for contaminating the world.m, and shoould demand reparations.
@kirbya954511 ай бұрын
@@toolbaggersbro who cares 😭
@Carbon-fan4 ай бұрын
@@Cdroh They will soon care about carbon emissions.
@ashitkotian239611 ай бұрын
Rice is not just a food, its like a symbol of life and a symbol of culture often used in rituals.
@TaLeng202311 ай бұрын
Alternate wetting can work as a deterrent against the invasive golden snail if everyone sync their flooding cycles. The snails lay their eggs above the waterline coz it can get damaged by water. Farmers can have the water level low while the snails are breeding and then raise it once the snails are done laying eggs.
@StanAllKpopGroups1311 ай бұрын
Paella really is a culinary masterpiece
@pdls411 ай бұрын
yes but not the paella shown in this video 😭
@shahinchoudhury825611 ай бұрын
1:55, like in Japan, in Bengali culture "bhat khawa" also means meal, (bhat is cooked rice, khawa is 'to eat') "bhat khaitm" ( want to eat cooked rice) means "i am hungry"
@KrasnyPetrograd11 ай бұрын
Also in Thai, ข้าว (rice) can also means meal.
@Arswampt718 ай бұрын
Thats also in assamese
@thaisgregorio273411 ай бұрын
I am Brazilian and I love rice. I feel like my meals are incomplete without it
@September200410 ай бұрын
0:02 That Mitch Hedberg line is great.
@Dheeraj537311 ай бұрын
Rice cultivation has a rich history dating back thousands of years. Originating in Asia, rice cultivation began in China around 5000 BCE and later spread to other parts of Asia, including India and Southeast Asia. It played a crucial role in the development of ancient civilizations, such as the Indus Valley and Chinese cultures. Rice cultivation techniques spread to the Middle East, Africa, and Europe over time. In the Middle Ages, the Moors introduced rice to Spain, and from there, it spread to Italy. European colonial powers further contributed to the global dissemination of rice, bringing it to the Americas during the Age of Exploration. In the modern era, rice has become a staple food worldwide, with various varieties adapted to different climates. It plays a vital role in the economies and diets of many countries, particularly in Asia, where it remains a dietary staple for billions of people.
@jigsaw225311 ай бұрын
Thank you chatgpt
@Dheeraj537311 ай бұрын
@@jigsaw2253 😑
@GoyFromFinland11 ай бұрын
@@Dheeraj5373 Sorry chatgpt
@jamescorvus670911 ай бұрын
Rice planting didn't spread into West Africa, they developed it INDEPENDENTLY. As it was said in the video. They had another rice species in West Africa that the Mande Peoples and other Niger Congo speakers developed on their own.
@Dheeraj537311 ай бұрын
@@jamescorvus6709 Africans have rich history and their own customs and culture. They definitely grow different types of rich but nowadays Asian and Indian rich are more popular 😏
@Dheeraj537311 ай бұрын
In 1961, the total world production was 216 million tonnes. But world rice production in 2023 was 523.9 million tonnes. So you can easily visualise how important food rice is .😊
@Tomer_Zaitsev11 ай бұрын
The population grew around 2.5 times in those years. So did the rice production. No surprise here
@Dheeraj537311 ай бұрын
@@Tomer_Zaitsev hit hard
@MapleRose911 ай бұрын
I learned so much about growing (and harvesting) rice from the game Sakuna of Rice and Ruin
@geeksdo1tbetter8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the rec!
@jonathankater749111 ай бұрын
As a University student, I’m humbled to know the roots of the food that has been there for me😂😂
@adriand28955 күн бұрын
Rice is so versatile. Can be used in a wide variety of dishes!
@月-s6w11 ай бұрын
I live in Japan.There’s "mochi ",which make from rice. It is eaten in New Year. I would like you to eat it!
@chobies538311 ай бұрын
I live in the United States and most stores have mochi, it might be an Americanized version though.
@AnAn-qx1vl2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the informative video. I'm from an agricultural country, Vietnam, which is notable for growing rice. As a kid, I had a chance to take part in collecting paddy fields with my family. It's such an unforgettable experience in my life!
@kimandre33611 ай бұрын
The Chinese character 飯 originally meant cooked grain as opposed to wheat or millet-based noodles or flatbread-like foodstuff. It became cooked rice much later.
11 ай бұрын
Here in Colombia we say "a lunch without rice is not lunch" and I like that we share the rice love with the asians because rice is pretty delicious
@TaLeng202311 ай бұрын
What do Columbians eat as staple prior to the Spanish arrival?
@echognomecal674211 ай бұрын
Another example of rice & Beans going well together.
@joshy1234_53 ай бұрын
here in the philippines we eat rice everyday morning, lunch, meryenda(3pm snacks), evening, midnight snacks, we cant live without rice
@perpetualbystander451611 ай бұрын
"But going against the grain could be just what we need" Nice one. 😄👍
@inuhundchien604111 ай бұрын
Huh I don't know about other countries but Im pretty sure in mine the rice paddy is flooded by rain so we don't actually 'use' water we just get what's there. Also the field will be let dry when it's not rainy season. Flooded field is also a good place to put in fish and shrimps.
@CirculatedFragrance11 ай бұрын
Every food production hurt the environment one way or the other however, its important to know that we shouldnt go against the farmers but we should blame corporates
@morrismonet355411 ай бұрын
Eat what you like and ignore the Climate Nazis.
@Wired4Life211 ай бұрын
@@morrismonet3554 Especially those with private jets and McMansions, resulting in them contributing a larger carbon footprint that the vast majority of us peasants. :b
@TaLeng202311 ай бұрын
@@Wired4Life2yeah like Taylor Swift lecturing us peasants while she emit more than we emit a year whenever she decided to visit her bf
@woofy83732 ай бұрын
Searching this because growing up i was heavenly surprised that people in some countries don't usually eat rice every meal
@lucianoosorio594211 ай бұрын
“Ok thanks to your new friend Ping, you spend tonight picking up every single grain of rice and tomorrow the real work begins.” Shang
@bubbleslovesmichael8195828 күн бұрын
Learn something new everyday! I’m literally obsessed with white rice. It goes with everything!!!
@squalltheonly11 ай бұрын
Because it tastes so goooood. I like to put shredded mozzarella cheese on it after it finishes cooking, mix it, and leave it on the rice cooker on the warm setting for a few minutes
@manahelh.610411 ай бұрын
Without even watching the video is simple coming from an Afghan person because it’s Delicious YUMMY god sent
@afan232611 ай бұрын
Such a nice animation bit in 1:33 with the European settlers coming in
@Willchannel907 ай бұрын
Many chefs from Asia applauded these.
@elijahwakili978411 ай бұрын
Of course, Beans knows rice best
@ZZ-sg6bk8 ай бұрын
1:50 Not just India and Nepal, also Bangladesh. In Bangladesh, Hindus also feed their babies rice as their first solid food in a ceremony called "Anaprashan". Would request you to keep in mind Bangladeshi Hindus exists.
@Boop-beep-bap6 ай бұрын
I feel you bro. But sadly they are considered minority in Pakistan and Bangladesh
@sanidhyatiwari724611 ай бұрын
Love your work ted ed Always grateful to you❤❤❤
@RadenYohanesGunawan11 ай бұрын
I love rice! Literally the staple food for us Indonesians. 🍱
@TheTimeweaver5 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, the title is misleading. This video is not really about why rice is popular but how rice contributes to green house gas emissions.
@haze30011 ай бұрын
It's important to us as a Filipino. and we have different terms for it: Palay - Unmilled rice Bigas - milled rice Kanin - cooked rice, rice in general Bahaw - cooked rice typically a leftover rice from previous dinner Sinangag - fried rice Lugaw - Rice porridge Malagkit - glutinous rice, typically used for "kakanin" or rice cake and desserts. Kakanin - a rice cake with different varieties. Tutong - burned or overcooked rice Mumo - a pieces of rice that was left on plate or table Sinaing - a rice that is currently on cooking process Ampaw - puffed rice and many more in different regions. That's how we love rice, unfortunately, white rice is really popular and it's unhealthy if consumed too much.
@Elefant575911 ай бұрын
Rice isn’t new but its quality is still needed.
@sadiajavaiddd11 ай бұрын
In Kashmiri too, "batt" means both rice and meal. You could eat an entire large pizza, 10 sandwitches and a kg of fruit, but unless you eat rice, its not considered a meal.
@nimomemre655011 ай бұрын
Biryani Lovers ! Show your presence 🖐️
@vytuong40163 ай бұрын
My family also keeps the tradition of growing rice for many generations.
@SteveJian11 ай бұрын
Rice plays an integral part in the food culture of Asian countries; therefore, as a Taiwanese, I'm really surprised to know that rice growing can cause global warming, which is usually associated with animal farming, industrial development, and heavy traffic.
@davidtogi587811 ай бұрын
Well tbh feeding more than half of the world population with just 12% methane is a big positive than the negative
@SteveJian11 ай бұрын
@@davidtogi5878 While you probably made a good point, some people argue that Asians typically have a lean figure because our diet is tipped badly toward the favor of rice.
@davidtogi587811 ай бұрын
@@SteveJian a bit lean or even plump were never a bad thing anyway. As long as it doesn't goes underweight nor overweight. 😉
@sapphyrus11 ай бұрын
Rice indeed complements so many different food types, both plant and meat. I prefer it as my carbohydrate intake compared to wheat in meals.
@CrossTheGoat11 ай бұрын
I'm from south east Asia, we don't see rice as a popular food we got so used to it that we don't see it as a food anymore instead we see it as a requirement when we eat food, for instance when you go to school you need a bag to carry your books and pen its a requirement but optional you can still carry your books and pens without the bag but its also inconvinient and uncomfortable, same to rice. When we asians eat, rice is required but also optional since we can still eat without rice but for us it is inconvinient and uncomfortable to eat without it. Unlike western diet where they can eat anything like for example they could just eat chicken wings from mcdonald and go to statbucks then call it a lunch, but for us breakfast, lunch, and dinner always requires rice. That's why people here know how to cook dishes, unlike americans who don't, the only thing they know to cook are fried chicken, smoked steak, roasted turkey.
@Electrobuzz1711 ай бұрын
Ah you spoke my mind. I now live in a different city for work and try to adapt to sandwich burgers meals for convience but i never fill full unless i eat rice be it ant dish biryani, fried rice ,steamed. When i look back on my childhood i realise i have been eating rice 3 times a day at home😂. Love from india
@tomkoelmans485911 ай бұрын
Saying methanogens are the only bacteria known to produce methane is saying like all the vegetarians are the only humans known not to eat meat...
@lias93411 ай бұрын
Millennials depend on rice as their staple diet, and as population surge, we cannot control its production rather opt for a sustainable method. But what we can *control* is Human-induced GHG which was shown vividly in the video by those- _Vehicular exhausts steering through the fields_ Thanks for the info. ;))❤⚡
@palakbatra493211 ай бұрын
Love the background music
@milamaystar11 ай бұрын
They forgot to mention Bangladesh. Rice is literally our national food. It should've included
@秋声-s4e11 ай бұрын
It’s hard to imagine how my grandparents used to cook rice in a pot. It seems they also steam rice? I can only use a rice cooker!
@renn577111 ай бұрын
In the north east part of India, in the state of mizoram, we mizo have this word "Chaw" meaning "food", but when we use the word "Chaw" it mostly refers to rice, meaning that we believed that rice is the main food. Bread if also a food but for us, rice is the main thing, and bread is not consume for breakfast but is more viewed as a food to be eaten as a lunch.
@hib1s11 ай бұрын
doesnt most of east india just use "bhaat" for meal?, like in chhattisagarh we say bhaat which includes whatever sabzi there's on the side.
@blazer954711 ай бұрын
North east of India are sino Tibetan people.@@hib1s
@shreyabagati802011 ай бұрын
@@hib1s I'm from North India and we also use our term for rice to denote a whole meal.
@arunjosephshadrach953911 ай бұрын
Even down south in Tamilnadu, people often use the word "sappadu" (means meal in tamil) to refer to just plain cooked rice. Though in cities that usage has decreased.
@lemonz176911 ай бұрын
Same in Myanmar next door.
@guzal611610 ай бұрын
Hi I am from Uzbekistand and every year we bring up rice and it is not as easy as you think to harvest it 'cause it depends lots of energy and action❤🎉
@EducationalChannel283498 ай бұрын
Who here likes rice? 😂
@Spreadlove29917 ай бұрын
Not likes loves rice❤❤❤
@wati_do6 ай бұрын
Why are you laughing?
@dilipaweeratunga2 ай бұрын
More than those who don't😂
@basantapant19811 ай бұрын
I am so happy that TED-ED mentioned hinduism and its importance of Rice in India & Nepal
@doggonemess111 ай бұрын
0:16 I had to listen to this sentence again. "This beloved CROP...". XD
@coniferous4637Ай бұрын
Same I hit rewind 4 times and it wasn’t until I turned on captions I got it 😂
@sedzanithilivhali8827 ай бұрын
Carolyn Beans was born for this
@als.c11 ай бұрын
Rice is life
@Beverly27-o7h24 күн бұрын
As a Chinese,i really love rice.Especially fried rice,tastes really good
@humanorion38211 ай бұрын
The Nigerian jollof is definitely one of the most iconic rice dishes in the entire planet.
@toolbaggers11 ай бұрын
Said no Ghanaian
@dedinacid45811 ай бұрын
As a Brazilian, I eat rice every day, I love it
@rcxb111 ай бұрын
Title is click-bait. Watched through the whole video. Not one possible answer provided as to "Why is rice so popular?". Instead, all about growing rice/effects on the environment.
@logank4448 ай бұрын
I'm sick of being dooped
@Dark.knight.among.us_7 ай бұрын
Insane
@yusufrosyid356111 ай бұрын
I don't know that planting the rice have a huge impact for environment. Thanks for the great insight😎👌
@victoriayanto211311 ай бұрын
4:28 and our balls full
@almalyncabansag44429 ай бұрын
In the Philippines we had a vierity of rice planted on the mountain not paddies but directly at a dry slightly moist soil called Hasik. Saddly it is not grown in our village anymore since the introduction of different kinds of rice seeds. Only less than 5 farmers grow it in our province
@Mcky-lw1zb11 ай бұрын
Haahaaa...her last name is Beans and she's talking about rice.
@MoroccanCanadianFromToronto11 ай бұрын
Rice was not known in my home country Morocco🇲🇦, it was introduced in the 40s. Bread is the most popular food 🥯
@bonbonbonbons11 ай бұрын
Ironically instant ramen was invented because of a reversed situation in postwar Japan. When US gave wheat to Japan to make bread one guy figured out that bread was not a common thing in Japan and ramen noodles were more popular, he set out to create ramen instead. He ended up creating instant ramen by flashfreezing ramen dough.
@DougOliveira11 ай бұрын
In Brazil we plant rice in the dry soil. So, 1 more point to us, for not creating more greenhouse gasses.
@paul547524 күн бұрын
Farmer in Asia here, actually Rice don't need to submerge in water all the time. A matter of fact it needs to be dried up. So the soil would not be mud, it would only be submerge for couple of days. Rice would die if you submerge it with water for all of its time. Also it is difficult to harvest if the soil is wet or muddy.
@vickykomsky37110 ай бұрын
So basically this video wasn't about rice per say but about gas emission
@LuxuriantCarrot11 ай бұрын
I think its perfect that the person giving the talk about rice is named beans