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14 votes
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Seal, whale, reindeer – and plankton? When your restaurant is high in the Arctic Circle you have to get pretty creative with your fine dining.
12 votes -
What are some lesser known food and cooking YouTubers?
Feel free to define lesser known how you like. Here's my list. Most of these have fewer than 100,000 subscribers. Some of them have fewer than 10,000 subs. Al Brady (32k subs) Has a nice mix of...
Feel free to define lesser known how you like. Here's my list. Most of these have fewer than 100,000 subscribers. Some of them have fewer than 10,000 subs.
Has a nice mix of sweet and savoury food. Has a lot of videos below ten minutes - there's a rapid pacing here that avoids the problems of TikTok / YT Shorts cooking. Enough time to explain what he's doing, no useless padding.
A reasonably new channel (only 33 videos as I post this). He has a method for pricing the recipes, and we can always argue about whether that makes sense or not, but at least it's consistent across his videos so viewers get an idea of relative costs. The recipes are simple. They're aimed at providing tasty filling food for cheap. The production values are low - no fancy lighting, no fancy camera, the kitchen table looks a bit rickety.
He's from Bristol (South West UK) and has the regional accent to prove it. He visits and reviews street food and cafés. I love videos like this - show-casing normal eateries. It's rough and ready - he sometimes includes swearing. And he's usually positive, or occasionally very mildly not positive. But I like that. He does a mix of shorts and long form - the long form does tend to be a bit calmer and explanatory.
Features food, mostly street food or bread, from Iran. I like the "show don't tell" aspect of these videos. There are loads of street food videos and I watch quite a few. Lots of videos are presented by people that I don't enjoy watching.
Another street food channel, again from Iran. This is the video that I really like - street food often looks like it has been rapidly cooked, but there are examples of slow cooked food. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDJowrQQisg
At over 100k subs this probably doesn't belong here, but I think this fits here because many of their videos get fewer than 1000 views. Views are picking up recently. It's a great channel if you're interested in fine dining in the UK. There are a huge number of interviews with some very very good chefs here, and often they demonstrate one of their dishes.
He researches regional dishes from France, Spain, and Portugal and he claims to present traditional "authentic" versions of various dishes. I've only just started watching, and I'm not sure if I'll end up finding that he's not for me.
15 votes -
Looking for feedback on some noodle dishes, which one is better looking/presented
18 votes -
Michelin-starred chef Rasmus Munk has teamed up with Florida-based startup Space Perspective to launch six diners at a time up to the outer atmospheric layer
7 votes -
What cooking techniques need more evidence?
There are many tips or techniques that are strongly recommended for cooking, but it's hard to know which are evidence based and which are just passed along because that's what people always do....
There are many tips or techniques that are strongly recommended for cooking, but it's hard to know which are evidence based and which are just passed along because that's what people always do.
Which are the tips that need more evidence?
Here are two that I struggle with, about stainless steel pans:
- Water drop test / leidenfrost
People say that if you get your pan hot enough to get the leidenfrost effect and then add the oil you'll have less problems with sticking. My problem with this is that it means the pan gets very very hot - much hotter than it needs to be for most uses. My other problem is they all say "Look, I'll cook eggs and they won't stick" and those videos either have a ton of cuts, or the eggs stick and you can see the person pushing with a spatula to get rid of the stick, or their "scrambled eggs" is really a chopped omelette.
- Heat the pan before adding oil. I don't understand this. Again, people say it helps prevent sticking, but they use some argument about "pores" which just feels hokey. I add cold oil to a cold pan and bring it up to temperature before adding food so the pan and oil are both at the right temperature, and food sticks and then releases, because that's how stainless pans work.
I'm aware I could be completely wrong here and that there may be a good evidence base for these, but they don't seem to work based on how I cook.
37 votes -
What do baking soda and baking powder do?
16 votes -
From ocean to plate, the female-led seaweed company Lofoten Seaweed in Norway – in pictures
3 votes -
Years before Stonewall, a chef published the first gay cookbook
21 votes -
Kenji's Vietnamese garlic noodles... with twenty cloves of garlic
41 votes -
Why a tire company gives out food’s most famous award
15 votes -
Former White House chef hosts themed dinners featuring food believed to be at risk from climate change
12 votes -
Grace Young and her ever-growing wok collection
12 votes -
Gordon Ramsay | Last Meals
10 votes -
Michelin star chef (and possible Viking), Ragnar Eiríksson, guides Matty through an Icelandic winter wonderland of odd food, crazy buggy rides, and steamy hot springs
12 votes -
The eternal allure of Engagement Chicken: Feminist backlash and the food of marriage
21 votes -
With its glaciers, fjords and craggy mountains, Southern Norway is jaw-droppingly beautiful – and nature leads the region's chefs who draw on the local bounties
6 votes -
A Baltimore restaurant owner drove six hours to cook a favorite meal for a terminally ill customer
28 votes -
Three-Michelin-star restaurant relocates from Copenhagen to London for one day – Noma looks to a future without its celebrated Danish restaurant
10 votes -
In his Arctic Circle restaurant, chef Halvar Ellingsen has made it his focus to change the misconceptions of Norwegian cuisine one guest at a time
11 votes -
The original fettuccine alfredo with no cream
29 votes -
Restaurants in Denmark, the recent darling of the culinary world, are outdoing each other to emulate Noma
6 votes -
Cucumber sauerkraut | Makin' It! Episode 1
11 votes -
I got to meet culinary legend and personal inspiration Jacques Pépin
14 votes -
Brad Leone - I'm on the Youtubes | Channel trailer
19 votes -
How two friends sparked LA’s sushi obsession — and changed the way America eats
4 votes -
Tiramisu is the best way to eat your coffee! To start our Classics of Coffee series on it, we wanted to uncover more about its origins, where it came from, and how it became so popular worldwide.
4 votes -
Jamie Oliver's war on nuggets
14 votes -
Emeril's Sitcom | Forgotten Failures
3 votes -
You’re wrong about white chocolate
9 votes -
Denmark's ode to the humble squash helped propel the Nordic nation to victory in prestigious culinary competition Bocuse d'Or
4 votes -
Noma's closing exposes the contradictions of fine dining
5 votes -
At Experience Restaurant on a remote farm, chef Kim Sjøbakk takes diners on a sixteen-course culinary tour of the Trøndelag landscape in Norway
4 votes -
Is Alchemist the world's most creative restaurant? Rasmus Munk offers Michelin-starred meals from food waste, drinks from rabbit's ears and a new way to look at food.
5 votes -
Denmark's Noma, which has regularly topped the list of the world's best restaurants in its twenty-year history, will close at the end of 2024
8 votes -
A guide to Norway's Trøndelag – this year's European Region of Gastronomy
4 votes -
Chef Poul Andrias Ziska of Koks restaurant honed his craft in the harsh North Atlantic but has now reimagined his signature locavore cooking for a Greenlandic terroir
6 votes -
‘Jiro’ and the impossible dream of authenticity
8 votes -
Once a trading gateway to the world, Finland's ancient capital of Turku is carving out a new niche as a Nordic food hotspot
3 votes -
Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives speaks to a homesick America
8 votes -
On the small island of Heimaey, chef Matthías Auðunsson is at the helm of a food movement that honours Iceland's history while coaxing it into a new era of innovation
5 votes -
Copenhagen confirmed its reputation as a global dining destination after its top eateries finished first and second in the 2021 World's 50 Best Restaurants awards
6 votes -
Michelin star Dim Sum feast at the Shang Palace restaurant
4 votes -
San Francisco restaurant's $72 fried rice was a runaway hit. It was also the chef's nightmare.
15 votes -
Brad makes smoked mushrooms | It's Alive
4 votes -
J. Kenji López-Alt is Seattle’s most powerful food influencer — and its most reluctant one
10 votes -
The best cooking lessons from Jacques Pépin
5 votes -
Brad and Chrissy make maple syrup | It's Alive
5 votes -
Brad makes fermented salsa | It's Alive
4 votes -
Brad makes fermented fruit leather | It's Alive
4 votes