In the abstract, food that’s prepared in the street might strike some as less than appetizing. But in reality, there’s something magical about street food. So in honor of all the hungry folks, standing in the road for the chance to buy something hot, fresh, and fast… What was some of the best street food you ever had? Where was it? Let us know in the comments!

#streetfood #food #weirdhistoryfood

39 Comments

  1. I don’t think anyone wants to eat any street food from India. You probably get a parasite. 😂😂😂

  2. Fufu would be tough to eat on the go, but then again, one is often rather close to a street while sitting down and eating fufu, it is a tough call to say if it is street food or not…

  3. Where are you getting your tamales? Every tamale I've ever eaten, including those made by Mexican abuelas, has been wrapped in a corn husk.

  4. I expected Argentina over Spain for empenadas. And Poutine, which is not street food, is trash compared to the other food in the video

  5. I knew all the characters in the cartoon Chowder where named after foods, but until now I've never seen Ceviches name sake

  6. Poutine is not street food. You're rarely going to find street vendors selling poutine. More accurate Canadian street foods are: hot dogs, jamaica patties, samosa, or onigiri.

  7. Poutine can be decline in many way. The one described is the classical one. I like the italian poutine with the meat spaguetti sauce on top

  8. What about Australia and the Chicko Roll ? (and the 'dog's eye with 'dead horse' (Translation: Meat Pie with Tomato Sauce)

  9. Really? No mention of georgian khachapuri?

    Adjarian style isn't really a street food, but imeretian style absolutely is, and it is EVERYWHERE

  10. "Invented in rural Quebec"
    Shows a picture of Quebec city

    Yeah… it was most certainly not invented in Quebec city, actually no one really knows who did, or how it came to be…
    Un ben gros mystère

  11. AFAIK, in Latin America, tacos are ONLY in Mexico. Hell, at least in Panama, tortillas refers to corn cakes. That said, street food wise, in Panama, ceviche, tamales, spiral cut hot dogs on a stick, and loaded hot dogs are pretty common. There are also these open-air walk-in bakeries with a large variety of pastries, including my favorite, mamallena, which is a type of bread pudding with raisins, that are pretty common.

  12. i've never seen a poutine food stall in Canada. it's not street food. Poutine is a massive psyop, almost no one ate it here outside Quebec until like 10 years ago when most fast food restaurants added poutine as an upgrade to their fries. It was a thing sure, but it was far from an iconic dish. it's simple junk food. People at a hell of a lot more kraft dinner than poutine.

  13. A fascinating roundup, but nobody walks around eating fish and chips in the UK! It's a very popular choice, but most people get a takeaway to eat at home, or in the chippy itself..!

  14. South Korean street food includes chicken on a stick, calamari, and yakimandu. Look for drunk bugers too after partying all night

  15. Where’s the Caribbean Jamaican jerk chicken Trinidad with doubles and many other Caribbean island street food that’s popular in all over the world

  16. in australia one coulld consider sausage sizzles a street food, they're typically sold at charity events to raise funds and typically sold for like 2 dollars or so. they're just grilled (typically beef) sausages put on a slice of white bread (typically you hold the bread in a diamond shape to wrap around the sausage) and covered in typically any sauce you want though tomato sauce is the standard, sometimes you can also optionally add grilled onions.

    so yeah they're lik hot dogs o3o

    though I suppose a meat pie and/or a sausage roll or a chiko roll or a corn jack could also count

  17. Even though all the cuts/images you showed about DÖNER were from Turkia.. you still kept calling it shavarma my azz !!

    Cry about it biatchez

    😭😁

Write A Comment