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How One Dish Has Kept This Japanese Restaurant Around for 250 Years | Eat. Stay. Love.
Japanese Chef Yamada Kosuke is the 8th generation owner of the Tamahide Restaurant in Tokyo, a restaurant so popular that people will line up for hours to taste his most famous dish, Oyako-Don. See how Chef Kosuke honors his family’s heritage while continuing modernize his recipes.
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How One Dish Has Kept This Japanese Restaurant Around for 250 Years | Eat. Stay. Love.
Пікірлер: 853
I hope that 250 years from now, this family restaurant is still making good food and forging relations with customers. Awesome place. and if I ever get to Tokyo I will stand in whatever line there is to sample this dish.May God Bless tamahide and the family that has feed people for over 250 years.
@theuglykwan
8 жыл бұрын
+Keith Cleghorn As long as his descendants can both preserve as well as adapt i am sure they will continue to be around in some form.
I liked how this was done completely in japanese with no commentary, it was immersive.
@Nozthedon1
7 жыл бұрын
I was glued to it.Very immersive.Its good they did it in Japanese.It was a wonderful story.
@devko3967
6 жыл бұрын
Weeb
@mrstrdknmabalz1412
6 жыл бұрын
👏👏👏
@Rebelass74
4 жыл бұрын
The only problem I have with subtitles is you tend to miss the content of the video because you are trying to read what they are saying, especially watching Sushi documentaries. I have to watch it for the second time.
@tatotiteta
3 жыл бұрын
@@Rebelass74 Ive used subtitles for so long, ive awakened the Sharingan.
The production value and content is crazy good, glad i found this channel! Way better than the competition when it comes to food channels and networks, great stuff.
She was willing to wait 4 hours in line... Shes definitely a keeper.
250 years!!!! My God, that is a long time - forget restaurants, many nations haven't been around that long. Awesome!
''Thanks to you we even got 3 kids'' Yes, Chef Yamada Kosuke has been a bad boy.
@ShiningIcePearls
7 жыл бұрын
Faqih 5:05
I spent 7 minutes watching this with a big smile on my face, even though I didn't quite understand what the dish was, but still, it was so lovely and warm, about human ties and tradition. A guy who loves what he does and pays homage to his ancestors through food, and a couple who fell in love waiting for his food and who also revived an old family engagement tradition. Wonderful!
@karjeecheng9024
3 жыл бұрын
My sentiments, precisely!
Everything was great about this video, the owner, the camera work, the music, the couple's story. Loved everything about it.
@sharonsolana
5 жыл бұрын
Subarashii desu!
Why is this making me feel so much? lol All the people complaining about not knowing enough about 親子丼, meanwhile I'm here about to tear up.
@gabrielabarrios1675
7 жыл бұрын
same 😭😭😭
Would have been nice to know more about the dish instead of this couple's relationship with the owner considering the title of the video.
@talonlan
8 жыл бұрын
+Thomas Spica my thoughts exactly.
@jasona7029
8 жыл бұрын
I know right
@MrBlazemaster525
8 жыл бұрын
Actually reinforces how good the dish must be IMO if you think about it why would people line up for 4 hours for what is essentially a chicken omelette unless it was really really good?
@BruceNorris1990
8 жыл бұрын
+BlazeMasterGaming isn't that totally besides the point? We know it's good, but tell us more about why it's good.
@MrBlazemaster525
8 жыл бұрын
+gabriel liong Don't the lines/long-term repeat business speak for itself?
Goes on a date with a pretty girl. Normal dinner would take 1 or 2 hours. Convince her to wait with him for 4 hours & got her attention. Smooth move, bro.
@mr.gardevoir3204
6 жыл бұрын
Only in Japan~
@realjiaxiong4764
6 жыл бұрын
nah the 100th like
@hazelpogosa4989
6 жыл бұрын
Just the for the sake of good food? why the hell not. its worth the wait
@156892
5 жыл бұрын
I don't think this would work anywhere outside of Japan lmao..
@ryanpanji7639
3 жыл бұрын
Dont forget for Tokyo Vibes at Night owww great feeling....
I like the fact he says " its not famous because of my efforts but because of my ancestors n I'm thankful to them". Its a thing of EASTERN culture.
@eyebeebak
7 жыл бұрын
Well most western restaurants don't last over several generations by the same family, so it's hard for a westerner to say i'm thankful to my ancestors.
it could be the bottle of wine I had, but I almost shed a tear when they mentioned they had a good conversation in the 4 hours wait and it led to 3 kids. So sweet
Oyakodon translates to "family bowl". The bowl, in a sense is called family bowl because it has chicken and the egg (family). It's fitting for the story in a sense that this dish created a new bond with people who are eating it to transpire the new generation.
@diary3745
8 жыл бұрын
so they cooked the whole family lmao
@petesookkhoo45
8 жыл бұрын
KFC ain't got shit on Oyakodon.
@Jendude321
8 жыл бұрын
+diar y loool
@nbartlett6538
8 жыл бұрын
More literally it means "parent-child bowl". Oya=parent, Ko=child.
@forbeshutton5487
7 жыл бұрын
It's a fucking omelette!
Massive respect. It's beyond dining, I believe...will line up there also when we go to Tokyo!
4 hours of queuing! u can queue right away after lunch serving and wait for dinner!
Love these fun fact videos on the history of a dish. Never realized that it was a dish reserved for royalty.
Fuck this was a good ass video. So damn beautiful. When people cherish something- food, tradition, ritual, and especially each other, thats really what's wonderful to me.
@alexruan5639
8 жыл бұрын
I like that they did not include hipster pseudo intellectuals like over at Munchies. They respect the tradition and the culture behind the food.
@InfiniteRhombus
8 жыл бұрын
holy shit just shut up
@alexruan5639
8 жыл бұрын
Iggy Tubmen u shut up
@sometimesitdown
7 жыл бұрын
要
I thank the guys that made the KZread. Hands down to you'll.
@nos5822
7 жыл бұрын
volikoto meh looks like chicken and egg soup..
@nos5822
7 жыл бұрын
Wi-Fi why wouldn't it ?
@nos5822
7 жыл бұрын
Wi-Fi but it is what it tastes like
@nos5822
7 жыл бұрын
Wi-Fi I try it of corse
@nos5822
7 жыл бұрын
Wi-Fi it would take alot of "secret" ingredients to make egg and chicken taste different
I would have liked to learn a little more about the actual dish.
@lynguini
7 жыл бұрын
its essentially eggs, veggies, meat on top of a bowl of white rice, and all of that is seeped in broth. IT IS SUPER YUMMY and traditionally a very cheap dish in japan, costing usually about $5 per serving which includes sides usually too.
@icyticey7656
7 жыл бұрын
lynda y SO it's basically a Japanese omelet?
@lynguini
7 жыл бұрын
Tice Cream nooo far from it. there is a huge difference in both texture, taste, and way of making
@a04Xavi
7 жыл бұрын
Japanese style omlet is called Tamagoyaki/Dashimaki. This is quite different.
@xdeadheadx
7 жыл бұрын
what dish?
Ok but i still have no idea what the fuck the dish is
@Mumeisan
7 жыл бұрын
It's a type of "donburi" which means it's served on top of rice. In this case, oyakodon is egg, chicken and seasonal vegetables, cooked in a broth and then served on top of rice.
@Morrissey2k
7 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@ericallnight
7 жыл бұрын
yup totally failed to actually explain the dish. Nice story but pretty big blunder for a wide audience
@Fome
7 жыл бұрын
Notice how the video is entirely Japanese with no foreign commentary whatsoever? It's supposed to be as authentic as possible, and since every Japanese person knows oyakodon, of course they wouldn't explain it.
@EllisYuuka
7 жыл бұрын
Oyakodon means chicken and egg rice bowl, Which also means parent and child rice bowl.
I saw "Fat. Stay. Love" at the beginning of the video 😂😂😂
@cantalizer
7 жыл бұрын
Stella Ella Its actually Eat. Stay. Love. tho😂😂😂 but i guess Fat works as well lol👌
@kilamkam
7 жыл бұрын
Stella Ella That moment when I read this comment and think "Wait that's not what it said? O_o".. Lmfao rewind....
@nomoreidolatry9845
7 жыл бұрын
Stella Ella Nice sun glasses
Seriously, this video just bring tradition and culture to their finest value. We often in this day and age urging for revolutionary changes and forget about the past. I admire countries like Japan, Korea who keeps cultivating new idea whiles perfectly balancing the harmony of good old tradition
This video brought some tears, for sure. Reminds me of what my father is trying to do and the legacy he's trying to leave. Much respect, amazing videos.
Wow this restaurant is older than the United States!
@tekkenfan01
5 жыл бұрын
kobzster06 but USA is more famous
@bebisibeb
5 жыл бұрын
@@tekkenfan01 what's your point?
@tekkenfan01
5 жыл бұрын
鄭漢洋 you know the point
@bebisibeb
5 жыл бұрын
@@tekkenfan01 looks like you were not happy with someone pointing out the obvious and in a way you felt slightly belittled since you're a patriot judging by your picture, so you proceeded to try to point out the fact that people knew more about the US than this restaurant which is strange because it doesn't really scale well and you're comparing two very different things. you couldn't just let go of the fact that your ego was challenged even in the slightest so you had to write that comment to pose a challenge. of course, I knew what your point was. I just wanted to hear you say it.
@tekkenfan01
5 жыл бұрын
鄭漢洋 same as you just now, good job
「家族が中心になって、店をやっていけば、店はなくなることがない。」に、感動しました。
1:43 most important part of this video. btw, Gordon Ramsey needs to visit this place maybe just for experience :)
@seikibrian8641
7 жыл бұрын
Gordon Ramsay would probably spit it out and yell, "The chicken is fucking raw!"
@emilia2411
7 жыл бұрын
SeikiBrian hahaha there are some places with serve semi raw, like beef. But it all adds to the texture of the dish.
Awesome awesome stuff. The food, the owner's respect for tradition and his ancestors, the couple (tears formed at that point), video content, quality, camera shots, music. Absolutely stellar, definitely going to subscribe!
In case anyone was wondering--this dish is super famous in Japan, so it's no wonder the video didn't think it necessary to explain. It's just chicken and egg cooked in a bit of sweet and savory broth served over rice.
What a lovely story. So hard to find such places in today's time.
This channel is pretty underrated, because the content is realy good! Keep it up
@jeantsu6850
8 жыл бұрын
+rense doornink Yeah I completely agree. I love this channel.
@dmjdmj
8 жыл бұрын
+rense doornink And here I was thinking that the channel is underrated because the content is bad. Silly me.
what a wonderful story. I really want to go and try it, now
so humble, this was completely moving. This is why i love japan, it's a profound feeling
So beautiful thaht I cried. Thanks +Bon Appétit, that's a documentary in his pure state of art.
@InfiniteRhombus
8 жыл бұрын
you should go see a doctor, you might have a brain tumor.
@Jendude321
8 жыл бұрын
+Iggy Tubmen wait what?!
@orhunolgun8303
6 жыл бұрын
u r stupid
250 Years of Family Business.. Dang.. :O
that's the awesome kind of content I want see on this channel
Beautiful and touching film. Thank you for sharing this story of love, tradition, and good food all coming together.
The feels in this video is strong...:)
family+love+food= what more do you need in life
@SLPC_
7 жыл бұрын
sankarshan lodh sex
@sankarshanlodh3227
7 жыл бұрын
lol
I love Oyakodon. If ever I find myself in Tokyo, I would love to visit the place and eat the dish as the original makes it. I love the quality of this video and the message, kudos to this channel and everyone behind it. These stories are inspiring. 🙏
Man I remember when I visited Japan, I came here on a whim from a random food blog suggesting this place. Little did I know that this restaurant was 250 years old and I didn't ecen know the name of this restaurant until today
Oyakodon is the first Japanese food I have ever eaten. And it made me fall in love with Japanese food ever since then.
This is so typical Japanese. It's not really about the Dish, it's about Tamahide Restaurant and people around it. The title of the video says "how one dish has kept this Japanese Restaurant Around for 250 years" and the video shows this 1 dish is not the only secret, its the people and tradition around the owner of the Tamahide Restaurant and their customer, it's a taste of culture and tradition. And the dish is super simple to cook :) there are so many Oyakodon videos online, but only this one is about its founder and tradition :)
@rickylovesyou9063
6 жыл бұрын
Bla Iso someone that gets it.
there's an adage "Food brings people together." I believe in that.
Wish I knew what was so special about this dish to make such a long line, but the couple's story was really adorable.
Constant refining of things, even simple things like this is amazing.
That Oyakodon restaurant is packed all the time!
I like how the guy sees a random 4-hour line and decides to line up without knowing for what they're waiting
What a lovely story! May this restaurant continue for the next 250 years times 250 years.
I went to Japan in 2006 for work....probably one of the best countries I have been to...I could live there! Incredible!
I love the traditions of Japan...that makes it quite unique.
Really enjoyed the video, hope to go Japan soon to have a chance to experience the food and culture, love the channel!
This is amazing! Great friends, great food!
Oh wow, I would love to pay a visit to this restaurant. I love Oyakodon .. thanks for posting this :)
Thank you for a charming tale filled with sincerity.
Beautiful story well told by the producers of the video. I felt like I was there with them. 5 Stars!🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
He said they stated serving oyakodon in 1979, so I guess it's not just one dish sustaining this restaurant... Wonder what other dishes they had, and have, sukiyaki maybe? Since that's the sauce they use, and how the waitress was cooking by the customers with that kind of pot also makes me think of sukiyaki
@IridescentJello
8 жыл бұрын
I think they mean they started serving regular oyakodon as opposed to royal oyakodon.
@Vulcapyro
8 жыл бұрын
When Mr. Utsunomiya came to eat they were having sukiyaki before the oyakodon :)
@eyebeebak
7 жыл бұрын
The dish was being served 250 years ago only to royals. Only until 150 years ago, his family created a similar dish to serve to regular people. Only until 1979, that the royal dish is being served to everyone. Got it?
Wonderful love story and the Oyakodon looks great!
This is one of the best videos I’ve ever watched
Beautiful
love places like this in Japan.
Keep making videos like this!! I love it!!
So humble
Falling in love with this channel
Beautiful video. Made me cry.
Love the dedication of the chef
Fascinating! Thank you!
Absolutely wonderful!
This chef be balling and really love his art. If you guys see at around 3.55 all his shallow pan looks like its made from copper, and copper pans aint cheap. In fact one of the most expensive pans out there
Wow. This was amazing!!
Ill be sure to visit this place in the future.
A great story and a great restaurant. I will definitely visit this place when i land in Japan someday.
This restaurant is older than the United States of America
@LaitoChen
7 жыл бұрын
Since when did the US become a yardstick for age?!
@goosecouple
6 жыл бұрын
Prince Blake since 1776
The production quality is great, but the subtitles are super hard to read at times. They need an outline.
That was very, very nice and it made me hungry.
I love the story!! It’s a real love story of both kinds💕😍💕🥰
Wow this is amazing
I love the couple's story. Imagine 130 years worth of stories and decades of people converse while waiting in line. From national politics to favorite band, from people coming from places thousands of miles apart to local dating young couples this couple once were.
The moment I heard "Oyakodonn" my mouth watered ♡
Sweet love story with amazing host and food. Amazing!!!!
I was pleasantly surprised to see the title of the video referred to oyakodon since it's my favorite Japanese dish outside of beef curry (lucky me I got the family curry recipe).
I love Japanese food. make ma hungry always
This just reminds me of Maisen in Tokyo- best tonkatsu I have ever had.. You could taste how much care and thought put into the dish.
This is my tokyo dream. My ultimate bucket list.
This is entirely based. I wish to visit someday. It is rare that a craft is passed down through so many generations. Truly a gem.
He has his heart and passion in the right place. I would've liked to know more of the history of this one dish though - being served to only royalty in the past makes it pretty intriguing
this is so amazing.
Must go to this place!
Outstanding!
So, we've waited for four hours to eat. Let's wait till death does us apart. How beautifully japanese.
4:11 hats off to japanese traditions and values.
brought tears to my eyes
I'd love to try this dish!
Wow simply amazing!
Gosh I loved this
Great content! Definitely enjoyed watching this.
Jeez you guys can't google what dish this is? "Oyako" means "parent and child", and it refers to the chicken and egg. The chicken is simmered in a sweet soy broth (sometimes onion as well) and egg is added slightly after. It's pulled off the heat while the egg is still nice and soft, and laid onto hot white rice. "Don" means bowl, a katsu bowl is "katsudon", yakiniku (Bbq) bowl is "yakinikudon" and so on and so forth.
A great video about this Japanese couple and their date .... For a moment I thought it was about food ...
So interesting! Thanks for sharing!
massive respect