- This looks like a doughnut. - I have been wanting to try those for, I don't know, maybe three years now. - I like this chutney. - Wow. - I don't think I like this dish. (upbeat music) - Hey guys it's Ruchi and Avi. This video we're doing
something a bit different we're always doing the eating, so in this video we're going
to be doing the feeding. (Avi laughs) We invited local YouTubers
The 5 Mexican Guys! - Hey.
- Woohoo! - Hello!
- Hi guys. - And our Indian friends
Tirumal and Rashed - Hey!
- Hello! - and we are going to
be feeding them the food of South India and we are so excited to feed them the food we grew up with. So Indian food has like
become really popular in recent times around the world but it's also mostly
not Indian food, right? it's always like butter chicken and naan. - Roti and naan. - Yeah. - But there's no South Indian food. - Around the world so
we wanted to feed them the food we grew up with dosa, idli, vada and so many more things so we're really excited
to see their reactions. - So there's a big Indian,
South Indian expat community in Mexico City, so they
make good South Indian food, so finding South Indian food
in Mexico City was not hard. We had so much fun eating
South Indian food here especially dosas, me,
I wanted all the dosas. So we decided okay why not show this food to our Mexican friends, and that's how this video came about. So the food is ready,
the Mexicans are ready. (group cheers) So let's get this party started. - Before we start, if you're new here we make food and culture
videos from around the world. We've been traveling and living out of a suitcase for about-- - Three years.
- Three years now. We're very excited to be in Mexico so make sure you hit the subscribe button and also the bell button to
be notified of our videos and yeah let's start. (rhythmic music) - Actually there are some
places here in Mexico that serve Indian food but we
have been told they are not very traditional and some
of them are not very good. I have only tried Indian food once in one of those restaurants
so this going to be a really new experience for me. This looks like a doughnut. This looks like, ah,
like some kind of pastry, like sweet pastry? Idli, idli. - Idli. - Idli. - Vada.
- Vada. - Doughnut-like. - Coconut chutney, mango chutney. - Chutney is the-- - [Ruchi] It's like our salsa. - Salsa, okay. Fluffy, airy, very soft. Yeah so I will just tear
apart a little piece and then go first with the orange one which I think is tomatoes. It's kind of similar to a Mexican salsa. (bell dinging)
(laughs) Really like I mean I can tell it is made out of tomatoes, I can tell
it has some chili in it. I mean it's a little bit spicy. - It doesn't taste like much. Just a vehicle for chutney. - What I Like is I like the fluffiness. (bell dings)
- This coconut chutney, I like it a lot. - Mmm I like this one a lot. This one is my favorite one
what is the name of this one? - [Avi] Sambar. - Sambar this one is the best for me. - Sambar? I want to have it like a soup. (laughing) (bell dings)
I think that's the way I would if I was an Indian person,
maybe I would go like this. (laughing) I think this is my favorite combination. The rice cake with the
soup, bean soup, the Sambar. - Mmm. - Okay so I'm going to try
it with the chutney now. - The tomato chutney is spicy. - I like this chutney. You know it's weird because I expected something totally different. I expected like something sweeter. - Like fresher, no? - Maybe fresher. You can feel the grinds
of the coconut like coconut particles in the chutney. (bell dings)
- I can see these working on a breakfast. Mmm they are really good,
really delicious, I like it. - [Avi] And this one is called upma. - Upma.
- Upma. - I don't know what this
is because it is not rice. (bell dings) I can see some orange bits here I am guessing they are carrots. And some other herbs. - [Avi] Everything is put in-- - Is this mustard seed? - [Avi] Yes, that's mustard seed. - Mmm. (bell dings) - Wow!
(bell dings) I like it a lot. - I'm gonna smell it first. - At first it reminds
me of tamales, right? (bell dings) Because tamales are also
like this dough consistency which is the same and it's spicy. It has a punch. Mmm. Yeah so good. Just because it is very good. I will eat the whole thing. - I will give this
maybe a three out of 10. - [Ruchi] Can you come from? - Yeah, not a huge fan honestly. - 10 out of 10, really good. And I will mix the three of them. - [Ruchi] Yeah that's-- - But this is not traditional I am sure. - No, we mix.
- We do that. - Like our Indian viewers would be there like "No, you don't do that!" - No we mix.
- No we mix everything. - Ah, yeah? - [Avi] Yeah, it's a personal
choice whatever you like. - Whatever I want, oh okay. Because here in Mexico when you see a guy mixing two types of salsas you get like "What are you doing, don't do that." (bell dings) I mean you can do it. It's fine but you will be
classified as a weird guy. - Pongal. - Pongal. - Mmm. (laughs) - Mmm. - Remember, remember
guys when we told them we were going to be honest? (laughs) I don't think I like this very much. - Yeah I think I have a better outlook on this than you, Moises. - I think I have to agree with Moises (laughing) it's like tasteless. It's just a paste but it
tastes like rice but... - It's like a puree but the mixture by itself doesn't have flavor. This is really really, thank you. - But it's not bad. I would go five out of 10. - Maybe four, four out of 10.
(laughing) - Imagine you just take
like pieces of paper and put sticky glue or water on it, and then you mix it.
(bell dings) I am getting those kind
of vibes with this. - It's, well, I'm not going
to give it an eight out of 10. It's like a six out of 10. - [Alonso] Six, wow! - With all respect I mean, you know guys that we are food bloggers we like all kind of things
but there things that we like better and some
that we don't like. - And it's like the perfect
thing to have in the rain with some chai. - I don't know if I would
like it with some chai. - No not together not to dip it. (laughing) - Chop this in. - [Avi] Have a bite of this and have-- - [All] Sip of chai. - Pakoda, cheers. - [Avi] Pakoda. - Very oniony of course. So sweet, smells sweet. - Pretty good I like it. - Mmm. - Very tasty.
- Mmmhm. - Yeah I think it's a
very good afternoon treat. - Flavors remind me a lot of kebab. It tastes a lot like kebab But I think a little bit better even. - I like the texture on
the outside, super crunchy, and sweet from the onions. - And soft on the inside - And then soft on the
inside and you can taste the chickpea it's kind of mushy. - It has this balance
between sweet and salty. And it is deep fried
so I can see why it is a popular dish because
everywhere in the world (bell dings)
deep fried is good. I really like it. I would like to put some
Mexican red salsa on it. And it would be amazing. - It's a lot of Funyun flavor
and onion is very strong too. - You're not gonna want to
kiss you girlfriend after this, (laughing) in trouble after. - Like watching a movie with some salsa. Very good. - Yeah I think this has to be my favorite. - I think it's my favorite also. - Eight out of 10. - Yeah I think eight, 8.5. It's kind of like tortillas. - [Moises] Yeah they look really like-- - This, this is like potatoes, for sure - With some herbs. - This is like a flour-- - Like a flour tortilla. - It smells familiar, really. - Like, we usually-- - They are onions and potatoes? So yeah that's very
familiar for us in Mexico. - [Ruchi] Why do you think it's yellow? - Mustard? Is it a vegetable, like-- - Masala? - [Ruchi] It's a spice. - It's a spice? - Huh yellow spice? - Yellow spice like grinded
mustard or something like that? - [Ruchi] Turmeric. - Ahh turmeric, I think
I've never tried turmeric. - [Avi] This is called poori. - Poori?
- Poori. - [Together] Poori. - [Avi] And it's made
of wheat like you know, and then deep fried. - Wow, deep fried, it's
not that tortilla like. It smells like a tortilla
but the texture is different much more crumbly. - Okay should we just
take a piece of potato? - So I'm going to go very Mexican for me. - A taco? - My taco. (laughing) - I think I'm going to go that way. - He's going to do the taco. We are so used to... - [Ruchi] We make it for small kids. Small kids eat it like this. - Like a taco? - [Ruchi] But adults they use tiny bites. - Like this?
- Yeah. - So cheers guys, cheers. Strong flavors. - I like it. Pretty good. - I like the texture from
this, like it's still soft in the inside and crispy on the outside but it has a crust at
the same time it is like, I don't know it is not crunchy. - It is crumbly. - Like a whole grain flour
tortilla, it's like a-- - Maybe but it's thicker. - It's thicker. - Flavors are very familiar. You get the milanesa con papas, they do it very similar with the
onions, and the flavor is very similar because
we also use chilies for that kind of stew. That should be a vegetarian dish right? Does it have meat? - [Avi] No this is a vegetarian dish if you prefer meat-- - Usually here in Mexico there is meat because in Mexico there
is always meat. (laughs) (bell dings) There's very few dishes
that don't have any meat. But it's good by itself. - Yeah I think--
- I think... (laughs) The flour disc could use more flavor. But the potatoes were pretty good. - But I mean I can see these working like with sugar too, right? Kind of like a-- - Like a dessert. - Like sugar. - [Avi] That's what we ate it as children - And some honey - You could add meat to the dish but I think it's good on its own and it would be good also with meat. - Pretty good.
- Pretty good. - I like it. - Yeah I would say I really like it but I would say for the potatoes I think they were very good seasoned. So I would say 8.5 out of 10, and for the disc, tortilla. (laughs) - The disc. - I like it a lot. I will say a 10 out of 10
because I like it a lot. - Like a seven, it's pretty good but I think it needs something else like-- - Some salsa. - Maybe some chutney--
- Maybe some meat. - Some meat, or maybe
some chutney to bring the flavor of the potatoes up. - [Avi] We do eat it with chutney some-- - Maybe like seven, 7.5 because-- - It was good, but-- - I do like a lot the potatoes a lot. - Kesari bath. - Cheers. - It's even better.
- Mmhm. - This one is good. - There was a crunchy thing
there, well not crunchy like-- - Yeah. - Like a nut, what is this? - [Avi] They have like
cashew nuts, they put like nuez de la india. - Ahh raisin something. - Ah.
- It's raisins. - I like this one.
- Yeah, yeah. - I can tell that it has a lot of sugar. It's very good I like it. - It's pretty good.
- Yeah. - Out of 10? - I think I would give this a nine. - A nine. - It's a very good dessert. - Yeah, it's pretty good. - I think if I made it at home, myself, I would add a lot more
raisins and cashews. - [Avi] Her mom makes
it her grandma makes it, they put in everything. - I think that this has been my favorite. - Yeah it's pretty good. - So this is the dosa, this
is like a South Indian crack. - Oh!
- Yeah. - [Mosies] Crack? - Yeah it's so good.
- So addictive. - Yeah.
- What does masala mean? - Masala, actually masala
means spices, but for this they call the aloo, the
potato filling, as masala. - Mmm. - Has the potatoes too.
- Okay. I'll try it first without any chutney. (bell dings) - So that's it, it's a taco.
- Mexican-- - [Mosies] That's not the
way of doing it, right? - How do we-- (laughing) it's a taco, you gave
it to us in a taco shell - It was tricky, it was-- - It's like a quesadilla right? - How are you supposed to... How do Indians grab this thing? - [Avi] So you break it up
and you dip it in the stuff which is in the stuffing. - Ah okay. - [Avi] And then the chutney and the base. - It think the taco-- - [Avi] Wait, we'll give you your-- - Ah, sambar. - [Avi] The sambar. - I think the taco
technique is more efficient. - [Avi] Usually the dosas are thicker. - A lot bigger.
- Ah. - Okay, okay. - You can do this? - [Avi] Yeah, you can do that. - It's good, no? It's crunchy on the outside very soft because of the potatoes, I like it a lot. - I really want to have
these with the sambar. Yeah, there's the sambar. (laughing) (laughing)
- We showed you. - Sambar?
- Sambar is the best. (laughing) - It's very good, I think. I believe the dosa is my favorite so far. - It has the potential which
we already liked a lot. - Mmm. - And you have the dosa
which honestly doesn't have that much flavor,
it's all about texture - It's like a crepe. - it's super crunchy but it's much more crunchy than a crepe. - Yeah, exactly. - You bite it it has like a layer outside, but then it has crispy bits on
the inside of that very thin. - Yeah but flavor-wise it's like a crepe. - I see like the dosa flavor
but the inside is more spongy. - Uh huh. - It has like that spongy texture. - But it's so crispy right? - But it's still crispy from the outside. So I have been looking where to try dosa for a long time now
from the street food meals. - [Avi] There you go. - I have been wanting to
try dosa for I don't know maybe three years now, so
this is going to be really special for me. - Sambar? - So if you buy it on the street do you get chutney and
sambar and everything? - [Avi] Yeah you get the whole plate. - Okay.
- Ah. - The meat with dosa. Well, and another time I
didn't know about sambar but now I am in love with sambar, - You can hear the crunch?
- Yeah, the crunch. - You know what I expected. Yeah I think it's delicious. And with the sambar--
- The best. - The best. - Yeah I think it's been my favorite too - Because I think what
we mentioned is that most of the dishes lacked
some texture and the dosa-- - Adds the crunchiness. - The crunchiness, it
just brings the dish. - Yeah because it's similar
to a crepe as you said but I like more the texture of the dosa. - You guys want one more? - Yeah sure.
- Yep? Let me make one. In India we have a lot of aromatics like cloves and cinnamon and star anise - Maybe cumin.
- Cumin. - Bay leaf
- Bay leaf. - We have it here we use it very often. - [Avi] We eat it with hand. There's going to be no spoon for this. - No spoon for this, only hand? Okay. - I like that yeah that's the way. - The way you do it is
the way we will do it. - And usually begins with
something called raita which is a side dish. - Raita? - [Avi] Raita. - [Ruchi] It's basically
pico de gallo in-- - In yogurt.
- Yeah, yogurt. - [Moises] Oh interesting. - I think I've tried this before. - Yeah, pico de gallo, basically. - With yogurt that's interesting. - This will add the
coolness to all the spices. - I'm excited okay.
- Take a piece of chicken. - [Avi] Yeah take a piece
of chicken and some rice. - I want some meat. So are you guys amazed
by the amount of meat we eat in Mexico? And all types of meat right
like chicken, fish, beef, pork, whatever is meat we will eat it. Oh this smells amazing. - So you do this with your
hands which we are not used to. The thing is I don't want
the yogurt on my hands. - So I use both of my hands or only one? - Just one.
- Just one. - Okay. - Why don't you try it with us, Avi? - Yeah you need to try it. - I think I have a
little bit of everything. - Yeah.
- Uh huh. (laughing) - Mmm wow it is so good. - Mmm. - I like it a lot. - If nobody's talking
that means it's good. (laughing) - That's a good sign. - I feel like one of the
secrets would be that the rice by itself has a lot of flavor. - Exactly. - By itself! The flavors are already
impregnate into the rice. So no matter from where you
grab, you'll get flavor. - The yogurt is hard to grab! How do you grab yogurt? - Okay so we'll try it. - I think the chicken
is the most important. - Wow, this is so good. You can move to South India. - Oh wow, this is so good. - Yeah, it's ridiculous. It's the best thing we've had all day. - Okay this is the best
chicken I've had until now. - So I like the fact I can,
I feel that I can eat a lot of this, a good portion of this because-- - We plan ahead.
- We eat it enough, yeah. - The spices are not that
strong, I know they're basic so I feel like I could
just continue eating a huge plate of this, and that's good. - It's so good.
(bell dings) Like the chicken is perfectly
cooked, cooked super juicy. The spices, like Moises said, they are subtle, not so powerful. - They're like in balance. - And the yogurt just brings
the coolness you mentioned and there's a little bit of
crunchiness of the onions which gives it a little bit of texture. Pretty good, I like it a
lot, and now authentic. - 10 out of 10 I would say. (speaking in foreign language) What is the name of this thing? - Biryani. - Biryani of excellence.
- Biryani. - I will remember the biryani forever. That was pretty damn good. - Yeah it was.
- That was my favorite. And the dosa, I like the
dosa a lot, very crispy. - He clearly didn't
expect much of the things that I tasted and it was some surprise, most of the time very good surprise. Didn't expect so much
veggies and so little meat. - Sambar was the best for real, (chuckles) but it's like a side dish. We would eat it like a soup. - Well the next time we
go to an Indian restaurant I think I will feel like more... - And-- - Yeah I will feel like I know this food. - I do like naan--
- Yeah, exactly. - But I will try to order some biryani. - Biryani, ah, sambar? - Some sambar and sambar and
sambar on top of everything sambar on chutney and chutney on sambar. - Bring some yogurt
with the onion, tomato. - Ah, the pico de gallo - Pico de gallo, bring some
yogurt please and chai tea? - Chai?
- Chai. - Chai.
- Chai. - [Avi] So are you guys full? - So stuffed. - We are packed. - Very full. - I think we are not
having dinner tonight. This is the only meal I had today. - So all South Indians out there, do you think we did a good job feeding our Mexican friends our
food from South India? - Was it legit? - Mexico's as diverse as India. We love sharing our culture with them and hearing stories about what they think of our food with us so we would like to thank
Lord Buddha Restaurant and Pradeep and Keerti
for the amazing food. Their links will be in the description. If you're ever in Mexico City, you know where to go for Indian food. And we also want to thank our friends Rashed, he doesn't have a YouTube channel, and Tirumal from the visatraveler.com, it's one of the best
sites in India right now, you have to check it out if you are ever in some sort of visa trouble. (laughing) - Which you probably will be. (laughing) - Subscribe to the five guys.
- Woohoo! - Subscribe to our channel. - Hit the like button, the little bell. - And we'll see you in the next one. - Bye!
- Bye bye.
Those aren't the only south indian food smh.