Three rules you MUST follow when you go to a Korean restaurant👀💬 (The K-dessert part is a MUST😏) @cake.learnkorean #koreanfood #koreanculture #koreanrestaurant #tteokbokki #learnkorean #koreanstudy #studykorean #koreanlearning
Meanwhile Germans watching this video: Happily eating the last piece (think of the food waste!), happily not ordering dessert (sorry can't fit it in my stomach), happily agreeing if the other wants to foot the bill😂
Got to leave an "Anstandsrest" 😅 and we usually argue who gets to invite the others. Maybe it's different in other parts of Germany... But yeah, nobody ever wants to eat dessert 😂
It was an incorrect translation, they didn’t say the word dessert, they said after meal food. Basically in Korean culture often before your main food you will have a soup(miso/douenjang or seaweed is most common) then after the meal you’ll often have things life friend rice or such. So there is before meal, meal and after meal. After meal being 후식 I think they translated it to dessert since there isn’t a similar word or even culture in most if not all native English speaking countries.
We went out together for dinner last night at a buffet for 스승의날. The tiny women Korean teachers had like 7 rounds. When I got dessert on my 3rd round they were like "Dessert already?!" I was like "I'm full." They were shocked. They had multiple plates each trip and ordered 3 huge bowls of ramen. Where did they put it all?! I was shocked at them and they were shocked at me.
I feel you tho🥲 As a Korean with tiny stomach, ppl won't understand me 😅😂 there's some culture (? convention, I mean) where they regard you as "smallhearted, coward(?), weak" if your appetite isn't big. I'm skinny and that's true so nvm idk how my friends and all the people eat so much amount in just few moments in my pov
I had the exact same experience many times over when I was living there. I don't know where they put it all, and somehow they still stay so thin! Black magic, I say, black magic!
15 years and I'm still wondering. I'm overweight so after I eat a couple of plates they are asking if I'm on a diet 💀 Do they just not eat for a few days after?
1. Say hi to everyone when you arrive; 2. Don't make noise eating; 3. Never leave any food behind. You can make a packed lunch of if, but you can't leave food behind; 4. There's always room for dessert. There's an extra stomach only for this; 5. Say goodbye to everyone before leaving.
We're exactly.... the opposite- ...well, applied only to family members. - fight for the last pieces - order a lot in one go. No dessert, that is for another shop lol - The eldest usually paid for our meals lol If friends then, we go dutch. Yours is yours, mine is mine.
I am from India and this is same as Indian culture but few different like last piece of food everyone will say I will not eat but everyone wants to eat and for money they will say that I will give but in you give why should I give
100% same for all of them in Türkiye lol ❤🇹🇷🇰🇷 But well, after all that "you can eat the last piece, I'm okay" dialogues, someone eats the last piece at the end lol (mostly a child if there is, or just someone from the table)
we Indians don’t eat rice for dessert though it’s always sweet and not only indian desserts but we eat desserts from other countries too, and we always finish food, someone will eat it and we don’t leave it on the plate. in every south asian country I think, finishing food is like paying respects
My rule, never left food on the table. It’s a waste, think of the sweat and blood from the hard work of people and nature to produce those resource for you to fill your stomach and the sacrifices of animals life. Rice, meat, vegetables, fruits. Have respect for your foods and hard work of other to provide them for you even if you’re paying for it.
In Colombia🇪🇨, generally there's not a small part left but a big one, so we ask the restaurant to pack it and those who want it are the ones to take it. About the bill, if nobody specifically did the invitation for the meal and it was just agreed by all to go together to eat, usually each one pays their part, and if someone pays your part, you'll surely pay the part of that person next time for courtesy.
@Cristyface Colombia's flag has a shield too, and very important to us, and that's too small to know which one it is, as both countries share similitudes because of the common past of " *La Gran Colombia* " and I'm convinced that I don't have to deny the symbols of my country just because some creators of icons don't know our history.
@@HobiVibe No I mean even if I look at it on desktop, it says: Colombia🇪🇨, meaning you used the actual Ecuadorian flag. I've seen the Colombian flag with the shield, too! I just found it funny because I don't see my family's country, Ecuador, in the online spaces I'm in super often so it was nice to see. I hope I did not offend! Nosotros somos hermanos con raíces en La Gran Colombia :)
@@kokoongi te respondo lo mismo que a Cristyface: La bandera de Colombia también tiene un escudo, y muy importante para nosotros, y ese icono es muy pequeño para que alguien pueda afirmar cuál es, ya que ambos países comparten similitudes por el pasado común de " *La Gran Colombia* " y tengo la convicción de que no tengo por qué negar los símbolos de mi país sólo porque algunos creadores de íconos no conocen nuestra historia... no me equivoqué, lo usé a propósito.
Its almost the same in India for the 1st one we won't waste the food it just automatically given to the most youngest or the foodie For the 2nd one even if we are full we eats desert like gulab jamun,ice cream etc For the 3rd if its friends they mostly fight for not to pay the bill or just split it equally but if its family or relatives there's a big fight like "no no let me,let me just this time for WHATEVER sake"
i iran we have something similar! it called ta'rof (تعارف) it means you shouldn't accept things at first even if you want it, to be polite 😅 like offer to pay the bill or not eating the last piece or invite people to your house or not accepting that they do something for you! it's very complicated & occur at every situation so it's hard for foreigners to understand it, even for us is hard to recognize if someone is doing that or really mean it
In my experience in America when I was younger, the same thing happened at the table. However, after all the banter, someone would finally say, "Well, if no one wants it, I'll eat it." Now that I'm past 40, everyone walks away and leaves it. Dessert may not even be considered!😂
(in bangladesh) We happily eat last piece,there is no problem with that. we also offer the last piece to the youngest one which is a way of showing our love towards the youngest. and also we love to eat desert after the meal ! we take small amount of it if we are not that intereseted.
(In Bangladesh)I dont know where do you live but in any family buffet or anywhere , we usually dont eat the very last piece right? But if everyone agrees to eat desert , if we dont want , we take a small piece of it right? I remember my mom to fight about the bill for 15 mins just so that she can show her gratitude..
Yes! The last piece! There’s ALWAYS one last piece left but we usually don’t ask around if anyone wants it. Eventually someone will eat it once someone points it out.
Number 2 was shocking for me... because dessert is always another food dish hqhahahaha. (We usually have ice cream, coffee, yogurt... as dessert) But while on a trip my friend and I were seriously arguing over paying and the owner said it felt so heart warming to see. haha😅
Indians do the bill thing all the time! I was at a restaurant with my aunt and mother the other day and they spent 30 minutes deciding who’s going to pay.
So relatable tbh. In India it is litreally same just that some rules are: Never leave food (its fine if its too much for you) Order less if u cant eat Always serve others first Try to pay the bill Always give others the chance to eat Basic etiquettes that every asian might be known to ❤
Bulgarian here - the bill fight is *real*. I'd say young people tend to just split the bill nowadays, but otherwise, you'll be fighting over who will pay it. It's a very long back and forth...
Young Bulgarian here. This is the first time I hear of this. We just split the bill or if someone wants to pay for me, I protest once and then accept and thank them.
@@user-ul4jq7gc2i Really? :o Where do you live? It is less common for young Bulgarians (though I've had it happen at cafes) but when I'm out with mum to a restaurant and a friend of hers, it turns into a very long back and forth on who will pay the bill. We're in Sofia.
@@user-ul4jq7gc2i Strange :o I guess it's just different people then, maybe some people follow after their parents and do the back and forth? While others are more used to just splitting the bill? I'm in my early 20s, so if you are younger than me, that could also be a difference.
The paying the bills is the same in my culture but there's a slight difference, the debate doesn't really last long. Sometimes the conversation could go like this... 1st person- *ask for the waiter* "how much is the cost? " 2nd person- "no it's okay I'll pay" 1st person- "okay sure thanks" Maybe it could go longer but my family is usually like this and I'm Malaysian by the way And also even though I am a quarter Chinese and in Chinese culture is also like the "always leave the last piece" but my family don't follow that, it's better we finish all of them even in restaurants or eating with our elders