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  2. Made With Lau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Made_With_Lau

    Made With Lau is an American YouTube channel that makes videos about how to cook Cantonese dishes. It features the Cantonese cooking of the Taishan-born Chung Sun Lau (known as Daddy Lau), who had more than 50 years of experience as a chef.

  3. Village Cooking Channel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Village_Cooking_Channel

    Village Cooking Channel is an Indian Tamil language YouTube Channel, popularly known as VCC. They are known for their videos on traditional village food cooking in open fields. [ 2 ] As of Nov 2023, it had 22.9 million subscribers on YouTube and became the first Tamil YouTube channel to receive the first Diamond Creator Award . [ 3 ]

  4. Firoz Chuttipara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firoz_Chuttipara

    In 2018, a YouTube channel called Craft Media was launched when the revenue from the shop was not enough. [18] started doing cooking videos in it .The channel grew quickly. Months later, the Craft Media channel was renamed the Village Food Channel. Then he started a YouTube channel called Travel Master and started making personal videos.

  5. Meet the top 20 food influencers on YouTube and Instagram - AOL

    www.aol.com/meet-top-20-food-influencers...

    Viral TikTok recipes, luscious meals, and cooking tutorials can all be found on his channel. With his friendly and easy style, he guides his audience through many tasty explorations. 6) Epic Meal Time

  6. You Suck at Cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Suck_at_Cooking

    You Suck at Cooking parodies the genre of online cooking tutorial videos. [2] [3] The videos, set in a home kitchen, are shot on a cell phone from a first-person perspective that shows only the kitchen counter and the narrator's hands. [2] [4] The visual style has been described as "deliberately gritty", with lo-fi editing, poor lighting, shaky ...

  7. Auntie Fee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auntie_Fee

    O'Dell became a viral cooking and comedy star in July 2014 when her son Tavis (her cameraman, sidekick, and comedic antagonizer) [7] began recording and uploading videos to YouTube showcasing his mother's home-cooking skills, recipes, and more, as well as her colorful vocabulary and (apparent) short temper. In a series of early videos, with ...

  8. Emmymade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmymade

    Cho started her channel in 2010, while living in Japan; her first video was of her using a Japanese candy-making kit. [2] Her initial goal was to "the dual intention of combating the loneliness of moving away from home and documenting her adventures as a foreigner living in Japan".

  9. John Mitzewich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Mitzewich

    Perhaps uniquely among Internet food writers, each of Mitzewich's recipes is split between the blog and the video instructions on his YouTube channel, with the exact written ingredient amounts and background information about the recipe being posted on the blog, and the method for preparing the recipe not being written but instead explained through the video on YouTube (which otherwise does ...