This Ethiopian Chickpea Stew Will Warm Your Soul | SOUP SEASON
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Shiro Wat is an amazing Ethiopian comfort food that is super easy to make! It's the easiest chickpea soup recipe ever. We'll learn to make Niter Kibbeh (spiced clarified butter) and injera (sour flatbread), what Berbere spice is, and how to recreate this soup when we can't find the ingredients indigenous to Ethiopia. Enjoy this recipe interpretation with us!
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► Shiro Wat Recipe - yields about 10 servings
*Berbere Spice Mix*
In a small frying pan, toast on medium heat:
1 tsp whole cumin
1/2 tsp fenugreek
1 tsp black pepper
2 allspice berries
3 pieces green cardamom
2 tsp coriander seeds
Add into the grinder with:
3 Tbsp paprika powder
1/2 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp cinnamon powder
1/2 tsp ginger powder
1/4 tsp nutmeg powder
1 tsp salt
Grind into a fine powder
*Niter Kibbeh*
In a small saucepan, simmer:
250g butter
5 cloves of garlic, peeled
1/2 onion, roughly cut into thick slices
5 thick slices of ginger
5 pieces of green cardamom
2 pieces of black cardamom
3 cloves
25g of Thai basil
1 Tbsp dry basil
1/2 tsp mint
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp turmeric
*Shiro*
In a big cast iron pan, toast over medium heat:
175g chickpea flour
Transfer flour into bowl and add:
1-2 tbsp of Berbere
500ml of water, have extra on hand
Whisk until fully incorporated.
In a pot, add:
2 Tbsp cooking oil
1 large onion, finely diced
2-3 cloves of garlic, grated or pureed
1 can of diced tomatoes
Add the chickpea flour mixture to the pot
Simmer for 10 minutes
Salt to taste
MSG to taste
1/8 cup of Niter Kibbeh
Top with chili, diced onion, tomatoes, and yogurt
Serve with Injera or Sourdough bread
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Written & Directed by Andong
Camera & Editing by Eypee Kaamiño
/ eypeekaamino
Research & Production Support by Grace Phan-Nguyen
/ phantagepoint
Spanish subtitles by Daniel González
/ danielgonzalezlombardi
Video Chapters
0:29 | Ethiopian food culture and context
1:28 | Shiro Wat in Ethiopia
2:52 | Berbere Recipe
5:12 | Nitter Kibbeh
9:10 | Shiro Wat Recipe
14:00 | Injera Bread Alternative
15:37 | Tasting
Пікірлер: 638
bruv im eritrean and i never even thought of making my own berbere. andong never fails to teach something new :^)
@mynameisandong
3 жыл бұрын
Shout out to Eritrea and their awesome food!! 🇪🇷
@MK-yp9rs
3 жыл бұрын
@@mynameisandong danke 😭 großes lob an dich! deine videos sind mega gut strukturiert und werden einfach nie langweilig :)
As an german ethiopian, who just managed to cook Ethiopian food few weeks ago, I have to say I am beyond IMPRESSED. Like I messed up so many times even tho I had all spices ready to use at hand 😂🤷🏽♀️
I'm Eritrean and I eat shiro with sourdough bread whenever my family runs out of injera. Also you should try Eritrean/Ethiopian porridge called Genfo (Ga'at in Eritrea). It's really simple, you only need flour, water, niter kibbeh (tesmi), and berbere. Serve it with a side of yoghurt and sprinkle some salt for taste.
Ethiopian restaurants are heaven for vegetarians! I'm lucky enough to live in a city with a ton of Ethiopian immigrants (Minneapolis) so the injera flows like honey here. I've been meaning to learn to cook my favorite Ethiopian dishes forever and this is giving me inspiration to visit my local East African grocer and finally make some nice shiro wat
@aliencat11
3 жыл бұрын
Im in Owatonna...Hi neighbor!
@lizlorenzsonn9999
3 жыл бұрын
I'm in St. Paul, hi twin!! Penzeys spices (with locations is Mpls and Stp) sells Berbere so if you don't want to wait for shipping or try to make your own you can do curbside pickup. It's ahhhhhmazing and I use it in lentil stews and on various veggies all the time 😊
@aliencat11
3 жыл бұрын
@@lizlorenzsonn9999 I'll have to try that!
@namingisdifficult408
3 жыл бұрын
Neat! I’ll be (possibly)moving to St Paul sometime in the fall for college, so that’s good to know!
@defectiveshark7602
3 жыл бұрын
I'm usually a terrible carnivore and I'm not a fan of alcohol or sourdough bread, but I will drop everything for Ethiopian vegetable dishes and injera, and the only drink I've really enjoyed was the house made honey wine from a local restaurant.
I've never been to Ethiopia, but near Nollendorfplatz (Berlin) there is a great Ethiopian restaurant, and everything I tried there so far is extremely delicious and comforting. One of the most consistently great cuisines out there!
Greetings from Ethiopia
@DreadDeimos
3 жыл бұрын
I hope you're safe from the Tigray thing!
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
Hello there.
@DreadDeimos
3 жыл бұрын
@@yip3303 It's not like worldwide media tells about it. Could you please tell more about outcomes? Maybe a link to a decent article?
@DreadDeimos
3 жыл бұрын
@@yip3303 Thank you! I was expecting something like this, just didn't know any timelines.
@ellegmye
3 жыл бұрын
@@yip3303 My family is in Tigray I didn't know that was the reason why we couldn't contact them, I thought it was because everything was still shut down. From what I know there is still conflict going on in Tigray but it is dying down I think so I am grateful 🙏🏾 I just want to rebuild now and get rid of ethnic federalism
Wawww thank you for this beautiful video Brother. I'm Eritrean,it is also eritrean food the Culture and foods is almost the Same and Shiro is my favourite traditional food I eat This delicious and healthy food 4 times a week 😋😋
Hey this was really interesting, thank you! One suggestion: for completeness in future videos could you also mention the original ingredients? I know you did for ethiopian cardamom but it'd be nice to quickly see or hear about the others!
@StrawberryGirl3333
3 жыл бұрын
yes please, I would also prefer that!
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
+
@johnnymnemonic6703
3 жыл бұрын
For the butter you have the Ethiopian cardamom (korerima) and also koseret (Lippia abyssinica) which are the 2 main ingredients. The cardamom I think gives the most flavour and is very unique (as in mixing green and black does not taste at all like that). This one is important also for meat meals like kitfo. In addition, Ethiopia is a very diverse country so another common ingredient in some areas is besobela. The first two korerima and koseret you should be able to get from any Ethiopian restaurant but besobela I never have managed to find. Also they would never put garlic in some areas but would in other. Though there might be slight variation between families the big difference is between regions/ethnicities. Best is always when you go in a restaurant and like the food, ask about the butter and if you really want to detect the flavours of the butter in a restaurant order kitfo (if you are not vegetarian) and if you are not comfortable raw say lebleb, which means rare. Then if you like it ask for the main butter ingredients. The butter is very important for dishes in Ethiopia ranging from vegetarian to meat and is present probably in more dishes than berbere. It is not even used really as butter is used in western cooking (at the beginning ) or in French (the whole way through ;)) but actually often is added at the end more akin to a spice.
@TheAgaskins
3 жыл бұрын
@@johnnymnemonic6703 I looked up ethiopian cardamom and it took me to amazon. At the bottom it showed that the cardamom was frequently bought with besobela and kosseret. I ended up finding all three things right there and am very seriously considering buying it (about $35 for 3 decent bags but the cardamom isn't whole :( ). Give it a look if you're vying for a more traditional taste
Hey Andong, 2 things, being i native we put yogurt on almost everything, so the yogurt is not 100% untraditional, and you can find wheat injera in most Arab stores, at least here in the US, and its not too far off from the authentic thing. A small warning, if it is sour then that is a method to preserve the injera. If you don't mind, could you make more videos on Ethiopian cuisine, if I may suggest, shüro , or hulbut (I'm not 100% sure how to spell them). Shüro it contains many different powders and hulbut is made of many different seeds and is an acquired taste, at least from where I come from, I'll leave the rest of the research to you ;)
@supermassivedwarf
3 жыл бұрын
Cannot find anything on "shüro" on the internet (apart from a lone mention of a dish with ground beans in, yet nothing beyond that), would you care to elaborate a little bit? ^^
@deangutu8897
3 жыл бұрын
supermassivedwarf I am not 100% sure on how to say it in English but it’s an orange powder that is a blend of many many other ground beans, primarily chickpeas (a yellow variant is made with only chickpeas) but it is a very common Ethiopian dish, it’s not popular on KZread with more meaty dishes overtaking it but if you search hard enough you are bound to find it. (Also try searching Ethiopian street food it might help)
@supermassivedwarf
3 жыл бұрын
@@deangutu8897 Thanks so much for the description; it sounds delicious. Yet, I may have to wait for a trip to Ethiopia for a taste of it - still having no luck finding it whatsoever. Have you thought about starting an Ethiopian street food KZread channel yourself?
@samsam2093
3 жыл бұрын
@@deangutu8897 Hi dean, I thought the video was about "Shuro (shiro) wat". I even have the orange Shiro powder at home and I think the Andong showed how we got the final powder by mixing the "berbere" spice with the original cream color chickpea powder. I am native but I had no idea how exactly the berbere and "nitir kibe" was made. :)
@deangutu8897
3 жыл бұрын
@@samsam2093 if you have family back in Ethiopia ask them to send you the berbere, and i originally thought he would make shiro too, also if you want to make a traditional simply saute onions, tomatoes, garlic puree, pepper, and whatever other spices you have. Then pour in the shiro powder and water until you get your desired consistency, from where my parents came from (the northeast) we don't add much water because a thick shiro. Also, everyone has their own recipe, this is just one you can make in a pinch, and don't skimp on the garlic or onions.
love your channel. i am Ethiopian and you did great by the ingredients you have. the only thing Ethiopians might cringe at is eating Shiro like a soup.
Andong's personality is coming out more and more in each video and I'm so here for it
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
Seems like a very fun and down to earth person.
@M1NDCR4WL3R
3 жыл бұрын
As we say in germany: "Er ist ein Mann von Welt."
@alanbralan9670
3 жыл бұрын
@@M1NDCR4WL3R was bedeutet das? ich studiere Deutsch aber ich habe das nie gehört :)
@justadude1547
3 жыл бұрын
@@alanbralan9670 Es bedeutet ungefähr das er charismatisch und selbstsicher ist.
When I visited Ethiopia, I was given the Berbere to bring home, but that was way before my cooking adventures began! so now that I am more adventuresome, I am so grateful for this Berbere recipe... even if it's not authentic! :)
It is interesting....very different mix from the typical Ethiopia recipes but love your creativity and effort. Love from Ethiopia 🇪🇹
No cap this guys personality and recording quality is so good
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
Totally agree with that.
@solchapeau6343
3 жыл бұрын
What does "no cap" mean?
@abilawaandamari8366
3 жыл бұрын
@@solchapeau6343 no lies
@TheAgaskins
3 жыл бұрын
@@solchapeau6343 slang for being serious or not joking
Using Shiro flour in the dredge is my "secret" for a lot of fried food. A true multitasker.
The "brown" cardamom is pretty widely available at Indian grocery shops, and they usually call it "black" cardamom or "badi elaichi" (literally, big cardamom). Also, my understanding is that the Ethiopian basil is a cultivar of tulsi or Holy Basil. Again, something widely used in India as well as in Thai cooking. In India as much as we might cook with it, it probably sees equal or even greater use in religious contexts and in the cultural formalization of old wives' tales called Ayurveda.
@Anesthesia069
3 жыл бұрын
Tulsi is horrifically hard to source, at least here in the UK!
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
Nice to know!
@nubitadeprimavera9017
3 жыл бұрын
I know it from tulsi tea, like the pukka tea brand sells tulsi tea (I sort of assume onboarding the natural food Ayurvedic trend that came up following the yoga)
@t-.-t.
3 жыл бұрын
Tulsi is different from thai basil
@ShootMyMonkey
3 жыл бұрын
Yes, it is different, but I've seen plenty of Thai recipes that call for "Holy Basil" rather than the usual Thai basil or purple basil. And yeah, fresh tulsi is hard to find, but the seeds actually aren't, so it's almost always easier to grow yourself than to buy.
11:40 very important information here. Always mix flour that contains proteins (e.g. gluten) with COLD water, not warm. The warm water will immidietly develop the protein structure and form lumps. Always mix flour with cold fluids.
@geekchick4859
3 жыл бұрын
Garbage. I do it all the time and NEVER have issues with it
@Xardaras
3 жыл бұрын
@@geekchick4859 You should publish a paper then. If you seriously can prove that proteins don't lump mixed with hot ionized fluids, you could get famous. No sarcasm.
Berbere is the most addictive spice. It is on DUNE level.
I must say that Andong seems such a nice, positive and clever guy. He dives deep into his explanations which is very interesting for us, home cooks, who want to upgrade our cooking skills all the time and add a lot of flavors to our dishes.
Andong: “And I know you guys are not going to order them to just use them once.” Me: **sees flashes of all the spices I have in my cupboard that I have used only once**
really cool, i like the cultural diversity youre covering with this series
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
The more the better I would say.
@namingisdifficult408
3 жыл бұрын
@@TheSlavChef agreed
Awesome! Nice to see some KZreadrs bringing attention to Ethiopian food which is sorely underrepresented in the larger culture as a whole, but especially their food culture which is pretty much all phenomenal.
As an Ethiopian, I really appreciate your effort in making your own ingredients to substitute for the real thing. I wish someone who lives in your area gets you some! Most ingredients we use in Ethiopia are very complex. E.g., shiro is a mix of several spices apart from the chickpea and paprika powder... the same is true for berbere...and the preparation takes meticulous processes. It's interesting how you prepared the niter kibe (clarified butter) with ingredients not commonly used in Ethiopia. The defining ingredients you couldn't find are esential to get the Ethiopian kibe flavor. I can imagine the taste of the kibe you prepared would be good, still different from the typical one. Again, I am impressed by how far you went to improvise and prepare Ethiopian food!
I like Berbere added to mac and cheese, a delicious addition.
@mattsnyder4754
3 жыл бұрын
Totally. This is usually a pretty good call with most regional spice blends too. Garam Masala, Chinese 5 spice, you name it. Just make some plain old Mac and cheese and chuck some spice blend in it.
It's kinda sad the African cuisine is so unknown (at least here in Europe). There are Asian foodstores everywhere, but African ingredients are really hard to get, while the food is absolutely amazing.
@samra2386
3 жыл бұрын
Europe have more nothern African/western african foods than east african..
@hypothalapotamus5293
3 жыл бұрын
In the US, I typically associate East African cuisine with the greater DC metro area and several midwestern cities (e.g. Minneapolis and, to a lesser extent, Columbus).
@lasseb5612
3 жыл бұрын
This also has to do with marketing. Several Asian countries have spent lots of money to promote their local cuisine in the West to generate interest in the respective country.
@hypothalapotamus5293
3 жыл бұрын
@@lasseb5612 I believe that good food is spread by the migration of people and not by marketing campaigns. I didn't think much of Mexican food until I had a good taco made by someone who cared what he was doing. The same is true with Korean food, which clicked for me when I first had an assortment of Banchan in front of me, or Ethiopian food, which Immediately stood out to me for its injera bread. The problem with African food (particularly West African food) in the Western Hemisphere is actually not one of influence. It's that we often don't acknowledge its African origins. I've watched Nigerian cooking videos and immediately recognized the dished as incredibly similar to ones used in the US, Caribbean, and Brazil. Then I came to the conclusion that the story about the dish being of French or Portuguese origins was BS.
@Gokashi-xt7vd
2 жыл бұрын
bro It's Ethiopia not Africa and Ethiopia wasn't colonized
If you don't care about the ethiopian cardamom pods, you can buy the seeds only instead. The seeds can be bought online and are usually called grains of paradise. The ethiopian cardamom is called korerime
I feel so blessed to live near the largest Ethiopian diaspora community
hey Andong! loved this, but I would really enjoy a brief explanation on what is included in the authentic versions that are missing, just so we know. you're truly one of my fave youtubers and I have been loving all the types of content you work on!
Berbere is my favourite spice mix! I put it in everything. I have to try this soup, it looks amazing
Whoever chose your soup-spot has an amazing eye for blocking. The color vs weather vs modernity vs a very classical dish. There is a lot of symbolism going on there. (Also I love street art)Thanks for sharing your vids.
This series changed my whole diet. Now I am eating a lot of soups thanks to you! I always have a tupper filled of lentil soup
I got a Video of you recommended 2 Days ago and I cant stop watching them! Your amazing dude! Greetings from Austria!
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
They are addictive, binge watched all of them a while ago.
I've been waiting for the next episode of soup season and here it is!
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
Me 2, with the cold weather, these are great!
Hey Andong, not sure if you’ll see this but anyways just wanted to say keep up the great work. You have one of the best cooking shows on KZread. It’s so interesting to find out the origins of a dish and how to make them, even if that dish isn’t 100% authentic they still look dope. Keep up the great work! I’m loving soup season, Can’t wait for the next one.
Really cool videos man! It really makes me wanna make this soup
@oliviercantin5926
3 жыл бұрын
are you gonna do it tho
@AnimeBrosAMV
3 жыл бұрын
@@oliviercantin5926 I've made the first turkish one tho :D it was delish ate it in turkey but his way way a lot better had to buy a hand mixer as well xD
@AnimeBrosAMV
3 жыл бұрын
@@oliviercantin5926 problem is this spice man xD idk how to find half of the things I need
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
@@AnimeBrosAMV Yup, the spice stops me too, but will try to find it arround or combine and replace some stuff if i can't find everything.
@briannelson3830
3 жыл бұрын
@@AnimeBrosAMV what part is hard to find look in Indian stores if you have those
“You’re not going to order them just to use them once!” [looks sheepishly at kitchen pantry]
@sarahr7890
3 жыл бұрын
BF: We're out of butter. Had to remind him about the ghee in the pantry. (He wanted to cook eggs).
Always happy to see a vegetarian dish! Thank you Andong I'm definitely going to try it
Our neighbors for many years was a family who came from Eritrea. Our kids fell in love with the Injera that their mother made. Several stores in town now sell her Injera.
"...a really small amount of nutmeg." Townsend is disappointed.
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
I see you are a man of culture as well (watching Townsend :D )
@jeffredfern3744
3 жыл бұрын
We needed at least a tablespoon to satisfy our 18th century palates.
@M1NDCR4WL3R
3 жыл бұрын
@Ashvin Vaidyanathan Yes, we care.
@M1NDCR4WL3R
3 жыл бұрын
lol I thought so as well
@bcgmktg
3 жыл бұрын
Didn't think I'd find Townsend lovers here!
was that a Scarce reference in the beginning there? 😁
@TheSlavChef
3 жыл бұрын
Yo, did not know Ranton is watching Andong. Loving your content bro!
@Philboh8
3 жыл бұрын
Germans supporting Germans. Nice
@mynameisandong
3 жыл бұрын
It wasnt but HI RANTON 😁✌️
@cactophone4552
3 жыл бұрын
collab when
@JustBigL66
3 жыл бұрын
i was wondering if the "get to know each other" at 11:18 was a reference to Binging with Babish :D
CIAO ANDONG! hey man loving the soup season! my wifes hungarian and im half italian and we both want to recommend a soup to you ;D shes going for the beef gulyás "gulasch" and im recommending zuppa di ceci e castagne "chickpea&chestnut soup from toscana" feuer frei du geila schnitzl du!
Loving the "DON'T FORGET TO STIR YOUR X!" meme! Great soups, keep em coming
9:03 I'm just going to imagine Andong just went and ate that spoonful and nothing anyone says otherwise will change my mind.
Hey man us Africans are just happy to get recognized, I have a idea for a video aswell maybe try Sadza/Ugali it's sold in alot of Indian shops even in Europe, I have family in the UK and Denmark so I know it's sold there it's basically corn meal but it's not any cornmeal it's close to polenta but more firm and is so easy to make for viewers and I'm 100% they will like it as it's also eaten with your hands and really makes it feel African, much love from South-Africa/Zimbabwe ❤️
I've eaten injera in Ethiopia too, and I know that German bread so, yeh, touch of genius there!
Just wanted to let you know that I watch your videos for a very long time and I just feel an urge to say a huge THANK YOU FOR EVERYTHING YOU DO!
I recently found tons of chickpea flour while dumpster diving. Finally I have a great recipe for it to use a lot of it! 😉
very much loving these international soup episodes, keep 'em coming
loving the soup season! keep them coming!
Thank you for showing this! Just tried shiro & love it.
this is the BEST WINTER SERIES ON KZread. the soups youve featured have all looked soooo delicious and satisfying!
There is a wonderful Ethiopian restaurant near my home, and they have some hot dishes with very potent berbere. The burning within your mouth can easily last for a good fifteen minutes after finishing your meal. I love it.
This soup came out absolutely delicious. Thank you for sharing!
I love the basket you have. It reminds me of my balkan grandma and her cooking, in a very cosy way!
Love the ambiance of the intro!
Thank you for making this. I've been curious about making ethiopian cuisine for a long time, and this video brought me over the edge. Have my Shiro wat boiling right now. Your videos are great!
My mom loves those weird horizontal whisks. You are the only other person I've seen who has one.
Definitely enjoyed his interpretation of Shiro.
ohhh making injera is like a bucket list thing for me!! Everyone who has had it seems to love it
@allygirl641
3 жыл бұрын
Same here! I’m HUGE into fermentation so am doubly inspired to make! Hope we both do it! ❤️
Can you please make a video about Georgian Kharcho? Delicious thick spicy-sour beef, tomato and rice soup. Georgian food is the best in the former Soviet Union
Wow, I never realized until now, but…shiro wot (no, I didn’t mean “shirt wit”, stupid auto-correct!) is a dal! Lentil stew, using ground rather than whole, and a finishing splash of spice-infused ghee. And your idea of using rye sourdough instead of crappy fake injera is fascinating! I’ll definitely be making this - I’ve loved Ethiopian food for years, but never made any myself.
@ratsalad178
3 жыл бұрын
i'm indian and i was thinking the same thing! injera also looks and sounds similar to dosa - which is eaten with sambar, which hey, also sort of resembles dal. though dosa is made from fermented batter and not dough
This is my first time coming across your channel. I really like how you actually set a table and tasted the food. So many cooking channels neglect the fact that you actually eat the food you made.
Simply loved the soup series, you managed to make me try some incredible recipes. I've already added many of them to my repertoire, thanks for making me grow as a chef!
Bro.....your videos are awesome, thanx for the great content, love from Australia!!!!!!
i love the lighting in this! a pleasure to watch
I love this series my man!
Love this idea. Soup season💜yummy! Count me in!
So glad I found your channel! You have the coolest recipes!
This was so incredibly tasty!!! Thank you so much for the receipe
I made this today!! It was great!
"I know your not gonna order one just to try it once" Me: ohh ya?
I'm definitely going to have to try this, excellent video as always!
Finaaaally :) I was missing your weekly videos.
There is an Ethiopian restaurant in Detroit MI I've eaten at several times. It's served the traditional way on injera bread exactly as you have pictured. I now have moved far from the area and miss it so much! The food is very healthy and was delicious.
Love Ethiopian food! This looks amazing 👍
Looks amazing! Really want to make this
We all know that juicy meat dishes get the most views, but I think they get boring after a while. That's why I love your content Andong. You regularly broaden my horizon and it always looks like you're having mountains of fun! Greetz from the Ukraine :-)
I was salivating throughout the video. I know what flavor profile you were referring to and also love stews/ dishes made with chickpea flour/ besan. Gatta da saag is one of my favorite stews and sattu is my favorite drink.
i was planning to make my first sourdough bread tomorrow and this will be the perfect companion. thanks!
Shiro is Awesome!
Why hasn't this channel blown up its crazy
Made all of it, it is so awesome!
it's amazing how muuch work you put in each and every of your videos, thank you for the free knowledge and company ^_^
This is really yummy, have eaten it on an Ethiopian restaurant here. I also always have a jar of the Ethiopian spice mix berbere in my kitchen. Thanks for a great video, as always💚
Do Indonesian Soto for another episode! There's a lot of variations of it but the most common one is soto ayam with the clear yellowish broth
Love ethiopian food!
Hello Andong. Thanks for your effort to present the food. Ur positively crazy :)
We use grains of paradise "ethiopian cardamom" all the time at home cooking different Middle Eastern, Western, and Indian inspired dishes. if you love to cook they are worth seeking out. oh and they taste sort of like black pepper and faint cardamom but more complex.
This soup looks amazing!
Loveeeee these episodes
He makes me want to try everything he cooks.
It looks so simple yet so good. I think I'll definitely try it out even thought I might change some of the spices, but the concept of a soup made with chickpea flour appeals to me a lot. Thanks for the idea!
Please make tscholent next!!! I know it's technically not a soup, but it would be really interesting to see your way of making it! Love your videos!👏
oh also sorry to do this again Andong but as a Scot, i will NOT rest until you make cullen skink
You my friend is very creative 👌 👏 I can have your shero all day long. I love it
I love fact that he will cook then go outside to eat ☺️☺️
Wow! This dish looks amazing!😍
Really wanna try this one!
‘Food is colourful’, proceeds to show a plate with 5 shades of brown 😆 great video as always though! Always come back to your pretzel video!
This looks soo delicious. I guess i Have to make it!