Take a look inside a Mongolian Yurt | SLICE
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- Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
- We brought our camera to Mongolia during the Lunar New Year “Tsagaan Sar”, and captured the preparation of the “Ul Boov”. Also known as the shoe soles, this is THE traditional Mongolian pastry, cooked for us by a family inside their yurt.
No comment, just sit, watch and get your taste buds ready!
Camera: Benoît Ségur
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They have everything they need or want.
Right in there together.
Beautiful & sacred tradition.
Everything they own has a purpose and is used. That is the way I am now striving to live as I am getting older.
It's beautiful how involved the men are
Slice team
Thank you 😊
Your videos are amazing and very knowledgeable
Good work
God bless your team 🙏
شكرا على الفيديو الجميل.
سبحان من خلق كل هذا التنوع في ثقافات وعادات البشر.
Apart from Septic Tanks and False Brits like Blowjob Johnson 👍
What if it's a her? 🤯
@@Hotarubi-dono He never said it was a “he,” even though we know it was.
Interesting and thought provoking. The first part seems hard work. The serenity appeals to me.
Thank you! 🌷🌿❤
How does she keep her sleeves from getting it?
La vie en famille!
It’s my country ❤
I wonder what it tastes like🤔 and man with all that work that they put into it its gotta taste good.
bland
It tastes pretty similar with old styled doughnuts.
Would have been nice to have some sort of narration
Looks so good!
the pastry really looks like a shoe, haha!
Exactly lol, old people even call that sole cookie
WOW
beautiful People
We have lost so much in modern society. Plastic cartons with fake food, miserable faces waiting at the till, everyone tutting and pushing in. And for what? I left my desk job in 2005. I have no possessions, no pension, no mortgage, no kids, no car and no new clothes. My hair is grey and I wear no make up. I made it to my dream of non materialistic practicing service to th e poorest people on the planet. I trained to teach English as a foreign language in 2007band have been on a low income teaching art and English ever since. In February I go to Nepal to teach the Nepali children at my friend’s 2 schools so they can spread the word about their culture and keep the culture alive. We all have a choice. Depends how much you want to accumulate
Ingredients?
Water, butter, salt and a bit sugar ( optional).
this is "family"
O can't understand......
I wonder if these nomads know about Genghis Khan.
Yes of course they do, he's a huge part of their history. Or were you being sarcastic? If you were I couldn't tell.
People don't just forget stuff like that. It's kept alive in songs, stories and poems. There's a good chance the song that guy was singing was about Genghis Khan.
++
zijn antieke turken die vlak na de ijstijd = ongeveer 10 000 jaar geleden naar deze regio zijn afgedwaald .. vind ik ook een leuk gegeven ..
Beautiful culture..Sharing food , sharing chores, absolutely magical heavenly atmosphere
If it takes four people to make it it’s got to be GOOD !.
All I really need in this life is to sit in a Mongolian hut listening to these beautiful, ancient people softly talking while preparing their Lunar New Year cake.
I would be made whole. 💗🌟
Why do Mongolian people whisper when they talk half the time?
Mongols have taught children since ancient times. He refrained from talking and laughing loudly around a guest or an elderly person.
@@95943045 your comment makes no sense.
@@albertledesma5173 It's obviously written by someone who's first language isn't English. You know what he meant.
Can't they just get it delivered? It would save them a lot of work.
Delivered? To the steppe? 😉😊
Lazy western talk
😂