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  • (cheerful music)

  • - So I was just in Los Angeles.

  • - Hi Steven.

  • - Hanging out with you guys.

  • Now we're all in New York City, Big Apple.

  • And today we are doing curry!

  • Right now we are at a Malaysian coffee shop.

  • This place is called Kopitiam.

  • And curry is a very personal thing to me.

  • Some of the locations in this episode were biased

  • by my personal Chinese-Malaysian background.

  • Hence the coffee shop we're at right now.

  • Woo yes.

  • Whoa!

  • - [Andrew] Certified awesome.

  • - [Steven] This is literally

  • how stuff is served in Malaysia.

  • My favorite dish in the world probably is Roti Canai,

  • which is a Malaysian dish influenced by India.

  • - [Andrew] Are we gonna try that today?

  • - They do have it at one of the places

  • that we're eating at.

  • - We should eat it!

  • - Okay!

  • - It's your favorite food.

  • - Today we're gonna be trying three curry dishes

  • at three drastically different price points

  • to find out which curry is the most worth it at its price.

  • I'm gonna hit you

  • with a curry fact!

  • 17th century British colonizers were perplexed

  • by the variety of dishes in India

  • and categorized them all under the term "curry".

  • People who visited India,

  • they didn't know how to categorize

  • all of these different foods.

  • So instead of actually identifying and learning all of them,

  • they just lumped them into one category.

  • - Before curry, you would just call it

  • what the individual dish name was.

  • - Exactly.

  • Okay so the first place we're going to is a bakery.

  • And we'll be having some curry puffs.

  • - Curry puffs.

  • So like a little pastry of curry, huh?

  • I got my drink to go, how about you?

  • - I might get one of those bags.

  • (energetic beats)

  • - Hi, my name is James Chou.

  • This is my father Han chou.

  • We're at Fay Da Bakery,

  • and we will be showing you our curry beef puff.

  • - [Han Chou] (speaks in Chinese)

  • - [James Chou] So basically the dough is mixed

  • same process as croissant.

  • So in there we use shortening and margarine to fold it in,

  • goes through that automated sheeter,

  • a little egg wash,

  • and then we have everyone putting the filling into each one,

  • baked and then you take it out

  • after about 20, 25 minutes,

  • you do egg wash,

  • and then you put it back in for another 15, 20 minutes,

  • and then you do one final egg wash.

  • - [Steven] What makes a very good curry puff?

  • - [Han Chou] (speaks in Chinese)

  • (register bell sound)

  • - [Steven] I got a watermelon smoothie to start off our day.

  • We'll be eating a lot of curries.

  • I gotta balance it out.

  • - I'm having ice malted milk drink.

  • - What?

  • - Yeah it's called Horlicks.

  • - Wow I didn't even know this existed.

  • Cheers!

  • - Here's one for you.

  • - Yes!

  • The most familiar smell

  • in the world to me.

  • Chinese bakery smell,

  • that was the Sunday afternoon,

  • family goes out to lunch,

  • and we hit a bakery afterwards.

  • Cheers.

  • - It's extremely satisfying,

  • because you have a very buttery nice pastry

  • along with a very savory filling.

  • It's not spicy.

  • It is actually a little sweet.

  • - It's like a pie.

  • It's like a ham pie.

  • - Yeah.

  • I think it's really cool

  • that you can have this savory treat

  • at what is predominantly a sweets bakery.

  • The fact that you can come to this bakery

  • and you can really build out

  • like a pretty well-balanced meal,

  • that's pretty unique I think, you know?

  • - I think it's a beautiful thing.

  • - [Andrew] Adam why are you eating that like a squirrel?

  • - [Annie] (laughs)

  • - So we just ate a curry puff,

  • but we're going to a Malaysian restaurant next.

  • So to prepare our appetite,

  • I was thinking that we bust open a durian,

  • which is the king of fruits in Malaysia.

  • Durian is a fruit that I've seen people,

  • kind of, laugh at, the smelliest fruit in the world,

  • but honestly, durian is a fruit

  • that my family, the first thing that we do

  • when we land in Malaysia when we visit is eat durian.

  • - Really?

  • - Yeah.

  • You just cut open a little bit

  • (durian cracks)

  • Oh!

  • - It doesn't smell that bad,

  • it smells like cheese honestly.

  • - Cheers.

  • - Oh it tastes good!

  • - Yeah.

  • - It's like a cross between a banana,

  • a pineapple, and a mango.

  • Hit me with that curry fact.

  • - Curry fact!

  • People who enjoy action movies and adventure seekers

  • are six times more likely to like spicy food.

  • - I love action movies.

  • I like spicy food.

  • I like getting my face to sweat.

  • - I've seen you sweat.

  • The next place we're going to is Laut.

  • It's Malaysian food.

  • - So you like this next place a little, or a "Laut"?

  • - (laughs)

  • A "Laut".

  • (energetic music)

  • - My name is Salil Mehta.

  • We're at Laut in Union Square.

  • And we're gonna be having the best Curry Laksa in the world.

  • - Oh wow.

  • - Wow.

  • - [Salil Mehta] Seven years ago, people did not know

  • much about a Rendang, much about a Laksa,

  • but a lot of people opened those doors up,

  • and then my background is slightly different

  • from most of the Malaysian restaurants

  • that are in New York City.

  • Being Indian, I was bringing the Indian influence behind.

  • - [Steven] So today we're having the Curry Laksa.

  • - Yes.

  • - Which is exactly what you're talking about,

  • the Chinese influence with the Malayan and Indian influence.

  • - Laksa comes from (speaks foreign phrase),

  • which means one million flavors.

  • You have all these great, amazing,

  • different kinds of Laksas all over Southeast Asia.

  • Then you have interaction of different cultures.

  • You have the Indian marrying the Malay,

  • the Malay marrying the Chinese.

  • Our Laksa, this is more,

  • Malay-Indian influenced Curry Laksa.

  • So the way we do ours,

  • we use onion, ginger, barley, fresh lemongrass,

  • grind it all up together in a paste,

  • cook it low and slow with some fresh curry

  • leaves brown spices in it.

  • Add the coconut milk slowly,

  • and we do a Lai Fun noodle.

  • This is like tapioca starch noodle.

  • And we do egg round noodle,

  • which is like a Lo Mein noodle.

  • Take some tofu puff actually soaks

  • in the soup from the Laksa.

  • I believe that Curry Laksa with seafood goes best.

  • Put the soup together,

  • garnish with some cucumber, lime.

  • That your bowl of Laksa.

  • - So we weren't planning on coming here

  • to eat the Roti Canai.

  • But saw in the menu,

  • so, could we also do that virtual quick?

  • - Roti's most popular dish in the restaurant.

  • Roti's something really unique and amazing

  • because it can be had as a snack,

  • it can be had as a proper meal as well.

  • The dough is prepped in pure Desi ghee.

  • So that's the way it was traditionally made

  • by bom in Malaysia.

  • And it comes from Canai, India,

  • so that's where the Canai come from.

  • - He just asked me if we wanna share this.

  • No!

  • There's a rule.

  • - Okay Steven.

  • - Two people, two roti.

  • This is actually my favorite dish,

  • because it reminds me of my time in Malaysia

  • staying with my grandpa.

  • And we would walk down to the local cart,

  • and they would just fry this up,

  • and hand me the curry in a bag.

  • I wouldn't even wait till I got home,

  • I would just eat on the way home

  • - That sounds awesome.

  • Cheers.

  • (tongue clicks)

  • Oh man that's good.

  • - Perfectly crispy.

  • It's almost like a croissant.

  • How flaky this one is.

  • - You have like the best textured bread,

  • and you get to just put it in the most luxurious gravy.

  • It cannot get better than that.

  • - Gravy makes everything good.

  • And now we have the Curry Laksa.

  • - So this is so pretty.

  • I love the color of the broth

  • that it's speckled with the oil.

  • - It's the million flavors of spice and color.

  • - Gotta make sure you don't lose any noodles.

  • - And then you know get some seafood.

  • The tofu is a flavor saver.

  • This is the mustache of ingredients.

  • This is what soaks the curry up.

  • And then you just take a little bite.

  • - I love that.

  • The mustache of ingredients.

  • What are you gonna try first, noodle?

  • Or just broth on its own?

  • - Uh let's do broth.

  • (slurps)

  • - It changes in your mouth as you're eating it.

  • - I like this too, because you have the coconut

  • and the curry just living together

  • but also porting their own identity and color here.

  • (slurps)

  • - I understand how this is like

  • a dish that emerged as the marriage

  • from a lot of people and the cuisines,

  • because it is like so many all-star things.

  • You have noodles, you have seafood,

  • you have this amazing broth.

  • - I save the flavors here for the end.

  • It's been just in here collecting juice, by the way.

  • My sponge.

  • Cheers.

  • - Cheers.

  • - (coughs)

  • Curry!

  • I love it.

  • Alright, so we just had some great Laksa.

  • We're now at a grocery store called Kalustyan's.

  • We're here because the next restaurant we're going to,

  • the chef recommended that we check this out,

  • because he comes here for all the inspiration

  • for his dishes.

  • - Wow, so many types of paprika.

  • - Yes!

  • Curry power!

  • Curry fact!

  • India is responsible for 70%

  • of the world's spice production.

  • - Wow!

  • That's wild.

  • I wonder if any other country has as much claim

  • over any other thing.

  • - We're headed next down the street

  • and it is an Indian restaurant called Junoon.

  • It was nice "ju-knowing" ya.

  • - Well now that it's "after-ju-noon" we can go to Junoon.

  • (laughters)

  • (funky music)

  • - Welcome to Junoon.

  • My name is Akshay Bhardwaj.

  • I am the executive chef here.

  • So Junoon is a modern fine dining Indian restaurant.

  • So what we try to do is maintain the aspect

  • of the traditional flavors in Indian cuisine,

  • but we try to give it

  • a more aesthetically pleasing look to it.

  • - So today we're getting the three-course menu.

  • And we chose the dishes are more curry-themed.

  • - So the appetizer that I'll be showcasing today

  • is the Butter Pepper Garlic Shrimp.

  • And then for entrees we have the Lamb Shank,

  • which is accompanies by Laccha Paratha,

  • which is one of the breads we cook in our tandoori oven.

  • For dessert, our Shahi Tukra.

  • - Indian cuisine is so broad and diverse,

  • how does Junoon see itself as drawing from

  • that huge spectrum of food?

  • - [Akshay Bhardwaj] What we try to definitely do

  • with the menu is utilize different regions of India.

  • We have coastal dishes which have a lot of seafood in it.

  • You have northern dishes, you have southern dishes.

  • The Butter Pepper Shrimp is more of a coastal dish.

  • It's a take on a very traditional dish in Mumbai, actually.

  • - And is the shank inspired by a particular region?

  • - [Akshay Bhardwaj] Yeah.

  • You have cumin power, coriander, masala,

  • that's definitely more of a north Indian style of cooking.

  • So with the butter pepper garlic shrimp,

  • whenever a guest comes and asks me,

  • well, what goes into it?

  • I say, well, you actually read the name of the dish,

  • it's literally those things that go into the dish.

  • We'll sear the shrimps, we'll saute it.

  • We'll add the sauce to it.

  • And then we'll pair that with

  • a traditional Indian bread called Pao.

  • Guests were actually complaining

  • the sauce was so good and so addicting

  • that they wanted to eat it with something.

  • So that's when we decided we'll pair this bread.

  • - [Andrew] Let's try a little bit of the sauce first,

  • and then we'll take a shrimp each.

  • - Always with the strategy.

  • - I'm a very strategic eater.

  • - All I think about when I have food

  • is how I get it from the plate to my mouth the fastest.

  • - Okay.

  • - Alright.

  • I understand why this bread is here.

  • - [Andrew] Wanna try a shrimp?

  • - [Steven] Shrimp!

  • There is this flavor that is still lingering

  • in the back of my mouth.

  • It's like a really peppery fiery taste,

  • just living back here.

  • - [Andrew] Then you take a sip of the cocktail,

  • and it washes it all away.

  • - [Steven] Oh I likey like that.

  • - (laughs) Yeah.

  • - Pao, oh man!

  • That looks so good.

  • - You know that makes me say?

  • Pao!

  • - So with the shank, we first braise the lamb shank.

  • And we actually use that as a cooking oil.

  • Then we'll add our onions to it.

  • And then we make something called the Putli,

  • which is we take a pull of whole spices

  • from the spice room and we wrap it in cheese cloth.

  • We throw it into the pot,

  • add some ginger and garlic.

  • We'll add some cumin powder, coriander powder,

  • red chili powder, turmeric,

  • as well as our Garam Masala spice blend.

  • And then we'll add the shanks and lotus pods.

  • Definitely adds a little creamy texture to the dish overall.

  • My favorite bread to eat is definitely the Laccha Paratha,

  • which is basically just whole wheat flour,

  • we'll baste it with a little bit of butter and oil,

  • stretch it out, so make it about seven to ten folds.

  • And each layer, the top layer will be the crunchiest,

  • the bottom later will be less and less crunchy as it goes.

  • And then we'll put it in the tandoori.

  • It's so enjoyable to eat with any curry, with any,

  • eat on it own also.

  • - [Andrew] Here we are Steven, to the main event.

  • The Lamb Shank.

  • - What's your strategy here?

  • Is it potato first, is it the bone?

  • - It's sauce first.

  • I definitely wouldn't recommend starting with the bone.

  • - [Steven] Woo!

  • - [Andrew] Look at that!

  • - You almost think for a second

  • that you could walk on water

  • when you put your knife on there.

  • It still holds the tension.

  • - It's so thick.

  • - That is so good.

  • - The spices are so vibrant in this.

  • - You're gonna to the Laccha Paratha first?

  • - Yeah.

  • There's a certain type of dress that looks like this.

  • Ridiculous tasting.

  • - It kinda does me a favor in picking up eating more curry.

  • It goes to the cracks,

  • so as I'm chewing it,

  • it's oozing through my teeth.

  • - [Andrew] Right off the bone.

  • - [Steven] Wow!

  • I'm getting chills right now.

  • - [Andrew] And it's crazy that we get so much pleasure

  • from watching meat fall off a bone.

  • - [Steven] Yeah.

  • - Which in any other context would be

  • a truly horrific image.

  • - [Steven] This is crazy, it looks so tender.

  • I can't really pinpoint what the flavor is

  • that it's like hitting me so hard.

  • - That's what's good about it,

  • you can't isolate any one flavor,

  • it's just a bunch of flavors.

  • It's really good

  • - Oh!

  • - So that's how you know it's good.

  • Adam tasted it, thought it was good.

  • Then took a few steps, and then said "Oh!",

  • because the flavor changed in his mouth as he was eating it.

  • - So for desserts we have the Shahi Tukra.

  • And I don't think there's anyone

  • better suited to describe it and explain it

  • than our pastry chef Gustavo.

  • - We made a brioche bread which is very buttery.

  • Then we pan-fry it, we soak it in a simple syrup

  • that was made with saffron,

  • which is one of the traditional spice in Indian cuisine.

  • We start putting in the rabri.

  • So rabri is the reduction of milk.

  • We put it on top of the Shahi Tukra.

  • Cashews, pecans, pistachios, edible rose petals,

  • and then pop sorghum.

  • And that's it.

  • - [Steven] So we have a dessert wine here

  • to pair with the dessert.

  • - [Andrew] Ready?

  • - Yeah.

  • - Oh.

  • Oh my God.

  • A cool and floral french toast.

  • - It's like got everything you want.

  • Chocolate and butter.

  • What the wine does,

  • it kinda expands the floral taste

  • of these dried rose petals.

  • Adam, I would love for you

  • to try this dessert with this wine.

  • I think you're gonna love it.

  • Okay Steven, New York was a great place to try this,

  • because we got to try curry

  • from a lot of different parts of the world.

  • - So, Andrew, then which curry spot

  • was the most worth it to you at its price?

  • - Laut.

  • I really appreciated his methodology.

  • I love his attention to detail

  • and his respect to history.

  • - I think the thing that I was most surprised by today

  • was the shrimp, actually, that was at Junoon.

  • Ah I don't know my winner.

  • I think my worth it winner, Fay Da Bakery.

  • - Oh okay.

  • - At least the value for this one.

  • I love curry so much,

  • and the ability to get it for two dollars.

  • It's so accessible.

  • - Annie, who's your worth it winner?

  • - Junoon.

  • - Laut.

  • - Okay so that was a day in New York City.

  • But it doesn't end there, because next,

  • we'll be doing something else in New York.

  • - Alright, so we're going out tonight, right?

  • - No.

  • (energetic music)

  • - [Narrator] Oh yes.

(cheerful music)

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B1 中級

2ドルカレー対75ドルカレー ($2 Curry Vs. $75 Curry)

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    Ming に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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