Finding The Best Curry House In London | Food Tours | Food Insider

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  • čas přidán 8. 05. 2024
  • "Food Wars" hosts Harry Kersh and Joe Avella travel across London to find the best curry house in the city. They'll be visiting four different locations in just one day to see what the city has to offer. This is "Food Tours."
    00:00 - Tayyabs
    07:21 - Curry Bazaar
    16:57 - Punjab Indian Restaurant
    22:58 - Spice Village
    31:30 - Credits
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    #Curry #London #foodtours #insiderfood
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    Finding The Best Curry House In London | Food Tours | Food Insider

Komentáře • 1K

  • @DG-hb8ob
    @DG-hb8ob Před měsícem +669

    Long story short for the non-brits. As a British-Indian, a lot of our grandparents migrated to the UK after WW2, and a second influx in the 60's, to help bolster the British economy. Despite being in this new environment, we we were in touch with our Indian food and continued making it in our houses. British locals and neighbours could smell the curries we were cooking and were intrigued, they began knocking on our doors asking to see what we were cooking, try the food, to our surprise they really liked it! Indians then began hosting the local British community and neighbours for meals in their houses, and selling curry pastes through knock-door sales. The demand became so big, we eventually burst onto the restaurant scene, and the rest is history. Indian food culture in the UK is probably the same equivalent as the Mexican food culture in US.

    • @ukbloke28
      @ukbloke28 Před měsícem +21

      "to help bolster the British economy" - im sure it did do that, but it wasn't their motivation - they moved here for their own benefit. the outcome is one of mutual benefit, therefore, so do stop trying to twist what happened.

    • @tomhay5516
      @tomhay5516 Před měsícem +108

      ​@@ukbloke28Google Windrush lad, people from the commonwealth were encouraged to move to help rebuild the country.

    • @ukbloke28
      @ukbloke28 Před měsícem +4

      @@tomhay5516 I obviously know about windrush you patronising tw.t. Are you saying tht the people that came over did it as charity, or did they benefit too? In which case in what way are you refuting my point? Lad.

    • @Mrsolpjh
      @Mrsolpjh Před měsícem +80

      ​@@ukbloke28 they were writing it from the perspective of the UK government who put the policy in place to help rebuild the economy. It's pretty obvious that people came over for their own benefit, as does anyone who immigrated somewhere. They weren't 'twisting' anything about history.

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 Před měsícem +17

      The first Indian restaurant in England opened around 1815.

  • @Regarl_
    @Regarl_ Před měsícem +204

    I love that Harry said that saying "Naan bread" is like saying "bread bread". I instantly thought about Spiderman: Across the Spiderverse and Pavitr saying that.

    • @kismetau
      @kismetau Před měsícem +12

      same goes for Chai Tea - Tea Tea 😅

    • @citizenpb
      @citizenpb Před 14 dny +1

      Curry Sauce = Sauce Sauce

  • @ALANL4460
    @ALANL4460 Před měsícem +517

    Highlight of the month when Joe and Harry do food tours. Can we get a show where they travel the world eating local dishes together

    • @APeekBehindTheCurtain
      @APeekBehindTheCurtain Před měsícem +1

      Well Insider did actually do this ages ago in Italy and all that. Here's hoping they actually do do it.

    • @briecheezy4119
      @briecheezy4119 Před měsícem +6

      I'd watch that if it was Joe and Harry. Would love it if they start with a country just over their borders and work their way down so Mexico and France respectively!

    • @marcellberki7545
      @marcellberki7545 Před měsícem

      Keep the message at the top,dont overlook the power of the crowd

    • @briandavis9952
      @briandavis9952 Před měsícem

      its called food wars clown

    • @scottmatthew9605
      @scottmatthew9605 Před měsícem

      I hope they get on in person, you never know

  • @ReallyNotThatFunnyy
    @ReallyNotThatFunnyy Před měsícem +493

    This show really fills the Buzzfeed "Worth It" hole that's in my heart

    • @trapalexx7304
      @trapalexx7304 Před měsícem +16

      Tbh I dont know y they even stop, it was a hit n they should've kept it going 😅😅

    • @etmccaus
      @etmccaus Před měsícem +6

      same here!

    • @pamlegaspi
      @pamlegaspi Před měsícem

      @@trapalexx7304 steven, andrew and adam are launching a new 'worth it' type food show over at their youtube, watcher very soon!

    • @naufalhusain1571
      @naufalhusain1571 Před měsícem +29

      Same! Kinda miss Andrew Steven and Adam so bad

    • @Nooticus
      @Nooticus Před měsícem +1

      agreed

  • @ShoelessJP
    @ShoelessJP Před měsícem +1435

    "Can you just stop colonizing for like five minutes?", I spit out my coffee hearing this... keep up the great work Harry and Joe!

    • @GenXBecks
      @GenXBecks Před měsícem +64

      Hawaii loudly clears their throat!

    • @ashtonmendez9366
      @ashtonmendez9366 Před měsícem +3

      Perfect 😂

    • @WeAreThePeople1690
      @WeAreThePeople1690 Před měsícem +25

      Think he needs to remember there is no Oil there, his country wouldn't be interested in taking it over 😉

    • @prachisaini1
      @prachisaini1 Před měsícem +13

      Speaks who American?

    • @user-yv2cz8oj1k
      @user-yv2cz8oj1k Před měsícem +30

      The Indian restaurants in the UK were set up by people from Bangladesh we let into the UK due to flooding and poverty who stayed.
      No colonising involved in it.

  • @wildwine6400
    @wildwine6400 Před měsícem +506

    After WW2, England allowed many many families from places like India, Bangladesh and Pakistan to come into the country to help rebuild the economy. This played a huge part in many curry houses being set up in places like London and Birmingham which were hit hard by the war

    • @tony_5156
      @tony_5156 Před měsícem +6

      Very interesting!

    • @kananamin304
      @kananamin304 Před měsícem +46

      allowed? colonizers and allowed colonized people?

    • @richtenx
      @richtenx Před měsícem +51

      @@kananamin304 yes allowed. problem?

    • @kananamin304
      @kananamin304 Před měsícem +38

      @@richtenx yes. I do have problem with word allowed here. History is proof of how allowing the colonizers were.

    • @saikrishnathiwakarrk
      @saikrishnathiwakarrk Před měsícem +4

      ​@@kananamin304 i guess he meant it in a way of using what ever is at there disposal ,and yes india and pakistan and all the colonized countires where still under Britain control till the 1947,1948 and so on. The allowed the rebuild to happen and then probably most of them settled there after the independences of the countries.

  • @08mlascelles
    @08mlascelles Před měsícem +297

    I used to know someone who would always insist on going to a curry house for a meal out, but he didn't like curry, and would order ham, egg and chips EVERY TIME! To this day I find that truly baffling.

    • @neiluk1470
      @neiluk1470 Před měsícem +20

      Legend

    • @frequentclearance9641
      @frequentclearance9641 Před měsícem +15

      Vibes are different at a curry house

    • @bryansmith9431
      @bryansmith9431 Před měsícem +6

      Take them to Waffle Curry House for that.

    • @martin96991
      @martin96991 Před měsícem +6

      Maybe because he go to the wrong curry house? Run by a Pakistani or Bangladeshi and named it as INDIAN?

    • @richard8331
      @richard8331 Před měsícem +17

      "I want the blandest thing on the menu"

  • @KillerTacos54
    @KillerTacos54 Před měsícem +105

    I’m actually blown away by how well researched Harry is. Massive respect man. The banter between these two legends always makes me smile

  • @benjaminaulakh4734
    @benjaminaulakh4734 Před měsícem +100

    Every British Asian Londoner has their views about the best Indian places in London, but I'd say its hard to say you've experienced the best without going to Southall, which is full of amazing North Indian places, like Roxys and Omis, which have to be good to survive the really stiff competition, and serve amazing and truly authentic home-style Indian food. Then Bombay Brasserie and Bombay Palace around Shaftesbury Avenue serve really high quality, restaurant style Indian. Laguna in Ealing is also another outstanding place.

    • @sentientarugula2884
      @sentientarugula2884 Před měsícem +2

      If you had to give your favourite, what would it be?

    • @benjaminaulakh4734
      @benjaminaulakh4734 Před měsícem +6

      @@sentientarugula2884 Bombay Palace, which has the best Lamb Rogan Josh I've ever tasted.

    • @hectorwright4550
      @hectorwright4550 Před měsícem +3

      Thoughts on dishoom?

    • @sentientarugula2884
      @sentientarugula2884 Před měsícem +3

      @@benjaminaulakh4734 Thanks mate, I'll be sure to note.

    • @tmarritt
      @tmarritt Před měsícem +4

      Yeah they said specifically the were going to the more "British Indian" places, which makes sense for the series.
      But find me a place with plastic seating where you have to bring your own beer and I'm the only white dude and I know I'm going to have a good time.😂

  • @moogleking
    @moogleking Před měsícem +64

    Joe and Harry have such good chemistry together

  • @Harlton001
    @Harlton001 Před měsícem +167

    Love this series! Harry and Joe have great chemistry.

    • @bee3092
      @bee3092 Před měsícem +1

      Yes I like to try and understand Americans more lol.
      Where I live in SEA to serve someone is a great sign of respect.
      Always pour for elders first and then yourself last so it's really interesting to see someone be taken back by that.
      I think the British have an element of this practice also? To serve others based on age, holiness or just kindness maybe......

  • @uzziel2005
    @uzziel2005 Před měsícem +44

    vindaloo is one of those funny dishes where restaurants hyper-correct themselves and will put potatoes in because they see "aloo", but the name comes from Portuguese "vinho de alho" - wine / vinegar and garlic - and didn't contain potatoes.

    • @-Viva-Cristo-Rey
      @-Viva-Cristo-Rey Před 18 dny +2

      Vindaloo is typically made with pork , because the fat renders while cooking , giving the dish its unique flavor. Yet to cater to the Hindus and Muslims who don't consume pork they make the same dish with alternate meats.

    • @kick3006
      @kick3006 Před 6 dny

      I was thinking the same thing lol. I had vindaloo in Goa where this dish kind of originated and did not find potatoes in it.

  • @PonderingDolphin
    @PonderingDolphin Před měsícem +12

    Been waiting for the next of this series !! Love this content so much, you both are excellent personalities and the food is excellent + the camera work is spot on. Such a pleasure and look forward to the next, thank you Insider Food for the great work !

  • @jellymoriarty
    @jellymoriarty Před měsícem +50

    Tayyabs lamb chops are to die for. Their buttery naans are also the best I've ever had.

    • @fayesouthall6604
      @fayesouthall6604 Před měsícem +1

      Nom nom

    • @theritchie2173
      @theritchie2173 Před měsícem +1

      If the Tayyabs queue is stretching too far down the street, or if you fancy a (slight) change, Needoo Grill is right round the corner. I believe it was started by some ex-Tayyabs staff who wanted to strike out on their own, and it's basically the same thing but with more breathing room. Not that Tayyabs atmosphere isn't great in itself, but it can get a bit claustrophobic depending on where you get seated.

    • @CanadianBritishBoy
      @CanadianBritishBoy Před 24 dny

      ​@@theritchie2173needos ain't close 😂

    • @theritchie2173
      @theritchie2173 Před 24 dny

      @@CanadianBritishBoy Yeah it is, it's about 50 yards away...

  • @GodfatherBoxSet
    @GodfatherBoxSet Před měsícem +62

    When they talked about Indian not really being culturally significant in the US like it is in Britian, the only comparison i could make is Mexican. Mexican food has been a part of the US since the beginning, and our people are increadibly mixed. Every city and town in the US has a great mexican restaurant or 2. I also think most Americans can name 15-20 mexican dishes the same way british people can with Indian.

    • @benoitwaffle5439
      @benoitwaffle5439 Před měsícem +4

      Mexican and Mexican-Americans make up around 1a% of the US population. It makes complete sense as to why there is such a cultural impact throughout the country. The population of Indian and ethnic Indians in the UK is around 3%, which is like that of the Polish in the US. In raw numbers, there are twice as many Indian or Indian-American in the US than the UK. I suspect because the multi-cultural mix is so much more prominent in the US, especially in the cities, that even though there are numerous prominent ethnic populations that have cultural footholds that it is hard for any of them other than the Mexican influence to truly feel like a national phenomenon. Heck, at this point the Mexican influence on the US has gone international. The rise of Mexican restaurants is Europe might be a bigger a sign of American cultural influence than the spread of Starbucks.

    • @GodfatherBoxSet
      @GodfatherBoxSet Před měsícem +2

      @benoitwaffle5439 I think a lot has to do with the situations that people come to the US and UK. In the US mexican and Central Americans come here for the work opportunity and start up by working more blue collar jobs. Construction, maintenance, restaurant, farming. The ease for some in setting up small taco stands or trucks is how mexican foorld grew. In some cities people have thier local taco stand that they go to often. Tex-Mex is a completely differnet thing and has been around for hundreds of years as well. In the case of Indian Americans, or the ones I have met, they mainly come here for education and to enter more white collar work. Same can be said of most Korean or South East Asian in the last 20 years

    • @VARMOT123
      @VARMOT123 Před měsícem +1

      Indian cuisine is upper popular in certain areas of usa where there is a huge indian population . Silicon valley,seattle,north texas,tri state area etc

    • @asimhussain8716
      @asimhussain8716 Před měsícem

      There's a reason why pretty much every phone customer service line says press 2 for Spanish lol.

    • @heatherboo1
      @heatherboo1 Před měsícem +1

      In south Florida the Mexican food is so good it can bring tears to your eyes.

  • @SamanthaStallcup
    @SamanthaStallcup Před měsícem +148

    Hear my voice!!! Joe and Harry need to do a travel series. I would endlessly rewatch the two of you trekking through Southeast Asia or South America.

  • @annother3350
    @annother3350 Před měsícem +35

    The name Vin Daloo comes from the portugese 'Vin D'alho' meaning wine (vinegar) and garlic -- it's not Aloo as in potato

    • @DavidAJones11
      @DavidAJones11 Před měsícem +1

      It's the other way around - they started putting potato in it because it has 'aloo' in the name.

  • @dnk0794
    @dnk0794 Před měsícem +41

    Born and raised in India - living in the UK for about 2 + years - I can confidently say that the representation of “Indian” food or “curry” in here is a tiny tiny tiny pick from India. 99% of the Indian Food / Curry we find here belongs to mainly the northern region in India. An accurate representation would be if we call it North Indian Food or simply “Punjabi”.
    What I’d love to see more in the UK is food truly brought in from ALL OVER INDIA - say Maharashtrian cuisine, Gujarati Dishes, Konkani, Kerala fish specialists, Malvani food, North East Indian preparations - I can go on and on.
    Calling the food u find in the UK as Indian food is akin to saying European food - we are missing on the nuances of the cuisine by a generalised name.
    I grew up in Mumbai - a city akin to London in India. My childhood was packed Maharashtrian food (Maharashtra is a state where Mumbai belongs) which is a whole different world altogether. I am sure other Indian migrants here from different states will resonate.
    Fyi - for grabbing the best “North Indian” food / curry in the UK - make friends with either someone from North India - who is a gooood cook - thats the most authentic experience you will ever have. 100/100.

    • @doghat1619
      @doghat1619 Před měsícem +2

      people from all over india immigrated to britain over history, only the style of food we now call "indian food" ever stuck.
      I'm sure there's plenty of other great food from all over india, but it likely isn't palatable enough to the british palate to have mainstream appeal here and justify existing as a restaurant industry

    • @zaphodbeeblebrox9109
      @zaphodbeeblebrox9109 Před měsícem

      Sure. But we cant absorb a whole countries entire cuisine as we have our own, and many others available here also.

    • @morbius7687
      @morbius7687 Před měsícem +4

      We definitely do have Goan and Keralan restaurants here in the UK, they're just less common. You find them in big cities but not in smaller towns.

    • @balpreetsingh6834
      @balpreetsingh6834 Před 29 dny +1

      Dude the curry culture is not Punjabi but rather Mughlai. Shows that you're from Mumbai 😂

  • @user-yv2cz8oj1k
    @user-yv2cz8oj1k Před měsícem +19

    Most Indian restaurants in the UK are run by people from Bangladesh.
    Though where I live there is a Bangladeshi restaurant, and I have to say, their own food is fantastic.

    • @ashokathegreat4534
      @ashokathegreat4534 Před 20 dny

      India has like 20 states the size of Bangladesh. Bangladesh is a bit larger than England.
      Each state had it’s own people and culture/ food.
      UK bangladeshi’s know nothing about Indian food of all those regions
      So what you ate is a bangladeshi attempt at Indian food. Not real

    • @evilkhamzat
      @evilkhamzat Před 19 dny +1

      @@ashokathegreat4534Calm down poojeet 😂😂😂 what the op states was a fact no need to get butthurt

  • @fayesouthall6604
    @fayesouthall6604 Před měsícem +5

    Been away without CZcams and this drops. Holy moly more Food Wars ❤️❤️❤️

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Před měsícem +67

    So nice to see Curry Houses featured! Saving for my recommendations.

  • @saikrishnathiwakarrk
    @saikrishnathiwakarrk Před měsícem +5

    Been waiting for this for months 🙌🙌🙌
    Atlast

  • @VarunaSingh89
    @VarunaSingh89 Před měsícem +36

    Harrys nailed every point and reference. He knows the culture well

    • @randyschwaggins
      @randyschwaggins Před měsícem +2

      Do you live in London?
      If you did you would understand that Tayyabs is Pakistani food...not Indian.
      If you can't even identify that difference you don't know the culture at all.
      I'm not even going to start on the references to 'aloo' in vindaloo meaning potato...which is totally wrong as well.
      So many uneducated comments here...but for you to say that Harry nailed anything is shameful...

    • @VarunaSingh89
      @VarunaSingh89 Před měsícem +14

      ⁠@@randyschwagginsim Indian and me and my pakistani brothers enjoy the similarities in our food in the uk. We call them desi but to eachs own. To be fair none of these are authentic but they are to The UK. On vindaloo yeah true but its this lost in translation why we get it that way and that to me growing up in the UK is cultural

    • @randyschwaggins
      @randyschwaggins Před měsícem

      @@VarunaSingh89 you like eating beef nihari with your Pakistani brothers?

    • @ashhabimran239
      @ashhabimran239 Před měsícem +5

      @@randyschwaggins As a British-Pakistani, there's undeniable crossover between cuisines, to the point where they're somewhat interchangeable, and that's fine by me. You just sound like a butthurt purist, stop embarrassing yourself

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus Před měsícem +2

    Such a great series. One of the best food series on CZcams right now.

  • @mark5115
    @mark5115 Před měsícem +13

    It's great to see brick lane included, so many restaurants there it's good to get a recommendation for new londoners

    • @beansdestroyer
      @beansdestroyer Před měsícem +3

      I went to muhib in brick lane when I visited and it was amazing, very friendly staff and owner too

    • @davidmannion7333
      @davidmannion7333 Před měsícem +2

      We used to go to Brick Lane quite a bit when I lived in London, We'd eat in the more modest stripped back looking places rather than the fancier restaurants, their food was always absolutely on point, no frills or distractions needed.

    • @nick260682
      @nick260682 Před 7 dny

      No one from London eats there.

  • @PopPo-zh9up
    @PopPo-zh9up Před měsícem +5

    Stunning
    This content 😍

  • @nilnz
    @nilnz Před měsícem +26

    London restaurants visited: 1. Tayyabs, Whitechapel, East London. 2. Curry Bazaar, Brick Lane East London. 3. Punjab Indian Restaurant, Covent Garden, Central London. 4. Spice Village, Tooting, South London

    • @ashokathegreat4534
      @ashokathegreat4534 Před 20 dny

      Go to Gymkhana. At least thats a real Indian restaurant and not some bangladeshi’s pretending to know Indian food

  • @HoldmyBeerSon
    @HoldmyBeerSon Před měsícem +12

    Many Pakistani owned resturant brand themselves as Indian restaurant because No one wants to eat Pakistani cuisine TBH. Personal experience from US & Canada.

    • @cagdasyalcin190489
      @cagdasyalcin190489 Před 15 dny +1

      Pakistanis are Indian

    • @HoldmyBeerSon
      @HoldmyBeerSon Před 14 dny

      @@cagdasyalcin190489 No. Pakistanis certainly believe that we are Turks. We came to this land when Turks invaded India

    • @mindfreaktsa7680
      @mindfreaktsa7680 Před 13 dny

      ​@@cagdasyalcin190489lol, no... They are 2 different countries

    • @cagdasyalcin190489
      @cagdasyalcin190489 Před 11 dny +1

      @@mindfreaktsa7680 south and North Korea are also two separate countries.

  • @skandan3806
    @skandan3806 Před měsícem +105

    I believe Nikhil would do an excellent job in explaining more about Indian cuisine to Joe and harry

    • @micah1754
      @micah1754 Před měsícem +1

      Who is Nikhil?

    • @mercgurl80
      @mercgurl80 Před měsícem +20

      @@micah1754 Nikhil was the India host when Food Wars did US vs. India. He’s a riot 😂

    • @micah1754
      @micah1754 Před měsícem +2

      @@mercgurl80 oh true! I'll have to watch those back. That would have been cool if he did it. I did think it was cool Harry seemed to have done some research on the history and stuff and did a pretty good job. I find Joe pretty crass and jarring but that's just me lol

    • @KillerTacos54
      @KillerTacos54 Před měsícem +4

      They did a great job, but yea it would’ve been awesome to see Nikhil featured here as a guest or something

    • @redeye1016
      @redeye1016 Před měsícem +7

      Why? They literally had a female guest of Indian heritage that did exactly this.

  • @Gremlack13
    @Gremlack13 Před měsícem +10

    I do quite love Indian food, as my wife is a first generation South Indian American.
    Indian restaurants can be quite good, or quite bad.
    But nothing beats the cooking of my wife.
    Some of the best Sambar and dosa I’ve had outside of India was in Calgary of all places.
    I love Sambar and dosa so much. But my wife’s chicken curry is my absolutely favorite food of any kind of all time.

    • @ashokathegreat4534
      @ashokathegreat4534 Před 20 dny

      She’s a tamil originally from Sri Lanka and not Indian. Indian women rarely date outside their own.

  • @WheelzGaming88
    @WheelzGaming88 Před měsícem +8

    I was ecstatic when I realized this was a new episode with the best food duo collaboration on the entire planet

  • @dpkarell
    @dpkarell Před měsícem +3

    Love when these two hang out and eat great food

  • @KillerTacos54
    @KillerTacos54 Před měsícem +4

    YESSSS finally a new episode!!

  • @markjones1337
    @markjones1337 Před měsícem +6

    These US/UK food tours are great videos.

  • @toyinmckinney789
    @toyinmckinney789 Před měsícem +3

    THE PERFECT DUO 🤩

  • @dpke
    @dpke Před měsícem +2

    Love it when one of these pops on my front page. Such a good team!

  • @spiceupat2000
    @spiceupat2000 Před měsícem +3

    Always love Joe and Harry videos, special food tours. Would've been nice if they tried some desserts as well.

  • @tericooper879
    @tericooper879 Před měsícem +6

    Harry and Joe, you two do one finding the best Bangers and Mash! My daughter is just in love with it and British food.

  • @Kill3rballoon
    @Kill3rballoon Před měsícem +55

    Joe and Harry videos are always a joy, and having special “expert guests” join is a great idea too. It keeps them on their toes a bit 😅

  • @diceymaan
    @diceymaan Před měsícem +9

    Not from the UK (but from Finland) and my favorites are Madras, Rogan Josh, Butter Chicken, Vindaloo, Dopiaza, and Jalfrezi. No idea which is even remotely traditional in India, but all are delicious, though it depends on the restaurant. Some restaurants make some dishes with chicken thighs and to me, those are better because chicken thigh gets so tender in sauce. Out of these dishes, I think Dopiaza is the one that varies the most and it's also most difficult to find. Many restaurants don't make lamb well, unfortunately. Lamb is delicious, but you don't want it to be chewy, it should fall apart tender or in some dishes a fillet cut that's tender.
    For "cleaning up" the plate, I use the naan. Naan to me is more important than rice, probably the European in me. In NZ they had Naan wraps with chicken and Indian sauces inside and those were amazing. Not sure if they exist in the UK (I assume though), but you can't get them in Finland.

  • @ryanfranklin3206
    @ryanfranklin3206 Před měsícem +5

    im so glad these guys are finally getting an actual meal

  • @LilMonkeyFella87
    @LilMonkeyFella87 Před měsícem +41

    No messing with that intro 😅 straight into the video

  • @WTT_321
    @WTT_321 Před měsícem +5

    I’ve had Indian food twice this month: one during my friend’s wedding and one during my hangout with high school friends… I felt like I was on Cloud 9 when I had the curries… oh my gawd… I would certainly go back for more when the time is right…! 🤤🤤

  • @n8nate
    @n8nate Před 18 dny +1

    I'm so glad you guys are back together. ❤️❤️

  • @venturout
    @venturout Před měsícem +35

    This video is so good I've just ordered a curry for tonight!
    Lamb Tikka Dansak, with Garlic Naan and Chips!😀

    • @mqb5151
      @mqb5151 Před měsícem +1

      Send some over

  • @langdalepaul
    @langdalepaul Před měsícem +7

    It is fairly easy to “clean up” the sauces with rice, roti, and naan. Chips not needed.

  • @vijayvadher2825
    @vijayvadher2825 Před měsícem +4

    26:02 The look in his eyes... Priceless

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Před měsícem +15

    3:56 THANK YOU FOR THIS! LOVE YOU HARRY ❤

  • @cherrysmith3173
    @cherrysmith3173 Před měsícem +2

    Love watching y’all explore food.

  • @phantomthread4385
    @phantomthread4385 Před měsícem +26

    Love Tayyabs. Good sign when there are locals there mainly.

    • @randyschwaggins
      @randyschwaggins Před měsícem

      Locals go to Needoos round the corner

    • @nick260682
      @nick260682 Před 7 dny

      @@randyschwaggins Needoos is just a breakaway from Tayyabs- someone left Tayyabs and started Needoos. It’s similar food,and they both very good. Probably same recipes
      Bill

  • @VelvetTeacake
    @VelvetTeacake Před měsícem +6

    Mini Dracula breakdown in the middle of the video was hilarious. The next BBC Dracula is bound to be Cockney 😂

  • @kathrynsymonds9455
    @kathrynsymonds9455 Před měsícem +1

    Huge fan of these clever and funny gentlemen, great video

  • @gsb5859
    @gsb5859 Před měsícem +75

    I’m UK born but parents originally came from north India. Grew up never going to curry houses, however in recent years I have. I have come to the conclusion that just because it’s British-Indian cuisine doesn’t mean it’s bad, it’s a cuisine now unique to the UK and long may it continue (the Turkish barbecue places are competing).
    I’ve been to more modern “authentic experience” Indian places in the UK and most are rubbish. For the most authentic North Indian high quality vegetarian home cooked style food … Shere Panjab in Leicester is your place!

    • @clogs4956
      @clogs4956 Před měsícem +1

      Surprised they didn’t come to Leicester!

    • @userunknown19
      @userunknown19 Před měsícem +1

      YES! Shere Punjab's saag and makki di roti is the best I've had that isn't homemade. It's fresh. No adding tadka to stuff from a tin like other restaurants do (you can taste the difference!)
      Leicester's Indian restaurants hands-down do the best vegetarian Indian food anywhere in the country.

    • @BlackHawkTejas
      @BlackHawkTejas Před měsícem +1

      Because most if these things are run by pakistanis, bangladeshis & nepalese, very few Indians run any of these.

    • @sentientarugula2884
      @sentientarugula2884 Před měsícem

      @@userunknown19 The one on St. Saviours road or Melton road?

    • @fayesouthall6604
      @fayesouthall6604 Před měsícem

      When you a decent Chinese/ Indian/ pizza you hold them in your heart.

  • @Amatureb
    @Amatureb Před měsícem +4

    Harry and Joe are the greatest duo ever - prove me wrong

  • @katies3971
    @katies3971 Před měsícem +1

    Love these videos. You need to do a top tier of all the best in the city. Best fancy afternoon tea, best pie, best curry. Michelin starred places and famous places. You've been doing good but very mainstream places.

  • @DarkCobra88
    @DarkCobra88 Před měsícem +24

    Harry and Joe remind me of why shows like Top Gear worked so well (and The Grand Tour), these two are the same (but very different) to the three clowns from that, not in their behaviour but people tune it to see them, their chemistry draws you in. Hope Insider realise they got a pro team here, send these two across the globe to try different cities and foods. Don't get me wrong, it works in Britain and America as its their home fields of course but still, its just enjoyable seeing them discuss food despite i never used to care about food to this level. Be interesting to see them in places they never been, so neither one can take the lead and they just stumble their way from eatery to eatery discussing the food.

    • @jasminappleby779
      @jasminappleby779 Před měsícem +1

      Even just places outside of London and New York. Going to Southern America and trying proper Brisket and Soul Food, or going to the Midlands or up North for a Curry.

  • @davecatlett1255
    @davecatlett1255 Před měsícem +23

    As a Brit living in the US, this makes me a little homesick. Nothing like a good curry house...

  • @user-yf5qs9by6y
    @user-yf5qs9by6y Před měsícem +4

    The episode we didn't know we needed.

  • @kristupasmerkelis7955
    @kristupasmerkelis7955 Před měsícem +2

    Amazing video, keep it up!

  • @bee3092
    @bee3092 Před měsícem +7

    FANTASTIC episode!
    Watching from Cambodia 🇰🇭 you're welcome here anytime 🤲
    you really got me craving 😅
    Akun 🙏 🙏 🙏

  • @thatschilltssk6274
    @thatschilltssk6274 Před měsícem +17

    Never seen anybody wield a knife and fork like Joe does. Wrong way around, switching fork hands, the guys a maniac. Love the show.

    • @WhatThisVideo-WTv
      @WhatThisVideo-WTv Před měsícem +3

      Actually I just realized the American and British way of using forks and now I can't unsee it.😄

    • @tedsteiner
      @tedsteiner Před měsícem +3

      It's a very American way of eating 😂

  • @lankarocks5636
    @lankarocks5636 Před měsícem +19

    Great video. I would categorise curry in Britain into 3 categories:
    1. The influx of a lot of chefs from Bangladesh and these are the most common curry houses.
    2. There are places where the immigrant population is very concentrated, such as Bradford, Southall and Brick lane in London. You will get a lot of items unknown to others, mainly street food and breakfast items
    3. And finally, the ones which opened in the last 10-15 years. These are opened by white collared professionals such as doctors, engineers who came in 80s and 90s and have now started opening restaurants providing cuisine very local to the places they grew up in. Examples are Dhishoom and restaurants opened by chefs Cyrus Todiwala and Atul Kochchar

    • @ZK-APA
      @ZK-APA Před měsícem

      Atul Kochchar upto a point. I am sure no Indian ever had chocolate put in a curry EVER.

    • @orientalmoons
      @orientalmoons Před měsícem

      I think there's also perhaps another category, which is modern/alternative. Such as Bundobust, which is street food with a fusion influence, and unlike your typical "Indian" restaurant has equal emphasis on drinking.
      Oh and there's also Desi pubs in some places too, where Indian culture meets British pub. I guess those might fit in your 2nd category.

  • @naufalhusain1571
    @naufalhusain1571 Před měsícem +2

    Thank God they're back

  • @gigteevee6118
    @gigteevee6118 Před měsícem +2

    Thanks for visiting Tooting! Too often all people discuss is curry in Brick Lane, but there’s so many great options elsewhere.

  • @tookings
    @tookings Před měsícem +6

    I just ordered some lamb curry from my local restaurant because of this video. Will keep you posted...

    • @joshjg
      @joshjg Před měsícem +2

      How was it?

  • @devinnn0
    @devinnn0 Před měsícem +5

    It’s currently 23:43 and I wanna eat Indian and nowhere is open. Indian tomorrow for sure. Great vid guys. Love you both.

  • @rosebud040686
    @rosebud040686 Před měsícem +1

    Kachori in Elephant & Castle is worth a mention too.. totally amazing

  • @suryavoid2488
    @suryavoid2488 Před měsícem +1

    I loved the video. The Way the video was going, at the end restaurant I was surprised, It would match to go at the beginning or the 2nd seeing as how young & expensive the 4th one looks. Now I feel like the 4th paid for this whole adventure.

  • @britanyestrada4151
    @britanyestrada4151 Před měsícem +4

    I've felt the "I'm so jet lagged I'm 🤏 this close to crying" only a good meal will help.

  • @ellis9290
    @ellis9290 Před měsícem +46

    Tikka Masala was invented in Scotland by a Pakistani immigrant and is synonymous with British comfort food, being served all over the nation in pubs, restaurants and of course curry houses.
    It is without doubt, a British classic.

    • @BlackHawkTejas
      @BlackHawkTejas Před měsícem +1

      What a bunch of lie! Its an Indian dish bought to UK.
      Spreading fake news and claiming Indian things is full time job of brits!
      British classic?? LoL!

    • @ishanbajpai6940
      @ishanbajpai6940 Před měsícem +3

      Sure.

    • @thebestevertherewas
      @thebestevertherewas Před měsícem +8

      Bangladeshi to be exact

    • @tmarritt
      @tmarritt Před měsícem +2

      A lot of Indians/Pakistanis who have not been to the UK get upset and say 'no it's just this dish, or that dish'.
      My reply to that is A) no it's different, and B) don't be upset your dish is better 😂.
      If they have been to the UK and taste it the option tends to be "yeah you can have it".

    • @thebestevertherewas
      @thebestevertherewas Před měsícem

      🤣@@tmarritt

  • @Guitarwolfluke
    @Guitarwolfluke Před měsícem +31

    Gymkhana is the best one that ive tried so far

    • @ashokathegreat4534
      @ashokathegreat4534 Před 20 dny +1

      That’s also one of the few places in the UK owned by real Indians and not Bangladeshi/Pakistani’s.

  • @morkel10
    @morkel10 Před měsícem +1

    Kokum in East Dulwich is phenomenal, add it to the hitlist

  • @gsb5859
    @gsb5859 Před měsícem +31

    13:14 the “aloo” in Vindaloo actually means garlic from the Portuguese word alhos. Vindaloo should also have a wine, vinegar taste to it which isn’t really used in Indian cooking but is used in Goa.

    • @Sjivje
      @Sjivje Před měsícem +6

      Yes, it's based on the Portuguese dish 'Carne de Vinha d'Alhos'.

    • @dhavalincredible
      @dhavalincredible Před měsícem +3

      And where is Goa? Goan food is a subset of Indian food but you seem to be having the colonizer mindset 😅

    • @prasenjeetnikam
      @prasenjeetnikam Před měsícem

      Imagine a British dude called GSB, stating that Goan food is not Indian.
      Go ask ur parents,they might put you back you in senses (if they are still Indian)
      'Inferiority complex ka 14'

    • @gsb5859
      @gsb5859 Před měsícem +1

      @@prasenjeetnikam Where did I specifically write that Goan food is not Indian? And how did you infer that from the message above?

    • @gsb5859
      @gsb5859 Před měsícem +2

      @@dhavalincredible I wrote “isn’t really used”, which is true, vinegar is rarely used in Indian cuisine. That doesn’t mean I said that Goan food isn’t Indian. Think you might need to improve your grasp of the English language.

  • @Ukgyt99
    @Ukgyt99 Před měsícem +3

    Them Sauces 😍

  • @heathermartin8932
    @heathermartin8932 Před měsícem +41

    In the early 1970s, the chicken tikka masala is invented by the Shish Mahal restaurant in Glasgow’s West End, now thought to be the UK’s most popular dish.
    The dish was created by Mr. Ali Ahmed Aslam after a diner complained about the dryness of the chicken. Mr. Ali used a can of tomato soup to prepare a gravy for the chicken, hence the birth of chicken tikka masala - It is the UK’s most popular dish (Robin Cook in 2001 claimed it was a British national dish)
    Check out this clip from BBC’s Antique Roadtrip, featuring Colourful Heritage’s Dr Saqib Razzaq. It focuses on the journey of lascars who came to Glasgow, and also touches on the invention of the infamous Chicken Tikka Masala.
    Location: Glasgow, Scotland

    • @kaycey7361
      @kaycey7361 Před měsícem +4

      Food colonisers claiming something that doesn't belong to you.

    • @annother3350
      @annother3350 Před měsícem +10

      @@kaycey7361 Get well soon mate

    • @userunknown19
      @userunknown19 Před měsícem +2

      @@kaycey7361 "food colonisers." 🙄 Don't be a bellend.

    • @redeye1016
      @redeye1016 Před měsícem

      @@kaycey7361did you just not read the comment? Or are you just unbelievably thick? But the “CoLoNiSInG” - literally no one cares, stop crying. The above story is literally verbatim how the dish was created. How can you be mad at the truth 😂 pathetic.

    • @BlackHawkTejas
      @BlackHawkTejas Před měsícem +2

      It's an Indian dish made in India, bought to uk by Indians, nothing, absolutely nothing about Chicken Tikka masala has any uk connection.
      From the way it is prepped to the cooking method to the ingredients to the utensils to everything.
      Stop stealing other culture/countries food!

  • @SundarSrinivasHarish
    @SundarSrinivasHarish Před měsícem +4

    19:46 Usually tamarind sauce to counter the spicy coriander and chilli chutney.

  • @ukpeewee
    @ukpeewee Před měsícem +10

    I was at Tayyabs today for lunch. You have to try it if you are in London!!!

  • @hamburglar83
    @hamburglar83 Před měsícem +10

    I love Indian food and i think y’all should be proud to call it “British Indian”…..Also from my research it’s primarily Bengali chefs that started the cuisine in England so i wish they got more credit. CURRY is a made up word anyway in England. Outside of Chicago in suburbs (Naperville ) there is a huge Indian and Pakistani population. So the restaurant scene is awesome but more authentic. Most places dont even have chicken tiki masala. We have restaurants dedicated to southern cuisine (dosa), Nothenrn Punjab (where you can get “curry and rice dishes”, biryanis places, one place that just does Pakistani burgers. It’s heaven

    • @fayesouthall6604
      @fayesouthall6604 Před měsícem +1

      Chicken Tikka is a British Indian invention.

    • @mast_orbiter
      @mast_orbiter Před měsícem +2

      Well you are right in a sense that It isn't Indian food as in it is less spicy and is more catered towards British Taste buds. But you can't claim it is new Cuisine. It is purely Indian cuisine that has been improvised a little to cater towards British ppl who can't handle more spices. Even Chicken tikka that you claim to be purely British was made because so called Bangladeshi chef but it is inspired from Butter chicken. It isn't anything new or made from scratch . Also it isn't original Bengali dish either. It has Pre Partition Indian roots. Bangladesh does have their own region cuisine like Pakistan has but some dishes are from pre partition India that has travelled to Bangladesh and Pakistan.
      Chicken Tikka masala is what Samosa is in Indian cuisine. Samosas were brought in by Mughals because they missed it in their homeland in Central Asia mainly Uzbekistan where original recipe comes from but in due time with our own spin on same recipe we Made Indian version of Samosa which have masala potato filling with more spices as compared to original dish. Now we can enjoy it as Indian Version but to claim Samosa as Indian Invention would be cruel just like British claiming Chicken Tikka to be British. It is British spin on Indian Chicken curry by South Asian immigrants but it isn't new dish on its own.

    • @AM-dz2sh
      @AM-dz2sh Před 29 dny

      @@mast_orbiter Just like Americans cant claim Tex Mex then?

  • @adamgibson7181
    @adamgibson7181 Před měsícem +1

    I live in dubai, and watching you two in my home town of tooting was amazing!

  • @kelseyanderson7351
    @kelseyanderson7351 Před měsícem

    I heart these two so much!

  • @jontout
    @jontout Před měsícem +3

    Tayyabs and Barak Eatery are my go to for food in Whitechapel, but Curry Bazaar looks worth a shot.

  • @frequentclearance9641
    @frequentclearance9641 Před měsícem +11

    As a Northerner ill gladly admit the regional ranking for Curry is Midlands, north, south.

    • @Woodlouse5
      @Woodlouse5 Před měsícem +2

      As a person who grew up in London, Manchester's curry Mile has Brick Lane beat. Brick Lane definitely isn't as Bangladeshi as it was once before.

    • @nick260682
      @nick260682 Před 7 dny

      @@Woodlouse5 No, the Midlands curry scene is ridiculously overrated. Balti triangle is basically dead because it’s shit, they have the desi/grill pubs which are fine, but mostly exciting cos they are pubs that do you good drinking food. They aren’t amazing. London has the most authentic Pakistani, Indian food etc in Southall, Whitechapel, Tooting, Hounslow etc, it also has higher end stuff, and it also has Michelin star Indian food if that’s your bag. It’s not even a comparison - London kills it.

  • @Woodlouse5
    @Woodlouse5 Před měsícem +2

    Spice Village also cater weddings, and the masala fish pakora is the best thing ever

  • @geordiefooda5218
    @geordiefooda5218 Před měsícem +2

    Vindaloo is traditionally a Portuguese dish made
    of meat marinated in
    vinegar (vinha) and garlic
    (alho). Not as in potatoes. It's actual literal translation is pork in vinegar. If you can get a hold of a recipe for pig cheeks vindaloo it's well worth a go although time consuming.

  • @beng4697
    @beng4697 Před měsícem +41

    That girl had zero clue about Indian food😅😅

    • @suvvyks4429
      @suvvyks4429 Před 25 dny +3

      he is a Pakistani and born British she know nothing about Indian cuisine's ...only know Punjab side of india cuisine which is prevalent in Pakistan so...no brainer

  • @DavidBrown-jd2st
    @DavidBrown-jd2st Před 20 dny

    Favourite food Duo yes !!!

  • @andykosec
    @andykosec Před 29 dny +2

    That was the Dracula from pink panther cartoons! he went "bleh, bleh, bleh" hahaha

  • @djs98blue
    @djs98blue Před měsícem +6

    You should watch the goodness gracious me sketch going out for an English - very funny!

  • @mickbanner
    @mickbanner Před měsícem +4

    Vindaloo heat comes from the build. Having a couple of bites won't be how you judge how hot it is. Finish the meal with a sweat on is how 😂

    • @xazarl3381
      @xazarl3381 Před měsícem +1

      Vindaloo is the hottest thing i have ever had but i think it depends whats in it. Because someone got one a few years ago and it wasnt hot but the one i had as a teenager one bite i had to drink a full glass of water lol. So the name doesnt really help.

  • @jaybee150889
    @jaybee150889 Před měsícem +2

    Absolutely love this show and I'm a massive fan of British curry houses. Just wish they tried proper classics like Rogan Josh, Madras, Biriyani etc. Whole new ball game compared to Tikka Masala

  • @prazzo1232
    @prazzo1232 Před měsícem +2

    The thing about Indian food is that it’s just so much better than any other cuisine that you can’t but love it ❤❤❤❤

  • @richardschleenvoigt4374
    @richardschleenvoigt4374 Před měsícem +3

    Chicken Tikka Masala is as Indian as Chicago Deep Dish Pizza is Italian.
    The roots are their but they are the magnificent results of cultures and resources being shared

    • @sorryi6685
      @sorryi6685 Před 23 dny

      Unlike Chicago Pizza in Italy, Tikka Masala is very popular in India

  • @nk9996
    @nk9996 Před měsícem +19

    7:20 if it was Nikhil, this video would came out to be EPIC !! 😂😂 Missed it guys 🔥😂

  • @tasmiadarr2362
    @tasmiadarr2362 Před měsícem +1

    Spice Village is legit - the food is amazing!!! Tayyabs lamb chops are definitely the best out there though...

  • @uroprop
    @uroprop Před měsícem +1

    all that looks amazing

  • @RyanG144Videos
    @RyanG144Videos Před měsícem +8

    Watching from Birmingham. Interesting fact. Birmingham has long been claimed to be the culinary birth place of the Balti curry. Not only that but there is an Indian takeaway in Northfield called Simla, which was actually voted 6th best takeaway in the UK! And from my own experience, I can honestly say their food is always so good.

    • @ChopperPBM
      @ChopperPBM Před měsícem +2

      I’m not from there but the best curries I’ve ever had have always been when passing through Birmingham

    • @SF7PAKISTAN
      @SF7PAKISTAN Před měsícem

      Nope. "Balti Curry", actually Balti Gosht comes from the North and North-Western regions of Pakistan. It was brought to Birmingham by Kashmiri immigrants

    • @RyanG144Videos
      @RyanG144Videos Před měsícem +1

      @@SF7PAKISTAN ok then. At the very least the British version of the Balti was invented in the 1970’s by a Birmingham/pakistani restaurateur. The very first place in Birmingham to serve a balti was a restaurant called Adil's located in Sparkbrook (Sadly permanently closed right now). But the Balti Triangle here is definitely the place to try a truly authentic Birmingham Balti.

  • @Orlak3lly
    @Orlak3lly Před měsícem +11

    “That’s my favourite track on Mario Kart”😂😂😂😂 Harry you’re hilarious

  • @dapprman
    @dapprman Před měsícem +2

    Ahh Tayyabs !!! - worked in the area from 2006 to 2011 when they really made their name. Best place in the area (including Brick Lane) for evening food (Khushbu Grill House you were missed when I moved away and I was sad to hear you had closed - it was the best place around, but lunch time only). I would argue the kebabs were better than the lamb chops, though both were superb. Great tasting food. HOWEVER ... in the six years I worked in the area I went there many a time, but we never left without at least one of the group feeling dodgy.

    • @tehtriangle6660
      @tehtriangle6660 Před měsícem +2

      We went on a work lunch and a few people had dodgy stomachs.

  • @yoandreee
    @yoandreee Před měsícem +2

    Harry and Joe = good vibes

  • @Rman_237
    @Rman_237 Před měsícem +14

    You should have done this episode in Birmingham, the home of the balti!