Tribal People Try British Food for the First Time
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- Опубліковано 6 вер 2023
- Tribal/Villagers try different International Food for the first time. They give pure reaction to the food/things they have never tried.
#tribalpeopletry #food #reaction #funny #real
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I think in the UK it's called comfort food 😊 Never heard of British soul food 😂
Only ever heard the term applied to Jamaican food.
Probably meant comfort food
Me neither, that term doesn't exist in the UK
Si, pero toma en cuenta la diferencia cultural ellos se refieren a SOUL FOOD como un término aplicado a la comida casera... Debe ser por eso que dicen soul food y no de otra forma 😊 pues es comida hecha con el alma o con amor por decir algo...
I’ve never liked a person who’s laughed at your type of observation. Honestly, the most boring people on this planet
*Soul food is often generally referring to Southern American foods. Soul food uses cooking techniques and ingredients from West African, Western European, and Indigenous cuisine of the Americas. 'Comfort foods' is what is called dishes like these shown. But comfort food IS good for the soul food!*
if it aint southern it aint soul!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Don’t forget Jamaica!
I’m British and we don’t do mashed potatoes bland. You add plenty of salt when boiling potatoes. Then strain. Then put back in pan an over heat to get any remaining water. Then mash mash mash. All lumps gone!!! Then add salt,white pepper,massive knob of butter and a glug of double cream. Then grab a fork n whisk it up! Also proper onion gravy,which you finish the sausages in. 👍🏼. I’m a proper old fashioned cook,I’d love to come and cook trad English dishes for you ❣️🇬🇧. Fabulous that ur all back. You are my guilty pleasure and you all always make me smile and my day a lil bit better 😁❣️🇬🇧 much love and prayers to you all from London U.K. Grandma 👵🏻❣️🇬🇧
Yes, mashed potatoes are nice when done properly. I wonder if they served them some kind of instant crap, like Smash, which is bland and artificial tasting.
Britain invent Bland ,and curry is an Indian import
@@j.robertsergertson4513 Bland isn't an invention, it's just a lack of flavour - many cultures plaster all their dishes with salt, pepper and spices to add flavour, while some rely on combining what's on your plate to complement one another, creating a subtle mix of natural flavours rather than overhwhelming you with spicy/sour/sweet additives in every mouthful.
Compared to our cooking, their cooking is much more spiced. It's a total different universe, so for them our cooking is bland in general.
Even nice mashed potato is going to taste a bit bland if you're from South Asia
Please tell these wonderful gentlemen that British love spicy food! Many people from India & Pakistan emigrated to UK and so there plenty of restaurants & take-aways with Curry dishes & we love them! I believe a recent poll showed that Curry food was in top 3 favourite meals in Britain.
The Phall was made for a British Audience
I think Phall was invented for some drunk man who fell out the pub and wanted something really hot😂
Except it makes our ar5es explode.
Soul food is variety of food found in the southern US, created through African origins. British cuisine isnt soul food. I believe the term you're looking for is "comfort food".
What, you think we don't have people of African origins in the UK?
@@Beedo_SookcoolI'm sure you do.
Go back far enough, close to 100%. 😁
Different cultures call it Different things, means the same.
@@TheTwoFingeredBulldog it doesn't mean the sme thing at all. At best, "soul food" is a very specific type of comfort food. The meanings are completely different. All soul food is comfort food, but not all comfort food is soul food. For example... mashed potatoes and gravy is not "soul food"... but it certainly is "comfort food"
You MUST!!! have salt and malt vinegar available when eating fish and chips
Agreed. Inedible without them. 🤣
In the U.S. tartar sauce is popular with fish.
@@kathyr2792 Yep. That too.. mushy peas is a thing here. I love it. One of my favourite dinners. 😁❤️
I worry the malt might ferment in the heat and turn to alcohol
God no! Lemon, all the way 😅
I've never heard it being soul food? I agree with the other comments as it being 'comfort food'
food made at home easily to just make you happy is comfort food. what you're giving them is traditional British comfort foods. Soul food is an ethnic cuisine originating from the cuisines of enslaved Africans trafficked to the North American colonies. It is the food of the black communities in the south. Its amazing food as well
Exactly. It's American.
Don't forget the Turtle soup.
Maybe the food from the UK is “comfort food”, which is food that we love to eat and can remind us of our home away from home and/or childhood, etc. Meanwhile: “Soul food is an ethnic cuisine originating in the Southern United States. It originated from the cuisines of enslaved Africans trafficked to the North American colonies through the Atlantic slave trade during the Antebellum period and is closely associated with the cuisine of the American South”. Yes, I used a literal definition of “soul food” hence the quotation marks. I thought that was the best way to go to highlight the difference. Although “soul food” can be comfort food too.
I’ve noticed that there seems to be a word they use that describes a “bland” taste in a positive way that doesn’t exist in English. It’s not explicitly “bland” in the sense we native English speakers use it, but rather things that are starches that act as a base or foundation for other flavors. I’d say, “starchy,” might be a closer translation, though that can have negative connotations as well. In English, “bland” usually means that something _lacks_ any flavor, and it usually isn’t a flavor of its own.
Yes, such a word does not exist in English, we borrow the Japanese word for it, which is "Umame"
I suppose "Savoury" is also a comparative word, but usually savoury just means something without sugar.
Really love you guys... Every person working in this channel the Camara team, the editing, the cooking team everyone I love all... Greetings from Venezuela 😊🎉 blessings
I suppose that the British term “Comfort food” could be seen as food that’s good for the soul.
It’s tasty, easy and familiar with the potential to bring back memories of childhood.
The jam and cream scones was funny .. 😂 Couldn’t help the cream gettin in Gul Sher’s moustache
British 'soul food'???? That's a new one on me lol. The things the guy with the orange turban comes out with cracks me up
I’m British and I’ve never heard of British Soul Food
That's because "Soul food" is more of a Southern US thing. I'm not sure why they're using it to describe British food.
you should travel ......... fish and chips ........ bangers and mash ........ scone and jam ........
Yeah cmon my G, Bangers and mash, Sunday roast, fish and chips, I don't know how common this one is but "Mish Mash Bish Bosh" (A mixture of simple pick at type foods, sausage rolls, scotch eggs, boiled eggs, cheese & bacon pasties etc) - though acquired or cooked, still classic British soul food❤
@@Villy245 They are bad about this kind of thing. If these people have dietary restrictions, stop trying to make substitutes that don't match up to the real thing and calling it the real thing. I'm American and Black and I know that soul food has a lot of pork in every dish pretty much. They need to stick to what these people can actually eat. Which isn't much.
I have heard of British Soul Music, but yeah, never British Soul FOOD. 😒
Aw this was lovely. Their interpretation of our food and what they can get of it and the translation of what it is so bravo to them
Mr. Tahir missed his callings to be a
License Doctor.
He has all the medical answers for do’s and don’t. 😂😂
Just love his humor.
I laughed when Gull got cream on his Stache.
Napkins please.
Try chicken Fricassee
In the South USA
We call it simply
Chicken and Brown gravy over rice, with French bread for sopping up the sauce.
Great Channel as always👌🏻💕
🙏🏻 for 🇺🇸
Fun video! Thank you!
I'm not sure if there's a cultural translation issue, but I think the term you want is "comfort food." "Soul food" has different connotations.
How's your Urdu? Maybe you could help them out.
@@annainspain5176 My Urdu is slightly worse than my Quechua -- and all I know in Quechua is how to sing "Kullakita."
Just trying to help spread greater understanding, is all.
It looks like your Quechua is just as bad as your Urdu because Kullakita is in Aymara, not Quechua…
@@rachelpage6884 Exactly!
But English, I *do* know, and that's why I offered to help, there.
@@Beedo_Sookcool As a professional translator myself (eng/span) I can tell you if you don't speak their language you can't correct the translation. Bear in mind that English isn't the subtitle creator's first language, probably not second either.
"British people don't like spicy food" is a common thing I've heard over the decades. Aside from curries, typical "village pub" style cooking is simple, savory, old fashioned comfort food with few ingredients but high quality meats. As an American kid I was lucky enough to have a Pakistani family move into my neighborhood so I got to try a ton of cuisine from that region, and developed a love of things like biryani, roti, paneer, etc. During my Army years I was introduced to Korean, Japanese, southern US foods, and South American cooking. A 2 week stint training with SAS troops taught me the wonders of proper fish & chips and bacon butties, which don't seem to exist here in the States sadly.
"'British people don't like spicy food' is a common thing I've heard over the decades" . . . yes, from ignorant people who don't know jack.
British people love spicy food, there just wasn't much in the way of native spices. There are 42 Indian restaurants in my town of 120K people. We're just very lucky here to have had such a wonderful immigration of food cultures from around the world that we celebrate, explore and love.
When new spicy Indian curry dishes are created in Britain, we don't label it as British, we maintain that it's Indian Food, Indian culture. Chicken Tikka Masala, invented in the UK, is Indian food to us. Balti, invented in Birmingham, England, is Indian food to us.
@@LittleBallOfPurr Seriously, the people who knock the food in Britain clearly haven't actually tried any. (Or if they did, they chose the wrong place to try.)
@@Beedo_Sookcool Even as an American, I'm usually eating bangers and mash at least once a week. Easy and delicious. I also love fish and chips. I'd say British cusine is doing something right to end up so heavy in my rotation 😂
never heard of british soul food..i think thats a down south thing here in the usa only..lol but hey its food and you got to try it so enjoy!!
I love these gentlemen, what wonderful world we would live in with them in charge , greetings from England, may your families and God protect you.
It would be interesting for them to try Polish food like kielbasa and Pierogi.
A lot of food in UK is bland, but many Brits are Chilie Heads and eat a lot of spicey food. Its just the food that the UK is known for isnt that spicy, but believe me the curries are hotter in the UK than they are in India.
[Cracks neck, sips tea]
>AHEM<
All those spices we "conquered the world to get and never used"? Yeah, only the rich people and the gentry got those. Nobody else could afford them, so why would they be traditional ingredients? Best we could do was wild garlic and some local herbs.
Then, after 1066, the Norman invaders made it illegal on pain of death for the common folk to take any good game, fowl, or fish from the land and rivers, so for a good 800 years or so, everyone subsisted on mostly vegetable stews with some bread, or pies, some eggs and dairy, and maybe a little meat on rare special holiday occasions . . . but still no spices, because they still couldn't afford them. We had to find creative ways of surviving, which is the only reason why the boiled, heavily-processed stems of a poisonous plant (rhubarb) in a pie crust was ever a thing in the first place.
Then, just after we were getting into a good stride after the Pure Food Law was passed in 1875 to stop unscrupulous Industrial Revolution food manufacturers from adding sawdust and powdered minerals to the food to boost their profit margins, we had two World Wars in rapid succession with a Great Depression in between, which wreaked absolute havoc on our food chain. Wartime rationing didn't end until 1954, TEN YEARS after the war in Europe had finished.
So for a couple of decades, the most reliable food was imported canned-ration-style stuff, like baked beans and tinned spaghetti. Whole generations got used to subsisting on that. It became comfort food to millions. And they passed that predilection down to their descendants.
Modern British food started to get WAY better in the 1980s, and it's excellent, today. If you have nothing but bad food in the UK these days, that's all on you eating in the wrong places. And mocking British food because of what it was like in our past is just mocking the poor, downtrodden, and war-torn, from a position of modern wealth, abundance, and privilege. And if you're going to do that, you might as well mock cultural foods like collard greens and grits, too.
Depends on the quality of the sausage and gravy.Same with the fish and chips, and not easy to cook.
These videos are so wholesome and I love the way they love our food 😂😂
We really do love our 'aloo'! A good tate goes with pretty much everything.
Look how easy it is to spread love.they r simple innocent people who know nothing about outside world but just by trying different food from all over the world,they have learned alot and gain love and respect
There are 3 things you must have for the fish, depending on your preference. Lemon juice or vinegar or tarter sauce. I prefer to squeeze a little lemon juice on my fish and dip it in tarter sauce. Yum. 😋
Not just any vinegar, it MUST be malt vinegar.
Not everyone wants to mess up the taste of their fish with lemon juice
They needed some malt vinegar for the fish and chips for sure. I love Mr. Chaudhary's face every time you give him sweets.
I love the attempted translations 😂
These dishes are old style traditional comfort foods. Brits love spicy food, in no small measure to the influence of immigration from India and Pakistan over the last 50 years. We have fully embraced the cuisine and made it our own to the point of inventing new curry dishes. Indian food is everywhere in the UK. Occasionally eat sausage and mash, would probably add more gravy than the one in the video.
india immigration? colonization and slavery for more then 100 years. HISTORY. learn it
Would love to see them try beans on toast 😁
It all looked good, whether you call it soul food or comfort food!
I love fish and chips! I'm American but every time I go to England that's what I go for. And I love malt vinegar on my chips or french fries...Even on my fish makes it tastes good. Actually, malt vinegar on the chips and then dipping them in mayonnaise is the best.
I actually made my own clotting cream once. Took me 13 hours to bake it in the oven but it turned out awesome...
Have you ever tried mushy peas or chip shop curry sauce with your chips? 😊 In a lot of the UK mayo is considered European not British, though salt and vinegar are obligatory (not really obviously, only if you want them) 😂😂
@@hedda2022 no, I've never tried the mushy peas for the chip shop curry sauce. I do love curry! And I love pea soup. Make it several times a year...
I think I'm more British than American sometimes 😊
Those who live in former and ex-trawler fleet towns probably have 'the best' quality fish. The people here in Grimsby turn their noses up at cod and only eat haddock. The 'cod or haddock?' debate divides families and communities.
@@flamingpieherman9822 Next time you go there maybe you could try them, but ask for them to be put in a small separate container on the side, rather than poured over the meal in case you don't like them 😊 The mushy peas taste better with vinegar, and the curry sauce is unlike any you'd get in a South Asian restaurant 😂 I love them both but maybe it's an acquired taste 😄
I wouldn't eat fish n chips if I couldn't have malt vinegar with it. It just wouldn't seem right.
Ironically, curry has become pretty much a British soul food, given how popular it is. It's right up there with sausage & mash, fish n chips, and Cornish pasties.
Nope Curry is an Indian import ,
No such thing as British soul food.
@j.robertsergertson4513 we eat alot of curry over here and the national dish has changed to chicken teka masala! Look it up!
Fried fish was a Jewish dish and fried potatoes French I believe so they are both “imported” ideas.
Since potatoes originally came from South America that would make “mashed potato” imported as well. 😁
@@j.robertsergertson4513 no shit Sherlock. Smh
I knew Doctor Tahir was a man after my own heart. Bland food is indeed delicious in its own way!
Watching these guys enjoy their food always makes me so damn hungry lol
Soul food is only found in America, originating in the southern part of America.
British food is known for being bland. The fish and chips are really good though.
Yet none of us eat bland food thats just an ignorant american outlook
Mr C saying it has a bland taste😅😅😅
Welcome to British food! 😂
Obviously they never seasoned the mash potatoes, also no salt and vinegar on the chips and no tartar sauce
sir he had a bite of mashed potatoes, that would encompass a huge range of other countries foods too
It was a jab. A joke. Don't get offended😅
These gentlemen are wonderful characters.
Really enjoyed this coming from the UK glad they enjoyed
Never in all my life have I ever heard the words 'British' and 'soul food' in the same sentence.
soul food is food that makes you happy
Mr. Chaudhary 's face lights up with the fish
I think my favourite comfort foods would have to be steak pie (especially with sausages in it) or macaroni cheese. Those two are always winners. Fish and chips always needs lemon juice or malt vinegar, salt and tartar sauce... of for those of us with a sweet tooth, tomato ketchup!
Love all their videos,but especially the ones where they get to eat sweets.. Chaurdury's face says it all..I knew Gul wasn't eating that without feeding his stash too!!😂❤😊
As a Brit, I was so confused cos I only hear Soul food from American's and it ain't this stuff 🤣.
Thank god for the comment section. Comfort food makes much more sense😄
*Tahir is on the road to a fish taco by putting it in roti! Just add veggies and there you are! Rana understands comfort food spot on! Chadhaury....ahhh you got your sweets, and glorious creamy too! Love how you taste the sweet and sour of jam.*
Some of us enjoy a slice of bread and butter with fish and chips as well.
Love you guys 😀😀😀
Soul food is exclusively American. There is no British soul food.
Eating cream with finger reminds me of my childhood. Yummmm 😊
As a British citizen I can assure you that we have no soul let alone soul food. That being said this brings me a smile.
Your comment brought me one 😊😂
I guess a lot of these could seem bland but we tend to add things like salt, pepper, vinegar and mustard to our own taste after the food is served.
I think it’s a mistranslation for which there’s no direct English translation. I’ve noticed when they say something’s “bland,” they mean it as an actual type of flavor. The kind you get with a starchy base food that’s covered in other things. Stuff like bread, mashed potatoes, etc.. There have been a few videos where they say “bland” but mean it in a positive way as just another flavor element to a food.
*Mashed potatoes with anything is sort of 'comfort food'... in the USA at least from my experience. It is something that just makes you happy whilst and after eating, and usually not a spicy food. I like mixing my vegetables into my mashed potatoes. Grilled cheese sandwich with tomato soup is another Winter comfort food.*
Did you salt the potatoes? Tell Dr Tahir that we love Indian spicey foods. Now you have to teach them how to fillet a fish so their wives and kids can eat fish .
I was expecting poor versions of grits, fried chicken and cornbread, but instead saw familar fish and chips and bangers and mash. I would have been horrified for my American brothers if we did produce some second rate Southern food 😂
I love these guys!
Bless these fellas
3:16 Gotta love Chaudhury's expressions :)
They def' oughta visit the U.K as an american like country (yet still very unique of its own). I like how britain has this cozy village vibes all in all, good town chatter and the rest thatd be much more up their alley as it is i say and not near as far to travel as a first destination
Most of words in america will make them plenty fluent in the U.K. were colorful too, in our own ways
Fish and chips needed malt vinegar.
It's a sin serving scones, cream and jam without a nice,hot earl grey tea.
They need to experience real soul food
Soul food in America is NOT simple... Not sure about the Brits. Didn't even know they had soul food.
i think a lot of british food being bland or not spicy is that spices dont grow naturally there, while they may have had a huge trade empire of spices most everyday people didnt ever have access to them, only nobles royalty and politicians. regular access to spices is a thing from the last 150 years, and most western places use restaurants catered to specific cuisines even today, though common food is still heavy with salt and lacking spice!
Gul Sher Khan is awesome, love that guy.
2:21
I love his style
His rings
He looks like someone who knows what he wants, and loves it!
A couple have gone to great efforts to use utensils properly and it shows with different cuisines.
you good people need to come to england and try real fish a chips ,also an english sunday roast
No tartar sauce for the fish? I know some like it with vinegar and some ketchup - but they got none of any. ☹️
Yum - bangers & mash, and, fish & chips 😋. Scones.... Yummo!
Soul food is a name originally from African/ black people meals.
thank you for making the subtitles so big I can't see the food
Wheres the mushy peas !! Lots of salt and vinegar and a pickled onion or two
For me, tartar sauce is needed for fish and chips.
Definitely needed mushy peas/curry sauce/gravy/tartar sauce... at the very least a good dose of vinegar from a jar of pickled onions... I don't know anyone who eats fish and chips dry 😂
Fish and chips combined in a flatbread or fluffy bread with some tartar sounds amazing
Def having fish and chips tonight it's Friday in Australia, god bless all
Mr Chaudhary says, “Excellent!” as he puts down his fish…
I think the gentlemen would love Creme Boulee...a great desert!
creme brulee. French for burned cream.
dessert. not desert
I wish I could cook a Salmon for you. I live in Oregon in the USA we have the most wonderful fish in the world here.
You got to have peas with Bangers and Mash, and mushy peas gravy bread and butter with the Fish and Chips
Would somebody PLEASE show these fellas how to filet a fish!!
Great video as ever, 3 things, that didn’t appear to be clotted cream on the scone, the fish n chips didn’t include mushy peas or chip shop curry sauce along with salt n vinegar to taste and I think English mustard should be offered with sausage n mash. Interesting comments and I do love ‘tribal people’ all such nice men.
They should like the 'fish & chips' cause they can eat it with their fingers.
I’m British. My comfort food is pasta! Thank goodness for immigrants. We all love Indian, Italian, Chinese, Greek, Japanese food and many, many more!
lol. immigrants? Historically speaking, colonization brought you those foods
The Gentleman in the brown turban is wearing a Rado diastar swiss watch!!!!!! 😮
It's not soul food. It's comfort food. The expression "soul food" originated in the mid-1960s, when "soul" was a common word used to describe African-American culture. Soul food uses cooking techniques and ingredients from West Africa. Comfort foods are regional. For example, you have clam chowder in the northeast. That would never be considered soul food. In the south, you have southern comfort foods like biscuits and gravy and fried chicken, and then soul food is another category that comes out of that, like yams and collard greens. In the southern US, we claim it all, but respect is due to the culture that brought us soul food.
I am commenting to get notifications
Usually soul food is Southern states in America
I think they mean "comfort food."
With the scones they need some tea!
First time I have to say that the definition of what thr food is is incorrect.. lost in translation. Soul food has its roots in thr Southern US from times of the slave trade and has African origins. Comfort food is hot, starchy, carb or fat ladened food with simple ingredients which is easy to prepare and consume
Every year there is a Nathan's brand hot dog eating contest. 🌭 Like to see how many they can eat in 5 minutes. Have plenty of drink available. Can keep it a simple hotdogs. Mustard/ketchup or could add onions, chili or even add cole slaw.
Long live Joey Chestnut!
Never heard of soul food and I’m British
Forgot the mooshy peas and curry dip as well as balsamic vinegar and tarter sauce 😋
Plus those are not scones and it clotted cream that is used with jam on top. Those were yeast donuts 😂😅
Lol is 10:30 am in the U.S.A and seeing this im eating cereal lol give me that lol,😂😂😂 love it
Sauces would provide an appropriate look into the culture of the UK. Regarding the fish and chips; having tartar sauce, vinegar, ketchup, and mayonnaise to create personalized sauces for both.
Dr. Tahir-you are becoming very skilled with the knife and fork. ⭐️
Mr. Gul Sher-that cream looks good on you. 😁
Some folks in America make Corned Beef and Cabbage on St. Patrick's Day. I prefer Bangers and Mash with onion gravy.
We would eat the scones along with a cup of tea. The guys would love that…
soul food?🤔
Soul food is generally understood to be food that feeds the soul as much as the body. Food made with love that spans generations.
I love how Mr. Chaudry delights in sweets. He’s a “sweet” man.
I sincerely hope your channel never gets a strike because of Tahir's medical advice.😆
Americans like British fish & chips too.