Coleslaw Doesn't Have to Be Boring (Move Over KFC!)
We all know Coleslaw from KFC - but it can be so much more than cabbage smothered in mayo! German Krautsalat, Lebanese Cabbage Salad and a Burmese Lethok are 3 styles of coleslaw you should absolutely try.
► Andong on Instagram 📷
/ mynameisandong
► Become a Patron and support this channel! ❤️
/ mynameisandong
► American Southern Style Coleslaw (KFC Style)
1 pound green cabbage, in slivers (about half a small to medium cabbage)
hand crushed and salted with 1,5 tsp salt for 45 minutes
1 large carrot, julienned or grated
1/2 white onion, sliced
2 Tbsp distilled vinegar
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1 Tbsp white sugar
1/2 teaspoon celery seeds
black pepper to taste
► German Krautsalat
1 pound green cabbage, in slivers (about half a small to medium cabbage)
hand crushed and salted with 1,5 tsp salt for 45 minutes
100g bacon / cured ham
1/2 white onion
1/2 apple, julienned
3 Tbsp apple cider vinegar
2 tsp caraway seeds
1 Tbsp mustard (dijon style is good)
3 Tbsp sunflower seed, grape seed or canola oil
► Lebanese Malfouf Salad
1 pound green cabbage, in slivers (about half a small to medium cabbage)
hand crushed and salted with 1,5 tsp salt for 45 minutes
2 Tbsp tahini
juice of 1/2 lemon
2-3 Tbsp olive oil
black pepper to taste
roughly 1/2 cup chopped parsley parsley
1 tsp garlic powder
1/2 Tbsp mint powder
► Burmese Lethok with Cabbage and Ginger
1 pound green cabbage, in slivers (about half a small to medium cabbage)
hand crushed and salted with 1,5 tsp salt for 45 minutes
juice of 1/2 lime
2 tsp fish sauce (or soy sauce)
3 Tbsp shallot oil
1 plum tomato, deseeded and sliced into slivers
2 Tbsp sushi-style pickled ginger (gari)
3 Tbsp fried shallots
1 Tbsp toasted sesame seeds
1/2 cup peanuts, crushed
► Twitter 🐦
/ mynameisandong
► Andong on Facebook 📘
/ mynameisandong
Written & Directed by Andong
2nd Camera & Editing by Eypee Kaamiño
/ eypeekaamino
Introduction to Coleslaw: (0:00)
Preparing Cabbage for Coleslaw: (0:33)
American Southern Style Coleslaw: (2:41)
German Krautsalat: (4:30)
Lebanese Malfouf Salad: (6:39)
Burmese Cabbage Lethok: (9:21)
Im lebanese and that was actually a pretty good take on malfouf! As you said tahini is not a classic addition and we use fresh garlic if we eat it ''family style'', but i love your appreciation for the dish. Gained a new subscriber :)
Yay!! Welcome :)
I too am Lebanese and guess what, i didn’t even know this type of coleslaw
@@generalz6627 Mom used to chop it very thin (with red cabbage) and add lemon, garlic and dry mint only..greet side dish with potato puree akle.
Same here
All aboard the Dong train, choo choo!
I really liked that from haram to halal. For some reason I found that hilarious 😂
I'm glad someone took notice :)
@@mynameisandong of course 😆. Don't know if you'll see this but I found your channel by sheer luck and I'm glad I did. Love the content!
Nothing "Lebanese" about this Lebanese coleslaw. There is less emphasis on "halal" food in Lebanon than most western countries.
Or from treif to koscher
@@mynameisandong Have you ever tried an authentic nihari?? If not, i think you should....this is the only dish that got a 10+ from food ranger as far i know.. kzhead.info/sun/a9GceLySsKSoYIU/bejne.html
In South Africa we make a coleslaw with shredded cabbage, grated carrot, finely diced onion, diced green apple, and a handful of seedless raisins.Crumbled walnuts are also added by some. Season with salt and ground black pepper, and chopped parsley and chives. To this we add a creamy mayonnaise with an optional dash of balsamic vinegar. The mayonnaise can be slightly diluted with sour cream, but I prefer it creamy 😇 Served straight from the fridge, as one of the salads for a barbecue.
Apples *and* raisins?! I'm so sorry, but that makes me cringe. How sweet do you really want your cabbage?
@@dummerikan Its surpringly not sweet. The apples are the very tart green ones, and we use a very creamy tangy mayonnaise which isn't sweet at all
@@nikkid4890 okay, now I see. Thank you for opening my eyes.
@@dummerikan Always a matter of personal and cultural taste though. 🤗
@@dummerikan Fruit salads actually aren't bad. I get why it doesn't sound appetizing at the start, but me and many others genuinely enjoy a nice refreshing sweet boost with our foods.
My wife (from Thailand) makes a coleslaw based on Thai Som Tom. It is very different from the Burmese style - think ginger, peppers, crushed peanuts, mortar crushed grape tomatoes, a little palm (or brown), lime juice, tiny dried shrimp. She also adds shredded carrots and sometimes some shredded green apple.
I know the Southern US cole slaw may seem “boring,” but you have to remember what it’s normally served with - barbecue, and the two together is like a match made in heaven.
That’s definitely true!
@@mynameisandong I don't know if you've done a video like what I'll describe but It would be cool if you did another video like this but with stews from different countries. Heck, a series of videos where you just cook a type of dish but each from different countries would also be very entertaining.
@@mynameisandong Texas BBQ is some of the best, paired with amazing coleslaw and its for sure a match made in heaven. By any chance have you heard of or had pernil? My parents love making it and they make some of the best pernil and recently my dad started smoking it and by god is it some of the best pork I have ever eaten. Paired with rice and beans or coleslaw and im in heaven XD.
Unexpected SPANISH INQUISITION there is nothing better than pernil. Smoked it must be amazing.
I could honestly eat it every day of the week. Then again, I'm a weirdo 🤷🏻♀️
Hey Andong! Salad in Burmese is just "thouq" (or "a-thouq-a-thouq"), the tea leaf salad is specifically "la-phet thouq". Cool to see Burmese food here, cheers pal!
In the US I have usually seen that spelled "thoke". OMG, I was so happy the day I discovered gin thoke!!! :9 :9 :9
What he mentioned might be Let-Thoke (လက်သုပ်) or Let-Thoke-Sone (လက်သုပ်စုံ) which mean Hand Stirred Salads...
I was surprised to see burmese food is featured. way to go 😂
💯🇲🇲
YASS WE STAN MYANMAR 🇲🇲 😎🇲🇲
I am from Poland, and my mom usually cooked coleslaw for the family in this way: for creaminess she used smetana, and main ingredients were cabbage, radish, dill and fresh cucumbers. Quite tasty and fresh, and we usually ate it as a side dish to some meat for the supper. Don't know if that's traditional or just the way she makes this salad.
By "cooked" I'm thinking you meant made, since cooking would involve using a stove. I do like the idea of including radishes and the sour cream instead of mayo for creaminess. Cucumber salad is another favorite of mine. Very refreshing and pairs nicely with heaver dishes. Paper thin sliced cucumbers and onion in sour cream with a bit of vinegar, a touch of sugar and salt and pepper.
Mostly mayo is being replaced in fresh salads by sour cream due to small amount of fats and actual presence of milk which is synonym of creaminess. I JA OCHENJ LJUBLU SMETANKU XD
Aways happy to see Burmese food on the internet. The salads are called "athote" by the way. 😌👌
အသုတ်👍
very tasty - loved it!
I was baffled how smoothly he pronounced Krautsalat until he revealed his Germanness
His english is very very good, far better than mine, but you could definitively hear a little accent
@@momanskiakabiffbuz6004 While yes his English is very good but definitely a German accent through and through.
yeah, bout it - he`s russian Anton %)
I am baffled why he thinks bacon belongs in German Krautsalat.
@Adolf Schinkler Naja als Anwohner kann ich das wohl sagen. Im Krautsalat habe ich noch nie Speck gesehen. Was du da schreibst ist Kappes.
My uncle makes something he calls Persian slaw. He's from Iran but has lived in the states for a while so don't know if it's from there or something he picked up but prepare the cabbage like you did, mix in the juice of one lemon, throw in some minced garlic, and half the seeds out of a pomegranate. Then salt and pepper to taste. It's light, simple, and you get those little flavor bursts from the seeds.
The pomegranate seeds sound like a wonderful addition. I'll certainly try that!
I am gonna add that to my Thanksgiving side dish for lunches I bet if you have leftover turkey throw that on a wrap with that slaw and Turkey .mm yummay !!light and less calories thanks for the input
That sounds delightful!
Hmm, my sister in law is from Tehran. I should have her make some. Otherwise sounds a lot like Greek cabbage salad. Equal parts lemon and olive oil, a clove of minced garlic for about a half head of cabbage, a little carrot, and maybe 2 or 3 drops only of red wine vinegar along with salt and pepper (white pepper preferably.)
I am Iranian. Never heard of that recipe. Probably no traditional recipe.
omg! i feel so happy that you introduced Burmese coleslaw. My country has tons of great foods but those are overshadowed by the foods of neighbouring countries which are also very good. Anyway, thank you for this.
As a Southerner who makes excellent slaw, I can confirm that celery seed is the key ingredient. I also like to put some thinly sliced celery in mine if I have it around. Some people add bell pepper, but I don't care for that. However, a couple of "secret" ingredients that can punch it up is sweet pickle relish (or sweet pickle juice in place of some of the vinegar) and horseradish, about a tablespoon at most. They're just background notes, but they bring a lot of subtle complexity.
Celery powder is the active ingredient on a Chicago Hot Dogs!
We ate slaw too in the Buffalo, New York area but not quite as sweet as some Southerners. My aunt used pickle juice, yum. We did not add onions but used about 2 Tablespoons of vinegar to every cup of mayo. Not as much sugar as the Southerners but celery seed definitely. I will have to try some horseradish. That sounds interesting.
@D. Price No need to shout. Calm it down. I'm not talking about adding a big heap of pickles to it like you might with potato salad -- of course, folks are welcome to make their slaw however they like. I'm talking about a tablespoon or so, more as a seasoning, which is why I also say you can also just sub out some of the vinegar for pickle juice. Same with the horseradish, you're just adding a little bit for complexity, like a little mustard in deviled eggs. Don't knock it till you've tried it!
Thank you very much. I'll definitely try out your "secrets"! Greets from 'Schland!
Yeah, horseradish is my secret coleslaw ingredient - the best. When I was a kid, all coleslaw had caraway seed instead of celery seed - ugh! Hated that. I also use black pepper.
I'm Burmese, and see, this is why I don't get it when ppl from other countries trash on slaw cuz as far as I've known slaw tastes fucken amazing.
Gestern beim Stuhlgang hat mein linkes Augenlid geblutet.
@@SchimmelAufDemBrot4m Dann hast du wohl bei der Zubereitung irgendwas falsch gemacht.
Let them talk, they just haven't discovered what marvels a cabbage can become. But I admit, you Burmese seem to really raise it to another level.
I’m with you!
The only slaw I’ve had that I don’t like is the traditional American style when the maker was too heavy with the mayo and/or sugar. Cabbage and some kind of dressing is always a win for me.
I made carbonated slaw with Sprite when I worked at a restaurant. The soda has all the sugar you need and the bubbles add a pleasant pop. Would recommend!
That sounds pretty awesome!!
sounds nice... gonna try
That sounds really weird... you can also make kraut in a sealed vessel to "carbonate" the cabbage. It will have little bubbles in the pieces of cabbage
Wolle you like to post the recipe Herr of somewhere else?
do you still mixed it with mayo or another dressing?
One of my favorite simple dressings for a cabbage salad is sesame oil, some cider vinegar, salt sugar and pepper. Add some toasted slivered almonds and green onion when you serve it. So good! Pair really well with chicken.
Think I will try that.
Tahini dressings are always amazing. I would recommend going with pomegranate molasse for the touch of sweetness to keep it 100% middle-eastern inspired.
Yeah pomegranate would’ve been perfect
Pomegranate juice is magic in salads!!!!
his salt jar says - without salt, without bread the talk is not great lol
lol amazing that you made that rhyme in English That's Greek right?
@@Broockle that's Russian
That's some serious babushka wisdom right there, lol.
For the American version - especially when talking about KFC slaw - you need a little bit of grated onion. Yes, grated. And that's why you only need a 'little bit', I emphasize. Like a tablespoon or two size piece of onion, grated into the slaw. That raw onion zing will just sit as a nice background "what is that" flavor - as long as you don't use too much. That's your second warning about using too much. LOL.
exactly, treat the onion like garlic, great result for the taste
a bit of sour cream is also great
Also KFC is whole head grated even the core, I used to work in a factory that made the mix.
@@brtrimmer132 Any other secret ingredients in there?
@@thelastmike not really we just chopped the heads down small enough to fit in the machine, as it went up the belt we added carrot. The dressing was made elsewhere.
Good thing u visited Myanmar 🇲🇲 a few years back , I live here and the country is on fire rn
A great place to visit
I love randomly finding all these channels of young people that got to travel in the time of the Internet. I feel both blessed and gypped. I lived abroad as a student when there were no cell phones and internet was not readily available. And we had pen pals! Good times! Love seeing young men cook and being all multicultural. If we can eliminate racism, disdain for the environment and lack of empathy, we may have a chance at a better future!
I still can't believe he doesn't have one million subscribers with this amount of production! keep up the high quality content!
...und genau aus diesem Grund habe ich Andong soeben ein Abo geschenkt! ;-)
Well deserved, sadly most people like horrible content
I mean he is talking in front of a camera and has some basic editing with very high quality video. But he will reach 1m very soon, subs dont mean anything in terms of video production.
There's a delicious El Salvadoran coleslaw called curtido that has jalapenos and oregano and is fermented for a couple days before served. A great one to try! Thanks for the video
I'm going to find a curtido recipe. I love trying new foods
That is good stuff especially on something rich or cheesy, reminds me more of sauerkraut though.
Can you post a recipe?
I love curtido! Had it with some homemade bean pupusas (no cheese since I’m vegan).
Yay thank you! Im looking for new recipes and appreciate this!
Just did the German recipe. Wow, this is the best coleslaw we ever had. The bacon, apple, caraway, vinegar excellent combination, well done thanks Andong.
By far the most enjoyable food focused channels on youtube. Keep it up Andong. You rule.
I was literally eating a coleslaw when you uploaded the video. Coleslaw is literally my comfort food and seeing you talk and make coleslaw literally made my eating experience better
I feel you! Love coleslaw, too
Literally?
Literally
Literally
"I literally use this word incorrectly EVERY time I say it"
"You can go all Jamie Oliver" hahahahahah that killed me.
Uncle Roger would not approve.
@@animeanibe >chili jam
I love this comment but I can't like because there's 69 likes :(
@@TheStillChillMimikyuOfficial indeed
@@GregoryMom >only 3 chillis
Lots of awesome yum... Thanks for a great vid!
love your delivery. very informative and engaging
Please do more of the history-of-a-dish type videos. They were amazing
Stay tuned, more coming for sure :)
I agree. My great gran and her daughter my grandmother were both born in Germany and would cook amazing foods 😍 but they both passed away while I was still rather young and foolish enough not to ask for their recipes. While my gran did teach me many recipes they were not the traditional German ones. (Or maybe they were) I only remember eating them lol. A pork joint (hind leg i think ) that was long roasted with cabbage and onions. It was so fatty and golden. Big potato dumplings? Like big round mashed potatoes with a cube of bread and cheese in the middle and parsley sauce. But one is a cake made with what I call cottage cheese here in the US but not a cheese cake persay it was a buttery moist cake with a cheesy taste and a cinnamon streusle on top. No one has found that recipe or has ever heard of it. I worry that it was of her own creation and now is lost. I do have her recipe books but I do not read German. I do know that there are apps now that will translate the pages so I might have to find all the books from storage. But watching Andong with his knowledge and him being so willing to share with us that maybe some day he will post one or more of them is a wish! Lol.
@@Emeraldwitch30 May be it was a variation of Quark Kuchen. Quark is an ingredient often used in traditional German baking but harder to find elsewhere. Its delicious and tangy and often used for a cheesecake-like dessert (but not cheescake)
Emeraldwitch30 As the other commenter said, it sounds like a mix between a Quarkkuchen or Käsekuchen with Streuselkuchen. The dumplings are Klöße, I like them a lot as well. The pork joint was either Haxe, if it was crispy, or Eisbein in case it was boiled. I guess your family is from central or southern Germany, judging by the recipes!
@@swisski thank you so much! My cousin is researching where great grandpa and great grandma were from more closely. But they both immigrated here to become Americans and didn't speak that much about where they were from. I know our family was big into pork and that great grandpa was from Prussia as we found his signature on some paperwork. I do know after he passed my greatvgran and gran went back to Germany to visit and find some important paperwork but were told that their small village had been bombed into oblivion during WW2 and just didn't exist any longer. I'm sure I mention that we used to get together when I was very small every fall and would butcher out several pigs. I wish i remember better but I do remember how good the sausage was and the pig heads bobbing in a big cauldron fir making a loaf of meats and i know now its head cheese but most I try is just okay compared to the memory of the flavors.
Just wanted to say that I really appreciate the new look and higher production value of your videos. Your videos are entertaining and informative. Great work! Weiter so! ✌️
I didn't like your videos before but now I'm sold. Subscribed. Thank you, I certainly enjoyed this.
This is honestly the best most creative and most inspiring video on coleslaw ! Thank you , you're brilliant. And great personality to top it all off !
Cabbage is such an underappreciated food tbh - it's cheap, it has a long shelf life, it's filling, and it's incredibly versatile! It's great raw and crunchy, and can be cooked in all sorts of ways. I use a lot cabbage in my day to day cooking - I'll chop some up and add to stews and stuff to bulk it out. Cabbage and dried legumes are indispensable cheap foods in the student kitchen 👍 Cheese slicers are great for shaving thin strips of cabbage for slaws and salads. Great if you're like me and stuck with a half-dull knife and no sharpener for the foreseeable future 🤦♀️
Cabbage and beans super healthy too.
I use a knife for an individual salad. I used to use a mandolin when making a family sized salad. If I am making 2 big bowls of 2 different kinds of cabbage salad for a party, I put the vegetable slicing-shredding attachment on the Messerschmitt (Jupiter or Family Grain Mill from Pleasant Hill Grain) machine and run that stuff through quickly.
I love cabbage so much too! Have you tried slicing it into 1/2 inch slabs and roasting in oven with a bit of oil? It gets soft and umami flavour, soooo delicious. Cabbage steak 😊
This is the best channel to have come out of 2020. Youll be a million sub by the end of the year brother. Cheers
Am so glad this popped up. Loved the humor and recipes
Andong, directions of your videos is amazing. I love each second of editing and picture. Attractive, informative, catching!!!! WOW! Greetings from Belarus, and billions of views!
Thank you for these interesting alternatives-especially your alternatives for those of us who don’t eat pork. One thing I’d like to mention is that one of the more traditional dressings for “American” coleslaw is a boiled dressing, not mayo and vinegar.
My own coleslaw is made of shredded cabbage, carrot, grated or finely chopped apple, and finely sliced sweet pepper and celery if wanted. The dressing is half mayonnaise and half Greek yoghurt and a pinch of salt. The magic ingredients are chopped dates and aniseed and little cubes of cheese (I prefer cheddar). That said, the Vietnamese recipe in the video sounds great, as does the German version. I'll certainly be trying them out.
Yummy, yummy. Iwill try's your recipe. Thank you.
I loved. loved this video. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.❤
This is awesome, thanks for the various options!
Meanwhile in Australia we put beetroot in ours. I've also seen many different dressings used from aoili and thousands island to infused oils and vinegeretes
The fact that someone took their time to make and review different Slaws and added humor to it deserves a million views. Minimum!
I'm German. I didn't know the recipe with bacon till now. I always added a bell paprika very thin sliced. Mixed vinegar, a hint of mustard, a good vegetable oil, salt and fresh coarsed black pepper, caraway seed and paprika powder for the dressing. The step where you crunch the cabbage with the hands is also for the consistency. My mom always skipped this part and we ended up with hard and smooth stripes of cabbage, where the dressing drips off.
You're quite convincing ! I will try the lebanese one for sure. Thanks for this high quality video (lights, sound, background, etc)
Very cool video! The word Coleslaw comes from the dutch words "Kool" meaning "cabbage" (pronounced the same as cole, the double 'o' in dutch makes that "oh" sound) and "sla" meaning "salad" (pronunciation is close enough to being the same). So there you go, Cabbage Salad but in a different language
I may add to the correct answer that the German pronounciation in some dialects comes very close to cole too. But the sla is from Frisian (e.g dutch) dialects. Or at least I don´t know any German dialect using it that way.
@@ronin47-ThorstenFrank salat also sounds like slaw
@@LMvdB02 Hm, after thinking about it you may be right. There may be areas (I look at you Bavaria) that it may be pronounced Soload (no English pronounciation) with a vowelless first o. That may come close. But I´m no linguist. And languages change over the time.
@@ronin47-ThorstenFrank soload sounds similar to how Limburgish people pronounce salade
@@ronin47-ThorstenFrank Just wanted to point out that Frisian is a completely different language than Dutch rather than just a dialect of it. They are of course both Germanic languages, but still considered by linguists (and by the Frisians themselves especially) to be separate languages.
The Burmese one sounds amazing!
Will definitely be trying a few of those. Thank you for sharing 👍🇨🇦
Loved this video and seeing the parallels of cabbage salads! I've never tried curing the cabbage with salt before hand! Brilliant!
Yeeees i love coleslaw, can't wait to try your recipes! 😊
I almost freaked out when I saw "KFC" next to southern and I was like "oh no he didn't use fast food to compare to all those other recipes" 😂😂
KFC cole slaw is actually very good, which is precisely why it's used as a comparison. My Grandma always used some Ginger root in hers. Never had any that came close to hers.
@@FredFukkinBear When KFC first opened a restaurant in my country and I went to try it out, I ordered pretty much everything on the menu and the ONLY thing I liked was the coleslaw. They even managed to fuck up the corn on the cob somehow. It was weirdly dry. (I haven't been back. Starbucks didn't get a repeat visit either, and I had to throw away most of the abomination they call a frappuchino as it was undrinkable. Subway makes soggy, uninspiring sandwiches. I've had them several times due to a lack of better options in the vicinity of a school I attended at the time, but meh. Domino's pizza? Isn't pizza. It's a nice enough savoury pastry of some kind, but it is NOT pizza. There's been a TGI Friday's here for a few years now but I honestly haven't felt like going. Frankly, almost all the American foods I grew up seeing on TV in the 90s, and badly wanted to try as a kid, that I later did try, were hugely disappointing. Rootbeer? Vile. Frosting? Inedible. Hershey's chocolate? Isn't. Reese's peanut butter cups? God, no. American style BBQ sauces and flavourings? Unbearably sweet. Skittles are fine. I like the sour ones. New York style cheesecake is one of my favourites [home made, and slightly modified to reduce the excessive sugar content]. In fact, Philadelphia style cream cheese may be the best thing to come out of the U.S. since jazz. But overall, American food seems to be pretty awful. To be fair, I haven't actually had it IN America, but I hear it's pretty much what you'd expect judging by their exports.)
Same lol
@@austenhead5303 I'm American and I hate the fast food here. I'm always going to an ethnic restaurant to try different dishes 😋
@@austenhead5303 As an American.......yeah fast food is literally garbage. Its by design. Fast food isnt something you want to eat as a "fancy restaurant outing." Its meant to be something you grab and eat on the go or if your too lazy to cook at home.
Loved the comparison. Ended up with extra slaw starter and needed some new inspiration. Left a subscriber. Great content and love your attitude.
Thank you for finally getting the right recipe for American slaw. I’ve been looking for one for a while and nothing till now. Great video 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Cole slaw is a Dutch word: koolsla, literally: cabbage salad.
yeah, lots of American words have a Dutch origin. Even the dollar.
@@richa16x Santa Clause, Sinterklaas. Same thing.
@@Jeroenhermanjan yep, there a whole list
@@richa16x ehm.. except the dollar. That's German from Thaler. We had guilders before we were sold down the river by our politicians.
@@colmangreen6029 My sources say from the Dutch word Daalder. Makes more sense that its Dutch since the Netherlands were more active.
I grew up in the North East. I never had store bought coleslaw (or potato salad) until I was in college. We only ate out on special occasions, my mother made all of our meals. She cooked as her grandmother from Ireland had taught her. The coleslaw & potato salad I grew up with are very tangy & far different from what is standard fare in America today but I knew nothing else. The dressing for both is the same. Apple Cider vinegar, Mayo, Salt & Pepper... Simple, very tangy & I love it. When I bring it to a potluck there's never leftovers. People think it has sour cream, but it's just copious amounts of Apple Cider Vinegar.
Just discovered this show and thought you did an awesome job, well done!
Lol, was looking for a cabbage recipe & your channel pops up, love it, I'm in, just subbed
Hey man as a Lebanese i dont actually ever see this recipe but i really liked the research you've done. You have only used ingrediants that are found in abundance here in lebanon and I'm really looking forward to giving ur recipe a try. Plus i really liked the malfoof addition Malfoof literally translates to "rapped" incase you were wondering😂 Non the less really enjoyed ur vid..
Malfoof = wrapped OR cabbage, since Arabic tends to describe some stuff and make the description the official name. as for the salad.... I am from Palestine, our cuisine is not much different, so I suppose you can find this salad at Shwarma restaurants.
@Aya Mazloum hahah yeh or hust with mint and lemon
I could see the Burmese one being great with the abundant addition of green chilis.
I never made anything using this channel’s recipes but it’s been always joyful to watch.
Outstanding production value. Well done.
This food from myanmar sounds great! You say, that it is too much overlooked. You have the power to change that! I would love to hear more about myanmarese food! Ich fühlt sich komisch an, mit einem Deutschen Englisch zu "reden"... ;)
FYI, it's Myanmar food, not Myanmarese. And the people are Myanmar too. Same as the country. :-)
Balkan version of coleslaw or as we call it ”kupus salata" which literally translates to cabbage salad, it's just cut up cabbage with vinigar and salt and it's perfect
Thanks for the awesome ideas to spice up my keto game! Great video 👌👍
I had no idea there were so many different ways to make Cole Slaw & I also wouldn't have imagined it could be so much fun to explore. You brought life to everything. Great job ! I'll be sharing this with my friends, thank you.
There's another variety of Southern American coleslaw that skips the mayo and is more vinegar-forward with a wonderful amount of sugar added as well. Don't have a recipe off the top of my head, but that one's my favorite.
That style is the best style on a pulled pork sandwich.
for the Burmese Lethok try replacing cilantro with celery leaves
Thankyou!I'm one of those that thinks cilantro tastes like soap but celery are lovely.What a great and simple replacement.Be blessed.🙂
Great Idea...loving it already 🤟
@@vnette9777 to me Both celery and cilantro taste like soap
@@LMvdB02 I can handle the light soap flavor of celery lol.But not the strong flavor of cilantro its strong like irish spring lol
@@vnette9777 im not sure if I want to know... but... how do you know how soap tastes like?
yum, thanks, I will definitely be using these recipes.
Really enjoyed this video. There is a certain wholesome quality that is evident throughout. Informative. Thanks a lot for the new coleslaws to try!
I've had, at some Cambodian homes, a cabbage salad made in the same style as their "bok lahong," papaya salad. Also had a variant with green mango instead that tasted very similar, too. Being from the Dominican Republic, a typical side salad to eat is a simple cabbage salad flavored with neutral oil, bitter/sour orange juice, and salt. My mother kicks it up a notch and uses a flavorful olive oil, a bit of freshly pasted raw garlic, dried Dominican oregano, a tiny bit of the orange skin shaving (chop after shaving to get it really fine), and optional cracked black pepper. If you can't get sour orange near you, any citrus or citrus combo with decent acidity will do, and dried Mexican oregano is a next best sub for the oregano. This salad goes well with grilled/baked meats and our styles of mixed rice ("locrio" and "moro"). Happy to elaborate further on this, and I love hearing about tweaks and tips that also inspire new foods to emerge from traditional takes.
wow thanks for sharing!!
The Greek version of coleslaw is amazing also - And i have grown up in Australia with many Lebanese friends - and this is very much how they make Malfouf - it is great on a kebab with toom , charcoal cooked potato , pickled turnip and cucumbers Taboulieh - with a sprinkle of zatar and sumac plus fresh lemon juice - can even add some falafel to the kebab
Love it. Will try the last 2.
Great video! This has really helped me up my slaw game, I tried the Lebanese slaw it was something else, thanks for the great content!
Possibly one of the best cole slaws I ever had was like thai basil & mint leaves in there. So so good!
basil & mint ? that sounds Levant/Mediterranean :O
I'm from Lebanon and i never heard of this recipe 😅 although good job andong. I loved you hummus episodes.
Wow thank you that was sooo interesting I just came across your page and found it very informative so will be making some Cole slaw cheers
Thank you for this video. I love coleslaw. I can’t wait to try the variations you have provided.
I can't wait to try all of these -- one at a time, though.
Love to see the Burmese "salad". Good to see something from my homeland!
very good presentation. First of your videos I've seen. Keep it up!
I think I am in love with your channel, including the comments. It’s like a little foodie paradise.
Good video. Some helpful tips for a true "Southern Coleslaw". Instead of vinegar try pickle juice, either bread & butter, or sweet & spicy pickle juice. Use a "Southern" or sweet mayonnaise like Duke's. It really makes a difference, & because its already sweet, there is no need for sugar. A fun addition is a simple bacon aioli, which pairs well with the sweet mayonnaise, & pickle juice. Another good addition is some quality tangy mustard, which adds a good contrast. Lastly pre-mix all the "sauce" ingredients & let the sit for 20 minutes to 1 hour to let the flavorless meld, before adding the cabbage
really love to see burmese salad reviewing by a cool youtuber... finally
Omg genius about adding the salt. I always massage my cabbage to break it down, so happy to learn this trick. Thanks!
You made this way more entertaining then i expected! awesome job had to subscribe.
The cabbage core has been a favorite snack of mine since I was a kid. Crunchy and peppery.
Yes, it's not fibrous, just more firm.
I used to hate coleslaw until my family started making an asian inspired one. It had so many bright flavors and umami. But what really convinced me to try it in the first place is when my mom put the fried ramen on top when serving. So damn good. I need to ask her what's in it. Now I'll eat cabbage basically in anyform Great video by the way!
Love cabbage , great ideas !!! Thank you ...
Very informative and love having some new takes on cabbage!
Hello
I loved your reaction when you r eating German version coleslaw. Lol what a gd reaction 😂😂😂
When he slammed the fork 🤣
I was like "wow, for an American he pronounces Krautsalat extremely well" - then I realized this was filmed in Germany and Andong is German (?) :D
He is. :)
That's funny, as an American his accent is very apparent to me, though it's not that strong, maybe from lots of traveling around the world? At 5:55 the second time he says "delicious" is like a perfect West coast American accent.
It's always waaay easier to spot an accent if u hear ur native language - in German I would only need 3-4 words and I could tell where someone is from as well. But listening to this dude speaking my 2nd language/English - it's hard for me to pinpoint that he's German too oO
You're right guys, of course if you listen closely to details you can spot he is not a native speaker. I still think his pronounciation is quite good, it lacks the cliché hard German "z" sound when speaking a "th".
@penguins inadiorama I'm pretty sure that in the Doktorskaya kolbasa video he said he was born in the USSR
This channel is rly awesome! I love the history videos and the comparisons of dishes. Cool approach, keep it up :)
You're hands down the most entertaining cook in youtube. You deserve a couple million subscribers.
Tonight I made the Lebanese Malouf for my wife & I - it was fantastic!
Sorry to be a smartass: It's Malfuf and not Malouf. Malfuf means cabbage in lebanese dialect. Malouf is a family name. There is a great cook and cookbook-writer named Greg Malouf: Australian with Lebanese roots.
@@telekhal amin maalouf 👍
Yes, “Latt Thoke” you said it right. We called it “Gawbi Thoke” here. Much appreciate from Myanmar! 🇲🇲 😎🤘🏽
So glad I found this channel, love your videos!
Hello
Ohhh!! I'm going to make all of these recipes!! Looks delicious!!!😍
This has the same topic but opposite energy as the ysac “bangin’ coleslaw” episode
came from the krupuk video, stayed for the quality
Thanks and welcome! :D
My heritage is german and I am absolutely going to try the Krautsalat.
there is a mexican Cole slaw too that I learned to make living in phoenix Arizona that is awesome, cabbage, shredded carrot, lime, juice salt, cilantro, chili flakes, cumin powder, white vinegar, diced scallions, diced garlic cloves ,puree avocado sauce.