Why people cook with caustic alkali

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  • Опубліковано 30 жов 2022
  • Thanks to LetsGetChecked for sponsoring this video! Got to trylgc.com/ragusea and use my code ADAM25 for 25% your at-home test kit.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @danmas7181
    @danmas7181 Рік тому +5764

    I only eat cringe food

    • @JKOOLDK
      @JKOOLDK Рік тому +99

      Agree, can’t beat that flavor

    • @franklintangelo3456
      @franklintangelo3456 Рік тому +46

      CRINGE!

    • @vilhelmpuddintain9295
      @vilhelmpuddintain9295 Рік тому +180

      My fave part is that this joke actually works cuz acidic food does make you cringe kinda if it's acidic enough

    • @majesticpbjcat7707
      @majesticpbjcat7707 Рік тому +26

      I always add a few pinches of Cringe to my recipes. The family just loves it!

    • @joshuanelson4559
      @joshuanelson4559 Рік тому +20

      I do love the subtle memes Adam puts in the videos, plus all the one liners
      “I swear this isn’t grandma, kids.”

  • @McWelly
    @McWelly Рік тому +5146

    I used to eat cringe food before I found Adam's channel, now I only eat based food

    • @leobriccocola8141
      @leobriccocola8141 Рік тому +185

      Gigachad only drinks the most based drain cleaner. Be like Gigachad.

    • @energeticyellow1637
      @energeticyellow1637 Рік тому +69

      Based on what?

    • @amirking5452
      @amirking5452 Рік тому +122

      @@energeticyellow1637 ashes

    • @PaperBenni
      @PaperBenni Рік тому +38

      Help, I ate too many based red pills, I cannot stop the urge to lock my wife in the kitchen for much longer

    • @kiwijuice78
      @kiwijuice78 Рік тому +11

      i drink pure sulfuric acid

  • @leogougeon8984
    @leogougeon8984 Рік тому +1150

    Adam knew exactly what he was doing when he made that thumbnail, and it worked.

    • @blueferret98
      @blueferret98 Рік тому +28

      Gonna watch it later, but I had to drop a like and peek at the comments just because of the thumbnail

    • @I-am-in-excruciating-pain
      @I-am-in-excruciating-pain Рік тому +6

      I don't get it. Pls explain 😶😶

    • @Jonathonson
      @Jonathonson Рік тому +4

      Adam may be young, but he ain't that young to do that on purpose.

    • @boliosbread
      @boliosbread Рік тому +47

      @@I-am-in-excruciating-pain "Based" is internet slang used as a compliment. It's considered the direct opposite of "cringe".

    • @uwuLegacy
      @uwuLegacy Рік тому +4

      @@I-am-in-excruciating-pain Based in internet slang means good, something you approve of, etc

  • @caseyhayes7510
    @caseyhayes7510 Рік тому +666

    The reason "lye" means "Bath" in its oldest form is not simply because of warmth; lye mixed with fats or oils begins a process called saponification, in which a surfactant solution - bathing soap! - forms, when exposed to water.

    • @pandoraeeris7860
      @pandoraeeris7860 Рік тому +62

      Hey, this is a basic anthropology video, no chemistry allowed! 😉

    • @accordionnewbie9872
      @accordionnewbie9872 Рік тому +4

      Came here for this.

    • @DawidEstishort
      @DawidEstishort Рік тому +54

      In the past soaps were very expensive and everyday people would use wood ash to clean their hands. Simply rub some on your hands with water and then rinse. So direct connection of basic ash and bathing, even before the invention of soaps.

    • @lettuce1626
      @lettuce1626 Рік тому +2

      I’ve always wondered how people made soap.

    • @Aengus42
      @Aengus42 Рік тому +28

      @@DawidEstishort That's why lye water feels slippery. It's the saponification of the natural grease in your skin turning it into soap.

  • @haavind
    @haavind Рік тому +766

    lutefisk is not conserved with lye, it is conserved by simple cold air drying (stockfish). The stockfish is then rehydrated in a lye-solution a few days before consumption. The lye increases water uptake, and also breaks down some proteins. Its easier to eat, chew, and digest compared to plain water rehydration.
    A more likely origin story is "a stockfish storage building fire", followed by "rain", followed by "food shortage".

    • @Chocomint_Queen
      @Chocomint_Queen Рік тому +156

      A lot of "local specialties" can be explained by "we had a food shortage a couple hundred years ago and then in better years we got nostalgic for the taste"

    • @zzzyyyxxx
      @zzzyyyxxx Рік тому +65

      I hear the stockfish can play really good chess too

    • @nickbuss3834
      @nickbuss3834 Рік тому +48

      Something terrible happened a while back and we were forced to eat things that we wouldn't normally. It didn't kill us or make us too sick so we looked into it more once things got better. Also that wierdo over there liked it.

    • @rasmis
      @rasmis Рік тому +40

      Fun fact: The only English weekday name that isn't from the Norse languages is Saturday, which is “lørdag”/“lördag” in Danish/Norwegian and Swedish, meaning “bath day” from “lud” -> “lye”. Also: Potassium, the element, gets its name from Germanic pot+ash, but in the Germanic languages it's “Kalium” from Arabic Al Qali, which also gives English “alkaline”.

    • @VyarkX
      @VyarkX Рік тому +10

      @@zzzyyyxxx cant believe they actually named a food after a chess engine

  • @TimeSurfer206
    @TimeSurfer206 Рік тому +110

    The word "alkali" is derived from Arabic al qalīy (or alkali). It, translated, literally means "Of the ashes."

    • @RustyDust101
      @RustyDust101 2 місяці тому +1

      Thank you, I didn't know that. Fascinating how the origins of words trickle down through the centuries. I really appreciate these types of background info. 👍

  • @CormacHolland
    @CormacHolland Рік тому +658

    Hey Adam, at around 2:05 you were mentioning flowering and fruiting trees but were showing clips of Ginkgo trees, which are ancient gymnosperms that do not produce flowers or fruit. Ginkgo biloba is the only living species in the Ginkgophyta division; all other species have died off.
    Maybe you could do a video on these plants because they are fascinating.

    • @jiraph52
      @jiraph52 Рік тому +31

      Haha, exactly! I noticed that too. Ironic to be talking about fruiting and flowering and showing a tree that does neither!

    • @BeaverThingify
      @BeaverThingify Рік тому +2

      I was thinking the same thing!

    • @bluephreakr
      @bluephreakr Рік тому +49

      Ha ha get tricked into engaging with the video doofus.

    • @LUKA_911
      @LUKA_911 Рік тому +5

      🤓

    • @Samu2010lolcats
      @Samu2010lolcats Рік тому +38

      101 how to bait nitpickers: Be subtly but intentionally wong with a detail.

  • @awkwardguy8238
    @awkwardguy8238 Рік тому +262

    Adam knew what he was doing with that thumbnail, BASED!

    • @Thoumil_Cooks
      @Thoumil_Cooks Рік тому +2

      What do you mean?

    • @grahamsmith3186
      @grahamsmith3186 Рік тому +21

      @@Thoumil_Cooks BASED dont you get it

    • @Theeswaglord
      @Theeswaglord Рік тому +21

      @@Thoumil_Cooks it’s based bro

    • @leetri
      @leetri Рік тому +9

      @@Theeswaglord Based on what?

    • @DEFxRECON
      @DEFxRECON Рік тому +9

      @@leetri based on a true story 👀

  • @Mockingbird_Taloa
    @Mockingbird_Taloa Рік тому +78

    In traditional Chahta cooking, our version of salt-and-pepper is hetok--powdered ash made from shelled bean pods. I have heard that people would occasionally add different types of wood ash to their cooking (eg, cedar/juniper), but hetok dominated to the point it sometimes replaced salt as a seasoning (it supplies many minerals salt would also, but has the advantage of being much more common than salt in the SE of Turtle Island). We cultivated beans before we did corn, so I'm fairly confident using bean ash as a seasoning predates making hominy with ashes. It's possible that folks noticed corn was better if it was seasoned well with hetok when cooking & began experimenting toward hominy from there.
    I also wanted to point out that ancient varieties of grain all across the globe were commonly roasted before grinding to make both grinding and digestion easier, in addition to imparting flavour. The easiest way to roast grain when you're using ceramic pots to cook is by putting live coals in with the grain, thereby seasoning them with white ash in the process of roasting. (I think this is the most likely route hominy was discovered by--someone got too much ash in their roast corn or accidentally left a pot roasting in the rain and wound up blessed by hominy).
    One thing I've learned preparing traditional dishes in pre-modern ways is that the elements of cooking or preparation impart flavour and texture that is missing in traditional dishes made the modern way. I think cooking food with a base or adding bases as seasonings weren't really accidental discoveries, but intentional practices that made food more interesting as refinements in cooking equipments and methods meant the cooking environment imparted less and less flavour itself to the final product. Sort of like how after millennia of trying to keep bugs out of food, Western society is beginning to bring them back in a controlled way to increase nutrition & spice up the diet!

  • @guynicklin271
    @guynicklin271 Рік тому +206

    Basic water could have also occured by people using rocks to actually heat the water. WAY back in the day, before metal pots, placing heated rocks in a fire (that could have picked up ash as well) were placed in a vessel of water (that might not have been able to sit in a fire) to heat the water to a boil. You can actually place hot rocks in an animal skin with out damaging the skin too much, and actually bring the water to a simmer or slight boil.

    • @michaelfujii2765
      @michaelfujii2765 Рік тому +38

      He did a whole video on this. I think it's called "the first stew" it's part of a series he did on early cooking

    • @dfhdf4214
      @dfhdf4214 Рік тому +29

      all of these theories could be true but i also think people underestimate how often people just do random things for no reason

    • @kyokoyumi
      @kyokoyumi Рік тому +3

      Mongolians still cook with hot rocks today even though they have giant metal woks and pots that are mostly used for cooking inside of the yurt. The rocks aren't generally used for boiling water but they everything inside quite well so adding water to your animal skin would effectively be the same thing and make a tasty broth too.

    • @OnlyKaerius
      @OnlyKaerius Рік тому +3

      You can actually cook in an animal skin pot over fire, without burning the animal skin, thanks to the heat transfer to the water. (though you'd singe off any fur on the outside).
      But you can use hot rocks to boil water in for example banana leaves, which would probably be too fragile to put over fire.

    • @rusty_juice_tin
      @rusty_juice_tin Рік тому

      @@michaelfujii2765 I was waiting for him to bring this up in the video. I wonder how many debates about cooking with or without putting rocks in your soup it took for the lye-factor to be isolated in some cases.

  • @Tshinsoo
    @Tshinsoo Рік тому +182

    Adam's unwavering curiosity is always a welcomed part of my day

    • @dodaexploda
      @dodaexploda Рік тому +3

      Seriously. It's why I'm subscribed. This is fascinating stuff.

  • @bzymek7054
    @bzymek7054 Рік тому +39

    Very Based video Adam

  • @vivyn2051
    @vivyn2051 Рік тому +188

    Adam really made a video title based on a single sentence he said in the how people first started cooking video.

  • @xanderbissell
    @xanderbissell Рік тому +90

    “It’s not yoga pants in winter basic, it’s peacoat in winter basic” absolutely brilliant 😂

    • @tomhalla426
      @tomhalla426 Рік тому

      It was peacoat, not peacock. Lol

    • @RaviPatel-lb7uc
      @RaviPatel-lb7uc Рік тому +4

      peacock

    • @xanderbissell
      @xanderbissell Рік тому

      @@RaviPatel-lb7uc my bad lol

    • @allanjmcpherson
      @allanjmcpherson Рік тому +6

      @@tomhalla426 And if you did have a peacock in winter, you could be accused of being many things, but basic is definitely not one of them.

    • @terubokmasin3247
      @terubokmasin3247 Рік тому +2

      As someone who has been living in tropical climate all his life, I totally don't get the reference.

  • @HasanHasan-kf4wz
    @HasanHasan-kf4wz Рік тому +13

    I cook chick peas for hummus with Sodium Carbonate (Na2CO3) because it breaks down the skin much better than Sodium Bicarbonate (probably because it's a stronger base). We (Syrians and probably other Arab countries too) also make an absolutely amazing dish called "fatteh b zait" in which one mixes "old" olive oil, water, and sodium carbonate to make a milk-like base for the dish, you throw in bits of old bread, cooked chick peas, and as much cumin as you have, and you've got yourself a dish that would put a horse to bed for 3 days.

  • @tcbarnes290
    @tcbarnes290 Рік тому +131

    Hey Adam, super miniscule criticism here but when you were speaking about hardwoods you showed images of Ginko Trees, which are actually softwoods.

    • @Ikbende2emetdezenaam
      @Ikbende2emetdezenaam Рік тому +32

      i can never trust him again after this

    • @christianterrill3503
      @christianterrill3503 Рік тому +9

      They also don't produce flowers or fruits lol

    • @tcbarnes290
      @tcbarnes290 Рік тому

      @@MrKumbancha Oh yeah, I wasn't aware. Thanks for letting me know!

    • @kratsatlu
      @kratsatlu Рік тому +3

      While we’re leaving criticisms: the pre-symbol superscript is for atomic mass, the pre-symbol subscript is for atomic number, which is already implied by the symbol, which is why it is so rarely seen.

    • @TheRedKnight101
      @TheRedKnight101 Рік тому +7

      He lyed to us

  • @paulaburatto629
    @paulaburatto629 Рік тому +13

    There's a Brazilian recipe for a sweet pumpkin preserve that nowadays uses a lime water solution to make the pumpkin pieces crunchy in the outside and gooey on the inside. My grandma says it used to be made with a water and ashes solution before. I think lime just became an easier replacement as we migrated from fire stoves to gas stoves. Nice use for something most people nowadays consider pretty useless.

  • @Jokkefanten
    @Jokkefanten Рік тому +45

    Thanks for teaching us the basics Adam.

  • @clovecanham8940
    @clovecanham8940 Рік тому +2

    the vitamin c thing is cart before the horse. our frugivorous ancestors were already mainly eating fruit. producing enzymes that you dont use is costly, so when a mutation appeared that eliminated our vitamin c producing enzymes, it was advantageous and it proliferated.
    the reason we like sour food is because fruits are sour, and our ancestors mainly ate fruit!

  • @ttyler2014
    @ttyler2014 Рік тому +13

    As a southerner I am surprised you didn't mention hominy, the second best fried southern food from a paper cup. The college I went to had fried okra and hominy served in large paper cups in the cafeteria, perfect to make it through the next class.

    • @bobbun9630
      @bobbun9630 Рік тому +1

      He actually did cover it, but didn't mention it by name--when he discussed processing corn with alkali. Hominy is what you have if you do the lye treatment, remove the hull, then don't grind the result into a tortilla! I'm not sure why he used whole kernel sweet corn in his video, though, rather than some type of field corn. Convenience, perhaps. Whole field corn isn't usually something you can pick up with the rest of your groceries on your regular grocery run. I grow my own, so I do have it. I don't nixtamalize, as it's a lot of work and I have a diverse diet that carries no risk of pellagra.

  • @TheHengeProphet
    @TheHengeProphet Рік тому +10

    IIRC there is lore Lutefisk came about from a fish drying hut catching fire in the winter, where the fish soaked in the ash laden melt water and was still there months later. This is apocryphal at best, but a fun little idea.

  • @commonsense660
    @commonsense660 Рік тому +10

    Lutefisk (lye-fish) is made from dried fish (tørrfisk), the lut (here lut=lye meaning any basic solution) process is therefore not done to preserve the fish, but to give consistency and taste. Dry fish is very hard and making it into a more edible form takes time and effort. And as you noted with the potato slices lye makes the process of softening things up faster and easier, so "wetting" the fish could become much faster. This adds a taste so usually you would cook the fish in fresh water afterwards, but if you didn't you got lutefisk

  • @jocaingles8464
    @jocaingles8464 Рік тому +3

    Lye converts into salt when mixed with acids, so it is a source of the mineral and major flavor component: salt.

  • @Gemarald
    @Gemarald Рік тому +17

    The energy this thumbnail exudes is too powerful.
    A giant ern of at what seems like at first glance mud and dirty water with "BASED FOOD" on top, it's just too good, it radiates Gigachad energy.

  • @greatest_jagras5132
    @greatest_jagras5132 Рік тому +17

    Please do a video about Matcha. I've been drinking it for years and would love to hear your takes on the taste and, potentially overblown, health benefits. Your research deep-dive videos are some of my favorites. Thanks!

  • @graysenm1320
    @graysenm1320 Рік тому +9

    This video was very based of you Adam

  • @blahpunk1
    @blahpunk1 Рік тому +21

    Nice one Adam. I forgot how informative and easily digestible your content was. Thanks!

  • @kieran6417
    @kieran6417 Рік тому +23

    I don't know if you'll ever see this Adam but I want to thank you so much for everything you have taught me that has made me 10x the chef I was. So much content on UA-cam is for the looks and misinformation (such as not touching a steak once its in the pan or you'll ruin the sear) you only provide good advice and most importantly the science behind it. So once again thank you so much! I'll always be a fan.

  • @cleanerben9636
    @cleanerben9636 Рік тому +38

    Rocks were used as a way to heat a non-fireproof container of water without having it over a fire. Get the rocks really really hot in the fire then put them in the water. Enough rocks will easily boil the water and cook things for a while.

    • @f.d.6667
      @f.d.6667 Рік тому +13

      Yup - and depending on your local geology, your water might have gotten a high pH value this way...

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Рік тому +3

      @@f.d.6667 precisely!

    • @dotacow22
      @dotacow22 Рік тому +8

      Yes! He also made a video about this a while back too.

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Рік тому

      @First Last I know I'd thought I'd seen it somewhere haha.

  • @beniaminorocchi
    @beniaminorocchi Рік тому +4

    Fun fact: in the italian wikipedia page of lye (liscivia in italian) cooking is never mentioned. Instead it refers to its use in cleaning and in manifacturing soap (which I think may be where the connection to bathing in the origin of the word may come from, not in human baths but in cleaning clothes)

  • @Kirmo13
    @Kirmo13 Рік тому +3

    I tried cooking my dried chickpeas with a teaspoon of baking soda and O MY GOD! The difference is astonishing. The end result feels much more like a purée

  • @vaibhovshinde
    @vaibhovshinde Рік тому +15

    In my native place (tribal area) people still bake potatoes, crabs etc in open ash so maybe that could be an explanation as well.

  • @martango365
    @martango365 Рік тому +54

    I would like to see Adam do a video on hand-pulled noodles and noodle elasticity. In particular, the effect that penghui has on dough and any potential substitutes (e.g. nutritional yeast as in Tim Chin's SeriousEats article).

    • @anon_ninja
      @anon_ninja Рік тому

      great suggestion!

    • @ributsuria
      @ributsuria Рік тому

      Or kansui in mooncakes and hokkien egg noodles

  • @davidsauls9542
    @davidsauls9542 Рік тому +19

    Hominy (corn soaked in Lye) used to be very popular in the south. Hominy Grits were also preferred over plain ground corn.

    • @Kowzorz
      @Kowzorz Рік тому +1

      Fry em up and you got yourself some corn nuts

    • @nataliajimenez1870
      @nataliajimenez1870 Рік тому

      Not surprising given that the nixtamalization of corn (treating dried corn kernels with lye) moved from Native American societies in Mexico to Native American societies in what became the American South. Hominy grits are more nutritive than those made from plain ground corn (hominy grits are better than polenta)

    • @christianterrill3503
      @christianterrill3503 Рік тому +1

      Hominy grits are far superior to plain corn grits

    • @davidsauls9542
      @davidsauls9542 Рік тому

      @@christianterrill3503 AMEN !!!

    • @alsaunders7805
      @alsaunders7805 Рік тому

      What's this "used to be" shit. I live in lowcountry South Carolina and they are still very popular here. 🤔🤓🍻
      I'm speaking mostly about the hominy grits even though I personally also like whole kernel hominy, which isn't as popular nowadays. 🤔🍻

  • @booyawooya
    @booyawooya Рік тому +227

    You mentioned you might be talking about lye from minerals in another video but I'd like to hazard a guess now. Hot rocks / pot-boilers have been used to heat stews and such (as you have already covered in another video) prior to the widespread use of firesafe vessels. I think people would have noticed similar benefits to those found in this video when cooking with rocks with particularly alkaline minerals.

    • @latday22
      @latday22 Рік тому

      HQ

    • @girlnextdoorgrooming
      @girlnextdoorgrooming Рік тому +8

      The ashes would have stuck to the rocks which were heated in the fire and been added to the dinner.

    • @zacjohnson9293
      @zacjohnson9293 Рік тому

      Hi! I hope you know that Jesus loves you and died on the cross for your sin. Call on Him, God Bless

    • @sabotage9926
      @sabotage9926 Рік тому +7

      @@zacjohnson9293 I never asked him to die for me, why would I call on him?

    • @Aengus42
      @Aengus42 Рік тому +2

      @@zacjohnson9293 Depart! Foul theist!

  • @nicoruppert4207
    @nicoruppert4207 Рік тому +7

    Based food? Based on what?

  • @nefariousyawn
    @nefariousyawn Рік тому +14

    I really appreciate your anthropological approach to food. When I used to take anthro classes I was focused on the relationship between food and culture, and you're helping me scratch that itch again. Thanks!

  • @henkeH2
    @henkeH2 Рік тому +6

    Not gonna lye, this was informative and entertaining!

  • @BradyBoll
    @BradyBoll Рік тому +1

    I love this channel. And I appreciate you Adam for producing these.

  • @Norm475
    @Norm475 Рік тому

    I love programs that delve into the chemistry of cooking food. Thank you.

  • @gerb9119
    @gerb9119 Рік тому +4

    Lye was an ingredient in basic soaps - possibly the etymological relation to bath?

  • @NotMac
    @NotMac Рік тому +4

    Based on what?

  • @appo1860
    @appo1860 Рік тому

    Thank you so so much for making this video. Your channel has been like a gift to me

  • @Blackmark52
    @Blackmark52 Рік тому +48

    It was probably impossible to cook food in water without getting potash in it before the invention of metal pots. One food, regularly cooked in a way that can't avoid the change, eventually becomes recognized as better.

    • @eReBeLe
      @eReBeLe Рік тому +4

      No it wasn't, ceramic pots also had lids.

    • @Blackmark52
      @Blackmark52 Рік тому +3

      @@eReBeLe "ceramic pots also had lids"
      And before that? People cooked in fires even before they had pottery. One method was to form leaves into a vessel (think broad thick tropical) to boil water right in the fire.

    • @beniaminorocchi
      @beniaminorocchi Рік тому +6

      @@Blackmark52 you are the one who said metal pots. Your point about a food being recognised as better because people are used to it is pretty weak, considering that ceramic has been a thing in the Mediterranean world for the last ten thousand years.
      I suspect there must be some other reason underneath. It is also worth pointing that cooking in lye isn't really a thing in a lot of cultures (I'm italian and I had to search for it because I never heard of it, and in the italian wikipedia page for it cooking is never mentioned, it's not something we do at all)
      PS ceramic on its own has been around for closer to 20ky, I was referring to ceramic pots and dishes specifically)

    • @Blackmark52
      @Blackmark52 Рік тому +1

      @@beniaminorocchi "you are the one who said metal pots"
      Yes, I was talking about before metal pots because Adam used a metal pot. But the idea holds true for any pot. The use of lye may go back a long way, and one idea of how it started is as I described.

    • @beniaminorocchi
      @beniaminorocchi Рік тому +1

      @@Blackmark52 you make a claim and draw your conclusions. Your claim is 8ish thousand years off target (at least for temperate Eurasia). I strongly suspect that there is something more to it, especially considering that in the same places where lye isn't used for cooking, it was widely used as a cleaning agent and for making soap (a reason that immediately comes to mind is that the high pH could be useful for food preservation in tropical and subtropical environments)

  • @PGproductionsHD
    @PGproductionsHD Рік тому +34

    Adam, look into Greek Cypriot cuisine: It will fit greatly in your style of cooking. Lots of potential when it comes to trying different types of cooking!

  • @whimsinator2982
    @whimsinator2982 Рік тому +1

    The standards of quality your channel has set are amazing. Loving your content man

  • @DvdBShow
    @DvdBShow Рік тому

    Thanks for the video Adam! Hope to see more

  • @umrthemd
    @umrthemd Рік тому +5

    There is a dessert in my home country (Turkey) made by using lye. It is Crispy pumpkin dessert, aka candied pumpkin.
    Its basically made by soaking pumpkin slices in some kind of lye water for a couple of hours and then rinsing thoughly and then boiling the pumpkin slices with sugar just as you make some kind of jam.
    I think lye prevents pumpkin slices getting mushy and keeps them crispy.
    I tried it once, it took me many hours to make, i even forgot the pot on the burner for some time however lye treated pumpkin didnt get mushy regardless of cooking time, if i had cooked regular non treated pumpkin as long it would have been like goo.

    • @user-cr5nh4mv5j
      @user-cr5nh4mv5j Рік тому

      Do you mean lime? Like the powdery kind? I've made oranges and cherries into a similar dessert, if it's actually lye I would love to try preparing it as such.

    • @umrthemd
      @umrthemd Рік тому +1

      ohh, sorry yess it was lime, i am sorry, i mistook lye as lime for a second

  • @baylinkdashyt
    @baylinkdashyt Рік тому +19

    NOTE: it's generally considered the best idea to take blood samples like the ones illustrated in this video from the *side* of the finger you use least -- usually your ring finger.
    It's much less annoying to type, for example, when you've avoided the *pad* of your finger for that stick.

    • @salvadorromero9712
      @salvadorromero9712 Рік тому +5

      Well he also misleads people about testosterone and normal aging so I would not rely too much on this guy for medical advice in any case. (To say nothing about being a professional chef who cooks himself up disgusting meals because he apparently believes it is "bodybuilding food" and there's some magical benefit to it.)
      I like him but you have to know what to defer to people on and what not to.

  • @MataH1
    @MataH1 Рік тому +2

    7:50 makes corn and grains easier to digest, deactivates mycotoxins and make niacin available. That's nixtamalization.
    9:10 preservation. For olives, century eggs etc.

  • @stormobsession
    @stormobsession Рік тому

    I was literally just asking this question the past few days, thanks Adam for delivering

  • @AB-mh8he
    @AB-mh8he Рік тому +14

    As a Swede lutfisk is the most rancid food ever, thanks for bringing that memory back Mr ragusea.

    • @f.d.6667
      @f.d.6667 Рік тому

      Um... you HAVE tried natto beans, right?

    • @pandoraeeris7860
      @pandoraeeris7860 Рік тому

      As an American, I agree, the Scandinavians have some of the worst food in the world.

    • @kattkatt744
      @kattkatt744 Рік тому

      @@f.d.6667 Natto is perfectly okey, so is Lutefisk. If we are going to talk foul Scandinaivain foods Swedish Surströmming and Norwegian Rakfisk definitely are worse.

  • @danielbickford3458
    @danielbickford3458 Рік тому +5

    I've always thought that one way someone might have introduced Alkali to their food could be that they accidentally dropped some food in some ash. or option b they purposely buried their food in the ash to cook it either one would probably do the trick

  • @HARRi81_UK
    @HARRi81_UK Рік тому

    Very fascinating, thanks Adam

  • @Buzzy-bm6bv
    @Buzzy-bm6bv Рік тому

    Excellent didactic video. Thank you. I was hoping you would segue way into how to use the concepts in our every day cooking. Well, maybe another video. Enjoy everything produce and I’m very grateful for the information you provide.

  • @baumgrt
    @baumgrt Рік тому +31

    The German word for lye, Lauge, is still used in the generic sense. It can refer to any type of alkaline solution (NaOH is specifically called Natronlauge, where Natron is also the word for baking soda and related to Natrium, the element with the symbol Na, which for some reason is called sodium in English), but it can also refer to soapy water, although this use is becoming more rare nowadays

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 Рік тому +5

      I’m pretty sure the English word sodium is related to the English word soda.

    • @rolandplumer4648
      @rolandplumer4648 Рік тому +1

      Soap used to be made with lye. But its becoming more rare.

    • @baumgrt
      @baumgrt Рік тому +3

      @@rolandplumer4648 How could I forget about that? It’s basically a major plot element of Fight Club

    • @Banom7a
      @Banom7a Рік тому +3

      @@pjschmid2251 its just soda + -ium

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Рік тому

      @@rolandplumer4648 What exactly is it that you think is used instead? Soap, by definition, is created by the saponification of fats, which is accomplished by reacting it with various metal salts, the choice depending on the desired qualities in the finished soap. Sodium hydroxide (lye) creates hard soaps ideal for bar soaps; potassium hydroxide creates softer soaps good for liquid soaps. Now, it’s certainly true that almost all _liquid_ hand soaps, dish liquids, shampoos, etc. today aren’t soaps at all but are liquid surfactant products. But bar soaps are still very much actual soaps.
      Soaps, especially lithium soap, are also commonly used as thickeners in lubricants.

  • @sparecactus
    @sparecactus Рік тому +4

    This leads into a topic that I would like to see you deep dive into: the growing fad of alkaline diets and high ph water.

    • @Crowbars2
      @Crowbars2 Рік тому +3

      This annoys me to no end. Why on Earth would anyone think that eating more alkaline foods would help with anything at all? I mean, the only thing I can think of is to treat indigestion. I've even read about what some people consider "alkaline" foods... Lemons were on that list. All of my wut?
      It's so stupid as well because homeostasis is a thing. The body can only function in a narrow pH range. And since you're eating it, the foods first become acidified by your stomach, since gastric enzymes work best in an acidic environment, and then all of that gets neutralized once in the duodenum and contacts alkaline pancreatic juice. Eating a ton of "alkaline" foods isn't going to change that. It's one of the most stupid fads I've heard of. It's up there with "detox" diets and eating cotton wool.

  • @madmh6421
    @madmh6421 3 місяці тому

    I like your thought process on this one! Having cooked on many a camp fire, well... this makes perfect sense!

  • @tridsonline
    @tridsonline Рік тому +1

    👍🏻 Interesting! Also, a huge factor in why olives are processed in lye is probably the way they taste when unprocessed. Anyone who has ever tasted a fresh olive will agree that it _demands_ harsh treatment. So it's not surprising that diverse treatments from acid pickling, dry salt packing, and ultimately lye pickling all yield excellent results in making them palatable

  • @edvijo
    @edvijo Рік тому +5

    "Normal water potato slice is on the right" ... We all see where this is going, don't we?

  • @BoyProdigyX
    @BoyProdigyX Рік тому +31

    I literally JUST watched another YT video about why humans like spicy food, and it made me think, "Well then why do we enjoy sour foods? Do we get the same chemical rush from something tart as we do a good burn?"
    The Vitamin C thing does make total sense, and the timing was perfect! haha

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому +6

      There's also a lot of fruits that are sour-ish that are a good gateway drug for the stronger sour flavors. Plus, acid is a preservative. Lactofermentation results in vinegar being produced. Sour = Safe.

    • @BoyProdigyX
      @BoyProdigyX Рік тому

      @@SlavicCelery Huh, I definitely hadn't thought of that either... Again, makes total sense!!

    • @potapotapotapotapotapota
      @potapotapotapotapotapota Рік тому

      @@SlavicCelery puckered lips = preserved food

  • @OldVikingSchool
    @OldVikingSchool Рік тому

    Another banger video with cool information I would've never cared about until I saw this. Your ability to find generally "uninteresting" topics very interesting is amazing.

  • @Uberlord1337
    @Uberlord1337 Рік тому

    This is one I've been wondering about a lot, thanks for covering it!

  • @Syndogon
    @Syndogon Рік тому +4

    Adam, will you do a video about culinary ash? This video kinda went through it but I believe it should be more explained. I believe it should have a big comeback or at least should be known to the general public. I had a theory that it could replace baking powder/baking soda to leaven bread.
    Also there's a rock in Mexico called Tequesquite that is a salt alkaline rock that supposedly leavens bread, help cooks beans and nopales. I don't know if you could use it for nixtamalizations but it is used after for making stuff like what Max from Tasting History.

  • @1000dumplings
    @1000dumplings Рік тому +4

    Great video Adam! I think it would be interesting if you made a video about soft shell crabs, I find them endlessly fascinating

  • @adamreece1629
    @adamreece1629 Рік тому +1

    Love the cutters shirt! Greetings from Bloomington

  • @Jupiter_One
    @Jupiter_One Рік тому

    Great video, Adam! 😊

  • @jaspervanheycop9722
    @jaspervanheycop9722 Рік тому +10

    Ashes were (and still are sometimes) used as a substitute for salt in places without access to seawater or saltmines, or in times of economic hardship, so maybe that's another way people discovered the properties of bases.

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому +2

      Potassium salts have been a traditional replacement for standard salt. It's one of the reasons Celery is popular in landlocked Europe. It's a salt veggie.

    • @OsirusHandle
      @OsirusHandle Рік тому

      You need potassium but its not a substitute for sodium in the body for many processes. It also takes different imo; Potassium nitrate at least tastes to me REALLY gross.

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому

      @@OsirusHandleStandard table salt isn't exactly tasty in its own right. It makes other things taste better. In and of itself, it's pretty gross.

    • @OsirusHandle
      @OsirusHandle Рік тому

      @@SlavicCelery Fair point, i dont think the flavour I tasted would work with much though. It was like that acrid taste at the back of your mouth when you eat tonnes of salt, but right from the get go on the tip. That could also just be the nitrate and not the potassium, idk.

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому

      @@OsirusHandle If you're far away from easy access to standard sodium chloride, the other versions of salt start to get really appealing.
      People forget that you used to only get salt, by the sea, salt flats, or natural salt deposits. Celery is one of the weird vegetables with a lot of salt in them. Both potassium and sodium varieties.
      But, in far from sea areas, adding various ashes to food to get some level of salt (typically a potassium salt and not a sodium salt) was not uncommon.

  • @billbrasky7540
    @billbrasky7540 Рік тому +3

    Ahhh yes yes, I may still eat based cookies, but I do NOT free base c'caine!
    Well...
    Dude I didn't know century eggs were prepared with lye.
    That explains when I first went to SE Asia, Singapore specifically, I tried a century egg for the first time and I did not like it lol i immediately got this chemical type of taste, and that caused my lips and tongue to tingle and feel slightly numb for a while after eating it, and I couldn't figure out why haha
    However I did eat scrambled century egg and it tasted like plain ol eggs... Or was it in an omelette? Idr exactly.
    Speaking of, there's a breakfast place there that has an entire menu of eggs, like eggs cooked 60 different ways or something (idr the exact info there either).
    But if anyone finds themselves going to Singapore, or in Singapore at the moment, check out that egg joint. I think it's also built like a loft if I remember correctly. Super neat building design, and _the_ best eggs bene ever 🤙🏻🥚

  • @kazuyam1negishi
    @kazuyam1negishi Рік тому +2

    Thumbnail jokes aside, another great little tidbit of knowledge that has been on my mind for a while! Great vid, Adam!

  • @ekbergiw
    @ekbergiw Рік тому

    Loved the video! I just did a presentation on the production of chocolate flavor compounds during roasting and I briefly covered some of the component reactions. One of the reasons the Millard reaction is accelerated by lye is due to the deprotonation of nitrogen in the strecker reaction, this reaction produces the aldehyde necessary to perform the Millard reaction. Lipid peroxidation also occurs more readily at a higher pH, but I'm not sure about the ramifications of that reaction, and I would love to hear more.

  • @PoppyGaming43
    @PoppyGaming43 Рік тому +6

    i'm just imagining if youtube existed thousands of years ago we'd have cooking influencers with titles like "why i put ash into my boiling water"

  • @CWeetus
    @CWeetus Рік тому +10

    I bet the way people made basic water with rocks would be from heating up rocks in a fire and dropping them into a clay pot or large leaf to boil water for a soup/stew…. I think Adam did this in a video a while back.

  • @swintintin
    @swintintin Рік тому +1

    Never expect to hear anthropology as a discussion source for a video, got my attention a minute in!

  • @zaybx
    @zaybx Рік тому +2

    "I swear it's not grandma, kids!"
    -Adam Ragusea 2022

  • @mickimicki
    @mickimicki Рік тому +5

    Soft pretzels and lye rolls from (southern) Germany are my favourite bread product. Add some (unsalted hay milk based) butter and I'm happy. Perfect snack.

  • @StealingCookiez
    @StealingCookiez Рік тому +3

    Adam you've hit such a quality spot doing videos on food chemistry and anthropology. Most of food UA-cam boils down (pun intended) to how to do something. Appreciate you for offering something more. Loving it

  • @jordanfish
    @jordanfish Рік тому

    Would love to see a continuation of this series. More basic anthropology.

  • @lemongyal5969
    @lemongyal5969 Рік тому

    May you please do a video on carob? I just learned of this plant/food today and would love to see a great, in-depth video on it by you:)

  • @mersito3955
    @mersito3955 Рік тому +4

    Adam redpilling us on food.

  • @knpark2025
    @knpark2025 Рік тому +5

    "Ash is based" Adam Ragusea, alleged Pokemon trainer

  • @brianlink5379
    @brianlink5379 Рік тому +1

    Rocks and other ground minerals making water basic makes sense to me...
    Unglazed pots/cooking vessels
    Rocks heated and dropped into a vessel of water to quickly bring it to a boil without directly heating the vessel itself
    I learned a lesson the hard way when I was tiling a bathroom over the course of a few weeks... Regularly clean the wet tile saw reservoir and put in clean water or risk the evaporation and the whirling saw blade concentrating the solution over time. I couldn't figure out why I kept getting a rash where tile saw water had splashed until a day or two later and that same water began causing burning/stinging sensations within a few second of contacting skin...

  • @gregmuon
    @gregmuon Рік тому

    Props to the Cutters Tshirt. I still have a '78 Masi, the 'breaking away' bike, purchased with paper route money when I was 14 and it was 2 years old.

  • @rhyswilliams5372
    @rhyswilliams5372 Рік тому +3

    this is so based thanks adam

  • @hoodless_1
    @hoodless_1 Рік тому +9

    based ? based on what

  • @devonostrom6282
    @devonostrom6282 Рік тому

    Putting hot rocks in an pot to cook is also a method. Particularly when you don’t have metal pots. Can line a hole in the ground with hide and then put rocks from fire into water to boil. Or find a hollowed out rock, eg. from coastal erosion. Easier to bring hot / fire to pot rather than other way around. Cool episode. Thanks

  • @baseballlover312
    @baseballlover312 Рік тому

    Love the anthropology videos!

  • @fascinatedbyeverything
    @fascinatedbyeverything Рік тому +5

    Can we get a pumpkin pie (maybe with some unique squashes) or eggnog recipe? I'm not gonna lye, I think you'd do a good job with it.

  • @MrCrow2014
    @MrCrow2014 Рік тому +10

    Because Adam raguesa is based and makes food to eat

  • @ggandalff
    @ggandalff Рік тому +3

    Is this why some people boil chickpeas or bean with a pinch of baking soda? (me included)

  • @spyguy318
    @spyguy318 Рік тому +2

    I think there are two possibilities to how alkali rocks could have been discovered. The first is cookery or vessels made out of this rock that leached alkali into water stored in it. The second is the technique of hot-rock boiling, where you heat rocks over a fire then drop the hot rocks into water to boil it, that way you can boil water in non-fireproof containers like wooden pots or leaves or fragile pottery.

  • @LadyPisces96
    @LadyPisces96 Рік тому

    First time hearing about any of it, very interesting 👏🏻

  • @justsomeguy2211
    @justsomeguy2211 Рік тому +3

    Great video, Adam! Thanks! In my country, some people cook beans or maize in a mixture of different salts, primarily carbonates, mined from a salt lake. Does the lye break down phytates and fibre?

    • @wayanjonathanschiwietz2486
      @wayanjonathanschiwietz2486 Рік тому +1

      Havent watched the video yet. It could help in breaking down but is mostly done for nutritional value (niacin convertion to free niacin/vitamin B3). Also the fiber glue is broken down but not necesarily the fiber itself). Regarding phytate (if you mean phytic acid in the form of phytin) is broken down by an acidic environment (and just cooking) but much less in a basic environment

    • @justsomeguy2211
      @justsomeguy2211 Рік тому +1

      @@wayanjonathanschiwietz2486 Thanks for the explanation!

  • @acerba
    @acerba Рік тому +3

    Is based adam going to be doing bronze age food next? I'm pretty sure Ragusea is one of the Sea People's names listed by the Phaorohs.

    • @alsaunders7805
      @alsaunders7805 Рік тому

      Congrats, you managed an obscure but still appropriate comment that no one else thought of. 🤓🍻

  • @elvinrillo5842
    @elvinrillo5842 Рік тому +1

    I've been thinking about this exact question recently because of "suman sa lihiya", literally rice cake with lye. Thank you, Adam!

  • @ProfGoodlife
    @ProfGoodlife Рік тому

    Very interesting indeed. Thanks!

  • @MajoraZ
    @MajoraZ Рік тому +5

    I love the channel, but since Nixtamalization came up, I wanna say that I wish you spent the amount of time/effort you do on historical tangents about culinary adjacent topics from Eurasia when covering stuff from the Americas: There's so many videos where you talk about the way food plays into like Roman society or Medieval China, or other aspects of those societies that are tangential to food, but when it comes to the Americas, any such references are absent or are very, very brief or abstract without referencing specific events, people, etc. Obviously, this is partially because such sources are less prevalent for Precolumbian societies, but they do exist, especially if we're talking about Mesoamerican civilizations like the Aztec: There's plenty of both written historical documentation you could quote from Nahuatl/Aztec sources about Nixtamalization and maize farming for example, or archeological studies about specific earlier Mesoamerican sites and their use of maize, etc.
    Like, even in the podcast episode you did abvout rice, you call out the Eurocentricism of some things at 20:37, but then give very Old-World centric analysis of the development of culinary culture and grains; even mentioning that Corn/Maize is technically a more nutritionally dense grain then rice, but leaving it out of the discussion because it only entered the Old World due to the Columbian exchange despite it's widespread use by civilizations and empires in Mesoamerica and the Andes and various other societies across the Americas. In the episode on Turkey, you briefly mention it's domestication in Mesoamerica and the Nahuatl word for the animal, but don't talk about say any of the roles it played in Mesoamerican mythology or religious rites or specific dishes made with them even though we have documentation of that and that's the sort of thing you HAVE done when talking about other foods in Old World cultures in videos.

    • @Blueshirt38
      @Blueshirt38 Рік тому

      Then make your own UA-cam channel. If you are so offended on the behalf of people that essentially don't exist anymore then put in your own effort instead of telling someone else that they should.

    • @MajoraZ
      @MajoraZ Рік тому

      @@Blueshirt38 I'm not "offended", I just think it'd be neat if he did it with as much detail with Precolumbian historical stuff as he does elsewhere

  • @johny16G
    @johny16G Рік тому +5

    Adam's T has been dropping for a while now, but his meme game is still fresh as ever

  • @JeremyLCrabtree
    @JeremyLCrabtree Рік тому

    I love the Cutters t-shirt! Breaking Away is a great film.

  • @zR0y4l7y
    @zR0y4l7y Рік тому +2

    This is gonna go down as a legendary thumbnail