A list of puns related to "The Cooking Channel"
People talk about it a lot in movies, but not that much in television. What is your favorite scene involving food/cooking on TV shows, and why?
As it's in the title, it's been a few years since I watched this Channel. The host was very easy going And shared simple recipes of almost anything, like pizza dough, Jelly Candies etc.
Thanks in advance :)
I love watching cooking videos and now that i found Ras Kitchen, Mark Wiens, and Liziqi, i am so interested to learn about foods from other places! Its really hard to find channels like those though, especially not speaking their language so i dont even know where to start looking. If you can help that would be awesome! They could be from any country and they dont even have to speak english, or speak at all. i just think its so cool to see traditional regional meals. extra awesome points if its cooked with traditional tools too :P
I like learning new recipes, and I think, the best way to do that is by watching other people cook. I have probably seen almost all tutorials by Jamie Oliver, Gordon Ramsey and similar. But what other good quality cooking Channels could you recommend?
Looking to learn more vegan recipes while not cutting myself
Porter Tanaka Factoryhttps://youtu.be/qO-5uxFoJb0
I don't mean to be too self-promotionish with this, and if the mods deem it so, I will gladly comply and not post any more. But I'm in this situation - I find myself alone after 9 years of marriage, and I like to cook. I have tons of free time, so eh, videos, I guess.
At any rate, I feel like it's pretty germane to this sub, so I hope this contribution is... contributory.
The meal turned out really well. I can cook, I just look like a spaz while I do it. If you follow this video, you will forever know how to make tasty chicken paninis at home, and you'll even know how to make your own vinaigrette! That's fun, right? Who doesn't like whisking things?
Hey folks seriously this would be the place to ask this question.
Why am I asking? Well it just so happens that I am thinking of creating one. Why? I am a chef just about to retire early, from a career that started in Europe and ended in North America. No I am not famous! Just a hard working culinarian with a some decent culinary skills that could be shared with anyone that is interested.
My goal would be to cook like a pro but really take it down a notch. Take the complicated stuff and break it down so everyone gets it.
Some ideas I am toying with is:
-Showing folks how to safe money when buying meats and fish by breaking down some easy cuts themselves.
-Showing how to correctly use various cooking method for things such as vegetables protein starch and in particular how to cook fish and seafood.
-Showing how to use convenient product to make a great convenient meal for the layman such as University Students and folks that just donβt know how to cook. (Example: buy tomato sauce in a jar, fresh ground meat, a few other ingredient and whip up a Bolognese sauce in no time.
-Share some of my favourite dishes and crowd pleasers.
-Share how to prepare for a meal (mise en place) so the actually cooking and finishing preparation will be less stressful.
This is just the tip of the iceberg but I have to start somewhere.
What I would need is to have the support of this community (I hope I am not breaking any reddit laws).
As you can understand creating a channel takes some work (I should know as I run one currently on a different subject).
Hypothetically if I would set up such a channel would you please answer the following question:
1: Would you subscribe to it even before my first video is published and patiently wait for it?
2: Would you recommend name for this channel?
3: Besides my ideas of content what would you like to see as being relevant topics?
4: Am I totally out to LUNCH on this??
Any other comments are welcomed but be kind ;-)
Does anyone else watch the cooking network and get angry they canβt eat food normally
I look at the cupcakes and cakes and get so upset because I just want to eat a freaking cupcake with out feeling like my whole world is going to stop
I JUST WANT A CUPCAKE!!!
Sometimes they do give me an urge to run to the kitchen and cook, whether my family and I are hungry or not. Sometimes I do cook in the kitchen as a result. Do they bore me? Never. Do they make me hungry? ALL THE TIME.
Pose, taste, posthaste
My friend asked for cooking advice, and I think this would be a great channel to introduce to them, but I canβt find it for whatever reason. The channel was from the perspective of a go-pro (Iβm assuming onto the chefβs head), and they would cook some surprisingly intricate midnight snacks. I think they had a video go viral for cooking leftovers. IIRC, the videos had only music for sound. For whatever reason, I canβt find it now. Please help :(
Iβm a young white woman who thinks Indian food is the best. When we lived in the northeast US it was so easy to find delicious affordable Indian food, but now that Iβve moved to Denver itβs proving to be such a challenge that Iβd rather cook it at home. I have YouTube channels that I love to follow for Chinese and Mexican cuisine, but does anyone have recommendations for Indian? Thank you!
My guess is 50 pounds LOL
Hey guys! New to reddit and YouTube but Iβve been cooking gluten free for nearly 20 years (I was diagnosed at 11) and I have learned A LOT. Wanted to share some of what Iβve learned cause I know how hard navigating this for the first time can be, and in a lot of ways awareness has led to complacency. Growing up when I ate out and told a restaurant I have Celiac, they would treat it as severely as any other allergy. Now, everyoneβs heard of gluten-free, the problem being that no one understands it. I canβt eat out in Los Angeles, even dedicatedly gluten free places have cross contamination because they couldnβt survive on gf margins alone (and have all gone out of business in the 6 years Iβve lived here). Unless itβs a really high end restaurant, there are 4 places I trust not to react.
AND THAT SUCKS. So letβs make the best of this bitch of a disease and become better chefs together. No cure, no choice :).
As great as YT is, I feel like a lot of the stuff is mostly just about variations on basic execution - chop, saute, mix, etc - with most of the nuance coming from how much of [fairly straight forward ingredient] they use. A massive simplification needless to say, but I don't feel like I ever get all that much out of it. It's super helpful to people starting out and developing their ideas of what makes a good dish, how to do knifework, and so on, but...well, that's kinda been there done that. So while it's a lot of fun, I'm at the point where I'm not really learning, and it all, well, blends together.
I was reading the Alinea cookbook the other day to get ideas about what could be truly different, and I have to say, everything there (or in something like Modernist Cuisine), it's waaaaaay beyond anything anyone on YT does. That I want to see: all the treatment of weird produce, all the using of relatively less common approaches, the answering the question of "how do we make this ingredient taste more like this ingredient"; all of that.
Are there any channels where the chef walks the viewer through incredibly complex, multi-day recipes which use really specific techniques/equipment/ingredients? I want to learn more about the top level execution and thought process of recipe development at the "beyond home cook" level. This may not be what the cooking side of YT is really all about, and it may well be that the caliber of chefs who would be able to give that sort of instruction aren't on YT to begin with, but everything else feels really, really...basic.
EDIT: Thanks for the suggestions so far everyone! Certainly some stuff I hadn't seen before. For further clarity, I'm looking more towards the "fine dining"/global nouvelle/modernist side of cooking.
My spouse will watch cooking videos with me if they're funny and personality driven. There's Brad Leone, of course, but can anyone recommend any others? I'll keep a tally list here. Thanks!
Fuck Thatβs Delicious (hosted by Action Bronson)
I love watching recipe and cooking videos on YouTube in my downtime. My favorite channel by far has been Juns Kitchen because of the personality and artistic aesthetic to it.
I love all types of cooking and food so please recommend your favorites :)
Edit: thank you everyone for the recommendations. Ill have some time to watch the videos either tomorrow or Monday and Ill reply to everyone. Xx
Hello guys!! My name is Peter and I just started my YouTube channel on Chinese/Asian cooking and culture! As a Chinese expat living in Europe, I would like to share with other people Asian food and, especially the culture!
As a newtuber, IΒ΄ll be so grateful if you could give me some feedback, advice, and critiques on my first video, so that I can improve myself in the future!
Thank you so much every one!!! Cheers!
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