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- We are here at Xi'an Famous Foods
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to figure out what's behind
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one of New York's most iconic noodle dishes,
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the famous hand-pulled lamb noodles.
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- I'm very excited to check it out, so let's go.
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(upbeat music)
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- Lamb is something that we use a lot in our dishes,
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not just in our spicy cumin lamb dishes.
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Lamb is also used in other things like our
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lamb pao mo soup and other lamb, you know,
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there's like an iron pot lamb that's very popular in Xi'an.
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There's just a lot of lamb.
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There's a Muslim population there
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and that's historically because of the trade,
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the Silk Road, and different people coming through.
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We take a small part of that tradition.
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We don't cook Halal food.
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We do have heavy influences from that type of cuisine.
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So, we use a lot of lamb.
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Working well with the spices, there's like a
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new flavor-- - It really stands up to it.
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It's not chicken. If it were just on chicken
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then you would taste just the spice.
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- It was you and your dad that started
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the business together, right?
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- He started the business back in 2005.
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I was still in school, and then after four years,
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I joined the business because I just thought
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(there's)such an opportunity here.
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- Alright, Jason. We are dying to know.
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What is behind your lamb dishes?
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- I'm going to ask our central kitchen chef, Mr. Wang,
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to help us cut this apart.
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He's very familiar with all of our operations here,
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and he still personally cuts a lot of the meat himself.
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- Jason, I notice we're keeping all these
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nice kind of fattier bits here.
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- That's a great question and a lot of
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our guests actually are probably going to be like,
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"Aw man, they use the so much gristle and crap?"
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It's just because you need that fat in order to,
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when you're cooking on a wok, everything's going to shrink.
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All the fat's going to turn to oil,
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and you really want that lamb oil
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in order to give it that flavor.
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- Do you predominately only use lamb shoulder?
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- Any parts of lamb, honestly, that has
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that mixture of fat and lean meat.
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- [Ben] It really does give you that kind of
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natural balance of a decent amount of fat,
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but it's also a hard working muscle.
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You get a lot of flavor out of it.
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- We're just going to marinate this a little bit.
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It helps to tenderize the meat.
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It gets some of the unpleasant gaminess out of it,
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but we just have to give it a better texture
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as well when we're cooking it.
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- What's going to go in our marinade?
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- Salt, cooking wine. We have starch here and some oil.
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Looks like we have enough lamb for our dish later.
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Alright, we're going to bring it over to our store
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here that's attached to our central kitchen.
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We going to cook this in our wok,
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and then we're going to do the noodles,
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and you know, it's lunchtime.
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Cool, let's do it.
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(upbeat music)
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We just heat the wok up really hot.
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- [Ben] So, that's like already sizzling hot
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within like seven seconds.
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First thing in is the meat, give some of that fat
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to render down and crisp up.
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- The oil that we added before doesn't give it that flavor.
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So, really, the oil from the fat
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will be able to achieve that.
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Right now, Wang's adding the chili oil.
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That's the house made chili oil that we use.
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- It's not a competitive thing like in New York
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where people are like militant about their favorite pizza
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joint or anything like that is it?
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- It's very, very competitive.
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It's very competitive.
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Like in China, your family name on the chili oil.
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You'll have a picture of your ancestor on the bottle.
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You can go to the Chinese grocery stores and you'll see.
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If you go to the dining restaurant,
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you're gonna see a lot of, like a huge menu.
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You're like wondering, "How do they ever cook
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all these items, right?"
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"Do they ever cook all these items?"
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They probably don't get requests for a lot of them
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very often, but it's important for Chinese chefs
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to typically have a large menu.
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To show that they can do everything.
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- I never even thought about why a Chinese menu
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would be long. Much less, that it is a point of pride.
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It's like do you have people come in and by like,
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"Can I get some pork lo mein?"
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- We, still get some of those.
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Some people who ask for french fries.
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Some people ask for chicken wings.
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I think thankfully because we're in a big city,
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and we do have a lot of exposure to different cuisines.
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So, people sort of understand.
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How do you measure up with the food
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that's actually in Xi'an, right?
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That's another sort of question,
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and I'm very confident about it
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because the thing is you can't find this food in Xi'an.
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When I say that it almost seems counterintuitive
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like Jason are sort of admitting your food is not authentic?
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What is authentic?
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Is it authentic because like, well, I'm from there.
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I cook food that's with that taste profile.
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If you mean authentic meaning you can find the same food
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in any of these stalls that you walk into
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you can find the same taste?
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Then I guess we're not authentic.
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I'm not so much worried about knowledge.
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You know, I want people to know what is in Xi'an.
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I want people to travel over there and then come back
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and be like, "Oh, okay, this is different, but you know what
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I can appreciate the differences."
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- It's your interpretation,
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and that's what makes it interesting.
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- It is true to like your family. It's what you ate.
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It's true to like the trade routes that went through there.
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Is it more important that it's authentic?
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Or is it more important that it's like honest,
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and that you're trying to do something good.
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- Yeah, is it more important that it taste good?
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At the end of the day, do you enjoy it?
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I'm gonna pull some noodles.
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This is just dough. Nothing special about it.
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So, what I'm doing is kinda pulling on it.
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At the same time, hitting it.
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Just kind of slap it on the surface like that.
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Overall, you just rip it in half.
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And that's the noodle.
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Usually, I'm just gonna drop them right in the water
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because they can't stay too long after being pulled.
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Do you guys wanna give it a go?
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He's pushing a little hard, look like he's a,
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- Pushing a little hard, but he's
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- But, he's pretty fast. He's pretty fast.
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- Look at that, look at that, wow.
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Great motions, actually.
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- Well enough?
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- Looks like he's, no it looks perfect. Yeah.
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- Wow.
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- Looks like he's been doing this for a while actually.
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Oh, no. (laughs)
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So, we're gonna take the middle part like a string cheese,
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and just rip it in the middle.
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- Look at the landing. He's stuck the landing.
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- This is awesome. I'm never going home.
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(laughs)
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- This is fun as hell.
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- So, it looks pretty good.
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We fished these out, and they are ready to go.
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Freshly cooked lamb from before.
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I got the cabbage, here, and it's blanched.
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And we've got some scallions, and chive flowers,
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and celery mix.
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And then, we are gonna dress it with the
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most important things: the noodle sauce and the chili oil.
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(upbeat techno)
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- That is so good!
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I love this dish!
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- Oh, man.
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- Yeah, the chili oil is so nice.
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- We're super generous with the cumin,
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but it just works in this case.
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- The shoulder is the perfect cut for it too.
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It has texture. It's gonna go well with the noodles.
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But, because there's fat to it too,
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it stands up to that spice.
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Even for this, you see the imperfections and you can tell
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that somebody actually made it which is awesome.
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That's what you want out of food.
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- Every part of this dish is made by our own recipes.
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And the noodles are made to order
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because that's the only way it can be made.
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I wish I could make the noodles ahead of time.
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That would save a lot of trouble.
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It's one of the special things about us though.
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So, it's something I probably wouldn't change.
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- It's perfect for New York.
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You order your food.
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You get it in three to five minutes. It's affordable.
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But, like, all of this stuff is actually made here.
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- If you guys ever travel to like any part of Asia
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everything's so fast, and it's just any minute
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that you waste it's like lost money, pretty much, right?
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For the guest or for your yourself or whatnot.
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That sort of mentality was like something
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even back in the days when we were in Flushing.
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We didn't have a PR system.
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You had to memorize all the totals.
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For example, if you ordered two dishes,
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I had to remember it was you that ordered those two dishes.
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And add together the math.
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And I'll be like you were before him.
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You know, it's crazy.
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But, that was kind of the culture
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that our business was built on.
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- So much fun to learn about
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a serious New York City iconic dish.
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- I appreciate you guys coming, and you know,
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you guys were really good with the noodles.
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That was the most surprising part of it all.
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I was like you know, you guys are gonna be pretty good
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in the meat rooms, but I don't know about the noodles part.
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But, wow, you guys are good.
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- What time do I show up for work tomorrow?
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- Let's get here at nine, I think?
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- Okay, cool. This is better than the Meat Hook.
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- The commute shouldn't be that bad. (laughs)
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- If you enjoyed this video, maybe you will also enjoy
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some of the videos from our good friends over at Vox.
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- [Narrator] Your oven to 350 degrees
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is sort of a basic requirement for baking in America.
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Our ovens even do it automatically as we turn them on.
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But, have you ever stopped and asked yourself.