字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント So the very traditional way to do this is, you take green papaya and then you shave it. So growing up, we'd always make fun of my mom when she did this. Because, the way you say how I, how I pronounce this is fuck. So obviously it's really close to the, the to the other word. But, we always be like mom what are you doing fucking the papaya. Hi my name is Soulayphet Schwader, I'm the chef owner at Khe-Yo. Khe-Yo is the way you say green in my country, it's layosha was very similar to Thai and Vietnamese sticky rice being a major component to every meal but we use a lot of variety of different herbs, lettuces in the cuisine. Some of the menu items are crunchy coconut rice with sausage, our pork curry noodles, makati, which is pork curry broth made with curry noodles, curry sauce, leaves served with a bunch of bean sprouts, banana blossom, and cilantro, culantro, very kind of interactive. Khe-Yo got started because, I was tired of working for other people. Living and working in Manhattan, knowing that, you know, it takes a lot just to be able to open a restaurant, I've been very lucky in my life working with really great chefs. I was able to find a spot here and. New York to open my own place. So, I'm making Papaya Salad. To start out with chillis, depending how spicy you want it. Before I opened this restaurant, I asked my Mom, what's super traditional Layocean dishes? She's like lap. Papaya salad. Some people really associate these things with Thai. We're basically like cousins when you really think about it, cuz we almost have the same language. So, if you're on the border of Thailand and Laos in this town called Lanka, they'll ask you if you wanna Thai style or Laos style. Basically it's saying, do you want the funk? What do you know? I'm Funk. So, the Funk is like grown up every traditional layocean household, has a little classic container of fermented fish. You add fish sauce, some aromatics, lemon grass, put philline leaves and you just let it ferment and build the flavors. It's basically a super-concentrated anchovy paste. Basically, I got started going to college, Lawrence, Kansas, and ended up in a Brie, one of my first kitchen jobs. Was good at it, the chefs really liked me, they saw potential. Went to Culinary School. My first job here in the city was with Patricia Yeo. At AZ, and It was really one of those great experiences of first real kitchen job in the city. I, we just realized, you know, it's gonna take a lot more than just Culinary school, and I ended up working with Marc and Laurent Tourondel at BLT. We started the BLT little empire in the mid 2000s. I worked in Brooklyn open up a Thai-Filipino spot Umino with my friend King and then just realizing that, you know, it was time for me to open my own spot, so we got lucky. He found this space in Tribeca, and we've been open about a year and a half now. Let's do it. All right. Shots, and then let's get the way outta here. Nick, don't get too fucked up. Going out with the guys last night, it was Mark Fugione, my friend, Cassie, and Nick, my business partner, and front of the house manager at Khe-Yo. First we had some shots, got in the van, and we headed to Motorino. Motorino is a pizza shop that was opened up by my friend Mathieu Palombino. I'm actually pissed that Mathieu's not gonna be there. I do the brussels spouts on the pizzas, because they don't know. They don't know what they want, so I, I tell them what they want. I mean. And they're talking loudly. It doesn't matter. I charge fort, $14. He's Belgium, he's not Italian, but he's just a really good cook. Doing really good pizza's in the spot in the east village. Chill. Jesus. It's New York. Yep. You have frosty mugs? I don't. I could just stick it outside. Cheers. At Motorino, appetizer wise, we had the Roasted Mortadella and the Burrata with the roasted peppers. Really simple, but just really good. Pizza for me is a nice wood fire oven, really good dough, thin, crispy, light. And the flavors were great. We had the brussels sprout pie, and the white clam pie. Super delicious. Why is that so loud? You don't know about sneezing? What about the sneezing? You should never hold back a sneeze. It's the second closest thing you can come to in enjoyment, other than an orgasm. All right guys. You guys ready to go to the next stop? You cheating me? Jesus. From there, we walked around the corner. To Jeepney. Mark, I wanna come here on Tuesday. They do like Stiggy Tuesday. Not today? No. Jeepney is Wednesday. Hey, how's it going? How are you? Jeepney is a Filipino Gastro pub in the East Village. I've been there a couple of times, but this one was just a great Kamayan feast, and it's really all about eating with your hands. As far as snapper, and just really an assortment of all secret traditional Fillipino cuisine. Yeah. Holy shit. You're not fucking around, are you? Oh my god. Picture. Worse idea ever I should. Look at this cold feast for you. Over here, sweet sausage, man. The centerpiece is the red snapper. 2.2 pounds. Deep fried extra crispy perfection finished off with eskeveche, sweet and sour sauce. And of course over here, banana ketch up rib that's out of this world, man, one of my other favorites. So everything is my favorite. How many favorites you've got? You've only got to have one favorite. All menu is my favorite, because it's just too good. Hey, you know, what? Let's get spiritual. Let's get spiritual. Thank you so much for this food, great spirit. Please give us the strength to be able to finish it all, and if we don't Cassie will take it home and eat it tomorrow for breakfast. So, just tell you how we usually do it. There's a technique. We take the rice, and make it into a ball. You put a little meat, but the technique is you push it forward. Into your, into your mouth. Okay. Got it. Boom! Awesome. Super. Awesome. Cheers to not having utensils. The Kamayan feast was a little overwhelming but great. I have the Lapu Lapu volcano bowl right. Basically tried all their tiki cocktails they do there. We had the Volcano, the Zombie, all the, all the traditional kinda Polynesian festive type drinks. That's good. You know, this might sound weird, but I've always wanted to. I actually feeled out here months break doubt it. Well I did too, cuz it's so cheesy. It's so cheesy it's insane. It looks like the menu. It's usually like turkey drum sticks. Is there oysters there? Yeah. No can't do it. I don't like the smell. So, let me get this straight. You mind the smell of the funk? Absolutely not. But, the smell of the horses freaks you out. Yeah. It disgusts me. It disgusts me. The highlight of, I guess my friend Mark's night was eating the balyt for the first time. All right guys, I hope we're feeling brave. Yeah, balut. Oh no! No! Son of a bitch. We get these locally from Long Island. Nice. And they're 11 to 14 days from hatching. You're going to tap it and crack it. There's gonna be a little membrane in there, you're gonna break that membrane, and you're gonna drink the soup that's in it. A little rich broth. It's actually really good. See, it's not bad, huh? No, it's good. Okay, now peel all around, you know, so you can expose the yolk and you can expose the embryo which is the best part of it. Now, it's an aphrodisiac. I'm gonna sprinkle it with a little bit of salt, a little vinegar. Cheers. Cheers. To good health. it's delicious. Yeah, we do this in Laotian culture. Really? We'll put like a little bit of soy, but also like a sweet carrot sauce on the top of it. All right. It doesn't happen too often, I go out and I get to eat something that I've never had before. That was also legitimately delicious. Thanks. It was nice to get that little demo on, on how to eat the balut. And really, it was just a nice little treat. Ready for the next round? Resheet. Sounds like a good idea. Bless you. Bless you. Let it out, yeah. Beat street, here we come. Yo, where's my jacket dude? I don't know. At Jetneey, at some point while we were leaving, Mark lost his sweater. He was cursing up a storm. The producer of vice managed to find it for us. All right. This is how you make dramatic moments. Trying to jack my shit you. Organize a surprise at the next establishment. See that doesn't fucking surprise me. From Giveny, we went to our local bar here in Tribeca, Reade Street Pub. It's kind of three restaurants that are kind of sisters here. Marc Forgione's restaurant and American Cut and Khe-Yo. We typically end up after work at Reade Street Pub. The atmosphere at Reade Street Pub is kind of a no frills. Got a couple TVs here, really laid back kind of bar. A lot of locals and regulars go there all the time. I guess we're into the, the local stuff. Cheers. Pick a card, any card. Okay, now put it back anywhere you'd like. So Tom is a head bartender at Reade Street, but he's just entertainment. He does some magic tricks, so he did a little nice little card trick for us last night. No. Regular hat. Oh, wow. Not bad. Thank you. Oh. That's huge fucking. Say it. From there we walked back to my. That's not Khe-Yo. I like to fuck around and there was this perfect snow that, I made into a ball. I was actually aiming for Nick, but it hit Cassie. Oh. That was for Nick. Good shot. Word up. Khe-Yo, we had some late night snacks that I prepared. Can you pop those beer bottles? Crispy pig face that we call fee overnight and then we roast in the oven in all the ovens for the pig face, were curry rice from ocelli noodles, lettuce to make your own wraps. And then we had some dungenous crab in black bean garlic sauce, with a bunch of siracha and mayonnaise toast. Like, put the pig face one three of the the square plates. We're just carmelizing some ginger. It's gonna be onions, black bean, garlic, all the crab, beer, butter. Real easy. Simple. Just a little bit. Look, look, look, Manny. Not even close. At least I take my faces out. If you guys are hungry, dig in. Before we started eating, we all gathered hands because, pretty much, the way we look at our restaurants here in Tribeca, we're a nice little family. So, we wanted to cheese it out a little bit. And do a little prayer. All right, Nick, let's start this off here. We say thanks for the food. You know, everybody's healthy at the table. Guys, thank you so much. I'm glad you're here. Enjoy the dinner. All right, dig in. Thank you, thank you. It's not bad. See, that's family. Mm-hm. He didn't even ask who took that last bite. That's family. You're like the fifth person who ate out of that. I'm not much of a conversation guy. You know, I just really like simply hanging out with my friends, and eating, and here's what we do, drink. We should move somewhere where there's palm trees. Why do we have to move to New York City? I don't understand. Cuz it's one of the greatest city's in the world? Well, I get it, but I'm just saying, wouldn't it be nice to just walk outside your front door and be on the beach? And have a little restaurant that bills like 30 covers a night. And then smoke a joint, and watch the fucking shooting stars on the beach, and then, you go to work again tomorrow.
B1 中級 米 ピザ、PBR、フォークを使わない食事。Khe-YoとNYCでのシェフの夜のお出かけ (Pizza, PBRs, and a Fork-Free Feast: Chef's Night Out in NYC with Khe-Yo) 47 6 Sū-guân Âng に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語