Русские видео

Сейчас в тренде

Иностранные видео


Скачать с ютуб Exotic GUYANESE INDIGENOUS FOOD Traditional VILLAGE in JUNGLES of GUYANA! в хорошем качестве

Exotic GUYANESE INDIGENOUS FOOD Traditional VILLAGE in JUNGLES of GUYANA! 1 год назад


Если кнопки скачивания не загрузились НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса savevideohd.ru



Exotic GUYANESE INDIGENOUS FOOD Traditional VILLAGE in JUNGLES of GUYANA!

🇬🇾 VISIT GUYANA:   / visitguyana   🇬🇾 DISCOVER GUYANA:   / discoverguyana   🌎 VISIT MY TRAVEL BLOG: https://davidsbeenhere.com/ After a few days exploring Georgetown, Guyana, I headed south to visit an indigenous village to dive deep into the local culture and, of course, try some of the local cuisine! My guide Stacey from Visit Guyana and I headed to Moraikobai, which is a village in the rainforest, roughly 4 hours southeast of the capital. It took an hour-long drive and a two- to three-hour ride on a speedboat to get to the Hubudee Eco Lodge, which has two rooms. 📝SUBSCRIBE TO MY NEWSLETTER: https://bit.ly/3JR71yN 🌳 MY LINKTREE: https://linktr.ee/davidsbeenhere We’d get to see some indigenous people make cassava bread, tuma (a fish dish), and cassareep (the main ingredient in pepperpot) being made. There, we met Gary, our local guide, who took us to see a local woman scraping the skin off the cassava roots and washing them. Then, they grate it and place it in a wicker contraption that extracts the liquid! They extract the juice to dry the cassava out enough. They then put it over a fire to completely dry it out and crumble it into a powder, which they then place on a tawa over a fire. Then, they boil the cassava juice to get rid of the cyanide in it. Then, it reduces to form cassareep. They also made quinches, which is made up of the cassava powder patties folded around shredded reddish coconut. You can also boil the cassava juice to make a soup called tuma, which contains wiri wiri peppers and smoked fish. The quinches were toasty and had a nice crunch. I loved the fresh cassava and coconut! Then, it was time for lunch at the lodge. We stopped at a hubudee tree, where Gary pulled down some fruit that you peel with your teeth to get to the meat. It’s pretty sweet but it doesn’t contain much meat because there’s a large seed inside. We had two types of tuma (one smoked, one fresh), a hard cassava bread, a soft cassava bread, and a pine drink for lunch. The cassava bread absorbs the cassava juice quickly. The cassava juice is a little spicy and smoky! The best part of the smoked fish was the skin. It was delicious! Then, we crushed some of the wiri wiri pepper into the tuma with the cassava. It was such a unique flavor. I’d never had anything like it! The wiri wiri pepper was spicy! The fresh fish was bony but very buttery. The fresh pine juice was also very nice and not too sweet. It was really refreshing! Where have you been? Subscribe Here! http://bit.ly/DavidsbeenhereSub Top videos! http://bit.ly/DavidsbeenhereTopVideos Follow Me: + INSTAGRAM ►   / davidsbeenhere   + FACEBOOK ►   / davidsbeenhere   + TWITTER ►   / davidsbeenhere   + MY BLOG! ► http://davidsbeenhere.com/ Contact Me: +BUSINESS EMAIL ► [email protected] #Davidsbeenhere #Guyana #Georgetown #GuyaneseFood #DavidInGuyana About Me: My name is David Hoffmann. Since starting David’s Been Here in 2008, I have traveled to over 1,300 destinations in 92 countries to experience and document unique cultures on my YouTube channel, travel blog, and social media.   I highlight culture and historical sites, but my passion is food! I love to experience and showcase the different flavors each destination has to offer, from casual street food to gourmet restaurant dining. Thanks for watching and subscribing!

Comments