As a viewer over many years, the solid Turkish representation this episode made me so happy! Btw, something I find quite unique about Turkish cusine is that we like to drink "salty" drinks like shalgam or ayran (yogurt diluted with water) for lunch or dinner to cut the fattyness, unlike a lot of western cusines that stick to more sweeter drinks 😊
Traditional Serbian cuisine has the salty drinks too. I used to love lacto-fermented cabbage brine as a child - it was a special treat sort of drink. I still love it, but it's not easy to come by if you don't do a whole barrel of cabbage heads for winter. Imagine how happy I was to discover salgam in my local immigrant owned stores here in Sweden. Had it at a Turkish restaurant first, then my Turk friends told me where to buy it, and now there's always a bottle or two in my fridge. It's not AS good as pure cabbage brine, but it's close enough. I tried to introduce it to my Swedish friends. Did not go well. Their loss.
Thanks so much Kush for showing our feasts to the world 🙏🙏🙏 mantı and salgam are not for breakfast, but i am really appreciated for you guys, love you all 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷
I have a feeling these were prepared a while in advance, and those egg dishes are best served freshly cooked. Seems like they went with the stuff easier to eat a bit after. Can't have skipped menemen otherwise@@Kangstor
When I was in Atlanta for work some years back, I went to the Coca-Cola museum, and their big exhibit right before the end is a huge soda fountain, divided by continent, where you can try different flavors and brands of soda/fizzy pop owned by the Coca-Cola company around the world. And I do distinctly remember the Fanta at the African section being really nice, so it must have been Nigerian Fanta. Edit: I should clarify, in case the terminology is different outside of the US: a "soda fountain" is not an actual fountain that shoots out soda, but one of those machines in restaurants and convenience stores that dispenses several different flavors from different nozzles.
I'm really glad you added the edit. I was imagining literal fountains spewing out different sodas, arranged on a large world map and going, "that must be fun" 😂
Mantı(Turkish ravioli with garlic yogurt and buttery tomate sauce) is not usually consumed in breakfast, apart from that, that is a solid Turkish breakfast props to Kush. I would also recommend drinking Tea(we basically drink as much tea as water), Menemen(with sucuk) and Salça(tomato paste/tomate saucey thing that is kind of like a spread on a toast).
i'm so happy whenever i see Turkish representation by you guys as a long time subscriber! hehe 15:43 we sometimes eat like this for dinner or for those late night cravings but like a simpler version of course :) The type you presented is like a large sunday breakfast where you have more time to prepare everything and most likely you have guests coming. The basic everyday version i can say you'd have bread, cheese,olives, tomatoes, butter, jam and eggs. Shalgam and mantı are not breakfast items but i'm glad they are getting recognized as well 😊
I found myself pausing and feasting my eyes with that breakfast and drooling like crazy. I honestly wished they would have made a whole episode of just each and every single dish on that table. I want to know more!
You guys really need to try Dutch style pancakes, bacon in pancakes is like level 1 and there's so much more stuff you can put on or in pancakes. edit: also B. Dylan Hollis cookbook/B. Dylan Hollis collab because old fashioned recipes are brilliant.
i do like my dutch pances with cheese and bacon though, never gets old for me, then again, making pancakes is a bit of a faff so it's not every day i make them either and yeah i do like my shoarma pancake sometimes too, lol you'll only have to make like 2 and it's match lol the sweet ones are kind of exceptions for me, but every so often i do like me one even then, still gotta be a dutch style pancake (thinner but larger in diameter, and a bit of salt in the butter) to kind of break up the sweetness :D
I am craaazy about Turkish breakfast (kahvaltı). They have one of the most wonderful breakfasts in the world, I bet! I love when they serve kaymak instead of just butter which is very fatty and rich cream. Ahh local cheeses and honey are such a pleasure every time. And fresh fruits and veggies!!! AND MENEMEN! Gosh, I would live in Turkey just to have their breakfast 😅 Glad you guys try them!
Nice breakfast! Next time you visit Turkey or a turkish breakfast place you could to try Menemen, a dish made with onion, tomato - optional pepper- and egg. A good breakfast needs a pot of tea, served in small turkish tea glasses. Salgam - pronounced Shalgam- pairs well with heavier lunch and dinner dishes like kebabs or meat stews. Some people use shalgam instead of water to wash down each sip of the turkish liquor Rakı. Manti is a dinner dish, for a homier version you can use powder red chili in butter instead of tomato, and definitely finish with a sprinkle of sumak.
Have to say.. As a long time viewer and a chef myself, this type of content is one of the more intresting ones. When you all, "normals" and chef(s) just sit at a table together and talk about recent trends and also try out some stuff together and discuss the pro's and con's and give your honest oppinion on the matter. Hands down the best addition to your roster of amasing video-ideas. Keep up the good work and the always way above par content!! Much love from one of many Swedish chefs! Love your content and keep doing you!!!💕👨🍳👨🍳
I have an idea, The Ultimate Full English Battle, each normal take their favorite version of this all time English classic and make it as tasty as possible without any help from the food team! And then you tell Ebber's that he then has to guess who made which dish and then he declares which one not only did the best but is also a prouder Briton! Please do it!!!🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧❤️❤️❤️❤️
@@SortedFood so far - nope- it’s 7am, and I’ve been marathoning old sorted videos since I watched this one!- whoops! I BLAME YOU! Just too damned entertaining for your own good!🤷♀️😂👍🏻 oh well- off to watch another battle where the boys stick h each other up!👍🏻😂🤣😂🤣🤷♀️🥰
I've been to Turkey waaaaaay back in the early 90's from Poland, on a holiday with my parents and I can smell this video ... maybe not exactly as you're having it, but it's a core memory for me. The nar stew is something I will never forget tbh!
They didn't like it when Jamie made it years ago (not well). They liked it when Kush made it here. It was the weird combos like pickle they didn't like here.
It was the execution. I suspect Kush took exactly one go at what he made, and it probably takes some trailing to figure out how to best batter certain things. Which is why Americans usually pour out the pancake and drop the filling in, or just put it on top. Fruit, breakfast meat, cheese, chocolate, lots of stuff is great. Would love to try many Dutch versions.
Jamie -- forget the haters. I respect your ability to cast aside convention and good sense to an effort to answer the question "Will it pancake?" History will prove you a visionary.
I am 66. I grew up in a touristy neighborhood that had tour buses coming to it. People would leave bottles everywhere. We would gather glass bottles take them to grocers and get spending money for the week.
I thought it was crazy that in a time we're supposed to be recycling they phased out the bottle deposit scheme. My milkman still takes back his bottles, & the local shops used to take back appropriate soda bottles. In parts of the world there are deposit schemes on all glass bottles. The Govt in the UK keeps on putting of a national deposit scheme. But like you I remember it being thing for kids to either volunteer to take back the families bottles for pocket money or going on bottle hunts to rustle up spending money.
just like germany, here in the Netherlands we have 15 eurocents deposit on aluminum and steel beverage cans since this year. so now i mix in the empty cans with the bottles and give them to the kids in the neighbourhood afer a piss bender so they can buy themselves some candy when they come around and ask for deposit bottles, which they sometimes do, knowing some people cna't be arsed to return them, everybody wins lol that said, i still have what is porobaly 30 euros worth of cans (which would be about 200) sitting in my shed to deliver myself andi t's piling up maybe i'm just waiting for that station that can handle them in bulk, or i'll have to spend a rough 40 minutes putting them in the machine one by one, and leave a pool of all the combined bottom sludge in the store, so be it if that needs to be the case lol maybe i'll just go for trying to rack up the highest deposit receipt, my record so far is only €16,65 on 111 cans alone, the shed has plenty of room left, and if i'm gonna get my hands dirty with digging out that disgusting shit , i may aswell do it all in 1 go :')
Glass is 100% recyclable, which means that as long as you use an electric furnace, and renewable energy glass is more or less 100%green. Aluminum uses electrolitic processes and heat to recycle and can usually (with modern practices recapture about 95-99% of the aluminum, though 90% is pretty easy to manage even in old aluminum refineries.that said, paper products as long as the equipment is mostly renewable energy based is carbon negative so long as you pyrolize the material so all thats left is essentially charcoal which can then be buried in the dirt. The big issue with paper is how much water it takes to process it and the ammount of pollutants left in the water afterwards.
Oh, also, glass is the only way we have of making new beach / industrial sand for cement currently, since desert sand can be used to make glass but not used in concrete. You essentially throw class in a wood chopper and sand comes out the other side. woodchip
The thing I love above all else with this channel is their upmost respect and care they put into other countries food. It really helps broaden horizons and the way they handle it is beautiful.
I'm with Kush. When travelling, sights are basically there to intersperse between the food spots and give time for your stomach to make more space for the next meal!
Most people who work in bars probably instantly recognised “Funkin” and maybe rolled their eyes like I did, because they do a lot of syrups and purées and it just reminded me of STICKY FINGERS !! 😂
Been to Türkiye Cumhuriyeti many times & have travelled all over. The food is astounding... especially the breakfasts. One thing I found was that many places wanted you to visit their kitchens as they wanted you to see the quality of their work & high standards. On the Fanta I remember a very drunk guy in a pizza shop explaining the code to look for on Fanta bottles to see if it was made in Dublin Ireland or Milton Keynes in England. this was years ago, but he was adamant that the Irish stuff was better. And to be honest on tasting them side by side I think he was right. It is a fairy good mixer, I'm drinking a gin & Fanta right now. Though a hill I'll die on is that Orangina in the old glass bottle tasted better than out of the new plastic ones.
@@rebeccas2801 Ah I heard rumblings at the time it was maybe closing. Seems they did do it then. Just looked it up where they produce it now: - "CCE Wakefield is a large soft drinks factory in West Yorkshire owned by Coca-Cola Enterprises UK; it is the largest soft-drinks factory in Europe (by volume of drinks produced)"
I like these round table videos. Probably my favorite content you guys produce if I'm being honest, although I suspect it just compliments the rest of what you do so perfectly.
OK, I've been really unsure about Kush joining the front team. But the shade he just threw at Jamie because he's the one who actually cooked his pancakes was good. Complimenting him on the skill to keep the egg jammy -- GOLD As he's becoming more comfortable, he seems to be getting more sarcastic and sharp which I miss from James. Bring it, Kush!
Kush brings back a lot of dryness that's been missing since James left, but he's missing that cynicism and resignation that James brought to the party, especially when made to review dumb gadgets.
@@billyeveryteen7328he is not james 2.0 he is kush and should not be seen as replacement to him, i love the chaos and the energy that he brings to the camera.
As much as I love your other content, this series has quickly became one of, if not my absolute, favourite of yours, love the variety, and EXTREMELY fun to watch.
There used to be a Turkish restaurant in Lincoln that I went to, many moons ago, and I decided to be adventurous. As soon as I saw the label on that bottle, my blood ran cold. I had the same response as Mike when I drank it, and I should've known because when I ordered it, the waiter asked "are you sure?"
I would love to see them take a crack at some of Dylan's fails. There are a bunch I think were the recipe being deficient instructions and not that the result is always awful. It would be interesting to see if the chefs would pick up on what is missing and THEN how noxious the result is.
The Şalgam Suyu makes a pretty good cocktail. Though I love tomatoes I'm funny about tomato juice. But Şalgam makes a pretty nice Bloody Mary. Though I prefer a version of the "Red Snapper" (a Bloody Mary made with gin) that is gin & beetroot juice. Don't drink to many though as it dyes everything that comes out the other end red & you make think you're bleeding to death.
I follow Refika's Kitchen out of Turkey. They have the most beautiful-looking, flaky breads as well as an unusual approach to food. It that keeps one interested. Would be great if you did a few shows with her,
preach ! I grew up in a turkish part of town in Germany, now again living in one and among the many things that keep me here is the breakfast I can have at any of the 4 places around here serving buffet style full turkish breakfast 🤩
Yay for savory breakfasts! Echoing others to try the Max Miller Tasting History cookbook. For Turkish recipes, I have made a lot from Refika Birgül (Refika's Kitchen). She and her team have such amazing energy and the recipes are excellent.
This was amazing to watch! Please do a series showcasing Pakistani street food/ traditional breakfasts too! Happy to give any ideas especially in terms of things that aren't available in London so well
I usually agree with most things here, but theres no way making cocktails available simply by opening a can instead of going through the whole mixing process will "reduce" alcohol intake xD
I'd love to see some "cooking with kds" type recipes/episodes. My grandkids enjoy watching your show ...in fact it's the only program the entire family watches together ❤️
There's a great channel, Dianxi Xiaogue, that shows the making of Chinese cuisine from the farm (or forest) to the table. Her videos are fascinating, beautiful to watch, and I cannot recommend her enough. I bring her up today though, because just over a week ago she released a fun video where she made a giant hamberger. I watched it and instantly thought of Jamie--there are countless layers of all types of ingredients and meats, and when it came time for dinner it brought about as much laughter as it satisfited their hunger. I think that's what I like about Jamie's contributions (and everyone else's, actually). These gatherings are about enjoying food and having fun with it. Whether it is a substantial new meal no one has tried or a weird flavor combination, I can always expect to learn and laugh when you sit down and talk. Thanks for all you do.
another point to add for the canned cocktails which is something i realized way back when discussing canned beers, the can helps protect the content from light that can degrade the taste of the content when bottled in glass.
We make turkey pancakes with leftovers from Thanksgiving! Use waffle batter with folded in egg whites and dip and fry large slices of meat. Serve with turkey gravy! It’s the absolute best!
The Turkish breakfast there is called "serpme", translates to something like "sprawler" because it's lots of little things sprawled around the table. This type of food is, or was, a traditional village breakfast. It's supposed to be eaten with a big extended family, or with a bunch of friends. Although now you can find it in all the cities and since it became quite popular they do it for individuals now as well (quite wasteful though). But most people have their own versions at home. Generally, in a Turkish family breakfast, you will see tomatoes, cucumbers, olives, feta cheese, eggs (usually soft boiled) some honey and jams, big pile of bread, butter, sometimes meats like sucuk or salam, a chocolate spread for the kids, and wash it down with lots of black tea. Different families will have their own touch, but generally those are the core ingredients. In addition to the core breakfast items, you can have some side dishes to share such as menemen, an egg dish you can dip your bread into. In certain regions, such as mine, you will find more pastry in breakfast too, such as gozleme, katmer, borek, etc. You can also have pastry like simit or poğaça, but those are generally for quick bites on the go. Like the simit that he showed in the video, we'll just buy that from a street vendor when we're in a hurry like a pick-me-up, and not make it or eat it in the house.
Aside from the obvious points you made about the canned cocktails, another few reasons I like them is they are lightweight and easy to carry, also you can crush them when done making them easier to take home and also they don't break so no chance of someone getting hurt from broken glass.
I liked the videos where they planned "guys nights out" for each other. It was kinda like this where they got to show each other stuff they liked and have fun together.
Guys can you do a series where you cook recipes from modern cook books? So think Chetan's book, or Elizabeth Haigh, or some of the classics from Keji Lopez or Nusrat's Acid fat salt heat.. basically different books, but recipes at random.. and name it something like "cooks with books"..
Kudos to Kush to nailing Turkish breakfast to the T...although he forgot tea and after coffee oh and also eggs usual Turkish breakfast also comes with a choice of egg dish (either sunny side up, boiled, some sort of omlette or in rare cases poached) :P Salgam is not something I consider a breakfast drink but considering the vast diverse approach to things in Turkey I bet there are places that actually drink it in breakfast. For me it is almost always with either kebab or with meat that you don't wanna know about :P
Hi there!! My Fiance and I have been watching sorted together for a long time! He had a great idea for a another chef v normal challenge where the Normals get to use super fancy kitchen equipment but chefs only get the basic bare minimum equipment. That would be so fun! 🎉
Would love to see more behind scenes with Cush or b roll. He does so much behind cameras would be nice to see time to time all the work that goes into his beautiful cooking
Regarding Ebbers' comment about recycling: does the UK not do a bottle/can "deposit?" In the US (and formerly in Mexico), you pay an additional fee for cans and plastic bottles as a sort of incentive to recycle the containers. If you take the containers to a recycling place or machine, you get the fee back. When I was a kid growing up in Mexico, they used to do deposits on glass bottles, so if you went to the shop to buy a Coke, you'd have to bring in an empty bottle or be charged the deposit fee. Or if you were buying a smaller bottle just for yourself, the cashier would empty out the bottle into a sandwich bag and give you a straw. So if you've ever seen pictures or videos of children drinking soda out of a plastic bag, that's why. The practice has largely died out in Mexico, ever since Coca-Cola switched from glass bottles to non-returnable plastic ones.
The Turkish breakfast took me back to my childhood. My family frequented what used to be a small fishing town called Yalikavak and were very familiar with the locals. I often think about going back but I assume it’s completely different now. I don’t have a point to make, but damn, nostalgia is crazy
Banana in a pancake batter is basically Pisang Goreng, Banana fritter, a yummy street food in Indonesia. The seller will also have: Tahu isi, tofu hollowed and then filled with shredded veggies, dunked in batter then deep fried also Bakwan, purely shredded veggies in batter, deep fried. The innovative one will have jackfruit, the ripe one is yellow and very sweet, but again dunked in batter and deep fried.
As a viewer over many years, the solid Turkish representation this episode made me so happy! Btw, something I find quite unique about Turkish cusine is that we like to drink "salty" drinks like shalgam or ayran (yogurt diluted with water) for lunch or dinner to cut the fattyness, unlike a lot of western cusines that stick to more sweeter drinks 😊
I love shalgam so much!! Especially the hot one!
Traditional Serbian cuisine has the salty drinks too. I used to love lacto-fermented cabbage brine as a child - it was a special treat sort of drink. I still love it, but it's not easy to come by if you don't do a whole barrel of cabbage heads for winter. Imagine how happy I was to discover salgam in my local immigrant owned stores here in Sweden. Had it at a Turkish restaurant first, then my Turk friends told me where to buy it, and now there's always a bottle or two in my fridge. It's not AS good as pure cabbage brine, but it's close enough.
I tried to introduce it to my Swedish friends. Did not go well. Their loss.
How does it cut the fattyness?
Jamie forgetting he's already done bacon in pancakes years ago. 😂😂😂
Hilarious 😂
Try and get bacon in Turkey.
@@Mr_Dopeythis wasn’t an episode dedicated to Turkish cuisine so I don’t really get your point?
Thanks so much Kush for showing our feasts to the world 🙏🙏🙏 mantı and salgam are not for breakfast, but i am really appreciated for you guys, love you all 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷
Mantı and salgam may not be breakfast items, but if you knew how many pizza's i have had for breakfast. And that is not an breakfast item either ;)
Simit, kaymak and honey is my favourite. But my mate’s mum makes the most incredible borek.
@@Gremalkin1979 I think mantı was more of a substitute for menemen or any other egg dish Kush for some reason skipped.
I have a feeling these were prepared a while in advance, and those egg dishes are best served freshly cooked. Seems like they went with the stuff easier to eat a bit after. Can't have skipped menemen otherwise@@Kangstor
@@namaja592 or maybe they used all eggs on those pancakes which was an idea that came to me after typing my response
Really love these Friday talk about videos. I learn something, find something new to try and have a laugh. Prefect intro to the weekend.
Happy Friday Alex!
@@SortedFood You guys are the Best!❤❤❤❤❤
When I was in Atlanta for work some years back, I went to the Coca-Cola museum, and their big exhibit right before the end is a huge soda fountain, divided by continent, where you can try different flavors and brands of soda/fizzy pop owned by the Coca-Cola company around the world. And I do distinctly remember the Fanta at the African section being really nice, so it must have been Nigerian Fanta.
Edit: I should clarify, in case the terminology is different outside of the US: a "soda fountain" is not an actual fountain that shoots out soda, but one of those machines in restaurants and convenience stores that dispenses several different flavors from different nozzles.
I'm really glad you added the edit. I was imagining literal fountains spewing out different sodas, arranged on a large world map and going, "that must be fun" 😂
Mantı(Turkish ravioli with garlic yogurt and buttery tomate sauce) is not usually consumed in breakfast, apart from that, that is a solid Turkish breakfast props to Kush.
I would also recommend drinking Tea(we basically drink as much tea as water), Menemen(with sucuk) and Salça(tomato paste/tomate saucey thing that is kind of like a spread on a toast).
i'm so happy whenever i see Turkish representation by you guys as a long time subscriber! hehe 15:43 we sometimes eat like this for dinner or for those late night cravings but like a simpler version of course :) The type you presented is like a large sunday breakfast where you have more time to prepare everything and most likely you have guests coming. The basic everyday version i can say you'd have bread, cheese,olives, tomatoes, butter, jam and eggs. Shalgam and mantı are not breakfast items but i'm glad they are getting recognized as well 😊
I’d really love to see you guys collaborate with Refika! She introduces me to so much wonderful Turkish food
Yeah, she is great!
I found myself pausing and feasting my eyes with that breakfast and drooling like crazy. I honestly wished they would have made a whole episode of just each and every single dish on that table. I want to know more!
You guys really need to try Dutch style pancakes, bacon in pancakes is like level 1 and there's so much more stuff you can put on or in pancakes.
edit: also B. Dylan Hollis cookbook/B. Dylan Hollis collab because old fashioned recipes are brilliant.
Definitely, some examples: Bacon, cheese, nutella, cinnamon, strawberry, banana, shoarma + garlic sauce, and more XD
i do like my dutch pances with cheese and bacon though, never gets old for me, then again, making pancakes is a bit of a faff so it's not every day i make them either
and yeah i do like my shoarma pancake sometimes too, lol you'll only have to make like 2 and it's match lol
the sweet ones are kind of exceptions for me, but every so often i do like me one
even then, still gotta be a dutch style pancake (thinner but larger in diameter, and a bit of salt in the butter) to kind of break up the sweetness :D
If you like B. Dylan Hollis check out You Suck at Cooking. Very different humor but somehow similar, like two very different flavors of soda.
@@adde9506 You suck at cooking is basically Dylan's dry-witted cousin that seems to have learned cooking the same way AI learns to go through a maze.
Bacon + caramelized apples 😋
I am craaazy about Turkish breakfast (kahvaltı). They have one of the most wonderful breakfasts in the world, I bet!
I love when they serve kaymak instead of just butter which is very fatty and rich cream. Ahh local cheeses and honey are such a pleasure every time. And fresh fruits and veggies!!! AND MENEMEN! Gosh, I would live in Turkey just to have their breakfast 😅
Glad you guys try them!
As a Turk living in Europe, I have found that mascarpone will give the texture and taste of kaymak ;)
@@Gilly-bean Evet! That’s probably the closest one to kaymak, but the texture is a bit different: to me kaymak is not that smooth as mascarpone :)
YES! Kaimak is such a naughty treat each time I go there
Nice breakfast! Next time you visit Turkey or a turkish breakfast place you could to try Menemen, a dish made with onion, tomato - optional pepper- and egg. A good breakfast needs a pot of tea, served in small turkish tea glasses.
Salgam - pronounced Shalgam- pairs well with heavier lunch and dinner dishes like kebabs or meat stews. Some people use shalgam instead of water to wash down each sip of the turkish liquor Rakı.
Manti is a dinner dish, for a homier version you can use powder red chili in butter instead of tomato, and definitely finish with a sprinkle of sumak.
You can see Kush's passion radiating from him here, what a wonderful thing as well as having the skills to share memories like that.
Have to say.. As a long time viewer and a chef myself, this type of content is one of the more intresting ones. When you all, "normals" and chef(s) just sit at a table together and talk about recent trends and also try out some stuff together and discuss the pro's and con's and give your honest oppinion on the matter. Hands down the best addition to your roster of amasing video-ideas.
Keep up the good work and the always way above par content!!
Much love from one of many Swedish chefs! Love your content and keep doing you!!!💕👨🍳👨🍳
I have an idea, The Ultimate Full English Battle, each normal take their favorite version of this all time English classic and make it as tasty as possible without any help from the food team! And then you tell Ebber's that he then has to guess who made which dish and then he declares which one not only did the best but is also a prouder Briton! Please do it!!!🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧❤️❤️❤️❤️
Ulster Fry
Nothing much else to be proud about this country I guess
The full world breakfast each noal draws a country and has to use inspiration from that country to make a version of a full English breakfast.
As an Aussie- it’s not often I get to see these so soon after they uploaded- finally my insomnia is working for me!🤷♀️👍🏻🥰
We hope you get some sleep soon! 😆
@@SortedFood so far - nope- it’s 7am, and I’ve been marathoning old sorted videos since I watched this one!- whoops! I BLAME YOU! Just too damned entertaining for your own good!🤷♀️😂👍🏻 oh well- off to watch another battle where the boys stick h each other up!👍🏻😂🤣😂🤣🤷♀️🥰
Oh yay... I love this format. I love to learn from them, see their reactions and hear their perspectives about different trends!
I've been to Turkey waaaaaay back in the early 90's from Poland, on a holiday with my parents and I can smell this video ... maybe not exactly as you're having it, but it's a core memory for me. The nar stew is something I will never forget tbh!
Pancakes with bacon (and other savory pancakes) are a very normal thing in the Netherlands, so I am kind of intruiged that they didn't like it
It may have been his execution rather than the idea. 😄
They didn't like it when Jamie made it years ago (not well). They liked it when Kush made it here. It was the weird combos like pickle they didn't like here.
dutch pancakes on friesland were one of the most delicious things i've ever eaten!
It was the execution. I suspect Kush took exactly one go at what he made, and it probably takes some trailing to figure out how to best batter certain things. Which is why Americans usually pour out the pancake and drop the filling in, or just put it on top. Fruit, breakfast meat, cheese, chocolate, lots of stuff is great. Would love to try many Dutch versions.
I think it was more that they didn't like that Jamie was presenting an idea they did years ago as something new and novel.
3:29 Spaff gives us an insight to his thought process and is a riot as usual😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Jamie -- forget the haters. I respect your ability to cast aside convention and good sense to an effort to answer the question "Will it pancake?" History will prove you a visionary.
I wish Poppy’s new air fryer cookbook would’ve been included! I loved her on the show and know she’d love to come back
I am 66. I grew up in a touristy neighborhood that had tour buses coming to it. People would leave bottles everywhere. We would gather glass bottles take them to grocers and get spending money for the week.
That's so lovely!
I thought it was crazy that in a time we're supposed to be recycling they phased out the bottle deposit scheme. My milkman still takes back his bottles, & the local shops used to take back appropriate soda bottles. In parts of the world there are deposit schemes on all glass bottles. The Govt in the UK keeps on putting of a national deposit scheme.
But like you I remember it being thing for kids to either volunteer to take back the families bottles for pocket money or going on bottle hunts to rustle up spending money.
just like germany, here in the Netherlands we have 15 eurocents deposit on aluminum and steel beverage cans since this year.
so now i mix in the empty cans with the bottles and give them to the kids in the neighbourhood afer a piss bender so they can buy themselves some candy when they come around and ask for deposit bottles, which they sometimes do, knowing some people cna't be arsed to return them, everybody wins lol
that said, i still have what is porobaly 30 euros worth of cans (which would be about 200) sitting in my shed to deliver myself andi t's piling up
maybe i'm just waiting for that station that can handle them in bulk, or i'll have to spend a rough 40 minutes putting them in the machine one by one, and leave a pool of all the combined bottom sludge in the store, so be it if that needs to be the case lol
maybe i'll just go for trying to rack up the highest deposit receipt, my record so far is only €16,65 on 111 cans alone, the shed has plenty of room left, and if i'm gonna get my hands dirty with digging out that disgusting shit , i may aswell do it all in 1 go :')
Glass is 100% recyclable, which means that as long as you use an electric furnace, and renewable energy glass is more or less 100%green. Aluminum uses electrolitic processes and heat to recycle and can usually (with modern practices recapture about 95-99% of the aluminum, though 90% is pretty easy to manage even in old aluminum refineries.that said, paper products as long as the equipment is mostly renewable energy based is carbon negative so long as you pyrolize the material so all thats left is essentially charcoal which can then be buried in the dirt. The big issue with paper is how much water it takes to process it and the ammount of pollutants left in the water afterwards.
Oh, also, glass is the only way we have of making new beach / industrial sand for cement currently, since desert sand can be used to make glass but not used in concrete. You essentially throw class in a wood chopper and sand comes out the other side. woodchip
The thing I love above all else with this channel is their upmost respect and care they put into other countries food. It really helps broaden horizons and the way they handle it is beautiful.
Unless it’s paella.
Fanta in Argentina and most of Latin America is also bright orange! I personally prefer the more natural, less chemical Fanta from Europe tho 😅
Really enjoying this format! That Turkish Breakfast?! WOW!!!
I love your Friday shows. I’ve found a bunch of new YT shows off your recommendation! So, thank you!
Turkish breakfasts are phenomenal! I went to Turkey back in 2015, and am planning to go again next year. Can’t wait!
I'm with Kush. When travelling, sights are basically there to intersperse between the food spots and give time for your stomach to make more space for the next meal!
Honestly, I did not want that video to finish. What a great conversation!
Most people who work in bars probably instantly recognised “Funkin” and maybe rolled their eyes like I did, because they do a lot of syrups and purées and it just reminded me of STICKY FINGERS !! 😂
Haha! Their cocktails in a can taste really good though TBF!
@@SortedFoodyessir 😊😊😊❤❤❤❤
@@SortedFood this channel is stealing your videos ua-cam.com/video/2-xKM4LoJa0/v-deo.html
I'm loving these new format series. Also something about the way Jamie pulls his phone out of his pocket on his turn was very satisfying.
Been to Türkiye Cumhuriyeti many times & have travelled all over. The food is astounding... especially the breakfasts. One thing I found was that many places wanted you to visit their kitchens as they wanted you to see the quality of their work & high standards.
On the Fanta I remember a very drunk guy in a pizza shop explaining the code to look for on Fanta bottles to see if it was made in Dublin Ireland or Milton Keynes in England. this was years ago, but he was adamant that the Irish stuff was better. And to be honest on tasting them side by side I think he was right. It is a fairy good mixer, I'm drinking a gin & Fanta right now. Though a hill I'll die on is that Orangina in the old glass bottle tasted better than out of the new plastic ones.
Wait, Fanta is made in Milton Keynes?!?
Edit: *was, apparently the site shut in 2018. How did I not know still??
@@rebeccas2801 Ah I heard rumblings at the time it was maybe closing. Seems they did do it then.
Just looked it up where they produce it now: - "CCE Wakefield is a large soft drinks factory in West Yorkshire owned by Coca-Cola Enterprises UK; it is the largest soft-drinks factory in Europe (by volume of drinks produced)"
I like these round table videos. Probably my favorite content you guys produce if I'm being honest, although I suspect it just compliments the rest of what you do so perfectly.
Love to hear that - thank you!
OK, I've been really unsure about Kush joining the front team. But the shade he just threw at Jamie because he's the one who actually cooked his pancakes was good. Complimenting him on the skill to keep the egg jammy -- GOLD
As he's becoming more comfortable, he seems to be getting more sarcastic and sharp which I miss from James. Bring it, Kush!
Kush brings back a lot of dryness that's been missing since James left, but he's missing that cynicism and resignation that James brought to the party, especially when made to review dumb gadgets.
@@billyeveryteen7328he is not james 2.0 he is kush and should not be seen as replacement to him, i love the chaos and the energy that he brings to the camera.
I love this format, this sort of semi-informal chat between the boys with some surprises. Love it.
I’m with Baz. I’m basically keeping the M&S at Marylebone station open with my pre-mixed cocktail buying at the end of a working week.
I love Jamie's food ideas. He seems so down to earth which I really appreciate. Keep on inventing Jamie!
As much as I love your other content, this series has quickly became one of, if not my absolute, favourite of yours, love the variety, and EXTREMELY fun to watch.
There used to be a Turkish restaurant in Lincoln that I went to, many moons ago, and I decided to be adventurous. As soon as I saw the label on that bottle, my blood ran cold. I had the same response as Mike when I drank it, and I should've known because when I ordered it, the waiter asked "are you sure?"
These are some of my favorite episodes. A bunch of good mates talking about a topic that they love!
Another really good cook book is Baking Yesteryear by B. Dylan Hollis! Would love to see you guys make some recipes from the book :)
I would love to see them take a crack at some of Dylan's fails. There are a bunch I think were the recipe being deficient instructions and not that the result is always awful. It would be interesting to see if the chefs would pick up on what is missing and THEN how noxious the result is.
The Şalgam Suyu makes a pretty good cocktail. Though I love tomatoes I'm funny about tomato juice. But Şalgam makes a pretty nice Bloody Mary. Though I prefer a version of the "Red Snapper" (a Bloody Mary made with gin) that is gin & beetroot juice. Don't drink to many though as it dyes everything that comes out the other end red & you make think you're bleeding to death.
Love these laid back Friday chats
Glad you enjoy them, thanks for watching :)
@@SortedFoodYou guys are the Best 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤
I follow Refika's Kitchen out of Turkey. They have the most beautiful-looking, flaky breads as well as an unusual approach to food. It that keeps one interested.
Would be great if you did a few shows with her,
Absolutely love these podcast style videos!
I evny Jamie's ability to forget stuff and then get excited about it again :D
Please don’t stop this format 🙏🏻👏🏻
preach ! I grew up in a turkish part of town in Germany, now again living in one and among the many things that keep me here is the breakfast I can have at any of the 4 places around here serving buffet style full turkish breakfast 🤩
1:36 I remember learning about cans vs bottles in a video where Eugene and Becky tried out various wines.
These round table sessions instantly became my favorite format
this is one of my top 3 favorite formats from you guys, if not my absolute favorite
I love all the og guys but kush is such an awesome addition. Can feel his passion for food and love seeing what he makes!
13:13 😂Barry's like, 'So we're drinking recycled pickle juice?' This was a super *fun* episode.
Awwwww I love that Kush's wife "lets him" food travel...so adorable! That breakfast is an all day event to be honest (grin) 😁
Always love this format on Friday!
Yay for savory breakfasts! Echoing others to try the Max Miller Tasting History cookbook. For Turkish recipes, I have made a lot from Refika Birgül (Refika's Kitchen). She and her team have such amazing energy and the recipes are excellent.
Really enjoying the new informal tableside chat format, great addition to the channel
Turkish menemen is in my top ten all time breakfasts
I really really enjoy this format. Thanks for the awesome video and the cool new products(to me) to check out.
Wow! I have never thought of Turkish food...that looked incredible. All of the show was so informative.
What a great episode, and @Kush, you're absolutely mental - in the best possible way! I love it!!
I've been a follower for many years and this was a great episode. Thank you for introducing others to our wonderful cuisine. I'd love to see more!
This was amazing to watch! Please do a series showcasing Pakistani street food/ traditional breakfasts too! Happy to give any ideas especially in terms of things that aren't available in London so well
Loved Jamie there at the end, when he says to everybody in the studio, dig in, what a sharer.
Kush knocks up a blinding Turkish breakfast! I would love to have tried that 👌
please make these long. love watching these
Producing Aluminium takes up a lot of energy....
but reclycling it is pretty enviromently friendly
I usually agree with most things here, but theres no way making cocktails available simply by opening a can instead of going through the whole mixing process will "reduce" alcohol intake xD
I'd love to see some "cooking with kds" type recipes/episodes. My grandkids enjoy watching your show ...in fact it's the only program the entire family watches together ❤️
LOVE this format guys! I learn something, i found something new to try and hace a laugh! Perfect prelude for the weekend! Keep it up!🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤
There's a great channel, Dianxi Xiaogue, that shows the making of Chinese cuisine from the farm (or forest) to the table. Her videos are fascinating, beautiful to watch, and I cannot recommend her enough. I bring her up today though, because just over a week ago she released a fun video where she made a giant hamberger. I watched it and instantly thought of Jamie--there are countless layers of all types of ingredients and meats, and when it came time for dinner it brought about as much laughter as it satisfited their hunger. I think that's what I like about Jamie's contributions (and everyone else's, actually). These gatherings are about enjoying food and having fun with it. Whether it is a substantial new meal no one has tried or a weird flavor combination, I can always expect to learn and laugh when you sit down and talk. Thanks for all you do.
This is my favorite series to watch - equal parts fun and informative 🎉
The key to great bacon pancakes is to make them the Dutch way: don’t cook the bacon until it’s crispy and bake them into the pancake. 🤤
So if you don't make the bacon crispy, is it very chewy?
another point to add for the canned cocktails which is something i realized way back when discussing canned beers, the can helps protect the content from light that can degrade the taste of the content when bottled in glass.
B Dylan hollis’s cookbook is great, you should all try it, it’s also a great read.
We make turkey pancakes with leftovers from Thanksgiving! Use waffle batter with folded in egg whites and dip and fry large slices of meat. Serve with turkey gravy! It’s the absolute best!
The Turkish breakfast there is called "serpme", translates to something like "sprawler" because it's lots of little things sprawled around the table. This type of food is, or was, a traditional village breakfast. It's supposed to be eaten with a big extended family, or with a bunch of friends. Although now you can find it in all the cities and since it became quite popular they do it for individuals now as well (quite wasteful though). But most people have their own versions at home. Generally, in a Turkish family breakfast, you will see tomatoes, cucumbers, olives, feta cheese, eggs (usually soft boiled) some honey and jams, big pile of bread, butter, sometimes meats like sucuk or salam, a chocolate spread for the kids, and wash it down with lots of black tea. Different families will have their own touch, but generally those are the core ingredients. In addition to the core breakfast items, you can have some side dishes to share such as menemen, an egg dish you can dip your bread into. In certain regions, such as mine, you will find more pastry in breakfast too, such as gozleme, katmer, borek, etc. You can also have pastry like simit or poğaça, but those are generally for quick bites on the go. Like the simit that he showed in the video, we'll just buy that from a street vendor when we're in a hurry like a pick-me-up, and not make it or eat it in the house.
I loved this. Keep doing this type of videos!
Thank you for appreciating Turkish food ❤❤❤ would love to see more!!!❤❤
Aside from the obvious points you made about the canned cocktails, another few reasons I like them is they are lightweight and easy to carry, also you can crush them when done making them easier to take home and also they don't break so no chance of someone getting hurt from broken glass.
Omg! That Turkish breakfast!! Yes, please. Everyday. 😀
love this format. longer versions would be amazing to see
I liked the videos where they planned "guys nights out" for each other. It was kinda like this where they got to show each other stuff they liked and have fun together.
loved those too. @@karencarriere8104
Everyone of these videos, Jamie surpasses himself. I love it 😂
Guys can you do a series where you cook recipes from modern cook books? So think Chetan's book, or Elizabeth Haigh, or some of the classics from Keji Lopez or Nusrat's Acid fat salt heat.. basically different books, but recipes at random.. and name it something like "cooks with books"..
FRIDAY BIG NIGHT IN IS BACK! Let us rejoice by watching culinary experts descend into chaos 🔥
Kudos to Kush to nailing Turkish breakfast to the T...although he forgot tea and after coffee oh and also eggs usual Turkish breakfast also comes with a choice of egg dish (either sunny side up, boiled, some sort of omlette or in rare cases poached) :P Salgam is not something I consider a breakfast drink but considering the vast diverse approach to things in Turkey I bet there are places that actually drink it in breakfast. For me it is almost always with either kebab or with meat that you don't wanna know about :P
Don't forget SUCUKLU MENEMEN
I really love these Friday episodes!
Hi there!! My Fiance and I have been watching sorted together for a long time! He had a great idea for a another chef v normal challenge where the Normals get to use super fancy kitchen equipment but chefs only get the basic bare minimum equipment. That would be so fun! 🎉
Turkish breakfast was awesome !! What a spread
Would love to see more behind scenes with Cush or b roll. He does so much behind cameras would be nice to see time to time all the work that goes into his beautiful cooking
Every time I see a sorted video in my feed I smile
love @5:37 Kush asks a question. Priceless!
Fanta in Greece has totally different flavors and is actually mostly real fruit juice. There's even a watermelon one!
Oh wow! We need to try that! You have a lot of Green Cola over there too right? That's my personal fave! Hayley @ Team Sorted
@@SortedFood Awesome!
Fanta in Australia is like the Nigerian one
@@Chard81 It's not mostly fruit juice.
Depending on the taste is from 7 to 20% from CONCENTRADED (0 fiber).
So, pretty much the same trash.
Regarding Ebbers' comment about recycling: does the UK not do a bottle/can "deposit?" In the US (and formerly in Mexico), you pay an additional fee for cans and plastic bottles as a sort of incentive to recycle the containers. If you take the containers to a recycling place or machine, you get the fee back. When I was a kid growing up in Mexico, they used to do deposits on glass bottles, so if you went to the shop to buy a Coke, you'd have to bring in an empty bottle or be charged the deposit fee. Or if you were buying a smaller bottle just for yourself, the cashier would empty out the bottle into a sandwich bag and give you a straw. So if you've ever seen pictures or videos of children drinking soda out of a plastic bag, that's why. The practice has largely died out in Mexico, ever since Coca-Cola switched from glass bottles to non-returnable plastic ones.
And the Turkisch Breakfast lacks of Scrambled Eggs to the Sucuk and Menemen. You definitely HAVE TO try Menemen 🤤
Consider using/trying out "Baking Yesteryear" by Dylan Hollis, perhaps!
The Turkish breakfast took me back to my childhood. My family frequented what used to be a small fishing town called Yalikavak and were very familiar with the locals. I often think about going back but I assume it’s completely different now.
I don’t have a point to make, but damn, nostalgia is crazy
Banana in a pancake batter is basically Pisang Goreng, Banana fritter, a yummy street food in Indonesia. The seller will also have: Tahu isi, tofu hollowed and then filled with shredded veggies, dunked in batter then deep fried also Bakwan, purely shredded veggies in batter, deep fried. The innovative one will have jackfruit, the ripe one is yellow and very sweet, but again dunked in batter and deep fried.