My boyfriend is Brazilian and his still living in Brazil 🇧🇷 I'm japanese living in Japan 🇯🇵 can't wait for him to come to Japan! Im excited and hope we do get Married one day ☺💗
@@lifewithamiinjapan that assumption came from the stories I’ve heard about only Japanese restaurants/services and then I saw this video of Japanese/Brazilian communities in Japan because of the migration to Brazil and back. Furthermore Japanese society forces their people to not stand out but then there’s you, a unique person who stands out because of your open mindedness which I commend, I believe it’s neat.
The sausage you ate in the pizza and the hamburger is called "linguiça calabresa" or "calabresa sausage". If you think the term "calabresa" has something to do with the Calabria region of Italy, it does. When italians migrated to Brazil they wanted to make a type of sausage they had in Calabria, but they couldn't find the peperoncino in Brazil, so they replaced it with a local substitute and the Calabresa sausage was born. So in this video we have people in Japan tasting a brazilian pizza made with a sausage created by italian immigrants.
@@matheus_ps So remastered, remade and tweaked that they become our own thing. Have you ever heard of mashed potatoes, peas and corn and potato sticks on a hot dog brimming with sauce? Brazil is a melting pot as well as a melting crock pot.
I'm actually living in Italy and I ought to say that there's nothing in Italy that resembles to our brasilian "calabresa sausage". The italians, for a fact, have a sausage here that goes by the same name, but it is - in all means - a totally other sausage... And as you sad they couldn't find the same type of pepper so they used the pepper that there was in Brasil, and at the end with that and other changes the "Salsiccia di Calabria" had become just an inspiration. Here in Italy, at least for my experience, if you want to find the brasilian one that has that particular taste and smokiness, you go, strangely, to romanian foodshops - and I tell you that becouse those are THE places that you search aroung here to find the sausage to make a good "feijoada" or a "caldo verde". 😂
Depois de passar alguns meses no Japão, esse sentimento começa a brotar naturalmente. Vai por mim...Rs...!!! Sem críticas a ninguém, só relatando a minha experiência e de alguns estrangeiros que conheci.
This is so sweet, here in Brazil, in São Paulo city, we have a neighborhood called Liberdade (Freedom), that is the biggest Japanese community outside Japan.
Brazilian culture mixed with Japanese culture. The Japanese colony is huge here in Brazil. I am sansei. My grandparents came here during the second world war. In this war times, we need to remember that it is possible for us to live in harmony as global brothers and sisters. Amazing video.
@@vitormascarenhas4884 Every brazilian in São Paulo, maybe. Since the japanese colony is concentrated there. You won't find many japanese in other states or regions. To be honest, it is fairly rare.
"Ciao" is Italian though. We spell "Tchau" in Portuguese :D And the pizza differs from region to region in Brazil. Some are quite different from one another, even if they are called the same name.
Very nice video! You should try"feijoada" next time. Brazil has the biggest japanese colony in the world, there are about 2 million descendants. 🙏🏻🇧🇷🇯🇵❤
Thank you for your comment! I know we have so much connection. We will probably visit more Brazilian communities in Japan, also want to visit Brazil and see Japanese communities in Brazil in the future.
In Japan, there is a joke that if you keep on digging all the way through the Earth, you'll end up in Brazil. Likewise, Brazilians also joke about digging to Japan. We have a similar joke here in Britain - we joke about digging to Australia.
This delicacy called "Pão de Queijo" (literally translated to "Cheese Bread"), when well done, is one of the most heavenly things you'll ever eat here in Brazil.
Watching the pizza segment makes me wonder: I live in Costa Rica and the Pizza Hut menu here has "Brazilian pizza." It's very good. It appears to be a very fine sausage spread on the top. It's served with lime wedges.
@@SamySamy-db8uu That's why I'm curious. I've been eating it for 20+ years here but maybe it's one of the sausage varieties available in Brasil by a specific name but they just called it Brasilian here. At any rate, it's a good taste.
@@stevekollen1672 well, we do have a kind of "sausage" called "calabresa", it have a red color and really tastes good in the pizza! But the lime wedges is new to me 😂😂😂
Actually there is a flavor of Pizza named "brasileira" but only at Pizza Hut. But here is mozzarela, ham, chopped olives and requeijão, a Milk product that is like a cheese spread. Back in the 90s Pizza Hut would only have "brasileira", pepperoni and muzzarela. However Pizza Hut is very different from brazilian Pizza.
actually there isnt a 'brazilian pizza' but brazil in 1940 was in a nationalist 'mindset' and most of our 'fastfood culture' was really changed to a brazilian way. for example prob you know hot dog as bread sausage and ketchup and mustard, here hotdog is a grilled bread with corn, pea the sausage is dived in tomato sauce we also put cheese etc.. so the same occurs w/ our pizza. There is even a 'worst' hotdog made in Sao Paulo that put mashed potato and a mix of tomato onion and oil.
Every brazilian on internet feels very proud when some ppl from other countries tries stuff and food of our culture lol I am feeling like I've just watched some kind of tribute to us. That's so pleasing to see that you guys enjoyed our stuff. Thank you! Since I was little I always loved japanese cultures and always wanted to visit Japan someday!
Pizza(Italian) and burgers(British) are not really Brazilian, they are global goods and all places have their style, this is not real Brazilian culture. Please do not think that Brazilian culture is just what the European descendants offers. I took the liberty to explain this in 5 topics. 1- In the Amazon region of Brazil you can taste, at the city of Belem, the food culture from the REAL Americans, not USA food. 2- In our warmest place for beaches and oldest colonized region, northeast, you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil. 3- Another important region for food culture is the state of Minas Gerais, in the southeast of Brazil, it has many historical cities that were even capital of the Brazilian Empire for a while and has a really special background for food culture because it is the place where the Portuguese explored with gold mining purposes. 4- For last, Rio de Janeiro was capital of the Portuguese and the Brazilian empires and has a culinary of its own. 5- For the rest, they fit in that zone that I called "European culture in Brazil"/"Pizza&Burgers", where the southeast is famous for Italian colonization(Brazilian pizzas), also the south also is famous for German colonization and foods related. They definitely don't define Brazil and are the very influence by outside trends, so they are the least unique foods of Brazil, because most of them you can find in Europe or USA as a standard kind of food.
Pizza(Italian) and burgers(British) are not really Brazilian, they are global goods and all places have their style, this is not real Brazilian culture. Please do not think that Brazilian culture is just what the European descendants offers. I took the liberty to explain this in 5 topics. 1- In the Amazon region of Brazil you can taste, at the city of Belem, the food culture from the REAL Americans, not USA food. 2- In our warmest place for beaches and oldest colonized region, northeast, you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil. 3- Another important region for food culture is the state of Minas Gerais, in the southeast of Brazil, it has many historical cities that were even capital of the Brazilian Empire for a while and has a really special background for food culture because it is the place where the Portuguese explored with gold mining purposes. 4- For last, Rio de Janeiro was capital of the Portuguese and the Brazilian empires and has a culinary of its own. 5- For the rest, they fit in that zone that I called "European culture in Brazil"/"Pizza&Burgers", where the southeast is famous for Italian colonization(Brazilian pizzas), also the south also is famous for German colonization and foods related. They definitely don't define Brazil and are the very influence by outside trends, so they are the least unique foods of Brazil, because most of them you can find in Europe or USA as a standard kind of food.
This video really shows how Brazil is: a lot of different people from different backgrounds sometimes different nationalities living together in the same country, enriching the culture, making this place what it is.
AJI AMARILLO, It is a sweet hot pepper from Peru, Amarillo means yellow (even if it is kind of orange…)Gunma has other japanese/South American communities,it is great to find it there.
I'm brazilian and Japan is the second country I love the most. I was very happy with the beautiful report you did about the brazilian town in Gunma. You speak a very nice english! Great video!
loved the video! the pizza here in brazil is really on point! and the "pão de queijo" is addicting. Maybe one day u guys get to eat some churrasco from the south part of brazil, more extacly the state of Rio Grande do Sul, we are known here in my state for having the best churrasco/barbecue in the world!
Pizza(Italian) and burgers(British) are not really Brazilian, they are global goods and all places have their style, this is not real Brazilian culture. Please do not think that Brazilian culture is just what the European descendants offers. I took the liberty to explain this in 5 topics. 1- In the Amazon region of Brazil you can taste, at the city of Belem, the food culture from the REAL Americans, not USA food. 2- In our warmest place for beaches and oldest colonized region, northeast, you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil. 3- Another important region for food culture is the state of Minas Gerais, in the southeast of Brazil, it has many historical cities that were even capital of the Brazilian Empire for a while and has a really special background for food culture because it is the place where the Portuguese explored with gold mining purposes. 4- For last, Rio de Janeiro was capital of the Portuguese and the Brazilian empires and has a culinary of its own. 5- For the rest, they fit in that zone that I called "European culture in Brazil"/"Pizza&Burgers", where the southeast is famous for Italian colonization(Brazilian pizzas), also the south also is famous for German colonization and foods related. They definitely don't define Brazil and are the very influence by outside trends, so they are the least unique foods of Brazil, because most of them you can find in Europe or USA as a standard kind of food.
@@fabianofrank4785 i agree, there is so many cultural foods in brazil, but i dont think its not brazzilian culture aswell (pizza,burgers...etc), cuz most of "brazzilian food culture" wasnt origniated in brazil so... If u consider that, tons of stuff wouldnt be "brazilian culture" but it is. U even said so ", you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil." if african food is considered brazilian food culture, why the other aren't?
psé, se a gente aplicar o mesmo raciocínio, a comida britânica não é britânica, mas sim indiana e por aí vai... brigadeiro não é brasileiro, pq é trufa e trufa foi inventada na frança e etc com tantas influências fica difícil dizer da onde a comida é, então apenas aceitamos que 'faz parte da cultura'
Half of my mother’s family who are Okinawans from Naha Okinawa,immigrated to Brazil and the other half to Hawaii. I ‘m glad you liked the Portuguese sausage, one of my favorite foods.
I love the tense music on the background like we are aliens ahahhaha Love the video! Trust me, a brazilian bbq out of nowhere and the people just hanging you the meat is very brazilian! About the diggly pizza, we usually eat them with fork and knife, holding them with your hands in public will be a mess!
@@taticastro27 O Problema, é que algumas pizzas, fica quase impossivel comer com as mãos, a Portuguesa da pizzaria que fica perto da minha casa, se tentar comer com as mãos, o recheio cai todo(Muito recheio, e massa fina)
it's so fun that here in São Paulo we have a HUGE japanese district called Liberdade, or "freedom" in english. The feeling I had when I went there was similar to yours visiting this brazilian district. And that one pizza, the Portuguesa, it's meaning in portuguese is "portuguese", or "from Portugal" kskssksksksks
Como somos Latinos os sabores da comida tem que desperta um sentimento por isso a comida brasileira é rica em sabor e quantidade, pois sempre é bom comer com alguém, ou com sua família ou amigos. Comer para nos Brasileiro é algo extremante cultural.
@@Alexandre.10 para os norte americanos latinos é identificado como hispano falantes, más Latino é uma distinção lingüística, porque a gente fala uma língua que desce do latín, os franceses, italianos, espanhóis e portuguêses são latinos também. Mas os que falam línguas latinas e moram no continente americano e caribe semos latino americanos.
@@CarlosGustavoSilvadosSantos Não necessariamente, eu nasci no Brasil mas minha família é inteira italiana. Ninguém me chama de Latino aqui nos EUA nem em Canadá.
I'm Brazillian.. and I have no idea what Ahi is. I looked around on google and found out that there's a Peruvian sauce.. Aji made of Amarillo.. it's a pepper sauce then, nice.
FYI, the sauce you see at 2:45, "aji" (a-hi) is Peruvian, not Brazilian, and is usually green, not yellow (prob the place in the video switched the ingredients from aji-pepper-based to mustard-based). I remember putting it on roasted chicken, etc, when I was in Peru, and it's pretty good. You see it at restaurants all over in Peru/Bolivia, but prob not in Brazil.
Makes sense that a Brazilian town would too become a melting pot outside of Brazil. We're generally very welcoming to foreigners. Personally, I can't wait to learn more about someone's country's customs and food, just to see what I can learn and introduce to the betterment of my own home and family. Those exchanges are one of my favourite types of conversation, they are always eye opening in some way. The pizza looks very much like the ones we find here, though we do **love** our variety in Brazil and pizzas are usually **dripping** with toppings... So most of our pizza restaurants serve food with cutlery, because the slices become to heavy to handle with hands without making a mess hahaha. The "mega burguer" (we call it "xis" here, which stands for our pronunciation of the letter "x", and very closely resembles to us to the way "cheese" is pronounced. So, "xis" as in "cheeseburger", but our giant version of it haha). The only difference I see is that our Xis tends to be heat pressed after assembled, so the bread's outside becomes slightly toasted. Plus, when flattened it becomes easier to bite into it. We also make something called "green mayo", which is basically mayo blended with fresh herbs and spices. It's a staple dressing for us, alongside ketchup, and every restaurant has their own version of it. We basically can tell how good a xis place is by the quality of their homemade mayo hahaha.
I'm Brazilian and you are always welcome to visit our country! ❤️ I want to visit Japan, since I've always had a connection to the place, and I have friends from there. I also love the UK!
If u guys have the chance try "Pit Dog" or "X-tudo" (X everything) its very popular hambuguer in brazil. Its common to young people eat after parties haha its amazing ♥️♥️
Realmente eu não esperava poder encontrar X-tudo,X-Salada... no Japão, ainda eu sendo Gaúcho, surreal haha perto de casa faz a gente se sentir, coisas tão tipicas daqui.
x is a corruption of "cheese", so x-tudo means cheese-everything. (X is pronounced somewhat like cheese in portuguese. i mean, sorta. more like "she's")
Ver vídeos de gringos dando as opiniões deles sobre o Brasil e os brasileiros, é uma das poucas coisas que me fazem ter um sentimento patriota, porque as instituições aqui conseguem manchar a nossa imagem de uma forma incrível
@@eduardopacheco5553, tenho orgulho do meu povo, da minha cultura, da história do meu estado e do meu país. Não é nem um pouco ruim ser brasileiro, ruim é morar aqui kkkk
It's really cool see the real Brazilian culture so well represented, there are restaurants in Brazil with over 70 differents toppings and dough. The sauce "AJI" is delicious but not so common here, it is from others great countries from SouthAmerica (Peru and Bolivia if my mind don't trick me). And yes, we invite every one to share BBQ and happiness.
Definitely a Brazilian town outside of Brasil. Brasil was born from that gathering of people from several places around the world. Brazilian culture is basically that coming together of multiple cultures creating one whole new culture of its own. The food, the vibe of the people with warm welcomes and receptiveness. As a Brazilian, it was really interesting to see a town in Brazilian Japan that looks almost exactly the same as quite a few of the Japanese communities in Brasil which I've seen.
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista. Até jornalista gente, por favor, Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil......
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista. Até jornalista gente, por favor, Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil....
The Brazilian bbq on the street is right on point, it was a weekly event on my family during years. Loved the channel and the content, the Brazilian pizza look perfect also
I would be glad to see them trying brazilian rice. It's completely different from japanese rice, for having a loose texture instead of being sticky, really good with beans (yes, we eat beans salty and most people I know think sweets made out of beans is kinda weird).
Getting togheter for barbecuing is soo south american LOL. I can relate to it so much. Now I know exactly where to go if I ever go to live in Japan and feel homesick.
I am Brazilian, it’s so cool that i’m japan has this place that represent my culture, is like the the neighborhood called Liberdade here in São Paulo Brazil, which is a place that represent the culture from the asians countries
Pão de queijo is not made by cassava flour. It's the starch of cassava like arrowroot or the corn starch. And it isn't palm fruits. It's the palm heart, the center of palm tree body called palmito
As a Brazilian, I'm proud to see people from Japan, or any other nation, to be enjoying our culture's WARM cuisine and daily It is quite hard for us Native Brazilians to point out our own "GOOD STANDARDS" on unison, meaning, there are a lot of standards, good and bad, that can differ depending on the region or State we come from. But the few we do agree on, regardless of region or State, is: > The fact that we are a "Generally Very Welcoming people", meaning, we tend to accept people easily into our culture and surroundings as we want them to enjoy, and feel the "warm" culture we have. Like we say it here, "We are like the Heart of a Mother, there is always space for one more" :)
Fun fact, we say “Ciao” as a “Goodbye” in brazil, but we learned to say Ciao with the immigrants from Italy, actually in Italy they say “Ciao” as a “Hello/Hi” not as a Goodbye like Brazilians do, that’s why we changed the write form instead of “Ciao” we write “Tchau”.
4:14 the "ã" vowel in "pão de queijo" is considered very difficult to pronounce non-native speakers... And you nailed it perfectly, congrats! Also 7:00 : a turkish and japanese family having a Brazilian BBQ in Japan, I love that
The negative part of Pão de Queijo is that for you to apreciate at its maximum you have to eat right after its out of the oven otherwise it will get hard and rubbery. I sugest trying out with a thin slice of butter on top and eating while is melting...its super good.
"Paçoquinha" and "Leite Moça", both products shown on the video, gave heavy brazilian feelings with it. You should try it, alongside Guaraná Antarctica.
in australia we have and egg and bacon, onion style pizza that has always been known as an "aussie" it was around in the 70s when i was a kid but may have possibly been around earlier than that ?
Wow, so nice your video, I just “ amei “ 😍 also I sent to my son with my daughter in law , they live in Kanazawa. With my two little boys Kai and Finn . Thanks, ありがとうございました, Obrigado 🙏🏼
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista. Até jornalista gente, por favor, Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil......
@@silisboabeige só pra você ver . Até os descendentes de japoneses fazem questão de se identificar como brasileiros e usar o português no Japão. Povo evoluído
love the idea of this video and you guys look so nice and had so much fun. i have a question thuogh: i watched several interview-type of videos made in japan and am always dissatisfied with the depth of the questions that are asked... but maybe that's because politeness barres you to ask any questions that could be perceived as to personal? just curios... great video!
Actually Japanese has a lot of words that resembles portuguese, and pan is one of then. The portuguese were the first Europeans to arrive in Japan and they developed a close relationship.
I suggest you visit the Uzbek restaurant in Tokyo and make a video about them. Uzbek guy is married to the Japanese lady, his wife has leaned uzbek language
Memories broken, the truth goes unspoken I've even forgotten my name I don't know the season or what is the reason I'm standing here holding my blade A desolate place (place) Without any trace (trace) It's only the cold wind I feel It's me that I spite as I stand up and fight The only thing I know for real There will be blood (blood) shed (shed) The man in the mirror nods his head The only one (one) left (left) Will ride upon the dragon's back Because the mountains don't give back what they take Oh no, there will be blood (blood) shed (shed) It's the only thing I've ever known Losing my identity Wondering, "Have I gone insane?" To find the truth in front of me I must climb this mountain range Looking downward from this deadly height and never realizing why I fight
I'm Brazilian and I LOVED this video! There is a japonese neighborhood in Brazil, in São Paulo city, called "Liberdade". It has many shops, restaurants with japonese food and a museum about the japonese immigration in Brazil. It's just like the city that you guys visited, but the other way around hahaha I love there. If you guys come to BR some day, you should visit Liberdade. It's awesome, I love there (:
Experimente a feijoada, nosso cachorro quente, e o sushi :) Eu vi um vídeo de uma japonesa experimentando nosso sushi brasileiro e dei boas risadas porque ela disse que jamais iria existir esse tipo de sushi no Japão 😂 Experimente quando puder, vou adorar ver sua reação :)
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista. Até jornalista gente, por favor, Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil......
It's so cool to see Japanese people trying our food ^^ I didn't know there was a Brazilian district in Japan. I''m from Brazil and in my city, São Paulo have a Japanese district and is my favourite place of all to go. I love the Japanese food, candy, festivals and everything
Something funny about the big burger, its called Beirute, a Brazilian recipe strongly influenced by the Syrian-Lebanese culture, cultural of São Paulo and made with fake pita bread (Brazilian pita bread is (generally) quite different from the original), the bread in the recipe changed until it was simply called big burger, in other states. And it was even in japan now
As a brazilian, here where i live, in Curitiba city, there's a place called "praça do Japão" (Japan Square). It is my favorite place in the world, such a beautiful spot to meditate!
8:30 this is why only brazilian eat pizza with fork and knife (on a plate). We NEVER eat like that (with hand), because is too heavy, there is a lot of ingredients. In Brazil we only eat with fork and knife
My boyfriend is Brazilian and his still living in Brazil 🇧🇷 I'm japanese living in Japan 🇯🇵 can't wait for him to come to Japan! Im excited and hope we do get Married one day ☺💗
That’s wild I thought most Japanese were closed minded
@@BlazeEst well you're wrong 😆🤣
@@lifewithamiinjapan that assumption came from the stories I’ve heard about only Japanese restaurants/services and then I saw this video of Japanese/Brazilian communities in Japan because of the migration to Brazil and back.
Furthermore Japanese society forces their people to not stand out but then there’s you, a unique person who stands out because of your open mindedness which I commend, I believe it’s neat.
God bless you
@@Brunogeremias thanks but unfortunately we broke up but it was mutual, however we still are good friends 😃😊
The sausage you ate in the pizza and the hamburger is called "linguiça calabresa" or "calabresa sausage". If you think the term "calabresa" has something to do with the Calabria region of Italy, it does. When italians migrated to Brazil they wanted to make a type of sausage they had in Calabria, but they couldn't find the peperoncino in Brazil, so they replaced it with a local substitute and the Calabresa sausage was born. So in this video we have people in Japan tasting a brazilian pizza made with a sausage created by italian immigrants.
Wow, that says a lot about this globalized world.
@@henriquepastick yeah, brazil like all american countries is made of immigrants, so all of our food is basically remastered versions of other foods
@@matheus_ps
So remastered, remade and tweaked that they become our own thing. Have you ever heard of mashed potatoes, peas and corn and potato sticks on a hot dog brimming with sauce?
Brazil is a melting pot as well as a melting crock pot.
I'm actually living in Italy and I ought to say that there's nothing in Italy that resembles to our brasilian "calabresa sausage". The italians, for a fact, have a sausage here that goes by the same name, but it is - in all means - a totally other sausage... And as you sad they couldn't find the same type of pepper so they used the pepper that there was in Brasil, and at the end with that and other changes the "Salsiccia di Calabria" had become just an inspiration. Here in Italy, at least for my experience, if you want to find the brasilian one that has that particular taste and smokiness, you go, strangely, to romanian foodshops - and I tell you that becouse those are THE places that you search aroung here to find the sausage to make a good "feijoada" or a "caldo verde". 😂
I thought it was linguiça blumenal hahahha
É normal querer sair do Brasil para visitar uma cidade brasileira no Japão?
Acho que todo mundo faz isso, olha só quantos japoneses visitam Liberdade em SP.
Depois de passar alguns meses no Japão, esse sentimento começa a brotar naturalmente. Vai por mim...Rs...!!! Sem críticas a ninguém, só relatando a minha experiência e de alguns estrangeiros que conheci.
Muitos brasileiros vão para o Japão por causa de dinheiro, mas não se adaptam à cultura e não falam japonês.
Vi lá pra voce ver o tanto que os japóneses gostam de estrangeiros rs
@@gs-nq6mw quando eu fui em 2018 foi normal, nada d+
1:23 30 reais café Pilão 500g, quase o mesmo preço aqui do Brasil kkkkk
Se parar pra pensar, o café lá tá bem mais barato, considerando os custos com logística e impostos
Né não? 😵 Se bem que o iene é bem mais forte que o real.
Que analise
Eu ri mas depois comecei a chorar
@Yoi de 6 a 10 é um pulo
tu mora perto onde o caminhão vira?
This is so sweet, here in Brazil, in São Paulo city, we have a neighborhood called Liberdade (Freedom), that is the biggest Japanese community outside Japan.
Brazilian culture mixed with Japanese culture. The Japanese colony is huge here in Brazil. I am sansei. My grandparents came here during the second world war. In this war times, we need to remember that it is possible for us to live in harmony as global brothers and sisters. Amazing video.
actually the japanese colony in BR is the largest in the world
@@rickitos94true
Every Brazilian had at least 1 Japanese descendent colleague in school, and of course they always get the same nickname "japa"
@@vitormascarenhas4884 Every brazilian in São Paulo, maybe. Since the japanese colony is concentrated there. You won't find many japanese in other states or regions. To be honest, it is fairly rare.
@@victorcarloscs eu moro num canto da casa do crl aqui no estado de são paulo,tem uns 40 japa aqui que eu conheço
"Ciao" is Italian though. We spell "Tchau" in Portuguese :D And the pizza differs from region to region in Brazil. Some are quite different from one another, even if they are called the same name.
True
spelled different, pronounced the same.
The Portuguese still use Xau but we adopted the Italian word
@@GraveUypo slight differences in tone
@@rogercruz1547 not really, since the meaning it's the complete opposite...
Very nice video!
You should try"feijoada" next time.
Brazil has the biggest japanese colony in the world, there are about 2 million descendants.
🙏🏻🇧🇷🇯🇵❤
Thank you for your comment! I know we have so much connection. We will probably visit more Brazilian communities in Japan, also want to visit Brazil and see Japanese communities in Brazil in the future.
@@EthnicNeighborhoods search by 'bairro liberdade' district of São Paulo, there are more japaneses then a lot of citys in japan
@@EthnicNeighborhoods in São Paulo we have a "japanese" town , they will speak in japanese with you (well most of the places)
@@____trazluz____9804
Liberdade?
@@DinnerForkTongue acho que esse é o nome
In Japan, there is a joke that if you keep on digging all the way through the Earth, you'll end up in Brazil. Likewise, Brazilians also joke about digging to Japan.
We have a similar joke here in Britain - we joke about digging to Australia.
I'm Brazilian and this is so true, here in Brazil we also say the same.
In Australia, we joke about digging to China.
It's not a joke. Actually it's a fact
@@geoguru32 We do this in Brazil as well
I always thought that this joke was born because our timezone is exactly 12 hours, which make sense if you think about it.
This delicacy called "Pão de Queijo" (literally translated to "Cheese Bread"), when well done, is one of the most heavenly things you'll ever eat here in Brazil.
Ntj,se tivesse um guaravita acompanhado ali ia me sentir vendo um vídeo Br kskskskssksksksk
Watching the pizza segment makes me wonder: I live in Costa Rica and the Pizza Hut menu here has "Brazilian pizza." It's very good. It appears to be a very fine sausage spread on the top. It's served with lime wedges.
Wut? I'm brazillian and i never heard about that flavour hahahaha
@@SamySamy-db8uu That's why I'm curious. I've been eating it for 20+ years here but maybe it's one of the sausage varieties available in Brasil by a specific name but they just called it Brasilian here. At any rate, it's a good taste.
@@stevekollen1672 well, we do have a kind of "sausage" called "calabresa", it have a red color and really tastes good in the pizza! But the lime wedges is new to me 😂😂😂
Actually there is a flavor of Pizza named "brasileira" but only at Pizza Hut. But here is mozzarela, ham, chopped olives and requeijão, a Milk product that is like a cheese spread.
Back in the 90s Pizza Hut would only have "brasileira", pepperoni and muzzarela.
However Pizza Hut is very different from brazilian Pizza.
actually there isnt a 'brazilian pizza' but brazil in 1940 was in a nationalist 'mindset' and most of our 'fastfood culture' was really changed to a brazilian way. for example prob you know hot dog as bread sausage and ketchup and mustard, here hotdog is a grilled bread with corn, pea the sausage is dived in tomato sauce we also put cheese etc.. so the same occurs w/ our pizza. There is even a 'worst' hotdog made in Sao Paulo that put mashed potato and a mix of tomato onion and oil.
Every brazilian on internet feels very proud when some ppl from other countries tries stuff and food of our culture lol I am feeling like I've just watched some kind of tribute to us. That's so pleasing to see that you guys enjoyed our stuff. Thank you!
Since I was little I always loved japanese cultures and always wanted to visit Japan someday!
nois adora um biscoito kkks
Pizza(Italian) and burgers(British) are not really Brazilian, they are global goods and all places have their style, this is not real Brazilian culture. Please do not think that Brazilian culture is just what the European descendants offers. I took the liberty to explain this in 5 topics.
1- In the Amazon region of Brazil you can taste, at the city of Belem, the food culture from the REAL Americans, not USA food.
2- In our warmest place for beaches and oldest colonized region, northeast, you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil.
3- Another important region for food culture is the state of Minas Gerais, in the southeast of Brazil, it has many historical cities that were even capital of the Brazilian Empire for a while and has a really special background for food culture because it is the place where the Portuguese explored with gold mining purposes.
4- For last, Rio de Janeiro was capital of the Portuguese and the Brazilian empires and has a culinary of its own.
5- For the rest, they fit in that zone that I called "European culture in Brazil"/"Pizza&Burgers", where the southeast is famous for Italian colonization(Brazilian pizzas), also the south also is famous for German colonization and foods related. They definitely don't define Brazil and are the very influence by outside trends, so they are the least unique foods of Brazil, because most of them you can find in Europe or USA as a standard kind of food.
É tudo lindo e maravilhoso até eles descobrirem o que a gente fez com o sushi deles kkkkkkkkk
KKKKKKKKKKKK
Porque você não viu o que fazem com nosso pão de queijo. 🤣 Já achei pão de queijo recheado com doce de feijão e pão de queijo com algas.
@@oejunnior socorro!! Me fala que isso é zueira, pfv
@@marianacurto4626 pior que não. Aqui geralmente na rede de lojas de conveniência Seven Eleven você encontra os dois tipos.
hahahahahahahahahaha. The treta has been planted
Thanks to all the Brazilians in Japan, life has become so much better for other foreigners. Muito obrigado.
How so?
Pizza(Italian) and burgers(British) are not really Brazilian, they are global goods and all places have their style, this is not real Brazilian culture. Please do not think that Brazilian culture is just what the European descendants offers. I took the liberty to explain this in 5 topics.
1- In the Amazon region of Brazil you can taste, at the city of Belem, the food culture from the REAL Americans, not USA food.
2- In our warmest place for beaches and oldest colonized region, northeast, you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil.
3- Another important region for food culture is the state of Minas Gerais, in the southeast of Brazil, it has many historical cities that were even capital of the Brazilian Empire for a while and has a really special background for food culture because it is the place where the Portuguese explored with gold mining purposes.
4- For last, Rio de Janeiro was capital of the Portuguese and the Brazilian empires and has a culinary of its own.
5- For the rest, they fit in that zone that I called "European culture in Brazil"/"Pizza&Burgers", where the southeast is famous for Italian colonization(Brazilian pizzas), also the south also is famous for German colonization and foods related. They definitely don't define Brazil and are the very influence by outside trends, so they are the least unique foods of Brazil, because most of them you can find in Europe or USA as a standard kind of food.
@@fabianofrank4785 They have a functioning brain, Fabiano. They know that those weren't Brazilian food.
@@Jay-nz1rz The japanese are getting used to living with Westerners, he wanted to say..
@@marcelohjsakura Nikkei-Brazilians don't wish to be called Westerners.
Watching her describe pão de queijo was so priceless, I couldn't stop smiling!
This place is the most genuine representation of an actual Brazilian place I have ever seen lmao
I was doubting it was genuine, until the cheap plastic poster with "Salgados" written on it appeared, then I felt at home. 😂😂😂
You felt EXACTLY how I feel when I go to Liberdade (also known as Liba), the Japanese district in São Paulo, Brazil. And that was AMAZING.
そのような場所が日本に存在するのは素晴らしいことです
! 🇧🇷 ❤️ 🇯🇵
Yes
That background music at the very start during the intro is so creepy lol. It feels haunting.
3:11 Actualy, it's written like "Tchau". It's a way to say goodbye in Brazil
This video really shows how Brazil is: a lot of different people from different backgrounds sometimes different nationalities living together in the same country, enriching the culture, making this place what it is.
AJI AMARILLO, It is a sweet hot pepper from Peru, Amarillo means yellow (even if it is kind of orange…)Gunma has other japanese/South American communities,it is great to find it there.
I was wondering what kind of sauce was that! That's definitely not brazilian, but it looks good.
@@gabriel.brasileiro here in the country side usually is ketchup, mayo and a herb/spicy mayo
is actually pretty hard to find places that serve mustard
@@Gabrostil Mostarda é muito comum.
Aqui é mostarda.
@@mr.schaeffer5399 mano, aqui no interior eu nunca vi algum lugar servir mostarda além de fast food, é sempre a maionese de ervas e ketchup
I'm brazilian and Japan is the second country I love the most. I was very happy with the beautiful report you did about the brazilian town in Gunma. You speak a very nice english! Great video!
loved the video! the pizza here in brazil is really on point! and the "pão de queijo" is addicting. Maybe one day u guys get to eat some churrasco from the south part of brazil, more extacly the state of Rio Grande do Sul, we are known here in my state for having the best churrasco/barbecue in the world!
Thank you for the detailed comment. We will visit more Brazilian communities in Japan and discover more Brazilian foods!
Pizza(Italian) and burgers(British) are not really Brazilian, they are global goods and all places have their style, this is not real Brazilian culture. Please do not think that Brazilian culture is just what the European descendants offers. I took the liberty to explain this in 5 topics.
1- In the Amazon region of Brazil you can taste, at the city of Belem, the food culture from the REAL Americans, not USA food.
2- In our warmest place for beaches and oldest colonized region, northeast, you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil.
3- Another important region for food culture is the state of Minas Gerais, in the southeast of Brazil, it has many historical cities that were even capital of the Brazilian Empire for a while and has a really special background for food culture because it is the place where the Portuguese explored with gold mining purposes.
4- For last, Rio de Janeiro was capital of the Portuguese and the Brazilian empires and has a culinary of its own.
5- For the rest, they fit in that zone that I called "European culture in Brazil"/"Pizza&Burgers", where the southeast is famous for Italian colonization(Brazilian pizzas), also the south also is famous for German colonization and foods related. They definitely don't define Brazil and are the very influence by outside trends, so they are the least unique foods of Brazil, because most of them you can find in Europe or USA as a standard kind of food.
@@fabianofrank4785 i agree, there is so many cultural foods in brazil, but i dont think its not brazzilian culture aswell (pizza,burgers...etc), cuz most of "brazzilian food culture" wasnt origniated in brazil so... If u consider that, tons of stuff wouldnt be "brazilian culture" but it is.
U even said so ", you can go to the first capital of Brazil, Salvador, also the biggest African city outside Africa(due to slave trade) and meet some AMAZING and culturally rich food from the real Brazil." if african food is considered brazilian food culture, why the other aren't?
psé, se a gente aplicar o mesmo raciocínio, a comida britânica não é britânica, mas sim indiana e por aí vai...
brigadeiro não é brasileiro, pq é trufa e trufa foi inventada na frança e etc
com tantas influências fica difícil dizer da onde a comida é, então apenas aceitamos que 'faz parte da cultura'
Now you can visit the Japanese neighborhood we have in Brazil's São Paulo called Liberdade, there's over 1 million Japanese living there.
Subarashii! The Brazilian people are so welcoming... ❤️ I'm so glad you liked the food. Next time try the feijoada, it's so good. ❤️
Half of my mother’s family who are Okinawans from Naha Okinawa,immigrated to Brazil and the other half to Hawaii. I ‘m glad you liked the Portuguese sausage, one of my favorite foods.
BRASILEIROS CAUSANDO NO JAPAO👏👏👏👏👏
I loved learning more about Gunma. My aunt lives there
In São Paulo we have a japanese neighborhood called "Liberdade", the biggest japanese comunity outside Japan.
I love the tense music on the background like we are aliens ahahhaha Love the video! Trust me, a brazilian bbq out of nowhere and the people just hanging you the meat is very brazilian! About the diggly pizza, we usually eat them with fork and knife, holding them with your hands in public will be a mess!
Quando que vão normalizar comer pizza com as mãos em pizzarias? 😭
The intro music was like a zombie movie
Eu como com as mãos e não tou nem aí hahaha
@@taticastro27 O Problema, é que algumas pizzas, fica quase impossivel comer com as mãos, a Portuguesa da pizzaria que fica perto da minha casa, se tentar comer com as mãos, o recheio cai todo(Muito recheio, e massa fina)
Algoritmo do youtube nunca decepciona. Abro uma aba e suddenlycaralho. As legendas de "Tchau" escrito como "ciao" me fizeram rir mais do que deveriam.
it's so fun that here in São Paulo we have a HUGE japanese district called Liberdade, or "freedom" in english. The feeling I had when I went there was similar to yours visiting this brazilian district. And that one pizza, the Portuguesa, it's meaning in portuguese is "portuguese", or "from Portugal" kskssksksksks
Como somos Latinos os sabores da comida tem que desperta um sentimento por isso a comida brasileira é rica em sabor e quantidade, pois sempre é bom comer com alguém, ou com sua família ou amigos. Comer para nos Brasileiro é algo extremante cultural.
Sou brasileiro, mas não me considero latino. Só brasileiro mesmo e já está de bom tamanho. Bem, não é uma crítica, é só uma observação minha.
@@joshering6726 Eu tambem estamos na América latina mas essa coisa de sou latino isso e mais de quem fala espanhol , isso e coisa de EUA .
@@Alexandre.10 para os norte americanos latinos é identificado como hispano falantes, más Latino é uma distinção lingüística, porque a gente fala uma língua que desce do latín, os franceses, italianos, espanhóis e portuguêses são latinos também. Mas os que falam línguas latinas e moram no continente americano e caribe semos latino americanos.
@@joshering6726 Isso n depende de sua vontade, é um fato, se vc nasceu no Brasil vc é um Latino.
@@CarlosGustavoSilvadosSantos Não necessariamente, eu nasci no Brasil mas minha família é inteira italiana. Ninguém me chama de Latino aqui nos EUA nem em Canadá.
I'm Brazillian.. and I have no idea what Ahi is. I looked around on google and found out that there's a Peruvian sauce.. Aji made of Amarillo.. it's a pepper sauce then, nice.
FYI, the sauce you see at 2:45, "aji" (a-hi) is Peruvian, not Brazilian, and is usually green, not yellow (prob the place in the video switched the ingredients from aji-pepper-based to mustard-based). I remember putting it on roasted chicken, etc, when I was in Peru, and it's pretty good. You see it at restaurants all over in Peru/Bolivia, but prob not in Brazil.
We brazilians don't use a-ji tho, maybe is something from that place..
This was such a lovely video, hope you guys can come to Brazil one day and enjoy our amazing food, beaches and stuff!
Makes sense that a Brazilian town would too become a melting pot outside of Brazil. We're generally very welcoming to foreigners. Personally, I can't wait to learn more about someone's country's customs and food, just to see what I can learn and introduce to the betterment of my own home and family. Those exchanges are one of my favourite types of conversation, they are always eye opening in some way.
The pizza looks very much like the ones we find here, though we do **love** our variety in Brazil and pizzas are usually **dripping** with toppings... So most of our pizza restaurants serve food with cutlery, because the slices become to heavy to handle with hands without making a mess hahaha.
The "mega burguer" (we call it "xis" here, which stands for our pronunciation of the letter "x", and very closely resembles to us to the way "cheese" is pronounced. So, "xis" as in "cheeseburger", but our giant version of it haha). The only difference I see is that our Xis tends to be heat pressed after assembled, so the bread's outside becomes slightly toasted. Plus, when flattened it becomes easier to bite into it. We also make something called "green mayo", which is basically mayo blended with fresh herbs and spices. It's a staple dressing for us, alongside ketchup, and every restaurant has their own version of it. We basically can tell how good a xis place is by the quality of their homemade mayo hahaha.
A great dissertation of our culture, just watching their reactions, I feel so proud... hungry too! Kkkk
In 3:46 Paçoquita... I LOOOVE IT. It is very popular here in Brazil
I'm Brazilian and you are always welcome to visit our country! ❤️
I want to visit Japan, since I've always had a connection to the place, and I have friends from there.
I also love the UK!
If u guys have the chance try "Pit Dog" or "X-tudo" (X everything) its very popular hambuguer in brazil. Its common to young people eat after parties haha its amazing ♥️♥️
Loved the video by the way. ♥️♥️
@DanMit94 Demais da conta kkkkkk
Thank you so much for watching. We probably gonna visit more Brazilian communities in Japan in the future!
Realmente eu não esperava poder encontrar X-tudo,X-Salada... no Japão, ainda eu sendo Gaúcho, surreal haha perto de casa faz a gente se sentir, coisas tão tipicas daqui.
x is a corruption of "cheese", so x-tudo means cheese-everything. (X is pronounced somewhat like cheese in portuguese. i mean, sorta. more like "she's")
Ver vídeos de gringos dando as opiniões deles sobre o Brasil e os brasileiros, é uma das poucas coisas que me fazem ter um sentimento patriota, porque as instituições aqui conseguem manchar a nossa imagem de uma forma incrível
Eh foda viver em um pais que vc nao se orgulha de nada.
@@eduardopacheco5553, tenho orgulho do meu povo, da minha cultura, da história do meu estado e do meu país. Não é nem um pouco ruim ser brasileiro, ruim é morar aqui kkkk
It's really cool see the real Brazilian culture so well represented, there are restaurants in Brazil with over 70 differents toppings and dough. The sauce "AJI" is delicious but not so common here, it is from others great countries from SouthAmerica (Peru and Bolivia if my mind don't trick me). And yes, we invite every one to share BBQ and happiness.
Hehehe, nice nice. Although many of the things (and words) that appeared were not in Portuguese/from Brazil, but Spanish/hispanic south america.
thank you so much for this video, I loved it ❤️
Definitely a Brazilian town outside of Brasil.
Brasil was born from that gathering of people from several places around the world.
Brazilian culture is basically that coming together of multiple cultures creating one whole new culture of its own.
The food, the vibe of the people with warm welcomes and receptiveness.
As a Brazilian, it was really interesting to see a town in Brazilian Japan that looks almost exactly the same as quite a few of the Japanese communities in Brasil which I've seen.
True
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista.
Até jornalista gente, por favor,
Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil......
Provaram exatamente as nossas especialidades, pizza, sanduíche e o famoso e delicioso churrasquinho !!!
Faltou a feijuca, mas aí já é Brasil para iniciados.
@Fëanor Aux Bro it was Brazilian barbecue. It just happened to be prepared by Turkish/Japanese people
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista.
Até jornalista gente, por favor,
Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil....
This was very wholesome! Thank you for trying brazilian foods ♥
Que legal ver que nossa cultura está em outros lugares graças a globalização.
Tem muito mais a ver com a imigração japonesa de 100 anos atrás do que com globalização
Essas misturas de cultura eh muito legal, parabens pelo video 👍
If you visit these places again, try COXINHA (with chicken stuffing, which is the traditional).
Adorei o video! vocês são fofinhos! so cute!
The Brazilian bbq on the street is right on point, it was a weekly event on my family during years. Loved the channel and the content, the Brazilian pizza look perfect also
I would be glad to see them trying brazilian rice. It's completely different from japanese rice, for having a loose texture instead of being sticky, really good with beans (yes, we eat beans salty and most people I know think sweets made out of beans is kinda weird).
Brazil has about 35 million descendants of italians and that's why we say ciao (bye)(tchau ).
Getting togheter for barbecuing is soo south american LOL. I can relate to it so much. Now I know exactly where to go if I ever go to live in Japan and feel homesick.
I am Brazilian, it’s so cool that i’m japan has this place that represent my culture, is like the the neighborhood called Liberdade here in São Paulo Brazil, which is a place that represent the culture from the asians countries
We should definitely visit Liberdade!
it's videos like these that make me enjoy my country xD, Lot's of love and peace from Brazil!
Pão de queijo is not made by cassava flour. It's the starch of cassava like arrowroot or the corn starch. And it isn't palm fruits. It's the palm heart, the center of palm tree body called palmito
Very lovely the way you guys approached Brazilian culture and stuff. Thanks. God bless you
As a Brazilian, I'm proud to see people from Japan, or any other nation, to be enjoying our culture's WARM cuisine and daily
It is quite hard for us Native Brazilians to point out our own "GOOD STANDARDS" on unison, meaning, there are a lot of standards, good and bad, that can differ depending on the region or State we come from.
But the few we do agree on, regardless of region or State, is:
> The fact that we are a "Generally Very Welcoming people", meaning, we tend to accept people easily into our culture and surroundings as we want them to enjoy, and feel the "warm" culture we have. Like we say it here, "We are like the Heart of a Mother, there is always space for one more" :)
Fun fact, we say “Ciao” as a “Goodbye” in brazil, but we learned to say Ciao with the immigrants from Italy, actually in Italy they say “Ciao” as a “Hello/Hi” not as a Goodbye like Brazilians do, that’s why we changed the write form instead of “Ciao” we write “Tchau”.
4:14 the "ã" vowel in "pão de queijo" is considered very difficult to pronounce non-native speakers... And you nailed it perfectly, congrats!
Also 7:00 : a turkish and japanese family having a Brazilian BBQ in Japan, I love that
i´m feel good watching this video thank´s for this guys
You have to visit São Paulo city in Brazil, there's a japanese neighborhood call Liberdade.
The negative part of Pão de Queijo is that for you to apreciate at its maximum you have to eat right after its out of the oven otherwise it will get hard and rubbery. I sugest trying out with a thin slice of butter on top and eating while is melting...its super good.
This was a sweet video, thanks for sharing!
Very sweet video.
Cheers from Brazil!
"Paçoquinha" and "Leite Moça", both products shown on the video, gave heavy brazilian feelings with it. You should try it, alongside Guaraná Antarctica.
Guaraná Antarctica, o quê... Se tivesse Guaravita era gg.
I just like to mention that is palm heart not palm fruit. loved the video.
in australia we have and egg and bacon, onion style pizza that has always been known as an "aussie" it was around in the 70s when i was a kid but may have possibly been around earlier than that ?
I did my study abroad in Oizumi. What a great memory
Wow, so nice your video, I just “ amei “ 😍 also I sent to my son with my daughter in law , they live in Kanazawa. With my two little boys Kai and Finn .
Thanks, ありがとうございました, Obrigado 🙏🏼
Is cool because in Brazil have a japanese city and Japan have a brazilian city
Japan 🤝 Brazil
Mas a cidade japonesa no Brasil e feita por descendentes de japoneses, e acidade brasileira no Japão tb e feita por descendentes de japones.
@@silisboabeige e desde quando eu falei algo sobre quem fez ou que não fez? 😐
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista.
Até jornalista gente, por favor,
Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil......
@@silisboabeige só pra você ver . Até os descendentes de japoneses fazem questão de se identificar como brasileiros e usar o português no Japão. Povo evoluído
love the idea of this video and you guys look so nice and had so much fun. i have a question thuogh: i watched several interview-type of videos made in japan and am always dissatisfied with the depth of the questions that are asked... but maybe that's because politeness barres you to ask any questions that could be perceived as to personal? just curios...
great video!
Wow amazing and informative video. The most of my Brazilian japanese friends had been to Japan to work for a few years..
Muito bom, gostei do vídeo. Cumprimentos do Brasil
Oh I super love Gunma! It is definitely in my Top 10 Best place in Asia. But I only went there for the hot spring. Nice to see this video.
The way you pronunce "pão de queijo" sounds almost perfect!
Most people cant spell it!
The japanese word for pão is pan, it sounds quite similar.
Actually Japanese has a lot of words that resembles portuguese, and pan is one of then. The portuguese were the first Europeans to arrive in Japan and they developed a close relationship.
I suggest you visit the Uzbek restaurant in Tokyo and make a video about them. Uzbek guy is married to the Japanese lady, his wife has leaned uzbek language
I visit that restaurant all the times! It's amazing! There are also Uzbek bakery in Saitama as well.
群馬にもブラジル系コミュニティがあるの知らなかったなぁ、静岡は有名だけど
スバルとかの工場が多いからなのかな? 美味しそう
u guys are amazing ! greetings from Brasil! Japanese people is always very welcome here. s2
oba!!! já sei pra onde ir!! woo hoo!
you guys should come to São Paulo !
Memories broken, the truth goes unspoken
I've even forgotten my name
I don't know the season or what is the reason
I'm standing here holding my blade
A desolate place (place)
Without any trace (trace)
It's only the cold wind I feel
It's me that I spite as I stand up and fight
The only thing I know for real
There will be blood (blood) shed (shed)
The man in the mirror nods his head
The only one (one) left (left)
Will ride upon the dragon's back
Because the mountains don't give back what they take
Oh no, there will be blood (blood) shed (shed)
It's the only thing I've ever known
Losing my identity
Wondering, "Have I gone insane?"
To find the truth in front of me I must climb this mountain range
Looking downward from this deadly height and never realizing why I fight
the sausage pizza you tried is actually a beloved favorite around here in brazil too, it's the most comon one
We are SO PROUD of you japanese that came here in the 1910's, you'll always be welcomed back here in Brazil 💚💛+❤🤍
I've never head of "ahi" before. It's not eaten in São Paulo where I'm from... I wonder if it's something that our siblings from Japan invented.
Apparently it's Hispanic American. A Peruvian friend on another comment mentioned it's a dish from Peru.
Eu conheço o "ají amarillo" como sendo peruano. É delicioso, mas nunca pensei em usar num hamburguer. Deve ficar bom.
Eu sou peruano-brasileiro, e confirmo o comentário do/da colega acima. E é bom, já comi os dois juntos hehehe
@@castorbr5695 Mas deveriam usar mostarda.
3:15 Comida brasileira vicia, cuidado vocês vão querer provar sempre! Adorei falarem tchau!
I'm Brazilian and I LOVED this video! There is a japonese neighborhood in Brazil, in São Paulo city, called "Liberdade". It has many shops, restaurants with japonese food and a museum about the japonese immigration in Brazil. It's just like the city that you guys visited, but the other way around hahaha I love there. If you guys come to BR some day, you should visit Liberdade. It's awesome, I love there (:
Love this video from BR!
This was really nice to see.
Experimente a feijoada, nosso cachorro quente, e o sushi :) Eu vi um vídeo de uma japonesa experimentando nosso sushi brasileiro e dei boas risadas porque ela disse que jamais iria existir esse tipo de sushi no Japão 😂 Experimente quando puder, vou adorar ver sua reação :)
Kkkkkkkk
um oferencimento, sushi de abacate, suchi com doritos e suchi com abacaxi
@@matheussanthiago9685
Sushi com manga!
Engraçado que ninguém precisa se dar o trabalho de aprender o português, o próprio brasileiro se adianta em dizer que somos insignificantes ao falar o idioma dos outros. Isso até mesmo dentro do Brasil se tratando de um estrangeiro que trabalha como repórter e jornalista.
Até jornalista gente, por favor,
Incentivem o português de forma inteligente. Segurem um pouco o viralatismo igual eu faço. Os estrangeiros que me conhecem, aprendem a falar português sem se sentirem forçados. Porque eu falo naturalmente, dou valor . Não é difícil......
@@robertoprimordial2633
Exatamente. Oviralatismo que vá virar lata. E leve a Globo junto.
It's so cool to see Japanese people trying our food ^^ I didn't know there was a Brazilian district in Japan.
I''m from Brazil and in my city, São Paulo have a Japanese district and is my favourite place of all to go. I love the Japanese food, candy, festivals and everything
Muito bom. Me deu uma baita fome ao ver vocês comerem. Gostei do vídeo. 👏
Ha! I live in Brazil, but now I want to visit Gunma. :D You were all very sweet! Everything you ate look exactly like what we usually get here! Yummy!
Something funny about the big burger, its called Beirute, a Brazilian recipe strongly influenced by the Syrian-Lebanese culture, cultural of São Paulo and made with fake pita bread (Brazilian pita bread is (generally) quite different from the original), the bread in the recipe changed until it was simply called big burger, in other states. And it was even in japan now
Loved the video!
The brazilian meat that you guys ate at the barbecue was chicken heart. It's very common here in brazil haha
Ao menos não foi na pizza... (gaúchos que gostam)
As a brazilian, here where i live, in Curitiba city, there's a place called "praça do Japão" (Japan Square). It is my favorite place in the world, such a beautiful spot to meditate!
8:30 this is why only brazilian eat pizza with fork and knife (on a plate). We NEVER eat like that (with hand), because is too heavy, there is a lot of ingredients. In Brazil we only eat with fork and knife