Nick DiGiovanni - Can I Turn Mark Rober Into A Chef?
Episode Date: May 20, 2025Watch to the end and comment below with a rating of Mark’s dish! ...
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The voice that we love that am.
This is Mark Rober.
One of the biggest YouTubers on the planet
who's gotten billions of views
on his science and engineering videos.
But it turns out he has no idea how to cook.
Today, I'm going to turn Mark
into a master chef. I'll start by putting him through an intense culinary boot camp.
And once he masters the three most important skills in the kitchen, he'll attempt to cook a gourmet
meal all by himself, completely from scratch. Mark, apron on. You'll get a chef's coat just like this
one. If and when, you earn it. And before we start our official training, I have a gift.
Whoa. That is your brand new chef's knife. Take good care of it. This is what's going to
teach you to do anything in the kitchen. How do I judge if it's sharp? I'll give you a piece of paper.
Okay, yeah. Look, that's sharp.
Not how it's done.
Oh.
Whoa.
Can we just cook with paper?
One more thing before we start.
If you succeed in this whole challenge,
you get this cool trophy right here.
I do have a trophy case at Crunch Labs,
and this would look very good.
If you fail, you have to wear this hamburger hat
on your whole trip home.
Come on.
This is how I'd look.
The first skill I'm going to teach Mark is knife skills.
Before you can cut anything, you need to know how to hold a knife.
How would you hold this knife?
Uh, for sure, like this.
Wrong.
Really?
I at least have the right end.
Give me that.
The way that you actually hold a chef's knife
is you pinch around the base of the blade
with your thumb and pointer finger
and then wrap the rest of your fingers around the handle.
That gives you full control,
almost like an extension of your arm,
and then you can slice nice even cuts.
Because I don't trust you yet,
you're gonna put this cut proof glove on.
No way, this is like chain mail.
Mark can't cut his fingers now.
With your other hand, you wanna make a nice claw.
The claw.
And you wanna cut using the claws as a guide
and go down the edge there.
Pick up this knife and just start showing me
those slices on the cutting board.
Try to get in the rhythm of it.
Watch the motion.
Oh yeah.
Mmm, I understand.
He's a quick learner.
Can I do a no look or I always need to be looking?
You can do a no look.
You sometimes do that.
Alright, let's bring in some ingredients.
First up, tomatoes.
Tomatoes, isn't that like the hardest thing to cut?
With the first tomato, I want you to make nice even slices.
Yes, Chef.
It should be going forward the whole time.
Oh yeah, yeah.
That's how you slice.
Okay, okay.
Even slices.
You said that like I'm not doing them evenly.
Well, are you?
You know, this was the first one.
We're not counting this. This is the last one.
Last one, I know as chefs you never count the first than last.
I've seen worse.
Looking at these initial knife cuts,
we're starting back at square one, maybe square zero.
There's room for improvement, I'll give you that.
If we get to the challenge later in the video,
I'm not gonna be the one judging you.
You're gonna be the judges, so at the end of the video,
comment down below if you think Mark did a good job
and if you think he became a master chef.
My fate is in your capable hands.
Next tomato. Get me the thinnest slice you can possibly get.
This is all about precision and knife control.
Whoa, okay.
You're not holding the knife correctly, are you?
Ah, ah.
Ah.
Do this curl?
Don't stand awkwardly, relax, and just position yourself however you need to be able to kind of properly.
Good point.
Thin, even slice.
Thinner than that, I need like thin thin thin.
Okay, first one doesn't count.
This is nice.
Oh, I can see like the cells in that thing.
Already you've gone from about a 1 on a scale of 100 to maybe a 7 or an 8.
Dang.
Okay, so precision you've got.
That's my thing. In the kitchen, I'm more of a real.
of like precise guy.
That's why I don't have like the feel in the art,
but like give me the numbers.
You crush this exercise.
When do I graduate from the glove?
I feel like such a newbie with this.
You'll graduate when you're ready.
One time I saw you perfectly take all the rind off
of watermelon, but you use sponges and you kind of cheated.
Now I want you to do it like a real chef would
with a knife.
Clean it off in the fewest number of cuts that you can.
Wow, that's a lot.
Don't stand awkwardly, grab the knife appropriately.
Relax, relax. Relax.
Mm-hmm.
Here we go.
This is where you need to be a little bit more forceful.
Okay, yeah, I'm getting that.
One, you're going on an angle right now.
Be careful.
Look at the shape of the watermelon.
Look at the base.
If I do that, though, it's not going to be parallel to the other side.
That's like 12 degrees right there.
Now I'm going to put it like this.
Oh, boy.
Follow the rind.
Okay, just follow the rind.
Oh, boy.
Holding the knife incorrectly.
Oh, such a stickler.
Sometimes a smaller knife helps try that out.
That even says your name on it.
I'm going to speak to Mark in some science terms now.
Thank you.
Apply lots of torque and twist down the edge of the watermelon.
Understood.
You're not holding the knife right.
This is safer and better.
Whoa, the Mark Rover knife, it's easier to apply that torque.
You want me to try you one?
Yeah.
Boom.
See that?
See how curved it is?
That was very different.
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Not bad.
A little bit more red here than here.
That's all right.
What do you think, chat?
Stop calling them chat.
Chat's got my back.
Much better.
You're getting better throughout the watermelon.
Yeah.
Now flip it upside out and do some cleanup.
Remember, we want as much watermelon there as possible.
When you take off the rind, it should just be green and white.
Oh, that was a bad one.
What do you think, chef?
Why don't you grade yourself with this?
That's like a B-minus.
You need to be in an A.
To get the Knife Skills badge, you must chop this whole onion in 60 seconds or less.
Before you try to do that, I'm going to show you how it's stuff.
Thank you.
I actually have a picture of myself cutting an onion
when I was six years old because my mom asked me
to help prepare for dinner and I went upstairs
and got the swim goggles.
Goggles.
Goggles! I came up with this idea first, so Nick, all right?
And this actually works, right?
I don't need goggles for this.
What? Wait, why? You're like immune?
No, if you have a sharp enough knife
and you use the right technique, you shouldn't cry.
So you're saying I'm gonna cry
because my technique will be so bad?
Well, hopefully it's not.
This would be a bummer of a video if it just ended here.
So first step, peel the onion.
There's no real chef's trick.
It's just kind of annoying for everybody.
First thing, chop off the top.
Upside down, chop it in half.
What about this part?
That actually is what holds the whole onion together,
so we need that.
This is where the claw comes in.
Chop down the onion.
You're not going through the whole thing.
Not all the way through, 90% of the way through.
If I'm being honest, you haven't done anything.
Like it just looks like an onion.
Sure, okay.
So we do the claw again.
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.
That is so cool.
And you're just going forward.
And we're left with this stub,
and if you really wanna chop the rest,
you can just...
And that's how you chop in the other.
No way. That's wild. Wait, the clock starts from the beginning? I mean like from this point?
For the knife skills badge, you must chop this whole onion in 60 seconds. You ready? I'm ready.
Three, two, one. Go. It's not my best start.
Uh, peel! Moving quick. Oh! Oh!
Nice. Don't forget how you hold your knife. Yeah, you got it. 30 seconds left.
Come on. I need a sous chef.
I'm falling apart, Seth.
10 seconds left.
What?
There's no way that's true.
Quick, quick, quick.
Five, four, three, two, one.
Hand up.
I got a little bit of glove in there in the end.
I'm not going to lie.
To see if Mark gets the badge,
I say we compare my pile of chopped onion
to Mark's pile of chopped onion.
There are a couple bigger chunks there
where you didn't cut all the way through.
The thing is, I like my onions's little chunkier.
So this was definitely an intentional choice.
Mark?
For somebody who never cooks, I think you just earn yourself...
Yes!
The Knife Skills Badge.
There it is, baby.
One of three, right?
One of three.
I'm very motivated.
For the second badge, you must learn, heat control.
What does that even mean?
Cooking with a flame.
It requires just as much focus and precision as knife skills, but now we're dealing with fire.
Which is cool.
If we make it to the final challenge, this will be extremely important.
The first thing I want you to do is toast this bagel perfectly.
Perfectly.
Remember that one time in your video when you made me toast?
I still dream of it.
about that. As you know, I don't put my bagels or my toast in a toaster. I cook it on the pan.
So I need you to cook it on the pan and get the inside, perfect golden brown. Can you do it?
Yeah, I got to remember what you did. It definitely has something to do with butter. Okay,
let's turn that on to 11 heat. Are you asking? No, I'm just saying and I'm looking at your face
when I do it. Maybe a little lower. Like eight heat, I mean? Five heat. Perfect. I're going to take
this butter and I'll put it right on the bagel in the pan. Mm-hmm. That I'm going to do
this like a pro let it melt.
I just pop this in here and I move it all around.
This is exactly so far how I would be doing it.
This is good.
I'm not kidding, when you made me that toast,
that's like the top five culinary experiences of my life.
You're being totally serious.
I'm dead serious.
I dream about that toast.
I'm not kidding you.
I'm noticing two things already.
First, your pan is off center on the flame.
Oh, this way.
Right, exactly.
Then constantly be adjusting that flame as you go.
You should be picking up the bagel, checking it, seeing
if it gets brown anywhere and then shifting it around at all times.
You need to constantly be moving the pan,
changing the heat like a DJ.
You wanna see a quick trick that I think you'd appreciate
because of science?
Yeah. So if my pan ever gets too hot,
I will immediately bring it back to the sink,
turn on the water, it instantly cools the pan down.
That is so good.
And then you're back to square one.
Okay, back up to five.
There's so many variables to be thinking about
when you're cooking something over heat.
The other key that you have to think about
that you haven't really thought enough about yet
is that surface area contact
between the bagel and the pan.
When people are trying to cook a steak
and they don't get a proper sear,
it's usually because the steak's bubbling up
and there's little pockets of it that aren't touching the pan.
Press down, make even contact on the whole bagel.
Treat it like a really fancy steak.
What I'm also noticing here,
and what I'm proud of Mark for is the fact
that he's got chef hands already.
You aren't seeming to be phased by the heat,
by the hot oil that's spotting up on you, by the butter.
It's just calluses from engineering and weightlifting.
You have chef hands.
Heck yeah.
99% of people I meet don't have chef hands.
Yeah, I bet Treyhan had soft
full baby.
Pillow hands.
Yeah.
They probably smelled like lavender or something.
That looks golden brown.
I can already tell you really good around heat and you just perfectly nailed a golden
brown bagel so I actually feel ready to jump you to the final test for this batch.
Okay, do I get to taste this?
Ooh, I like the crunch.
That's pretty good.
It's not as good as your toast, but it's good.
Oh, wow.
Wow, that's really good.
Did you hear the crunch?
What is that from?
Myard reaction.
If you want the real science.
I do want the real science.
For the heat control badge, Mark, you must make me.
me the perfect pancake.
Oh.
It's got to be fluffy.
It's got to be even golden brown across the whole thing.
And it's got to be delicious.
Do you make pancakes?
Do you how much?
They're waffles.
So no.
Are you ready?
Are you going to go without butter?
Oh, no, I'm not going to go without butter.
I'm going to go with about this much butter.
Make the perfect pancake.
That's it, right?
That's it.
Already, this is usually more butter than I would typically.
Is that like a trick to be a good chef?
Yeah, chefs use a lot of butter.
Do a very small amount.
Make sure it's perfect.
No reaction at all.
On these final challenges, I can't tell you much.
Choose your weapon.
I'm more of a flat-wide guy.
Okay.
Trick to a good pancake.
I learned when I was a kid.
You wait for the bubbles.
Cool.
You said cool like that's not the trick.
Okay, we're not sticking, that's good.
You kind of only want to flip once, too.
That's what I always say.
I have never met anyone who flips their pancakes more than once.
Okay, we're seeing the bubble action.
We're just waiting for that one last section to come through.
You've got to be very confident when you flip.
It's got to be a clean.
The other thing is a lot of times I don't even use a spatula. I do. No way. Yeah. Do you want to see it? I'm gonna flip this without a spatula
Can we agree regardless of how this looks if I flip this without a spatula? I get the badge. No
Let's just be clear if it's burnt you don't get the badge if it gets messy when it flips
You don't get the badge until you make me the perfect pancake. You don't get the batch
So much pressure. Okay, here we go. I'm ready three
two
One that doesn't look normal how did you even get those packs? I
I don't know. It's burnt. It kind of looks like an English muffin. That tastes a disgusting.
What was that? Try again. Can't not move forward until I get this right. This time I'm gonna flip it earlier. I don't want to wait for full bubbles throughout. I'm not gonna say anything. It's back to you. Okay, here we go.
Okay, we're up to a great start already.
I'm already turning it down to like a four.
I feel like slow and low is how you want to rock a pancake.
Already we've got great bubble formation.
The pancake's a little off center in the pan,
and what I'm optimizing for is pancake placement.
The pancake itself is right in the crosshair of the stone.
Smart.
I like how you're using your engineering skills
to create the perfect pancake.
You gotta play to your strengths, right?
Sure.
The thing about cooking is that it's actually all science.
So theoretically, Mark should be a really good
That's true.
Theoretically.
Theoretically, I should be able to do this.
Now sometimes, and this is an advanced move, you can do a little bit of a peak.
Smart, I like that.
I saw some brown.
I'm ready for the flip.
You are?
Yep.
All right, let's see.
Here it is.
Boom.
We're good.
You were a little heavy handed on the butter on this one.
I still don't know that I'd call that the perfect pancake.
Third time's a charm.
What are you doing different this time?
I want a nice thin layer of butter.
I've been a little heavy handed on the butter.
What I'm gonna do now is wipe it around, and I'm just coating the whole entire pan.
I've turned the heat down, a single pour right in the middle.
That's your best pour so far.
That is a perfectly circular pancake, and already those bubbles are starting to form.
I'm also rotating the pan a bit more.
In case like parts of the flame are hotter than the others, it's kind of like how on your microwave it spins around.
So you don't have like hot spots and cold spots?
You cook with a microwave, Nick?
No.
Me neither.
I mean, look at that.
You can calibrate an instrument on the International Space Station with the circularity of this pancake.
I don't even know what that means.
I think it's ready to flip.
This is the big moment. Come on.
That's a nice, slim pancake.
I like the texture.
Perfectly smooth across the whole thing.
You do have an attention to detail with the food I've noticed, Nick.
That really takes it to the next level.
This is really, really good.
If that's not the definition of heat control, not sure what is.
It's a perfect circle.
It's perfectly even in thickness, and that crust on the top is even in golden brown, which means...
Two for three.
Two for three, baby. We're getting there.
Still one left.
I've heard this is the hardest of the three.
I was actually about to say that.
Okay, and I made that up. I assume it is.
Okay. What's the one is it?
In order to make it to the final challenge,
you need to achieve your seasoning batch,
which is one of the most important things in cooking.
In front of us, I've created a mad scientist flavor lab
with all the different textures and flavors you find in food.
There's a lot here.
To start out, I want you to look at all these categories.
They're in groups of three.
Each one of these groups represents some kind of taste or some kind of texture.
In order to move into the different,
to the next stage of our seasoning lesson,
I need you to properly identify each of these sections.
I'm on it.
This, that's a potato chip.
This is a cornflake.
And this breadcrumbs?
Well, I feel like this represents the texture of crispy.
Nailed it.
Boit.
Get it out of here.
Here we go.
This syrup.
Ooh, I'm looking forward to this bite.
The good stuff.
Salt?
Just kidding.
It's sugar.
And this looks like honey.
This represents sweet.
Correct.
Get it out of here.
These are getting harder.
Okay, I think I got this one.
Lemon juice, vinegar, and pickles.
This is like vinegar, like acidity.
Acidic.
Here we go.
All right.
This, peanut bar.
What is this gonna be?
Cream?
And this looks like mayonnaise.
This feels like that.
Mark's getting good.
You're already doing way better than Ryan Trahan
with the seasoning section.
He didn't know really what any of this stuff was.
He thought pesto grew on trees.
Everyone knows it grows.
in the bush.
Coming up next, this is...
Oh, oh, ginger?
Yeah.
Hot sauce.
Could have been ketchup, but it's hot sauce.
That's pepper.
I don't need to taste that.
This is a high concentration of capsaic,
also known as spicy stuff.
Spice.
Good job, Mark.
Now this is where it might start to get a little bit tricky.
You can tell, I've gone from like what's easy.
Remember, some tastes, some textures.
Okay.
This, I'm hoping it is what I think it is.
I thought that was coconut.
That was not coconut.
Not going on it. It's um Parmesan cheese. There you go. This is a mushroom. I don't eat taste that
Well, I'm gonna do it anyways. This any guesses soy sauce
What is that? What's your share? Oh Worcestershire. So this is
Umami Wow, I didn't think you'd get that like that I made that up. I don't know what
Umami is I heard people say it that was a hailberry. What does umami mean sort of like a taste that makes you want to keep eating? I thought that was sugar this I know what it is because I grow it in my yard as
As suspected. This smells like toothpaste. This is mint. Mm-hmm.
This, I have no idea what's about to happen.
Sour cream.
Nope.
What?
Okay, okay.
Yogurt.
Yeah.
Last one.
Cucumber.
What do all those doing to you?
It's like refreshing?
Close.
Cooling.
There you go.
Okay, two more.
This looks kind of delicious.
That's like coffee.
Yep.
Really hoping this is cocoa powder.
I'm just going full send.
It is cocoa powder.
Why would you eat that much?
I thought like quick, Nestle quick, taste delicious.
You're going to choke on it.
Water!
Taste in small amounts.
What the heck is this?
Last one.
It tastes like gross sprite.
Tonic?
Yeah.
What do they do to your palate?
They make it, um, bitter.
Bitter!
I pulled that out!
This last one should be pretty easy.
This looks like it's kind of like feta or blue cheese, which I love.
That's feta.
Salt, I'm guessing.
Hard to mess this one up, yeah.
This, a clean spoon.
Soy sauce.
I want to say salty.
Salty it is.
Ready for the challenge, though?
I have prepared a beautiful chicken stir fry.
It's got chickens.
It's got all sorts of veggies, it's got sesame seeds,
but it's missing something.
It's got absolutely zero seasoning.
To get the seasoning badge, you need to use a combination
of these ingredients to make a sauce for this surfride.
It needs a one-way ticket to Flavitown.
Bring it there.
Okay, generally versus stir-file,
I think I want like a terriaki.
To me, that says like umami.
I like it kind of sweet.
Maybe a little bit of a kick to it.
It's starting with honey.
Like that much I know I want.
Okay, that's probably enough honey.
We're moving.
You wanna put the heat on,
or are you just gonna let it cook without the heat?
Oh, that's what happens when you flood the room with gas and then light a spark kids now
This was the Worcesters sauce. I just want a little bit of that soy sauce is like a given I did a lot of soy sauce
Okay, I'm gonna mix this in next up go with me on this little potato chip
You never saw that coming did ya? I think a little peanut butter to be honest
And it's gonna give you a little bit of that fat get those lipids in there mix that up a little bit of a hey, how are ya?
That's actually not bad a little bit sweet I want to bring that down a little bit
little bit. A little bit of ginger. Similar to like a bay leaf, it kind of goes in there for the
flavor profile. You're not necessarily supposed to eat it. And that, by the way, is serving the same
function as my potato chip. I'm not loving the viscosity. What you want is somewhere in
between honey and soy sauce, and I feel like we're a little too close on the honey end of the spectrum.
I might thin it out with a little bit of feta cheese juice. That juice is going to have a little
bit of salt. You have something like a coconut milk? That's going to give it a little bit of that
lipid, sort of in the flavor profile of East Asian cuisine.
Do we have any like seeds?
Sesame seeds?
Seeds.
Seeds. Thank you.
I'm really impressed that Mark is asking for stuff
that is not actually already here on the counter.
That shows that he's thinking outside the box.
You know what it needs?
I think it needs a little bit more sweetness.
Making sure that's sugar, not salt.
True story, I made a batch of cookies
and I poured a cup of salt in.
They were not good.
Okay, see if that changed anything.
Nick, I am very proud to say,
we've arrived to Flavortown.
Once you pour it onto the stir fry, there's no going back.
You ready?
Yeah.
This is like pencils down moment.
Nice. Okay, chef, what I have prepared for you today is a chicken stir fry with a terriaki sauce that's umami.
It's got some of that sweetness in there with a hint of oaky undertone's not just saying this for the camera.
That sauce is better than what you get at most restaurants.
What?
Actually, it's pretty good.
It's really good.
Wow, I genuinely feel pride right now. I feel really happy.
How ready do you feel on a scale of 1 to 10 to cook a gourmet meal fully by yourself?
I'm a little bit nervous, but I'm excited.
With this final badge, it means that Mark gets to move on to that final championship round
where we get to find out if he is a true master chef.
All three badges, how do you feel?
I didn't honestly think I'd make it to this point, so I'm just stoked to be here.
Close your eyes.
To move into the final round, you need to put on your very own chef's coat.
Chef Mark!
What?
Mark, do you have any idea what we're making?
I have no idea.
I picked a recipe that whether most of you know it or not is filled with lots and lots of science.
The perfect burger and fries.
I love burgers and fries.
Have you ever made one?
Not fries.
A very simple burger.
Today, you're going to attempt to make a gourmet burger and fries entirely from scratch
except for the buns.
There's no way you'd make the buns from scratch in time.
You have great buns, Nick.
This won't be easy.
You'll have one hour, and if you don't finish, then we'll just judge you on whatever you make.
I'm not just saying this, but the work I to do to earn those three badges means I'm entering this with like some level of confidence.
Probably overconfidence.
Your one hour starts out.
Go.
Let's go.
Chat, I'm not gonna let you down.
Okay, this is the French fry maker.
Place this here.
Just gonna try this.
Ooh, smooth.
Never cut potatoes like this for French fries.
I love this little machine.
Get those in cold water right away.
Okay, ice, ice, ice.
The cold water is gonna pull the surface starch off these fries
and that will make them more crispy.
Scientifically, we're making crunchier fries, lady.
What's next?
I make my sauce.
This is for the burger.
You know what I like is a good fry sauce.
In Utah, they have this stuff called fry sauce,
which is basically,
Basically just mayo and ketchup.
I'm just gonna mix this.
Mmm, that's good.
Ooh, my knife.
Be careful.
This is a big moment.
Not bad knife skills for someone
who's never cooked before today.
So this is adding a little bit of texture,
a little bit of saltiness.
It's my bench scraper, get them in there.
Time for a little taste.
Maybe a little more ketchup.
I do feel like the sauce needs a little bit more sweetness.
51 minutes left.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
This doesn't...
Just a hint to lemon.
I came prepared today with a little bit of science.
This is measuring the P.A.
level of the sauce now the perfect pH level for kind of a sauce like this is kind of like the high threes and it looks like we are at 3.6
That's a little low. I want to get it a little less acidic if I could just get it to the high threes. I'd be happy
You brought a pH tester? Nothing if not prepared.
3-8. I'm calling that a w. Soss is done. Okay, all right next up we're gonna work on my top piece
Got some butter lettuce, red onion, and a juicy ripe tomato. Here we go. I'm gonna slice this
this is where our practice with that tomato from earlier comes in handy. Mark needs to make a perfect
even sliced down the center of the onion.
Oh man, I'm losing time on the onion field.
Yeah, this is just a waste of time, Mark.
You've spent over a minute trying to peel this onion.
Stay with me, chat.
OK, here we go.
I got the claw.
Claw that bad boy.
Claw.
You're taking way too long doing this part.
You want to salt the tomato right after you cut it.
Now something I learned from watching your videos,
it's like an osmosis thing.
So the salt draws the water out.
It kind of pulls the flavors of the top.
He's exactly right.
Topping's done.
I'm going to put these in the free.
42 minutes remaining next up we got the burger okay what are you doing right now
honestly this just feels cool believe it or not Mark's actually doing the right
thing you want to throw your burger meat back and forth between your hands
to remove all the air bubbles okay Nick it should come as no surprise I like a
precise burger right here 166 grams looking for about 151 153 148 there it is
151 no backup sure I'm only making one but you say that like I should have a backup
I'm gonna make a backup Mark quick quick quick come on
I feel like I shouldn't have to say this, but never pull out a ruler when you're making a hamburger.
Just wasted a full 25 seconds doing that.
When you see how perfectly these burgers fit on the buns, you're gonna regret that same it, Nick.
Now, I'm seasoning high up because that gives you more of an even distribution.
I really like to go high, Nick.
Burgers are ready.
34 and a half minutes to go, you need to just...
Got to clean my workstation.
I was about to say that.
You don't need to say that.
I'm a chef.
I'm wearing the friggin' white thing.
Next up, fries.
They've been chilling in that cold water, really dry.
out the starch now I'm just gonna like pick the best ones get out of here don't need
that put those fries quick quick quick quick okay I need oil all right I can help you
with that oh this is cooler than I was anticipating you're gonna double fry these
french fries it makes them much crispier sounds delicious and it's a little
bit of a challenge I'm throwing in there for you because it's gonna take you longer
and you only have 29 minutes left okay here I go watch your face oh that's
starting to bubble up real nice that is a nice gentle boil there we go right on
time I realize there's an art to cooking
There's a science to it too.
I mean, these are all physical properties that are happening
that are affecting changes in the food.
Admittedly, I don't have the art side as much.
So that's why I brought all my instruments.
Normally, when you double fry French fries,
you want to go ahead and put them in the freezer
for a while until you fry them for the second time.
But since Mark's here, I wanted to bring them a treat.
I got you some food grade liquid nitrogen.
Liquid nitrogen.
This part is kind of dangerous.
Cogles on for safety.
I'm not stopping the time for you, by the way.
I don't need you to stop the time for me.
We're just pouring the liquid nitrogen
into this bowl here.
So to be clear, we're doing this so you can freeze the fries
faster and not run out of time for this challenge
and then fry them again.
All right, here we go.
Liquid nitrogen.
This one's for you, chat.
Only the best.
Here we go.
The most scientifically proven way.
You can see what the leaden frost effect.
Nobody knows what the leaden frost effect.
Leadenfrost does.
It's named after him.
Look at these little balls.
They're kind of evaporating and rolling along the surface.
Let's go.
This is how you freeze french fries.
See if they pass the sound test.
Oh, that sounds frozen.
Mark, that was really cool.
But guess what? What? You only have 21 minutes left. Oh no oil
Time to put him back in clean your workstation I won't let him proceed until he keeps his workstation clean
It's not part of the deal oil our oil is up to 375. This is a little hotter the second time through fries in
Let's go very frozen fries in we just kind of let them cook for the second time
All right Nick I brought another tool. This is a decibel meter the thought here is I can measure the crunchiness of the fry
We look up what's the ideal crunch for a fry about 60 to 70 decibels
There it is. I'm gonna take one out right now and then we'll measure the crunchiness
Using the pressure waves of the sound. Okay, here we go moment of truth
Six decibels short of the desired crunchiness. How is it fried?
Fry's pretty good. It needs a little bit more crunch. We go
Got it. We're like low 60s. These look amazing now we need salties from a high elevation
This is quite possibly the best French tribe ever had the crunchiness of the outside. It's just like pillowy on the inside
Mark you gotta go you gotta move. Okay, okay
Okay, I hear you.
We still have to toaster buns and make the patty
and then melt the cheese.
I know.
All right, time to cook the burger.
Go, go, go.
Pull out my frying pan, turn it on, oil.
I'm looking for a my yard reaction here,
meaning you get that nice crust on the burger.
That means you want your pan to be around 450 degrees Fahrenheit.
Got my trusty laser thermometer here.
We're rocking like 480, so it needs to come down just a bit.
I'm just gonna gently put this in here.
Layed it away from him, that's good.
Making sure we have full surface contact
so that myard reaction could take place.
Come on, baby, chef hands.
We got one more tool here.
This is an infrared camera,
but it's not just thermometer,
like it visually gives you that indication.
Oh yeah, that's an even cook.
Just the right temperature.
11 and a half minutes ago,
you're kinda gotta get closer to that one.
I feel like I gotta make up some time here.
And go ahead and flip away from me.
Wow.
That's a my art reaction right there.
All right, here we go.
Go. I got some cheese.
I'm gonna give my lid.
Creates a nice little steam bath.
Just gently melt the cheese.
Better not take too long
because you've got eight minutes, 45 seconds.
While my cheese is melting, we go ahead and carefully cut my buns. That's a clean cut.
Cheese check. Oh, that's looking melty. To pull this off. Just under six minutes ago. Here we go. Throw the buns on. I'm gonna start plating. You're using the thermal camera. Oh, yeah. I'm liking that.
Condiments. Coming through. A little bit of sauce on the bottom bun. Two layers of lettuce. My burger.
Find the burger. Find the burger. Find the burger. Find the burger. I'm looking. It's right there. Oh
I miss that. 30 seconds remaining. Next up is the onion. I'm lightly. I'm
salted tomato sauce on top quick quick quick quick quick you're forgetting one big
thing 10 nine eight seven six five four three two one done round of applause for mark come on
let's go thank you this truly I'm not lying is like the best thing I've ever made
nothing I made has ever looked this good unfortunately I'm not the judge so for
everybody watching Mark why don't you describe your dish one last time but
before they comment down below their judgments.
We got a beautiful burger with an artisanal bun,
all the classic toppings, special sauce,
and then some double-fried French fries
with my proprietary seasoning blend.
Go comment down below if you think Mark Rober is now a master chef.
The moment of truth,
they're really good.
We're going to cry.
When you were pretty, you've
on have braced in course of recreat,
always in trying to negotiate,
exchanging the cards of hockey,
the bonhomes,
even of the collations.
You know that each thing has a value,
well, to have to have counted.
And, from,
Well, the things have not really changed.
Negoti-titre TD
you can't do renouet
with your instinct of negotiation.
With, without operation
gratuite,
no amount of minimum
and no fretsmanual,
you're made for negotiate,
and the appellee-nogist-tit-T-D
is made for you aid.
Telecharge it right now.
