It always fascinates me watching chefs working the wok, it's so hot so things cook really fast and more surprisingly I haven't really seen any chefs taste their food, I think because they did it so many times they know by the time, color or smell if the food is right or not.. amazing.
as one should for anything delicious. I can't stand people scarfing down gourmet food. Might as well eat trash if you're gonna swallow it in 5 seconds. There's a difference to eating for enjoyment and eating for sustenance. No different to gulping down $100 wine. You can gulp $5 wine just the same why pay more and bypass savouring.
@@JC-wf8iw Knorr's chicken powder is more for chicken stock, hot pots etc.. If you want real chicken powder then grab some Ko-Lee, they do instant noodles but they also do the chicken powder sachets. I've used them in both noddles and fried rice and it's absolutely gorgeous🤤
I don't know ya'll. Expensive fried rice is maybe only marginally better than properly cooked fried rice. I've had $12 fried rice and $80 fried rice but I barely remember the $80 one ( I just remember how much it cost!)
Absolutely, you hit it on the nail matey. Fun fact : Fried rice is originally a leftover dish; you fried the rice which you cooked too much the day before with whatever is in the fridge. Have a good day.
nah you just got scammed by the 80dollar rice. if you live in china, fried rice made by the street restaurant vs the one in the high end palace restaurants, even with the exact same fried rice it will be night and day.
@@ahlapski actually many high end restuarants use freshly cooked rice to make fried rice because leftover rice lost some of its aroma and flavor. The chef usually uses less water to cook the rice though.
5$ for the ingredients 45$ for buying next gallon of cooking oil. 0.5 $ for cooking. 0.25 $ for serving presentation. 0.25$ for ther chef for standing and supporting him throughout the process.
there are families of four that eat for a whole month for 46 dollars here in Brazil, and interestingly enough, their diet consist of most of the ingredients in this fried rice: rice, beans, eggs and common vegetables - with luck some ground beef once a week
@Jas Zho when I go to India I prefer to eat the street food real food what the locals eat I have been to the expensive restraunts all it Is is the decor presentation the food is no where as tasty as the cheap stuff what the majority treat themselves too
@@andrewooi82 see, i thought they were peas too at first cuz i was on mobile, but blowing it up in 4k on a computer and i dunno man... that's a fucked up looking pea. any idea what kind of pea that would be? looks like the green end of green onions to me still... or maybe even like tiny little chops of haricot verts. not tryin to argue about it, just tryin to learn something new or figure out if im crazy.
@@egoomega Americans would call it peas I think but in actual fact he's using a kind of long green bean or type of French bean. They are usually chopped up like that if used in fried rice. Not common to blanch for fried rice as you can usually cook as is but blanched greens beans usually look brighter or so they say. Edit: yes could also be haricot verts.
You can hardly tell the difference. It does have slight difference in texture and stronger beef aroma, but you won't notice the difference while eating fried rice. You can't even tell the difference of fresh and overnight ingredients while eating fried rice, much less a wagyu and normal beef.
@@cyclopsvision6370 i commented the answer of your question. but i will just copy paste it again here : do you know why meat is cooked for just few seconds? because chef would cook it AGAIN together with rice. the result is tender and chewy not hard and burnt like some amateur who attempted to cook asian fried rice with meat in it.
@@cyclopsvision6370 usually i use half cooked meat method for cheaper ingredients like boneless chicken breast or bit expnsive one like goat meat for middle eastern style. that way, meaty flavor will seep through the rice.
The person paying $46 for this fried rice doesn't care about the Wagyu beef or foie gras. They only care about telling their friends and social media that they paid $46 for fried rice.
That cooking set up with the double domed stainless geometry is expensive to build... and how it goes to that linear drain... someone said we are going to make the perfect cooking station and we will spare no expense.... Beautiful serving bowl at the end. But the chef is the best part.... amazing skills and to see him manhandle that large wok with not much leverage and a small cloth.... thats like Bruce Lee level tendon strength.... What a great video..
Yes.. but treat yourself once in a while with gourmet food such as this.. wagyu, lobster and/or foie gras is simply divine.. good quality truffle as well. Expensive caviar and edible gold is where i draw the line.. never got to taste genuine saffron so i dunno if the price is justified
@@zenmaster8826 >but treat yourself once in a while >wagyu, lobster and/or foie gras is simply divine yo who the FUCK has that kind of money on this economy? I cant even find a job to pay the bills bro and your talking bout lobster wagyu and shit i cant even spell......
@@maoduida387 It doesn’t have to be food..nor does it have to be expensive.. but afford yourself some luxury in a stressful world otherwise you’ll go crazy… Treat yourself to one of your guilty pleasures once in a while.. you deserve it. My guilty pleasure is food..😄
The wonderful thing about Aden is how his films have no commentary - besides the gaze of the camera work, so to speak. It really allows the atmosphere of the restaurants and kitchens to breathe.
It's really hard to make perfect FRIED RICE even though it looks so simple. The general principle is to keep it hot, avoid adding water which can cool the food and stirring it a lot so it doesn't stick and burn.. 🧑🍳
You can laugh about the price and all that as much as you want - I am happy to see this, I would have always been curious what's the difference to demand this amount of money. Thank you for showing!
Pretty sure what makes this high end fried rice is the foie gras and wagyu. I'm not sure if wagyu retains its signature fattiness when you cook it in small cuts like that, however.
@@canhandletruth Wagyu is definitely from Japan, but unless there was something on captions that I had turned off I didn't know what any of the ingredients were I imagine the comment you're responding to was just guessing.
@@thaloh It's ground wagyu. You can get that for like 6 bucks a lb at Sams club lol. Even if it was a Japanese A5 wagyu steak cut up into bits, he's using like 2 ounces, which would be like ~10 bucks at most. Add in 2 ounces of foie gras for like 5 bucks and that's 15 bucks worth of ingredients he's using at the most. I'd say realistically it's only like 10 bucks though plus 36 for the prestige.
@@Albion101 honestly most restaurants dont have this kind of margin. Only high end ones. But just the guy i responded to seems to think cause they are "high end" ingredients, it must be expensive. But I'm just saying he is using so little of it, it still doesnt cost much.
It takes four times time more than regular fired rice, that's why it worths four times more. Separating yolk and white is the key to enhance the aroma of fried rice, but takes more time to cook.
I make lots of fried rice, but I didn't know making a fancy fried rice would require some extra tools, bit of xtra steps, fire controls and oil. That is indeed one proper looking rice, a respectful one, and I wont add other opinion about the price as it isn't the point xD
I'm not saying it's worth it but not all rices are common or have the same price, obviously. But again, fried rice indeed doesn't need fancy rice. That's the spirit of this dish.
$20 rent $6 the gimmick of having wagyu and foie gras in it $10 actual cost of the wagyu and foie gras $10 cost of a typical "decent" fried rice Just kidding. Perhaps $15 rent, and put the remaining $5 into Chef's skill. That was pretty well done.
we make the high end fried rice at our store too. the different is we use a different soy sauce and we put alittle of it so u can taste all the union, green union and the beef on it. but our price is at 30 not 46
@@pheddupp lard definitely, maximum flavour minimum amount needed and until recent times was the go to choice in nearly every culture, sesame should never be cooked with as it's far to delicate so you garnish with it like spring onions, use rapeseed for a good fried flavour if you need options.
Chinese food is the most sophisticated food on the planet. It takes so much skill to produce good wok hei. Let alone timing on every ingredient add at the exact moment it needs to be added. Way to many variables to dive into. I’m a white guy that loves this style of cooking and have worked in a lot of French kitchens. The last 27 plus years experience in the kitchen wok cooking takes the cake in all categories of different cuisine. This type of cooking is an art hands down.
Sofisticato??? questa è la cosa più assurda che ho letto oggi. La vera cucina è quella Italiana che viene copiata in tutto il mondo. Ce la invidiate tutti
I see the ingredients listed above, but i don't see anywhere mentioned the white powder he put in...it is in a small dish next to the wall by the soy sauce. Please tell me that is not MSG.
I already see in my head how this is going lmao. Trash the fancy foie gras and little ass wagyu for the entire duration of the video but praise the wok skill of the chef lol.
That's actually the proper way of doing stir fry. You see many chefs cooking with flames shooting up. When that happens, either the heat is too high or there is too much oil. Usually both. People usually have flames shooting up, because they want to get many done in short amount of time, so they can make more money. But if you charge as much as his restaurant does, you can take the time to do it correctly. So, if you are watching this to stir fry at home, learn from this chef, not the guys who do fire works with their wok.
That's gotta be $46 Hong Kong dollars (less than $6.00 USD) because there is no way that a simple dish like that is worth anymore--no matter who makes it.
It always fascinates me watching chefs working the wok, it's so hot so things cook really fast and more surprisingly I haven't really seen any chefs taste their food, I think because they did it so many times they know by the time, color or smell if the food is right or not.. amazing.
He’s a sifu nam sayin
@@CupContender hahahahah
You get to the point where you know roughly how much seasoning for one serving by eye. Salt and heavy while sugar is much lighter by volume.
I think their ancestor cooking spirit whispered in his ear "enough for the salt..." ; and he stops. :P
everytime u see a chef, he is on camera
He treated that fried rice like it was 46 dollars at the end. So carefully eaten.
as one should for anything delicious. I can't stand people scarfing down gourmet food. Might as well eat trash if you're gonna swallow it in 5 seconds. There's a difference to eating for enjoyment and eating for sustenance. No different to gulping down $100 wine. You can gulp $5 wine just the same why pay more and bypass savouring.
😛
46 Hong Kong dollars is about 6 euros, US dollars.
@@szendreimihaly1986 The bill showed 338HKD. $46 is USD.
It also had foie gras and wagyu. Would’ve probably been even more expensive in the states
yay you are in Hong Kong now, looks forward to more Hong Kong food video
For 46$ you better scoop the rest of that rice into the bowl! 😆 🤣
Hahaha
ㅋㅋㅋㅋ 😂🤷♀️
Serve with that wok pan
@@sansworld which hopefully you can take home after you’ve finished
@@discovery91 👍😂
yeah, it's just stupid at this point, people have too much money to spend and dont know what to do with it anymore, incredible.
He really turn that fried rice into FRIED rice
yeah I noticed that too.
What?
😅
all you have to know the secret ingredient for this rice was chicken powder haha!
Is there any particular brand you like the most? Lee kum kee?
@@dioricergy6931 Knorr
@@JC-wf8iw Knorr's chicken powder is more for chicken stock, hot pots etc..
If you want real chicken powder then grab some Ko-Lee, they do instant noodles but they also do the chicken powder sachets. I've used them in both noddles and fried rice and it's absolutely gorgeous🤤
@@dioricergy6931 try Lee Kuan Yew
The colors in the kitchen make it so pleasant and calm lol
Look at that signature knee kick to the knob. That's how a experienced Hong Kong chef does
I don't know ya'll. Expensive fried rice is maybe only marginally better than properly cooked fried rice. I've had $12 fried rice and $80 fried rice but I barely remember the $80 one ( I just remember how much it cost!)
once you eat pishori, its a type of rice. The rest will pale in comparison
Absolutely, you hit it on the nail matey.
Fun fact : Fried rice is originally a leftover dish; you fried the rice which you cooked too much the day before with whatever is in the fridge.
Have a good day.
nah you just got scammed by the 80dollar rice.
if you live in china, fried rice made by the street restaurant vs the one in the high end palace restaurants, even with the exact same fried rice it will be night and day.
@@ahlapski actually many high end restuarants use freshly cooked rice to make fried rice because leftover rice lost some of its aroma and flavor. The chef usually uses less water to cook the rice though.
Have u eat over $200 fried rice?
This is probably the longest I’ve ever seen someone fry rice. I would love to try it.
I was thinking the same thing.
If the fire is on all the time while he stir it, the rice would not be edible, it will be tough as rock
Imagine he had to wok 100 per day. If the steam rice cook perfectly then he would have less work
@@odjsjaks if u truly think that then u dont know how to cook lol
Parabéns... Vcs são nota mil.... Murdhock de Guarulhos SP Brasil
Love watching the technique
5$ for the ingredients
45$ for buying next gallon of cooking oil.
0.5 $ for cooking.
0.25 $ for serving presentation.
0.25$ for ther chef for standing and supporting him throughout the process.
he used Wagyu and foie gras, I doubt you can get the ingredients for $5.
there are families of four that eat for a whole month for 46 dollars here in Brazil, and interestingly enough, their diet consist of most of the ingredients in this fried rice: rice, beans, eggs and common vegetables - with luck some ground beef once a week
You left out the wagyu beef and foie grois, the two most expensive ingredients lol.
Come to the conclusion.
@Jas Zho when I go to India I prefer to eat the street food real food what the locals eat I have been to the expensive restraunts all it
Is is the decor presentation the food is no where as tasty as the cheap stuff what the majority treat themselves too
@@andrewooi82 see, i thought they were peas too at first cuz i was on mobile, but blowing it up in 4k on a computer and i dunno man... that's a fucked up looking pea. any idea what kind of pea that would be? looks like the green end of green onions to me still... or maybe even like tiny little chops of haricot verts. not tryin to argue about it, just tryin to learn something new or figure out if im crazy.
@@egoomega Americans would call it peas I think but in actual fact he's using a kind of long green bean or type of French bean. They are usually chopped up like that if used in fried rice. Not common to blanch for fried rice as you can usually cook as is but blanched greens beans usually look brighter or so they say.
Edit: yes could also be haricot verts.
Glad to see Quang Tran doing ok these days, “QUICKTIME! That’ll be $46 my guy! Hahaha 😃 “
"food and money is a beautiful thing, dont you think?"
He was super pumped to make the fried rice
Lmao 🤣🤣
Order 69 your order is ready my g
holy shit my name is Quang Tran. How do you know me?!?
All these videos by expert chefs make me hungry. Hats off!
I mean, does shredded wagyu meat taste much better than an shredded usual meat?
Not at all
You can hardly tell the difference. It does have slight difference in texture and stronger beef aroma, but you won't notice the difference while eating fried rice.
You can't even tell the difference of fresh and overnight ingredients while eating fried rice, much less a wagyu and normal beef.
the wagyu gets lost in the sea of rice, and it was cooked separately, so the beef flavor was never incorporated into the rice anyways.
@@cyclopsvision6370 i commented the answer of your question. but i will just copy paste it again here : do you know why meat is cooked for just few seconds? because chef would cook it AGAIN together with rice. the result is tender and chewy not hard and burnt like some amateur who attempted to cook asian fried rice with meat in it.
@@cyclopsvision6370 usually i use half cooked meat method for cheaper ingredients like boneless chicken breast or bit expnsive one like goat meat for middle eastern style. that way, meaty flavor will seep through the rice.
The person paying $46 for this fried rice doesn't care about the Wagyu beef or foie gras. They only care about telling their friends and social media that they paid $46 for fried rice.
And?
bla bla bla
Take sometime off social media my guy
I love fried rice , and I would honestly pay $46 jut to try
Go spend 46 bucks on a new piece of mind man
That cooking set up with the double domed stainless geometry is expensive to build... and how it goes to that linear drain... someone said we are going to make the perfect cooking station and we will spare no expense....
Beautiful serving bowl at the end.
But the chef is the best part.... amazing skills and to see him manhandle that large wok with not much leverage and a small cloth.... thats like Bruce Lee level tendon strength.... What a great video..
thats one of the cleaniest kitchens I have ever seen.
Chef:Ok! Thats $50!
CZcams:With some ingredients that fell... $46 its is!
Yeah thata weird right? Where the heck did $46 come from? It was $50.
But that rice with service charge was actually $47.4, the rest is for the tea.
Fried Rice with chicken is still some of the best food-to-go that you can get to this day.. So fast and delicious aswell.
Yes.. but treat yourself once in a while with gourmet food such as this.. wagyu, lobster and/or foie gras is simply divine.. good quality truffle as well. Expensive caviar and edible gold is where i draw the line.. never got to taste genuine saffron so i dunno if the price is justified
@@zenmaster8826 >but treat yourself once in a while
>wagyu, lobster and/or foie gras is simply divine
yo who the FUCK has that kind of money on this economy? I cant even find a job to pay the bills bro and your talking bout lobster wagyu and shit i cant even spell......
@@maoduida387
It doesn’t have to be food..nor does it have to be expensive.. but afford yourself some luxury in a stressful world otherwise you’ll go crazy… Treat yourself to one of your guilty pleasures once in a while.. you deserve it.
My guilty pleasure is food..😄
Haven't been in Hong Kong in 3 years due to Covid. I miss the food. Thanks for the video.
I would try it considering the work he puts into it.
The wonderful thing about Aden is how his films have no commentary - besides the gaze of the camera work, so to speak. It really allows the atmosphere of the restaurants and kitchens to breathe.
💯
It's really hard to make perfect FRIED RICE even though it looks so simple. The general principle is to keep it hot, avoid adding water which can cool the food and stirring it a lot so it doesn't stick and burn.. 🧑🍳
It is easy. Don’t get misled. The key point is to have a strong and professional stove! That’s it.
It's... extremely easy. Just remember two things: don't add random things in there and use overnight leftover rice
@@tinggu1506 True👍
Which planet you come from where people add water to fried rice?
stirring a lot is essential technique to remove the moisture and make it fluffy and dry, lose, not wet and sticky.
Welcome to HK and hope you enjoy your stay!
Love your content!
We need @Uncle Roger to review this!! 😃😃
You can laugh about the price and all that as much as you want - I am happy to see this, I would have always been curious what's the difference to demand this amount of money. Thank you for showing!
its the wagyu beef
Considering there is Wagyu and Foie Gras in it, the price isn't that crazy.
@@Mjhavok there's very little wagyu and foie gras in that clay pot. the star ingredient in fried rice is rice, not the meats.
@@EightCore Noone grinds wagyu unless they scammin
Never had Wagyu beef Patties?
This guy is a master
Why use a soup spoon for eating rice?
The rice was cultivated on mars.
I'll order this fried rice next time when I am in town.
for $46? 😂😂
@@christian-zs8uy yo he showing the ingredients and how to cook it, might as well make one at home.. maybe he wants the real vibe tho
incredible!
Thanks for the video! It worth every grains of rice....looks delicious.
Wow amazing food tour 💓 thanks for the effort you put in this video really enjoyed watching 👍
You scared the hell out of that guy in the hat at the end 😅
I’m not sure about his wok, the oil seems to be pearling (gathering in droplets and rivulets) like the wok is not properly seasoned?
this guy is the master of getting ripped off. respect
You can tell the person at the end freaked out a little 😄
Pretty sure what makes this high end fried rice is the foie gras and wagyu. I'm not sure if wagyu retains its signature fattiness when you cook it in small cuts like that, however.
definitely not
Yeah with regular ingredients it's probably a 15 dollar fancy from the technique.
Why would somebody use an expensive beef for fried rice? They could just use ground pork, right?
Wagyu and Foie gras is a white thing. Try sharkfin, birdness and abalone.
@@canhandletruth Wagyu is definitely from Japan, but unless there was something on captions that I had turned off I didn't know what any of the ingredients were I imagine the comment you're responding to was just guessing.
Great techniques.
Tender-loving care fried rice to appeal to the gastronomic palate!
The way he's working that wok is kinda mesmerizing lol
Yo~ Ming Court is a Michelin 3 star bistro, the $46 price tag is unsurprising
It has foie gras AND wagyu. $46 is about right.
@@thaloh It's ground wagyu. You can get that for like 6 bucks a lb at Sams club lol. Even if it was a Japanese A5 wagyu steak cut up into bits, he's using like 2 ounces, which would be like ~10 bucks at most. Add in 2 ounces of foie gras for like 5 bucks and that's 15 bucks worth of ingredients he's using at the most. I'd say realistically it's only like 10 bucks though plus 36 for the prestige.
HK$ 46 is only us$5 you need to say what $ it is
@@PoolamRules if you gonna breakdown every ingredients by cost in every meal, you’ll never be dining out again.
@@Albion101 honestly most restaurants dont have this kind of margin. Only high end ones. But just the guy i responded to seems to think cause they are "high end" ingredients, it must be expensive. But I'm just saying he is using so little of it, it still doesnt cost much.
Hongkong food quality is amazing.
I luv their roast goose…….
Artist ❤
Un bellissimo piatto👍👏
I love these hellish portals they use in asia for cooking. Like i'm just waiting for frodo to throw the one ring into that thing xD
its only in restaurants and certain rural areas in china, though i do wish we all had it lol
Best way I’ve heard that described
It's a jet engine from a F35
I love fried rice...
that climax was everything
I love the sound of those infernal wok burners.
Sounds like a dragon taking a puke.
It takes four times time more than regular fired rice, that's why it worths four times more. Separating yolk and white is the key to enhance the aroma of fried rice, but takes more time to cook.
It’s four times more because it has wagyu beef. That’s the main reason
It costs 4 more because it uses 100x the amount of gas
Honestly
He took so much time to work on those flips
I would like to try it
I make lots of fried rice, but I didn't know making a fancy fried rice would require some extra tools, bit of xtra steps, fire controls and oil. That is indeed one proper looking rice, a respectful one, and I wont add other opinion about the price as it isn't the point xD
the only reason this High-end fried rice cost $46 with these Low-end ingredients, is because it's in Hong Kong.
Capitalism in its finest
Pretty standard way for cooking a good fried rice
I think I would like to come and join Aden for a food crawl next time I visit HK.
I'm surprised he didn't fry the plate.
Yeah, you throw in expensive ingredients and it becomes expensive. The fried rice itself is relatively common
I'm not saying it's worth it but not all rices are common or have the same price, obviously. But again, fried rice indeed doesn't need fancy rice. That's the spirit of this dish.
The ingredients aren’t expensive.
yummy 😋
Worth every penny!
Sohai
So it’s the foie gras and wagyu that make it $46? I guess…as long as the wagyu isn’t overcooked or something.
No. It's the rent.
$20 rent
$6 the gimmick of having wagyu and foie gras in it
$10 actual cost of the wagyu and foie gras
$10 cost of a typical "decent" fried rice
Just kidding. Perhaps $15 rent, and put the remaining $5 into Chef's skill. That was pretty well done.
My parents would kill me if I told them I payed 46 dollars for fried rice😂😂. They would say I wasted $46 when I can get it free at home😅
Better you delete this 😤
realistically you paid 5$ for the fried rice and 40$ for the wagyu and 1$ for the tea lol
Most of the wok masters I've seen bring all ingredients with the spatula, and only the rice portioned out. Looks cooler to me
God seeing this reminds me how much i suck at wok tossing when i make egg fried rice i always share with the kitchen floor
No BBQ sauce was used in this video. It's normally light and dark soy sauce used. Maybe sometimes uses mushroom soy sauce along with XO sauce.
Amazing. I'd pay $10 for it.
even less
hypebeast of fried rice.
0:27 is that the lookout/security keeping six incase someone tried to steal the fried rice?
we make the high end fried rice at our store too. the different is we use a different soy sauce and we put alittle of it so u can taste all the union, green union and the beef on it. but our price is at 30 not 46
What type of cooking oil is the best to use when making fried rice? Vegetable oil, lard, or sesame oil, etc.
@@pheddupp lard definitely, maximum flavour minimum amount needed and until recent times was the go to choice in nearly every culture, sesame should never be cooked with as it's far to delicate so you garnish with it like spring onions, use rapeseed for a good fried flavour if you need options.
@@pheddupp honestly for me i use soybean oil. i use it at work and home. and dont use sesame oil the smell of sesame overkill the fried rice taste
@@MsKristy1001 Thanks for responding to my question, I will use soybean oil as well.
what is the name of your store?
Chinese food is the most sophisticated food on the planet. It takes so much skill to produce good wok hei. Let alone timing on every ingredient add at the exact moment it needs to be added. Way to many variables to dive into. I’m a white guy that loves this style of cooking and have worked in a lot of French kitchens. The last 27 plus years experience in the kitchen wok cooking takes the cake in all categories of different cuisine. This type of cooking is an art hands down.
You got it right! Respect to the Chinese. Btw it particularly the Cantonese dishes that's the epitome of food art.
No doubt !
@@waterfoker8558 please try some Huai Yang cuisine as well
Sofisticato??? questa è la cosa più assurda che ho letto oggi. La vera cucina è quella Italiana che viene copiata in tutto il mondo. Ce la invidiate tutti
Requires a lot of coordination, especially when the on/off lever for the heat is at his feet 7:03.
Yup. Wow.
What was the beige powder he added towards the end?
LOL...the title should be "Overpaying for an $8 dollar fried rice"!
I don’t like your profile picture
Read the ingredients
Nah mate not overpaying you just poor
I Can't Wait for Uncle Rodger to react to this one.
Thought the same thing 😂
I see the ingredients listed above, but i don't see anywhere mentioned the white powder he put in...it is in a small dish next to the wall by the soy sauce. Please tell me that is not MSG.
Ok…I’m just here for the fried rice…and some tea of course 🤷🏻♂️ 😁
Uncle Roger has to see this. 😀
Agree with you Uncle Roger does me to see this.
I already see in my head how this is going lmao. Trash the fancy foie gras and little ass wagyu for the entire duration of the video but praise the wok skill of the chef lol.
He ain't allowed in hong kong
係人都知道好食既炒飯肯定係大排檔啦….酒店炒飯屬於搞笑性質,上到檯都涼曬
Looks just like any fried rice, what's so special about it? (other than the foie gras and waguy beef)
Isn't this normal price? Koi palace charges about 45 bucks for fried rice.. up to 60
Perhaps the high $46 was also chefs' fee for allowing him in the kitchen filming lol!
Had the same fried rice look from my office back alley for 3.80, with free ice lemon tea 😅
with Foie Gras and wagyu Beef?
Why i see this things during midnight 😩
Damn, that's a fierce dragon!
Need uncle roger's approval!!
the headchef is a legend .. as a chef myself .. he is a real pro..
American chefs is easier and less work
That's actually the proper way of doing stir fry. You see many chefs cooking with flames shooting up. When that happens, either the heat is too high or there is too much oil. Usually both. People usually have flames shooting up, because they want to get many done in short amount of time, so they can make more money. But if you charge as much as his restaurant does, you can take the time to do it correctly. So, if you are watching this to stir fry at home, learn from this chef, not the guys who do fire works with their wok.
Poetry in motion
The noise of the wok being taken off that flame is like a dragon. So impressive.
His consistency in cooking the fried rice is worth the cost. Other places can vary depending on the cook that day.
You determined that from watching 1 video?
Waygu foie Gras...I'd say 46 bucks is a good deal and the care that man put into the rice, hes a wok star
美味そう~
That rice was fried into oblivion. So dry, you"ll need a lot of tea of beer to get that down.
That's gotta be $46 Hong Kong dollars (less than $6.00 USD) because there is no way that a simple dish like that is worth anymore--no matter who makes it.
it's not
USD46.
In Japan,you are able to have it for about 5💲.
日本なら5ドルで食べれるよ
Sensational