Taste Testing Pretentious Ingredients Vol.12 | Sorted Food

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  • Опубліковано 15 чер 2024
  • It’s PRETENTIOUS INGREDIENTS time and we’re sending a big shoutout to our community for all of their amazing suggestions in this episode. Have a watch to see what our Chef and Normals thought!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,9 тис.

  • @josephreierson2798
    @josephreierson2798 3 роки тому +1039

    Pass it on idea: Cook a specific country’s cuisine but only tell the first person

    • @Aquelll
      @Aquelll 3 роки тому +121

      Or everyone gets told different country when they come to the kitchen. Making it ultimate fusion pass it on. 😂

    • @notthatcreativewithnames
      @notthatcreativewithnames 3 роки тому +113

      @@Aquelll con-fusion

    • @Fyreflier
      @Fyreflier 3 роки тому +34

      No.
      Remember the paella burrito incident?

    • @josephreierson2798
      @josephreierson2798 3 роки тому +32

      @@Fyreflier I think that is why I want that, just for the chaos 😂

    • @Rangaman27
      @Rangaman27 3 роки тому +12

      @@Fyreflier but thats what makes it funny

  • @Anna-uh3jq
    @Anna-uh3jq 3 роки тому +610

    “A slice of history.”
    That’s what my dad calls stale bread. 😂

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 роки тому +56

      Hahaha sounds YUMMY!

    • @Anna-uh3jq
      @Anna-uh3jq 3 роки тому +3

      @@SortedFood haha. It does right? 😂

    • @OK-mv4ih
      @OK-mv4ih 3 роки тому +7

      Your dad is hilarious 😂

    • @janmay3901
      @janmay3901 3 роки тому +6

      We got a Dad joke after all that! Missed those!

    • @neutraltral8757
      @neutraltral8757 3 роки тому +8

      @@janmay3901 I thought the Dad jokes were "toast". 😇

  • @shewmonohoto
    @shewmonohoto 3 роки тому +43

    This reminded me of my favorite food quote of all time, "Shaving a bunch of black truffles over a dish, doesn't make it good, it just makes it expensive..."
    ~Rick Bayless (on Top Chef Masters)

  • @finunistu
    @finunistu 3 роки тому +121

    As a boy, growing up in rural Canada, morel mushrooms grew on my parents’ front lawn.
    When we saw them starting to show, we knew steak was on the menu the next weekend.

    • @kristinarood2166
      @kristinarood2166 Рік тому +10

      Also in our frontyard in Estonia.

    • @etienne8110
      @etienne8110 Рік тому +10

      Same, they say it is "rare", but in France by going in the woods near my village you can easily find a Kg in a few hours in Spring.
      We dry them just because we can't eat that much during the season, not because it is "rare". (it is rare for city dwellers only ^^)
      There are rarer mushrooms with more complex cooking process etc... (coprins, truffles etc...)
      Having a UE/Non-UE pot is a huge red flag though. There are 3 varieties of morels and clearly the chinese and yellow ones taste poorer. You want the grey ones. (just like how black truffle from France is way more tastier than summer truffle from China or Italy, they are just not the same products)

    • @newgrl
      @newgrl Рік тому +7

      Morel pickin' is a tradition for a long spring family walk in my neck of the woods too. (Central US)

    • @lisamichel6548
      @lisamichel6548 Рік тому +1

      Here in Montana the season for morels is late May and June. Most people go to the mountain forests and foothills. They tend to grow especially well in area where there have been fires to clear the forest canopy and underbrush.

    • @dizzygunner
      @dizzygunner 7 місяців тому

      @@etienne8110 You're just falling for the typical French attitude of "it's French, so it must be better", Italian truffles aren't better or worse than French ones, if French ones were better, all the top restaurants would use exclusively French truffles, but that doesn't happen.

  • @sbutterfield207
    @sbutterfield207 3 роки тому +1358

    After all the pretentious ingredients videos you've done, this one suddenly crystallized something for me! Your discussion about the morels made me realize that one of my signals for whether I would consider something pretentious or not boils down to actual vs artificial scarcity. Something (morels, e.g.) is not pretentious simply because it is naturally rare, but MAKING something rare through marketing, branding, or supply controls DEFINITELY signals pretentiousness to me.

    • @MissingmyBabbu
      @MissingmyBabbu 3 роки тому +88

      Exactly! For me, truffle and morels aren't pretentious. Solely because they're not artificially rare (to my knowledge, neither can be farmed). But, and this isn't a food example, a diamond IS pretentious. Because the only reason why they're rare is because one family owns all the diamond mines and only lets so many be sold at once.
      But then, the marketing of individual products from these ingredients can totally change my opinion. Like the purple salt. It jumped to pretentious for me with all the unproven (and often times in these cases, unproveable) health claims. But a (to use another non-food example) grinding wheel coated in diamond dust isn't pretentious, because it's just letting the product speak for itself.

    • @SkribbleNL
      @SkribbleNL 3 роки тому +58

      @@MissingmyBabbu also the marketing for diamond has been, buy this expensive thing to show how much you truly love her. So if diamonds are cheap they are less interesting due to how effective the marketing has been.

    • @sharcalena
      @sharcalena 3 роки тому +19

      @@MissingmyBabbu Morels are not pretentious. My grandparents live on a small farming plot and you would not believe the amount they can get every spring. They just have a rather narrow time slot for growing (after thaw but before getting real warm), which is what leads to their low production for commercial selling (if you can get the people who have them to part, those things are delicious).
      The diamond craze was started in the late 1800s upon the discovery of mines in Africa which made the formerly rare commodity suddenly abundant. The engagement ring was their advertising campaign that drove the prices back up and the industry has even called a cartel.

    • @IzabelaSSilva
      @IzabelaSSilva 3 роки тому +5

      When scarcity starts being an impactful quality it changes the meaning of the product and put an unquantifiable value in its worth that is status, therefore pretentiousness.

    • @hannahk1306
      @hannahk1306 3 роки тому +16

      Yes for me it's pretentious if it's deliberate, e.g. gold leaf on food

  • @mothamaeghan
    @mothamaeghan 3 роки тому +763

    Jamie: it’s sweeter than normal horseradish
    Barry: *dying in the corner*

    • @TheOnlyBongo
      @TheOnlyBongo 3 роки тому +15

      Pain hurts but victory is sweeter

    • @StabbyJoe135
      @StabbyJoe135 3 роки тому +13

      "this is the original form of true pure mustard" *Barry takes a full f**** forkfull*

    • @elpukito
      @elpukito 3 роки тому +4

      ...while wearing a shirt literally saying "Wild Ones"

    • @MattDocMartin
      @MattDocMartin 3 роки тому

      if only.

    • @boop6169
      @boop6169 3 роки тому +1

      Proceeds to beat Jamie in excitement over the sandwiches lmao

  • @AmeliaBell28
    @AmeliaBell28 3 роки тому +66

    Unrelated but Barry's hair is looking very nice in this vid. Those waves!

  • @erinkimbell2321
    @erinkimbell2321 3 роки тому +84

    This is the moment I realized as someone who lives in central Michigan not everyone can walk into their backyard and just pick morel mushrooms.

    • @7ab3tha
      @7ab3tha 2 роки тому +5

      I was literally just like we have morels all over in michigan!

    • @lindatuttamore8676
      @lindatuttamore8676 2 роки тому +1

      We have them all over Ohio also

  • @TotallyAwesomeMcknz
    @TotallyAwesomeMcknz 3 роки тому +557

    I love these episodes of “raiding Barry’s kitchen” 😂

    • @MercenaryPen
      @MercenaryPen 3 роки тому +28

      or, in the case of the stuff Barry doesn't know, "raiding Barry's future kitchen" (time machine sold separately)

    • @TotallyAwesomeMcknz
      @TotallyAwesomeMcknz 3 роки тому +13

      @@MercenaryPen oh yeah, “giving Barry ideas” or “the reason Barry went broke: $135 salt” lol

    • @santiagoperez5431
      @santiagoperez5431 3 роки тому +13

      Or we can even name it "does Barey have it?"

    • @AmericanHothead
      @AmericanHothead 3 роки тому

      Brilliant!

    • @deltadom33
      @deltadom33 3 роки тому +13

      They need to actually raid his kitchen in an episode , go through his cupboards and see how many pretentious ingredients he has in his kitchen

  • @zoeschipper4311
    @zoeschipper4311 3 роки тому +271

    I miss the fridge cam, that always made me smile, doesnt matter how bad the dad jokes are!

    • @janmay3901
      @janmay3901 3 роки тому +14

      "Butt first..."

    • @Bee-ol1xr
      @Bee-ol1xr 3 роки тому +10

      I actually miss the comment of the week days...

  • @hungryclone
    @hungryclone 3 роки тому +154

    I only knew about the Korean salt and when they said “20-ish” quid each I was like “Oh you sweet summer child…”

    • @arniecalang4583
      @arniecalang4583 3 роки тому +15

      Oh you lemon and herb boys…

    • @MrWhangdoodles
      @MrWhangdoodles 3 роки тому +1

      I said 100, but I meant euros, so I wasn't even close.

  • @joanprim666
    @joanprim666 3 роки тому +65

    I remember “hunting” for morels with my dad when I was a child. We would just fry them in some seasoned flour and they were so delicious. 🤤 😋

  • @theotherVLF
    @theotherVLF 3 роки тому +234

    Imagine having friends over like, "Would you like some mustard on your sandwich? Just let me get the mustard BALL out." It's not pretentious, just weird.

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 роки тому +28

      Haha so you wouldn't try it for yourself?

    • @theotherVLF
      @theotherVLF 3 роки тому +25

      @@SortedFood I'd try it once, but probably be laughing at it the whole time

    • @suppersdinner119
      @suppersdinner119 3 роки тому +11

      @@theotherVLF i think a mustard ball is still better than the small wooden handmade barrel i once got my mustard in

    • @theotherVLF
      @theotherVLF 3 роки тому +6

      @@suppersdinner119 ok now that's a pretentious mustard

    • @smiah7898
      @smiah7898 3 роки тому +2

      Most pretentious things ARE weird!

  • @kabbaage
    @kabbaage 3 роки тому +330

    I'm very surprised Truffle boy hasn't heard of morels. You know who you are

    • @ninarossouw4091
      @ninarossouw4091 3 роки тому +4

      Truffle boy!!!! Love that!!

    • @jmp_fr
      @jmp_fr 3 роки тому +8

      take it from the truffle boy himself, "sometimes I wake up, with a craving for truffle, and it hits the spot."

    • @OK-mv4ih
      @OK-mv4ih 3 роки тому +1

      Who's truffle boy?

    • @MaZEEZaM
      @MaZEEZaM 3 роки тому

      Yeah, I recognised them straight away but could only remember the name started with M.

    • @edwinlam4679
      @edwinlam4679 3 роки тому +3

      @@OK-mv4ih Starts with B, rhymes with Scary

  • @jopiagalis
    @jopiagalis 3 роки тому +25

    What I find extremely fascinating is how the "normals", specifically Jamie have grown and changed and their definition of pretentious has almost evolved since their first pretentious ingredients video. I remember watching the early pretentious ingredient videos and mostly agreeing with Jamie's and Mike's and Barry's judgement on whether or not something was pretentious but in this video there were a few times where I thought an ingredient was absolutely pretentious but Barry and Jamie unanimously said it wasn't. (What's interesting to me is that even how I define something as pretentious as changed since I started watching Sorted. I actually learn so much from this channel and I'm extremely grateful for it.)
    You can tell that the guys have grown and become (for lack of a better word) more 'chefy' (I mean that they are more advanced home cooks and treat cooking and ingredients completely differently than say how i would approach cooking. I think that's really cool because you can actually gauge just how much Mike Barry and Jamie have grown and learned with Sorted. It also means I am jumping on the old bandwagon and saying there is no way these guys are normal anymore.

  • @OracleAnne
    @OracleAnne 3 роки тому +194

    Boys: these morel mushrooms sure are pretentious!
    Me: goes out to the woods in Illinois with a stick and finds enough to fill a trash bag. We fry them in cornmeal here. 😂

    • @Burger_pants
      @Burger_pants 3 роки тому +41

      i envy you, they go for 60-80 bucks a gallon and I never find any when i go out, and my hometown is the mushroom capitol of the US, in Missouri.
      Make sure you use a mesh bag dude, not a walmart bag, its because off all the people who go out and take 100% of every morel they find and dont spread any spores that they are so rare anymore.

    • @breyer1236
      @breyer1236 3 роки тому +9

      My mom has them growing wild in her front yard. We get a ton every year

    • @CityscapeMuse
      @CityscapeMuse 3 роки тому +7

      I have friends and family who forage for them! In Kansas, they have pretty good luck, but thanks to the fires in Washington, my more local friends are getting luckier. The fact they'd never heard of morels blows my little mind!

    • @lemonsAndFun
      @lemonsAndFun 3 роки тому +3

      Western WI on the Mississippi - us too! Couldn't believe I knew what the pretentious ingredient was! :)

    • @violablaire6499
      @violablaire6499 3 роки тому

      Which parks do you go to? I rarely find any mushrooms in Illinois

  • @amandadrake6675
    @amandadrake6675 3 роки тому +479

    *Midwestern Americans stare in shock at never having heard of morels.* We hunt morel mushrooms every spring; it's a family fun outing.

    • @thibaultwyrsch6888
      @thibaultwyrsch6888 3 роки тому +54

      Honestly, as a european (Switzerland), I'm also shocked they don't know morels.... It's decently common to search for them and they are pretty popular as dishes!

    • @invictus_Vi
      @invictus_Vi 3 роки тому +11

      I really don't like Morels, tbh. (Indiana born and raised.) I'm more of a shiitake/porcini kind of guy.

    • @DimT670
      @DimT670 3 роки тому +8

      They usually don't grow in England id assume

    • @SongofNiemah
      @SongofNiemah 3 роки тому +32

      I’m from the Midwest and I knew what they were right away 🤦🏾‍♀️ Never hunted them tho.

    • @sydzierz
      @sydzierz 3 роки тому +14

      Oh yes! Every spring in Michigan. We always wait to mow our lawns too, living near the woods. There's always a few that pop up in random spots every year.

  • @MarcJaxon
    @MarcJaxon 3 роки тому +142

    I'm truly surprised the guys hadn't had Morels...or even heard of them.
    Intriguing.

    • @margeryk000
      @margeryk000 3 роки тому +4

      My thoughts exactly.

    • @FisforFenton
      @FisforFenton 3 роки тому +4

      I get them all the time where I live at local farmers markets I didn't realize they were so hard to find but they are awesome.

    • @asmith8692
      @asmith8692 3 роки тому +7

      I'm surprised that they didn't taste them during their trip to Washington and Oregon.

    • @Shelsight
      @Shelsight 3 роки тому +2

      Yep, I thought the same as I knew what they were. But then I watched the Epicurious video on all different types of mushrooms last week, so maybe I just sub-consciously retained morels from there. Loved seeing Ben’s dish using them though - that looked epic...
      Edit: I lived in the US mid-west for 10 years, so reading other comments below, I just realised I prob know them more from restaurants and meals there, as they are v plentiful.

    • @TarossBlackburn
      @TarossBlackburn 3 роки тому +8

      And here I sit, reckognizing them by shape from Stardew Valley...

  • @courtneyduncan5249
    @courtneyduncan5249 3 роки тому +40

    can you do a video where you serve the normals the exact same thing but presented in different ways (like one very fancy and one just chucked on a plate). I think it would be interesting to see if presentation subconsciously makes you think food tastes better!

  • @rxsheepxr
    @rxsheepxr 3 роки тому +66

    I like how the subtitles spelled "cloche" four different ways, none of them correctly.

  • @bullesweet
    @bullesweet 3 роки тому +102

    9:18 Ben reminds me of a teacher, his mouth says "Interesting" but his face says "You're dumber than I thought" xD

  • @lexica510
    @lexica510 3 роки тому +145

    "This is a slice of history." More like a ball of history, surely.

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 роки тому +24

      You're not wrong! A spicy ball of history

    • @Wander79
      @Wander79 3 роки тому +3

      @@SortedFood is that Ben?

    • @stevenraycopley8885
      @stevenraycopley8885 3 роки тому

      Looking at your profile avatar and readi g this comment...I can see that face saying that

  • @moondream6
    @moondream6 3 роки тому +11

    I grew up eating morels, my entire life, fresh from the woods! They're so good fresh. I love them fried, and made into a bisque, too! They're very diverse in all the things you can use them for. :)

  • @willgibson2924
    @willgibson2924 3 роки тому +70

    Me, who lives where Morel Mushrooms grow: "oh, are those dehydrated morels?"
    Barry: "IS IT CORAL?"
    Edit: also, they were calling it meaty, which is interesting, because some people say it's like chicken, even giving it the nickname "Hickory Chicken" in some places

    • @TheLoreSeeker
      @TheLoreSeeker 3 роки тому +5

      Meanwhile, me, who lives where coral grows: "Barry.... no.... no Barry... its not coral. Coral, although living, has the same consistency as a rock. Its not squishy."

    • @CityscapeMuse
      @CityscapeMuse 3 роки тому

      @@TheLoreSeeker And meeee, in similar to both of your situations...agreeing with you both! lol Barry, don't eat coral!!

  • @Stampmaster55
    @Stampmaster55 3 роки тому +115

    I think we all operate on a different definition of pretentious. For me "pretentious" would mean something that doesn't provide a meaningfully different experience than a cheaper alternative, but you pay more because it is more expensive and has an exotic back story. "This Coffee is expensive because the beans came out of a marsupial's bum" is pretentious if what you are left with is basically a cup of coffee..

    • @Marysart
      @Marysart 3 роки тому +9

      But...(No pun intended!)that would mean it went through an actual process in the marsupials intestines to get that specific taste, like kopi lupak, which is rare and therefore expensive?

    • @ivylee42069
      @ivylee42069 3 роки тому +14

      And someone had to clean the beans and then dry them so it's actually a process that takes a while plus if your cleaning poo beans all day you deserve a good pay 😅

    • @50ShadesOfEndo
      @50ShadesOfEndo 3 роки тому +4

      Hence why the mustard balls are pretentious

    • @palindromee
      @palindromee 3 роки тому +1

      Fully agree!!

    • @Stampmaster55
      @Stampmaster55 3 роки тому +11

      @@Marysart Or it didn't. As I explained, if it just tastes like coffee then it's pretentious, if it is actually a unique flavor that creates a unique experience then it isn't pretentious.

  • @christopherdurham1999
    @christopherdurham1999 3 роки тому +313

    I feel like living in an area where morel-hunting is a thing cuts way down on the pretentious factor.

    • @Earendilgrey
      @Earendilgrey 3 роки тому +30

      Yeah, i grew up hunting them around the neighborhood. Around here they are common but still pricey because that short window of growing and everything having to be just right. Some times we get tons and sometimes we get a handful.

    • @mihalygyori4280
      @mihalygyori4280 3 роки тому +2

      Exactly! MY favourite way to make it is to stuff them with prunes, wrap them in bacon and cook the in the oven. :)

    • @hopecox
      @hopecox 3 роки тому +21

      I live in Georgia, USA and my father-in-law goes on a scavenger hunt to harvest morels every year! He keeps a lot and then he sells the rest. He can sell them for a pretty penny! I don't think that morals are pretentious, they are just not very common and not sold in many places because they are not a mainstream ingredient. The expensive price is bc of the labor to pick them & the process of trying to find them in the same place every year. Pretentious ingredients take the extra step to impress (e.g. the purple salt). Morels don't need that extra step because they are delicious at they are.

    • @ItsHammer
      @ItsHammer 3 роки тому +32

      Yep. Once you’ve trudged through the woods with a couple old wonder bread bags picking morels and then go home and pick the ticks off yourself you got while morel hunting, pretentiousness is out the window.

    • @amberp8835
      @amberp8835 3 роки тому +28

      Midwest here and it is definitely the thing we rurals go out for every year. I have great memories of mushroom hunting with my dad as a kid. And you don't share your spots when you find a good one.

  • @reneearabia583
    @reneearabia583 3 роки тому +7

    It's always interesting to me how other cultures use certain ingredients. Over here, I've always tasted black garlic in Japanese food like in ramen. It gives a really deep warm flavor to the broth and just *chef's kiss*

  • @TheBigWheats
    @TheBigWheats 3 роки тому +14

    get the “Morille de feu” (fire morel) they grow after forest fire. they are even more expensive.

    • @ELGlueckert
      @ELGlueckert 3 роки тому +1

      And they grow rather large too, found a few on some hunts here in Montana as big as my forearm.

  • @EdinMike
    @EdinMike 3 роки тому +80

    As soon as I saw the Morel i called it… Cause someone played a lot of Stardew Valley during lockdown… A LOT !

    • @Jamie_kemp
      @Jamie_kemp 3 роки тому +3

      Haha can relate

    • @faline6458
      @faline6458 3 роки тому +4

      They grow wild where I live, so I see them quite a bit! I never really thought of them as pretentious, just a lucky find lol

  • @14rs2
    @14rs2 3 роки тому +222

    You should get Barry to bring in a load of stuff from his kitchen and mix them with other pretentious ingredients and you guys have to guess which are his and which aren’t

    • @thomasbonse
      @thomasbonse 3 роки тому +13

      But what would they do, when they have two of almost everything?

  • @ethancampbell215
    @ethancampbell215 Рік тому +4

    I think what this series has made me realise is how much disposable income I lack that makes me so uncultured 😂😂 seeing them review these ingredients and having an actual stomach churn when I hear the price makes me appreciate how well the channel has done to be able to afford these products to review them and provide their opinion when it’s most likely that I’ll never be buying these products 😂

  • @katecapek3116
    @katecapek3116 3 роки тому +3

    For our first anniversary, my hubby took me morel hunting, and his brother gave us fresh caught trout. We had the trout stuffed with the morels and wild garlic, then grilled. That was a wonderful anniversary dinner.

  • @Doubt1337
    @Doubt1337 3 роки тому +155

    Morels are pretty common is the US, I think. People love to go "mushroom huntin" here in the south. I'd be interested in a video about other foraged ingredients. Things not often thought of as edible, like dandelion
    edit to specify by "common" i mean "widespread", as in, everywhere from the south to the west, people can harvest morels during their season. This is in response to the guys having seemingly never heard of them.

    • @mattnemitz6558
      @mattnemitz6558 3 роки тому +2

      May be more talk here in the US but they aren't common... Just the nature of the morel.

    • @amberp8835
      @amberp8835 3 роки тому +6

      Well known but not common. That is why you have to hunt for them! It is so expensive because they are much harder to cultivate commercially than other popular mushrooms. They are so finicky about conditions. I have great memories of morel hunting in the midwest with my dad as a kid.

    • @Walkerbtween
      @Walkerbtween 3 роки тому +5

      @@amberp8835 Yep. I live in central Illinois, USA, and the first really warm day in spring after a rain everyone is out in the woods hunting for morels. At best, you've got 2 to 3 weeks to harvest and then they're gone till next year. I'd rather eat morels than nasty, dirt flavored truffles any day!

    • @Jaqen-HGhar
      @Jaqen-HGhar 3 роки тому +2

      @@mattnemitz6558 it's not just talk, at least not in Texas and certain other parts of the US. They may not be as common as other mushrooms but in the spring after the first rains they can be found if you know how to find them. The issue is having the land to go mushroom hunting.

    • @mattnemitz6558
      @mattnemitz6558 3 роки тому +1

      @@Jaqen-HGhar I didn't say Morels are just talk. I said there might be more talk about them in the US than the UK, referring to what they said in the video. I know how they grow and when etc... It's just hard to find. Hence why I said not common.

  • @Missmethinksalot1
    @Missmethinksalot1 3 роки тому +52

    SORTED is one of the last cooking channels on UA-cam that keeps putting out quality content that never makes you bored or skip to the end. Fingers crossed!

  • @ghoff101
    @ghoff101 3 роки тому +1

    Just picked 20lbs of morels last week here in western Canada! So many amazing uses for it but nothing beats sauteed in garlic butter!

  • @niaashmore9227
    @niaashmore9227 3 роки тому +5

    I think you should have a ‘Regional Treats’ episode where you look at weird local ingredients (like the Tewkesbury Mustard). I’m sure there must be loads in Britain to binge on. Maybe Stargazy Pie, Bedfordshire Clangar, Staffordshire Oatcakes etc

  • @alanfitzgerald6567
    @alanfitzgerald6567 3 роки тому +396

    Listen, the price is irrelevant, you go to a friends house & they bring out a ball of mustard like that & not a jar how on this planet are you not going to think it's pretentious?

    • @tylerryandaughtry
      @tylerryandaughtry 3 роки тому +38

      You know when you put it in that situation absolutely pretentious.

    • @DimT670
      @DimT670 3 роки тому +12

      And cups of warm beer to dilute 😂

    • @Warlundrie
      @Warlundrie 3 роки тому +17

      Same with Morels or truffle from our pretentious head boy Barry Taylor… like how do you even justify truffles as not pretentious?

    • @lazerapes
      @lazerapes 3 роки тому +9

      Yeah, if you are eating hot dogs and someone asks for mustard. If someone pulls out that ball and a cup of water I am getting the hell out because I am absolutely in the wrong place.

    • @MtnNerd
      @MtnNerd 3 роки тому +2

      Well yeah then they are just pretentious. I would use it as an ingredient. The first thing that comes to mind is rubbing it on a pork roast.

  • @martinbezecny8382
    @martinbezecny8382 3 роки тому +116

    The Morel mushrooms bit was quite interesting to me, because in my country a traditional activity is to go "mushrooming", you just go to the forest and spend your time picking gorgeous wild mushrooms, then bring them home and cook the hell out of them(I think Ben would enjoy that activity very much) and from that I know about morel mushrooms for a long time, they are completely amazing and it didn't even cross my mind that you just didn't know them at all 😀 nice to broaden my horizons... Shows how big the cultural barriers are even throughout Europe

    • @mrcrabmoney
      @mrcrabmoney 3 роки тому

      Thank you for sharing! An intrigued American!

    • @cocolao6954
      @cocolao6954 3 роки тому

      So is there a place to learn about all the mushroom types? Or have someone verify that they're safe to eat? Just curious since poisonous/hallucinogenic mushrooms might be accidentally used...unless people are into that stuff (no judgement)

    • @kalebnolan8343
      @kalebnolan8343 3 роки тому

      We do the same thing in Australia but we make a tea

    • @martinbezecny8382
      @martinbezecny8382 3 роки тому +2

      @@cocolao6954 Because it is popular, there are many books about mushrooms that are found in czechia, on how to recognize them, where they are usually found and if they are safe to eat and things like that.

    • @Burger_pants
      @Burger_pants 3 роки тому +5

      @@mrcrabmoney Morels are mostly found in America... My hometown in Missouri is known as the morel capitol of the US.

  • @kerrlove1
    @kerrlove1 3 роки тому +6

    I would love an episode testing all historical ingredients.

  • @jeanneferguson7124
    @jeanneferguson7124 3 роки тому +2

    Cannot believe you let Barry talk as though he isn't the only normal who consistently already has very many of the pretentious ingredients at home! Love watching you guys!

  • @vickytruckenmiller3856
    @vickytruckenmiller3856 3 роки тому +411

    On these video, Barry should be labeled as a “pretentious normal”

    • @rebel4466
      @rebel4466 3 роки тому +9

      1 Chef, 2 Normals, 1 pretentious individual

    • @rosehill9537
      @rosehill9537 3 роки тому

      @@rebel4466 yes! Add that to his pass it on title page for sure.

    • @xXKuroXx100
      @xXKuroXx100 3 роки тому

      I think biased will do

    • @thomasbonse
      @thomasbonse 3 роки тому

      or just normally pretentious

  • @ms9076
    @ms9076 3 роки тому +221

    Pass It On order idea: Alphabetical by the Name of the last song they've listened to. (a great insight to everyones music taste and sufficiently random :P)

    • @gibuttersnaps2538
      @gibuttersnaps2538 3 роки тому +3

      This is such a good one!

    • @ms9076
      @ms9076 3 роки тому

      @@gibuttersnaps2538 thanks! I hope it reveals some musical guilty pleasures

  • @dilpreetkaur9782
    @dilpreetkaur9782 3 роки тому +2

    This episode was truly fascinating! The processes of transforming the simplest of ingredients into something else altogether offered such an insight in to history and tradition and just general industriousness of people…

  • @hunterjordan731
    @hunterjordan731 3 роки тому +4

    Glad to see morel mushrooms on here! In Ohio in the US, I grew up hunting for morels every spring! A real delicacy

  • @erinhowett3630
    @erinhowett3630 3 роки тому +311

    Alright then boys, MUSTARD, HORSERADISH, AND WASABI POKER FACE CHALLENGE

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 роки тому +68

      We would LOVE to see that

    • @BeardedDanishViking
      @BeardedDanishViking 3 роки тому +2

      I doubt that they'll be able to get actual wasabi, though.

    • @oon-huing1729
      @oon-huing1729 3 роки тому +9

      @@BeardedDanishViking there's a company in London that sells real wasabi root! I've purchased from them before and it tastes delicious! The Wasabi Company :)

    • @sonic4spuds
      @sonic4spuds 3 роки тому

      That would be great, good fresh horseradish is something you can't help but react to as it burns through your brain.

    • @MrGrimsmith
      @MrGrimsmith 3 роки тому

      @@BeardedDanishViking It's not *that* bad, horseradish can be a lot stronger to be fair. Then again, I adore sitting there scoffing handfuls of wasabi peas so I might be mildly resistant now.

  • @MrAndrewtheguru
    @MrAndrewtheguru 3 роки тому +61

    Normals: "I wouldn't know what morels were unless you explained them to me."
    Me, having played Stardew Valley: "Do you guys not play games?"

    • @bobblelooble3530
      @bobblelooble3530 3 роки тому +3

      I've been wondering why I instantly recognised morels, having never seen or eaten one. You have solved that mystery!

  • @deeznuts8988
    @deeznuts8988 3 роки тому +3

    Really liked the concept of having two guys reviewing together, better banter more fun.

  • @suzz1776
    @suzz1776 Рік тому +12

    So since I can't get the mustard balls where I live, I went on Google. And since they have put in the request for them to be a protected food, I found a paper submitted to ur gov about them. It tells exactly what ingredients r used and even their exact process. Hehe. So now I know exactly how they make them and even the recipe sais it makes 33 balls. So hehehehehe. I love the interwebs. 😁 Totally gonna make some.

  • @weevilstevil9901
    @weevilstevil9901 3 роки тому +84

    Have you lads ever considered a short series on doing historical british food? Perhaps with a back to back historical and modern dish comparison!
    Also! Regional and UK specific food review? :-)

    • @MtnNerd
      @MtnNerd 3 роки тому

      Try watching Tasting History

    • @weevilstevil9901
      @weevilstevil9901 3 роки тому +3

      @@MtnNerd I've done so and love it! Though it's be an utter delight to see these lads dip into their culinary heritage and relate that to the world!
      They've gone to great lengths to show us cusiine and culinary experiences from accross the globe (for better or worse), and a touch of their locality to add to that would be lovely to see
      And! Who are we kidding, more Ben Nerdisms???? Please!

    • @emiewolfe7850
      @emiewolfe7850 3 роки тому +1

      love this!

    • @dankoga2
      @dankoga2 3 роки тому

      Also Townsends! He tries to keep everything as authentic as possible, including the methods and utensils.

    • @emilyhunt8853
      @emilyhunt8853 3 роки тому +1

      I'd love to see a Sorted take on a Heston Blumenthal like series

  • @Kalfje33
    @Kalfje33 3 роки тому +66

    I've had a carpaccio with black garlic aioli, grilled leak vinaigrette, dutch old cheese flakes and thinly sliced radishes. It blew my mind how creamy the aioli was, and it tasted amazing!

  • @gregmunro1137
    @gregmunro1137 3 роки тому +17

    Why didn’t they hear me yelling dried morels, when I was a kid- we picked them every spring at the edge of the woods near a field. I haven’t had them in years. In Canada you can still find them, but I can’t tell the difference between edible morels and the poisonous morels. We soak the in a salty brine , drain , cut them up and fry them in butter. Then later in the season we’d look for puff balls

    • @rhijulbec1
      @rhijulbec1 3 роки тому +1

      👋 👋 Hello from Ontario!
      We too used to go "mushrooming" every spring. My dad knew every wild mushroom growing so no fear of getting a wrong one. Morels often have a LOT of dirt and sometimes worms, so soaking them took care of that.
      I never could bring myself to eat puffball though. The rest of my sibs and dad couldn't get enough of them. Not me. And not my mum. But she'd have a big cast iron frying pan with a tonne of butter in it to fry the shrooms and puffball up. That was over 50 years ago and I still think of that as a great time.

    • @windyhawthorn7387
      @windyhawthorn7387 3 роки тому +1

      @@rhijulbec1
      Hi from Texas I would read my dad's book on mushrooms when I was Little and always enjoyed the wild mushrooms that would pop up every year just in the back yard where we hung out the laundry.

    • @rhijulbec1
      @rhijulbec1 3 роки тому

      @@windyhawthorn7387
      Great memories~right? ☺

    • @windyhawthorn7387
      @windyhawthorn7387 3 роки тому +2

      @@rhijulbec1
      Yes especially the fact that knowing too much about poisonous mushrooms made you stare at them wondering if you made a mistake one day you would die horribly. But we also gathered up the wild greens with mom that will kill you vary painfully if you don't know how to cook them mostly listed as poisonous in field books with skull and crossbones ☠️. They are the best of greens vary tasty.

    • @rhijulbec1
      @rhijulbec1 3 роки тому

      @@windyhawthorn7387
      Now that's something I haven't tried doing! Foraging. There are so many edible greens that grow right under our noses, yet we treat them like weeds instead of food. I know you can eat things like stinging nettles as long as they're young and well cooked. Dandelion greens are excellent when they're young as well. So are the flowers. I've seen them made into a jam! Now I've never eaten a dandelion flower, but it really doesn't have a strong smell, so I can't imagine what it tastes like.
      I absolutely love greens of all kinds~spinach, kale, collard greens, watercress, chard and more. Love them. I usually just boil them, either for a short time~like spinach or a long slow boil for collard greens. All I add is salt and a big slice of lemon and cook them.
      Do you know what greens you used to pick? I'd love to know. Just in case I can find them. Thanks for your reply!
      Nice to meet you!
      Jenn

  • @Friend2FriendnMA
    @Friend2FriendnMA 2 роки тому +1

    Mike and his "exfoliate your forehead" made me weak. That was HILARIOUS!!!

  • @SilverAlaunt
    @SilverAlaunt 3 роки тому +57

    I would love an episode that shows several ways to use the black garlic! For instance, does it work on garlic bread, in ethnic dishes, or in marinades and so forth?

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams 3 роки тому +1

      It does work on garlic bread but it lacks that distinct garlic flavor so it won't be the same. It's also easy to make at home.. Just takes a long time as you have to slowly cook it at a low temperature.

    • @monicaenns9967
      @monicaenns9967 3 роки тому +3

      😉 Bob thinks it's great on a burger

    • @kellyjay48
      @kellyjay48 3 роки тому +1

      This was all I was thinking during the discussion on black garlic!

    • @erics2133
      @erics2133 3 роки тому

      @@SilvaDreams yeah, I use black garlic, and for me, it's not at all unusual to use black garlic and non-black garlic in the same dish. However, unlike regular garlic, there's not any one dish where I always use black garlic, I often use it for a change of pace.

    • @MtnNerd
      @MtnNerd 3 роки тому

      I've used it in a recipe for ramen. Also it's not that hard to make on your own. It's just gently heating the garlic until it caramelizes.

  • @hilotakenaka
    @hilotakenaka 3 роки тому +361

    I don't think that this would count as Chef vs Normal. Just the title that needs to be fixed
    Unless Barry is now a chef. Maybe cumin and lavender was a genius move after all

    • @hrithikasarvodayan
      @hrithikasarvodayan 3 роки тому +37

      It could be jamie , cuz after the paella burito, the articles did call jamie chef🤭🤭🤭🤭

    • @lokithecat7225
      @lokithecat7225 3 роки тому +23

      No, Jamie revealed last video, that he has been Running a Food channel for 10 years.
      Baz is just there to photograph things, and leave hobs on.

    • @adamd5910
      @adamd5910 3 роки тому +5

      Also if it was versus then the chef (as there is only one) should be tasting stuff to !

    • @JuryDutySummons
      @JuryDutySummons 3 роки тому +7

      Yeah, this doesn't feel like a "vs" episode really.

    • @giannidescalzo2101
      @giannidescalzo2101 3 роки тому +4

      @@hrithikasarvodayan Jamie did work in the test kitchen under James for a long time. That's practically an apprenticeship.

  • @valcrump8257
    @valcrump8257 2 роки тому +2

    I remember my grandpa had a secret mushroom patch in the woods, he would pick pounds and pounds of them, freeze most of them. We always had a feed of mushrooms with Swiss chard sautéed in butter and served with heavy cream and dill. They were so delicious and it was a once a year treat. They looked identical to these morels. A nice memory.

  • @akshat9282
    @akshat9282 3 роки тому +5

    this was one of the most informative pretentious ingredients episodes!! loved it

  • @jenniferogormanarafa8920
    @jenniferogormanarafa8920 3 роки тому +6

    MORELL trivia for you! In 2003 here in British Columbia we were hit by massive wild fires. The following spring people went into the burned acres of forest land to find thousands upon thousands of Morells under the ash. Hippies then would gather and sell from their trucks these very large and gorgeous mushrooms at a very high premium where Kelowna residents would barter for them. I myself was amazed by the flavour. Lesson......beauty from tragedy. 🇨🇦

    • @lindaspenard3298
      @lindaspenard3298 3 роки тому +1

      People here on Vancouver Island also forage for Morell as well as other wild mushrooms. Chantrel (spelling?) is also yummy

    • @jenniferogormanarafa8920
      @jenniferogormanarafa8920 3 роки тому

      Yes very cool. Chanterelles are a real delicacy also. Cheers to you 🇨🇦

  • @silverdawn813
    @silverdawn813 3 роки тому +38

    if you have a rice cooker or slow cooker with a warm setting you can make black garlic at home. of course, you can't use the appliance for about 14 to 20 days.

    • @monikalagiewka7883
      @monikalagiewka7883 3 роки тому +1

      Instant pot can be used too.. I heard the smell can be very strong so to do it in the garage or on a covered patio

    • @kathimorrical9912
      @kathimorrical9912 2 роки тому

      I laughed so hard!!

  • @Molikai
    @Molikai 3 роки тому +2

    The salt descriptor felt like a pitch - saying 'Pure salt! 'then 'Added anti-oxidants and nutrients from the bamboo!' these are diametrically opposite points.
    Also, with the comparitive taste - knowing the difference will change the flavour. This is why we have blind taste tests.

  • @fredtuttle2227
    @fredtuttle2227 3 роки тому +1

    I like this format more where Baz and J are together. It feels like they play off each other more!

  • @shihalya
    @shihalya 3 роки тому +50

    Soooo, bored and in quarantine I am rereading lots of different literature, and thought at : „fillet of a funny snake, in the cauldron boil and bake, eye of newt and toe and frog, wool of bat and tongue of dog, adders fork and blind worms sting, lizard s leg and owlets wing. For a charm of powerful trouble , like a hell broth boil and bubble“ now I remember that eye of newt is mustard seed, toe of frog is buttercup, not sure about all the rest, but it made me wonder what odd brews and recipes might be in other classics….might be an interesting challenge to see what the „normals“ could do with those classical, fantastic and or historic recipes, twisting them as they see fit,… and you could use the mustard ball 😁

    • @xdgirl8886
      @xdgirl8886 3 роки тому +1

      Oooh that's an interesting one! Do you have any particular books/novels in mind?

    • @shihalya
      @shihalya 3 роки тому +6

      @@xdgirl8886 well, that particular thought came up during Macbeth/ Shakespeare, I always wondered about lambas bread ( lord of the rings… or maybe just a hobbit food schedule feast), in a little princess by burnett it’s more of a generell description of rich hot tasty soup and sandwiches and blueberry muffins, a moveable feast by Hemingway describes very good chicken … I think de bresse(?!), the Queen of hearts tarts stolen by the knave of hearts in Alice adventures in wonderland by carroll, maybe the chocolate cake from mathilda by r Dahl, or maybe from pippi longstocking „and they shouted with delight when they saw all the good things pippi had set out on the bare rock. There were lovely little sandwiches of meatloaf and ham, a whole pile of pancakes sprinkled with sugar, little brown sausages and three pineapple puddings“, …. Maybe a duck rochambeau from the moviegoer by walker percy, I think there were some amazing potatoes mentioned in the secret garden by burnett, in the secret life of bees there are a few references to classic southern dishes (since the author put the whole story in South Carolina), or maybe the „normals“ could make lane cake from to kill a mockingbird by Harper lee „I’ll make a lanecake. That Stephanie s been after my recipe for thirty years, and if she thinks I’ll give it to her just because I am staying with her, she got another thing coming“(no clue what a lanecake is, but why not?!) , or maybe a twist on the Turkish delights from narnia, …. Or just recipes out of nanny ogg s cookbook ( part of terry pratchetts epic discworld series), …
      Any book recommendations would be welcome for my reading list too 😉
      Most stories have some food in them, it’s a big part of social interaction and even buisness….
      And for historical ideas, well has beer probably the oldest recipe from 3500 BC, or maybe the meatpie recipe from Mesopotamia dating back to like 1700 BC,…

    • @dizzydazed8055
      @dizzydazed8055 3 роки тому

      how about.... no.

    • @BlueGangsta1958
      @BlueGangsta1958 3 роки тому

      If you're looking for adaptations of famous recipes in Media, maybe give Binging with Babish a try. He does movies and Shows so idk how that translate to your list but I'm fairly certain he tackled the cake in Matilda at least

    • @shihalya
      @shihalya 3 роки тому

      @@BlueGangsta1958 thanks for the rec, I check it out :)

  • @sophykitten2212
    @sophykitten2212 3 роки тому +11

    Does Barry seem healthier or happier to anyone else? Whatever he's doing, I hope he keeps it up! 💖

    • @avariceseven9443
      @avariceseven9443 3 роки тому

      I’m glad to see i’m not the only one who find him a little different than usual. It looks like he lose some weight. He looks brighter and fresher for some reason.

    • @bondfool
      @bondfool 3 роки тому

      @@avariceseven9443 Could it be that a certain something that rhymes with hamchemic is tapering off in England?

    • @justinwhite2725
      @justinwhite2725 3 роки тому

      Honestly I wonder if it's James.

  • @loribriggs3346
    @loribriggs3346 3 роки тому

    I live in southern Oregon, USA. Morel mushrooms are plentiful here in the spring and fall right after a rain. They are often found under Oak, Laurel and conifer trees in the leaves. Once you find one there will be more...most always in a group. Often when new bark dust is put down in a new landscape and people water well they will have a huge patch of them in their new bark dust. My father made the most wonderful mushroom soup base with them and my mother loved them egg, cracker crumbs and pan fried.

  • @codybasore2747
    @codybasore2747 3 роки тому

    12:00 I love Barry so much 😭😭 when he was like "I did" after Jamie tried to confirm if anyone saw his amazing catch. Barry's the best.

  • @charitysterry6141
    @charitysterry6141 3 роки тому +11

    This is wild seeing morels on here. I saw them and IMMEDIATELY knew what they were. Never figured them for pretentious though since they just grow in my parents backyard naturally here in the states. But I will say - morel hunting is pretty common and people guard their sites religiously! It’s a common activity around here to go mushroom hunting and spend the day wandering the woods, looking for mushrooms and avoiding snapping turtles!

  • @CoLiCoVis
    @CoLiCoVis 3 роки тому +8

    There was a fire at the nearby high school about 40 years before I attended the rebuilt school. There’s a back wood area and morels grow like weeds, it’s a treat of the season and only 5 or 6 people know about it!

  • @jakejarvis6683
    @jakejarvis6683 3 роки тому +1

    Never seen dried morels before. Used to pick them when I was younger. Pretty common in the midwest states (at least in Missouri where I'm from) if you know what you're looking for, but since most people don't know how/when/where to find them they cost a fortune to buy at a store, or even from a local picker. We used to just batter them in egg and flour with some salt and pepper. To me they taste quite similar to fried calamari when cooked that way. I love them. One of my favorite foods. I'd say the opposite of pretentious if you pick them yourself, but rather pretentious the way they're presented in this video.

  • @sandraleutzinger2131
    @sandraleutzinger2131 5 місяців тому +1

    Morel mushrooms grow in the Midwest. When I was a kid we would go hunting them in the spring

  • @ladybutters
    @ladybutters 3 роки тому +19

    Morels are so delicious. My family forages for them every season in the woods on our property. Then we just lightly flour them and fry them but if you're doing fresh you have to let them soak in salt water to remove insects.

    • @koroxus
      @koroxus 3 роки тому +1

      Yes! I always just saute them in butter, sometimes flour them sometimes don't! It's a great time of year when the morels start.

    • @OracleAnne
      @OracleAnne 3 роки тому

      @@laakins We always soaked them and THEN fried them, but some people didn’t bother. It’s just extra protein, right? Haha.

    • @ladybutters
      @ladybutters 2 роки тому

      @@laakins haha, no. Fresh as in not dried.

  • @erinhowett3630
    @erinhowett3630 3 роки тому +30

    New drinking game: take a shot every time Barry knows what the pretentious ingredient is.

    • @mrs.thomas-usmcwife5686
      @mrs.thomas-usmcwife5686 3 роки тому +1

      We would all be getting pretty wasted (depending on what you're drinking) and this is not approved for doing at work. LOL

    • @arransykes9465
      @arransykes9465 3 роки тому +5

      Sorry but I'm gonna have to copyright strike you for copying my profile picture 😂

    • @jameslynas1650
      @jameslynas1650 3 роки тому +3

      Presumably it'd have to be a shot of Meloni?

    • @galli0
      @galli0 3 роки тому +1

      Double shot when hes super sure but suuper wrong too 😅

    • @avikash7620
      @avikash7620 3 роки тому

      Mate, they'll end up on the floor within minutes!

  • @TraceyOfficial
    @TraceyOfficial 3 роки тому +1

    Watching Barry and Jamie have so much fun together made me so happy

  • @mareencope8421
    @mareencope8421 2 роки тому

    About 68 years ago in the Spring, my father would take me into the woods early in the morning to find Morel mushrooms. At home, he would soak them in salt water so any bugs in the folds could be rinsed out. Then they were chopped and mixed in scrambled eggs. One of my favorite memories as I lost him when I was 5 years old.

  • @thering0010
    @thering0010 3 роки тому +7

    Morels grow all over my grandparent’s property. We used to forage for them all the time when Iw as a kid. Even around that area in Northern Michigan people go nuts for them. We used to fill grocery bags! I recognized them immediately

  • @inokainemis
    @inokainemis 3 роки тому +29

    seeing black garlic makes me wonder, have the sorted food group ever used cured egg yolks

    • @0roseable
      @0roseable 3 роки тому +1

      I thought that when they said that the salt was eggy.

    • @PawsitivelyQuestionable
      @PawsitivelyQuestionable 3 роки тому +1

      Yup, they have! I think in the ramen battle

  • @pheflin526
    @pheflin526 Рік тому

    On my dad’s side of the family, everyone goes Morel hunting. It is known the conditions they like, but that doesn’t mean they are always there. At the end of the day, even if you don’t find any, it’s always nice to spend a day in the woods.

  • @bobblelooble3530
    @bobblelooble3530 3 роки тому +3

    I'd be really interested to see how the Bamboo salt compares to Indian Black Salt. When Barry and Jamie were describing the taste I expected it to be black salt, which is much, much cheaper! It's a vital ingredient in chaat masala.

  • @Youp1e
    @Youp1e 3 роки тому +4

    Hahahaha, Barry's face, the little slapping of Jamie's arm, brilliant!

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 3 роки тому +13

    I like the fact that it’s a certified joke that Pretentious Ingredients is equal to raiding Barry’s Fridge.

    • @thomasbonse
      @thomasbonse 3 роки тому +1

      ...except the raid is real.

  • @AdAm-cw3gi
    @AdAm-cw3gi Рік тому

    Sorted is the perfect mix of fun ans informative. The host’s are perfectly complementing each other like [insert a food parable].

  • @christinekaye6393
    @christinekaye6393 2 роки тому

    Morels! Got it first glance!! They grow around where I live (West Virginia, US) and are, indeed, highly prized.
    Two friends of mine were crossing a street and the center divider was covered in mulch out of which a swarm of morels were growing. They ran back to their house, got a paper bag, returned to the divider and picked every morel. They feasted on some and dried the rest.

  • @margowsky
    @margowsky 3 роки тому +27

    Morels are not uncommon in the mountains of Oregon. However, they do have a very short harvest cycle making them a delicacy here!

    • @SortedFood
      @SortedFood  3 роки тому +6

      Ah lucky you! How would you serve them?

    • @margowsky
      @margowsky 3 роки тому +7

      @@SortedFood clean them, then dredged in seasoned flour, quick pan fry in brown butter! Great with steak or served over a grain like cooked buckwheat. Eaten with quinoa and zucchini is delicious as well!

    • @Earendilgrey
      @Earendilgrey 3 роки тому +3

      They are fairly common here in Illinois as well. We either lightly bread them or saute them in butter.

    • @nobodyimportant5417
      @nobodyimportant5417 3 роки тому +2

      Tons in the river bottoms in Nebraska and Iowa, for about two weeks or so in spring. It's tough to get any, as many people around here treat morel harvesting as a contact sport.

    • @Dinariina
      @Dinariina 3 роки тому +1

      You can find morels in northen Europe too (scandinavia, Finland). I have not eat morels myself but some say that you can find them in burnt places/forests (like swidden) and new garden areas at spring (when the soil is new).

  • @bakadraco6321
    @bakadraco6321 3 роки тому +14

    Why is nobody talking about Barry and Jamie’s reaction to the price of the bamboo salt? 😂

  • @OhHeyTizKei
    @OhHeyTizKei 3 роки тому +4

    I mean we could go into the woods behind our house and get Morels every year. Between the woods and the bugs we had to clean out, it's hard to call them pretentious

    • @PawsitivelyQuestionable
      @PawsitivelyQuestionable 3 роки тому +1

      For you maybe xD it's all in the product positioning. In an area that doesn't have morels, people would pay at a surplus. They're delicious, I wish we had them over here, but I live in a tropical country and they go for about 50 dollars for 500 grams

  • @yesimarabbit
    @yesimarabbit 3 роки тому +3

    Morels are absolutely amazing and worth the cost. Also, I genuinely prefer black garlic powder to the paste. I feel like you can get more uses out of it!

  • @stephendonovan5056
    @stephendonovan5056 3 роки тому +28

    Bets are off when stuff is served with ‘courgette fries in Parmesan’

    • @Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co
      @Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co 3 роки тому +2

      Like, zucchini? The things people literally give away in August?

  • @astcat
    @astcat 3 роки тому +10

    Barry’s cupboard almost killed him in round one. 🤣

  • @Corina_Simpson
    @Corina_Simpson 3 роки тому +1

    Morel mushrooms are all over the place in the spring here in Vermont. you will literally find hundreds of thousands of them if you just wander around the woods of Vermont. Us wild foragers consider them to be the king of all mushrooms.

  • @mausolf19
    @mausolf19 3 роки тому +1

    Morels grow in northern lower peninsula of Michigan during the spring

  • @michellebretschneider-zuo1004
    @michellebretschneider-zuo1004 3 роки тому +36

    Video idea: Everyone reads reviews left online for your personal favorite kitch products & see if your opinion matches public opinion! Or, switch it up and make it "blinded" by having one person read the review and the guesser have to guess which of 3 products in front of them is the one being described

  • @notanalien9041
    @notanalien9041 3 роки тому +31

    I'm starting to think that Mike's color is fuschia. Go Mike!

  • @anne-marie9842
    @anne-marie9842 3 роки тому

    Interesting episode! Thank you guys.

  • @franziskastacker3457
    @franziskastacker3457 3 роки тому +8

    Morels are quite "usual" here in Austria and in the east of Europe. Of course fresh. Every posh restaurant has them when they are in season. Either way, I don't like them very much 😅

  • @mrs.thomas-usmcwife5686
    @mrs.thomas-usmcwife5686 3 роки тому +19

    Why does Barry try to look pretentious himself when he says "bring it on"? LOL

  • @nelltierney9989
    @nelltierney9989 3 роки тому +10

    “no one saw that, are we rolling? damn” IM FUCKING ROLLING AHAHAGHAGDHA

  • @jaybehkay2438
    @jaybehkay2438 4 місяці тому

    I’m glad they agree black garlic isn’t pretentious. It’s delicious and I love it

  • @shanh3016
    @shanh3016 3 роки тому

    Barry spotting the sandwich, turning into a little kid...side smacks and all...🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @Aurirang
    @Aurirang 3 роки тому +3

    Morels (Morcheln in german) are actually a pretty common ingredient in sauces for a roast at Christmas. Cooking them for a long while in a gravy makes the gravy alot more intense and brings out the unique Morel-taste. (I love it)
    But yes, they're very expensive.

  • @ducklinsenmayer7681
    @ducklinsenmayer7681 3 роки тому +7

    pass it on: Using all the ingredients from these shows over the years, make an insanely expensive dish :)

  • @ColinLeuze
    @ColinLeuze 3 роки тому

    This is a great way to format the series, with the pair of them together.

  • @giadanafra4635
    @giadanafra4635 3 роки тому +5

    New drinking game: let's have a shot every time someone says INTERESTING 😂