With how rice was practically forced to be my routine meal after breakfast (wasnt much of a fan of rice), realizing that people outside don't even eat it _mandatorily_ was so fascinating and frustrating at the same time.
not filipino but I also eat either rice or noodle every day for every meal most of the time, had a bit of a mind fuck when I went to my friend's house and saw that they don't have rice for dinner
I was blown away people could eat salty foods without rice to balance it out. It took me until adulthood to be able to eat *just* plain fried chicken, without rice.
As a Filipino I can’t even argue about the rice addiction. If I run out of milk? Fine. No Bread? No problem. But if I run out of rice? …well, I don’t know, I have never let myself run out.
As a proud sea bro we eat Fresh steam rice all day everyday till we die. Having no rice in a meal is unacceptable. Expecially when you go to an asian family's dinner and they pile the rice super high
in these trying times, it's sometimes hard to get veggies and meat, and rice is the only thing keeping my sanity afloat, and i rationed it harder than other food. hell, i sometimes had to cook rice with some buillon cube just so there's some flavor, or add some MSG while it's cooking. Rice is as versatile as Glasses.
my thai and japanese co-workers were arguing which of their countries eat rice more. then they found out my country eats more rice than theirs do. sometimes they eat noodles instead of rice. in the philippines, we rarely substitute rice with anything...and if we do eat noodles, we pair it with rice.
@@guardianofthetoasters2323 it's an acquired taste because of the texture, but it it just have the same taste as rice and more fluffier than rice if newly cooked, just not make leftovers for corn-grains.
True. Eating one or two sandwiches, no matter how heavy, will always be considered a snack. I could never understand how people could feel full from eating two slices of bread and last more than 2 hours without anything else.
Filipinos have a whole category of desserts based around rice. Yes, other countries also have rice based desserts, but Filipinos have such a wide variety of it that the whole category has a name of its own. It's called _kakanin_, from the root word _kanin_, meaning rice.
I'm an Indian and can confirm that rice is very cheap and available in abundance here. Most people will have at least one meal a day that is rice based.
Yes. YES. *_YES._* Remember rice cakes? They're *_rice_* cakes. We love rice so much we turned it into a dessert. Fry some rice and it's a different dish altogether. Add a different ingredient to it and it's different again. Or if you're feeling sick you can make rice porridge. If you want something warm to drink you can drink rice coffee. If you want something cold maybe rice milk, which is also a breast milk substitute. You can feement it and turn it into a condiment or maybe wine. Rice wine hits hard. Glasses are versatile, but rice is much more.
it still wouldn't work because it's the gut bacteria talking to the brain that says you still need to eat more cause you haven't eaten rice yet, even if your stomach is already full
I have no idea why people call it addiction. But when its rice, for us filipinos, its a meal, not a snack. It's not addiction, it's a way we use to satisfy hunger quickly.
fun fact: some filipinos, like me, eat these combos: rice with salt rice with soy sauce rice with fish crackers rice with coffee rice with powdered milo (this sht hits the hardest)
We grow rice in Philippines,sure But we're not literally addicted to rice Also it isn't stereotypical,it's cultural It's still nice that Kronii has a Filipino friend
I agree. I think Kronii thought her friend was obsessed with rice cause this friend probably demands rice all the time and have to constantly defend herself to her western friends on why she needs it in her diet lol.
This is the 3rd time Kronii had triggered swagapinos, and flooding the entire chat with "FILIPINOS MENTIONED, Proud to be Pinoy 🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭" in chat that it broke the chatting server
They're not wrong. We eat rice from breakfast, lunch, and dinner. It's a staple food over here Obviously, we also pair rice with another food which we call them as "sud-an". Examples are tinola, adobo, fried chicken, linaga, and karne frita
I don't mean to be rude but it might look that way but the "we" in this post isn't "we, as Filipinos." I think he meant, "we, as in our place/province." I don't know what sud-an is. I'm a filipino and we have a lot of islands/regions meaning we have our own cultures. I just don't like the sound of the "we" in this one especially if I don't know what the hell sud-an is, Never know it, never heard of it.
@@konaqua122 filipinos now a days have become super sensitive..chill bro..we do have 7k+ islands with varying cultures but collectively is filipino culture..the point here is that we filipinos love rice in general and we eat it almost all the time..sud-an, from what I know, is visayan for ulam. It is something that you pair with rice to get a full meal..sheesh..
@@cedyanlee666 his point is that not all Filipinos call ulam as “sud-an” which is Visayan. Saying it as if it is the general term is a kind of misrepresentration. Visayans are Filipinos but not all Filipinos are Visayan.
To Mizwira, we pair our rice with any dish as rice becomes more delicious. Fried fish, steak, hotdogs, noodles, curry, crispy chicken, boiled egg, calamares, dried fish, soy sauce, milk, Milo (yes, the chocolate powder drink, you pour it on rice like it's no one's business), banana ketchup, salt, etc. You name it, we eat rice with it.
My Filipino mom chastizes me if there isn't rice ready at all times. Even though we spoil and waste a lot of rice that way. Then she says the usual "That's how it was when I was growing up!"
In our culture (I'm Filipino), rice dishes are paired with rice dishes, the noodles are made out of frinkin rice sometimes (bihon), desserts are rice (dikit and puto), all of that is paired with plain old rice like wth.
Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner wouldn't be called in their respected names without you eating rice. Not even burgers, sandwiches and pizza or any food that is considered a proper dine in other country.. those food are only considered as a snack in the Philippines
like how EU and Americans treat their bread this is how we treat our rice. KFP will be suprised what their gravy is also great with. I mean KFC UK sure was.
I remember some article say that 𝐅𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐨 eat rice alot because their rice quality doesn't met the standard for international market and have to eat it all up themself. I didn't research too deep into it so please take it with a grant of salt.
Its is an addiction. If you ate 4 whole sandwiches and still feel hungry just because it doesnt contain rice, it counts as an addiction. This whole country has that addiction ingrained in its culture. Whenever I eat pizza, the ones I eat with usually wonder if I'm on a diet even though I'm eating 3 times the amount of the rice meals they ordered. Its frustrating.
Filipinos have different name for the state of rice Uncooked = Bigas Cooked = Kanin Fried Rice = Sinangag Left over rice from the day before = Bahaw Burnt rice = Tutong The stereotype is there because there's a cultural explanation.
My sister and her friends were once having a conversation about racial stereotypes, and when one of them complained about the stereotype that all Asians have black hair and are obsessed with rice, it was pointed out that everyone in their group is a black-haired Asian who loves rice.
Man as a Filipino i love living outside Phillipines, I spent a month there with my relatives a few years ago for vacation and every day at every meal someone was eating rice be it breakfast, lunch or dinner. Now tbf I still very much do eat rice every day but not for all 3 meals.
poor man's rice recipe: fry your rice. make sure its not too oily but also to not let it stick to the pan. salt after frying toss a little and add soysauce. good luck to any other poor man out there.
I'm no filipino but in my country if you don't eat rice with anything it's not considered a meal and chances are you'll probably get hungry immediately afterwards.
One of My friend Doesn't like rice, he was bullied, 6 years later he became local attraction, people will talk to him to study how a human being can live without eating rice.
Only now does it hit hard how much Filipinos eat rice. Every day, every meal (snacks not included) and even if Filipinos eat noodles, they make it a side dish for rice.
As Filipino myself I can confirm that without rice it's not very satisfying. Also rice controls the flavor of the meal due to plane rice having less flavor. It helps balance the strong flavor of the meat and making you feel full in a good way.
Filipino here. Yes we do eat rice as our primary staple food on the table. And almost all of our meals have rice because our dish "Ulam" are mostly very rich in flavor which is by pairing with rice will give the best result. I only eat 2 meals a day though and snacks "anything sandwich or pasta" at night after work.
I'm not surprised Kronii has a Filipino friend, Canada is basically invaded now by Filipinos lol. And it's not an addiction, it's our way of life. We wonder more why foreigners can live without rice.
Not all Filipinos though. It can be frustrating sometimes. I once ate 3 packs of LuckyMe Pancit Canton for lunch and my mom scold me saying I should eat lunch instead of eating snacks. Even though her food which she considers as "lunch" is 1/4th the amount of mine just because she has rice.
it's not even a stereotype, it took me until high school to learn eating rice for breakfast lunch and dinner wasn't something everyone did, it's like water to me
In most Rice-growing nations, if you eat Sandwich for lunch, it's NOT a meal, it's a SNACK
true
a small size snack.
Indeed
When you grow up eating rice its pretty weird to not have it as a meal
agree
As a filipino, my mind was blown when I found out that not everyone in the world eats rice everyday for every meal.
ua-cam.com/video/t8S_6zS4V1c/v-deo.html
With how rice was practically forced to be my routine meal after breakfast (wasnt much of a fan of rice), realizing that people outside don't even eat it _mandatorily_ was so fascinating and frustrating at the same time.
not filipino but I also eat either rice or noodle every day for every meal most of the time, had a bit of a mind fuck when I went to my friend's house and saw that they don't have rice for dinner
I was blown away people could eat salty foods without rice to balance it out. It took me until adulthood to be able to eat *just* plain fried chicken, without rice.
@@mattcap4178 A lot of Asians eat rice, especially the SEAsians countries.
As a Filipino I can’t even argue about the rice addiction. If I run out of milk? Fine. No Bread? No problem. But if I run out of rice? …well, I don’t know, I have never let myself run out.
Man. I feel like an Alien. I'm A filipino but I feel like i'd rather eat food without rice. Unless if the rice is flavored (eg. Java Rice)
As a proud sea bro we eat Fresh steam rice all day everyday till we die. Having no rice in a meal is unacceptable. Expecially when you go to an asian family's dinner and they pile the rice super high
In the most desperate of times, we even have noodles on rice.
And when in times of plenty, 3 cups of rice for one piece of burger steak.
Wait are you allergic to milk?
in these trying times, it's sometimes hard to get veggies and meat, and rice is the only thing keeping my sanity afloat, and i rationed it harder than other food.
hell, i sometimes had to cook rice with some buillon cube just so there's some flavor, or add some MSG while it's cooking.
Rice is as versatile as Glasses.
its not an addiction nor a stereotype, Its a staple.
Shush
It's both
It's a necessity.
If u dont eat rice, u aint living a full life. Hehe
Yeah, I wouldn't eat a staple if I were you.
my thai and japanese co-workers were arguing which of their countries eat rice more. then they found out my country eats more rice than theirs do. sometimes they eat noodles instead of rice. in the philippines, we rarely substitute rice with anything...and if we do eat noodles, we pair it with rice.
pancit kanton and rice is good tho imo
we use corn grains as rice but it's a regional thing and it is a better substitute in taste and nutrition than rice.
Any noodles with rice is best dish ever, especially Pansit Canton!
@@mloepostle62 really? I found corn to taste funny, didn't expect it is a staple for others
@@guardianofthetoasters2323 it's an acquired taste because of the texture, but it it just have the same taste as rice and more fluffier than rice if newly cooked, just not make leftovers for corn-grains.
It's so ingrained into our life that when I had a sandwich for lunch at school people thought I was dieting.
LMAOOO
True. Eating one or two sandwiches, no matter how heavy, will always be considered a snack.
I could never understand how people could feel full from eating two slices of bread and last more than 2 hours without anything else.
To me that explains why she read that "Tagalog" phrase so easily during her Katamari stream. She probably hears Tagalog words so many times before.
I feel like a lot of ethnic groups love rice. Considering that its very easy to make and also very versatile.
Filipinos have a whole category of desserts based around rice. Yes, other countries also have rice based desserts, but Filipinos have such a wide variety of it that the whole category has a name of its own. It's called _kakanin_, from the root word _kanin_, meaning rice.
@@raze_ I mean it's kinda the same in Europe, except that it's bread. My parents refuse to eat anything without some bread on the side lol.
I'm an Indian and can confirm that rice is very cheap and available in abundance here. Most people will have at least one meal a day that is rice based.
Rice feeds a lot of people
Yes. YES. *_YES._*
Remember rice cakes? They're *_rice_* cakes. We love rice so much we turned it into a dessert. Fry some rice and it's a different dish altogether. Add a different ingredient to it and it's different again. Or if you're feeling sick you can make rice porridge. If you want something warm to drink you can drink rice coffee. If you want something cold maybe rice milk, which is also a breast milk substitute. You can feement it and turn it into a condiment or maybe wine. Rice wine hits hard.
Glasses are versatile, but rice is much more.
At this point, almost everyone in the world has atleast met a Filipino in their lives.
one of those is me
we're overpopulated (for our country size) and local jobs find us replaceable.
so overseas employment is pretty common.
and in the VTubing scene
there's Millie.
Filipinos are everywhere in the world…
Because there's more opportunities outside our country.
If not, be admitted in a hospital, you will for sure find one there as well. Narses the Filipino Dream.
I mean Lyrica explained this pretty well. Bless your soul Lola.
Rest in Maldives 🙏
Her soul transferred to Millie Parfait lol
Sumalangit ka nawa Lola
She was reincarnated as Millie Parfait.
@@LlewelynReswald even though a lot of people know still ........ stop the doxxing 🤣
“A meal is never a meal without rice.”
A famous saying here.
As a filipino, its a staple food here and i freaking love rice! .... also, i' m happy she saw my question !!
If I don't eat rice during lunch time, I just can't feel full no matter how much I ate.
Drink water you will feel full in no time
Try 2 whoppers from burger king then
it still wouldn't work because it's the gut bacteria talking to the brain that says you still need to eat more cause you haven't eaten rice yet, even if your stomach is already full
@@legendarydigitize2523 literally doesn't make a dent. still hungry after that.
@@legendarydigitize2523 bruh, burgers wont do. we need rice to be full.
Only here can you pair pasta with rice and not be called a psycho
I have no idea why people call it addiction. But when its rice, for us filipinos, its a meal, not a snack. It's not addiction, it's a way we use to satisfy hunger quickly.
Because of other people saying 'no rice, no meal' to big and very real meals
@mie_yuu Sorry, but I like having meals without rice. It's just I get forced to eat rice in some way.
@見えない I don't feel that way. If anything its more like a habit or nature at this point.
Unless that also technically counts as addiction?
"Not a snack"
Bet
fun fact: some filipinos, like me, eat these combos:
rice with salt
rice with soy sauce
rice with fish crackers
rice with coffee
rice with powdered milo (this sht hits the hardest)
chocolate rice
rice with liquid seasoning hits hard too
rice with bagoong
Rice, tomato’s and salt 😂
Fried rice
i mean a plate of rice can just magicaly dissapear if there is a delicious lookin' sambal right there
agreed, nasi lemak ftw.
>Rice Loving
>European sounding name (Thomas/Tomas)
Yep that's the Philippines for you.
We grow rice in Philippines,sure
But we're not literally addicted to rice
Also it isn't stereotypical,it's cultural
It's still nice that Kronii has a Filipino friend
Very rice
I agree. I think Kronii thought her friend was obsessed with rice cause this friend probably demands rice all the time and have to constantly defend herself to her western friends on why she needs it in her diet lol.
@@everrunic8375 ha ha ha very punny
Speak for yourself
@@cye2310 well I am a pilipino so.....
This is the 3rd time Kronii had triggered swagapinos, and flooding the entire chat with "FILIPINOS MENTIONED, Proud to be Pinoy 🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭" in chat that it broke the chatting server
They're not wrong. We eat rice from breakfast, lunch, and dinner. It's a staple food over here
Obviously, we also pair rice with another food which we call them as "sud-an". Examples are tinola, adobo, fried chicken, linaga, and karne frita
I don't mean to be rude but it might look that way but the "we" in this post isn't "we, as Filipinos." I think he meant, "we, as in our place/province."
I don't know what sud-an is. I'm a filipino and we have a lot of islands/regions meaning we have our own cultures. I just don't like the sound of the "we" in this one especially if I don't know what the hell sud-an is, Never know it, never heard of it.
@@konaqua122 My guy, I meant that as Filipinos...
@@konaqua122 though this term is usually from around Negros, Iloilo, Cebu, and Bohol. We probably aren't in close regions
@@konaqua122 filipinos now a days have become super sensitive..chill bro..we do have 7k+ islands with varying cultures but collectively is filipino culture..the point here is that we filipinos love rice in general and we eat it almost all the time..sud-an, from what I know, is visayan for ulam. It is something that you pair with rice to get a full meal..sheesh..
@@cedyanlee666 his point is that not all Filipinos call ulam as “sud-an” which is Visayan. Saying it as if it is the general term is a kind of misrepresentration. Visayans are Filipinos but not all Filipinos are Visayan.
To Mizwira, we pair our rice with any dish as rice becomes more delicious. Fried fish, steak, hotdogs, noodles, curry, crispy chicken, boiled egg, calamares, dried fish, soy sauce, milk, Milo (yes, the chocolate powder drink, you pour it on rice like it's no one's business), banana ketchup, salt, etc. You name it, we eat rice with it.
and junk food it is also nice combo if u are in a tight budget specially fish crackers, chippy and cracklings.
Forgot Mango and Rice combo wombo. I told a Korean Friend of mine to try it and he looked at me like I was a criminal.
Filipino here and yeah we always have a pot of rice ready. If we don't, I guarantee you we'll cook one in the following 24 hours
Kronii may be Canadian but she does have over sea friends
Filipinos are everywhere, it's practically almost impossible to not meet one in your lifetime.
There's more than a few Filipino vtubers living in Canada
well millie parfait is also in canada
I'm Filipino Canadian. There are plenty of us everywhere
I think it's nothing special for Canada tho. There a lot of migrants there. Isn't Kronii of asian descent herself?
Oh wait, till see finds out about the Mang Inasal Unli Rice
My Filipino mom chastizes me if there isn't rice ready at all times. Even though we spoil and waste a lot of rice that way. Then she says the usual "That's how it was when I was growing up!"
dude, fried rice.
Always trust filipino moms..................or else.. 😆
At least steam last night's leftover rice while cooking something something cups of rice under it 😭
Broo, overnight rice is perfect for nasgor
@@ilied7130 🩴🩴🩴
That friend: 'WELCOME TO THE RICEFIELDS MOFOKERS'
*Proud pinoy moment*
Optimum Pride
As a half Filipino, this is accurate and 0:53 reminds me of Stefano if you know you know
Shocked to see this comment! Hehe
It'sStefano
In our culture (I'm Filipino), rice dishes are paired with rice dishes, the noodles are made out of frinkin rice sometimes (bihon), desserts are rice (dikit and puto), all of that is paired with plain old rice like wth.
Filipino food is very rich and flavorful. The rice is to there to dilute the flavor and balance out the taste.
one word about us. "YOU ALERTED THE HORDE."
"Rice is life" as we Filipino's say it
My daily diet is literally 20% dish and 80% rice.😔
We even have like a fast food restaurant that serves roasted chicken and unlimited rice.
Mang Inasal gang whats up
I would neither deny or confirm that comment at the end.
Makes sense. There are tons of Filipinos in Canada
The people from swagland lmao
it ain't a stereo type it's our way of life .
I smell a certain witch from Nijisanji giggling.
I bet she's cackling rn
No, no...
She's having a menage a tois with a bird and a dragon rn...
In The Philippines rice is the most important staple food. Like every family would think about buying rice first than any other necessities.
I mean at jollibee you get spaghetti with a side of rice if you wanted....it's just natural for us
No you can't. WTF are you talking about? You have to order them separately.
@@ninetyninenights6226 well this memory of mine was in the Philippines in the 90s. Sheesh. No need for the attitude.
@@GeronKizan LOL what attitude? I'm just calling you out on your statement. And I've been consuming Jollibee since the 90s too BTW.
@@ninetyninenights6226 he's probably thinking about the spaghetti w/ rice and chicken meal.
@@lanzstriker7693 that rice is obviously for the chicken though
It's not a stereotype, it's our way of life.
This is made even goofier because "tama" is right.
And What I mean by that is tama means correct or right in Filipino
"ooh it's a stereotype"
Me who eats just rice when bored: 👀😶👀
Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner wouldn't be called in their respected names without you eating rice. Not even burgers, sandwiches and pizza or any food that is considered a proper dine in other country.. those food are only considered as a snack in the Philippines
*i have apparently been summoned.*
like how EU and Americans treat their bread
this is how we treat our rice.
KFP will be suprised what their gravy is also great with.
I mean KFC UK sure was.
Condolence
Well, you can turn rice into different things. So eating just rice is technically possible.
I love only eating pure white rice
Hotdog on bread? BAH! A hotdog with rice has a bigger volume!
we loooove rice
I will never unhear that one chat on 0:33 calling rice "Soggy grass seeds"
Where is the lie?
God, I love rice so much.
As a filipino. we have extra rice on the menu.
Don't worry, we don't just eat rice, we have rice bread as well!
Rice is the only thing worth living for in this rotten world.
It’s not a addiction it’s a lifestyle 😂
I remember some article say that 𝐅𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐨 eat rice alot because their rice quality doesn't met the standard for international market and have to eat it all up themself. I didn't research too deep into it so please take it with a grant of salt.
aww that's so sweet that kronii has a filipino friend, must be fun to hang around with them ^^
I like how their name is "Tama" which literally means right, yes or correct in Filipino.
Here in Latino SEAbro land when your rice stock is 10 kilos you're on dangerously low levels of rice
Its not an addiction, its vital to life
Its is an addiction. If you ate 4 whole sandwiches and still feel hungry just because it doesnt contain rice, it counts as an addiction.
This whole country has that addiction ingrained in its culture. Whenever I eat pizza, the ones I eat with usually wonder if I'm on a diet even though I'm eating 3 times the amount of the rice meals they ordered. Its frustrating.
A meal is never a meal unless there's rice involved.
Filipinos have different name for the state of rice
Uncooked = Bigas
Cooked = Kanin
Fried Rice = Sinangag
Left over rice from the day before = Bahaw
Burnt rice = Tutong
The stereotype is there because there's a cultural explanation.
My sister and her friends were once having a conversation about racial stereotypes, and when one of them complained about the stereotype that all Asians have black hair and are obsessed with rice, it was pointed out that everyone in their group is a black-haired Asian who loves rice.
Philippines, the country where rice is a staple. Main food Rice, Snacks made from Rice, Noodles made from Rice, Alcoholic drink(Tapuy) made from Rice.
We filipinos eat rice thats why were everywhere in the world having all the energy we need from rice and sides
Man as a Filipino i love living outside Phillipines, I spent a month there with my relatives a few years ago for vacation and every day at every meal someone was eating rice be it breakfast, lunch or dinner.
Now tbf I still very much do eat rice every day but not for all 3 meals.
poor man's rice recipe:
fry your rice. make sure its not too oily but also to not let it stick to the pan.
salt after frying toss a little and add soysauce.
good luck to any other poor man out there.
dude if rice ran out there will be riots like i am dead ass serious rice is a goddamn blood here
I'm no filipino but in my country if you don't eat rice with anything it's not considered a meal and chances are you'll probably get hungry immediately afterwards.
Those guys blew it, it's not a stereotype its a way of life.
Breakfast, lunch, snack, dinner, and midnight foods is always rice meals including desserts is also rice but sticky.
One of My friend Doesn't like rice, he was bullied, 6 years later he became local attraction, people will talk to him to study how a human being can live without eating rice.
"Rice is life! Rise up my SEA gang!!!!11"
Only now does it hit hard how much Filipinos eat rice. Every day, every meal (snacks not included) and even if Filipinos eat noodles, they make it a side dish for rice.
As Filipino myself I can confirm that without rice it's not very satisfying. Also rice controls the flavor of the meal due to plane rice having less flavor. It helps balance the strong flavor of the meat and making you feel full in a good way.
If I don't eat any rice in a day, my head starts aching. Like actual migraine. Rice addiction is real
I'm sure the Swagapinos can attest to the rice addiction.
For the last frame, i have taught by the elders that if somehow i didn't have enough money to buy food just make some rice and eat it with salt. Lmao
Filipino here. Yes we do eat rice as our primary staple food on the table. And almost all of our meals have rice because our dish "Ulam" are mostly very rich in flavor which is by pairing with rice will give the best result. I only eat 2 meals a day though and snacks "anything sandwich or pasta" at night after work.
we eat rice 3 times everyday. breakfast, lunch, and dinner but I don't usually eat rice during breakfast I prefer eating bread before going to school
I'm not surprised Kronii has a Filipino friend, Canada is basically invaded now by Filipinos lol.
And it's not an addiction, it's our way of life. We wonder more why foreigners can live without rice.
Millie Parfait of Nijisanji en is one of them lol
Rice is life my man
One of the most priority food during an evacuation because of heavy typhoon? RICE
We, asian people really can't blame those isekai characters for trying to find rice
Unlike most, I don’t eat rice everyday, but I eat rice for most of the month. It’s perfect for every meal
We Filipinos are not addicted to rice it's just part of our culture/ everyday lives.
Filipino Ppl: *Happy noise
Also Me: *Happy noise a
“Its a stereotype”
Yes and a welcome one, thank you very much
Not all Filipinos though. It can be frustrating sometimes.
I once ate 3 packs of LuckyMe Pancit Canton for lunch and my mom scold me saying I should eat lunch instead of eating snacks. Even though her food which she considers as "lunch" is 1/4th the amount of mine just because she has rice.
it's not even a stereotype, it took me until high school to learn eating rice for breakfast lunch and dinner wasn't something everyone did, it's like water to me
That guy was right about rice filling bellies and killing demons though. It's in his name.
It's not even a stereotype, I cannot be full without rice
It's not swagapino without the rice bag at home.
we can't live without it.
Omg now it makes sense
That last comment tho some people do just eat rice especially if it's goddamn delicious. They just add salt, soysauce or milo.
If i dont eat rice i get sick. I feel my head saying something EAT RICE.
I cant imagine eating chicken(joy) without rice, id feel empty inside.