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  2. 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 ...

  3. Made With Lau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Made_With_Lau

    [9] [18] Daddy Lau shares his cooking tips in the videos such as the best way to sharpen a knife and his technique to extract as much taste as possible from dried scallops. [18] Daddy Lau also plays the flute, and his music appears in the channel's videos as its theme music. [4] Daddy Lau speaks Cantonese in the videos.

  4. J. Kenji López-Alt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Kenji_López-Alt

    López-Alt started a YouTube channel in 2016, which, as of March 2022, had over one million subscribers and over 200 million views. The videos are POV-style demonstrations of recipes and cooking techniques in López-Alt's home kitchen that feature unscripted commentary and largely unedited footage. [26]

  5. Bob's Your Uncle (YouTuber) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob's_Your_Uncle_(YouTuber)

    He started his YouTube channel on 26 January 2014. [12] [15] Six months after creating the channel, Uncle Bob had uploaded more than 60 videos, each of which was receiving tens of thousands of views. [4] The dishes in his cooking videos are from different countries' cuisines and are primarily higher-end.

  6. Sorted Food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorted_Food

    Sorted Food is a British YouTube channel and food community created on 10 March 2010, by Benjamin Ebbrell, Michael Huttlestone, Jamie Spafford, and Barry Taylor. [2] In addition to producing cooking videos and live events, Sorted Food publishes cookbooks and manages the subscription-based recipe app "Sidekick".

  7. Grandpa Kitchen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grandpa_Kitchen

    Prior to his YouTube profession, Reddy was a gardener. [7] His first video, "King Of 2000 EGGS," was uploaded in August 2017. [2] As of 1 November 2019, the channel built a subscriber base of 6.11 million, [7] with Indian and foreign viewers, [1] and included over 220 videos. [7] His first video was viewed on over 2.6 million occasions.

  8. Brothers Green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brothers_Green

    Brothers Green formerly hosted an online cooking show Brothers Green Eats on YouTube and a cooking and music TV show with MTV international that airs in over 90 countries around the world. [1] In 2019, Brothers Green announced their split as a creative team, with Josh starting a new, less food-focused YouTube channel and Mike keeping and ...

  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 ...