Process of Making Traditional Rice Cooker by Cutting Huge Stone. Korean Pot Factory
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- Опубліковано 21 вер 2022
- Process of Making Traditional Rice Cooker by Cutting Huge Stone. Korean Pot Factory
This video does not contain any paid promotion
📌Product in Video: bit.ly/3S6gIg7 (Stone Lee)
📌Contact: factorymonster2021@gmail.com
📌Copyrightⓒ 2021. Factory Monster. All Rights Reserved - Навчання та стиль
※This video does NOT include any paid promotion※
※ 위 영상은 유료광고를 포함하지 않습니다 ※
📦 제품문의(Product Inquiries): bit.ly/3S6gIg7 (영신스톤, StoneLee)
🎬 촬영문의(Filming Inquiries): factorymonster2021@gmail.com
-I film for the company who are proud of showing how their products are made.
-팩토리몬은 제품에 자신있는 소상공인 분들과 중소기업을 대상으로 무료촬영을 진행합니다.
Copyrightⓒ 2021. Factory Monster. All Rights Reserved.
111ㅣ141ㅣ기444ㅣㅏ444
Nice sounds
Wow the quality of English subtitle is just awful and ridiculous. Is it written by a 7 years old kid or you just can't use English?
하아~~~ 오밤중에 누룽지 테러 당했다............먹고싶어 죽겟네.............
The blocks with holes look useful for habitat restoration.
Whoever wrote the subtitles is a hero.
Forklift: "Why are we here? Just to suffer?"
I read them in the voice of Uncle Roger.. made it 10 times funnier, still!
@@klaernie now I can’t get his voice out of my head and I’m literally thinking in “uncle Roger”
Omg I want to eat that toasted rice at the end so bad 🤤
6:25 lol lots of dugtrio
From someone who has sat through too many forklift safety videos, I just want to say that this forklift driver is a hero.
I would prefer clay pots
Madmaxmiami Aaron.. His Korean name pronounced in English is Sketchy Sketcherson...
@@planeandsimple431 Foo L. Harhdi
I couldn't help notice they were wearing good PPE all through cause that's a dangerous work environment from start to finish
Klaus
Who ever made the subtitles deserves a raise and my congratulations. One of the best videos of 2022.
So many people dont appreciate how much work goes into things that they buy.
와.... 돌솥이 만들어지는 노력에 비해 엄청 싼거였구나... 진짜 대단하네요.
재료가 싸니까요
만들기 진짜 힘들어보이네요
@@user-vh3dt6bu2x 저재료 몇억년짜리돌솥임
@@user-vh3dt6bu2x 재료가 싸면 뭐함 저런건 운송비랑 인건비가 비싼데 노력에 비해 엄청 싼거지
Отколоть в карьере каменный блок, погрузить на грузовик, привезти его на завод, разгрузить, вручную разделить на 2 части, отвести на вилочном погрузчике в цех, распилить до половины алмазным диском, отвезти во двор, вручную расколоть оставшуюся половину, высверлить из него 10 цилиндров, остатки блока отвезти во двор, каждый цилиндр разрезать на 4 части для горшка и 8 частей для крышки, затем алмазными резцами грубо обработать крышку и горшок, затем в токарном станке обточить их, затем вручную отшлифовать. И в конце одеть 2 обруча из нержавеющей стали. Эта технологическая цепочка длиннее, чем при изготовлении интегральных микросхем. Ради чего ??? Чем камень лучше глины или чугуна ? Теплопроводность камня не очень сильно отличается от теплопроводности чугуна и глины. Процесс изготовления невероятно трудоемкий и энергозатратный.
I’ve spent two years in Korea in early 1980s while in the Army. Hard work and tough life for everyone. Then I went back for six more years working all over the country. I’ve always toured these little manufacturers (fishing poles, reels, shoes) to see how the locals work things out. This brought back some great memories. Great video work too, kept me thinking about dalsut (hot) beebimbop. I miss Korea.
dont lie pls
팩토리몬님, 안녕하세요. 건축을 전공하는 학생입니다. 평소에 이런 공정들에 많은 관심이 있었는데, 우리가 일상에서 써온 것들을 제작하는 과정을 눈으로 직접 보다니 정말 신기하고 재밌어요. 무엇보다 내레이션 없이 진행되는 모든 영상이 마음에 드는 것 같아요. 하지만 전 이걸 단순히 그러한 영상으로 보진 않는게, 모든 공업에 종사하는 사람들이 자신만의 요령과 스킬을 갖고, 때로는 고도화된, 때로는 전통적인 방식으로 우리의 일상품들을 만들어내는게 너무 신기하고 감사하고 예술적이라고 생각합니다. 많은 영감을 받고 가는 것 같아요. 앞으로도 좋은 영상 부탁드립니다. 감사합니다!
walaal waad mahadsantahay ra,yigaada wanaagsan intaa kadib waxaan kuu soo bandhigayaa diinta islaamka walaal aduunyadani waa wax iska dhamaanaya dhimasho ayaan ku xukumannahay dadka intooda badan ma aaminsana cadaab ama jano waxay leeyihiin qofkii wuu dhintay qolofkiisina wakaa qabriga kujiree maxaa lacadaabayaa !?horta qofku wuxuu ka koobanyahay jasad iyo ruux jasadku wuu iska baaba ba,ayaa laakiin ruuxdu madhimato waa iyada waxa lacadaabi ama lajanayn faahfaahin la xariir tv yada islaamka kuwa diinta kusaabsan mahadsanid soo dhawoow walaal ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Amazing video! Well produced and very captivating. The subtitles made it even more entertaining. I never thought about how much care and artisanry goes into each pot. Loved it!
돌솥하나가 이리 많은 노고를 거치는지 처음 알았네요..감사함을 느낍니다..
역시 세상에 쉬운건 없네요!
没有机械前 石头锅更难制作 怎么做的?
I am not sur if you are right!
Ugly edge bye-bye!😍
BOY that takes me back... When I was about 7 years old, my mom had a boyfriend who was a stonemason. He took me to a convention once, where we saw all kinds of new and innovative technologies for working with stone. I still distinctly remember a new hydrodynamic stone splitting system, that basically used high pressure water in plastic tubes to replace those splitting wedges. I was SO fascinated...
Yes. That's the easiest way. Also cut stone with Water Jets. Basically Sand cutting stone.
@@RabbitsInBlack Costs a lot but big kitchen top firms may have a hydro CNC, the factory i used to work at still does everything the 1960s way like this up in the northeast of england
Separate kid
Multiple ....
Who controls the British Crown
Who keeps the Metric system down
We do,We do.....
They're called a feather and wedge, and those hydraulic splitting machines are used a lot, especially in areas close to residential areas where you cant blast, or in other sensitive environments. Other times its tight spaces or other difficult to access areas, or in places where its cheaper/easier to hire ppl with hydraulic certs instead of blasting.
I haven't seen it here in the US, but i had seen that the UK has a two part mix that expands to exert pressure to split rock with. Its a pretty cool idea too, but i have no use for such things since im not a stone mason or miner, or construction worker.
I lived in Korea for 3 years. I often ate from this type of bowl (I loved Dolsot bibimbup - Stone pot mixed rice). I enjoyed seeing how these bowls are made. Awesome.
Hello there
is it practical ? is it better ?
@@aloyd6157 I dont know if it is practical outside of the restaurant environment, these bowls take a lot to heat up. The food tastes better😋
Those rubber gloves are very dangerous, they are so loose and can get caught in those machines.
Imagine how long these traditional rice cookers would have taken to make in a traditional way!
i was thinking the same thing, before electricity and the advent of these modern diamond grinding tools, on pot probably took days.
not to mention the years of practice, (and broken pots that were almost finished), it would have taken to get that skilled.
Traditionally, only the king and his few friends could afford it. The Korean people are notable for being both very hardworking and very poor. Also, you can cook rice perfectly by loading it into a piece of bamboo.
The whole video I was thinking, “Yeah, but how did your ancestors do it?
@@ledganache that’s true of most of Asia, hard working and poor. Actually, aside from royalty, aristocracy and government officials, EVERYONE worked hard and was poor.
Lathes and steel aren't modern technology, they sure weren't this efficient, but still.
Can't believe it was not sponsored. Anyhow, a solid craftmanship. Korean stone pot (called 'dolsot' - where 'dol' means stone, and 'sot' means pot) is a perfect bowl for the Bibimbap... works really well.
It is sponsored.
By everyone that watches it and thinks, "Honey! Come watch this! I want one! It would probably get here before Christmas!"
And if 45 thousand people see this, and 3% want one, they would sell One-Thousand Three-Hundred Fifty cookers.
That's right
3% of 45,000 views
is 1,350 pieces.
👍🏼If the restaurant has dolsot bibimbap and just bibimbap, I ALWAYS go dolsot! The crunchy rice bits are the best 🤌
비빔밥 말고도 한식당에서 많이 쓰긴함
@@hanleyk cerdas
Well fuck, a word which translates between two languages literally, that's new
石鍋って、こんなにも手間を掛ける作り方なんですね!
勉強になりました!
There’s nothing more ancient than a forklift, machinery and power tools. 😊
billy carson agrees with you.
i love the little jokes and humor in the captions. it's really adorable and this was such a fascinating process.
와.... 정말 많은 과정을 거쳐서 탄생하네요 ... 또 그걸 기가막히게 영상으로 찍으셔서 편하게 누워서 보고있네요
감사합니다
돌솥하나 만드는 데에 엄청난 노력이들어가네요. 정말 감사하게 먹어야 될 듯
There is a lot of hard work involved before it becomes such a beautiful cooking pot.
The subtitles are greatly appreciated. :)
Thank you for the humour in the subtitles
Thank you so much for watching :)
Turn on subtitles, enjoyment increases significantly!
😢 ‘Forklift is suffering’ heartbreaking
Hahahha thank you for the tip!
For some annoying reason UA-cam eneables subtitles on every video I watch no matter ho many time I tell it to not do it. In this particular occasion I was fine with it
@@thecommenter578 haha same
"Dugtrio"
What a beautiful way to cook rice. They must be expensive though. I didn’t know some rice cookers were made from stone. I wonder what the difference is in taste or quality of cooking? Fascinating.
Ah yes, the "traditional" forklift and power saw
Can't even imagine amount of labor put in this back in the day, where workers didn't have all that fancy machinery.
Thanks for sharing and huge props for the subtitles!
Unlike cheap electronic rice cookers, those hand crafted stone pots would last a lifetime or for generations even. I guess the labor intensive product would come at a cost back in the days.
@@HansWurst-lg1ws absolutely correct
But I meant - the amount of labor put in there by craftsmen in Middle Ages (or when they started to craft those pots) was tremendous. If even nowadays it takes so much effort, lots of machinery, etc.
I might be wrong, but those pots look like something came from the past.
@@HansWurst-lg1ws idk my fancy electric rice cooker will probably last many generations because it's cover in dust and unused..
@@HansWurst-lg1ws But DIAMONDS???
Back in the day they had 50 thousand Hebrew slaves running in a hamster wheel all night.
와 수많은 수작업이 이뤄져야 하나의 돌솥이 탄생하는군요...앞으론 비싸도 아무 말없이 사야 할 것 같네요...
It is amazing so much work goes into making these bowls and they cost so little even after transporting to the US. It makes great rice.
the rock takes so well to being formed. one of the coolest 'how it's made' type videos ive ever seen.
Well done video! I wish I could get one of the cookers. I will try and find one. Also: the subtitles in this video were hilarious! Just the perfect sense of humor to go with a mechanical process. Nice!
it's not really a "rice cooker" - in my mind (spent a LOT of time at Korean friends houses over the years including mealtimes) it's for making the Korean dish often spelled "dolsot bibimbap". It's a dish made in a super hot stone bowl - rice, bulgogi, fiddleheads, carrots, pickled veggies, a fried egg, some strips of gim (laver/nori), and gochujang red pepper paste and some sesame oil, maybe a few other things locally. And you add some bits of banchan (side dishes) as you eat. You basically get the whole thing with the bowl so hot you can't touch it - you take a few big spoons and stir it up pretty well. Then eat as you find spots that aren't scalding ^^. Eventually you may dig deeper and get a nice bit of crunchy rice that was sitting in the oil on the hot bowl and turned a golden color. It's a great dish, and you use this exact stone bowl to make it. It's fun when a whole table of people get it and the whole room heats up from those bowls radiating at everybody. :D
@@chouseification thanks for information!
Makes one appreciate the work that goes into creating such a simple utilitarian everyday cooking pot.
👍Yet it's one that will last a lifetime or more
@@davids7209 up to 6000 years I would say.
@@BillOweninOttawa And of course the warranty only covers 5000.
@@Ivegotwormsinme It's hard to get get quality anymore.
@@BillOweninOttawa The world we live in.
I can't get over how clean and smooth they look!
The subtitles are hilarous, lmao. "the stone is suffering", "to keep the stone from running away" "dugtrio" are some of the gems, haha.
I can't get over the craftsmanship that goes into making these beautiful utensils. It's not the machine work so much as the people involved in the creation of the pots. Love it!
The old POTS decades ago were true crafts made without electric machines made with much effort and by hand.
@@overdrivelzma.9219 Can you imagine those people using all sort of contraptions to move boulders around and then cutting manually, using pedal lathes...
I wouldn't want to arm wrestle someone doing that job back in the days 😂
@@overdrivelzma.9219 Indeed they were. And perhaps the supply was sufficient for the local markets. But when you want to supply the global market, a little machining doesn't hurt.
wingmakers interview 5 gonna change you world.
@@pomodorino1766 fork lift driver hard on his machine. Maybe he is encouraged to be but.....no
Thank you @Factory Monster!
The captions were fantastic, your English is superb! (ignore the haters, I'm an american giving you 👍👍!)
And thank you for NOT adding music. The sounds of the work being done are relaxing and enhance the video.
Overall you just a subscriber and thumbs up and a couple shares! Keep up the outstanding content! It's great to see people take pride in there work.
i subscribed purely for the subtitles, whoever did them is a pure genius. i was so invested.. 10/10 video
Forklift is suffering😂❤
Very cool watching the process of making these rice pots. If my eyes didn't deceive me, I think you still had all of your fingers too (working around those cutting wheels). I love the crunchy rice that you get around the edges. You have some very cool stuff on your website too. I'll pick up something for my wife. She already has some stone pot cookware, but you can never have too much 🙂
u r right “You can never have too much”
@@2000jago nah dude - those crispy bits are SO GOOD!!!
@@Factory_Monster do they do international shipping...difficult to see that on the web page after translation..
@@2000jago just try it out you’ll be amazed… I purposely overcook my rice just a little to get some of that crispy rice on the edges too
@@2000jago "the crunchy rice" can only be achieved with a clay pot or stone pot cooked over an opened flame. It is considered cooked just right! to have the maximum rice fragrant! In Chinese, It is called Guo Ba 鍋巴. It should be golden brown and not burnt. The electric rice cooker will never have the crunchy rice that you get around the edges.
돌 그릇이 있는 식당에 가서 볼 때마다 구수한 누룽지를 따뜻하게 마음의 힐링을 하며 먹을 때마다 기계로 만들고 투박하지만 왠지 오래된 듯한 전통의 선이 담긴 멋스러움이 있고 편안합니다.
Future historians would think those rocks with cylindrical holes are objects people used in the 20th century to launch some of the world's earliest missiles.
We eat rice in brazil too, but here we fry the rice with spices (usually garlic, salt and onion) before pouring the water to cook.
I feel sad for the poor forklift.
Forklift suffering
I'm like why 😑 Then I'm like jeezus they abuse them 😂😂😂
I imagine it's well greased and oil changes up to date! but yeah i hear what your saying.
@@casual257 id do maintainence twice as often
I feel sad for the burnt rice, 🥺
i love the subtitles they explain parts that dont need explaining but make the video way more enjoyable
good job
Muito linda estas panelas parabéns
Pregunto si esas ollas podrían ser vendidas en Ecuador contesteme por favor
금속의 용도가 멋인줄알았는데 ..이런 세심한 배려가 있었군요~
대단한 과정을 거져나오니 밥맛이 절로 나나 봅니다 ~최고!!
I've eaton from many rice bowls exactly like these and it just seems to taste better than rice from an electric rice cooker. Great job on the video
한국의 돌솥의 제작 과정은 정말 아주 세심합니다!
돌을 자르고 갈기 위한 휠 톱은 냉각을 위해 물이 필요하고 동시에 돌 조각이 사방에 튀지 않을 것입니다.그것은 정말 매우 강력한 디자인입니다!
현재 제가 아는 나라 중에 돌솥을 쓰는 나라는 한국밖에 없는 것 같아요!
@epa iso 뚝배기를 더 많이 쓰긴 하는데 돌솥도 씀 내가 볼 땐 돌솥이 더 비싸고 가공도 어려움 뚝배기는 항아리랑 비슷한건데 돌솥은 말그대로 돌이다보니
@epa iso 韓国でも家庭ではほとんど使わず、主に店で使います。
@epa iso 돌솥은 온도 유지가 다른 것에 비해 좋기 때문에 찌개류에 많이 사용함
The thing that impressed me the most was the methodical handling of the forklift when it was time to separate the cylinders from the rock. Seeing a forklift move like a delicate tool was a pretty unique sight. 😂
Poor forklift. Gets no respect.
Forklifts get used and abused, and they just take it for decades. They are always trying to hire forklift technicians but no one wants it.
That fork lift is ragged out its had a rough life.
First it was Korean Drama"s, now it beautiful stone pots. Who knows what awesome Korean stuff is next. Respect from America.
Parabéns pelo trabalho de altíssima qualidade!
You add a lot of character the way you narrate these, its awesome!
I just want you guys to feel what I felt there
@@Factory_Monster i’m in the comments because of the great subtitles. “Rock is suffering” “Stomach massage”
@@Factory_Monster I was waiting for a ripping on how much rice crusted on the pot, honestly. Subs were great throughout!
As I watched this video, I was hoping you'd cook out of the finished product. Lo and behold, you did!
Thank you rhank you so very much for making yourself uncomfortable and getting wet so we can see exactly how this type of stonework is done. You are seriously helping me understand more about ancient stonework artifacts found in Egypt. Specifically the famous 30,000 bowls from Abu Grabe and also rampant ancient evidence of large tube drills.
Thank you for sharing how they are made! Please thank them too! This video makes me happy!
와 돌솥 만드는게 보통일이 아니었군요~ 엄청나네요
간단하게 생각했었는데 , 복잡하네요. 비쌀 듯...
Beautiful wonderful amazing! Thank you so much for posting this wonderful video! I love it! So hard so much work to make these beautiful granite bowls! I so much wish they could sell those giant cored blocks! I remember the first time I saw this in a Korean restaurant it was so cool and awesome and amazing, the sizzling food in a stone bowl! ❤️
한 서너공정이면 끝일 줄 알았는데 정성이 엄청들어가네요...솥이 참 간결하니 이쁘네요
Me gusto mucho la parte de la sierra circular. Todo el proceso de fabricació de estas ollas es muy interesante.
Great video! Well-paced; the subtitles are perfect and give a taste of what it was like to be there. Like another, I am curious if they try to do anything with the offcuts. I could see the rough ends being redone as coasters for hot pots so they don't burn the table. Maybe another craftsman could use them?
Worst case, they can be made into crushed stone for landscaping or other uses.
Even the stone dust can be used as a soil amendment for organic farming, although more often than not the dust just goes to waste. Perhaps mixed in with fill for construction.
@@p51mustang24 You could also use the rocks to throw at people.
Stone trivets...?
That is really interesting. I did not know how granite pots were made. Thanks.
This place is so tough. Even the Rocks suffer .
Looks great.
I Imagine that making those with traditional methods would be crazy labor intensive though.
That is a neat process. I wonder when the first bowls were made.
The off cuts (scrap from the blocks) would make great habitat for fish with all the holes. Great for reef building.
Good idea, much friendlier than sinking old ships.
Great idea :)
I'm guessing this was the best way to cook rice for a very long time. This sort of thing could have been made even with stone tools, just would take a lot longer to do.
@@rayanderson5797 I very much doubt people were making granite bowls with stone tools during primitive times.
@@DaleNorthEast Well, some things look impossible without modern technology, but craftsmen can do incredible things with little effort. Just look how he split that huge rock in two. I have an old friend who can barely walk anymore, yet he still cuts trees. 😉😉😲😲
Stone work is some of my favorite to watch. I love when they cleave the stone in two with the chisels and the mallets.
Que processo fantástico, que resultado maravilhoso! Parabéns pelo belíssimo trabalho!
I have always been impressed by the amount of waste generated by the machining and turning industry... Not to mention the water required to cool mechanical parts. It's not hate, I just needed to make the observation. Very good video btw and the subtitles, a genius! What do they do with all the residual rock skeletons?
Creio vão a um britador para se tornarem pó para novos objetos usando colas ou em paredes como lindos rebocos à vista;
Very glad you included cooking the rice in the pot at the end! I'm tempted to get a rice pot like this now.
It's a commercial.
They show you a product and now you want one.
I didn't realize that it was an ad until I got to the end. I said, "YOU MEAN THAT YOU'RE NOT GOING TO SHOW ME ONE THAT WAS MADE WITHOUT ELECTRIC TOOLS, And Diamond Dust-tipped blades?
I call BS. You entitled it "TRADITIONAL something". You made that up because you think we are so stupid that we would just take your 'word' for it and not search for ancient hand-made things. Because if we did, we'd find cooking vessels made of Bamboo.
Traditional cooking and steaming of all food in the orient was done inside of bamboo, not granite.
This is a commercial.
The corporation that made it
thinks we're stupid;
That we'll say, "Honey! Come watch this! I want one! It would probably get here before Christmas!"
And if 45 thousand people see this, and 3% want one, they would sell One-Thousand Three-Hundred Fifty cookers.
That's right
3% of 45,000 views
is 1,350 pieces.
The commercial is successful, now you just remember the box and start looking for it and buy it.
@@hanleyk I feel sorry for you mahn
Excelente trabalho! Resultado do produto satisfatório. Parabéns aos trabalhadores desde aqui do Brasil 🇧🇷.
The final sound of the pot and lid is very satisfying.
But what do you do with the "burned rice"?
please keep the large rocks which have had the cylinders removed from them.
these can be placed in gardens with the holes filled with soil and plants can be grown in the rocks. the effect will be very pleasing
진짜 돌로 만든다고 생각 못했는데 비싼 이유가 있었네요! 너무 고마운 분들...
@@kimseungchan1 "찐"
왜..... 고마운거죠....?
incrivelmente bem elaborados. vale cada centavo. parabens mil vezes
Incrível, perfeito. Vai durar anos.
I have one of those bowls. I had no idea there was so much work to make one. Thanks!
Que perfeição, muito lindas as panelas.
I had no idea how much work goes into such a simple utensil. Love the subtitles.
How is that traditional but made with modern machinery? Where did they get those drills back in the day?
Bruh that forklift needs a raise
My favorite Korean dish is cooked in a stone bowl. Thank you for sharing!!
Everyone watching this should put their subtitle on
It’s funny af
"Forklift is suffering" 100% accurate, I felt bad for the forklift.
"Sounds like Porsche Taycan" 🤣
Stomach massage 🤣🤣
Don't worry, I don't drag this out showing the same shut.
Never do what the guy does at 7:06. Always turn the blade off before retrieving your work.
보는내내 가슴조리며 보게되네요. 안전사고없이 멋진돌솟 만들어주세요. 돌솟비빔밥 시켜먹어야 겠다. 감사합니다.
Yep, those machines very dangerous.
대단하네요... 이런곳에서 일하시는 분들의 처우가 만족스러우시길 기대합니다...
영상잘보면 만드는사람 동남아인 ㅋㅋㅋ
Loved this! There are three things.. no four things I absolutely love, clean, clear running water, good rich soil, quality wood/lumber and stone namely things made out of granite! Give me a home and garden with those elements and I’m in my happy place.
Sério?
完全手工製做、踏踏實實一步一步完成每個步驟、真的太完美了👍👍👍👍👍
Best subtitles ever. Please UA-cam, hire this person
Those leftover large rocks would make the perfect habitats for fish and other sea animals.
Just drop them in the ocean, they will become fish magnet.
Nice idea :)
Thats why i love korean made cause their so traditional,and have ancient cultural values❤️❤️❤️🇰🇷🇰🇷🇰🇷👍👍👍
Im wondering just what type of stone this is ?? But i always liked korean craftsmanship !!! 👍👍👍
dad: what's your intention with my daughter?
boys: 3:15 !!
bro💀
Excellent video. It does not matter which country or culture you are from; we all appreciate superb craftmanship.
정말로 돌을 사용해서 만들거라곤 생각도 못했는데 대단하네요. 링크 걸어주신 곳으로 들어가서 제품을 봤는데, 가격 더 높게 받아야할 듯..ㄷㄷㄷ 저렇게 힘들게 하시는데...
made in real stone; this amazed me too
Nice to see the ancient traditional process of CNC stone pot making.
That driver treated that forklift like it owed him child support.
Thanks for another great video! These are lovely pots, and I should think that they are very nice to cook in, with very even heat.
@Factory Monster -- It would be nice to see this utensil being used. In the southern part of India, in some "modern" homes where we use induction stoves, we still use clay pots in which we actually cook certain very specific dishes -- such as fish, beef, tapioca, etc. -- over a wood fire, of course!
Can see at the end
Beef?
The advantage of the stone pot is that it keeps the heat long, but if the detergent penetrates into the pores of the stone and boils the soup, it is to eat detergent soup.
Give whoever made those subtitles a raise
Very interesting production. I never knew that there were pots made of stone.
So what i REALLY want to know is HOW they "Traditionally" did this without the power tools... Your choice of subject are wonderful and really showcases these impressive crafts..Your translations are the best!
Ancient Aliens
They used to break the stone by hand tools.. It was more rough surface and much more difficult to manufacture it.
@johnnythepr1ck This is good cause they can produce big count of that items and sell that to earn more money.
@johnnythepr1ck They're dying. Sad, but true.
@johnnytheprick when a company take more profit, then the boss/owner will have more money.
The money will be spent somewhere like for buying luxury stuff, building big houses, etc.
As long as the wealth is going around, job will be available. Unfortunately wealth isn't always going around.
All the way back to the basics of the "stone age" in one of the world's most technologically advanced countries. And I am SO glad they're still doing this.
Yep, all those stone hammer drills and stone forklifts and stone carbide coring drills. The only 'stone age' aspect is the medium been crafted.