Все мы прекрасно знаем, что с законом шутки плохи. Несколько веков назад за преступление можно было угодить в сырую темницу, где из еды был только хлеб и бегающие повсюду крысы. Но неужели с тех пор ничего не изменилось? Что ж, в некоторых странах заключенные питаются деликатесами и посвящают время творчеству, но кое-где условия для преступников все так же суровы. Готовы к рискованному путешествию по тюрьмам мира?
00:00 — Добро пожаловать!
00:32 — Китай (превью)
01:58 — Италия
03:19 — Казахстан
04:46 — Норвегия
06:08 — США (превью)
07:30 — Германия
08:48 — Южная Корея
Мы семьёй приехали на Хайнань. В этот вечер детей оставили в хостеле, а сами пошли в старый город есть уличную еду.
Европейская архитектура вперемешку с китайскими трущобами. Рестораны, кафе, забегаловки, рынок. Дегустация блюд на фудстрит.
#Китай #Хайнань #уличнаяеда
Управляй своими путешествиями вместе с приложением OneTwoTrip, скачать — 12trip.me/oblomoff
Промокод OBLOMOFF дает скидку 500 ₽ на бронирование отеля, авиа или ж/д билета, промокод действует от суммы заказа 3000 руб.
Sadly, there was a recent fire in the outer Tsukiji Market at a legendary ramen shop. Luckily no one has been reported injured from the fire, but it is very sad to see some legendary Japanese street food stalls completely destroyed.
Ok, now back to the information from this Japanese street food tour of Tsukiji Market in Tokyo!
If you’re a food lover, there’s now way you’re going to visit Tokyo without a trip to Tsukiji Market. The inner part of the market is where you’ll find all the fresh seafood — the fish market part of the market. The outer part of the market is where you’ll find all sorts of Japanese street food snacks, some of which are seafood, others are not, and where you’ll find restaurants and all sorts of market stalls.
Here’s the list of everything I ate and where during this Japanese food tour in Tokyo (also, everything is on this map: goo.gl/zmPPMm):
Kitsuneya — legendary organ stew
Address: 4 Chome-9-12 Tsukiji, Chuo, Tokyo 104-0045, Japan
Organ stew — 850 JPY ($7.70) per bowl
Sea urchin (uni) — 500 JPY ($4.53)
Nishin Tasuke
Eel skewer — 200 JPY ($1.81) per skewer
Home-style Sushi — 本種
Large plate sushi — 1,500 JPY ($13.59)
Chirashi don — 900 JPY ($8.15)
Matcha ice cream — 400 JPY ($3.62)
Tamago (sweet egg omelet) — 100 JPY ($0.91)
Blowtorched scallop — 1,000 JPY ($9.05)
Tenfusa Tempura — amazing small restaurant for tempura
Address: 5 Chome-2-1 Tsukiji, Chuo, Tokyo 104-0045, Japan
Total price — 2,500 JPY ($22.64)
This tour includes 10 different Japanese street foods. Probably my favorite thing of the entire day was the giant oysters, the amazing home style sushi, and the blowtorched seafood scallop. But really Tsukiji Market is a Japanese food paradise and a seafood lovers dream come true.
When you visit Tokyo, I hope you have an amazing time eating at Tsukiji Market!
See this food tour on my Tokyo food map: goo.gl/zmPPMm
— MUSIC: You Are The Solution, Cuckoo’s Cafe — goo.gl/HwVjdo
Omi Wagyu Beef belongs to the 3 most reputable cattle breeds in Japan (beside Kobe Beef and Matsusaka Beef). The highest quality A5 Wagyu, such as Omi beef, is usually firm to the bite with a distinct strong taste of beef. Unlike medium and lower quality A5 Wagyu, which «melts in your mouth» like a piece of butter, a rather unpleasant sensation for most people.
In this restaurant usually 80 g of Omi Beef are served for the set lunch meal. I asked for additional 40 g (4,000 Yen/35 USD), the chef put 10 g on top for free. Without the lobster and with the regular 80 g steak, the lunch is about half the price.
Interestingly the chef spoke only Japanese and French, they English speaking waiter explains the different food items. Filmed in Kyoto, Japan.
Jun Kurogi, the last Iron Chef Japan, told us about his food, his passion, his story, and let us into his restaurant to experience a meal like weve never had before, and might not ever have again.
This is a big deal for us as foodies. A bucket list. I hope you like it. And if youd like to experience this for yourself, we have all the info on our blog:
☞ www.eatyourkimchi.com/kurogi
This amazing chef creates mind-blowing food illusions that will definitely impress you!
Chef Ben Churchill has been a professional chef for over 10 years. Around 3 years ago, he realised there was one area of cooking he had never really dabbled in: pastry. He started teaching himself the basics but soon grew tired of the conventional aspects of the pastry world. Everyone was doing the same cakes, mousses and pastries. This is when he started thinking about lemons. Could chocolate be worked to form the shape of a fruit, but contain a hidden surprise? He crudely constructed a chocolate shell by moulding yellow chocolate around a lemon, cutting the citrus fruit out then joining it back together, but not before filling it with chocolate ganache. It worked! It was rough, and crudely made, but it worked! Now his mind was opened. What else could be done? What else can be made? How far can desserts go? So he started experimenting. Carrot cake shaped like a carrot, beetroot shaped brownies, coconut mushroom meringues. With each dessert he was teaching himself new skills, new ideas. This is when he started to move even deeper into what he calls ‘food illusions’; desserts designed to trick and confuse. The ethos has always been the same however. The flavours must always remain true to the theme. A dessert based on the computer game Fallout, for example, should include flavours relevant to a post nuclear wasteland: sour sugar, lemonade, popping candy.
As the desserts became more elaborate, so started the criticism. Some people in the world online couldn’t believe they were edible. They must be constructed with something other than food. So he decided to start filming himself making them. He showed himself creating, then eating the food illusions. This is when his profile really grew. His Facebook and Instagram started gaining followers, the video quality and editing skills improved, and the desserts kept on coming.
People watching the desserts just wasn’t enough for him. He wanted people to experience them for themselves, to try making them, to start thinking like he does. So he began writing «Food Illusions volume 1». A compilation of some techniques, thoughts, articles and of course full desserts. Completely self-produced, from the photos to the design, it was released in November 2017 through Amazon. It was very well received by food illusion fans both new and old, and has shifted over 1,000 copies to date.
What next? As of late his desserts have taken a sinister turn. Following on from the success of his washing up sponge dessert (olive oil sponge, topped with a mint crumb and served with a milk foam and apple puree to replicate a scrubbing sponge) he is now playing on the idea of not only making desserts that look like other things, but making them resemble unappealing items. The idea is to challenge people’s perceptions of taste. To add that element of surprise, and be delicious. Examples include the edible soap bar (lemon parfait, lavender gel and chamomile shortbread), the mouldy orange (a conventional mirror glazed imitation orange, but with the addition of bubble gum meringue powder for a realistic mouldy look) and most famously, the edible ashtray. A vanilla pannacotta set in an ashtray, topped with silver chocolate, meringue ash and chocolate cigarette butts. The reactions have been better than expected. Love it or hate it, they definitely get people talking. These desserts will set the theme for his next book, «Food illusions volume 2». There will be many desserts in the same style as these. Food to make your skin crawl but stomach celebrate, as well as tutorials on silicone mould making, more techniques and musings.