This "Dinosaur Egg" is One Of The Rarest Salts In The World | Still Standing | Insider Business
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- Опубліковано 7 тра 2024
- Asin tibuok, nicknamed the dinosaur egg, is one of the rarest salts in the world. In the 1960s, salt-making families in the Philippine island of Bohol would trade it for food and other goods. But the craft nearly disappeared in the late 20th century when younger people left the trade for more profitable careers.
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00:00 - Introduction
01:18 - Preparing Coconut Husks
03:25 - Filtering Seawater Through Ashes
04:18 - Preparing the Stove
06:30 - Cooking Salt Brine
08:20 - Removing and Cleaning Pots
09:29 - Packing Asin Tibuok
09:53 - ASIN Law
10:59 - Indonesian Palung Salt
13:47 - How to Cook with Asin Tibuok at Toyo Eatery
15:19 - Challenges
16:40 - Asin Tibuok’s Future
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This ‘Dinosaur Egg’ is One Of The Rarest Salts In The World | Still Standing | Insider Business
I like how we are all amazed by the making of the salt, but this man took in a child when he had nothing, raised him, and gave him a job. That is amazing!
@@NotTheMothMan A job usually pays, a family business makes you more than an associate though
embarrassing if u ask me
@@MrFatdubymanThat's why we didn't ask you.
There is a type of apprenticeship in some Asian countries. Usually an older man, a master of a craft, would adopt orphan child/children. He would teach his craft to the child and raise him for free. The child is expected to work as he gets old enough and hopefully take over the business and care for the old man as he retires.
Indentured servitude type beat
Removing jewellery and all that isn't superstitious, they are working with heat/open fire, also the salt/salty water can damage the jewellery, or cause troubles while handling work.
Exactly! Same with oily foods - you don't want oil on your skin around that kind of heat.
But they're poor brown people so Insider Business has to make them seem more exotic and backwards by mentioning superstitions 🤡
A lot of superstition is grounded in reality, somewhere. Of course, not all of it, but it definitely bears at least a bit of consideration sometimes.
Right, I thought the same thing.
Actually most superstition isn't grounded in reality.
It's formed by mixing with half-truths.
Only a few have some actual grounding.
Besides removing jewelry for such work seems simply practical? Because it obviously can get in the way at the very least.
I'm from Bohol, Philippines and I can understand the dialect they spoke. Sadly, I never heard of asin tibuok in my province until it was featured here. I appreciate their hardwork since we, Filipinos are industrious, but sadly the labor is cheap. Thank you for featuring this.
Tinuod na Bai baratu ra kayu labor
FEATR showcased it before as well in their own documentary featuring the same family
Murag Naa nis Bohol Museum bai gi display..
It's not Boholano is it? It sounds a lot like Bisaya, my mom speaks Bisaya and I can sadly only understand bits and pieces of it
@@kitcutting Boholano/Bol-anon is a Cebuano Bisaya dialect, so there's bound to be many similarities with some own pecularities of their own that isn't the same as in Cebu.
Very cool process. I bought a dinosaur egg a few years back. It has a super smoky/fruity taste to it. Not ideal for all dishes, but amazing on meat!
What are the benefits of eating the salt?
@@RobertsDigitalit tastes good on meat.
Wait, it actually tastes different to regular salt? I got too bored to pay much attention to the video but it seemed like there was no explanation to what makes these special.
@@elio7610 well there's the coconut husks
@@elio7610 Well maybe next time watch it and you'd know 😂
I see, so basically the coconut husks are used to concentrate the seawater into brine by evaporation and infuse the 'sweetness', just like how Japanese used hay and poured sea water over it and burn them. Then they burn the husk, crystallizing the salt and infusing the salt with smoky aroma. At that point it's already similar with how Korean's bamboo salt was made, but then they refined it further by pouring brine to the salt, removing some of the overpowering aroma. Then finally it got crystalized in clay vessels.
Its absolutely fascinating to me how practices in one culture can be so similar to another culture's despite being 2000 miles away.
They said the husk ash was used as a filter, the brine is concentrated seawater. After it's filtered they boil off the rest of the moisture in the clay pots.
They probably don't have to do much to prep the brine, I imagine it's right out their backdoor.
If you made it all over the world it would taste different and offer different rare minerals we probably don't really need but could benefit from nonetheless.
alot of work for nothing. i'll go to walmart and buy five years worth of iodized salt for ten bucks
@@MrFatdubyman not for many dish but good on meat because of Smokey and fruity taste and its cheap
@@MrFatdubymaniodized salt is slightly bitter, but whatever floats your boat.
The National Cultural Heritage Act should be expanded to protect these traditional products.
traditional products doesn't mean better products and alot of the time it just means higher priced products and less regulated and dangerous products
@@MrFatdubymanless regulated, sure. But some of these have been traditionally made for centuries now if not millennia. If there's ever a problem it would've shown by now.
@@MrFatdubymansince when did cooking salt became dangerous!?
after the ACTERS almost killed it......... yea sure
Anything Artesinal is worth your every penny. Pag sure diha. @@MrFatdubyman
We all should support local artisans around the world.
Easier said than done
I respect the people who bring back old traditions like this massively, but I just can't help but think in how many ways this process could be improved. The molds, the iron rods, the way they control the fire all could be improved. It's a shame they get no government support to invest in such improvements and are stuck doing it the way shown to support themselves.
I was thinking if they only had some kind of stand for the pots it would make the process so much quicker and easier.
Yea, but then it wouldn't really be so special anymore. Then everyone would do it, and the prices would go downhill.
@@Der_Kleine_Mann It shouldn't be "special". If you want to persevere culture making it a purposely laborious task that many don't want to do will just increase the risk of it going extinct again. If everyone is doing it, the culture survives long term.
Since special salts and their health benefits are just marketing hype, even if you make improvements it would still just be an ineffective way to process salt. This is all about the traditional process and preserving it
@@Der_Kleine_MannSo you want prices to remain artificially high so that it can only be enjoyed by the elites? Well that's not how a culture survives.
People like these are what is precious to the diversity of humankind. I'm thankful to learn about them through episodes like this.
Very cool to fetishize poor people doing incredibly inefficient (borderline pointless) work to eek out sustenance for themselves.
i salute that chef whos support the local bussiness! mabuhay ka kapatid
I love how all the materials used in the production are natural things from the environment around them.
that's what happens when that's all u have to work with lol it's called living in a 3rd world country. you would also probly like the simplicity of their wastewater management system since all they do is shit in a bucket or a hole
Natural things like plastic bottles 😂😂
@@FullPlaythroughs And rods of building steel.
And cement in the oven.
And mass refuse from coco plantations
everything that exists comes from the environment
Duh samok kaayo uban ga comment diri mga nega 🙄🙄🙄
Traditional Salt Tultul in Guimaras Province Philippines also have a unique flavor because of coconut milk added during the cooking of the salt.
Traditional Korean bamboo salt was a billion industry.
Featr should feature them. They have the Salt Series after all.😊
@@scorpioninpinkthey just posted a video last night about it
To everyone who says this is just another artisanal salt, it really isn't! It's smokier (you can really taste the smoke but not in a disgusting way) and finer than table salt. It almost tastes sweet. My late grandpa used asin tibuok exclusively back when he was still cooking for everyone and even shaved off chips of it to give to us kids as a treat.
Sadly it's sold at too high a price point for most locals to afford (because of the labor-intensive process). The few times I've had it, I used it for vinegar-based dishes like ensalada. Also great on sunny side up eggs and fried/grilled/baked fish.
Good for red meats and fish I would assume. Can you explain the sweet aspect, usually smokey and sweet in a salt sounds odd but im curious. Also when your grandpa(god rest his soul) was shaving off chips wee you eating them like candy straight or whats the process there? Thanks in advance.
@@roundtrip385 High-end French fleur de sel and Portuguese flor de sal also have a sweetness that is said to be contributed by salts other than sodium chloride (such as magnesium chloride), which are present in small amounts in the seawater from which such natural sea salts are made.
@@dbadagna Very cool! Thanks for the reply.
Ive noticed the best cooking really almost entirely about whoever gets the best ingredients.
The sweetness is from the coconut husks. I actually make bulk orders from Nestor, and sell them whole at my local farmers market. After shipping (air) it costs me about $26 per 1.5kg egg. I make around 250% margins. People love the novelty and history. More and more local restaurants are buying from me as well to the point that I'm more financially secure than I've ever been in my life. I just sent Nestor and his workers a Christmas package last month. I got each of them a bottle of bourbon and mini Louisville Slugger bats.@@roundtrip385
I got exhausted just watching the whole process 🥵 . Absolutely incredible craftsmanship these folks have displayed here. You have to be 1000% committed to do this work, no half stepping. Hats off to them and I wish they were paid hefty amounts of money for their labor, even tho I know part of the reason they do this out of love, preserving a tradition. I want to try this salt myself !
I got exhausted watching the process because I could think of a dozen ways to make it easier and still end up with the same results. Not exactly “incredible craftsmanship”.
The lady making the pots, the meticulous stacking of rocks to seal the gap between pots.. the rods that barely hold the pots in place, how the guy hand patches the pit everytime… just dozens of ways to improve each step using age old crude and many modern methods.
@@HiThisIsMine You're thinking about this in the completely wrong way. Not everything should, or even needs to be "modernized", easier or more efficient. And you say you would end up with the same result, and I doubt that tbh. The way they are doing it is a specific process, and if you start making it less labour intensive etc. you might end up with people becoming lazy, not pay so much attention to detail etc. The charm, the love, the attention to detail, the tradition etc. is what makes this special, the human touch in every part of the process. We need more of this kind of thing, not less
@@northpaul707 - As a business owner in an industry that requires extreme attention to detail and manual labor… I can tell you that you are flat out wrong that modernization is not important and no, it will not change the product. Those little details of stacking rocks or the old lady hand pressing the clay pots may make it special for you, but it doesn’t change the product one bit. We’re talking about a better, more efficient method of hand making pots… a better system of stacking them over a pit and meticulously holding them up with rows of rebar and stacking rocks between the gaps to create a seal… pointless things that these guys admitted to already have modernized with the addition of the rebar.
We’re not talking about creating a factory or changing their overall process. Just simple things that will still allow them to create an identical product… less painfully. Their current method isn’t efficient, and therefore is less profitable.
I mentioned it in another threat.. these people aren’t doing this out of pure love… they are doing it as a business to make money and feed their family. Traditions get lost when you make it harder to pass down. Making a pot with two stones instead of a pottery wheel or a form… or stacking them over a fire with rows of rebar… that’s not what tradition or love of what you do is about. Rebuilding a pit every time is not part of their love of this work.. the guy said he has no choice but to do it.
These people are doing things the way they do because they have no other choice and don’t know better. They just know how to make salt.
The old lady even said it.. she doesn’t want this work for her daughter (grandkids?).
ya it's called "craftmanship" when the idiot doing the work is too stupid to find the more efficient way to do it
@@HiThisIsMineall materials used are natural so the process should also be natural, more hard work, but that's better than relying on machines
Erwan Heussaff introduced this to us on his UA-cam channel. Truly fascinating. I’m glad more people outside the Philippines get to see this too
There are a couple of videos on asin tibuok made by locals back then and i think there was also a channel that did feature can't recall and it's more of iykyk for people interested in unique / traditional food items but glad someone with a bigger platform is making ppl know of it.
their brine scoopers are made out of Nautilus seashells 🤩🤩🐚🐚🐚
I would LOVE to buy this! Pink salt also isn’t iodized and people buy it like crazy. The gov needs to realize that there’s a world market waiting for this amazing salt.
The Philippines is a semi-feudal and semi-colonial country. National industrialization will not be allowed by foreign powers and their local ruling elite collaborators sitting in the government. Western world heavily relies on PHLs human labor export.
They seem like they would make great gifts. Unique and something that can actually be used.
This iodine requirement is very short sighted. Yes, iodine is a necessary mineral but you need only a tiny bit and you can get it by simply eating seafood.
@@beckyweisfeld6977 rofl, there's a burgeoning health crisis because idiots stopped eating regular iodized salt in favor of bullshit pink rock salt. But you clearly know better than doctors and legislators and government regulators who applied their medical recommendations to law
@@beckyweisfeld6977this might not be known in some places or in a lot of younger generations now, but a lot of people used to live on extreme powerty that some days, all they can afford is just salt and rice. Some people still live this way.
They had to make it a requirement to make iodized salt cheap and the people living in extreme poverty to actually have access to it.
It's shortsighted in that they could have made exemptions and/or budgeted to help our saltmakers to learn how to iodize salt.
I studied and lived in Bohol for 7 yrs, and my mom is from Panglao, Bohol. Unfortunately, I didn’t know about asin tibuok until Erwan Heusaff and his team featured it on his channel. So glad that this craft is getting more attention because even some Boholanos were and some still remain unaware of this salt. I haven’t tried this myself yet but I’ve seen this in some souvenir stores in Bohol! It was just displayed without a label and you wouldn’t be able to tell it’s salt unless you already know about it.
Man I love bohol so much! We went there a few months ago and I want to come back asap!
@@ruggy1689 Such a beautiful place, right? Took it for granted when I was still a child but growing up, I started loving and appreciating it.
I think Featr, by Erwan Heussaff, was the first to feature them and in his channel they also introduced more and different artisan salt makers from the Philippines.
Yes, Featr does a really good job in making docus about the Philippines, it’s people, and their craft.. better than the govt tourism dept..
Byahe ni Drew did.
yes
Maraming Salamat sa pagtataguyod at pagpapatuloy. Sana hindi po kayo mapagod na ituloy ang kultura ng paggawa ng Asin Tibuok. At higit sa lahat, naway makuha ninyo ang suporta na nararapat sa inyo. Thank you for preserving our culture and identity.
Thanks to Business Insider's host Ruqayyah Moynihan for making the effort to pronounce Filipino words correctly. Not everything is perfect but I really appreciate how much they are trying.
I am from the Philippines, such a profounding works of hardship and dedication surely the Philippine government should protect and support this kind of work that somehow could be put into arts and culture of being proud how technology is advance during those times centuries ago that they bring it to life again in our current time. Proud to a Filipino.
This should be considered a luxury item and should cost at least 10k, artisanal salt in other countries cost way more, Philippines should make it one as well.
The Asin tibook is actually expensive for normal Filipinos. They are 20-30 USD per piece and normal Filipino can't afford such luxury.
It's just snake oil.
@@khanch.6807what are you trying to imply?
@@khanch.6807 Mostly, but it looks cool, there is a story behind it, and it may taste a bit different with the coconut added. Why do people like pink salt? $20 for some hand shaped salt doesn't seem terrible. How much salt are you going through that this wont last a long time.
@@khanch.6807 Fully agree.
My heart goes to all hardworking filipinos ❤
As a chef, salt is one of the most key flavorings to every food
And would you prefer the one for 30 cents, or this one, which takes days to make, for 250 dollars (per kilogram, real price by google)? Cuz I invented similar technique for sugar - the price is also 83300% of the normal one, and the taste is also totally same, but at least you know I spent huge unnecessary time on it... It is also necessary for most of sweet meals. (Note: Sadly, I am not from Philippines and I use normal steel ladle to pour in the water. Also heat resistant and doesn't contain synthetic chemicals, just not as cool.)
the ancient romans had a better way of producing salt for their foods so I wonder how the mystery of it got lost over time these idiots are breaking their backs doing something that should be so simplistic now days
A true chef would know that salt isn't a flavouring and doesn't add flavour to food. A true chef would know that salt is a flavour enhancer as it enhances the flavour of whatever ingredients are already there.
the workers saying they are happy even if the working conditions are not ideal are just so pure.. they really love their tradition and their product, i hope the government gives them funding to improve their craft! more power to the makers of this salt!
I bet that salt is delicious because of all the trace minerals/processes that go into it. Thanks for showing me something I never saw before.
Organic salt, with lots of trace minerals, and the coconut ash filter also gives it some extra minerals and taste too. Nice!
I agree with trace minerals.
Those seashell spoons are something else!
7:07 - They're pouring the brine using a nautilus shell! That's hardcore.
Im from Cebu, Philippines and Bohol is just our neighbor island. Never knew about this until now, a foreign media spread the word. Wow. Will be buying from them from now on and might visit as well.
But make sure you get enough idodine otherwise - especially your kids.
Strumata are no joke and its preventions still useful.
@@user-un8tv1pp8mCebu has lot's of seafood, don't worry.
Time to amend the Asin Law to help these hardworking fellowmen.
With such integrity of the product, you'd think top chefs around the world would be lining-up and paying top dollar to have this in their kitchens.
why? Its salt.
The complex artisenal production process doesnt change its taste all that much, only its price.
Most customers/eaters will never taste a difference.
At least that much has been true for any "special salt" i´ve ever tasted, and those where quite a few.
In the end ist just natrium chloride.
@@user-un8tv1pp8mprobably those high end restaurants will use this for uniqueness. I heard the taste of this salt is really different. It’s like concentrated with a smoky flavor.
What is that even supposed to mean? Chefs care about flavor.
@@bitchcraftwitch351
I´ll not denie that in direct comparison - fleur de sel or korean black salt vs supermarket salt - there can be differences in taste.
I did those tests - but that is having the stuff before you and figertip-tasting it on its own. One after the other, comparing directly. Yes, there are differences.
The moment you salt the food with it?
I doubt many consumers can still tell a difference.
I´d argue the chefs boasting such stuff are in the same situations as wine-experts who cannot differentiate in blind testing between discounter-tetrapak wine and 15 yo 100$-bottles.
They have a personal marketing-interest to hype it.
@@user-un8tv1pp8m well that’s fine dining for you especially when it involves culture and history. With this kind of salt in a traditional Filipino restaurant it can be a cultural asset and even more so because right now the government is trying to protect the salt’s heritage because it’s endangered of vanishing.
I remember when I was a kid, Circa 1990, there’s one small family from Albuquerque that brought asin tibook, kon (klay plots), kalan, and ginamus (fermented anchoves) to our village located in Sierra Bullones, a mountainous town in Bohol. They trade these products with humay (unprocess rice grains), and native chickens then brought it back to their town. There’s not much money back then in our village because we grew our goods and seldom buy from the market, so we pay them with our harvested crops.
They use a shell based ladle to avoid synthetic substances but they're also using single-use 12oz water bottle for filtration 😅
Edit: Heat doesnt matter. Plastic bottles should not be reused for food cold or hot. They shed microplastic and isnt hygiene after single use.
I agree with your idea but if they used it for filtration then THAT bottle isn't "single-use" anymore!
@@Steven-cn9jg I've worked as a Stainless (Acid-Resistant) welder, building medicine machines. The price for changing all the plastic parts used in the video, into sustainable Acid Resistant (highest level of Stainless) is absolutely something they can afford if they sell each "Egg" for $100-$180.
its different because it is being heated
@@ku8721 micro plastics and pthalates are kosher as long as not from single use plastic
Sorry my point is that plastic bottle like that arent designed to be used over and over again... especially with salty water.. It can inhibit germs and add microplastics to their salt..
they filter the sea water through ashes, and the carbon so it actually cleans it of micro plastic and heavy metals.
I will call his technique of making salt, The Sacred Salt. In my eyes this is more valuable than I can express in words of wisdom and the work of manifestation. Love it!
Right now, the Philippines should actively marketing this. perhaps the asin tibuok should be rebranded as a flavour enhancer instead of salt which enables it to be sold in Philippines? I have never tried this but this looks like a gourmet ingredient. What are they doing man?
The ladle is a nautilus shell attached to a stick, how creative
As a Latin American I’m always surprised whenever I’m reading or hearing about the Philippines, because on a lot of ways they are very similar to us. They way the use Spanish and English words with their own native language is very similar to how we speak on this part of the world. They got the Spanish and American influence later down the line, hence why it didn’t overwrote their culture as much as it did ours but it is an interesting parallel.
Hello I'm Filippino, thanks for the appreciation bro❤
Back in the colonial days, Philippines was actually under the Governor of Mexico before their independence hence why there are some similarities in culture and language.
We trade for hundred of years manila acapulco galeon trade❤
They speaking Cebuano, one of Visayan languages. I'm Capiznon speaker from Visayan group also but I can't understand what they say. I can undestand only some Spanish , English and Tagalog words.
Wrong, The Philippines was only decades later than Mexico to become a Spanish colony. The reason The Philippines preserved pretty much its own culture and identity is the fact that Asians have cattle, chicken, and goat unlike the Native Americans, thus they have some immunity to diseases that almost wiped out the Native Americans, and their old culture along with it. Getting almost 90% of their population dead from small pox and other pestilence would understandably make the Latin American culture easily replaceable with Spanish.
I admire the work ethic of these people. I also find very old traditional crafts fascinating.
Amazing! I’m from PH but never knew about this! There’s still so much to discover about my country’s culture.
I can't be the only one who didn't think PH was referring to their country of origin.
He not from the country
Erwin's channel Featr also have the same video and the Salt Series that features these traditionally made salt.
I remember this with my grandparents. Spent the best summers of my childhood in Catigbi-an, Bohol. Thanks for featuring my home province.
I'd love to support them! Their salt product looks amazing and it's the result of hard work and craftsmanship.
Can't count on Business Insider to actually promote the businesses they exploit for ad revenue.
Lmao, it's literally just salt. Are you fr or just being sarcastic? genuinely can't work out if you're being funny or just not the brightest spark.
@@CreateHarmony It doesn't take a sophisticated pallet to work out that it's literally not JUST salt. If you knew anything about, well, anything, or simply paid attention to the video, you'd know that. Genuinely can't work out if you're being funny, or just a woefully unsophisticated contrarian.
@@GM-qq1wi he's a tasteless uncultured swine. leave him be.
@@GM-qq1wiYou can't expect many people to have ever tried this salt so most people have no idea what it tastes like. The video shows the salt being made before really giving any explanation to what the point of it all is. It really did just seem like it was no different from regular salt.
I knew this would become an episode here after Featr! But I don't get why there is so much antagonism for traditional saltmaking from soitheast countries here in the comment section when no one makes a fuss about bad working conditions for mining himalayan salt or celebrating different saltmaking traditions from either Japan or Korea where the salts are considered premium and not overpriced.
Wdym... japan and korean traditions get question on a daily basis
strong ascertainment bias here, Everyone gets criticized.
Phillipinos are such warm and kind people. To take in an orphan is a wonderful thing
AND cheap labour on top.
filipinos btw, and yea sadly labor is cheap
Bohol island is my Father's province and this is the first time I learned about the law in regards to producing sea salt. 😢 Sad to know that this hindrance the business of salt maker even in the small towns nearby Metro.
Thanks for featuring this! 😁
Do you know why a law like that would even be enacted?
@@9Godslayer it was said, and even shown in the film.
A population that eats iodized salz will develop no strumata.
That law is to protect the people by enforcing sale of only salt that has this health benefit.
Condensed seawater salt does not have that.
@@9GodslayerRepublic Act 8172, known as an “Act for Salt Iodization Nationwide” (ASIN), requires the addition of iodine to salt intended for animal and human consumption to eliminate micronutrient malnutrition, particularly iodine deficiency disorders, which remain as a public health concern in the country
@@user-un8tv1pp8m All these salt farmers need is the iodine component but sadly the country’s government is corrupt and not far sighted enough to financially support them for the machinery to make that possible. If they supported them, traditional ways are preserved, people don’t have to leave that career and over flood Manila (apperantly the capital is where they put most of the available jobs), basically that helps sustains the already available traditional source of income/jobs in Bohol and lastly, it can help boost tourism if the salt actually becomes a huge competitor outside the country.
I have tried this kind of salt. It's so unique. And it is less expensive than your regular table salt, or rather it's quite cheap. The more you use the salt the more you get that sweet after tase.
I search in internet and they sell one egg of salt for 139 dollar.Thats not cheeper.😂
@@tauruskd6688Filipino here. It's 8-10 USD. Still expensive compared to a normal salt.
@@tauruskd6688 those are probably imported ones. The last time I had the chance to try this unique salt was before covid when the whole family visited the Philippines for a month vacation. It was still pretty cheap back then that a single egg only cost us like 3 or 4$. It Was worth it tho. we had the salt for like 2 years. haha
You know I've been watching videos like this of people using old processes to make goods and I really hope there is a foundation out there that can help them survive. An influx of cash can help these individuals buy new tools and help them repair their ovens, ect. Stuff like this is culturally significant.
I'm from Philippines and I speak the same dialect with these people (but from different region). It's sad that I don't know about this and this isn't given enough attention. It's a beautiful symbol of tradition.
Cebuano is a language, it's totally different from Tagalog. A tagalog speaker won't understand cebuano
@@grantasilom5844 Oh really?? I used to call it language back then but someone told me I should call it dialect because it's not a national language.
@@kungbibitawngmahinahonakob5481 they're simply wrong. A dialect is a regional version of the same language like Bohol Cebuano, Negros Cebuano, Davao Cebuano, Mindanao Cebuano, Urban Cebuano, Formal Cebuano, etc. They may have different accent or slightly different words but they will understand each other. Tagalog is totally a different language like other languages such as Waray, Hiligaynon, Chavacano, Ilocano, etc.
@@grantasilom5844 pinaglalaban mo? Sa asin ka magfocus!
@@grantasilom5844They are speaking Bicol Cebuano, so technically they are correct that they are speaking in a dialect (a dialect of Cebuano).
It seems like there is so many ways for this process to be improved
Why not let the sea water evaporate like everyone else does?
some businesses do not need to be "still standing" this is the first one in this series that I really thought should disappear
@@thewronganswer1187 Why? That salt looks amazing!
Probably the "lack of money" is a huge factor in it.
@@lYl93 Because that's not how "everyone else" does it. That's done for sea salt. Table salt is typically mined. There are many different types of salt, based on the source and manufacturing process, which contributes to unique flavors.
I lived in the Philippines for a while. The people are incredibly hardworking. This video made me so nostalgic and wistful I found myself crying. I'm going to try and find this salt.
Bless you.. xx
Iodine exemption and making a new pit in order to produce salt pots 1/4 the size of the "dinosaur eggs" would open up a huge market worldwide. The smaller pots would would cut down on production time while increasing the price per ounce of salt over the larger pots. Here in the states one of the dinosaur eggs costs between $100 to $180. A pot 1/4 the size would sell in greater numbers at 1/3 the price. Despite being a luxury item most do not buy the dinosaur eggs because they don't use enough salt to justify the price. Instead consumers buy smaller quantities of pink and other premium sea salt at an even higher premium prices per ounce. Therefore making smaller pots for international distribution would exponentially increase sales and profits. Business owners are then afforded the opportunity to improve and expand the business..... and finally hand over control of the business to the next generation so they can retire as successful and wealthy individuals.
Solely producing the large pots is limiting sales primarily to the food industry. The key is targeting household consumers with smaller pots. They must act quickly before counterfeit and copycat producers take over the household consumer market and cash in on massive profitable smaller pots filled with cheap mass produced salt.
great insight mate solid points
amazing analysis
yEP!
Nice points
nice
It’s interesting that Japan is one of those countries where adding iodine in salt is Not practiced. In fact iodine is an illegal food additive and not allowed to be used in any food. People in Japan naturally get enough iodine from everyday foods like seaweeds.
Unlike in a third world country that food is scarce not very nutritious so would be needing some iodine even in just salts.
I use Amabito No Moshio daily. I love how it gets its iodine from seaweed.
I guess adding iodine when being an island eating lots of things from the sea would make it more likely to end up with excess iodine than deficiency.
that means my salt is illegal
you have no idea what you are talking about, iodine or salt have never been illegal in japan
As a Filipino this is amazing to know. I'm going to buy one for each of my family so we keep this business alive.
It's weird the potter does not make the little pots with square rims, so they all fit together and hang on the iron rods. They would not need to be so careful with all those little rocks, and the setup would be so much faster.
True but since the pots appear to be one time use they have to make a lot of them and round is faster to make than square
@@sadurkee5only a few minutes faster. Many simple things could make the entire process faster and safer, but the traditional aspect usually keeps people from being practical and innovative
To get around the law about selling salt without Iodine, a clever marketing slogan might get around this. Something like:
“Condensed Sea Water Seasoning” (or something similar)
This is very cool and epic, preserving a old craft is hard it looks like nowadays.
I have mixed feelings about these kind of things, on one hand its very cool that they preserved the tradition, on the other there are SOOOO many DIY things (like the metal rods) they could've done to facilitate the production. Also, iodizing salt is not a simple and cheap process, its kind of dumb their government wont help them get setup to do it.
Exactly. I think this should be considered national heritage and get funded/boosted by the government in some major ways.
This is why engineers should stick to their lanes.
Ignorance is bliss, I guess
The government is smart in maximizing their own profit.
The government? Want to help citizens make money by making it easier for them to make their product?
Not gonna happen
I love the Filipinos people, I've had the pleasure to work along with a few of them in my field and was always blown away with their crazy skill and hard work ethic that put a lot of people in America to shame lol. Great video, hope I can visit the Philippines soon and meet the friends I've made online one day!
As an American living in the Philippines, I can honestly say what puts most Western cultures to shame is how people stick together here. How they have the mental fortitude to handle some very tough situations without breaking down. In the current era back home, most Americans would break down. The people here are very much like how America was in our early years as a county.
To be fair its literally the corruption in the government there that are holding the people back. Plenty of Filipinos back then had to move to other countries just so their innovations get funded. If there wasn’t a brain drain and reasons to move abroad I can only imagine how much better the country might be.
This is a legacy worth keeping. Proud boholano!
Guga next week: "Now we gonna dry age the steak for one month in Dinosaur egg salt. Enough talking now LET'S DOOWEET!"
I hope some international and celebrity chefs try this salt and feature them in their menu.
Why?
@@xrry8428for finishing/ esthetic
I know it is in a 5K a plate luxury restaurant in NY
All of these are well deserved nyo po because you have kept the tradition out of love for the culture and traditions handed down to you po ❤️❤️❤️❤️🌹🌹🌹🌹 Perseverance and dedication and the love of your work inspires us viewers ❤️
Please keep making this type of content.
I appreciate the need to maintain heritage, but refusing to improve the process is the main reason why so many traditions die out.
I almost agrees with you, except that a lot of old traditions went thru hundreds even thousands of years to perfect the process to reach desired quality. The modernization of low cost and compromised quality products are the ultimate killer.
This begs the question of how much you can modernize a tradition without it losing the value the tradition adds.
I felt bad they had to balance the salt eggs with the iron rods and stones, it sounds so tedious. But would adding a fixture to hold all the pots lessen the value of the tradition?
@@jacksonc8243 Literally. That particular bit is so easy to address it's ludicrous they aren't improving on that one
If all you cared about was profit and making a product, then yes, tradition is in the way of making things more efficient and faster and cheaper and more profitable...
But is that all you care about?
Chasing purely profits and efficiencies can be detrimental as well as we can see from the state of USA farming today...
The whole process is so unnecessarily laborious it's hilarious.
I imagine the pot making and hanging process could be signficantly sped up and made less labor intensive by using a metal grid rack (instead of single bars and balancing rocks) layed over inflatable forms. Inflate, form clay over, let dry, deflate, pull forms out from under, flip the rack and hang.
You dont think they know that??? At the end of the day its just salt, it doesn't bring much money when you have even cheaper alternative than what you make..
These people are literally 'the salt of the Earth'. Respect for these people who pride themselves on their ancestry and are keeping it alive.
Wow finally! I've suggested this a while ago (on another rare salt video). Glad they got to make a video about this amazing craft.
i'll send u a video of me making a shit... it's just as long and useless as this is
@InsiderBusiness why cant you advertise in the description for these businesses? Even just a link to their store or something. If you are going to profit off of their work the decent thing to do is promote them.
i was born in Bohol and raised there as a kid, crazy i didnt even know bout this stuff, also its mad cool that i can understand the people on these videos for once lol
This channel is such a gem
Thank you Insider for featuring this!
My whole family is from bohol and i am a native speaker of this language. Im just wondering why they dont let the sentence finish to transition to another clip😂 it just cuts abruptly 😂
I swear you guys come out with a new “rarest salt in the world” every 2 months
akalain mo meron plang ganyang asin dto sa Pinas ,marami sa atin ngayon lng din nalaman yan,buti pa ibang bansa na feature sila..thank you Insider business
That dude cutting the coconut husks came soooooooo close to losing his thumb...
Trust me, It’s not even close. Stop exaggerating.
Nah homie dude was about to become a 9 finger mfer that shit was close
And they do that for hours repeatedly😬
@@cruzaldinomorales9790bruh look at 1:44 the last cust 😮😮
@@cruzaldinomorales9790Dude was less than a centimeter from his thumb
wow im a filipino but never knew and saw it before. thanks for sharing this
Been wanting to try it for over two years, and I was amazed to find it on sale in Cebu airport.
It seems that the word of mouth and coverage in the last years is helping to revitalize this market, and this is great!
Thank you for featuring this!!! Would love to buy this one day!!
These asin tibuok were used to be bartered with newly harvested rice from the fields up to the early 90's. I really missed this salt.
I’ve tried that leche flan ice cream and salt at Toyo. Wooow what an experience! A must try if you’re in Manila.
Thank you for making this video! I found it fascinating and I am curious to try this salt now! ✌🏼💖
Great that you are back, your way of teaching is very good and allways brings something even if youre a seasoned musician with robust theoretical knowledge.
Ive been watching business insider for years and I'd never imagine they would feature my home island Bohol ❤ thanks for this
Awesome video, so interesting l wish everyone success and hope the tradition continues for many generations. 😊
AMAZING ... ❤ the process is complicated, the result salt is interesting
Her voice makes my soul calm down. I love it!
This seems very similar to the bamboo salt made in Japan.
Korea i think
@@ultravioletgaia Yea, I think you’re right, it may have been Korea.
Why not make a cross lattice of iron they can slip the pots into? It would save them so much work.
I was thinking the same thing, maybe because the profit margins are razor thin.
The salt water would destroy it.
Because this is about tradition not making it easier. A machine could pump out those clay pots but the 100s. Honestly large chunks of this could be modernized... but they don't WANT to make it that way.
@@ku8721
Then why did they change to using iron rebar from stacking stones like he used to do when he was younger? Your logic isn't fully tracking with what they're (the other commenter) suggesting.
He (the man doing all this work) even specified that using the iron made it EASIER. Stop speaking on behalf of people you don't know.
@@ElysetheEevee Probably because the benefit outweighed the (I guess you could call it) shame, of breaking tradition. Didn't you see where he ALSO mentioned that one rock falling in would ruin the whole batch? Yeah I'd use less rocks too. I also seriously doubt the traditional way used a plastic water bottle for filtration! BUT if you think this couldn't be modernized to make their jobs way Way WAY easier then you don't understand manufacturing engineering. Back to my previous comment why not use a machine to make the clay pots? It would cost between 8-12k depending on factors but that would pay for itself in 2 years!!! So why do they pay someone to make the pots by hand? A much much slower and more costly process. And that is the tip of the iceburg here. You could automate the cutting, use an oven for the buring of the husks to ash, even the final baking could be much more expeditious than doing it this way.
ALSO THEY MENTION SEVERAL TIMES THIS IS ABOUT TRADITION!!!! I've met similar Amish people so I actually do understand what these people are saying even though I'm an engineer by trade
yay 🙌 a new one ! I love these videos !! I find them So interesting ❤
i never know this exist in my country until I watched it in your channel thankyou for this im gonna buy this asin tibuok when I will go to bohol soon😍
I'm from Catigbian, Bohol which is more inland.
My family (especially the elders who remember their time) would reminisce about how coastal salt traders would trade their asin tibuok with the people more inland. This was before proper roads and transportation so traveling (even on a small island like Bohol) would take days. This was important because rice farmers would make their carabao (water buffalo) lick the salt which would allow them to store more water, thus increasing productivity when it came to the process of planting rice!
Interesting. I'll be visiting Catigbian this Jan'24. I live in Manila all my life but I remember being there when I was 7 when my grandparents are still alive. It's a very rural area and frankly, no offense, it's very poor compare to other rural places. whenever I remember the place and my grandparents it makes very sad bcoz I really wish my grandparents got to experience some comfort
Erwan and FEATR beat you to this by like a year lol
These episodes are excellent.
gonna visit the shop next time I go to Bohol. Too bad I missed it when I stay in Panglao, I didn't know that the salt shop that time.
That's not any old sea shell. That's a nautilus shell.
Thank you for featuring one of the cultures of my country . God bless this people🙏 i Hope it will continue. And people will support this craft .and Artisans will be paid off for their hardwork. Ill buy one of these when i get back home in Pinas try to visit from Iloilo ❤
first time even hearing about that asin tibuok salt, really interesting!
pacman hometown philipines great people and alot of talents thanks for the time to show us the amazing craft
Salt tastes completely different from each other depending on how, where, and with what it was made with, I use four different types of salt: Kosher, Himalayan, Stick salt (Made by a native tribe that lives nearby), and a volcanic salt