Gordon Ramsay cooked Finnish food and I don't know what to think...
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- Опубліковано 26 кві 2022
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You can watch the full videos that I reacted to here:
- Gordon Cooks "Pyttipannu": • Gordon Ramsay Makes Fi...
- Sauna cooking: • Suomi-jakso - Gordon k...
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F.A.Q.
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• How old are you? •
33
• How tall are you? •
6ft 3 (or 192 cm)
• Where do you live? •
Helsinki, Finland
• What camera gear do you use in this video?•
Canon EOS R (body)
Canon EF 16-35 f4 L IS
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• What program do you edit with? •
Adobe Premiere Pro CC
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You should start "torilla tavataan" series, where you react to international content that is made from finland. Like the Anthony Bourdain episode from finland for example.
I thought this too but couldn't land on a name for it... I like this though!
Hyvä idea 👍
The Anthony Bourdain episode was amazing. He actually enjoyed drinking eating traditional food and liked Finnish fast food. He loved mustamakkara also.
Ooh, you could feature the Finland episode of Travel Man where Paul Rudd almost throws up because he tasted liquorice candy...
@@Yoarashi they are at senaatintori
I remember that old video of Gordon visiting Finland and tasting karjalanpiirakka with munavoi. He said it's disgusting. I lost all respect for him right that second. Now Finnish food is beautiful. Riddle me that 😄
Maistappa niitä kaupan halpis karjalapiirakoita. hyi että
Finish food is like pu**y, one must get used to it. ;)
I was so ashamed of that woman. I think she was drunk af. edit: as said that was Bourdain, my memory fooled me.
@@mielikuvitelma I think you are mixing Gordon to Anthony Bourdain, he visited a Finnish home where everybody were drunk in the end of the meal. Gordon tasted Karjalanpiirakka with reporter Sanna Kiiski in Huomenta Suomi program and she was not drunk.
@@bonk695 nice profile pic
IIRC pyttipannu was originated as just frying some leftovers before they spoil so it's not a very strict recipe but most commonly it's just potatoes and sausages and maybe some onions.
The onion is pretty crucial and it typically is fried brown. Every time I accidentally cook onions on too high heat tje end result taste is reminiscent of something I can only describe as "taste of pyttipannu". 🙈
the onion is too good
Bro u finding the place is so sick😂
Genuinely couldn't believe it 😂😂😂
@@davecad Honestly though, Geoguessr is so much fun with streamers. There's a darker version where you're kidnapped, escape and have to try to know where you are by your surroundings :D I always forget the name though...
@@davecad I was literally shocked to see that because I live there (in Finland's side) and it's such a small city
that was so crazy, he found the EXACT spot, I was not expecting that
Its kinda painful to watch him claim that to be Finnish 😂 first of all, that sausage is way too fancy, no one uses that kinda sausage in pyttipannu. and beets..not typically in pyttipannu either 😂
Not in, but on (or on the side, I suppose)! Pickled beets is a must when it comes to pyttipanna/pyttipannu, imo. :)
Beets are an extremely traditional Finnish vegetable. It's in everything, if you want it to be, as it, along with some other similar roots and vegetables, are vegetables that the potato replaced and they were used long before potato was brought here from the Americas. Though, it's been centuries since we basically stopped using them in almost everything lmao
Beets work super well with pyttipannu though
Didn't you paid any attention that it was swe/fin food 🤣
Pyttipannu is a swedish dish. Pytt i pann
This video was originally 6 or 7 minutes longer but got a bunch of copyright claims so... now its this long buuuut I thought I'd upload it anyway. Hope it's still somewhat enjoyable :)
This is brilliant! You really have nailed the Finnish mindset, I almost covered my eyes when I saw the metal spoon :D
Me too! Shame Gordon shame!!!! 🤣
I cringed when I heard the scraping sound!😂
Röstiperuna is basically a hash brown. But I have no idea what what he cooked is.
Iirc it's just called 'hash', and I think it's a US thing. Basically just a stir fry with potatoes as a base ingredient, often had for breakfast. I only know of it from seeing people eating it in videos, so I could be wrong. He probably just got the two names confused while talking, because they're so similar.
Pyttipannu is kind of Nordic food it has it's own name in Norway, Finland, Denmark and Sweden
@@TN-bp2cf potato onion some kind of meat and fried egg is probably the usual go to with it
Yes and beetroot...
My friend once sent me a pic of gordon ramsay eating in a restaurant in my city in Finland. My friend's friend was eating at the same restaurant when she spotted him. Like imagine how random it is to accidentally to just see Gordon Ramsay eating in the same restaurant as you.... in Finland
If he wasn't screaming at someone it wasn't Gordon. xD
@@4Everlast xDD maybe. Imagine being the waiter serving him and the chief cooking for him. Like no pressure
@@GenetMJF True, but then again, I have to remind my self how many people walk around without knowing anyone in their line of work, so, there's a chance they had no idea whom he is.
You can use almost everything on pyttipannu, potato are only basic incredient. And in Finland it is not typical breakfast.
Yep, more suitable for evening. Only english people eat fatty fried stuff the moment when they wake up :D
Honestly... pyttipannu for breakfast sounds.... very hangover.
This just made me sad as Finn. Gordon should be banned from EU just because he said soccer.
Unforgivable sin! ⚽️
Hear hear
Can't wait for the sauna cooking series!
Dave has acquired the Finnish instinct: Torille.
Finland-gene LOL! But true 🤣
🇫🇮🧬😂
Dave is truly starting to absorb finnishness, he gets excited at the mention of Finland and out of all the words that he knows the best pronounciation is on "sauna", like bloody hell man that sounded scarily finnish (also it's usually either a stove/kiuas, not an oven)
that face when you dropped the little man on the maps XD
Jamie Oliver also uses metal utensils on non stick pans, so I think these guys do not care 😬 Teflon gives the best flavour...
I guess they go in the bin right after the video so it's like, whatever. And yeah, that Teflon spice *chefs kiss* 👨🍳
@@davecad That's what Nylon Beat used to call "Teflon Love", I guess...
the only thing teflon gives you is cancer ;)
But Jamie has his own series of pans for this. I guess..
Jamie did a show post 2020 with very low production value. Basically youtube videos at home with a camera on a tripod. His pans are absolutely trashed in that series. The whole vibe is somehow really cheap and unproffessional (not relatable home cooking, rather idgaf mentality). I think he might be strapped for cash or something. If it's a concious decision then I'll take it back ig, but I heavily doubt it.
Beetroot is absolutely used in Finnish cuisine but I've never seen ones that are yellow like Gordon's. Maybe that's a variant I haven't seen but it looks weird.
I googled it and it is indeed a variant. I should mention that beetroot is traditionally used mostly in side dishes since it has a really strong color that turns things purplish pink, so I guess this golden variant can be used without it making everything look weird. I've never seen or used it before, though.
At a bar, having a cold one, it’s wednesday, Dave uploaded, it’s about Ramsay cooking Finnish dishes, thank you!
Enjoy! 😁
@@davecad 🍻
From the Finnish article of Pyttipannu, it's origin has both Finnish AND Swedish heritage. So I learned something new about a dish I really thought was that basic ;D
But the thing I was the most impressed in the whole video by was that fact that how fast you found the place in GeoGuessr!!
Pyttipannu is usually made when you have leftover boiled potatoes. You chop them up with some onions and sausage, fry them with an egg and voila. You can add whatever spices you want. I usually use salt, pepper, garlic, paprika and oregano. And I add veggies to pyttipannu, like cherry tomatoes.
Love your vids Dave, been a subscriber since your first Finnish candy taste test.
Feels crazy looking back at that video and now. Also, never stop being the best Cave Dad.
I hope you make the sauna cooking- series :)
Beets are about as Finnish as rubber boots. Especially pickled beets were a staple in schools and lunch cafeterias for decades, and somehow I remember being served punajuurisalaatti (basically shredded beets dressed with mayo) everywhere in the 80s. Nowadays beets are not as popular, but I'm not sure if that's a shame or not, because they're just beets.
I definitely think of beetroot as 'school food'.
Yay, preparing for Cadin saunakeittiö -series!
That was the best part of growing up, makkara in tinfoil, sininen lenkki ofcourse, On the stones while you saunoi.
I've never seen pyttipannu that looks like that. In fact, the kind of sausage he used, not really the first thing that would come to mind for a Finn whe talking about sausage. But Ramsay is Ramsay, he likes to do a lot of things his way. The typical Finnish sausage would probably be trash for him.
Yes! It has to be like sininen lenkki or something!
My mom's vegetable garden always used to have beets until my dad developed some kind of insensitivity to them. There are a bunch of traditional Finnish recipies with either fresh or pickled beetroot (which indeed are sold next to the pickled cucumbers) in them. I've never had pyttipannu with beetroot in it, though.
I wanna see you do sauna cuisine! And I may have to get it myself for my Finnish cottage experience!
Hashbrown= Finnish röstiperuna
I legit have no idea what he cooked
That show is on Disney+! I have been watching it because he goes to neat places like Peru and Alaska etc. Never would thought that he comes to Finland to make that show. I have to watch it full.
Can we get Dave Cad's summer kitchen... this summer perhaps? HMM HMM...
I like it! :))
Cadin kesäkeittiössä!
Kesäkeittiö is usually outside and consists of the grill (or firepit) and maybe one stovetop 'burner' for potato boiling. Running water optional.
That was hilarious. Especially your complete incredulity!
Also, excellent work on the Google-maps-jitsu there! Tosi lahjakas!
When i was a kid we often cooked fish in sauna.
Wrap it in tinfoil and multiple layers of wet newspaper. Put IT in kiuas fireplace when you go to löyly. And when you are ready so IS delicious fish.
Usually we used hauki or lahna.
Where do the ''BALLS'' go? That was so funny. 🤣
Dave, your comments are pure gold!! 😂♥️👍💪
I was almost offended by that "pyttipannu". My soul shriveled up inside me and died when he used that metal spoon and cooked on those huge flames. Also really looking forward to the sauna cooking videos!
Aivan mahtavaa!😀 Enpä tienny miekään tuosta saunakeittokirjasta. 🤔 Ehdottomasti olis kiva nähdä sun kokkailua saunakeittokirjasta! 😀
Dave: this is a reaction video
Dave three seconds later: this is a Geoguessr video
Ayy good job finding the right spot! That beach is a short walk from our house lol, took even me a second to recognize it. I remember at the time some classmates had met Gordon at a local bar and even got a picture with him. It was a whole thing
Pyttipanna is translated to Pytt-in-a-pan in Swedish, so I assume (no reference) that pyttipannu is a Finnish adaption of the name?
Could be, for sure!
Perhaps the Finns missheard the name as the Finnish word for pan is pannu so they thought the name was pyttipannu, not pyttipanna since it is made in a pannu
@@Henriki2305 It's not misheard. "Pannu" is existing loanword from Swedish "panna" and used in many other words. Doesn't make much sense to use slightly different loanword for same thing. And then word "panna" means something else in Finnish.
@@kognak6640 And adding -i to "pytt" is also simply a frequent loanword adaptation thing for Finnish. We might use another vowel if i is taken already. See harppi and harppu -- both loanwords from harp but as they mean different things they got a slight difference.
Gordon must have been stoked about the mystery balls with burnt cardboard. Bloody hell :D
This was funny. My Grandparents were Swedish/Finnish immigrants to MA, USA. Johannes Nordblom and Aina Jernvall. As a child I was always confused asking my Dad are they Swedish or Finnish? I am 74 now and only understood ten years ago, lol. Thanks to my brother's research and making connections. And yes, I needed to look at a map, lol. I tried that sauna experience one time at my sister's health club. Five minutes and I was beet red and my blood pressure was way too high. I left immediately before I passed out and jumped in the swimming pool 8 feet away to save myself!
You should definitely try "kiuasmakkara". Delish!
honestly him finding the place spot on was incredible
Suggestions: Tom Hardy + Mika Salo roadtripping in Siberia. And Gordon Ramsay - Desperately seeking Santa.
I actually included some of the Desperately Seeking Santa clips originally in this p but they were copyright claimed so I had to edit them out 😔
or James May with Mika Häkkinen
Your Voice is so calming
Gordon Ramsey also filmed an episode in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and had fun with the interesting characters there (some of Finnish ancestry).
Chef Gordon Ramsay is the Best Chef Ever!!!👍👍👍😎 Greetings from Helsinki, Finland 🇫🇮🇬🇧🇫🇮🇬🇧🇫🇮🇬🇧
They also have a episode where Gordon, Gino and Fred visits Finland. That was enjoyable to watch
Pyttipannu ingredients: HK sininen lenkki paloiteltu, perunakuutioita, lihapulla puolikkaita, sipuli (no red onions!!) ja paistettu kananmuna, thats it. fry the chopped onion, potato cubes, Diced lenkki and the half cut meatballs and fry the egg last, with butter and not some cheapo stuff grease, voila. As someone has pointed out the origal pyttipannu was made from leftovers.
I believe he has been here 2-3 times. He took his buddies here too during rona, and I saw the episodes of that show during christmas. It was BBC show if I remember correctly. They got drunk in Lapland, ate reindeer, fish and made coffee.
That location drop was unreal.
Rösti or rööschti (Alemannic German: [ˈrøːʃti]) is a Swiss dish consisting mainly of potatoes, sautéed or shallow-fried in a pan.
Basically hashbrowns, röstiperunat in finnish.
Se pyttipannu syödään mukisematta saatana
Ah niin joo! Röstiperunoita meijän iskä kokkailee tulella ulkona kesäisin.
Or just get bag of "peruna-sipulisekoitus" (freezed product) which you can buy from pretty much any shop and then add some cream, put in oven and you have thing called "Perunaruukku". Not sure if it's just different name for same food or if those are some small differences, but looks same for me.
@@youcrom Not the same. That would be potato gratin. Perunasipulisekoitus is too coarse for rösti. For rösti you need to grate potatoes and then remove extra liquid of them. Then fry it on a skillet with oil, like pancakes. No cream. You can add a bit of grated onion if you wish.
@@fnbtt Ye, you are probably right. Rösti is not that familiar for me, it's been like 10-20 years since last time I have eaten that.
That place Gordon is at is called Uitonranta in Tornio, on the banks of Tornionjoki. Used to swim there a lot when I was a kid. :D
5:50 That might be Fiskars "All Steel" series cookingware? (I think they purchased production lines previously known as "Hackman Kovanaama" series which looks a bit like teflon cookware but the surface is some mixture of materials such as titanium and other stuff which make it hard enough to use with steel products. It's much harder to keep clean than teflon stuff, though.)
might be perhaps the best reactionvideo I've seen
my face was priceless when you dropped the pin on the exact same place where gordon was
I was most impressed with that you found the location! 😂
It'd be fun to hear you doing a video in Swedish,Dave. (As a finn born and raised in Sweden)
Love your comments. So funny.
Can’t comprehend how you just found that location so easily 😂
Yess! Buy the book😍
I might have to!
In Swedish pyttipanna there's no beet in it, but we serve it with the pickled sweet beets on the side.
There's no beet in Finnish pyttipannu either. We also serve pickled sweet beets and maustekurkku/kryddgurka on the side. This must have been some "Gordon Special" lol 😛
Hello dave maybe you should do saunamakkara cooking video, and maybe taste some good beer taste when you eat these saunamakkara , but makkara have to cook alumiunfoil and cook sauna stove :D . Sorry my english
I'll definitely do this in a vlog this summer!
@@davecad nice nice :) have nice day and spring time not long time when summer coming and then have to enjoy
I used to live in that small city, and frequently went to this beach. I didn't even recognize it haha
I can't believe I'm the first one to comment on pyttipannu not being a breakfast dish 😶
Dave you need to react to the video Gordon Ramsay - traditional Finnish food
That video is so hilarious! 😂
Thanks for this vid. Was fun though Ramsay isn’t my favourite chef
dave look up röstiperuna
We want to see you grill next summer!
You said that you've grown the "Finland mentioned gene" and you mentioned also GeoGuessr. You should check out channel All Over the Map. He's an American man who got interested in playing Finland maps in GeoGuessr and he got quite many Finnish followers.
One of the best sauna dishes is minced meat, onion and potatoes in a foil, cooked on the kiuas. You just got to make sure they don't drip fat on the stone, wrapping them in multiple layers of foil.
Beets: no
Fancy sausage: no
Olive oil?: no
”Beautiful”: no
Remember in Stadi (Helsinki pronounced in slangi) pyttipannu is spydäei (pyttipannu on slsngi) söangi = the dialect of Helsinki, but it's pretty much it's own language, because it has Swedish, English, Finnish and probably some words from Russian and even more languages.
A Finnish artist called Avionin Prinssi hae a song called Niin gimis on Stadi and it's only in Slangi:D
I wasn't so happy about him "not knowing if the food was actually finnish or swedish"
When you found the place and got speechless... I laughed my ass off, haha!
Yes for sauna cuisine!
We in Germany call these Hashbrowns: Reibekuchen or Kartoffelpuffer, or in Bavaria I think they call them Reiwedatschi or something like that.
Cool
I really liked this video!
1:40 you could look up Röstiperuna and make those for yourself. I guess you could make those to something like that.
Crazy maps skiz 👍
This is bizarre! My husband and i try a new Finnish recipe each week in prep to move there. Last night we chose pyttipannu for our next recipe! It said in our book that it is mostly for lunch or dinner and that all nordic nations have their own name for it.
I was kind of shocked at Ramsey saying soccer. Too long in the US for sure!
Indeed, we don't eat cooked meals for breakfast. Typical breakfast items are open faced sandwiches (with butter, cheese and/or ham, and sliced cucumber/tomato/bell pepper), yoghurt, viili or porridge (with sugar and cinnamon or fresh berries), cereal, and coffee/tea/orange or apple juice. Absolutely not pyttipannu like in this video, except maybe as hangover food lol.
I hope you enjoy your stay in Finland :) The long, dark winter might be a bit meh and we're a bunch of weirdos but mostly nice 😛
I know exactly where Gordon was cooking because we stayed 20 meters from him the place he cooked at in our camper from our return back to Southern Finland from Northern Norway!
We have Pyttipanna in Sweden also. Panna literally means pan, so the translation is ''pytt'' in pan.
You do realise it's the same in Finnish. Stole it from you we did.. Pytt- i - pannu (pan)
5:50 Gordon, I'm judging you... 👀
He was at Kukkolankoski
Never heard pyttipannu has eaten for breakfast in Finland. Pyttipannu is for lunch.
supper. Then you have good 8 hours digesting all that fat.
Ihana Dave 🥰👍
I don't know how many Finns eat pyttipannu as a breakfast... I've never had it as breakfast.. I guess it could work..
I just ate that, but it was called texmex sausage. Finnish cuisine is really international. Allahovi Winery in Kuopio would have served local food and wines.
This is content without need to go outside
Yes please start cooking in Sauna and let us see. Mayby you get good at it and write Cave dads brit-fin sauna cookbook 😁
You should cook a beer sausage in tinfoil on the kiuas.. it's good! 😁
What a scam. Never seen anything like it in Sweden or Finland 🤔. 👍❤️👍
This was fun
Yes it tornio Finland and haparanda sweden