Same in our Mexican culture, I’ve been with my wife 32 yrs and half of them have been saved solely by her food and how much it taste like my aunt who raised me.
@@enriquecasas3058 Yes, Latino culture and Korean culture have this similarity, among a few others. Definitely love some authentic "de mi mama" and "de mi abuelita" home cooking!
@@xiangwu3932 actually, he’s dead. Thanks for that. But he wasn’t lying. His mother was a very bad cook. He grew up eating a lot of frozen foods and being forced to take a ton of vitamin supplements and drink weird nutritional shakes. My question to you is: why do you feel the need to troll ppl in the comments and to be an ass? It seems that there’s something fundamentally missing from your life and food won’t help with your emotional issues.
That is not always the case. My uncle and I were raised together and my grandmother was raised by her depression era grandmother. Things were really basic growing up. Salt and pepper maybe Italian seasoning. Her spice cabinet to this day has salt pepper Italian seasoning lowery’s garlic salt , and seasoning salt. Never a fresh steamed veg with dinner ( frozen or canned) and the meats were chicken and beef mostly legs thighs and hamburger. If my uncle tells a woman she’s a better cook he is not fibbing. My grandma has a heart of gold but dinner was an inconvenience and the meals were BASIC I never had an artichoke, asparagus, in any form or a fresh steamed veg until 19..
Lmao I know that’s right. One of my husbands friends who he always shares snapchats of the food I make him, always says I have my husband wrapped around my finger with the food I make him lol
It’s great to see our kids appreciated all the years we put in as a mom and still do. My boys are 23&26 and still eat my cooking almost every night and they love it! If it weren’t for them I’d be living of chicken soft tacos and McDoubles. 😂
Met a girl in college and became close friends with her. One day she brought food she cooked which was chicken adobo, and it reminded me so much of my mom's cooking when she was still alive. We've been married for 8 years now, hopefully 'til I die.
The face of purity when he finds out that she took the time to learn the recipe awhile back just to do this for him one day. After everything, that’s everything
@@nikkimiddlekillsday5161 i cant really eat my mom's cooking cause it taste so bland almost to no seasonings fr. The reason why i decided to learn how to cook at age 10😆
@@nikkimiddlekillsday5161my poor mom can burn water, as in she has legitimately burnt water before. I seriously wonder how I made it to being an adult.
Idk I think its weird because he only said this because the food tastes like his moms food. He is happy about his girlfriend being able to cook food for him which tastes like his moms. Its sounds like he likes her for acting like his mom. 🥸
I really respect woman who can cook like her husband mom. Bc doing that is so freaking hard. Even your mom in law teach you, your habbits'll make your cooking taste different.
You can also learn to make it yourself tho. This video is cute but I’ve seen too many boys complaining how their girls don’t cook as good as their mom but dude, your the one who have been living with your mom for like 30 years.. and you have hands, just make it yourself.
Same as any country in this world. But honestly, same goes to ladies. A lady give priority on her food time than anything in this world.🤷🏻♀️ Food is everyones first love
God bless both you and whoever is reading, dont forget Jesus loves you. He died on the cross for our sins and rose three days later. Have an amazing and safe day!❤️!!
As a guy, there’s nothing wrong with a woman cooking differently than her man’s mom. The fact that a woman will take the time to learn dishes from her mother-in-law whether they get along or not says a lot about them and how they view their relationship. It also gives a man a priceless euphoria and creates priceless family recipes that can be taught to another generation rather than be lost in time forever.
Just a reminder that men can also, in fact, learn their mother's recipes or at least write them down. No need for it to be "lost to prosperity" or whatever 😂
@@madeniquevanwyk what planet are you on? 👀 It's 2023. Do you have any idea how common it is for men to know their family's cooking? He definitely knows how to cook it. It's the fact that she LEARNED from the mom out of her own volition that makes this special. I swear to God some of you are under a rock. This is absolutely laughable. Even the BIGGEST laziest momma's boy I know can and does cook his mom's cooking. Gtfoh 🤣
@@nirair9650 depends on the girl. Some girls will want that and some girls will hate you for it and the relationship ends there. The real secret is her seeking it out on her own. If she does that then she really is a match for you. The age of asking things outright is over. Now it's about initiative.
@@ObayiBright oh I didn’t even ruin anything for her lol If she wants to lives under a shadow of his mom then that’s on her but no man should compare their wife’s food to their mom’s that’s something my own dad taught me. Because some men don’t realize that we put as much love if not MORE love into what we make for our husbands.
How? It's really fucked up that his partner would have to recreate his mom's cooking, which is probably shit to be honest, to deserve his love. How is that sweet at all? Please explain
@@allysonlippert nah you all attacking Lauren are the salty ones. The video and the comments here suddenly make me feel lucky that my husband adores me for how I am and how I do things, including how I cook. Can’t imagine being appreciated for recreating someone’s mother’s cooking! That’s just plain childish and weird lol . Like, is it cause his mom’s a good cook or it’s just cause no one can replace mommy? Cause my mom actually was a great cook too and I learnt from my family.