I'm Steve an industrial maintenance engineer from England, Ive always loved Asian food but never been a chef.
I was also a doorman for many years and my last badge ran out after i had been working at Bustlers Street food market in Derby, being able to try out so much food tipped me over the edge and i had to start learning. I love to do things right and authentic and i love how Uncle Roger makes fun of white people and their bland food and how we always change things to be similar to how we know it rather than follow the right way of making dishes. I'm now learning Nepali from the Gurkhas at work and intend to visit Nepal next year, Ive been told by some of the guy's wives that my food is just as good as being in Nepal which is better than any Michelin star i think.
I also think down there the culture is better and people seem so friendly and keen to share food, I now get Nepali food brought into work and given me and both my local Chinese takeaway and market regularly give me things including food or gifts the normal white customers would never get 🇳🇵😋
I know some Thai people and they have tried my Thai food also and commented on how good it is, unlike Jamie Oliver i don't want to upset any Asian ancestors. I have taken over large areas of the kitchen with all sorts of ingredients to cover all of these foods.
Only a few recipes I've done below, I started learning over 2 years ago from YouTube School of Wok. As my head works differently i could really understand him so have gone on to learn from a few others which is how i ended up here as i slowly explore and see how others cook the same dish and work out the best way or the tasty way to cook something new. Marions Kitchen, World Food Paradise, Spice N Pans, Made with Lau, Sue and Gambo, Souped up Recipes, then for Nepali kanna Yummy food World, Food & Beverage Nepali, Chef Suni. Ive even followed some of Uncle Rogers recipes, of course using the right ingredients not the white ingredients.
Hey Steve…dish looks delicious. Thanks for sharing. But I would suggest keeping it separate as a new post next time, and give it a title/subject relevant to the post ie the name of this dish. Click on the button “create new post”. See attached screenshot. Happy posting 😊
Khasi ko sekuwa (made with lamb, Khasi is goat in Nepali) and street style chutney on puffed rice which is like street food in Kathmandu from these 2 YT channels. Very nice it was, ill be doing it on a larger scale and serving it up to the Gurkhas at work for their approval i hope 🤣
Wow Steve! That is very interesting. Your story and your passion in food and cooking Asian food. Glad to have you on this forum. I wish the other members will share their experience and their journey on how they got started in cooking.
For me, I grew up watching my mother in the kitchen, followed her to the wet market. The house I grew up is literally 5 minutes walk from the wet market. My mother is a traditionally housewife. A full time job. She walked to the market daily in the morning to get ingredients to cook for us and put on the table on the day. That was my introduction to food as a kid.
I started to cook when I was studying in the United States with a group of Malaysian friends in a shared apartment. That was in the late 1`970s. Malaysians love food and eating. Missing the food back home, we have no choice but to learn to cook. Some better than the others. But we had good laugh and communal feed among us, and missing home.
I got more serious in cooking when started my own Malaysian restaurant in a country town in Tasmania, almost 20 years ago. It was the best time I ever had in terms of work. Self taught just like you. A great experience. Lots of hard work and not enough money. So I went back doing my full time job as a senior project manager in IT consulting. After that, I started food blogging, foodtrail.wordpress.com was my first blog.
I started creating YouTube content during the lockdown in April 2020. I wasn't working. Can't travel. Nothing else to do being stuck at home. With a small flimsy tripod and a point and shoot camera, I decided to mount on my kitchen bench, and randomly shot a video and post on YouTube. It wasn't until a couple of months later that I told myself that I quite enjoy doing it. Started watching other YouTube creators on how to prop a set in the kitchen, setting for the camera, post production edit the video..etc, to improve on the quality content of my videos.
I am, by no way an expert in cooking. I am happy to share any cooking experience, food I cooked at home, and recipes that I learnt along the way. I am not a professional trained chef but a self taught cook, blogger, and YouTube creator.
Now that I am retired, I can focus on my website and create new posts.
Cheers,
Victor
Wow! Steve, thanks for sharing this post and your dishes. They look amazing. Very impressed considering you only started cooking in the past 2 years by watching YouTube videos, learning from your Nepali friends. adjusting and creating your own interpretation on the dishes.
The Nepali momo dumpling looks delicious, and the Chiang Mai chicken noodle curry looks just like the one I get at a Thai cafe. Nothing like a "white man" cooking 😉.
May I ask how you first got interested in Asian food, and make you want to learn and cook more Asian dishes?
Cheers,
Victor