My Indian breakfast is usually cold leftover lamb jalfrezi from last night and the remains of an onion bhaji. I've got some mango chutney in the fridge
I always eat street food all over the world. The rules are, 1) only eat food that you have seen freshly cooked staight from the heat. 2) never eat fruit unless you have peeled it yourself. 3) check the seal on bottled water to ensure they aren't refilled. 4) avoid salads. In 42 years and 30 odd countries I've never had a problem, But I've eaten some heavenly food.
I’ve been eating paratha for a decade and croissants double that and this is the first time I’ve realised why my freezer is never without paratha in it…flat croissant!! Absolutely makes so much sense to me now 😂 Thanks for that! And puuri are another fave! One thing about South Asia is they have my heart when it comes to breads. Nothing compliments a meal better than a freshly prepared, thick, doughy, fluffy naan 🤌🏽
We've changed as a society, travelling to work 25 year ago people on the train would sit and read a paper, have a snooze, look out the window, roll cigarettes, 1 guy i used to see would be practising card tricks!!! or maybe have a chat with a fellow traveller. Now i look up and everyone is sat looking at a screen and i bet you maybe 50% are going to sit in an office looking at a screen all day!!!
Chai is an original Chinese term for tea that has travelled in South, Central and South East Asia. Hindi is a modern word for old Hindustani/Urdu and has Persian, Turkish, Pashto influences in its vocabulary. In early 20th Century there were many language based riots with the Hindu zealots wanting to oppose Urdu and it's Arabic script so now they write Hindustani/Urdu in Sanscritic Devanagari script but with slightly less Perso-Arabic vocabulary
I had curry for breakfast today. It was the afternoon but it was the first food I ate all day. Vegetable and chicken curry with leftover roast veg from saturday and leftover roast chicken from sunday
I would be totally spoiled for choice between those two as they both looked gorgeous. Canadian probably just edges it but would have to back the next day for the Indian one! Get in there and great to see you Danny have got it again with a vengeance!! Thanks
Danny you should take a friend of yours who’s Indian / Asian to help you when you try these Indian/Asian places. It will help you understand what things are and help you with your spice level lol. That other “sweet pastry” you had isn’t a pastry, it’s another style of “flatbread / chappati”.
Used to be a regular viewer, haven't watched in over a year and got to say Im impressed you're still bang it. Well done sir, thought you'd have croaked by now
While having Indian food, everything on the plate is supposed to be had together in a mouthful.. that's how you balance the spice levels and enjoy the combination of flavours❤ if you try one of it alone, in this case the spiced beans then you'll obviously find it spicy because you didn't have it with the other items supposed to be had alongwith it for the balance
That's how he does his videos, tastes each thing separately. It's also not going to be easy to taste every flavour together when they're in separate compartments of the plate
I think that's fitting seeing Britain is run by India Islam & Blacks & the English genocide is well underway vanishing from football TV Streets & Politics & promote cultures who commit the most crimes & terrorism
My usual Indian breakfast is cold Peshwari Naan with cold Chicken Vindaloo served in a crushed foil tray. However, I've been to Canada a couple of times and I know they love bacon, eggs, pancakes and maple syrup. Canadian hash browns are grated spuds not those types. They love their hash browns over there.
@@therefreshed5887 Just add them to the beans? They are plenty salty as is. I wonder if they maybe simmer them with some specific spices. Danny said they had a kick, and garam masala isn't spicy/hot at all
@albionswede basically fry a mix of chopped onions, chilli powder, garlic, ginger, chillis, coriander and tomatoes, then add in the baked beans and you're good to go 👍
@albionswede when you say kick, the black pepper adds to that. It's meant to have a deep dark taste. But at the end of the day your right in that you could add spices to your taste and its whatever suits you. The missing accompanying dish on Danny's indian meal was halva. Semolina
Im half Indian of Canadian origin and that Canadian breakfast is the Indian version of a Canadian breakfast, traditional Canadian breakfast is not like this, however the Indian community created this hybrid version and it originated from Toronto from the early Indian immigrants. Thought I would mention this to save to confusion. 😂
Glad to hear you had a great honeymoon danny, Hope you and Sophie have many amazing years ahead. Great to see old editor with you again 😅 He didnt get in quickly enough to spend your money this time haha. Great review
An Indian friend would show you how to best eat the Indian meal. Inorder to get the authentic experience the various breads are used to scoop up the beans, curry etc
As an Indian living in the UK, that is not a traditional Indian Breakfast. There should be something like an Idli Sambhar or Dosa provided. Think this lot is just adapting vegetarian curries and calling them breakfast foods. You would not get this in India.
Dan- the Pooris are like mini parathas- you eat them by wrapping the potatoes, egg or chickpeas (Chana) like a taco. And in Canada we wouldn’t ever have pineapple with our pancakes and bacon lol. Don’t sit so close to the road mate!
Anybody else notice when danny clapped his hands the guy crossing road and the car driving down street disappeared haha great editing that 😉 both of them breakfasts looked good to be fair, keep up the good work guys and congratulations danny on your marriage ❤🎉
Danny just to let you know you can still get£1 burgers in Blackpool from you know who the Mac master is trying to tread on your toes love the breakfast 😂
While on Caribbean Cruise in 2010, all meals were included so for breakfast I was having steak, eggs...and pineapple and I promise it works on an English breakfast amazingly! Yes, pineapple on pizza too.
@@comedinewithchillinic3962 I do understand that that’s their culture. I stand by my first comment. Also I am a well educated and well travelled person. 🤗
Hello Danny, I would like to suggest you try a place in Chesterfield called "Fat pig BBQ" it is really nice and definitely worth the money. Much love Todez xxx
Danny would you ever come to suffolk and Norfolk?we're so out in the sticks the food is farmed and wholesome it's lovely would love to see you this way
Hi Danny I like the way you speak to the flys and wasps in quite a nice way, it shows that you care about God's creatures , thanks Danny for your videos, From Tony from Bedfordshire
Both breakfasts looked really good, I would easily try both but the hash browns looked like shop bought rubbish, really easly to make your own rather than those generic triangle type ones. Love pancakes and syrup for breckie, it balances the saltiness of the bacon which I would have.
Although there is t much technique involved in making hash browns, they are a complete ball ache to make! I tend to use every pot and pan in my kitchen!
@@shsh-he5qg - Please don't be that inevitable person who gets bogged down in the pure technical pedantry of language without any awareness of the applied context. 'Chai' in India does indeed refer to chai. 'Chai tea' in multiple English-speaking countries refers to that same Indian drink. But it's not a redundant tautology when used in that context. In those countries, just calling it 'tea' would confuse it with regular black tea. Just calling it 'chai' might be an unknown word to English-speaking people (admittedly more so back years ago when it first became popular in those countries, as opposed to now where it is fairly mainstream). So calling it 'chai tea' in those countries provides clarification and context. The addition of 'tea' as a suffix isn't fundamentally needless. Additionally, if you wanted to get pedantic (or in your case, remain so), while the word 'chai' is used in many Asian countries (or at least regional derivatives of the word) to refer to tea, it refers to vastly different things within each of those countries. In India, it refers to 'Masala chai', being the Indian drink with the black tea and spices which Danny tries here. But in China, the term chá would typically refer to plain green or white tea. So the Chinese wouldn't use the word chá within China if they wanted to specify a Masala chai. Just the same as the English wouldn't use the word 'tea' if they wanted to order a Masala chai.
I know I bought this up before one of your website RU-vid but it would be really good if you could do something or show some homeless people how they can get some food as cheaply as possible and live thank you and I know you have a kind heart ❤ so I think you're at least consider it thanks
Interesting combo, Indian breakfast is much different. South Indian vs north indian breakfast. In south 2 type. South veg (almost common to 3 states) and south Non vegetarian unique to one State Kerala must try u might get beef or fish for breakfast as well, but Kerala hotels are very rare in UK. Yes India tea is brewed not just mixed.😉